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                  <text>Page 86 • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailys~ntinel.com

National Scoreboard
BAoberts, Baltim ore, 5 1, Huff. Bahrmore,
48, Markak1s. Baltrmore, 47; Morneau,
Mmnesota. 47: Rros . Toronto. 46 ,
Youio..1lis, Boston, 43, Ibanez, Seattle 43.
TAIPLES-Granderson . Detro1t. 13.
Crawford , Tampa Bay, 10': lw~m ur a ,
Tampa Bay, 8 ; Rios, Toronto, B:
BAOberts, Balt1more, 8, Ellsbury, Boston,
7: AJones, Baltimore. 7; Inglett. Toronto,
7: 0"'11esus. Kansas C1ty. 7; 1Suzukr.
Seattle, 7.
HOME RUNS-Quen tin, Chicago, 36:
MiCabrera, Detroit . 36; ARodrrguez.
New York, 35; Sizemore, Cleveland, 33:
Thome. Chrcago, 33: Huff, Baltimore, 32;
Dye, Chrcago, 32; Grambi, New York , 32.
STOLEN BASES - EIIsbury. Boston. 49.
!Suzuki. Seattle. 43, Upton. Tampa Bay,
42: 8Aoberts, Baltimore, 39; Sizemore.
Cleveland, 38: CaGomez. Minnesota ,
32: Figgins, Los Angeles, 32.
. •PITCHING '(16 Oecisions)-Matsuzaka,
Boston. 18-2.
900. 2 .80; CLee.
Cleveland. 22-3 , .880, 2 54: Perkins.
MlnnEJsota, t2-4 .. 750, 4.50. Lackey, Los
Angeles. 12-4, .750, 3.25; ESantana,
Los Angeles , 16-6, .727, 3 25: Lester,
Boston, 15-6, .714, 3.26; Saunders . Los
Angeles. 16-7, .696. 3.52 .
STRIKEOUTS-Burnett. Toro1 .:l. 220:
· ESantana. Los Angele s. 209: Halladay,
Toronto, 201 ; JVazquez, Chicago, 195:
Greinke, ,Kansas City. 183: Meche.
Kansas City, 176; Beckett Boston, 172.
SAVES;,FRodriguez. Los Angeles, 61 ;
Soria. Kansas Crt y, 41 : Pape!bon .
Boston . 41 : Nathan. Minnesota. 38:
MRivera. New York, 38: BJRyan, Toron to,
32 : Sherrill , Baltimore, 31 .

Natlon11 League
East Division
W L PciGB
PAiladelphia
89 69 563

New York

87 70

Florida
Atlan ta
Washington

81 76 .516 7 .
70 ss .443 19 ·
59 98 .376 29 /1

554 1',,

Central Olvlalon
W L Pel GB .
lt-ChiCago
95 61 _.. 609

Milwaukee

86 71 .548 9 ~
82 74 .526 13
81 76 .516 . 14 iJ

HQUStOn

St. Louis
Cincmnat1

74 83 .471 21/,
65 92 414 30 ii
West Division

Ptttsburgh

W L

Pet

GB

Los Angeles
An zona

82 75 .522

Colorado

San Franc1sco

72 85 .459
70 87- .446

10
12

San Diego

61 96

21

79 78 .503 3

.389

x-clinched divisiOn

Tuesday 's Games
Atlanta 3. Philadelphia 2
N.Y. Mets 6 , Chicago Cubs 2
~ashington 9, Florida 4

Cincinnati 2. Hous1on 1
Milwaukee 7, Pinsburgt1 5
St. LOuis 7. Arizona 4
L.A. Dodgers 10, San Diego 1
C(llorado 9. San Francisco 4
Wednesday·• Games
Atlanta (J.Aeyes 3-1 1) at Philadelphia
(Myers 10-12). 7:05p.m.
Chicago Cubs (Zar:nbrano 14-6) at N.Y.
Mets (OI.Perez 10-7). 7:10p.m.
Florida (Jo.Johnson 6-1) at Washington
(Redding 10-10). 7:10p.m.
Cincinnati (R.~amirez 1-0) at Houstot
(Wo lf 1 H2}, 8.05 p.m.
Pittsburgh (Maholm 9-8) at Milwaukee
(Sabathia 9-2). 8:05 p.m .
Arizona {Scherzer 0-3) at St. louis
(Wa inwright 10-3). 8:1 5p.m .
San Diego (Estes 2-3) at L.A. Dodgers
(Kershaw 4-5), 10:10 p.m .
Colorado (L.Hernandez 2-3) at San
Francisco (J.Sanchez 9-11) , 10:15 p.m.

PRo FOOTBALL
National Football league

AMERICAN CONFERENCE
East
WL TPct
PFPA
Buflato
3 0 0 t .OOO 78 49
New England 2 1 0 .667 49 58
N.Y. Jets
1 2 0 .333 59 81
Miam i
1 2
.333 62 64
Sou ttl
WLTPct
PFPA
Te nnessee
3 0 0 1.000 72 29
JackSonville
1 2 0 .333 49 58
Indianapolis
1 .2 0 .333 52 67
Houston
0 2 0 .000 ' 29 69
North
WL TPct
PFPA
Baltimore
2 0 0 1.000 45 20
Pittsburgh
21 0 .667 54 3B
Cincinnati
0 3 0 .0004067
Cleveland
0 3 0 .0002666
Welt
WL TPct
PFPA
Denver
3 0 0 1.000 114 84
Oakland
I 2 0 .333 60 73
San Diego
1 2
.333 11094
Kan sas C1ty
3
.000 32 78

o

TODAY'S MLB LEADERS
NATJONAL LEAGUE

BATTING-CJones, Atlanta, .364 ;
St. Louis, .350; Holliday.
Colorado . .321: Berkman, Houston, .314:
CGuzman, Washington , .312; Winn, San
Francisco, .308: Giles, San Diego, .304.
RUNS-HAamirez ,
Florida,
120;
DWright, New York, 113: Beltran, New
York, 113-: Barkman. Houston, 11 2;
McLo uth. PittsbUrgh, 111 : JReyes, NGw
York, 109: Utley, Philadelphia, 108
RBI-Howard ,
Philadelphia,
141 ;
NATIONAL CONFERENCE
DWright, New York, 122: AdGonZalez .
East
·
San Diego, 116; Delgado. New York.
1
WL TPct
PF PA
1.10: Beltran , N ew York. 109; ArRamirez,
Dalla s
3 0 0 1.000 96 63
Chicago, 109; Pujols, St. Louis , 108.
N.Y. Giants
j 0 0 1.000 83 43
HITS-JReyes. New York, 200;
Washrng
ton
2
1 0 .667 60 57
· DWright, New York, 183: Pujols, St. ·
Philadelphia 210 .6679050
Louis, 179; Winn, San Francisco. 179;
South
DLee.
Chicago,
179; CGuzman.
WLTPct
PFPA
Washington , 178: Tejada, Houslon, 175.
Tampa Bay
2 1 0 .667 7 1 57
DOUBLES-Me;Lou1h , Pinsburgh, 46;
Atlanta
2 , 0 .667 81 59
Berkman. Houston , 46; Hart , Milwaukee,
2 , 0 .667 56 61
Carolina
45; ArRamirez, Chicago, 44; Young,
New Orleans 1 2 0 .333 BO 83
Arizona , 42; SDrew, Arizona , 42:
North
DWright. New York, 42: Pujols, St. louis,
WLTPct
PF PA
42.
.
Green Bay
2 1 0 .667 88 , 71
TRIPLES-JAeyes, . New York, 19; :
1 20 .333 54 52
Flewis, San Francisco. 1 1: SDrew, I Minnesota
Chicago
1 2 0 .333 70 60
Arizona, 11 : Rollins, Phil adelphia, 9;
Detroit
0 3 0 .000 59 11 3
Vic torino. Philadelphia, 8 : Velez . San
West
Francisco. 7: Braun , Milwaukee , 7:
W l T. Pct
PF PA
You ng, Arizona , 7; Weeks. Milwaukee, 7;
Arizona
2 1 0 .667 7 1 47
BPhillips, Cincinnati , 7.
,.
San Francisco 2 1
.667 77 66
HOME RUNS-Howard , Philadelphia ,
Seattle
1 2
.333 7780
46; Dunn, Arizon a. 38; Delgado, New
St. LOUIS
0 3 0 .000 29 , 16
York, 37; Braun. Milwaukee. 35 ;
AdGonzalez, San Diego, 35: Ludwick ,
Sunday's Gamea
St. Louis, 35: Fielder. Milwaukee, 34;
TennEJssee 31 , Houston 12
Pujols, St. l ouis, 34.
Buffalo·24, Oak land 23
STOLEN BASES-Taveras , Colorado,
Minnesota 20, Carolina 10
68; JReyes, New York, 52; Rollins,
Atl anta 38, Kansas City 14
Philadelphia. 45; Bourn, Houston. 41 :
Tampa Bay 27. Chicago 24, QT
Pierre. Los Angeles. 38: Kemp, Los
Washington 24. Arizona 17
Angeles, 35; HRamirez, Florida, 33";
Miami 38,. New Englan d t3
Victorino, Philadelphia, 33.
N.Y. Giants 26, Cincinnati 23, OT
. PITCHING (16 Declslons)-Lincecum ,
Seattle 37, St. Louis 13
San Francisco, 17-5, .773, 2 .66; Webb, I
San Francisco 31, Detroit13
Arizona, 22-7, .759, 3.24: Volquez,
Denver 34, New Orleans 32
Cincin nati. 17-6, .739. 3.21 : Dempsler,
Baltimore 26, Cleveland 10
· . Chicago, 17-6, .739, 2.99: Lohse, St.
Jacksonville 23. Indianapolis 21
Lo uis, 15-6 . . 714 , 3.78: Zambrano ,
Ph iladelphia 15, Pittsburgh 6
C~ i cago, 14-6, .700, 3 .77 : Nolasco, 1
Dallas 27, Green Bay 16
Fl~rida, 15-7, .682, 3.55; JSantana, New 1
Monday's Game ·
York,
15-7,
.682
2.64: Moyer.
San Diego 48, N.Y. Jets 29
Philadelphi a, 15-7, .682, 3.78.
Sunday, Sept. 28
STRIKEOUTS-Lincecum,
San
Arizona at N.Y. Jets, 1 p.m.
Francisco, 252; Volquez , Cincinnati , 206:
Minnesota at Tennessee, 1 p.m.
Billingsley, Los Angeles, 19~; Haren,
Denver at Kansas City, 1 p.m.
1\rizona, 197; JSantana. New York ,· 197;
San Francisco at New Orleans. 1 p.m.
Hamels, Philadelphia, 196: Dempster,
Atlanta at Carolina, 1 p.m.
Chicago, 183.
Cleveland at Cincinnati, 1 p.m .
SAVES-Valverde.
Houston,
42 :
Green Bay at Tampa Bay, 1
8Wilson, San Francisco, · 40; Lid ge,
Hquston at Jacksonv ille, 1 p.m
PI'111Melphia, 40; FCordero, Cincinna1i,
Buffalo at St louis, 4:05 p.m.
34; KWood, Chicago, 33; Gregg, F-lorida,
San Diego at Oakland, 4:05 p.m .
29; Fuentes. Colorado, 29.
Washing1on a.t Dallas, 4:15 p.rn.
P~;~jols,

o

o
a

I

o
o

1

1

P.m.

American League
Ellat Division

W L

Pet

GB

y-Tampa Bay
95 62 .605
y-Bdston
92 65 .586 3
New Y01'k
86 71 .548 9
Toronto
B3 74 ' .529 12
ti7 90 .427 28
Baltimore
Central Dlvlalon
WLPctGB
Chicago .
86 70 .55 1
Minnesota
85 72 .541 1Y:
Cleveland
79 78 .503 7i:
Kansas City
72 86 .456 15
Detroit
7l 85 .455 15
West Dlvlalon
WLPctGB
x-los Angeles
97 60 .618
. 76 82 .481 21%
Tex as
Oakland
75 82 .478 22
Seattle
58 99 .369 39

Philadelphia at Chicago. 8:15p.m.
Open : l n~i anapolis . Miami . New
England, Seattle. N.Y. Giants, Detroit
,
Monday, Sept. 29
I
Baltimore at Pittsburgh, 8:30p.m.

I

Balance beginning
to shift in AFC
.
BY DAVE GOLDBERG
AS30CIATED PRESS

When Tom Brady went .
down midway through the
first quarter of the season
opener, it was clear this New
England team wasn"t going
to match last year's 16-0 regular-season run.
But no one expected the
Patriots to be hammered 3813 . as they were Sunday by
lowl y ·Miami. a game in
which
Ronn·ie
Brown
became the first NFL player
to run fo r four TDs and pass
for another since Paddy
Driscoll in 1923 for the
Chicago Cardinals .
New England's trouble is
the biggest surprise. but hard.ly the only one in a headscratching start to the NFL
season. :
.
.
AP photo
With Indianapolis. · San
Diego and Jacksonville stum- Miami Dolphins running back Ronn ie Brown (23) runs past New England Patriots defendbling from the starting gate ers Tedy Bruschi , left, Jarvis Green, right, and Rodney Harrison (37) for a touchpown dur·
and Pittsburgh getting beaten ing the second quarter of a football game at Gillette Stadium in Foxborough, Mass., Sunday.
up in Philadelphia on
Sunday. the balance of power terback to bring them fro m seconds left after the Jaguars There's little question that
is shifting in the AFC. where behind . Moreover. how long had contro lled the · ball for Belichick will use the
the like s of Te nnessee. can . the temperamental more than 12 minutes to start upcoming bye to make
adjustments to the Patriots on
Denver and Buffalo now can Randy Moss go before he the fourth quarter.
That was too early to get both offense and defense. but
melts down ~ Althoug h Bill
have Super dreams .
The NFC isn't goi ng Belichick said Monday that the points, because it put the Buffalo certainly looks capa· 1y accor
·
d'mg to s&lt;;npt
· , "Randy
defense back on the .field. ble of . challenging New
. is one of.. our
M most
h
ent1re
either.
consistent p1ayers.
oss as The Jaguars managed to get England's five-year title run
Sure. the Cowboys look just 13 catches for !56 yards into range for ·Scobee's fie ld in the East if Trent Edwards
and one touchdown after a goal and both teams are. r\ow continues to show a compogreat as expe~ted, and the season in wh ich he set an 1-2 , two games behind sure rare for a second-year .
defending Super Bowl cham- NFL record with 23 TD Tennessee in the AFC South. quarterback.
pion New York Giants are 3The decline of the Patriots
Denver is ·the most ques0 as well. But Brett Favreless catches and had 98 recepand Colts emphasizes the 3-0 tionable of the 3-0 teams .
Green Bay has won two of its tions for 1.493 yards.
The Broncos have allowed
fi rst three. as has Atla nta
At this point l ~st season, he starts by the Titans, Bills and
after a horrid 4-12 season had 22 receptions for 403 Broncos, and a 2-0 start by 84 points , third worst in the
Baltimore, which remains a league behind two pitiful 0-3
marked by the imprisonment yards and five TDs.
question
mark because few teams. Detroit and St. Louis.
of Michael Vick and the sudThe Dolphins also exposed
den departure back to college llaws in a defense that could- teams win much with a rook- They beat the Chargers
of new coach Bobby Petrino. n't stop Brown. three of ie quarterback. Can they win because of referee Ed
ackn\)wledged
And . San Francisco, with whose TDs (t wo runs and the the North? Probab ly not. Hochuli 's
Despite
the
beating
the
blown
call
and esca ~ed
J .T. O 'Sull ivan at quarter- pass) came with him taking a
Steelers
took
in
Ph
illy,
the
y
Sunday
against
New Orleans ·
back after throwing J·ust 26 direct snap in the shotgun
formation ,
are historically a resilient when .Martin Gramatica
passes since beinf drafted in
The Colts also have deeply team, are only a half-game missed a 43-yard field goal
2002 , is 2-1. loo ing like it rooted problems after losmg behind the Ravens and two . attempt with I :55 remaining
at
home
might actuall y move toward 23 _2 1
to games up on Cleveland and that could have ptn the Saints
the middle c;&gt;f the pack afte r Jack~onville, which got its Cincinnati , both 0-3.
ahead 35-34. This after blowbeing either at the top or bot- first win on Josh Scobee 's
The Titans are probably the ing a 21-3 lead in a game ·in
tom for almost three derades. 51 -yard field goal with 4 sec- most solid of the AFC 's which Drew Brees passed for
Yes , it's earl y. But the onds to play.
unbeaten teams, especially 421 yards against them.
Patriots and Colts. 66-14 and
The Jaguars are another with Kerry Collins stabilizOverall , the AFC may not
63- 17 over the past live regu- high1 y regarded ream that ing the quarterback position have any team equal to the
Jar seasons. are showing started 0-2 when injuries while Vmce Young over- top three in the NFC East,
problems that mij\ht not be required a massive reshuf- comes injuries to his knee which is 8-0 against outside
. fixed so easily. And lling of the offensive line. and his psyche. Collins, who opposition and might contain
Pittsburgh, the' only other And they really should have actually ran three times for the three best teams in the
team to.represe nt the AFC in won more easily. With DT Ed 30 yards on Sunday, is league right now: Dallas, the
the Super, Bowl during that Johnson released because of turnover-prone unless you Giants . and Philadelphia.
span . demonstrated serious off-field indiscretions and protect him. But with whose onl y loss was by four
leaks in its · offensive line. Bob Sanders, the Colts' most LenDale White and rookie points at the Cowboys.
That left Ben Roethlisberger, important run defender - Chris Johnson · running the Washington, which lost on
already playing with a sore not to mention the 2007 ball and a solid line, he's a opening night in the
shoulder, more bruised and Defensive Player of the Year much safer bet than Young Meadowlands, would be" a
bandaged afte r the Eagles got - out with an kle and knee right now.
contender in an_y other divinine sacks in their 15-6 win injuri es, Jacksonville (an for
The very physical Titans, sion.
'
in the battle of Pennsylvania . . 236 y*rds and held the ball who have allowed just 29
But the Brady injury points
It could be the beginning of for more than 41 of'the 60 points in three games, han- out what should be obvious
a major power shift in the minutes ..
died the Jag uars easily on to the power teams: Keep
But Peyton Manning , who opening day and, barring your QB healthy, because
league, especially in . the
AFC.
missed most of training camp injury, they look like an 11 -5, very few teams have backups
New England 's problem after minor knee surgery and 12-4 team , a good bet to win who are anywhere near as
without Brady is obvious: If is still working his way back the South.
good.
the Patriots fall behind by into form. did what he so
The Bills are young and
With 13 games to go. one
more than a score or two, often does, leading the Colts had to struggle to beat hit can change everything for
~att Cassel is not the quar- to the go-ahead score with 67 Oakland at home Sunday. anyone.

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TRANSACTIONS
Tuesday 's Sports Transactions
BASEBAll
American L~ague
TORONTO BLUE JAYS-Claimed LHP
Reid Santos on waivers from Cleveland.
National League
MILWAUKEE BREWERS-Signed a
lour-year affiliation agreement with
1 Wisconsin (MWL) . Activated IN F Russe ll
I Branyan and RHP Yovani Gallardo from
the 15-DL.
SAN DIEGO PADRE S---Announced tl'1e
resignation of Wally Joyner, hitting
coat;h .

Please see Dave or Brenda at the The Daily Sentinel, 111 Court Street, Pomeroy
or call 992-2155 for details. Ads must be paid for in advance.

r~~~-- ~-~J --~~ ~-~
I

Tueaday'a Gamea
-r;ampa Bay 5, Baltimore 2, 1st game
Tampa Bay 7, BaltimorEJ 5, 2ncl game
Boston 5, Cleveland 4
Kansas City 5, Detroit
N.Y. Yankees 3, Toronto 1
Te&gt;o:as 6, Oakland 4
Minnesota 9. Chicago White so,. 3
Seattle 9, L.A. Angels 6

National Basketball At~oclatfon
SAN ANTONIO SPURS-Signed G
George Hill.

FOOTBALL

National Football league
' NFL-Suspended New Orleans G
Jamar Nesbit four games for violating tt1e
NFL:s policy on anabolic steroids· and
related substances.
1 CINCINNATI BENGALS-Signed CB
, Jamar Fletcher. ·waived CB Geoffrey
Pope .
•
Wednesday's Games
Oakland (Eveland 9·8) at Texas 1 CLEVELAND BROWNS-Signed OL
(Harrison 8·31. 2:05p.m .
TraviS Leffew to the practrce squad
Cleveland (Carmona 8•71 at Boston Released Ol Nathan Bennett from tile .
practice squad.
(~:~p~1 - 1 ~~/:0fJ~~~Son 12 _11 ) at MINNESO.TA VIK INGS-Signed LB ·
Rufus Alexander to the practice squad.
Bahimore (liz 6_61 . 7:os p.m . ,
Released OL Isaiah Ross from the pracKanses City (Bannister 8-16) at Detn;&gt;it tice sQuad.
(Robertson 7... t QJ, 7 :05p.m.
NEW YORK JETs-Released TE Brad
N.Y. Yankees (Hughes 0-4) at Toronto Listorti and p Waylon Prather from the
practice squad.
(Burnett 18-10), 7:07p.m.
Chicago Wh1te Sox (Buehrle 14-1 1) at
HOCKEY .
Minnesota (Blackburn 10-10). 8 :10p.m.
National Hockey league
L.A. Angels .(Garland 14· 6) at Seattle
ANAHEIM DUCK5-Signed C Maxima
(F.Hernandez 9·11) , 10:10 p.m.
Macenauer and 0 Eric Regan to threeyear contracts.
'
TODAY 'S MLB LEADERS
BUFFALO SABRES-Assigned F Tyler
AMERICAN LEAGUE
Ennis, F Paul Byron, F Jacob La~a ce, D
BATTING-Mauer. Minneso ta , .329: Nick Crawford and D Jordon Southern to
Pedroia. Boston, .324; Kinsler, Texas, their junior teams.
.319: Ordqnez. Detroit .319: Youkllis,
PHOENIX COYOTES- Named John
Boston, .3t4 ; !Suzuki, Seattle , .3 12; Muckier senior adviso1" to the ge~eral
Dejesus, 1&lt;ansas City, .308: Morneau. manager. Signed Ulf Samuelsson, assoMinnesota.. 308.
Ciate coach, to a contract extension.
RUN$-Pedroia ,
Boston ,
117:
PITISBUAGH PENGUINS-Assigned
Granderson . Oetro11. 108; Markakis, F Kris Beech, F Ryan Stone, F Adam
Baltimore. ,105 : BRoberts, !Jaltimore, Henrich, F Aaron Boo"gaard, F Tim
105: A Rodriguez , New York, 103; Kinsler, Wallace . F Jonathan Frlewich . F David
Texas , 102: Peralta, Cleveland, 101 .
Gave. F Christopher Minard. 0 Deryk
ABI-Morne!lU,
M~nesota ,
129: Engelland, D T.J. Kemp, D Ben Lovejoy,
MICabrera, Deuoit, 125; Hamilton , D Joey Mormina and G David Brown to
Texas . J24 : Youkilis, Boston, 111 ; Hutf, Wilkes-Barre/Scranton (AHL).
Baltimore. 107; Ibanez. Seattle. 107:
WASHINGTON CAPlTALS- Re(urned
Mora, Baltimore, t 02 ..
Joel Broda . Stefan Della Rovere , Dmitry
HITS-Pedroia, Boston, 208; !Suzuki, Kugrys~ev, Bretl Leffler, Eric Mastery
SeaniEJ, 207: Morneau, Minnesota, 185 ; and Justi n Taylor to their junior teams.
Jolopez, Seattle, 184; Hamilton, Texas,
COLLEGE
184; Ibanez, Seattle, 184; Rlos, Toronto,
COLLEGIATE WATER POLO ASSOCI·
182 .
•
ATION- Named Lall ie Kamerman diracOOUBLE9-Pedroia, Boston , 53; tor of membership services.

o

1 Col. x .2" ' I

,I
I

I

Weekday
$13.56
.Sunday
$20.70

I

I

I'

2 Col. x 5"
Weekday
$67.80
Sunday
$103.50

1 Col. x 3" ,..

Weekday
. $20.34
Sunday
$31.05

50 CEI\'TS • Vol, ;;8, Nu. !'i4

• High school football
previews. See Page B1.

Borders and Artwork

BY BETH SERGENT
BSEAGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEl.COM

COLUMBUS - Despite
a nearly six month delay on
a hearing concerning an
appeal of its air permit-tostall issued earlier this year
by the qhio Bnvironmental
Protection
Agency,
America n
Municipal
Power-Ohio is moving for- ·
ward wit h plans for its $2.9
billion power plant.
. " It's. a de lay tactic on their
part, in my opinion ," AMPOhio
Senior
Communications Director
Kent Carson said about the
opponents of the plant who
requested the later hearing
date. "As far as we're concerned we ·can still build
thro ugh the appeal process."
Carson added the company will keep moving for-

'

w\\w.mydail)st'ntiiH"L&lt;·um

ward and is in final negotiations with a' contractor to
build the coal-fired power
plant called American
Power
Municipal
Generation Station.
The appeal · of AMPOhio's air permit-to-install
was filed by the National
Resources Defense Council.
Ohio
Environ mental
Council, Sierra Club and the
National Parks Conserv.ation
Association,
Knoxville ,
Tenn. (which is not to be
confused with the federa l
government's Natiomil Park
Service) in March against
OEPA
Director Chri s
Korlenski and AMP-Ohio.
The original prehearing
conference was set for I0
a.m .. Jan. 27. 2009 while
the de novo hearing was set
for 10 a.m., Feb . 9, 2009 .
The new dates . announced

by the Ohio Environmental tion. She added , according
Appeals to official documents associReview
Commiss ion hearing the ated with the case. AMPcase. '"~ July 27. 2009 for Ohio and Ohio EPA requestthe final prehearing confer- ed the Feb .. 9. 2009 hearing
ence and Aug . 3, 2009 for date while the NRDC. SietTa
the de novo hearing which Cl ub, etc . requested the
is permitted to continue Aug. J, 2009 hearing date.
until Aug. 21.2009. if necTom Cmar, counsel for
essary. This means the pro- NRDC and other opponents
ceedings have been pushed . of the plant in the case . said
back by six month s. ·
that date was one offered by .
Yesterday a spokesperson ERAC due to it s heavy
with ERAC said there had docket. Cmar attributed' this
been no official statement delay to Ohio EPA and
from the Commission as to · AMP-Ohio , say ing that at
why the decision to pus~ the times when both were
hearing back had been required to file papers for
made. The spokesperson the case "both asked for.
added there were likely a more time to do it."
number of wnt ributing facCmar fel t "after all those
tors th at led to the decision extensions were addc'd up'' ·
afte r rev iewing documents that it gave the NRDC a
submitted by all part ies and "short amount of time" to
taking the Comm ission's do soine of the most
busy docket into considera- "important" work in the

case . includin g deposing
witnesses and following up
other issues associated with
discoverv in the case.
"All 'we're askinu for in
light of the extensio ns that
have already been granted
to the Ohio EPA and AMPOhio is that we have an
equivalent extens ion so that
we could hav e adequate
time to prepare as well."
Cmar said.
Cmar denied any stalling
tactics.
'
·
··AMP-Ohio has a permi t.
they can bui ld the plant at
any time... he added . "The
on ly way this hearing wi ll
stall construction of the
.pl ant is if the permit is ille- ·
gal. If AMP is ri ght they
have nothing to worry
about. There·s n.o reason
why this should delay plans
in any way."
·

Sherift charges

16 criminal
·resoassinu at
mine properiJ

INSIDE
• Straight·talking
consetVative elected
Japanese prime
minister. See Page A2
• Study; Extending
time of stroke
drug treatment OK.
See Page A3
• 3 Ohio teens in
Cl,tstody after Alabama
chase. See Page AS
• $80M in cuts
coming to Ohio
agency for poor.
See Page AS
• Local Briefs .
See Page AS
• Reclaim Music
Festival coming
to Meigs County.
See Page A6
• Hocking schedules
· outdoor adventure.
'
See Page A6
• Entertainment Briefs.
See Page A6

Annie's Mailbox

As

Calendars

As

Classifieds

B3-4

Editorials

Bs
A4

Places to go

A6

Comics

Sports

BY BRIAN

J.

REED

BREED@ MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY - Six teen are
charged in Meigs ·county Court
,.................
with criminal trespassing, after
two men were injured in an allterrain vehicle accident on the
old Southern Ohio Coal Co.
property in Salem Township on
Saturday.
· Sheriff Robert Beegle said Jack
Shiller , 54, Cheshire , was transported tram the Consol Energy
property by medical helicopter,
and Shane Shuler, 22. Orient , was
taken by ambulance and later
medical helicopter fo r injuries.
They are among those fac ing
criminal trespassing charges.
Also charged are: Paul H.
Schuler. Rutland; Jeffrey Shiflet.
Rutland: Mary Schuler, Rutland;
Jessica Schuler. Rutland; Alicia
Roush, Rutland; Roger Cm1ch,
Middleburg ; .Chad Schuler,
Rutland; Amber Schltler, Rutland ;
James Gibbs, Middleport; Steven
Peckham , Middleport; Dana
Beckner, Middleport; Herbert
Roush , Rutland ; Andy · Doczi ,
.
Beth Sergontlphoto
Middleport; and Laura Brady.
Th
e
top
four
Meigs
County
Re
lay
For
Life
tea
ms
were
recently
honored
and
are
(second
from
left)
Diana
Jeffers repOrient.
Those are allegedly the owners · resenting Holzer Clinic Meigs , Sherri Sisson -representing Ernie's Line Crew, Mona Frecker representing Meigs
of all-terrain vehicles found on Intermediate School, Mary Beth (right) and Brylee Preston representing Farmers Bank's Moolah Makers. Also picthe property Saturday, Beegle tured from the' RFL Committee, Courtney Sim, JoAnn Crisp, as well as .Relay ~upporter, Shaggy.
said . They are expected to appear
in County Court on Oct. 2.
According to the sheriff's
accident report, Schuler was
stopped on his ATV when he was
Holzer Clinic Meigs Dedicate to a people here in Meigs County such as
BY BETH SERGENT
struck in the rear by an ATV
BSEAGENT@ MYDAILYSENTINEl.COM
Cure team and Farmers Bank's ·Reach
t,o
Recovery.
Look
Shiller was driving. No other
Moolah Makers .
Good ... Feel Better, Hope Lodge. and
details about the a~cident or the
POMEROY - After grossing
In add ition to team fundraisers, the ACS ' Ferman E. Moore Cancer
condition of the men injured is $52 ,788 and netting $47.528. the local schools ge nerated $7,377 via Resource Center.
avai lable, Beegle said.
Meigs County Relay For Life was mini -relays and other fu ndraisers
Crisp said: ''Ca ncer tuu~he s each
Beegle reported the following ·Considered a big success by the RFL and cooperate sponsors donated of us every day in some way. We all
investigations:
committee who recently honored the $ 12.193 .
can ' make a difference. ' The
. • Several reports of automo- top earning teams .
RFL Chairperson Jo Ann Crisp . Committee works hard all year long
biles being entered in the Racine
All teams raised a total of $32.672 said the local American Cancer for that one moment in time when we
and Dorcas areas. Some of the with Ern ie's Line Crew being the ' Soc iety Meigs County . Advisory can make a difference to a cancer
vehicles have had windows bro- only gold level RFL team which Board was very happy with the way survivor and t~eir family.''
ken to gain entry. Wallets. purses. raised $5,046. There we re three the community responded to the
As for next year's Relay. the top ·
money, checkbooks an'd medica- teams which came in at the si lver event desp.ite a tough economy and . four teams are already getting ready.
tions have been stolen. Beegle RFL fundrai sing level ( w~ich is some bad weather. '
Crisp and RFL Team Coordi nator
asked anyone wi th information $2,500-$5,000) and those were the
Cri sp pointed out· the event raises Courtney Sim wi ll attend the ACS'
about the theft cases to contact Meigs Intermediate School team. money for free programs that benefit Relay Summit tomorrow .
his oftlce , and advised residents
to put val uab les out of sig ht in
trunks rather than in sight.
Jeremy Lowe. Ravenswood.
W.Va .. reported the theft of his
for 2008, to date, are $60,550 more expenses, such as cou~ty payroll and
wallet and $100 from his vehiBY BRIAN J. REED
8AEEO@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM
other costs .
than last year.
cle, parked at the ·Park and Ride
Ironically, other counties. includThe July collections were ihe highnear the Ritchie Bridge . He was
POMEROY - Meigs "Coun ty col - est in the county since before ing some surrounding Meigs County.
walking to the Ohio River to fish
lected more from its one-percent January. 200 I. · when the auditor have seen a decline -in sales tax revat the time of the theft.
• Bobby Arnold, Sc ipio sales tax in July than it has collected began a monthly comparison. It enue, perhaps. Commissioner Jim
Township employee, reported in the seven years the co'i.mty aud itor places the year-to-date collections at Sheets said earlier thi s year. because
fewer people from outside those
$60.~50 over those of last year.
the theft of a chain saw and two- has tracked it.
Proceeds from t'he sa ler tax ha ve
The county is in the second year of counties are traveling there to shop .
gallon gasoline can from the
He said he believes local residents
been increasing for the past year, as increases in revenue from the tax,
township garage .
Beegle reported that Michael the high price of gasoline and other after several years of steep declines. are traveling less to shop for items they
Franc is was traJtsported to the economic· indicators c reate at least After the closing of several retail can easily purchase in the local area ,
Orient Reception Center to begin one benefit for the l0cal economy. ' outlets in the count y, revenue from such as groceries and household items.
"We are not doing tremendously
a sentence of eight years for
Auditor Mary Byer-Hill reported the tax dropped by nearly $100,000
escape. Four years of his sen- July sales
tax revenue of betwee n 200 I and 2006 .
better. but we are holding steady.
tence was su spended, and he will $125,794.29, an increase of over
lrr 2007. the county generated ·especially in light of what other
be placed on community contml $13,000 when compared to that of $ 1,I79 ,805 from the tax. and used it counties nearby are expcriet]Cing ,"
after serving the first four years. Jul y, 2007. The county's collections ro meet general fund operating Sheets said earlier this year.
'
'

Top

2 SECTIONS- 12 PAGES

2 Col. 'x 2"
Weekday
$27.12
Sunday
1.40

Tlll' RSilAY. S EJY('EM IIER 2;), 211118

,.

t1&gt;

Despite hearing delay, AMP goin·g forward

SPORTS

Detatts on Page AS

Weekday $40.68
Sunday $62.1 0

Printed on IOO 'il
Rrt::.)·cled ~ewsprint

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

2 Col. x 4"
Weekday
$54.24
Sunday
$82.80

;2 Col. x 3"

competition set
atWahama,A6

a

WEATHER

1

Marc~~ band

Bush warns of
'long and painful
recession,' .A2

.

BASKETBAll

x...clinched division
y-cllnched playoff spot

Wednesday, September 24,2008

B Section

Weather
© 2008 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

'Relay~

teams recognized

July sales tax revenue highest yet

�The Daily Sentinel

NAT

N

ol . gand

BUSh

WORLD

Page .A2
Thursday, September 25,

•

Straight-talking
conservative
eJected Japanese
prime minister

I

BY JENNIFER LOVEN
ASSOCIATED PRESS WR ITER

WASHINGTON
on
Pll'sLdent
Bush
Wcunesday
wm ned
Amenums and luv.'mdkel s
reluctant to pa&gt;s a $700 htl·
lion t manc1.1l rescu~ plan
th,LI [,u[mg Ill ,ICI f,lsl 11 sks
'' 1pmg out

1~tuement

sav -

mgs. nsl!lg lorcclosLJres.
lost JOhs ,md closed bliSI ·
nesses -- our entire economv

1 ~ 111

dcm2er.'' he

s~u d .

H1s due \\~rnmg came not
long at1c1 lhc prcstdent
tsslled extraord mary mvllallons to prcstdentt.d candt·
dates Barack Obam.t and
. John 1\kCtin. one of whom
will mhent the mess tn fo11r
months. as "ell as kev congresstonalleadcrs to a·w·h,te
House meetmg on Thutsday
to work on d compJOmJse
"Without tmmed1atc actton
: hy Con gr~ss. Amencan
. : COll ld sl ip 11110 d financt.tl
pamc and a d1stre ss mg scenario would unlold.'' Bush
: satd 111 a 12-mmllte pnmetime address from the While
House East Room that he
hoped wo11ld hdp tesclle hts
tough-sell bailout package
Bush expl !cl tl y endorsed
several of the changes that
have been demanded in
recent days Inmt the nght and
left But he w.uned that he
wo11ld dr.L'-' the hne ,ll regul a. !Jons he dete1mined .:auld
hampe1 el:onorl11c g10wth.
" It shou ld he endctcd as
soon as posSLhle ... the preSIdent s.ud.
The b,ulout, whtch the
Bush ad mmi slratLOn asked
Congress last weekend to
approve before 11 adJOUrns ,
is meetmg wi th deep skepticism. especmll y from conservati ves in Bush's own
party who are revolttng at
the hi gh pnce tag - and
unprecede nted pmate-sector mtervention. Though
there 1s genera l agreement

th at somethmg mu st be
done to address the sptraling eco nomic problems, the
timmg and even the stze of
the package remamed 111
doubt and the admumtration has bee n forced to
accept changes almost dail y.
Seekmg to explain himself
to conservattves, Bush
stressed he was reluctant to
put taxpaye r money on the
line to help busmesses that
had made bdd decisions and
. that the rescue is not aimed at
savmg mdtvtdual companies.
, He tried to address some of
. the maJor complamts from
. Democrats by promtsmg ,that
CEOs of failed companies
won't be rewarded .
"With
the
sttuatton
becoming moreJrecanous
by the day, I fac a choice.
to ste p in wtth dramatic
government actton or to
stand back and allow the
trres ponstbl e actiOns by
some · to undcrmme the
fmancial secll!IIY ol all,''
Bush sa1d "These are not
nom1al ctrcumstanccs"
The prestdent turned htmse lt tnto an ewnomtcs professor for much of the
add1ess. ttacing the origins of

Bv JOSEPH COLEMAN
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER
TOKYO - A qutck-smilin£ fmmer Olympic skeetsllt&gt;otci "1th a penchant for
t.ulorcd su1l s and manga
com1 c books took power as
Japa n's thtrcl pnme m 1mster
lit t" o \ ears Wed nesday,
vowt ng tt&gt; boost a JanguishJIH! econnmv.
L11vmakel·s elected Taro
Aso, " 6R -)ear-old conserv,lfive pop11la i With the
young .md hnown f01 hLS
st1 aight !.Ilk. alter quellmg
.tn .tt lempt by the upper
ho11s~ to In st,tll a nval as
prem ier
.
In h1 s fi rst news conference as pt em1er, he also
vowed to tcsc ue the "ruhng
party tram disaster in parl13me'ntary electtons. He
stacked h1 s Cab tn et with
felJm, t ight-leanmg veterans and pledged to go headto-head With the resurgent
oppostlton
"I appoltlted the right
people m the tt ght JObs so
th at we can live up to the
people 's expecta!lons," Aso
s,ud "We wil l head into the
AP photo elect tons w1th thts lmeup ,
President Bush poses for photographers after dehve nng a pnme-lime speech from the Wh1te House on Jhe admg finan- and wd l have a Iall' hght."
Cial markets Wed nesday in Washington
The fOimei foreign minister replaced the morose
the pt oblem baL·k a decade to would attend ,md "wt JI con· lime address to the natton 377 Bernanke take the lelld '-' Ilh Yasuo Fukuda. who strug,, hu ge mnu x of money Into tmue to work m a bipartisan days ago, on Iraq Thts one, reporters, lawmakers and gled dunn g h1s year tn
the U.S. system l'tom ovei - spit !! and do wh,ttever IS earned live by all five maJor the public. Bush remained office with a politically
seas, low imerest rates, the n ect:~sa ry to come up w1th a tele vision outlets. could be silent for days
d!vtded pa rli ament and
"fault~
assum ption" th at fmal soluti on " Semor the last of hiS preSidency.
Smce last Thu rsday. how- · cllrolllcally low public suphome val11es would contmue McCain
advtsers satd
White House and admtn- ever, the prestdent has pot t rattn gs Fukuda's preto skyrocket, easy lending by McCain will attend , too. The tStration offtcial s have talked about the cri sts decessm. Sh mzo Abe. also
mortgage compames, over- plans of the other mvitees warned repeatedly of a com- almost daily, although us11· lasted barely a year.
ally bnefly, and yet he stil l
borrowing by home owners were unknown, and the tng "ftnanctal calamity"
Aso , Buddhtsl Japan 's
and exuberant building by exact detatls of the meeting,
But that has not closed the has had trouble break m2 fu st Roman Catholic prewhtch Pet ina said was deal , which for many recalls into the debate ' News cov~ mtei. inhei1ts a stumblmg
construction firms.
But
while
generally atmed at making fast prevtous v.arnings of grave erage has barely menttoned economy. an unpo pu lar rulac know ledgmg nsky and progress ro stem the btggest threats from Bush - such Bush's comments .
Ing p.1rty and mounting
meltdov.n m as before the ltaq wa1 poorly thought-out financial financial
The deciston to pull out expectal! ons th,ll he wtll
dectstons at many levels of decades. were silll being set. that dtd not matenahze. So perhaps a prestdent 's lat gest call snap lowe1 house elecsociety, Bush never asSigned
In another move welcome Bush's goa l with hts speech available weapon - the ttons to p1 ove he has a manblame to any specific entity. at th e White House, Obama was to frame the debate in abiltty to demand a pres- d.lle to r11l e
such as lm admini sttation. and McCam issued a [Oint lavman's terms to show the ence on evening televtsion
Atm1n g to bol ster hts
the 4uast-mdepedent mort- statement urging lawmakers depths of the cnsts , explam screens nation wide, h om a st~l ndm g amo ng \oOters, Aso
gage g1at11 s Fanme Mae and - 111 d!fe terms - to act
how it affects the people 's setting with th e ultimate has struck a markedly pop"Now is a ttme to come daily lives and inspire the bully-pulpit power - ts one ulist note. vow mg to boost
Freddie Mac, 01 the Wall
Street fu ms that built rising together Democrats and publi c to demand action stgn that th e tescue package l1scal spendmg to prop up
still faced daunting hUidles. the economy and atd those
profits on mcreasmgly spec- Republicans 111 a sptnt of from Washmgton.
ulatt ve mortgage-bac ked cooperat ion for the sake of
Wtth so many c11ses hi! · sutfenn g am id the country 's
He sa1d that more bank s
tmg
the United States at financial tiOubles .
secunt1es Instead, he spoke the Ametican people," 11 could fail , the stock market
m terms of in vestment banks said. "The plan that has could plummet and erase once, the ptesidenllal race
"The
economy
has
that "found themselves sad- been submttted to Congress retirement accounts, busi· has taken a bac k se~t and so dec lined over the past year,
dled with" toxic assets and by 'the Bush admmistratlon nesses could find tl hard to has Bush's involvement in and we ha'e to thmk about
banks that " found them- is flawed, but the effort to get credit and be forced to pohttcs. Bu sh canceled a hov. to support the people,
selves" with questionable protect the American econo- close, wiping out jobs for fundraising tnp to Florida mcluding small and medtum
on We'dnesday to deal wtth stze busmesses,·' he smd .
milhons of Amencans.
my must not fail."
balance sheets
The two candidates - btt"Uittmately, our country the problem, the thtrd time
Aso has pledged not to
lntenstve, personal wheeling and dealing is not usuaJly terly fightmg each other ' for could experience a long and in a week that he has 1a1 se the 5 percent conBush 's style as prestdent, the White House but coming pamful recession," Bush scrapped his attendance at . sumption tax for 'at least
smd. "Fellow citizens, we . out-of-town fundraisets. three years. despite Japan's
unhke some predecessors. He together over this iss ue etther because of the market balloonmg def1 ctt.
qoes not often caJI or meet satd the sttuatton offers a must not let this happen ."
DLplomattcal ly , Aso indiBut he ended on a posittve turmoil or Hurricane Ike
wtth mdividual lawmakers to chance for polillcian s to
push a legislative pnority.
prove Washington's worth. . note, predicting lawmakers . The economic crists also IS cated that little would
But wtth the natton facmg
"Thts IS a time to rise would "rise to the occaston" almost certain to ovetshadow change He favms a close
the btggest fmanctal melt- above polittcs for the good and that the nation's econo- the rest of Bush's four months relatlonshtp v.ith Tokyo's
down in decades, Bush took of the country. We cannot my will overcome "a left m office and could hugely mam benefactor, the Untted
the unusual step of calling risk an economic catastro- moment of great challenge " tmpact hts legacy. It has been States, and he said he would
Democrat Obama personal- phe," they satd.
'rhrough the crisis, the assumed that the long-term pu sh to extend a U S .!~ about the meetmg, said
However, the Oval Office White House has struggled vtew of Bush's presidency b,tcked Jap,mese antt-terror
was to be shaped largely by misston in the lnd1&lt;1n Ocean.
pres identtal spoke swoman nvals were not putting poh- over how to deploy Bush .
Prestclenl Bush called Aso
Dana Penna While House IICS aside enttrely McCam
As the problem mush - Iraq ~ Humcane Katrina and
aides extended the invita- asked Obama to agree to roomed over the weekend the Sept. II , 2()() I , attacks on Wednesd.Iy to congt atutions to Republican McCam delay their first del:iare, sched- of Sept. 13. Bush generally Now, the dtre economic p!Ob- l,Ite him "and to Ieaffitm the
and to GOP and Democratic uled fm Fnday, to deal wllh stayed out of the lime light, Jems and the aftermath of the sllength of the U.S.-Japan
the meltdown Obama said letttn g Treasury Secretary government's attempted sol u- ,!lliancc." smd National
leaders from Capttol Htll.
Henry Paulson and Federal lton will cet1amly be added to Secwu y Council spokesman
Obama spokesman Bill the debate should go ahead.
Gordon Johnd1 oc .
Bush last gave a prime- Reserve Cha irrllan Ben that list.
Burton said the senatot
Aso could lace tro uble tl
he contmucs h1s record of
t uffhn g leatheiS ,,t home
and abroad with caustic offthe-cult co mments.
He tecent ly drew tre , for
U.S. dtplomats are talking ed today." Hemonen satd. about who ts m charge, or tf I mtllt on tons of ml undet a
some sort of transttion ts m February 2007 deal w1th the mstancc . by companng th e
wtth other nations Involved accordmg to tile statement
in bargainmg wtth the North
It also sa 1d North Korea the process of takmg place U.S., South Korea, Chin a, top oppoSI Ilon party to the
Nazts_ In 200 I , he was
at this wee.k 's meeting of bat red lAEA mspectors with the military. who have Russia and Japan.
the U.N. General Assembly. from further access to th e . ptobably not been too
But the accord hi t a bump lorced to apologize after
Any mo ve by Pyongyang Yongbyon nuclear com plex. happy to gtve up thetr m mtd -August when the saying the Ideal country
to restart Its nuclear proNorth Korea had SLgnaled (nuclear) trump card," said U.S refused to remove wou ld be one that attracts
gram "would only deepen m recent davs that tl would Roberr S Norris, senior North Kor~a from 'tts list ot "the ncilest Jewish people "
Aso, " hose ruling Liberal
Its Isolatton," Rtce warned bteak out ol the diSarma- resea rch assoc tate at the states that sponsor terronsm
''We strongly urge the N011~ ment deal. announcmg it NatUtal ResoUtces Defense until th e North accepts a Democr.tttc PUI1 y has ru led
to reconst.der these steps was making "thorough Counci l in Washington
plan f01 verifying a list of J,\pan nea1ly all of the past 53
and come back tmmedmtely preparattons" to restart
"Now that he ma y be nucl ear asse ts that th e yems. stopped short of set- '
mto compltance with 11s Yongbyon
weake ned -or who knows, Pyongyang regtme submtl· ung a date for snap eleCilons.
obl1gatt ons" under a· disar" What they've d9ne . LS dead
there may be ted to tts negoti attng part - By law. he has until next
September to call a ballot.
mament-lor-atd agreement trouble," said • Greg01y L eme1gmg . . a possi ble ners earher
OppoSit iUtl leaders immereached m stx-nation talks . Schulte. the chief US. dele- cli que of hard- liners who
Yongbyo n previously was
Hours
earli er.
the gate to the IA EA . South may want to play hard ball under IAEA seals in diately attacked the new
when government . accusmg Aso
lnternatwn al
Atomic Korean Prime Mmtstcr Han again," he a'dded
December 2002
Energy Agency announced . Seung-soo
ca ll ed
the
On the other hand , "thi s Pyongya ng ordered U N . of focuSin g so lely on stayth at North Korean officials N011h's actions ''very unfor- may be one more negotiat- inspectors out at the coun- '"£ 111 powet rather than
"inf01 med the IAEA inspec- tun ate" and "very Iegtet- ing ploy by them ," Norris try and restarted its nuclear put~mg together coherent
tors that they plan to mtto- table'' and urged patience in smd, alluding to North activities, aftet the unJavel - pol1ctes.
"E;verythmg. tncluding
Korea 's htstory of escalat- mg of an earlier deal comduce nuclear matenal to the dealing wtth the country.
But their comments were mg tenstons during tis inter- mitttng .the U.S. to help the the !.tree we JUst saw dunng
reprocessmg plant 111 one
measured ,- retlectmg con- nat ional negoti ations to try North budd a peaceful the LOP piestdency camweek's time ."
pai gn. IS geared toward
cerns
that harsh condemna- to increase its
The statement ftom the
. leverage and nuclear program
elccttons."
said lch1ro
North Korea ~li lt the
Vienna-based U.N. ageticy tion co ~l d backfire by wm concess ions.
The Yongbyon nuclear Nuclear Nonproltferation Ozawa. leacle1 of th e top
said Deputy IAEA Dtrector acceleratmg the North 's
pa 1t y.
the
General Olh Hemonen told move to restore its nuclear facilities were shut down Treaty m January 2003 . oppoSition
Then
on
Oct.
9,
2006,
11
set
Party
of
Japan.
Democratic
ons
and
then
sealed
as
part
of
a
operall
the IAEA board that alter a
Aso. howe'el. brings an
North Korea 's recent North Korean pledge to dts- off an underground test
req uest from North Korea ,
his mspectors temoved all moves have deepened the able tts nuclear program . exploston ot a nuclear bomb energy aml buoyancy to the
agency seals and surveil- guessi ng game abo ut lead- That was meant to be a step There was wide, pread mter- premJershtp th.n h.1sn 't been
lance equ ipment from the. ership tq Pyongyang. whe1e toward eventuall y disman - national condemnation, but seen since th_e wildly popureprocessmg plant and its Kim ts reportedly ill and tling the complex in return ' the U.S. also softened tts lm Jutll ehtro Kojzumi
· for. dtplomattc concesstons position and the stx-nat ion stepped down 111 2006 after a
tmmed1ate area
possibly mcapacttated.
length y li ve yea rs m office . ·
"There IS uncertamty and energy atd eqLuvalentto deal soon followed.
That work "was complet-

NKorea orders UN nuclear inspectors from plant
BY GEORGE JAHN
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

VIENNA. Austna
North Korea moved closer
to restartmg Its nu cleat
: arms ptogranl Wednesday,
barring U.N. 1nspectot s
. from its mam pluton ium
: reproce sst ng plant and
announcing 11 wtll react!. vate the faci hty that provid: ed the matenal fot its atomIC test blast.
The move fed fears about
a resurgent nuclear North
: Korea, but there also is
· spec11lation 11 might be
. motivated by negotiating
: strategy. Pyongyang could
: use the year needed to
· restart us sole reprocesSi ng
·. plant to wrest more concesSions from the U.S and oth·
. ers seekmg to end the .atomLC program
Still , commg amtd reports
leader Km1 Jong II suffered
a stroke. the nuclear tevei : sal ts ratsing nervousness
abou t a breakdown m the
international attempt to
· coax the North out of its
confrontatiOnal tsolatton . a
pomt
addressed
: Wednesday by Secretary of
State Condoleezza Rice.

.

•

2008

.

•

•

•

•

PageA3

&lt;The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, September

25, 2008

Study: Extending time of
stroke drug treatment OK
BY ALICIA CHANG
AP SCIE NCE WR TEA
LOS ANGELES
Stt okc sufferers can sllll
benelll from · clot-bust1ng
medi( Jnc even if they
receive 11 an ho11r or so
beyond the cunent threehour Window alter sy mptoms start , :m impot1.mt new
~tud, ~u~gc~h.

Tli~ ftr{dmg could paten tmll y extend treatment to
thou sands more people each
)&lt;'•II &lt;Ind p1e ve m many ftom
dtsabled.
bcmg
ldt
Ho" cver. 11 does not change
long-•a.mdtng advi ce that
stroke VICtim s seek Jnllnedt.tle hel p it they lee! sudden
numbtlcs s or weakness

Ill

the lace. arm or leg
"Don't wa 1t ," said Dr Lany
Goldstem. dnectot of Duke
Unl\erstty's stroke center and
." spokesman
tor the
Amencan Stroke Assoctd!Ion
"If }OU thmk you ~ue hav ing
symptoms. call 91 1."
The study by European
doctoiS lound th at th e dot
c!ISscJ ive t cou ld safely be
g1ven up to 4 1/2 hou1 s .tfter
the stall ol symp toms.
Results were pub liShed 111
Thursd,t) ·, New Eng land
Jou1 n,tlof Medtcine
Stroke IS the nalton's No.
.l kdler and tb e leachn g
cause ol disabtlity such as
p.tr&lt;~ly s ts or speech loss.
More
tb an
700,000
Amenc&lt;I ns suffer a new 01
recurrent stroke each ~cat
.tn d more th an 150 ,000 d1e
The most common strokes
res11 1t from a blood clot
blockmg an artcty suppl yin g blood to the bram, starv ing bt ain cell s of oxy~en
The best tteatment tS g1vmg patients the d111g TPA to
break up the clot and open the
m1e1y A hlrge federal stud y m
1995 showed that people
fared bettct when given the
dru~ w1thm three hours of the
stat1 ot a stroke. Beyond that.
studies IMve shown the dmg
can 1aLSe the 11sk of dangero11s bleeding m the bram and
may nul be as effective
Howeve r. only about a
th1rd of stroke V!Cltms seek
help th at last. and lewe r
than 5 pe1cent get TPA now.
·Some do&lt;; tots have been
trying to push the time limit.
· and th e new study IS the
'IM"est and most ngorous to
tcst that approach
Doctors
randomly
.tsst gned 82 1 stro ke pattent s
tn Ell! ope who were not
treated within three .hours to
teL'CiVC an intraveno us dose
ofTPA 01 a dummy d1ug 11p
.to 4 I /2 hours after symp·toms start ed.

Doctors found those
gtven TPA Jared better 52 percent survived wtthout
maJOI disabil1ty compa1ecl
with 45 percetll ol the othe1 s. The dru g gro11p had
more cases of ble e dm~ m
the bratn - 27 percem ~v'er­
sus 18 percent Howcve1, tl
was senous 111 onh about 2
percent The death. rate was
sm1tlar 111 both groLtps
The study w.ts funded b}
Boeh1 inge1
lngel hetm
Pharmaceuticals Inc .. whtch
markets TPA as Act !lyse
overseas TP&lt;\ LS sold 111
Nortb
Amenca
by
Genentech In ~: as Activase.
Last week, the s.tme
reseerch ets rep01ted si milar
tesu lts m a l e ~s ng.orous
obsetvattonal st11dy ol 664
stroke pattents also given
TPA &lt;I ftet three houts
Dr Lee Schwamm, direc tor
ol
Massac husetts
Ge neral Hospttal 's ac ute
sJroke progi.llll. estim ~t ed
that nearly 20.000 more
pat ients a yeat cou ld be
treated under the ttme
extension
" I stiUngly believe it has
th e potent tal to have a maJor
unp act on practtce'' Ill the
Umted
States,
sa id
Schwa mm , wbo had no !Ole
m the reseatch.
Some expetts v.o11 y that
some pallents mid dodors
may take thetr ttme trea tm g
sltokes given the ex tra wtn dow.
" It " vcrv cleai that ou1
foc;us must' remam on the
door-to need le ttm e_ Every
mtnute matteiS dunng a
stroke," Dr Pat!ick Lyden,
head ot the Umvetstty of
Ca ltlornia , San Diego
stroke center, wrote m an
acc:ompanying edttottal.
Stroke neurologtst Dr
Walter Koroshet z of the
National lnslltutes at Health
said treatment gll!delmes
deserve a fresh look "to tty to
bre,tk thts three-hourbanier.''
Ko ros hetz sa td tl 's not
clear whtcil patients mi ght
benefit most fr om th e extra
It me . Since the European
studv foc used on mtld
stroke cases. it 's unknown 1f
severe stroke victim s would
also benefit. he said .
Dr Kenneth Games, stroke
' director at N~w Orlean's
Ochsner Medical Center.
s~u d he might be more wt]l1ng to conSLder gtving TPA in
borderlme cases But he
remained concetn ed about
the bleedmg side el'l ects.
"The teal sulutiOll " to
move taster.'' Ga mes stud .
"There ts dt min iS hin!J retllrn
the lange i you delay ueatment."

AP MEDICAL WRITER

C HI CAGO - A regula. tot y groll p told hospitals
Wednesday to adopt stn ct
measures to prevent errors
InVO[vtng blood th!llnets
tncluding hepann - mtstake' that have been made
neatly 60.000 times and led
to d07e tt s of deaths 111
1ecent years.
The Jomt Comtmss ion
. tssl!cd a safety alert say mg
hospttals need to adopt preventi on measl!res that coul d
incl ude bar-codmg tec hnology for medicines or computenzetl dru g orders It
advLSed hospilal s to more
closely monitbr pattcnts on
these diUgs and make sure
that adlllt-sttength beparm
IS stored nowhere near chtl·
dren 's units
The alert said 28 deaths
:are among 32 reports of
drug errors mvolvmg bloocf
thumers that It received
' between 1997 and last year.
· "We know tha t there are
' many more (deaths) and .
that 's the reason for 1ssumg
'th LS alet1," smd Dr. Mark
Chassin . president of the
Oakbrook Terrace , Ill.- based commiSsion
, Recent errors include
acctdental ltfe-thteatening
hepann over!loses gt ven to
aetor Denni s Quatd's newborn twms &lt;Ll a Los ,A nge les
hospital last November. In
July , 14 babies tecetved
. acctdental hepann overdos es at a hospital m Corpus
Chnsti, Texas. ·
Comm•,ssion mvesti gators

China tainted milk crisis triggers global recalls
BY GtLLlAN WONG
ASSOCIATED PRESS WAITER

BEIJING - An mdustnal
chemtcal that made Its way
into Chm,1s dairy suppli es
and that authorittes blame m
th e death of four babi es has
tl!rned 11p m numerou s
Chin ese- made
exports
ahroau - f1om candtes to
yog urt to ri ce balls.
.
Bn t1sh supemMrket cham
Tesco removed Chmesemade White Rabbit Creamy
Candtes off tls shelves as a
precal!l!On amtd reports that
samples of the mtlk candy
m Smgapore and New
Zealand had tested posittve
for melamine - an mdu s11 ial chemtcal used to make
plastics and fertilizer
Chtnese baby formula
tainted wtth th e chemical
has been bl amed tor the
deaths of four mfants and
the Illnesses of 53,000 others 111 Chma. Health experts
s&lt;Ly mgest tn g a small
amount of the chemt ca l
poses no dan get , but
melamine can cause kidney
stones and lead to ktdney
fmhue. h1fants are parttcl!larly Vlllnerable.
More than a do zen co unt! ies h.tv e banned 01
recalled Chinese dairy p!oducts
the latest was
Ft ance whtch does nol
import Chmese dairy product s but has halted imports
of Chmese btsc utts, candy
or other foods that could
contain Chinese dairy denvattvcs. The go,ernment
wtll make unannounced vts· dcscnbed ·the meas ure as a
its to make sll! e hospttals are ptecaution
lndone sm on Wednesday
adoptmg strict meas ures to
also
dtstributed a list of 28
prevent blood thmner errors,
products
that 11 said may
and those who faLl to do so
could see thetr accreditation con tam tainted Chmese
milk , includmg Oreo cookrevoked. Chassin sa id .
The co mmi ss ion IS a pri - Ies, Smckers ba1 s and
vate group that sets hospttal M&amp;M chocolate candies.
U S and European constandards and accredns
safety officials urged
StLJnet
most of th e nation 's hospiBeijmg
to bettet enforce
tals. Acctedit&lt;ltLon hnn gs
prestige and fedetal dollars. product safety standards.
Tesco sa td that 11 had
A total of 59,316 med icawithdrawn
White Rabbit
lton errors mvolvmg blood
Candies
oft its
Cteamy
thinners we re report ed
bet..,een 200 I and 2006 to a shch es as a precautton The
dawbase tun by U S. candtes had been sold in a
Pharmacope ta , a gro up that small number of Tesco's
sets drug standard s, the alct t Bitlish stotcs as part of the
stud Near Iy 3 percent, or supermarket 's ethmc range
New Zealand 's Food
roughly 1.700, resulted m
S&lt;L
iety Allthonty recalled
pat tent harm or death, the
While Rabb tl candies after
commtsston satd.
Blood thmners are pat;tic- tests showed they contamed
ul arl y tncky to use because dangerously high levels of
too much can ca use hard-to- melamine and advised peoco~trol bleedmg internally ple not to eat them
·:Th ts product contams
and from every body opensullicietltly
h1gh levels ot
mg , too l!ltle can resu lt in
lite-threatemn g blood clot s. melam ine which may. in
some tn divtdual s , cause
Chass in satd
Heparin is usually gtve n hea lth problems such as
Warfann, ktdney stones." deputy chief
mtra veno usly.
another bl ood thmner cJted executtve of the authority,
in the alert. IS available m Sandra Daly, satd m a statepill s pal!ents can take at ment
New Zealand ex pected all
home but can cause bad
reacttons when mi xed with Whtte Rabbtt sweets to be
off she lves Within 24 hou rs
other medtci nes.
The
recommendations and was testmg numerous
"absolutely" wtll make a other ptoducts for melamme
dtffe tence and hospttal s will contamination, said Food
pay atte ntion , said James· Safety Authonty spokesman
Conway. semor v1ce pres i- Geolf Allen .
"We are looking at a w1de
dent of the nonp rofi t
In stitute tor Healthcare tange of products ... pnmarily
in baby fort11ulas as they pose
Impro vement
the hi ghest nsk, and now
Cambndge. Mass.

·Regulator says hospitals
.need strict heparin rules
BY LINDSEY TANNER

AP photo
A researcher prepares to test m1lk samples collected from stores, at a government food safety laboratory In Wuhan in
central Chma's Hubei provmce Tuesday China's government pledged Tuesday to crack down on a milk-gathenng system that was "out of control," after tamted baby formula sickened nearly 53,000 Ch1n~se 1ntants and left four dead.

v.e're movmg throu gh aH the
othet . . products that may
contam adulterated milk .'' he
told Nattonal Radto.
Melamme has been tound
in infant formula and other
milk products ft om 22
Chmesc !)all y companies
Supphers ' rymg to cut cost&gt;
are believed to have added
II to watered -down milk
because tls ht gh n1trogen
content masks the resultmg
protetn deftciency
Smgapore 's . Agn-Food
and Veterinary Authority,
known as AVA, recalled
Whtte Rabbit candtes earher
tht s
week
and
satd
more
Wedne sday th at
Chmese-made food had test
ed positive for melamme.
includmg Dutch Lady-brand
banana and honeydew fla vored milk. Silang-btand
potato cra ckers and two
kmds ot puffed nee balls.
The crac kers and nee
ball s li sted milk as mgredtents.
The U.S Food and Drug
AdminiStration · satd White
Rabbit candy has · bee n
added to its list of products
bemg mspccted ,at port s of
entry, but that no melami~e ­
ta inted goods !rom Chtna of
any sort have turned up yet.
Nonetheless. some ethmc
grocers started removmg
th e popular candies lrom
th etr shelves
A woman who UIJswered
the
phone
at
AsianFoodGrocer.com m San
Francisco said the company is
no longer selling White
Rabbit cand tes . "Everythmg
has been taken oft~ hne," satd
the woman. who would not
g1ve her name.
In New York Wednesday,
China's prem1er sought to
ease tlfe growing concern
abroad over the growin g
cn sts over Chmese food
exports by vow mg to
strengthen product safety
checks and .meet mternattonal standards.
Chma nee ds to better

enforce checks at eve ry
stage ot produc(!on and step
up efforts to protect consumer interests, Premier
Wen J tabao satd on the stdelt nes of a mcetmg of the
U.N. General Assembly.
''We want to make sure
that our products and our
food will not only meet the
domesttc and mtcnmtional
standards , but also meet the
specttic reqUirements of the
Ltllport countnes," Wen _satd
at an event organized by
American orgamzattons
Also
Wedn esday ,
a
Chinese offtcial tssued a
publi c apology to consum ers m Ta1w.tn as the
tsland 's pres ident , who won
March elections on a platlorm of closet economic
t1es w1th the mamland ,
blasted Chmese mtlk pro·
ducers.
"I condemn the mainland
manufacturers that have
produced fake milk and
datry creamer," Ma Yingjeou satd.
Authorities there ordered
160 products containing
Chmese milk and vegetablebased protems off store
shelves. say mg the goods
had to be tested befo1 e they
can go back on sale.
" We !eel
ex tremely
painful about the damage
that the milk pov.der
brought to people m
Taiwan Our gove rnment
attaches great tmportance to
tt and IS takmg a set ies of
measures to mtmmize the
damage and mtluence,'' sa 1d
L1 Wei yi, a spokesman for
the State Council Tmwan
Affatrs Office.
Speaking m Chma. where
U.S. and European offtcials
were attending seminars on
product safety, a U.S. offi cial satd China 's troubles
with contamm ated mtlk
highlight the need for better
enforcement of product
si)fety standards m manutacturmg
"The melamine sttuation

Annual

just underscores the message
that we are try mg to de li ver,
and that IS you have to know
what's cnmtng into your factor~ and what's gomg out of
you1 factory." sa id Nancy
Nord , actmg head of the U S
Consumer Products Safety
Commiss ion .

The Ch mese government
has been scramb lmg to
show tl is tackling the ptOblem In recent days. the govern ment anno unced htgh pt ofi le arrests and forced
res ignations of officials
The datt ~ at the centet of
the scandal , Sanlu Group
Co . will not be able to
recover fto m the damage tl
has suflered to its reputation , t'ts New Zea land partner sa 1d Wednesday . An
uwesttgallon mto the contammatton found
Sanlu
recetved complai nts about
LIS mfant formul a as early as
December 2007 and covered up the problem f01
months, state med ta teported earlier thts week
The Chmese go,ern ment
has taken control ot Sanlu.
which IS 43 percent owned
by New Zealand 's Fonterra
Cooperatt ve, and sh11t down
tis operatt ons. Fonterra
CIHef Execu ll ve Andrew
Feme r said at a briefing.
Sanlu ts based m northern
Chtna 's He bet prov tnce.
'·Sanlu has been damaged
very badly by tht s tragedy.''
Ferrier told rep01ters as he
announced Fonterra's annual results. "The brand cannot be reconstru cted "
There was no immediate
res ponse Wednesday from
Sanlu . Several calls dunng
the day were answered by
temporary workers in the
co mpan y's med ia depatlment who took down questtons but scud it was up to
seni or company offi cials to
dectde whether to reply. The
workers refused to gtve
thetr names, which IS common
among
Cb mese
employees.

Co.

SAlE ·""""

FRIDAY,

SEPT. 26

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ii!IIJ&gt;!!: .

Irish

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$10 OFF

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Route 2 Bypass Point Pleasant, WV

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Mon Sat 9 6, Sun 12-5

�The Daily Sentinel

NAT

N

ol . gand

BUSh

WORLD

Page .A2
Thursday, September 25,

•

Straight-talking
conservative
eJected Japanese
prime minister

I

BY JENNIFER LOVEN
ASSOCIATED PRESS WR ITER

WASHINGTON
on
Pll'sLdent
Bush
Wcunesday
wm ned
Amenums and luv.'mdkel s
reluctant to pa&gt;s a $700 htl·
lion t manc1.1l rescu~ plan
th,LI [,u[mg Ill ,ICI f,lsl 11 sks
'' 1pmg out

1~tuement

sav -

mgs. nsl!lg lorcclosLJres.
lost JOhs ,md closed bliSI ·
nesses -- our entire economv

1 ~ 111

dcm2er.'' he

s~u d .

H1s due \\~rnmg came not
long at1c1 lhc prcstdent
tsslled extraord mary mvllallons to prcstdentt.d candt·
dates Barack Obam.t and
. John 1\kCtin. one of whom
will mhent the mess tn fo11r
months. as "ell as kev congresstonalleadcrs to a·w·h,te
House meetmg on Thutsday
to work on d compJOmJse
"Without tmmed1atc actton
: hy Con gr~ss. Amencan
. : COll ld sl ip 11110 d financt.tl
pamc and a d1stre ss mg scenario would unlold.'' Bush
: satd 111 a 12-mmllte pnmetime address from the While
House East Room that he
hoped wo11ld hdp tesclle hts
tough-sell bailout package
Bush expl !cl tl y endorsed
several of the changes that
have been demanded in
recent days Inmt the nght and
left But he w.uned that he
wo11ld dr.L'-' the hne ,ll regul a. !Jons he dete1mined .:auld
hampe1 el:onorl11c g10wth.
" It shou ld he endctcd as
soon as posSLhle ... the preSIdent s.ud.
The b,ulout, whtch the
Bush ad mmi slratLOn asked
Congress last weekend to
approve before 11 adJOUrns ,
is meetmg wi th deep skepticism. especmll y from conservati ves in Bush's own
party who are revolttng at
the hi gh pnce tag - and
unprecede nted pmate-sector mtervention. Though
there 1s genera l agreement

th at somethmg mu st be
done to address the sptraling eco nomic problems, the
timmg and even the stze of
the package remamed 111
doubt and the admumtration has bee n forced to
accept changes almost dail y.
Seekmg to explain himself
to conservattves, Bush
stressed he was reluctant to
put taxpaye r money on the
line to help busmesses that
had made bdd decisions and
. that the rescue is not aimed at
savmg mdtvtdual companies.
, He tried to address some of
. the maJor complamts from
. Democrats by promtsmg ,that
CEOs of failed companies
won't be rewarded .
"With
the
sttuatton
becoming moreJrecanous
by the day, I fac a choice.
to ste p in wtth dramatic
government actton or to
stand back and allow the
trres ponstbl e actiOns by
some · to undcrmme the
fmancial secll!IIY ol all,''
Bush sa1d "These are not
nom1al ctrcumstanccs"
The prestdent turned htmse lt tnto an ewnomtcs professor for much of the
add1ess. ttacing the origins of

Bv JOSEPH COLEMAN
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER
TOKYO - A qutck-smilin£ fmmer Olympic skeetsllt&gt;otci "1th a penchant for
t.ulorcd su1l s and manga
com1 c books took power as
Japa n's thtrcl pnme m 1mster
lit t" o \ ears Wed nesday,
vowt ng tt&gt; boost a JanguishJIH! econnmv.
L11vmakel·s elected Taro
Aso, " 6R -)ear-old conserv,lfive pop11la i With the
young .md hnown f01 hLS
st1 aight !.Ilk. alter quellmg
.tn .tt lempt by the upper
ho11s~ to In st,tll a nval as
prem ier
.
In h1 s fi rst news conference as pt em1er, he also
vowed to tcsc ue the "ruhng
party tram disaster in parl13me'ntary electtons. He
stacked h1 s Cab tn et with
felJm, t ight-leanmg veterans and pledged to go headto-head With the resurgent
oppostlton
"I appoltlted the right
people m the tt ght JObs so
th at we can live up to the
people 's expecta!lons," Aso
s,ud "We wil l head into the
AP photo elect tons w1th thts lmeup ,
President Bush poses for photographers after dehve nng a pnme-lime speech from the Wh1te House on Jhe admg finan- and wd l have a Iall' hght."
Cial markets Wed nesday in Washington
The fOimei foreign minister replaced the morose
the pt oblem baL·k a decade to would attend ,md "wt JI con· lime address to the natton 377 Bernanke take the lelld '-' Ilh Yasuo Fukuda. who strug,, hu ge mnu x of money Into tmue to work m a bipartisan days ago, on Iraq Thts one, reporters, lawmakers and gled dunn g h1s year tn
the U.S. system l'tom ovei - spit !! and do wh,ttever IS earned live by all five maJor the public. Bush remained office with a politically
seas, low imerest rates, the n ect:~sa ry to come up w1th a tele vision outlets. could be silent for days
d!vtded pa rli ament and
"fault~
assum ption" th at fmal soluti on " Semor the last of hiS preSidency.
Smce last Thu rsday. how- · cllrolllcally low public suphome val11es would contmue McCain
advtsers satd
White House and admtn- ever, the prestdent has pot t rattn gs Fukuda's preto skyrocket, easy lending by McCain will attend , too. The tStration offtcial s have talked about the cri sts decessm. Sh mzo Abe. also
mortgage compames, over- plans of the other mvitees warned repeatedly of a com- almost daily, although us11· lasted barely a year.
ally bnefly, and yet he stil l
borrowing by home owners were unknown, and the tng "ftnanctal calamity"
Aso , Buddhtsl Japan 's
and exuberant building by exact detatls of the meeting,
But that has not closed the has had trouble break m2 fu st Roman Catholic prewhtch Pet ina said was deal , which for many recalls into the debate ' News cov~ mtei. inhei1ts a stumblmg
construction firms.
But
while
generally atmed at making fast prevtous v.arnings of grave erage has barely menttoned economy. an unpo pu lar rulac know ledgmg nsky and progress ro stem the btggest threats from Bush - such Bush's comments .
Ing p.1rty and mounting
meltdov.n m as before the ltaq wa1 poorly thought-out financial financial
The deciston to pull out expectal! ons th,ll he wtll
dectstons at many levels of decades. were silll being set. that dtd not matenahze. So perhaps a prestdent 's lat gest call snap lowe1 house elecsociety, Bush never asSigned
In another move welcome Bush's goa l with hts speech available weapon - the ttons to p1 ove he has a manblame to any specific entity. at th e White House, Obama was to frame the debate in abiltty to demand a pres- d.lle to r11l e
such as lm admini sttation. and McCam issued a [Oint lavman's terms to show the ence on evening televtsion
Atm1n g to bol ster hts
the 4uast-mdepedent mort- statement urging lawmakers depths of the cnsts , explam screens nation wide, h om a st~l ndm g amo ng \oOters, Aso
gage g1at11 s Fanme Mae and - 111 d!fe terms - to act
how it affects the people 's setting with th e ultimate has struck a markedly pop"Now is a ttme to come daily lives and inspire the bully-pulpit power - ts one ulist note. vow mg to boost
Freddie Mac, 01 the Wall
Street fu ms that built rising together Democrats and publi c to demand action stgn that th e tescue package l1scal spendmg to prop up
still faced daunting hUidles. the economy and atd those
profits on mcreasmgly spec- Republicans 111 a sptnt of from Washmgton.
ulatt ve mortgage-bac ked cooperat ion for the sake of
Wtth so many c11ses hi! · sutfenn g am id the country 's
He sa1d that more bank s
tmg
the United States at financial tiOubles .
secunt1es Instead, he spoke the Ametican people," 11 could fail , the stock market
m terms of in vestment banks said. "The plan that has could plummet and erase once, the ptesidenllal race
"The
economy
has
that "found themselves sad- been submttted to Congress retirement accounts, busi· has taken a bac k se~t and so dec lined over the past year,
dled with" toxic assets and by 'the Bush admmistratlon nesses could find tl hard to has Bush's involvement in and we ha'e to thmk about
banks that " found them- is flawed, but the effort to get credit and be forced to pohttcs. Bu sh canceled a hov. to support the people,
selves" with questionable protect the American econo- close, wiping out jobs for fundraising tnp to Florida mcluding small and medtum
on We'dnesday to deal wtth stze busmesses,·' he smd .
milhons of Amencans.
my must not fail."
balance sheets
The two candidates - btt"Uittmately, our country the problem, the thtrd time
Aso has pledged not to
lntenstve, personal wheeling and dealing is not usuaJly terly fightmg each other ' for could experience a long and in a week that he has 1a1 se the 5 percent conBush 's style as prestdent, the White House but coming pamful recession," Bush scrapped his attendance at . sumption tax for 'at least
smd. "Fellow citizens, we . out-of-town fundraisets. three years. despite Japan's
unhke some predecessors. He together over this iss ue etther because of the market balloonmg def1 ctt.
qoes not often caJI or meet satd the sttuatton offers a must not let this happen ."
DLplomattcal ly , Aso indiBut he ended on a posittve turmoil or Hurricane Ike
wtth mdividual lawmakers to chance for polillcian s to
push a legislative pnority.
prove Washington's worth. . note, predicting lawmakers . The economic crists also IS cated that little would
But wtth the natton facmg
"Thts IS a time to rise would "rise to the occaston" almost certain to ovetshadow change He favms a close
the btggest fmanctal melt- above polittcs for the good and that the nation's econo- the rest of Bush's four months relatlonshtp v.ith Tokyo's
down in decades, Bush took of the country. We cannot my will overcome "a left m office and could hugely mam benefactor, the Untted
the unusual step of calling risk an economic catastro- moment of great challenge " tmpact hts legacy. It has been States, and he said he would
Democrat Obama personal- phe," they satd.
'rhrough the crisis, the assumed that the long-term pu sh to extend a U S .!~ about the meetmg, said
However, the Oval Office White House has struggled vtew of Bush's presidency b,tcked Jap,mese antt-terror
was to be shaped largely by misston in the lnd1&lt;1n Ocean.
pres identtal spoke swoman nvals were not putting poh- over how to deploy Bush .
Prestclenl Bush called Aso
Dana Penna While House IICS aside enttrely McCam
As the problem mush - Iraq ~ Humcane Katrina and
aides extended the invita- asked Obama to agree to roomed over the weekend the Sept. II , 2()() I , attacks on Wednesd.Iy to congt atutions to Republican McCam delay their first del:iare, sched- of Sept. 13. Bush generally Now, the dtre economic p!Ob- l,Ite him "and to Ieaffitm the
and to GOP and Democratic uled fm Fnday, to deal wllh stayed out of the lime light, Jems and the aftermath of the sllength of the U.S.-Japan
the meltdown Obama said letttn g Treasury Secretary government's attempted sol u- ,!lliancc." smd National
leaders from Capttol Htll.
Henry Paulson and Federal lton will cet1amly be added to Secwu y Council spokesman
Obama spokesman Bill the debate should go ahead.
Gordon Johnd1 oc .
Bush last gave a prime- Reserve Cha irrllan Ben that list.
Burton said the senatot
Aso could lace tro uble tl
he contmucs h1s record of
t uffhn g leatheiS ,,t home
and abroad with caustic offthe-cult co mments.
He tecent ly drew tre , for
U.S. dtplomats are talking ed today." Hemonen satd. about who ts m charge, or tf I mtllt on tons of ml undet a
some sort of transttion ts m February 2007 deal w1th the mstancc . by companng th e
wtth other nations Involved accordmg to tile statement
in bargainmg wtth the North
It also sa 1d North Korea the process of takmg place U.S., South Korea, Chin a, top oppoSI Ilon party to the
Nazts_ In 200 I , he was
at this wee.k 's meeting of bat red lAEA mspectors with the military. who have Russia and Japan.
the U.N. General Assembly. from further access to th e . ptobably not been too
But the accord hi t a bump lorced to apologize after
Any mo ve by Pyongyang Yongbyon nuclear com plex. happy to gtve up thetr m mtd -August when the saying the Ideal country
to restart Its nuclear proNorth Korea had SLgnaled (nuclear) trump card," said U.S refused to remove wou ld be one that attracts
gram "would only deepen m recent davs that tl would Roberr S Norris, senior North Kor~a from 'tts list ot "the ncilest Jewish people "
Aso, " hose ruling Liberal
Its Isolatton," Rtce warned bteak out ol the diSarma- resea rch assoc tate at the states that sponsor terronsm
''We strongly urge the N011~ ment deal. announcmg it NatUtal ResoUtces Defense until th e North accepts a Democr.tttc PUI1 y has ru led
to reconst.der these steps was making "thorough Counci l in Washington
plan f01 verifying a list of J,\pan nea1ly all of the past 53
and come back tmmedmtely preparattons" to restart
"Now that he ma y be nucl ear asse ts that th e yems. stopped short of set- '
mto compltance with 11s Yongbyon
weake ned -or who knows, Pyongyang regtme submtl· ung a date for snap eleCilons.
obl1gatt ons" under a· disar" What they've d9ne . LS dead
there may be ted to tts negoti attng part - By law. he has until next
September to call a ballot.
mament-lor-atd agreement trouble," said • Greg01y L eme1gmg . . a possi ble ners earher
OppoSit iUtl leaders immereached m stx-nation talks . Schulte. the chief US. dele- cli que of hard- liners who
Yongbyo n previously was
Hours
earli er.
the gate to the IA EA . South may want to play hard ball under IAEA seals in diately attacked the new
when government . accusmg Aso
lnternatwn al
Atomic Korean Prime Mmtstcr Han again," he a'dded
December 2002
Energy Agency announced . Seung-soo
ca ll ed
the
On the other hand , "thi s Pyongya ng ordered U N . of focuSin g so lely on stayth at North Korean officials N011h's actions ''very unfor- may be one more negotiat- inspectors out at the coun- '"£ 111 powet rather than
"inf01 med the IAEA inspec- tun ate" and "very Iegtet- ing ploy by them ," Norris try and restarted its nuclear put~mg together coherent
tors that they plan to mtto- table'' and urged patience in smd, alluding to North activities, aftet the unJavel - pol1ctes.
"E;verythmg. tncluding
Korea 's htstory of escalat- mg of an earlier deal comduce nuclear matenal to the dealing wtth the country.
But their comments were mg tenstons during tis inter- mitttng .the U.S. to help the the !.tree we JUst saw dunng
reprocessmg plant 111 one
measured ,- retlectmg con- nat ional negoti ations to try North budd a peaceful the LOP piestdency camweek's time ."
pai gn. IS geared toward
cerns
that harsh condemna- to increase its
The statement ftom the
. leverage and nuclear program
elccttons."
said lch1ro
North Korea ~li lt the
Vienna-based U.N. ageticy tion co ~l d backfire by wm concess ions.
The Yongbyon nuclear Nuclear Nonproltferation Ozawa. leacle1 of th e top
said Deputy IAEA Dtrector acceleratmg the North 's
pa 1t y.
the
General Olh Hemonen told move to restore its nuclear facilities were shut down Treaty m January 2003 . oppoSition
Then
on
Oct.
9,
2006,
11
set
Party
of
Japan.
Democratic
ons
and
then
sealed
as
part
of
a
operall
the IAEA board that alter a
Aso. howe'el. brings an
North Korea 's recent North Korean pledge to dts- off an underground test
req uest from North Korea ,
his mspectors temoved all moves have deepened the able tts nuclear program . exploston ot a nuclear bomb energy aml buoyancy to the
agency seals and surveil- guessi ng game abo ut lead- That was meant to be a step There was wide, pread mter- premJershtp th.n h.1sn 't been
lance equ ipment from the. ership tq Pyongyang. whe1e toward eventuall y disman - national condemnation, but seen since th_e wildly popureprocessmg plant and its Kim ts reportedly ill and tling the complex in return ' the U.S. also softened tts lm Jutll ehtro Kojzumi
· for. dtplomattc concesstons position and the stx-nat ion stepped down 111 2006 after a
tmmed1ate area
possibly mcapacttated.
length y li ve yea rs m office . ·
"There IS uncertamty and energy atd eqLuvalentto deal soon followed.
That work "was complet-

NKorea orders UN nuclear inspectors from plant
BY GEORGE JAHN
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

VIENNA. Austna
North Korea moved closer
to restartmg Its nu cleat
: arms ptogranl Wednesday,
barring U.N. 1nspectot s
. from its mam pluton ium
: reproce sst ng plant and
announcing 11 wtll react!. vate the faci hty that provid: ed the matenal fot its atomIC test blast.
The move fed fears about
a resurgent nuclear North
: Korea, but there also is
· spec11lation 11 might be
. motivated by negotiating
: strategy. Pyongyang could
: use the year needed to
· restart us sole reprocesSi ng
·. plant to wrest more concesSions from the U.S and oth·
. ers seekmg to end the .atomLC program
Still , commg amtd reports
leader Km1 Jong II suffered
a stroke. the nuclear tevei : sal ts ratsing nervousness
abou t a breakdown m the
international attempt to
· coax the North out of its
confrontatiOnal tsolatton . a
pomt
addressed
: Wednesday by Secretary of
State Condoleezza Rice.

.

•

2008

.

•

•

•

•

PageA3

&lt;The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, September

25, 2008

Study: Extending time of
stroke drug treatment OK
BY ALICIA CHANG
AP SCIE NCE WR TEA
LOS ANGELES
Stt okc sufferers can sllll
benelll from · clot-bust1ng
medi( Jnc even if they
receive 11 an ho11r or so
beyond the cunent threehour Window alter sy mptoms start , :m impot1.mt new
~tud, ~u~gc~h.

Tli~ ftr{dmg could paten tmll y extend treatment to
thou sands more people each
)&lt;'•II &lt;Ind p1e ve m many ftom
dtsabled.
bcmg
ldt
Ho" cver. 11 does not change
long-•a.mdtng advi ce that
stroke VICtim s seek Jnllnedt.tle hel p it they lee! sudden
numbtlcs s or weakness

Ill

the lace. arm or leg
"Don't wa 1t ," said Dr Lany
Goldstem. dnectot of Duke
Unl\erstty's stroke center and
." spokesman
tor the
Amencan Stroke Assoctd!Ion
"If }OU thmk you ~ue hav ing
symptoms. call 91 1."
The study by European
doctoiS lound th at th e dot
c!ISscJ ive t cou ld safely be
g1ven up to 4 1/2 hou1 s .tfter
the stall ol symp toms.
Results were pub liShed 111
Thursd,t) ·, New Eng land
Jou1 n,tlof Medtcine
Stroke IS the nalton's No.
.l kdler and tb e leachn g
cause ol disabtlity such as
p.tr&lt;~ly s ts or speech loss.
More
tb an
700,000
Amenc&lt;I ns suffer a new 01
recurrent stroke each ~cat
.tn d more th an 150 ,000 d1e
The most common strokes
res11 1t from a blood clot
blockmg an artcty suppl yin g blood to the bram, starv ing bt ain cell s of oxy~en
The best tteatment tS g1vmg patients the d111g TPA to
break up the clot and open the
m1e1y A hlrge federal stud y m
1995 showed that people
fared bettct when given the
dru~ w1thm three hours of the
stat1 ot a stroke. Beyond that.
studies IMve shown the dmg
can 1aLSe the 11sk of dangero11s bleeding m the bram and
may nul be as effective
Howeve r. only about a
th1rd of stroke V!Cltms seek
help th at last. and lewe r
than 5 pe1cent get TPA now.
·Some do&lt;; tots have been
trying to push the time limit.
· and th e new study IS the
'IM"est and most ngorous to
tcst that approach
Doctors
randomly
.tsst gned 82 1 stro ke pattent s
tn Ell! ope who were not
treated within three .hours to
teL'CiVC an intraveno us dose
ofTPA 01 a dummy d1ug 11p
.to 4 I /2 hours after symp·toms start ed.

Doctors found those
gtven TPA Jared better 52 percent survived wtthout
maJOI disabil1ty compa1ecl
with 45 percetll ol the othe1 s. The dru g gro11p had
more cases of ble e dm~ m
the bratn - 27 percem ~v'er­
sus 18 percent Howcve1, tl
was senous 111 onh about 2
percent The death. rate was
sm1tlar 111 both groLtps
The study w.ts funded b}
Boeh1 inge1
lngel hetm
Pharmaceuticals Inc .. whtch
markets TPA as Act !lyse
overseas TP&lt;\ LS sold 111
Nortb
Amenca
by
Genentech In ~: as Activase.
Last week, the s.tme
reseerch ets rep01ted si milar
tesu lts m a l e ~s ng.orous
obsetvattonal st11dy ol 664
stroke pattents also given
TPA &lt;I ftet three houts
Dr Lee Schwamm, direc tor
ol
Massac husetts
Ge neral Hospttal 's ac ute
sJroke progi.llll. estim ~t ed
that nearly 20.000 more
pat ients a yeat cou ld be
treated under the ttme
extension
" I stiUngly believe it has
th e potent tal to have a maJor
unp act on practtce'' Ill the
Umted
States,
sa id
Schwa mm , wbo had no !Ole
m the reseatch.
Some expetts v.o11 y that
some pallents mid dodors
may take thetr ttme trea tm g
sltokes given the ex tra wtn dow.
" It " vcrv cleai that ou1
foc;us must' remam on the
door-to need le ttm e_ Every
mtnute matteiS dunng a
stroke," Dr Pat!ick Lyden,
head ot the Umvetstty of
Ca ltlornia , San Diego
stroke center, wrote m an
acc:ompanying edttottal.
Stroke neurologtst Dr
Walter Koroshet z of the
National lnslltutes at Health
said treatment gll!delmes
deserve a fresh look "to tty to
bre,tk thts three-hourbanier.''
Ko ros hetz sa td tl 's not
clear whtcil patients mi ght
benefit most fr om th e extra
It me . Since the European
studv foc used on mtld
stroke cases. it 's unknown 1f
severe stroke victim s would
also benefit. he said .
Dr Kenneth Games, stroke
' director at N~w Orlean's
Ochsner Medical Center.
s~u d he might be more wt]l1ng to conSLder gtving TPA in
borderlme cases But he
remained concetn ed about
the bleedmg side el'l ects.
"The teal sulutiOll " to
move taster.'' Ga mes stud .
"There ts dt min iS hin!J retllrn
the lange i you delay ueatment."

AP MEDICAL WRITER

C HI CAGO - A regula. tot y groll p told hospitals
Wednesday to adopt stn ct
measures to prevent errors
InVO[vtng blood th!llnets
tncluding hepann - mtstake' that have been made
neatly 60.000 times and led
to d07e tt s of deaths 111
1ecent years.
The Jomt Comtmss ion
. tssl!cd a safety alert say mg
hospttals need to adopt preventi on measl!res that coul d
incl ude bar-codmg tec hnology for medicines or computenzetl dru g orders It
advLSed hospilal s to more
closely monitbr pattcnts on
these diUgs and make sure
that adlllt-sttength beparm
IS stored nowhere near chtl·
dren 's units
The alert said 28 deaths
:are among 32 reports of
drug errors mvolvmg bloocf
thumers that It received
' between 1997 and last year.
· "We know tha t there are
' many more (deaths) and .
that 's the reason for 1ssumg
'th LS alet1," smd Dr. Mark
Chassin . president of the
Oakbrook Terrace , Ill.- based commiSsion
, Recent errors include
acctdental ltfe-thteatening
hepann over!loses gt ven to
aetor Denni s Quatd's newborn twms &lt;Ll a Los ,A nge les
hospital last November. In
July , 14 babies tecetved
. acctdental hepann overdos es at a hospital m Corpus
Chnsti, Texas. ·
Comm•,ssion mvesti gators

China tainted milk crisis triggers global recalls
BY GtLLlAN WONG
ASSOCIATED PRESS WAITER

BEIJING - An mdustnal
chemtcal that made Its way
into Chm,1s dairy suppli es
and that authorittes blame m
th e death of four babi es has
tl!rned 11p m numerou s
Chin ese- made
exports
ahroau - f1om candtes to
yog urt to ri ce balls.
.
Bn t1sh supemMrket cham
Tesco removed Chmesemade White Rabbit Creamy
Candtes off tls shelves as a
precal!l!On amtd reports that
samples of the mtlk candy
m Smgapore and New
Zealand had tested posittve
for melamine - an mdu s11 ial chemtcal used to make
plastics and fertilizer
Chtnese baby formula
tainted wtth th e chemical
has been bl amed tor the
deaths of four mfants and
the Illnesses of 53,000 others 111 Chma. Health experts
s&lt;Ly mgest tn g a small
amount of the chemt ca l
poses no dan get , but
melamine can cause kidney
stones and lead to ktdney
fmhue. h1fants are parttcl!larly Vlllnerable.
More than a do zen co unt! ies h.tv e banned 01
recalled Chinese dairy p!oducts
the latest was
Ft ance whtch does nol
import Chmese dairy product s but has halted imports
of Chmese btsc utts, candy
or other foods that could
contain Chinese dairy denvattvcs. The go,ernment
wtll make unannounced vts· dcscnbed ·the meas ure as a
its to make sll! e hospttals are ptecaution
lndone sm on Wednesday
adoptmg strict meas ures to
also
dtstributed a list of 28
prevent blood thmner errors,
products
that 11 said may
and those who faLl to do so
could see thetr accreditation con tam tainted Chmese
milk , includmg Oreo cookrevoked. Chassin sa id .
The co mmi ss ion IS a pri - Ies, Smckers ba1 s and
vate group that sets hospttal M&amp;M chocolate candies.
U S and European constandards and accredns
safety officials urged
StLJnet
most of th e nation 's hospiBeijmg
to bettet enforce
tals. Acctedit&lt;ltLon hnn gs
prestige and fedetal dollars. product safety standards.
Tesco sa td that 11 had
A total of 59,316 med icawithdrawn
White Rabbit
lton errors mvolvmg blood
Candies
oft its
Cteamy
thinners we re report ed
bet..,een 200 I and 2006 to a shch es as a precautton The
dawbase tun by U S. candtes had been sold in a
Pharmacope ta , a gro up that small number of Tesco's
sets drug standard s, the alct t Bitlish stotcs as part of the
stud Near Iy 3 percent, or supermarket 's ethmc range
New Zealand 's Food
roughly 1.700, resulted m
S&lt;L
iety Allthonty recalled
pat tent harm or death, the
While Rabb tl candies after
commtsston satd.
Blood thmners are pat;tic- tests showed they contamed
ul arl y tncky to use because dangerously high levels of
too much can ca use hard-to- melamine and advised peoco~trol bleedmg internally ple not to eat them
·:Th ts product contams
and from every body opensullicietltly
h1gh levels ot
mg , too l!ltle can resu lt in
lite-threatemn g blood clot s. melam ine which may. in
some tn divtdual s , cause
Chass in satd
Heparin is usually gtve n hea lth problems such as
Warfann, ktdney stones." deputy chief
mtra veno usly.
another bl ood thmner cJted executtve of the authority,
in the alert. IS available m Sandra Daly, satd m a statepill s pal!ents can take at ment
New Zealand ex pected all
home but can cause bad
reacttons when mi xed with Whtte Rabbtt sweets to be
off she lves Within 24 hou rs
other medtci nes.
The
recommendations and was testmg numerous
"absolutely" wtll make a other ptoducts for melamme
dtffe tence and hospttal s will contamination, said Food
pay atte ntion , said James· Safety Authonty spokesman
Conway. semor v1ce pres i- Geolf Allen .
"We are looking at a w1de
dent of the nonp rofi t
In stitute tor Healthcare tange of products ... pnmarily
in baby fort11ulas as they pose
Impro vement
the hi ghest nsk, and now
Cambndge. Mass.

·Regulator says hospitals
.need strict heparin rules
BY LINDSEY TANNER

AP photo
A researcher prepares to test m1lk samples collected from stores, at a government food safety laboratory In Wuhan in
central Chma's Hubei provmce Tuesday China's government pledged Tuesday to crack down on a milk-gathenng system that was "out of control," after tamted baby formula sickened nearly 53,000 Ch1n~se 1ntants and left four dead.

v.e're movmg throu gh aH the
othet . . products that may
contam adulterated milk .'' he
told Nattonal Radto.
Melamme has been tound
in infant formula and other
milk products ft om 22
Chmesc !)all y companies
Supphers ' rymg to cut cost&gt;
are believed to have added
II to watered -down milk
because tls ht gh n1trogen
content masks the resultmg
protetn deftciency
Smgapore 's . Agn-Food
and Veterinary Authority,
known as AVA, recalled
Whtte Rabbit candtes earher
tht s
week
and
satd
more
Wedne sday th at
Chmese-made food had test
ed positive for melamme.
includmg Dutch Lady-brand
banana and honeydew fla vored milk. Silang-btand
potato cra ckers and two
kmds ot puffed nee balls.
The crac kers and nee
ball s li sted milk as mgredtents.
The U.S Food and Drug
AdminiStration · satd White
Rabbit candy has · bee n
added to its list of products
bemg mspccted ,at port s of
entry, but that no melami~e ­
ta inted goods !rom Chtna of
any sort have turned up yet.
Nonetheless. some ethmc
grocers started removmg
th e popular candies lrom
th etr shelves
A woman who UIJswered
the
phone
at
AsianFoodGrocer.com m San
Francisco said the company is
no longer selling White
Rabbit cand tes . "Everythmg
has been taken oft~ hne," satd
the woman. who would not
g1ve her name.
In New York Wednesday,
China's prem1er sought to
ease tlfe growing concern
abroad over the growin g
cn sts over Chmese food
exports by vow mg to
strengthen product safety
checks and .meet mternattonal standards.
Chma nee ds to better

enforce checks at eve ry
stage ot produc(!on and step
up efforts to protect consumer interests, Premier
Wen J tabao satd on the stdelt nes of a mcetmg of the
U.N. General Assembly.
''We want to make sure
that our products and our
food will not only meet the
domesttc and mtcnmtional
standards , but also meet the
specttic reqUirements of the
Ltllport countnes," Wen _satd
at an event organized by
American orgamzattons
Also
Wedn esday ,
a
Chinese offtcial tssued a
publi c apology to consum ers m Ta1w.tn as the
tsland 's pres ident , who won
March elections on a platlorm of closet economic
t1es w1th the mamland ,
blasted Chmese mtlk pro·
ducers.
"I condemn the mainland
manufacturers that have
produced fake milk and
datry creamer," Ma Yingjeou satd.
Authorities there ordered
160 products containing
Chmese milk and vegetablebased protems off store
shelves. say mg the goods
had to be tested befo1 e they
can go back on sale.
" We !eel
ex tremely
painful about the damage
that the milk pov.der
brought to people m
Taiwan Our gove rnment
attaches great tmportance to
tt and IS takmg a set ies of
measures to mtmmize the
damage and mtluence,'' sa 1d
L1 Wei yi, a spokesman for
the State Council Tmwan
Affatrs Office.
Speaking m Chma. where
U.S. and European offtcials
were attending seminars on
product safety, a U.S. offi cial satd China 's troubles
with contamm ated mtlk
highlight the need for better
enforcement of product
si)fety standards m manutacturmg
"The melamine sttuation

Annual

just underscores the message
that we are try mg to de li ver,
and that IS you have to know
what's cnmtng into your factor~ and what's gomg out of
you1 factory." sa id Nancy
Nord , actmg head of the U S
Consumer Products Safety
Commiss ion .

The Ch mese government
has been scramb lmg to
show tl is tackling the ptOblem In recent days. the govern ment anno unced htgh pt ofi le arrests and forced
res ignations of officials
The datt ~ at the centet of
the scandal , Sanlu Group
Co . will not be able to
recover fto m the damage tl
has suflered to its reputation , t'ts New Zea land partner sa 1d Wednesday . An
uwesttgallon mto the contammatton found
Sanlu
recetved complai nts about
LIS mfant formul a as early as
December 2007 and covered up the problem f01
months, state med ta teported earlier thts week
The Chmese go,ern ment
has taken control ot Sanlu.
which IS 43 percent owned
by New Zealand 's Fonterra
Cooperatt ve, and sh11t down
tis operatt ons. Fonterra
CIHef Execu ll ve Andrew
Feme r said at a briefing.
Sanlu ts based m northern
Chtna 's He bet prov tnce.
'·Sanlu has been damaged
very badly by tht s tragedy.''
Ferrier told rep01ters as he
announced Fonterra's annual results. "The brand cannot be reconstru cted "
There was no immediate
res ponse Wednesday from
Sanlu . Several calls dunng
the day were answered by
temporary workers in the
co mpan y's med ia depatlment who took down questtons but scud it was up to
seni or company offi cials to
dectde whether to reply. The
workers refused to gtve
thetr names, which IS common
among
Cb mese
employees.

Co.

SAlE ·""""

FRIDAY,

SEPT. 26

Sale
ii!IIJ&gt;!!: .

Irish

Setter

$10 OFF

KIPLING SHOE CO.
Route 2 Bypass Point Pleasant, WV

{304) 675-7870

Mon Sat 9 6, Sun 12-5

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The Daily Sentinel

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

www.mydallysentinel.com

Oh1o Valley Publishing Co.
Dan Goodrich
Publisher
Charlene Hoeflich
Gener~l Manager-News Edttor

Co11gress shall make 110 law respectiiiJl an
establishment of religion, or prohibiting the
free exercise tlureoj; or abridging the freedom of
speech, or of the press; or the right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the
Government for a redress of grievances.
- The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

TODAY IN HISTORY
Today tS. Thursday, Sept 25. the 269th day ol 2008
fhere are Y7 t.ttys lelt m the yed t
· Today"s Htghlrghl m Hrstory· On Sept 25, 1789 , the ftrst
Unl!ed States Congress adopted 12 amendments to the
Conslltutron and sent them to the st&lt;ltes for ratrfrcallon
(Ten of the amendments became the Brll of Rrghts)
On thts date In 14'1.1 . Chnstopher Columbus set sdtl
from Cad1z, Sp,un wrth a tlotlil,t of 17 shtps on hts second
voyage to the Western Hemisphere
In 1513. Spamsh explmer Vasco Nunez de Balboa crossed
the Isthmus of Panama and srghted the Pact ftc Ocean
In 1690. one ol the car\u;st Amenc,m newspapers.
Pubhck Occurrences. publtshed lls ftrst - and last - ed t·
liOn 111 Boston
In 1775. Amen can Revolutton,u y War hero Ethan Allen
was captured by the Birtrsh as he led an attack on Montreal
In 1890, Wdlord Woodrulf. prestdent o l the Church ol
Jesus Chnst of Latter-day s.unts, ISSUed a Mamfesto formally renoun~mg the practtce ol polygamy.
In 191 9. PreSLdenl Wrlson collapsed after a speech rn
Pueblo . Colo .. during a nat tonal speakmg tour 111 support ol
the Treaty ol Versdtlles
In 1956. the ftrst trans-Atlanttc telephone cable went rmo
service
In \957, ntne black students who'd been forced to wtthdraw' from Central Htgh School 111 Little Rock , Ark ,
be&lt;Oause of unruly whtte crowds were escorted to class by
members of the U.S. Army's \01 st Arrborne Dtvtsron
In 1978. 144 people were k11led when a Pacrftc
Southwest Aulmes Boemg 727 and a prtvate plane collrded over San Otego
In 198\, Sandra Day O 'Co nnor was sworn 111 as the ftrst
fe male JLt&gt;lice on the Supreme Court
One year ago. Warren Jeffs, the leader ot a polygamous
Mormon splmler group, was convtcted m St George, Utah ,
of bemg an accpmphce to rape for performmg a weddmg
betv,een a 19-ycar-old man and a 14-year-o\d gtrl. (Jeffs
was later sentenced to two consecutive terms of ftve years
to hfe m pnson.) !raman Pres1dent Mahmoud AhmadmeJad,
addressing the Umted Nations , announced "the nuclear
1ssue of Iran ts now closed ," and md1cated Tehran would
d1sregard Secunty Councll resoluttuns tmposcd by what he
called "arrogant powers." Japan's lower hou se of parhament
elected Yasuo Fukuda pnme mm1stcr.
Today 's Btrthdays Broadcast Journaltst Barbara Wallets
1s 79 Rhythm-and-blues smger Joe Russell1 s 69. Defense
Secretary Robert Gates ts 65. Actor Robert Walden IS 65
ActOI ·producer Mt~hael Douglas IS 64. Model Cheryl
Tiegs ts 61 Actur-dtrector Anson W1lhams ts 59 Actor
Mark Hamill is 57 Polka bandleader ltmmy Sturr 1s 57
Actor Michael Madsen ts 50 Actress Heather Locklear IS
47 . Actress Arda Turturro ts 46 Actor Tate Donovan is 45.
Basketball player Scotlle Ptppen ts 43 Actor Wtll Smtih 1s ,
!\0. Actor Hal Sparks IS 39 Actress Catherine Zeta-Jones is
;19 Actress Bndgette W•lson-Sampras ts 35. Actor Chns
Owen 1s 28 Rapper T. I. 1s 28 Actor Lee Noms ts 27
: Thought tor Today· "H tstory ts too senous to be left to
h1ston~ns."- lam Macleod, Bntlsh pohtrc1an (191 3- 1970)

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EDITOR
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Thursday, September 25,

2008

Analysis: A bailout plan too big to fail
BY DAVID ESPO
AP SPECIAL CORRESPONDENT

(740) 992-2156 ·FAX (740) 992-2157

PageA4

WASHINGTON
Ptes tden t Bush and the t~~&gt;o
men tunmnc 10 !&gt;. UC ceed hun
r.u sed the ~ polr11cal stakes
dr.tmati ea ll y Wednesddy m
the greal barlout debate ol
200X . cllecttvcly "ampmg a
" too b•g to fLttl" :-.1gn on co ngress umal cllorts to pass a
pre-electron cconom tc rescue p\,tn
Wrth the oulwmc all but
.tssured. detdtls .tnd a
!lmct,tbk lor passage ul an
tmprecedc ntcd Jcdcr.tl mtcr'cnlron ru the cd pilal markets ICill.tlll to be settled .
And bulh John McCarn and
Bm.tck Ob,lllld wr\1 be dble
to chum uetht IOJ w111nimr
ch.mge~ m the admm1St1 ,~
Iron "s ougrn,rl plan - some
of wluch the White House
IMs .dready ,tc cepted
"The whole wor\J Is
watchmg to see If we can
,Let qwckly," Pt esrdent Bush
s,ud e.11l y 111 the week,
bd01e hi s ptoposa\ran 111!0
l.' lltiC1sm from Democwt s

,md Repub lrcans ahke.
So. too. the Ameucan
e\ectowte, srx weeks befo1e
choost ng between two prestdentral candrdates. now
staging srde by srde aud rtlons tor the JOb ol tMtional
c rt'i.J"i mdnager- m ch 1d
With Tre,1SUI} SecJet,uy
Henry P,llllson and Federal
Reserv e Charrm,lll Ben
Bernanke issumg drre warnrngs d,uly. Bush ,uranged .t
pnme ltme .tddress to the
natron It was dest gned to
rescue the rescue plan th.Jt
Bush sent to Cor-.g1 ess Jess
than a week ago after he was
told that e,trlier, pt ecemea\
b,ulouts had not resto red
confidence to the markets
With less than four
months 1em,tinmg 111 offrce
and approval ratrngs 111 the
10 perce nt ra nge. Bush\
persuaSive powers .tt e as

,md Obama , the Democ tat ,
\\Cte uymg out for hi s JOb
M&lt;Cnn , tra rltn ~ once
mm e 111 the rdce -for th e
Whrte House, announced he
wou ld return to Washmgton
to help work on legJslatton .
He suggested he and Ob~ma
dose d ~doo r mcc llng \' 1th
hold around-the-clock meetP.tul son and Bc!IJ&lt;Lnkc "It's mgs wtth congresstonalleada te!lrble pl,ut. but I h"' cn" t ct s and .rdmtnislratJon oflihe,ud ,myth rn g better·
chris u11ttl they h&lt;td reached
'They sold the IVdi. they .rn .Lgteement .•md he satd
sold the st rmulus p.Kkage lhrs Fmlay's prestdc nltal
,md some other thtn~s It 's debate should be rescheduled
the ' \\'olf dl the tloo1 ~. &lt;~t gu­ rn defe1 ence to the criSis
··All we mu st do to
ment . s,1id Da' rs. who "
Iellnng at the end ul th.c ye.u ac hreve tim LS lemporanly
If RepubltLans we ren't set polrtrcs .tsJde, and I'm
exactly cld)llOI Jn g fur BtlSh uJ1111111tted to dorn g so."
to show them the wav, McCam said 111 New York
Democrats tll SI.s!ed the pr e;.
It w.L s an echo of the
1den1 step up. lur rc,rsnns of .1Ccept.1nce speech he delr vthen own
etcd rn St Paul , Minn , Jess
" It rs lime lor hnn lo th,rn ,, month ago "After
cxplam why hts admmtslt.L
we·,e won . we're gmng. to
tton s,r t on 1ts hands lor rc,tch out our h,md to any
months and only 1101~ has wrllrng p.ttnot , make thts
come to Jeal!Ze the need lot govanment sta rt workmg
tmmcd ta te and unpi ece· lor you aga rn ," he satd then
dented govc tnmenl ,tcllnn ,"
But there was more to tt
satd Senate Ma1on1y Leader
McCam 's
stateme11t
Hmry Re1d ol Ncv,td,t
marked the second ttme m a
" It IS !lme lot hnn to matter ot weeks that he used a
cx plam how he could tell dramatrc gesture to shake up
our count Iy for months that the tace tor the Whtte House
The ltrst was hts select ron
out economy wa s frn.e. yet
ovcrmght dec lal c that 11 ol Al.tsk,t Gov Sarah Palm
Amcrr~.m t.txpd yct s don ' I as vtcc prestdemtal runnmg
accept hts b&lt;~ tlout bt\1. our m,u e. .t ptck that energtzed
cumttry wrll lace dll cw· consct vut1ves and helped
numtc tiJ~.ts h:r ·
lucl" posl-conventron swge
Translalron Ncrt hcr Rcrd tn publtc support.
nor House Speaker N,mq
But the gams 111 publtc
Pelosr rntendcu to put thcrr opmron surveys have now
rank and Iric rn the postttun drssrpated . and most polls
ol votmg fn1 lcgrsldt ron th dl show Obama wrth the same
Repubhc ans wu ld oppose Icl.rtt vcly modest lead he
and then Lise .ts ,t c,unpdlgn he\~ hefo1e the summer One.
rssue ,rg.tll1&lt;l them But rf the Wa shtllgtull Post-ABC
man y Rep ublrc.tn s w.e1e smwy. g.rve the Democrat a
pl.mnmg tu Vl1te for the m11e-poml au vantage, wtth a
measur e eve ntu .l ll y. they commanchng lead among
we1e qutel about rt on votets who satd the economy
Wednesda;
w.ts the top tssue
Whr\c Bu sh was exetusAnd whrle M~Cam has
mg hts prcsrdentral poweJS. rn srsted Palm is ready to
v,ould -be
succe"ors t.tke ove1 as prestdent, he
McCain. the Repuhltca n. nhtdc no mention of mcludunt:en.un 111 Congte~s .1 &gt;.:
they ar e wrth the puhhc
It was d potnt so me
Repubhcans were WIIirng to
make. unchantahl y m tunes
"It 's a tough sell to most
o.f our mcmbc'I S.' sard Rep
Tom Dav1S , R- Va . &lt;tl lct a

· ing he1 rnthe cnsts meetmgs
he want s 111 Washmgton .
One a1de satd he dtd not
mtend fo r her to be present.
Qb.1ma was next to step
before the cameras. tcllmg
reporters that he had mttrally
called McCam to suggest a
JOint statement that would
make clear both prestdentml
hopefuls supported leg•slallon
to stem the ecollom•c shde
Where McCain talked
about
btpartrsahship,
Obama p1 ovtded specificS
across party lmes
" I also need to ~1ve cred11 to Republican Sen Tom
Coburn . who had called me
sugge;tm g that' a JOLnt
statement mrght be useful,"
he sard
He also said he had urged
De mocJattc congresstonal
Je,1ders not to pursue efforts
to add an economrc StJmuIus package to the batlout.
Similarly. he satd the
attempt to gtve bankruptcy
JUdges the power to rewnte
mortgage term s, another
Democrauc pnonty, "1s
probably something that we
shouldn ·r try to do 111 thts
p1ece of leg•slauon "
Then came the pb at h1s
' nval
" My hope ts, ts that Sen.
McCam ts gmng to be talkmg to Rcpubltcans and
sendmg them the same message, that there are some
tssues that they may be concerned about or thmgs that
are pllonttes for them, but
what we shou ldn 't dots try
to get everythmg done m
thts package."
Nm was Obama taken w1th
McCam's call to defer the
debate unt1l agreement had
been Leached on legtslallon.
" You know. prestdents are
go mg to have to deal with
more than one thmg at a
t1me." he satd . "It's not necessary for us to thmk that we
can only do one thmg and
suspend everythmg else."

ToDAY IN SC HOOL
WE LEARNED TO COUNT
To 700 BILLION.

Thursday, September 25, 2008

Local Briefs

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

www.mydailysentinel.com

ANNIE'S MAILBOX

Receives endorsement
POMEROY - The Fraternal Order of Pollee i ~ endors·
mg Jimmy Stewart m h1 s race for Ohio's 20th Senate
Dtstrict The FOP. Oh10 's largest law enforcement organilat ron , has more than 25 ,000 professLOnallaw enforcement
members statewide
Stewart IS currently serving h1s third ternn as state representative of Oh10"s 92nd House D1stnct. He currently s1ts
on tl)e House Finance and AppropriatiOns Committee and
serves as chat rman of the Human Serv1ces Subcommittee.

Game drug-free, but still_dangerous
Bv KATHY MITCHELL
AND MARCY SUGAR

ol leaches the danger&gt; of
thiS g.tme There IS a web
stte that addresses the warn
rn g srgns at www chok
rngga me net I am hopeful
otheJS .wtll Jearn about th ts
pracllce belore ll h.rppens to
then· chtld
Still
Grieving Grandma in
Davenport, Iowa
Dear Grandma: Our
condol ences on your temble l0ss We have d1 scussed
thrs top1c belore, but 11 certaml y bears another menlion Children and young
teens thmk thts self-asphyx·
JatJon game ts harmless
becau se It's drug-free. But
depnvmg the bram of oxy ·
gen. even fo r short penods.
n sks permanent bTarn dam ·
age, se tzures and death
Parents should watch for
marks around the neck.
bloodshot eyes. complamts
of headaches. dtsonenlalron
after spendmg ttme alone
and paraphernalta su~h as
p\asttc bags, dog leashes .
bungee cords, t1es, ropes,
scarves and belts, especrally
1f they are t1ed to bedroom
fu1mture or doorknobs 01
found knotted on the floor
We hope .til parents of
young children wtll discuss
the dangers as they would
talk about drugs or alcohol.
The best p10tectton ts honest mformation.

Dear Annie: Our grandson dted a year ago at tne
age of 15 H1s death was the
res ult of playmg the
extremely dangerous "chokmg game ." Thousands of
ktds between the ages of 9
and \6 are playmg thr s
game. There are other
names for 1!, such as "pass
COOLVILLE - Coolvi lle Volvnteer F1re Department out game" and "space monwill hold Octoberfest and a car show on Oct. II
key." l&lt;1ds play tt m groups
Plans mclude food , entertamment, drawmgs and a safety and alone Playmg alone IS
house. Vendors are v,elcome for a $!0 space fee . No food
the most hfe-threatemng
vendors a1e permitted
The
game
mvolves
The parade w1ll begm at I I am., With hneup a! 10:30
neck
to limrt
squeezing
the
Information ts·avaJ\able from Les Washburn at 667-6891.
blood flow and oxygen to
the brain m order to ach1eve
a h1gh. Most of the children
who play th1s game are
MARIETTA - Regtonal Adv1sory Council for Area good ktds who are agam st
Agency on Agmg wrll meet at 10 am on Oct 10 in the the use of drugs and alcoHtll s/Hockmg Valley Regtonal Development hol K1ds thmk It's a safe
Di1;trict Area Age ncy on Agmg Office, Manetta.
way to ach1eve a rush wuhoul usmg But tt ts not sate
at all. Lack of oxygen to the
bram ktlls bram cells, wh1ch
do not replenish them ·
selves Hundreds of ktds
Rtdge Commumty Church, have suff~red bram damage
Eagle R1dge Road . dmner at' and heart problems, or dted
noon , smgmg at I p m by from asphyx1allon
Monday, Sept. 29
Most parents are unaware
Bissells,
Jerry and Dtane
POMEROY - Veterans
Frederick,
and
Everett
that
tht s IS somethmg their
Servtce Comm1ss ton, 9
Grant and Friends
children may be involved
,, m , 117 Memonal Dr.
Sunday,
Oct.
5
in. Schools teach about
Wednesday, Oct. 1
HEMLOCK
GROVE
but no sehoul I know
drugs,
POMEROY
- Me1gs
County Board of Health, 5 Homecoming at Hemlock
p.m . Health Depurtmenl Grove Chnstian Church.
conference room. 112 E Worship at 9.30 a.m., dinner
at Grange Hall at 12:30 p.m.
Memonal Dr
Afternoon program at 2
year-old boy . a 16-year-old
GADSDEN , Ala. (AP) p.m. wtll feature Forg1ven
grrl
and a 15-year-old . gtrl
Ohio
teenagers
are
m
Three
Agam Tno, with other readare
charged
wllh recetvmg
custody
in
Alabama
after
they
mgs and mus1c.
drove from pursumg deputies stolen property The boy.
Saturday, Sept. 27
'
and later rammed two patrol who was dnvmg. also face s
RACINE - Thomas and
cars to end a 30-mmute chase. reckless endangerment and
(Weaver) Stobart
Etowah County S hen ff cnmmal m1 scluef charges.
reunron I p m at Star Mill
Thetr mtmes were not
Todd Entrekm says a 16Park rn Racme Take covered dtsh. Ln the event ot
Friday, Sept. 26
rem. the reun1on wtll be
POMEROY
held at the Racme Ltbrary
AlzheJmer's/memory loss
careg1ver support group will
shteld the counties"
BY STEPHEN MAJORS
meet from I :15 to 2:15p.m.
ASSOCIATED
PRESS
WRITER
Stnckland ordered that
at the Me1gs Semor Center.
two
ot the department's pro·
Thursday, Sept. 25
Those attendmg may bnng
COLUMBUS
The
RACINE
- Southern their loved ones for a lime of
grams be protected lrom
Local School Dtstnct's structured activity during state agency that admm1s· budget cuts - the $9 3 btl,Enne" Center, open hou se, the support group's meetmg. ters programs for poor and han the state sets as1de to
4-i p.m , Southern Htgh Kathy McDamel and Sharon low-mcome fam1lies is cut- provtde Medtcmd to lowSchool , free health screen- Dean are co-facilitators for ting almost $80 million mcome
Ohtoans
unul
its
budget,
mcluding
from
mgs.
rece1vmg
a
federal
reimthe support group. For more
mllhons of dollars tor a bursement , and $25 mllhon
mfornnation, call992' 2161
welfare program
for dtsabthty asststance
Tuesday, Sept. 30
Records obtamed by The
The department will be
POMEROY - OH-KAN
Press
Wednesday
Associated
cuttmg
$ 12.7 mtlhon - or
Com Club, change of meetFriday, Sept. 26
show
the
Oh10
Department
about
5
percent - of the
MIDDLEPORT - The mg from Monday to
and
Fam1ly
SefV!ces
of
Job
$267.6 mtlhun 1t had been
Mtdd\eport Church of Chnst Tuesday at the Pomeroy
also
1
s
cuttmg
back
on
fundspendmg m Its share of the
wtll have a free commumty L1brary, 7 p.m.
mg
for
adoption
serv1ces,
federal-state
Temporary
MIDDLEPORT
dmner, 4 30 to 6 p.m , m the
money
to
detect
MedJcaJd
Assistance
for
Needy
Middleport Church of Chnst Middleport Literary Club, 2 fraud and funds to admmtsFamtly Ltfe Center, F1fth p.m. Gay Perrin Will rev1ew ter the state's ch1ld support Famtl ies program The program. s1gned mto law b~ forand Mam. Menu, biscutts "A Thousand Splend1d
program.
mer President Btll Chnton ,
and gravy, eggs , potatoes Suns" Leah Ord hostess .
In
many
cases
the
money
provtdes
welfare benefits to
CHESTER
- Shade
and bacon and dessert
bemg
cut
goes
to
county
the poor while pushmg them
River Lodge 453, monthly
Sunday, Sept. 28
proagenc1es
that
manage
to find employment
stated meeting, 7 30 p.m .
RACINE
grams
for
Ohio
ctllzens
It
Homecoming ~~ the Eagle Refreshments follow.
wtll be up to the counties to

Octoberfest, car show

Council meets

Community Calendar
Public meetings

Dear Annie: I am a 22yea r-old p,uHrme co ll ege
student ~~&gt; tlh .1 lul\-trmc JOb
I rece ntl y got e ng&lt;~geLI ..
whr ch I' m exerted ,\bout I
moved Ill wrth my boyfnend
a year ,\fter we st&lt;~ rte d datm g
and ever} thmg ts goi ng 'e' y
smooth ly
The pr oble m is. my par
ents are stlong C tthohc; and
were extremely upset thdt
we moved m toge ther They

Uear Annie: l l11s rs rn
response to (Jet It Rrgltt,
P\ e,tsc'
\\ IHlsc" 111 -l,l\"
msr'l o n c·.tllm~ her "" knn) ·
mslead of her Znii CL I n.un e.
whrch IS "Jenn.t.
She shou ld tlldkc " huge
name tag thai redds ··MY
NAME IS JEN:-JA. and
we,11 rt whc ne\u she rs
,11ound them Md\ ~e rl could
Ill Jed :,nme hui1wt \\ hd e
cettmc them to Iemembci to

wouldn"t

l1se he-1

If Presrdent Bush seems
oddly unshaken , what with
a 19 percent approval! atm g
and an astonrshmg zero '!Jercent of the pubhc opttmtstrc
about the economy, u's
because lor hrm, rn the
Immortal wo1ds of Yogr
Berra , the Wall Street meltdown bas1cally amounts to
"dep vu all over agam "
Pr10r to mhentmg the
Whtte House, tinandnl cnses
were the sto ry ol Bush 's hte.
He'd talk college tnends mto
backmg a Texas Wildcat otl
venture. dnll some dry holes.
then get bought out by
Daddy 's f11ends at a prolit
Pnorto Daddy 's tnends buymg the Tex.ts Rangers. hrs
btggest payday had come
from cashmg out ol .1 troubled ml company days ahead
ot a lousy eammgs report
Sure, there was an
Secut tttes and Exchange
CommtsSJon tnstder-tradmg
mvestt ga tJOn , hut Poppy·
Bush was prestdent So you
know how lar that went. loe
Conason narrated the sotdid
tale tor Harper's back 111
2000, but nobody wanted to
hear tt The make- beheve
Texas rancher was a "com-

Sachs. he was paid a repmtNobod} evet expected to
ed $38 mdhon for helping pay A greater fool would
turn the natron 's fmanctal borrow more to buy ttre
system rnto a giant shell pro petty tomorrow
· gLtme, as Inv es tor~ were
People hke Prmceton econduped rnto buymg so-called omist and New York Times
Gene
'·mortgage-backed secun - colummst Paul Krugman
Lyons
nes"' b.tsed upon bad loans who warned that the speculathat wr ll never be Iepatd .
ttve bubble was sure to burst
At bottom. Repubhcan w1th potentially catastrophic
economic tlunkmg ts based consequences were scorned
M,uxt st-stylc hsca\n,t!tonal - upon two mamfestly false as backward-thmkmg pesiza tron , It should m:unly rde.Is The ltrst. endlessly stmJsts and lampooned fot
beneltt multrmrllJOnau ~s. !lugged by Rush L1mbaugh thCJr clumsy prose
Feanng collapse, Paulson
Sou.1 ltsm f(Jr the we.1\th v, ,md lm co· hOI ts, that sharply
market dtscrplrn e for you reduemg taxes un people demanlls an estimated $700
lrke the Bushes, the Paulsons · bJ\hon blank check to buy
and me
and
the McCams resu Its m up the bad paper from hts
lnd gmg by the plan
lllCteased
govemment rev- Wall Street fnends . Here 's
sketched out by Tt e.1sur y
Secreta ry Henry P.tul so11 enue and g1eater prospenty his tdea of takmg responsihenceforth to he known as for all. In practtce, tt's led to bJhty· " DeCISIOnS by !he
the natlon 's " Money Cz.tr."" st.tggeung budget def ICtls , Secretary pursuant to the
he must tmagme God '" a decre.tsmg opportumty and authonty ot th1 s Act are
cclcsttdl Rc,tltot wtth loi s of ll sing mequaht y. More DOn-reviewable and commmed to agency dtscretJon ,
\rstmgs m G1eenwrch. Conn . p.tlaces. lewer JObs.
The
second
is
an
updated
and may not be rev1ewed by
whete W&lt;1 ll Street tycoons
ver ston of the early Chnsttan any court of law or any
erect compelmg palaces
A 1ecenl New Yo1 ker drttclc Pelagtan he1esy, denymg the admmJStratJve agency"
Everybody says someby N"k P.tumgartcn limned universality of Ongm&lt;d Sm.
the scene Uncle Scrooge Always and everywhere thmg hke what Paulson progovernment poses must be done; everyMcDuck's mansron wou ld be denouncrng
overstght
and
tegulahon
of body's probably right
" teardown opportun rt y fm
rnvestment
ftrms,
banks,
Democral s,
moreover,
these jokers Only one bull ron
pool to dabble m? Rather like brokcr.1ge houses and insur- men ' t wtthoui blame. B11l
lohn and Cmdy McCam , they ,mce companies, flee-market Clinton stgned leg tslation
require 35 .lXJO sqtt.tre feet, 10- fundam entahsts assured us greatly reducmg regu latory
p as~aonate
conservat 1vc ·· cm garages. ,md mdoor and that the fuM ncml system was safeguards m 1999 .
everybody wanted to have a outdoor he.ttCd pools, along rnh erentl y se\f-regulatmg .
We must now pray that
beer with .
Gen tl emen
geniuses the financial wtza•ds who
With movte theateJs. ba~ket·
So now we're all m what ball arenas. wme cellars . pre sided; greed was a cardi- created thts maze can find
Poppy once called "deep skccl-shoolmg ranges and ser· nc~l VII1Ue
therr way out
doo-doo." and the same vants qumters modeled upon
rhe resu It was the creation
Meantime , here' s a
b11 lhant ecunormc team that Versarlles Lrteral\y.
ol a gigitlltlc Ponzi scheme phrase that sho uld vamsh
assured us that all was well
They're nol so much hous· The quamt concept of "due f10m the language forever
two weeks dgo w(lrn:-.. an es as theme parks. the theme d•lrgence·· v,tmshed from the "Republtcan ft scal conservPaul Krugm,m's wotds. that herng l,ultomless g1eed and linancwl system from bottom at1ve.·•
"the sky 1s falhng. and that element,r\ pnmate st &lt;~ tu s f1en· to top Fee-chummg brokers
(At kama~
Demncrctt to save the world we have to lY basi~ chrinp stull Except. peddled adJUSt&lt;lble-rate mort- Ga ;:etre wlumnm Gene
do exactly.. what II s &lt;~ ys now onrs. foreclosures are mount gages au ovet valued real L10n 1 "
a Natuma/
now now
Ill!.! Ill (, IL'L'IW. tt.:h ton
est.llc to suckers mcapable of Ma ga::.me All'au/ wtmrer
People have olten s,ud llwl
"lvitHle\ C!.ll l'.tulsnll del
llldkmg the p.tyments, then and W·&lt;l utltor of " The
tf fasc1sm came to Amettca. lilli e\} knov, s the ICIIIlory p.twncd ufl the b,td loans on Hun/1118 of the President "
tt would amve wrth a sm1lcy In 2011) h" last full ve,u .ts speculators who , m turn, (St Mart111 '1 Press, 2000)
face: So maybe It 's littmg CEO or the (now -,h,tk y) rep.tck.tged them as (now YtJu can e-matl L'tmB at
that 1f we're gomg to have mvcstment bank Goldman . woithless) securities
eugcnelyom2@\a/.100 w m J

VISit

our apartment

or allow my fiance to come
to th e 11 home tor anv re~t son
They sttll won·i. e\en
though we' re engaged HIS
wjtole larm ly loves me to
death and couldn 't be happtet for us When wtll my p.trenls ever accept hun' ·Worried Fiancee
Dear
Worried:
Hopefully. when you &lt;Ire
marrred Your p.uenl s don' t
want to grvc the rmpi csston
that they .tpprove ol your
ltvmg dnangements Th~
same W.t} they don't ,\gree
With the cho t~e you m.rde to
move in to gether. you don't
have to l.lgree wtth them,,
but tty to Iespect theu lee\ rngs on the subject Once
you have Jegalrzed th"
a11angement 111 chu1 ch. they
will be more comtortable
welcoming YOU! fianc e 111[0
the fanuly If not, ask yo ur
pnest fm help

It th ey

uH t eclnd1liL'

sltp up she c,tn srmply porn!
to the

rcpe,ll
repe.u

~~ ~n

.tnd h.w~ the m
- .~nd r ~pc.rt
,md

until the) I11Mll y
ll" ill - Eileen
"' Dear" Eileen : Old hablls
dre h,u d ,tnd n,une t.1gs
wo n 1 h ~ l p 11 ben lctrer s ,tre
rnc o11 ee l 1\ ,\dd t ""''d bu t
llliCCtrng htu .1or " ollcn "
good ""Yto ~L'l "dtl lt cul t
pornt across l ll.utl-.s
Anllll' 'I .Hwlhox 11 11"17/te/1
oe [ II

by Kallt,l Mlltltdl mul Marcy

Sugar.

edt/on' uf

lmlKIWU!

tire Anu l.wulcn wlumu.
Pleale e·marl yo ur qrt e.\IJOtl.\
to
anuin mmlbox@mm·
cwil.net, or U'llll! lo:

08

g
hetr
I m
eep
tilt a
tied
1ree
25Wlll
ped
1me
fay.
·ack

on
m!s

81

Aunie's

Matlbu.t , PO /!o.\ /18190 ,
C/ucago, IL 60(&gt;1 I. To find
out 111111e about -lnnie 's
Mailbox. am/ 1eml feature~
bv other Crwtu11 .~wulicate
write/"\ and UI/(Ofllli\l\, t'lSif
tile Crea/ol\ \\1/dicate We~
page a/ ww11.creatm uom.

.Jp

~s

3 Ohio teens in custody after Alabama chase

Reunions

Clubs and
organizations

Other events

released
lnvestrgatot Jell Hoppe&lt;
s&lt;~ys the teens stole ,t car m
Jackson 111 southem Oh10.
before headmg to Alabama to
meet a boy who the youngc1
gtrl met on the lntemct.
The teens .ue accused ol

~te,l l iiH:! clllnth l'l

\('h ick tll

not111 Al. rh,lm.r I he J1U isllil
sta1ted

ttbnut

el l

I

cl

dec1de how to rework their
local budgets to deal with
. the loss of state dollars.
. . , - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - wh1ch could lead to cuts m
'
services to Oh10ans
Thursday ...Patchy fog in 40 percent chance of rain.
As the economy has
the mormng Sunny H1ghs Highs in the mid 70s.
worsened, greater numbers
111 the upper 70s Northeast
Saturday night. •.Mostly of Ohioans have been showwmds 10 to 15 mph
cloudy with a 40 percent ing up at county agenctes
Thursday night ...Partly chance of rain. Lows 111 the looking for help for the first
cloudy m the evemng .Then m1d 50s
lime. The latest news Jed 10
mostly cloudy with a shght
Sunday .. .Mostly cloudy renewed calls from advochance of ram alter mld- m the morning. Then cates of the poor tor a secnrght Lows m the lower 50s. becommg partly sunny. ond federal sumulus packHighs m the mid 70s.
Chance of ram 20 percent.
age to asstst state budgets .
Sunday night through
Friday...Cloudy wtth rain
About $36 mllhon m state
night ...Partly cuts w1ll come from money
hkely Hi ghs arou nd 70, Monday
Northeast wmds 10 to 15 cloudy. Lows around 50. that had been set as1de for
mph w!lh gusts up to 25 H1ghs in the upper 70s.
the Med1care Part D preTuesday .. .Mostly sunny scriptiOn drug program but
mph Chance of ram 60 perwith a 40 percent chance of is no longer needed , smd
cent
Friday uight ...Cioudy showers . Highs in the lower Ohio Job and Family
With ramlrkely. Lows in the 70s
Services spokesman Dennis
Tuesday night ...Mostly Evans No semor currently
IUtd 50s Northeast wmds
10 to 15 mph Chance of cloudy w1th a 30 percent under the program wt\1 lose
chance of showers. Lows m coverage, he satd
ram 60 percent
Saturday ...Cioudy wtth a the lower 50s.
The agency made the cuts
to comply w1th Gov Ted
Stnckland's request that
most state agenctes cut 4 75
percent from their budgets
The state faces a proJected
65.85
bud~et deficit of $540 mtl·
AEP (NYSE) - 36.79
Ohio Valley Bane Corp. (NAS.
Akzo (NASDAQ) - 57.55
hon durmg the fmal year of
DAQ)- 20.55
Ashland Inc. (NYSE) - 29.35
the slate's two-year, $52 btl ·
BBT (NYSE) - 38.54
Big Lola (NYSE) - 29.60
han budget.
Bob Evans (NASDAQ) - 26.78 Peoples (NASDAQ) - 23.45
Earlttr
th1s
year
Pepsico (NYSE) - 70.10
BorgWarner (NYSE) - 32 84
Stnckland announced a prePremier (NASDAQ) - 9.50
Century Aluminum (NASDAQ)
Rockwall (NYSE) - 36.69
-35.58
VIOUS round of cuts thai
Rocky Boots (NASDAQ) Champion (NASDAQ) - 4.48
!otaled $733 m11110n .
4.05
Charming Shops (NASDAQ) Job and Family Servt~e s
Royal Dutch Shell - 62.72
5 10
was
able to avmd makmg
Sears Holding (NASDAQ) City Holding (NASDAQ) cuts
that would have an
94.50
42.50
Wai·Mart
(NYSE)
58.92
impac1
on county agency
Collins (NYSE) - 46.67
Wendy's (NYSE) - 21.79
DuPont (NYSE) - 43.74
operations during the ftrst
WeoBanco (NYSE) - 27.87
US Bank (NYSE) - 33.85
round of trimming
Worthington (NYSE) - 17.11
Gannett (NYSE) - 17.09
" In our earliet cuts we
Dally stock reports are the 4
General Electric (NYSE) took the brunt of tt internalp.m. ET closing quotes ol
24.59
tranaactlono lor Sept. 24,
ly, so th at the count res didn't
Harley-Davidson (NYSE) 2008, provided by Edward
39.18
realize any of thos, cut s."
Jonea financial advleoro laaac Evans said "Thi s t11ne
JP Morgan (NYSE) - 40.50
Milia In Gallipolis al (740) 441- around, whtle there weren't
Kroger (NYSE) - 26.35
94.41 and Laolay Morraro In
Limited Brands (NYSE) any programs that we directPoint Pleaoant at (304) &amp;7418.24
'
ly ehminated , we couldn't
0174.
Member
SIPC.
Norfolk Southern (NYSE) -

M,lml.r v .rft~r Ihe I'"' drun"t
stop ,11' ,L d11\ ct s . l rcc n ~e
chec:kpornt
The tc~ns \Vtil' t d~l' ll tn d
IU VCillk hul d 111 ~ l,tlll ll)

The agency IS also cuttmg
$4 mJilton , or 5 percent . ol
the mone} tt h,td set .tsrde
lor ado pHon set VIces ,tnd ~
percent. or nearly $400.000.
out ol SK 2 null ron set asrde
tm tile Sidle's chtld suppmt
program
The eLli s come .tt a bad
trmc. s.t td B11an Gtegg.
spokesm.m tor the Hamtlton
County Department ol Job
and Famtly Servrces. wh1ch
serves the Cmcmnatt area.
"At the same ttme we are
bemg cut, we ' re actually
being asked to serve more
people," he said
About 35 percent of ht&gt;
department's chente\e are
membet s of the workrn&lt;;
class who have fallen on
hard ttmes and are makmg
thetr ltrst tnp to the county

de pd ltm cn t CI I L"gg ~.u d

Rnughl)

out nl 10
un I ond

t Hll'

Oh HMn ~ .u L

tH 1\\

st~mps

I

~ . l td

.,

~O M

l ith
ty"s
tde
d.ty
,•olf
and
her
)08
na•the
111

1~ .1

ll.unk1;
Fug111 . e ~l'Ultl \l' dJt l'ltDI of
I he Oh 1o A":--.ot. t:Jtto n o.l
Second Hat' ~sl ~ood B.mb
· Ou1 lo od
y ,mel
soup knchen Jut~ ' ,11c conltnuln g to g lO\\ longer .'
Hamlet -Fugrll '''"I ·om
lamtll..:s ,\l c te lling u.s
there 's no other pi .tee to cui
theu budget s
She quest tOlled " hethcr

P•"'"

mone y ftom the- :-, l dte':--. I dill Y

day fund . CUII Cllt\ y Ul $7)0
mrlhon. should be used ILl
ptevent some ol the cub
But Stnckl.rnd s,11d earlrer
thrs nwnth Ill' drd n "1 w,ant to
dtp Into the I und hcL,tllse he
lea1ed thl' hud L!c t :- . nu.tt ton
coul d g 11m \~oi~L'

-

Local Weather

Local Stocks

m

$80M in cuts coming to Ohio agency for poor

Church events

vrizll Street welfare

L

.

15
s at

the

,ive

to
1e xt
~ tta

Ill

rhe
tol e
hed
am
85.
4th
am
by
ian
md
opane
ors
fol' of
use
ker
ley
md
'ew
nels
j rs-

led
a
by
md
02
Jod
nds

1

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The Daily Sentinel

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111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

www.mydallysentinel.com

Oh1o Valley Publishing Co.
Dan Goodrich
Publisher
Charlene Hoeflich
Gener~l Manager-News Edttor

Co11gress shall make 110 law respectiiiJl an
establishment of religion, or prohibiting the
free exercise tlureoj; or abridging the freedom of
speech, or of the press; or the right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the
Government for a redress of grievances.
- The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

TODAY IN HISTORY
Today tS. Thursday, Sept 25. the 269th day ol 2008
fhere are Y7 t.ttys lelt m the yed t
· Today"s Htghlrghl m Hrstory· On Sept 25, 1789 , the ftrst
Unl!ed States Congress adopted 12 amendments to the
Conslltutron and sent them to the st&lt;ltes for ratrfrcallon
(Ten of the amendments became the Brll of Rrghts)
On thts date In 14'1.1 . Chnstopher Columbus set sdtl
from Cad1z, Sp,un wrth a tlotlil,t of 17 shtps on hts second
voyage to the Western Hemisphere
In 1513. Spamsh explmer Vasco Nunez de Balboa crossed
the Isthmus of Panama and srghted the Pact ftc Ocean
In 1690. one ol the car\u;st Amenc,m newspapers.
Pubhck Occurrences. publtshed lls ftrst - and last - ed t·
liOn 111 Boston
In 1775. Amen can Revolutton,u y War hero Ethan Allen
was captured by the Birtrsh as he led an attack on Montreal
In 1890, Wdlord Woodrulf. prestdent o l the Church ol
Jesus Chnst of Latter-day s.unts, ISSUed a Mamfesto formally renoun~mg the practtce ol polygamy.
In 191 9. PreSLdenl Wrlson collapsed after a speech rn
Pueblo . Colo .. during a nat tonal speakmg tour 111 support ol
the Treaty ol Versdtlles
In 1956. the ftrst trans-Atlanttc telephone cable went rmo
service
In \957, ntne black students who'd been forced to wtthdraw' from Central Htgh School 111 Little Rock , Ark ,
be&lt;Oause of unruly whtte crowds were escorted to class by
members of the U.S. Army's \01 st Arrborne Dtvtsron
In 1978. 144 people were k11led when a Pacrftc
Southwest Aulmes Boemg 727 and a prtvate plane collrded over San Otego
In 198\, Sandra Day O 'Co nnor was sworn 111 as the ftrst
fe male JLt&gt;lice on the Supreme Court
One year ago. Warren Jeffs, the leader ot a polygamous
Mormon splmler group, was convtcted m St George, Utah ,
of bemg an accpmphce to rape for performmg a weddmg
betv,een a 19-ycar-old man and a 14-year-o\d gtrl. (Jeffs
was later sentenced to two consecutive terms of ftve years
to hfe m pnson.) !raman Pres1dent Mahmoud AhmadmeJad,
addressing the Umted Nations , announced "the nuclear
1ssue of Iran ts now closed ," and md1cated Tehran would
d1sregard Secunty Councll resoluttuns tmposcd by what he
called "arrogant powers." Japan's lower hou se of parhament
elected Yasuo Fukuda pnme mm1stcr.
Today 's Btrthdays Broadcast Journaltst Barbara Wallets
1s 79 Rhythm-and-blues smger Joe Russell1 s 69. Defense
Secretary Robert Gates ts 65. Actor Robert Walden IS 65
ActOI ·producer Mt~hael Douglas IS 64. Model Cheryl
Tiegs ts 61 Actur-dtrector Anson W1lhams ts 59 Actor
Mark Hamill is 57 Polka bandleader ltmmy Sturr 1s 57
Actor Michael Madsen ts 50 Actress Heather Locklear IS
47 . Actress Arda Turturro ts 46 Actor Tate Donovan is 45.
Basketball player Scotlle Ptppen ts 43 Actor Wtll Smtih 1s ,
!\0. Actor Hal Sparks IS 39 Actress Catherine Zeta-Jones is
;19 Actress Bndgette W•lson-Sampras ts 35. Actor Chns
Owen 1s 28 Rapper T. I. 1s 28 Actor Lee Noms ts 27
: Thought tor Today· "H tstory ts too senous to be left to
h1ston~ns."- lam Macleod, Bntlsh pohtrc1an (191 3- 1970)

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR
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Ihanh to orgam zaunm and mdJI'Idual&lt; will nor be aaept·
t!d for puh/Jca/ion

The Daily Sentinel
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Thursday, September 25,

2008

Analysis: A bailout plan too big to fail
BY DAVID ESPO
AP SPECIAL CORRESPONDENT

(740) 992-2156 ·FAX (740) 992-2157

PageA4

WASHINGTON
Ptes tden t Bush and the t~~&gt;o
men tunmnc 10 !&gt;. UC ceed hun
r.u sed the ~ polr11cal stakes
dr.tmati ea ll y Wednesddy m
the greal barlout debate ol
200X . cllecttvcly "ampmg a
" too b•g to fLttl" :-.1gn on co ngress umal cllorts to pass a
pre-electron cconom tc rescue p\,tn
Wrth the oulwmc all but
.tssured. detdtls .tnd a
!lmct,tbk lor passage ul an
tmprecedc ntcd Jcdcr.tl mtcr'cnlron ru the cd pilal markets ICill.tlll to be settled .
And bulh John McCarn and
Bm.tck Ob,lllld wr\1 be dble
to chum uetht IOJ w111nimr
ch.mge~ m the admm1St1 ,~
Iron "s ougrn,rl plan - some
of wluch the White House
IMs .dready ,tc cepted
"The whole wor\J Is
watchmg to see If we can
,Let qwckly," Pt esrdent Bush
s,ud e.11l y 111 the week,
bd01e hi s ptoposa\ran 111!0
l.' lltiC1sm from Democwt s

,md Repub lrcans ahke.
So. too. the Ameucan
e\ectowte, srx weeks befo1e
choost ng between two prestdentral candrdates. now
staging srde by srde aud rtlons tor the JOb ol tMtional
c rt'i.J"i mdnager- m ch 1d
With Tre,1SUI} SecJet,uy
Henry P,llllson and Federal
Reserv e Charrm,lll Ben
Bernanke issumg drre warnrngs d,uly. Bush ,uranged .t
pnme ltme .tddress to the
natron It was dest gned to
rescue the rescue plan th.Jt
Bush sent to Cor-.g1 ess Jess
than a week ago after he was
told that e,trlier, pt ecemea\
b,ulouts had not resto red
confidence to the markets
With less than four
months 1em,tinmg 111 offrce
and approval ratrngs 111 the
10 perce nt ra nge. Bush\
persuaSive powers .tt e as

,md Obama , the Democ tat ,
\\Cte uymg out for hi s JOb
M&lt;Cnn , tra rltn ~ once
mm e 111 the rdce -for th e
Whrte House, announced he
wou ld return to Washmgton
to help work on legJslatton .
He suggested he and Ob~ma
dose d ~doo r mcc llng \' 1th
hold around-the-clock meetP.tul son and Bc!IJ&lt;Lnkc "It's mgs wtth congresstonalleada te!lrble pl,ut. but I h"' cn" t ct s and .rdmtnislratJon oflihe,ud ,myth rn g better·
chris u11ttl they h&lt;td reached
'They sold the IVdi. they .rn .Lgteement .•md he satd
sold the st rmulus p.Kkage lhrs Fmlay's prestdc nltal
,md some other thtn~s It 's debate should be rescheduled
the ' \\'olf dl the tloo1 ~. &lt;~t gu­ rn defe1 ence to the criSis
··All we mu st do to
ment . s,1id Da' rs. who "
Iellnng at the end ul th.c ye.u ac hreve tim LS lemporanly
If RepubltLans we ren't set polrtrcs .tsJde, and I'm
exactly cld)llOI Jn g fur BtlSh uJ1111111tted to dorn g so."
to show them the wav, McCam said 111 New York
Democrats tll SI.s!ed the pr e;.
It w.L s an echo of the
1den1 step up. lur rc,rsnns of .1Ccept.1nce speech he delr vthen own
etcd rn St Paul , Minn , Jess
" It rs lime lor hnn lo th,rn ,, month ago "After
cxplam why hts admmtslt.L
we·,e won . we're gmng. to
tton s,r t on 1ts hands lor rc,tch out our h,md to any
months and only 1101~ has wrllrng p.ttnot , make thts
come to Jeal!Ze the need lot govanment sta rt workmg
tmmcd ta te and unpi ece· lor you aga rn ," he satd then
dented govc tnmenl ,tcllnn ,"
But there was more to tt
satd Senate Ma1on1y Leader
McCam 's
stateme11t
Hmry Re1d ol Ncv,td,t
marked the second ttme m a
" It IS !lme lot hnn to matter ot weeks that he used a
cx plam how he could tell dramatrc gesture to shake up
our count Iy for months that the tace tor the Whtte House
The ltrst was hts select ron
out economy wa s frn.e. yet
ovcrmght dec lal c that 11 ol Al.tsk,t Gov Sarah Palm
Amcrr~.m t.txpd yct s don ' I as vtcc prestdemtal runnmg
accept hts b&lt;~ tlout bt\1. our m,u e. .t ptck that energtzed
cumttry wrll lace dll cw· consct vut1ves and helped
numtc tiJ~.ts h:r ·
lucl" posl-conventron swge
Translalron Ncrt hcr Rcrd tn publtc support.
nor House Speaker N,mq
But the gams 111 publtc
Pelosr rntendcu to put thcrr opmron surveys have now
rank and Iric rn the postttun drssrpated . and most polls
ol votmg fn1 lcgrsldt ron th dl show Obama wrth the same
Repubhc ans wu ld oppose Icl.rtt vcly modest lead he
and then Lise .ts ,t c,unpdlgn he\~ hefo1e the summer One.
rssue ,rg.tll1&lt;l them But rf the Wa shtllgtull Post-ABC
man y Rep ublrc.tn s w.e1e smwy. g.rve the Democrat a
pl.mnmg tu Vl1te for the m11e-poml au vantage, wtth a
measur e eve ntu .l ll y. they commanchng lead among
we1e qutel about rt on votets who satd the economy
Wednesda;
w.ts the top tssue
Whr\c Bu sh was exetusAnd whrle M~Cam has
mg hts prcsrdentral poweJS. rn srsted Palm is ready to
v,ould -be
succe"ors t.tke ove1 as prestdent, he
McCain. the Repuhltca n. nhtdc no mention of mcludunt:en.un 111 Congte~s .1 &gt;.:
they ar e wrth the puhhc
It was d potnt so me
Repubhcans were WIIirng to
make. unchantahl y m tunes
"It 's a tough sell to most
o.f our mcmbc'I S.' sard Rep
Tom Dav1S , R- Va . &lt;tl lct a

· ing he1 rnthe cnsts meetmgs
he want s 111 Washmgton .
One a1de satd he dtd not
mtend fo r her to be present.
Qb.1ma was next to step
before the cameras. tcllmg
reporters that he had mttrally
called McCam to suggest a
JOint statement that would
make clear both prestdentml
hopefuls supported leg•slallon
to stem the ecollom•c shde
Where McCain talked
about
btpartrsahship,
Obama p1 ovtded specificS
across party lmes
" I also need to ~1ve cred11 to Republican Sen Tom
Coburn . who had called me
sugge;tm g that' a JOLnt
statement mrght be useful,"
he sard
He also said he had urged
De mocJattc congresstonal
Je,1ders not to pursue efforts
to add an economrc StJmuIus package to the batlout.
Similarly. he satd the
attempt to gtve bankruptcy
JUdges the power to rewnte
mortgage term s, another
Democrauc pnonty, "1s
probably something that we
shouldn ·r try to do 111 thts
p1ece of leg•slauon "
Then came the pb at h1s
' nval
" My hope ts, ts that Sen.
McCam ts gmng to be talkmg to Rcpubltcans and
sendmg them the same message, that there are some
tssues that they may be concerned about or thmgs that
are pllonttes for them, but
what we shou ldn 't dots try
to get everythmg done m
thts package."
Nm was Obama taken w1th
McCam's call to defer the
debate unt1l agreement had
been Leached on legtslallon.
" You know. prestdents are
go mg to have to deal with
more than one thmg at a
t1me." he satd . "It's not necessary for us to thmk that we
can only do one thmg and
suspend everythmg else."

ToDAY IN SC HOOL
WE LEARNED TO COUNT
To 700 BILLION.

Thursday, September 25, 2008

Local Briefs

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

www.mydailysentinel.com

ANNIE'S MAILBOX

Receives endorsement
POMEROY - The Fraternal Order of Pollee i ~ endors·
mg Jimmy Stewart m h1 s race for Ohio's 20th Senate
Dtstrict The FOP. Oh10 's largest law enforcement organilat ron , has more than 25 ,000 professLOnallaw enforcement
members statewide
Stewart IS currently serving h1s third ternn as state representative of Oh10"s 92nd House D1stnct. He currently s1ts
on tl)e House Finance and AppropriatiOns Committee and
serves as chat rman of the Human Serv1ces Subcommittee.

Game drug-free, but still_dangerous
Bv KATHY MITCHELL
AND MARCY SUGAR

ol leaches the danger&gt; of
thiS g.tme There IS a web
stte that addresses the warn
rn g srgns at www chok
rngga me net I am hopeful
otheJS .wtll Jearn about th ts
pracllce belore ll h.rppens to
then· chtld
Still
Grieving Grandma in
Davenport, Iowa
Dear Grandma: Our
condol ences on your temble l0ss We have d1 scussed
thrs top1c belore, but 11 certaml y bears another menlion Children and young
teens thmk thts self-asphyx·
JatJon game ts harmless
becau se It's drug-free. But
depnvmg the bram of oxy ·
gen. even fo r short penods.
n sks permanent bTarn dam ·
age, se tzures and death
Parents should watch for
marks around the neck.
bloodshot eyes. complamts
of headaches. dtsonenlalron
after spendmg ttme alone
and paraphernalta su~h as
p\asttc bags, dog leashes .
bungee cords, t1es, ropes,
scarves and belts, especrally
1f they are t1ed to bedroom
fu1mture or doorknobs 01
found knotted on the floor
We hope .til parents of
young children wtll discuss
the dangers as they would
talk about drugs or alcohol.
The best p10tectton ts honest mformation.

Dear Annie: Our grandson dted a year ago at tne
age of 15 H1s death was the
res ult of playmg the
extremely dangerous "chokmg game ." Thousands of
ktds between the ages of 9
and \6 are playmg thr s
game. There are other
names for 1!, such as "pass
COOLVILLE - Coolvi lle Volvnteer F1re Department out game" and "space monwill hold Octoberfest and a car show on Oct. II
key." l&lt;1ds play tt m groups
Plans mclude food , entertamment, drawmgs and a safety and alone Playmg alone IS
house. Vendors are v,elcome for a $!0 space fee . No food
the most hfe-threatemng
vendors a1e permitted
The
game
mvolves
The parade w1ll begm at I I am., With hneup a! 10:30
neck
to limrt
squeezing
the
Information ts·avaJ\able from Les Washburn at 667-6891.
blood flow and oxygen to
the brain m order to ach1eve
a h1gh. Most of the children
who play th1s game are
MARIETTA - Regtonal Adv1sory Council for Area good ktds who are agam st
Agency on Agmg wrll meet at 10 am on Oct 10 in the the use of drugs and alcoHtll s/Hockmg Valley Regtonal Development hol K1ds thmk It's a safe
Di1;trict Area Age ncy on Agmg Office, Manetta.
way to ach1eve a rush wuhoul usmg But tt ts not sate
at all. Lack of oxygen to the
bram ktlls bram cells, wh1ch
do not replenish them ·
selves Hundreds of ktds
Rtdge Commumty Church, have suff~red bram damage
Eagle R1dge Road . dmner at' and heart problems, or dted
noon , smgmg at I p m by from asphyx1allon
Monday, Sept. 29
Most parents are unaware
Bissells,
Jerry and Dtane
POMEROY - Veterans
Frederick,
and
Everett
that
tht s IS somethmg their
Servtce Comm1ss ton, 9
Grant and Friends
children may be involved
,, m , 117 Memonal Dr.
Sunday,
Oct.
5
in. Schools teach about
Wednesday, Oct. 1
HEMLOCK
GROVE
but no sehoul I know
drugs,
POMEROY
- Me1gs
County Board of Health, 5 Homecoming at Hemlock
p.m . Health Depurtmenl Grove Chnstian Church.
conference room. 112 E Worship at 9.30 a.m., dinner
at Grange Hall at 12:30 p.m.
Memonal Dr
Afternoon program at 2
year-old boy . a 16-year-old
GADSDEN , Ala. (AP) p.m. wtll feature Forg1ven
grrl
and a 15-year-old . gtrl
Ohio
teenagers
are
m
Three
Agam Tno, with other readare
charged
wllh recetvmg
custody
in
Alabama
after
they
mgs and mus1c.
drove from pursumg deputies stolen property The boy.
Saturday, Sept. 27
'
and later rammed two patrol who was dnvmg. also face s
RACINE - Thomas and
cars to end a 30-mmute chase. reckless endangerment and
(Weaver) Stobart
Etowah County S hen ff cnmmal m1 scluef charges.
reunron I p m at Star Mill
Thetr mtmes were not
Todd Entrekm says a 16Park rn Racme Take covered dtsh. Ln the event ot
Friday, Sept. 26
rem. the reun1on wtll be
POMEROY
held at the Racme Ltbrary
AlzheJmer's/memory loss
careg1ver support group will
shteld the counties"
BY STEPHEN MAJORS
meet from I :15 to 2:15p.m.
ASSOCIATED
PRESS
WRITER
Stnckland ordered that
at the Me1gs Semor Center.
two
ot the department's pro·
Thursday, Sept. 25
Those attendmg may bnng
COLUMBUS
The
RACINE
- Southern their loved ones for a lime of
grams be protected lrom
Local School Dtstnct's structured activity during state agency that admm1s· budget cuts - the $9 3 btl,Enne" Center, open hou se, the support group's meetmg. ters programs for poor and han the state sets as1de to
4-i p.m , Southern Htgh Kathy McDamel and Sharon low-mcome fam1lies is cut- provtde Medtcmd to lowSchool , free health screen- Dean are co-facilitators for ting almost $80 million mcome
Ohtoans
unul
its
budget,
mcluding
from
mgs.
rece1vmg
a
federal
reimthe support group. For more
mllhons of dollars tor a bursement , and $25 mllhon
mfornnation, call992' 2161
welfare program
for dtsabthty asststance
Tuesday, Sept. 30
Records obtamed by The
The department will be
POMEROY - OH-KAN
Press
Wednesday
Associated
cuttmg
$ 12.7 mtlhon - or
Com Club, change of meetFriday, Sept. 26
show
the
Oh10
Department
about
5
percent - of the
MIDDLEPORT - The mg from Monday to
and
Fam1ly
SefV!ces
of
Job
$267.6 mtlhun 1t had been
Mtdd\eport Church of Chnst Tuesday at the Pomeroy
also
1
s
cuttmg
back
on
fundspendmg m Its share of the
wtll have a free commumty L1brary, 7 p.m.
mg
for
adoption
serv1ces,
federal-state
Temporary
MIDDLEPORT
dmner, 4 30 to 6 p.m , m the
money
to
detect
MedJcaJd
Assistance
for
Needy
Middleport Church of Chnst Middleport Literary Club, 2 fraud and funds to admmtsFamtly Ltfe Center, F1fth p.m. Gay Perrin Will rev1ew ter the state's ch1ld support Famtl ies program The program. s1gned mto law b~ forand Mam. Menu, biscutts "A Thousand Splend1d
program.
mer President Btll Chnton ,
and gravy, eggs , potatoes Suns" Leah Ord hostess .
In
many
cases
the
money
provtdes
welfare benefits to
CHESTER
- Shade
and bacon and dessert
bemg
cut
goes
to
county
the poor while pushmg them
River Lodge 453, monthly
Sunday, Sept. 28
proagenc1es
that
manage
to find employment
stated meeting, 7 30 p.m .
RACINE
grams
for
Ohio
ctllzens
It
Homecoming ~~ the Eagle Refreshments follow.
wtll be up to the counties to

Octoberfest, car show

Council meets

Community Calendar
Public meetings

Dear Annie: I am a 22yea r-old p,uHrme co ll ege
student ~~&gt; tlh .1 lul\-trmc JOb
I rece ntl y got e ng&lt;~geLI ..
whr ch I' m exerted ,\bout I
moved Ill wrth my boyfnend
a year ,\fter we st&lt;~ rte d datm g
and ever} thmg ts goi ng 'e' y
smooth ly
The pr oble m is. my par
ents are stlong C tthohc; and
were extremely upset thdt
we moved m toge ther They

Uear Annie: l l11s rs rn
response to (Jet It Rrgltt,
P\ e,tsc'
\\ IHlsc" 111 -l,l\"
msr'l o n c·.tllm~ her "" knn) ·
mslead of her Znii CL I n.un e.
whrch IS "Jenn.t.
She shou ld tlldkc " huge
name tag thai redds ··MY
NAME IS JEN:-JA. and
we,11 rt whc ne\u she rs
,11ound them Md\ ~e rl could
Ill Jed :,nme hui1wt \\ hd e
cettmc them to Iemembci to

wouldn"t

l1se he-1

If Presrdent Bush seems
oddly unshaken , what with
a 19 percent approval! atm g
and an astonrshmg zero '!Jercent of the pubhc opttmtstrc
about the economy, u's
because lor hrm, rn the
Immortal wo1ds of Yogr
Berra , the Wall Street meltdown bas1cally amounts to
"dep vu all over agam "
Pr10r to mhentmg the
Whtte House, tinandnl cnses
were the sto ry ol Bush 's hte.
He'd talk college tnends mto
backmg a Texas Wildcat otl
venture. dnll some dry holes.
then get bought out by
Daddy 's f11ends at a prolit
Pnorto Daddy 's tnends buymg the Tex.ts Rangers. hrs
btggest payday had come
from cashmg out ol .1 troubled ml company days ahead
ot a lousy eammgs report
Sure, there was an
Secut tttes and Exchange
CommtsSJon tnstder-tradmg
mvestt ga tJOn , hut Poppy·
Bush was prestdent So you
know how lar that went. loe
Conason narrated the sotdid
tale tor Harper's back 111
2000, but nobody wanted to
hear tt The make- beheve
Texas rancher was a "com-

Sachs. he was paid a repmtNobod} evet expected to
ed $38 mdhon for helping pay A greater fool would
turn the natron 's fmanctal borrow more to buy ttre
system rnto a giant shell pro petty tomorrow
· gLtme, as Inv es tor~ were
People hke Prmceton econduped rnto buymg so-called omist and New York Times
Gene
'·mortgage-backed secun - colummst Paul Krugman
Lyons
nes"' b.tsed upon bad loans who warned that the speculathat wr ll never be Iepatd .
ttve bubble was sure to burst
At bottom. Repubhcan w1th potentially catastrophic
economic tlunkmg ts based consequences were scorned
M,uxt st-stylc hsca\n,t!tonal - upon two mamfestly false as backward-thmkmg pesiza tron , It should m:unly rde.Is The ltrst. endlessly stmJsts and lampooned fot
beneltt multrmrllJOnau ~s. !lugged by Rush L1mbaugh thCJr clumsy prose
Feanng collapse, Paulson
Sou.1 ltsm f(Jr the we.1\th v, ,md lm co· hOI ts, that sharply
market dtscrplrn e for you reduemg taxes un people demanlls an estimated $700
lrke the Bushes, the Paulsons · bJ\hon blank check to buy
and me
and
the McCams resu Its m up the bad paper from hts
lnd gmg by the plan
lllCteased
govemment rev- Wall Street fnends . Here 's
sketched out by Tt e.1sur y
Secreta ry Henry P.tul so11 enue and g1eater prospenty his tdea of takmg responsihenceforth to he known as for all. In practtce, tt's led to bJhty· " DeCISIOnS by !he
the natlon 's " Money Cz.tr."" st.tggeung budget def ICtls , Secretary pursuant to the
he must tmagme God '" a decre.tsmg opportumty and authonty ot th1 s Act are
cclcsttdl Rc,tltot wtth loi s of ll sing mequaht y. More DOn-reviewable and commmed to agency dtscretJon ,
\rstmgs m G1eenwrch. Conn . p.tlaces. lewer JObs.
The
second
is
an
updated
and may not be rev1ewed by
whete W&lt;1 ll Street tycoons
ver ston of the early Chnsttan any court of law or any
erect compelmg palaces
A 1ecenl New Yo1 ker drttclc Pelagtan he1esy, denymg the admmJStratJve agency"
Everybody says someby N"k P.tumgartcn limned universality of Ongm&lt;d Sm.
the scene Uncle Scrooge Always and everywhere thmg hke what Paulson progovernment poses must be done; everyMcDuck's mansron wou ld be denouncrng
overstght
and
tegulahon
of body's probably right
" teardown opportun rt y fm
rnvestment
ftrms,
banks,
Democral s,
moreover,
these jokers Only one bull ron
pool to dabble m? Rather like brokcr.1ge houses and insur- men ' t wtthoui blame. B11l
lohn and Cmdy McCam , they ,mce companies, flee-market Clinton stgned leg tslation
require 35 .lXJO sqtt.tre feet, 10- fundam entahsts assured us greatly reducmg regu latory
p as~aonate
conservat 1vc ·· cm garages. ,md mdoor and that the fuM ncml system was safeguards m 1999 .
everybody wanted to have a outdoor he.ttCd pools, along rnh erentl y se\f-regulatmg .
We must now pray that
beer with .
Gen tl emen
geniuses the financial wtza•ds who
With movte theateJs. ba~ket·
So now we're all m what ball arenas. wme cellars . pre sided; greed was a cardi- created thts maze can find
Poppy once called "deep skccl-shoolmg ranges and ser· nc~l VII1Ue
therr way out
doo-doo." and the same vants qumters modeled upon
rhe resu It was the creation
Meantime , here' s a
b11 lhant ecunormc team that Versarlles Lrteral\y.
ol a gigitlltlc Ponzi scheme phrase that sho uld vamsh
assured us that all was well
They're nol so much hous· The quamt concept of "due f10m the language forever
two weeks dgo w(lrn:-.. an es as theme parks. the theme d•lrgence·· v,tmshed from the "Republtcan ft scal conservPaul Krugm,m's wotds. that herng l,ultomless g1eed and linancwl system from bottom at1ve.·•
"the sky 1s falhng. and that element,r\ pnmate st &lt;~ tu s f1en· to top Fee-chummg brokers
(At kama~
Demncrctt to save the world we have to lY basi~ chrinp stull Except. peddled adJUSt&lt;lble-rate mort- Ga ;:etre wlumnm Gene
do exactly.. what II s &lt;~ ys now onrs. foreclosures are mount gages au ovet valued real L10n 1 "
a Natuma/
now now
Ill!.! Ill (, IL'L'IW. tt.:h ton
est.llc to suckers mcapable of Ma ga::.me All'au/ wtmrer
People have olten s,ud llwl
"lvitHle\ C!.ll l'.tulsnll del
llldkmg the p.tyments, then and W·&lt;l utltor of " The
tf fasc1sm came to Amettca. lilli e\} knov, s the ICIIIlory p.twncd ufl the b,td loans on Hun/1118 of the President "
tt would amve wrth a sm1lcy In 2011) h" last full ve,u .ts speculators who , m turn, (St Mart111 '1 Press, 2000)
face: So maybe It 's littmg CEO or the (now -,h,tk y) rep.tck.tged them as (now YtJu can e-matl L'tmB at
that 1f we're gomg to have mvcstment bank Goldman . woithless) securities
eugcnelyom2@\a/.100 w m J

VISit

our apartment

or allow my fiance to come
to th e 11 home tor anv re~t son
They sttll won·i. e\en
though we' re engaged HIS
wjtole larm ly loves me to
death and couldn 't be happtet for us When wtll my p.trenls ever accept hun' ·Worried Fiancee
Dear
Worried:
Hopefully. when you &lt;Ire
marrred Your p.uenl s don' t
want to grvc the rmpi csston
that they .tpprove ol your
ltvmg dnangements Th~
same W.t} they don't ,\gree
With the cho t~e you m.rde to
move in to gether. you don't
have to l.lgree wtth them,,
but tty to Iespect theu lee\ rngs on the subject Once
you have Jegalrzed th"
a11angement 111 chu1 ch. they
will be more comtortable
welcoming YOU! fianc e 111[0
the fanuly If not, ask yo ur
pnest fm help

It th ey

uH t eclnd1liL'

sltp up she c,tn srmply porn!
to the

rcpe,ll
repe.u

~~ ~n

.tnd h.w~ the m
- .~nd r ~pc.rt
,md

until the) I11Mll y
ll" ill - Eileen
"' Dear" Eileen : Old hablls
dre h,u d ,tnd n,une t.1gs
wo n 1 h ~ l p 11 ben lctrer s ,tre
rnc o11 ee l 1\ ,\dd t ""''d bu t
llliCCtrng htu .1or " ollcn "
good ""Yto ~L'l "dtl lt cul t
pornt across l ll.utl-.s
Anllll' 'I .Hwlhox 11 11"17/te/1
oe [ II

by Kallt,l Mlltltdl mul Marcy

Sugar.

edt/on' uf

lmlKIWU!

tire Anu l.wulcn wlumu.
Pleale e·marl yo ur qrt e.\IJOtl.\
to
anuin mmlbox@mm·
cwil.net, or U'llll! lo:

08

g
hetr
I m
eep
tilt a
tied
1ree
25Wlll
ped
1me
fay.
·ack

on
m!s

81

Aunie's

Matlbu.t , PO /!o.\ /18190 ,
C/ucago, IL 60(&gt;1 I. To find
out 111111e about -lnnie 's
Mailbox. am/ 1eml feature~
bv other Crwtu11 .~wulicate
write/"\ and UI/(Ofllli\l\, t'lSif
tile Crea/ol\ \\1/dicate We~
page a/ ww11.creatm uom.

.Jp

~s

3 Ohio teens in custody after Alabama chase

Reunions

Clubs and
organizations

Other events

released
lnvestrgatot Jell Hoppe&lt;
s&lt;~ys the teens stole ,t car m
Jackson 111 southem Oh10.
before headmg to Alabama to
meet a boy who the youngc1
gtrl met on the lntemct.
The teens .ue accused ol

~te,l l iiH:! clllnth l'l

\('h ick tll

not111 Al. rh,lm.r I he J1U isllil
sta1ted

ttbnut

el l

I

cl

dec1de how to rework their
local budgets to deal with
. the loss of state dollars.
. . , - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - wh1ch could lead to cuts m
'
services to Oh10ans
Thursday ...Patchy fog in 40 percent chance of rain.
As the economy has
the mormng Sunny H1ghs Highs in the mid 70s.
worsened, greater numbers
111 the upper 70s Northeast
Saturday night. •.Mostly of Ohioans have been showwmds 10 to 15 mph
cloudy with a 40 percent ing up at county agenctes
Thursday night ...Partly chance of rain. Lows 111 the looking for help for the first
cloudy m the evemng .Then m1d 50s
lime. The latest news Jed 10
mostly cloudy with a shght
Sunday .. .Mostly cloudy renewed calls from advochance of ram alter mld- m the morning. Then cates of the poor tor a secnrght Lows m the lower 50s. becommg partly sunny. ond federal sumulus packHighs m the mid 70s.
Chance of ram 20 percent.
age to asstst state budgets .
Sunday night through
Friday...Cloudy wtth rain
About $36 mllhon m state
night ...Partly cuts w1ll come from money
hkely Hi ghs arou nd 70, Monday
Northeast wmds 10 to 15 cloudy. Lows around 50. that had been set as1de for
mph w!lh gusts up to 25 H1ghs in the upper 70s.
the Med1care Part D preTuesday .. .Mostly sunny scriptiOn drug program but
mph Chance of ram 60 perwith a 40 percent chance of is no longer needed , smd
cent
Friday uight ...Cioudy showers . Highs in the lower Ohio Job and Family
With ramlrkely. Lows in the 70s
Services spokesman Dennis
Tuesday night ...Mostly Evans No semor currently
IUtd 50s Northeast wmds
10 to 15 mph Chance of cloudy w1th a 30 percent under the program wt\1 lose
chance of showers. Lows m coverage, he satd
ram 60 percent
Saturday ...Cioudy wtth a the lower 50s.
The agency made the cuts
to comply w1th Gov Ted
Stnckland's request that
most state agenctes cut 4 75
percent from their budgets
The state faces a proJected
65.85
bud~et deficit of $540 mtl·
AEP (NYSE) - 36.79
Ohio Valley Bane Corp. (NAS.
Akzo (NASDAQ) - 57.55
hon durmg the fmal year of
DAQ)- 20.55
Ashland Inc. (NYSE) - 29.35
the slate's two-year, $52 btl ·
BBT (NYSE) - 38.54
Big Lola (NYSE) - 29.60
han budget.
Bob Evans (NASDAQ) - 26.78 Peoples (NASDAQ) - 23.45
Earlttr
th1s
year
Pepsico (NYSE) - 70.10
BorgWarner (NYSE) - 32 84
Stnckland announced a prePremier (NASDAQ) - 9.50
Century Aluminum (NASDAQ)
Rockwall (NYSE) - 36.69
-35.58
VIOUS round of cuts thai
Rocky Boots (NASDAQ) Champion (NASDAQ) - 4.48
!otaled $733 m11110n .
4.05
Charming Shops (NASDAQ) Job and Family Servt~e s
Royal Dutch Shell - 62.72
5 10
was
able to avmd makmg
Sears Holding (NASDAQ) City Holding (NASDAQ) cuts
that would have an
94.50
42.50
Wai·Mart
(NYSE)
58.92
impac1
on county agency
Collins (NYSE) - 46.67
Wendy's (NYSE) - 21.79
DuPont (NYSE) - 43.74
operations during the ftrst
WeoBanco (NYSE) - 27.87
US Bank (NYSE) - 33.85
round of trimming
Worthington (NYSE) - 17.11
Gannett (NYSE) - 17.09
" In our earliet cuts we
Dally stock reports are the 4
General Electric (NYSE) took the brunt of tt internalp.m. ET closing quotes ol
24.59
tranaactlono lor Sept. 24,
ly, so th at the count res didn't
Harley-Davidson (NYSE) 2008, provided by Edward
39.18
realize any of thos, cut s."
Jonea financial advleoro laaac Evans said "Thi s t11ne
JP Morgan (NYSE) - 40.50
Milia In Gallipolis al (740) 441- around, whtle there weren't
Kroger (NYSE) - 26.35
94.41 and Laolay Morraro In
Limited Brands (NYSE) any programs that we directPoint Pleaoant at (304) &amp;7418.24
'
ly ehminated , we couldn't
0174.
Member
SIPC.
Norfolk Southern (NYSE) -

M,lml.r v .rft~r Ihe I'"' drun"t
stop ,11' ,L d11\ ct s . l rcc n ~e
chec:kpornt
The tc~ns \Vtil' t d~l' ll tn d
IU VCillk hul d 111 ~ l,tlll ll)

The agency IS also cuttmg
$4 mJilton , or 5 percent . ol
the mone} tt h,td set .tsrde
lor ado pHon set VIces ,tnd ~
percent. or nearly $400.000.
out ol SK 2 null ron set asrde
tm tile Sidle's chtld suppmt
program
The eLli s come .tt a bad
trmc. s.t td B11an Gtegg.
spokesm.m tor the Hamtlton
County Department ol Job
and Famtly Servrces. wh1ch
serves the Cmcmnatt area.
"At the same ttme we are
bemg cut, we ' re actually
being asked to serve more
people," he said
About 35 percent of ht&gt;
department's chente\e are
membet s of the workrn&lt;;
class who have fallen on
hard ttmes and are makmg
thetr ltrst tnp to the county

de pd ltm cn t CI I L"gg ~.u d

Rnughl)

out nl 10
un I ond

t Hll'

Oh HMn ~ .u L

tH 1\\

st~mps

I

~ . l td

.,

~O M

l ith
ty"s
tde
d.ty
,•olf
and
her
)08
na•the
111

1~ .1

ll.unk1;
Fug111 . e ~l'Ultl \l' dJt l'ltDI of
I he Oh 1o A":--.ot. t:Jtto n o.l
Second Hat' ~sl ~ood B.mb
· Ou1 lo od
y ,mel
soup knchen Jut~ ' ,11c conltnuln g to g lO\\ longer .'
Hamlet -Fugrll '''"I ·om
lamtll..:s ,\l c te lling u.s
there 's no other pi .tee to cui
theu budget s
She quest tOlled " hethcr

P•"'"

mone y ftom the- :-, l dte':--. I dill Y

day fund . CUII Cllt\ y Ul $7)0
mrlhon. should be used ILl
ptevent some ol the cub
But Stnckl.rnd s,11d earlrer
thrs nwnth Ill' drd n "1 w,ant to
dtp Into the I und hcL,tllse he
lea1ed thl' hud L!c t :- . nu.tt ton
coul d g 11m \~oi~L'

-

Local Weather

Local Stocks

m

$80M in cuts coming to Ohio agency for poor

Church events

vrizll Street welfare

L

.

15
s at

the

,ive

to
1e xt
~ tta

Ill

rhe
tol e
hed
am
85.
4th
am
by
ian
md
opane
ors
fol' of
use
ker
ley
md
'ew
nels
j rs-

led
a
by
md
02
Jod
nds

1

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The Daily Sentinel

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�!

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

BY DAVID ESPO
AP SPECIAL CORRESPONDENT

WASHINGTON
www.mydailysentinel.com
President Bush and the two
me11 r unll!ng 1o sttcceed llun
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
r:used the political stakes
chamat !cally Weunesday in
Dan Goodrich
the great b,ulout debate of
Publisher
200R. effectively st.tmpmg a
"too btg to I ail" s1gn on congressJon,Ji eflorts to pa ss .1
Charlene Hoeflich
pre-election cconomtc tesGeneral Manager-News Edtlor
cuc pLm
W1th the nut&lt;:omc all but
oi'Sllled. det,uis ,md a
timetable lm passage of an
Congress shall make 110 law respecting an
unpt ecedented fede1 al Inlet establishment of religion, or prohibiting .the
vent!On 1g the cap1tal matfree exercise tl!ereo.fi or abridging tlu JYeedom of kch ren1.11n to be settled
And both John McCam and
speech, or of the press; or the right of the peo- B,1rack Ob.!llM will be able
to clatm cicd il fm w1nnJng
ple peaceably to assemble, and to petition the

Government for a redress of grievances.
- The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

TODAY IN HISTORY
. Today 1S Thursday, Sept 25, the 269th day of 2008
There are 97 d,tys left m the year.
· Today's H1ghlight 111 H1 st01y On Sept 25, 1789, the first
United States Cong1ess adopted 12 amendments to the
ConstltUI!On anu sent them to the states for rat!fl~dtlon
(Ten of the amendments became the Btl I of Rights.)
On th1s &lt;.late In 1493. Chnstophet Columbus set s.1tl
fr,om Cad1z , Spa1n. With" flotilla of 17 s~tps on hiS second
voyage to the Western Hemtsphere.
In 151 J, SpaniSh explorer Vasco Nunez de Balboa crossed
the Isthmus of Pan.1ma and s1ghtcu the Pa~1f1c Ocean.
In 1690 , one of the ea rliest Amencan newspape!S,
Publtck Occurrences, published Its first - and last - edition m Boston
In 1775. Amet1can Revolutionary War hero Ethan Allen
I'. as captured by the Btlt!Sh as he led an attack 011 Montte,il
In 1890, Willonl Woodrutt. prestdimt ot the Church ot
Jesus Chnst of Lattet -day Samts, tssued a Mamfesto formally renouncmg the pract1ce of polygamy.
In 1919 , President W1ison collapsed after a speech m
Pueblo , Colo .. dunng a nat tonal speaking tour in suppnrt of
the Treaty of Ve1 sat lies
In 1956, the first trans-Atlantic telephone cable went Into
serv1ce
In 1957, nme black students who'd been forced to Withdraw from Central H1gh School m Little Rock , Ark.
because of unruly wh1te crowds were escorted to class by
members of the U.S Army's JOist Airborne Dtylston
In 197R , 144 people were k1lled when a Paciftc
Southwest Atrlines Boemg 727 and a pnvate plane collided mer San D1ego
In 1981 , Sandra Day O'Connor was sworn m as the first
female JUStice on the Supteme Coll!t
One year ago Warren lefts, the leader of a polygamous
Mormon splintet group, was convicted m St George, Utah,
of bemg an accompl1ce to rape for pertormmg a wedd111g
between a 19· yeat·old man and a 14-yeat -old gtrl. (Jeffs
was later sentenced to two consecutive terms of five years
to life m pnson.) ltanian President Mahmoud AhmadmeJad,
addressmg the Untted Nations, announced "the nuclear
tssue of Iran is now closed." and mdtcated Tehran would
dtsregard Secunty Council resolutiOns 1mposed by what he
called "arrogant powers " Japan's lower house of parliament
electea Yasuo Fukuda pnme mmiSter
Today's B1rthdays Broadcast JOUrnalist Barbara Walters
IS 79. Rhythm ·and-blues singer Joe Russell is 69 . Defense
Secretary Robert Gates IS 65 Actor Robert Walden IS 65.
Actor-producer Mtchael Douglas is 64 Model Cheryl
T1egs ts 61. Actor-d1rector Anson W1llmms IS 59. Actor
Mark Hamill is 57 Polka bandleader Jimmy Sturr IS 57.
Actor M1chael Madsen ts 50 Actress Heather Locklear IS
47 Actress A1da Turturro 1s 46. Actor Tate Donovan 1s 45
Basketball player Scottie Pippen IS 43 Actor Will s"mtth IS
;:10. Actor Hal Sparks ts 39. Actress Cathenne Zeta-Jones is
?9 Actress Bndgette Wilson-Sampras ts 35 Actor Chns
Owen ts 28. Rapper T. I is 28. Actor Lee Norris 1s 27
: Thought for Today· "History IS too senous to be left to
histonans ." - lain Maclencl, Bnt1sh politician ( 1913-1970)

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR
Letters to the edl/01 are welcome They should be le"
than 300 words. All lelle! s we subjeU UJ edltmg. mu1t he
Mgned, and mclude addre~s and te lephone 1111111ber Nv
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good taste, addres11ng 15-\lte\, not personaht•n Lei/en of
zhank&gt; to orgamzatton.l and mdtvtdual' w11/ not be ac tept·
-ed for pubilcatwn
'

The Daily Sentinel
Correction Polley
Our mam concern 1n all stones 1s to
be accurate If you know of an error
m a story, call the newsroom at (740)
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Lhdnges 111 lhe admlmslia-

I!OII 's ottgu!.il plan - some
of which tl1e Wh1te House
has ,ilre,tdy dccepted
"The whole world "
watchtng to see If we can
act qutckl y,' Ptes1dent Bush
s:ud early 111 the week,
bdme h~&gt; proposal r.1n mto
Cll tlclsm from Democrats
and Republicans al1ke.
So. ton , the Amencan
clectOJate.Six weeks before
choosi ng between two presIdential cancltdates. now
s1,1gmg Side-by -side audi tion s tor the fOb of !Wtlon.tl
CIISIS 11Mild£CI - i 11- Ch ICf
With Tre.tsuty Secret.tty
Henry Paulson and Fede1al
Reserve Chan m,m Ben
Berndnke tss umg d1re Wd lll mgs datly. Bt!Sh ammgcd a
ptllne t11ne .1ddress to the
nat1on . It was des1gned to
1eswe the 1escue pl,m th,!t
Bush ;;ent to CoQgress less
th,m d week ugo aHc1 he was
told that eat lier, piecemea l
bailouts had not resto1ed
conf1dence to the markets
W!lh less th an tour
months 1em.t1ning 111 off1ce
and approval ratmgs 111 the
30 percent range. Bu sh's
persuastve powe rs are as

dS ,mel Obama. th e Democrat.
were tt y1ug out for h1s JOb
they are wilh the puhltc
It was ,, poult some
McCa1n , trailing once
Republican s were willmg to 11101 e 111 the race for the
make. unch.utl.ihly ,It limes Wh1te House . announced he
"It's a tou gh sel l to most wou ld return to Washmgton
of OLII memhcr, ... '''"' Rep to help work on legislation.
'1om D.IVI\. R-Vd. aftet a He &gt;uggesteu lie and Obhma
do s~ d - door meetin g Wilh
hold ,tround·the-clock meetP.tt!lson ,mu U~nMnk~ " It's liH!' wtlh congressional lead
a te111b le pl.m . hut I ha ve n' t et ~ and admimstrauon offihe.mJ anythm g bdtcJ ..
udls until thex had 1eached
"They sold the wa1 they ,111 ,lgteement. and · he sa1d
sold the stimu lus paekuge tim F11day's preSidenttal
.1nd some other thmgs It's debate should be rescheduled
the ·woll at the door ·· t~rg tt ­ 111 defetence to the cnsts
"A ll we mu st do to
ment. s.ud DaviS who IS
.~etueve thts IS tempmanly
re11nng .11 the end olthe ye:u
If Repuhl1 ca ns \\eren't set politics aside , and I'm
exactl y damm1ng lm Bu sh committed to domg so.''
to show them the way. McCam sa 1d 111 New York
Democr,lts msl\ted the p!es- · II w.1s dn echo of the.
Jdent step up. '"' teasons ol acce ptance speech he de I! v
e1cd 111 St Paul. Mmn .. less
then own
"It IS t1me io1 him IO th.111 " month ago "Afte r
cxpl,un why hts mlm ln!stl.l- we· vc won, we· re go mg to
!lon s.1t on tts h.u1ds lo1 JC.Ich out our ha.Jd to any
months dnd only now lids willmg patllut, make thiS
come to te.Jltze the need fo1 grl\e tnment st&lt;-llt work111g
Immediate· and unprece· lor you agam," he sa1d then.
dented govetnmen t ,tctton.'·
But there was more to 11
McCam's
statement
satd Senate Matonty Lcade1
Han y Re1d ol Nev.tdd
mat ked the second time in a
" It " tllne lot htm to mattet ot weeks that he used a
explai n how he cou ld tell dt.tmallc gesture to shake up
our country lor months th,!t the race for the White House.
1 he f11st was his selection
our eeonom y v. '" lm.e , yet
ovetn1ght decl,uc that 1f ol Alask.t Gov Sarah Palm
1\mei!L.III ldxp,!yel\ uun't ds vtcc pres tdentldl ll1110tng
ciCCCj)l hiS bailout bill. ()lll llldle, .1 ptck that energ1zed
cour111y wlll lace ,111 eco
cume1 vatJVes and helped
nomtc dtsa:-..Lcr ..
fuel .t post-conventton sutge
Tr,msldtlon Nc!lh~i Re1u 111 public suppm t
nor House Speakc1 N,utcy
But the gam s in public
PeloSI 1ntendcu to put the 11 op11110n surveys have now
1ank and fil e Ill the pos!lion d!SS!p.lted. and most polls
of votmg lt11 kg!SI.ttton tlldt show Obama w1th the same
Repuhl1eans LOuld oppose Ieiat!vely modest lead he
and then usc ,Js a cdmpatgn held before the summer. One,
1ssue &lt;~g,un st them Btl! If the Washmgton Post-ABC
mdny Republi ca ns wete survey, gave the Democrat a
pi,lllnlllg Ill \OIC io1 the n111e-pomt advantage, w1th a
measure eve ntu,ill y. th ey commandmg lead among
we1e qwet abou t 11 on voters who sa1d the economy
Wcdnesda)
WdS the top ISSUe.
And while McCam has
While Bush w,Js cxetc!Smg hiS prestdent ldl pnwe!S. lllS!sted Palm IS teady to
would -be
successo!S take ove1 as p1esJdent , he
McCa1n . the Repuhltc.m. made no mentton of mcludum~ ertam

111

Co11g,1c~s

'

mg he1 m the ens1s meetmgs
he w,mts 111 Washmgtun
One atde smd he dtd not
1ntend for he1 to be present
Ohama w.1s next to step
19eto~e the c,m1eras . telhng
reporters that he had 1111tially
called McCun to suggest a
JOint statement that would
make ciC:tr both prestdeniJ,Il
hopefuls supportcu leg"lat1on
to stem the econom1c sltde
Whe1e McCain talked
about
bipatt!Sanslllp.
Obama provided specifics
ac1 oss party hnes
'l also need to g1ve ~red ·
11 ro Republ1c.Jn Sen Tom
Cohurn, who had called me
suggcstm g that a JO int
statement m1 ght be useful
he satd
He also said he had wrged
Dcmocr&lt;~tt~ congresS IOJM I
leade.-s not to pursue efforts
to add an cconom" stmmltt&gt; package to the batlout.
S1milarlv, he smd the
attempt to g1ve' bankruptcy
judges the power to rewnte
mortgage terms. another
DemocratiC pnonty, " 1s
probably someth111g that we
shouldn't try to do m thts
ptece of legislatiOn "
Then came the Jab at h1s
t1val
" My hope 1s. ts that Sen
McCam IS gomg to be talkmg to Republicans and
sendmg them the same message, that there are some
1ssues that they may be concerned about or thmgs that
are p11ont1es 1'01 them. but
w\lat v.e shouldn't do is try
to get everythmg done 111
th1s package ."
Nor was Obama taken wtth
MeCum's call to defer the
debate until &lt;~greement had
been teached on legislation
"You know. presidents ate
going to have to deal with
more than one thmg at a
time." he smd '· It's not necessary tor us to thmk that we
can only do one thing and
suspend everythmg else."

. POMEROY - The Fraternal Order of Police ts endorsmg ltmmy Stewart m h1s race for OhiO's 20th Senate
D1stnct The FOP. Ohio's largest law enforcement organization, has more than 25,000 professtonallaw enforcement
members statewide
Stewart IS currently servmg hts th1rd term as state representauve of Ohto's 92nd House D1stoct. He currently sits
on the House Fmance and Appropnatlons Committee and
serves as chatrman of the Human Services Subcommittee.

Octoberfest, car show
COOLVILLE - Coolville Volunteer Fire Department
Will hold Octuberfest and a car show on Oct. ll.
Plans mclude food, entertainment , drawmgs and a safety
house Vendors are welcome tor a $1.0 space fee No food
vendors are permitted
The pa1&lt;1de will begin at II a.m., With hneup at 10 30
lnformauon IS·ava!lab le from Les Washburn at 667-6891.

Council meets
MARIETTA - RegiOnal Adv1sory Council for Area
Agency on Agmg will meet at I0 a.m. on Oct. 10 m the
Buckeye Hdls/Hockmg Valley Regional Development
DIStnct Are.t Age n'y on Agmg Office, Marietta .

!'
:1

I

'

Community Calendar
Public meetings
Monday, Sept. 29
POMEROY -Veterans
SerY!ce CommiSSIOn, 9
a.m . 117 Memonal Dr
Wednesday, Oct. I
POMEROY
- Meigs
County Board of Health. 5
p.m , Health Dep~rtment
conference room, 112 E.
Memorial Dr

Friday, Sept. 26
MIDDLEPORT - The
Mtddleport Church of Chnst
will have a free community
dmner, 4:30 to 6 p.m. , m the
Middleport Church of Christ
Famtly Ltfe Center, F1fth
and Mam Menu, biscuits
and _gravy, eggs, potatoes
and bacon and dessert
Sunday, Sept. 28
RACINE
Homecomlng at the Eagle

Wall Street welfare

now now:·

People IM\ e often s.ud tll.ll
1f fasc1sm came to r\mcnca.
1t would mrive With" sm1kv
face. So m.tybc u·, fitung
that 1f we're gomg to have

Sachs, he was patd a reported $18 million for helping
turn the nation 's hnanctal
system mto a gwnt shell
game, as mvestors. were
duped mto buymg so·called
Gene
" mot tgage-baeked sec unLyons
ties" based upon bad loans
th&lt;~t will never be repa1d.
At bottom , Republican
economic thmking IS based
M&lt;11 xtst-s tylc I!Sc,tl nauondl- upon two mamfestly false
tZatlon. II should ma1nly ideas The f1rst, endle~s ly
ben~lit
multnniii!Oila!res flogged by Rush Ltm~augh
Sou.11ism lot the wealthy. and his co-h01ts. that sharply
reducmg taxes on people
m,Jrk~t dJSl'iJJimc for you
like the Bushes, the P,!Uisons
a11d me
Judgmg by the plan and the McCams results m
sketched 0111 by T1easury 111creased gove11unent revSec1ci.Jry Hemy P.JUison. enue ,md greater prospenty
hencefcl! th to he known as fo1 all In pract1ce. 1t's led to
the nut ton 's "Money Cur." staggenng budget dehctts.
he must 1m,1g me God LlS " ·decre.tsmg opportumty and
celestml Realtor wttb lots ot n stug mequalit)l. More
listings Ill Gteenwicil, Conn . palaces. !ewer JObs
The second is an updated
where Wall St1eet tycoons
vetston
of the early Chnstmn
erect compctmg pal,tces
Pelagtan
hetesy, denymg the
A tccent New Yorke! arttclc
by Ntck P.mmg.u1en limned un1versaltty of Ongmal Sm.
the scene Uncle Scrooge Always and everywhere
gove rnment
McDuck's manSICln wou ld be denouncmg
oversight
and
tegulation
of
a teat down uppo11um ty tot
these JOkets. Only one bullion banks. mvestment fmllS.
pool to dabble m:' Rather hke bruke1age houses and msurJohn and Cindy McCain. they ance compames. free-m,trket
requtre 35.000 sqtJaJe feet , 10· fundamentalists assured us
em gawgcs. and mdoor and th,ll the financtal system was
olit\loor he&lt;~tcd pools. along inherently self-regulatmg
Gentlemen
gemuses
With movtc thcatc!S. ba&gt;ket·
ball arems. wme cellm s, preSided: greed was a cardiskeet-shootmg wnges and ser- nal v1rtue.
The ·result was the creation
vants quarters modeled upon
of
a g1g.tnttc Ponz1 scheme.
Versailles L1tet ;tlly
fhcy're not so much hous- Tl1e quamt concept of "due
es as theme p:u ks , the theme dtligence" vamshed from the
bcmg latilomleS&gt; greed and financwl system from bottom
elemental pnmate st,ltus fren- to top Fee-churnmg brokers
zy· bas1c ch11np stull Except. peudleu aliJustable rate mortoops. forcclosll! es arc mount- g&lt;~gcs on 'overvalued real
lilt! Ill G1l'J;Il\\ld1 . 100
csl,!lc ''' suckers mc·apable ol
\loll&lt;:) Ct.JI l',u!l"m del - lllctklllg the payments. then
p&lt;~wncu oil the bdd lmms on
lllltCI) kno w&gt; Ill ~ ICIIIIOIY
In 200) . il" 1."1 lull vc.u ,,, specui&lt;~tOts who, m turn ,
CEO of the (JJDIV ·s ha~ y) !ep&lt;~ck.J gc d them '" (now
mvcstmeut bank Goldm,m, worth lc") sec unties

Nobody evet expected to
pay A greater fool would
borrow more to buy tire
p1operty tomotrow.
People hke Pnnceton econonust and New York Ttmes
colummst Paul Krugman
who warned that the speculative bubble was sure to burst
w1th potentmlly catastrophic
consequences were scorned
as backward-thmkmg pes·
stm1sts and lampooned f01
thetr clumsy prose.
Fearing collapse, Paulson
demantls an estimated $700
b1llion blank check to buy
up the bad paper from h1s
Wall Street fnends . Het e's
hts tdea ot takmg respons ibility "Dec!SIOIIS by the
Secretary pursuant to the
auth011ty of th1s Act are
t]On-rev!ewable and committed to agency dtscret1on ,
and may not be rev1ewed by
any court of law or any
admmtstrat1ve agency."
Everybody says some·
th1n g hke what Paul son pro·
poses must be done; every·
body's probably nght
Democrats.
mnreover.
a1en't Without blame. Bill
Clinton s1gned legtslat1on
gtea!ly 1educing regulatory
safeguards m 1999
We must now pray that
the fm,mctal wizards who
created th1s maze can tmd
thetr way out.
•
Meanttme.
here 's
a
phrase that should van1sh
ftom the language forever
"Republican f1 scal conservative ,

( A1 kanw~
DemocratGazelle wlumnw Gene
L\ on.\
"
a Natwnal
Maga::.llle AH wd wumer
aml w·alllho r of " Th e
Hlllll/111{ of rhe Pres1denr"
(St Martin'5 P1e&lt;s, 2000).
You can e·/11(11/ L10ns at
fllgenelvlllll2@ wl1oO &lt;om.)

Rtdge Commumty Church,
Eagle Ridge Road. dmner ar
noon, smging at I p.m by
B1ssells , Jerry and Diane
Frederick, and Everett
Grant and Fnends.
Sunday, Oct. 5
HEMLOCK GROVE
Homecoming at Hemlock
Grove Christian Church.
Worshtp at 9.30 am., dmner
at Grange Hall at 12:30 p m
Afternoon program at 2
p.m wtll feature Forgtven
Again Trio, with other readmgs and mus1c

Clubs and
organizations

Church events

Friday, Sept. 26
POMEROY
Alzhe1mer's/memory loss
careg1ver support group wtll
meet from 1:15 to 2:15pm.
at the Meigs Semor Center.
Those attending may bnng
thetr loved ones for a ume of
structured actiVIty during
the support group's meeting.
Kathy McDaniel and Sharon
Dean are co-facilitators for
the support group. For more
information, call 992-2161.
Tuesday, Sept. 30
POMEROY - OH-KAN
Com Club, change of meetmg from Monday to
Tuesday at the Pomeroy
Ltbrary, 7 p.m.
MIDDLEPORT
Middleport L1terary Club, 2
p.m Gay Pemn will review
"A Thousand Splendtd
Suns." Leah Ord hostess.
CHESTER
- Shade
Rtver Lodge 453, monthly
stated meeting, 7:30 p.m.
Refreshments follow.

Local Weather
Thursday...Patchy fog m
the mommg Sunny Highs
m the upper 70s. Northeast
winds 10 to 15 mph
Thursday night...Partly
cloudy m the evening . .Then
mostly cloudy w1th a slight
chance ot ram alter midmght Lows m the lower 50s.
Chance of ram 20 percent.
Friday...Cioudy wtth ram '
likely Highs around 70
Northeast winds I0 to ' 15
mph with gusts up to 25
mph Chance of ram 60 perFriday night ...Cloudy
with ram likely. Lows m the
mid 50s. Northeast winds
I 0 to 15 mph Chance of
rain 60 percent.
Saturday ...Cioudy w1th a

40 percent chance of ram.
Highs in the mid 70s
Saturday nlght ... Mostly
cloudy with a 40 percent
chance of rain. Lows in the
mid 50s.
Suuday...Mostly cloudy
m the morning ..Then
becommg partly sunny.
Highs in the mid 70s
Sunday night through
Monday
night ... Partly
cloudy. Lows around 50.
Highs in the upper 70s.
Tuesday ...Mostly sunny
with a 40 percent chance of
showers. Htghs m the lower
70s.
Tuesday night ... Mostly
cloudy with a 30 percent
chance of showers. Lows in
the lower 50s.

Stocks
(NYSE) - 36.79
(NASDAQ) - 57.55
~~=~~~~~~~Inc (NYSE) - 29.35
;.J
Lots (NYSE) - 29 60
Evans (NASDAQ) - 26.78
Bot·aW:arn••; (NYSE) - 32.84
tJ t:e~~u!~ Aluminum (NASDAQ)
n (:ha!11PI•m (NASDAQ) - 4.48
Charming Shops (NASDAQ) 5.10
City Holding (NASDAQ) 42.5Q
Collins (NYSE) - 46.67
DuPont (NYSE) - 43.74
US Bank (NYSE) - 33.85
Gannett (NYSE) - 17.09
General Electric (NYSE) 24.59
Harley-Davidson (NYSE) 39.18
JP Morgan (NYSE) - 40.50
Kroger (NYSE) - 26.35
Limited Brandl (NYSE) 18.24
Norfolk Southern (NYSE) •

www.mydailysentinel.com

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

ANNIE'S MAILBOX

Receives endorsement

mgs

If PreSident Bush seems
oddly unshaken . what With
a 19 percent apptoval t&lt;Jtmg
and an astomshmg zeto')&gt;ercent of the pub he opttmtst!c
about the economy, 1t 's
because fo1 h1m, m the
Immortal words of Yogi
Berra. the Wall Street meltdown baSically amounts to
"deja vu all over agam."
Pnor to inhenting the
Whtte House. tinanchll cnses
were the story ot Bush 's hfe
He'd talk college friends 1nto
baekmg a Texds wtldcat 011
venture, dnll some dry holes
then get bought out by
Daddy's f11ends at a profit
Pnor to Daddy 's fnends buy·
mg the Tex.Js Rdngers hiS
b1ggest payday had come
from cashmg out nf a It ou·
bled 011 comp&lt;tny days ahead
of a lousy e,unm gs tepot1
Sure, there was an
Secunties .1nd Exchange
Comm1sston ms1der-tradmg
mvesttgat1on, but Poppy·
Bush was president So you
know how far that went. Joe
Conason n:I!Tated the sord1d
tale for Harper 's back m
2000 , but nobody wanted to
hear 1t. The make-bel1eve
Texas rancher was a "compassionate conservative"
everybody w.mted to ha ve a
beer w1th .
So now we're all m what
Poppy once called "deep
doo-doo ," .md the same
bniiiant economic team that
assured us tiJ ,Jt a ll was well
two weeks ago warns. m
Paul Krugman's words. that
''the sky 1s falling. and that
to save the world we h.1ve to
do exactly what It says now

2008

Local Briefs

Thursday, September 25, 2008

Analysis: A bailout plan too big to fail

(740) 992-2156 ·FAX (740) 992-2157

Reader Services

PageA4

P NIO

The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, September 25,

65.85
Ohio Valley Bane Corp. (NASDAQ)- 20.55
BBT (NYSE) - 38.54
Peoples (NASDAQ) - 23.45
Papaleo (NYSE) - 70.10
Premier (NASDAQ) - 9.50
Rockwell (NYSE) - 36.69
Rocky Boots (NASDAQ) 4.05
Royal Dutch Shell - 62.72
Sears Holding (NASDAQ) 94.50 ·

Wat·Mart (NYSE) - 58.92
Wendy's (NYSE)- 21.79
WeaBanco (NYSE) - 27.87
Worthington (NYSE) - 17.11
Dally stock reports are the 4
p.m. ET closing quotes ol
transaction• lor Sept. 24,
2008, provided by Edward
Jonas financial advlaora Isaac
Milia In Gallipolis at (740) 4419441 and Lesley Marrero In
Point Pleaunt at (304) 8740174. Member SIPC.

Game drug-free, but still dangerous
BY KATHY MITCHELL
AND MARCY ~UGAA
Dear Annie: Our grandson d1ed a year ago at the
age of 15 Hts death was the
result of playmg the
extreme! y dangerous "chok ·
mg game " Thousands of
ktds between the ages of 9
and 16 are playin g this
game There are other
names for tt, such as ''pass
out game'' and "space monkey." Kids play tt 111 groups
and alone. Playmg alone ts
the most hfe-threatenmg.
The
game
mvolve s
squeezing the neck to lim1t
blood flow and oxygen to
the brain m order to ach1eve
a high Most of the children
who play th1s game are
good k1ds who are agamst
the use of drugs and alco·
hoi. Ktds th1nk tt 's a sate
way to achteve a ru sh wtth
out using. But it is not safe
at all. Lack of oxygen to the
bram k1lls brain cells, whtch
do not replenish them.
selves. Hundreds of k1d s
have suffered brain damage
and heart problems, or died
from asphyxmtlon.
Most parents are unaware
that thts 1s somethmg thetr
chtldren may be mvolved
in Schools teach about
drugs, but no school I know

of teaches the dangers or
this game There 1s a webSJte that addresses the w~u nmg &gt;~gns at www.chokmggame net I am hopeful
others will learn about this
pract1ce before 11 happens to
thm child
Still
Grieving Grandma in
Davenport, Iowa
Dear Grandma: Our
condole.nces on your temble loss We have thscussed
thiS toptc before. but 1t certamly bears another mention Chtldren and young
teens thmk th1 s self-asphyxIation game ts harmless
because 1t 's drug ftee But
depnvmg the bram of oxygen. even for short penods.
nsks permanent bram dam.tge. se izures and death
P&lt;~rents should &gt;Natch for
marks a10und the neck .
bloodshot eyes, complamts
of headaches , dJsonentat1on
after spendmg time alone
and paraphetnalia such as
plastic hags, dog leashes.
bungee cords, t1es. ropes,
scarves and belts, especially
II they are lied to bedroom
furniture or doorknobs or
found knotted on the floor.
We hope all parents of
young c·hildrcn wtll dtscuss
the dangers as they would
talk about drugs or alcohol
The best protection ts han·
est mtonnanon

Dear Annie: I ,m1 a 12ye,tr-olcl p.l!Hilne college
student with .t lull-lime JOb
. I recently got cng"ged
wh1ch I' m excited about I
moved m wuh my boyh 1end
a ye.1r altet we started datmg
and everythmg IS gomg 'et)
smoothly
The ptoblem is. my par.
ents are s tt on~ Catholics und
were extren1ely upset tlld t
we moved 111 togethe1 They
wouldn't VISit our .tp.ntment
or allow my fi ,mce to come
to theu home fo r any Je,Json
They still wont. n cn
though we're eng,tged H"
whole tamtly loves me to
death and couldn 't be h.1pp1
er f01 us When will PI )' p.u ents ever accept hun ' Worried Fiancee
Dear
Worried:
Hopefully, when you diC
mamed Your parent s d.m ·,
want to g1ve the 1111pres\lon
that they approve ol you1
ltvmg at ran gement-- The
same vvay they don ' t ag1 cc
w1th the chmce you nt.~de to
move m toget her, you don ·,
have to a~ree w1th th cu s.
but try to respect their lee[
mg s on the subject. Once
you ha ve legal1zed th"
arrangement 111 chUJch. th ey
will be more comlo11.ible
welcommg your ltancc 1nto
the famil) If not , ask vo ut
pnest for hcl p

Dear Annie : rh" " 111
1esponsc to (Jet It R1ght
Pl e ._t ~c'
'' IHl'-~L' t n - l~t\~ :-,

lfl"l'-~lllllldiiJJl~ hl"r 'fcllll)"

tnste,td of hc-1 con t'll n. tmc.
wh1ch ,.., " Jen11.1
" She shoulu m,1 ~c ,, huge
name ta~ that Je.tu&gt; "M Y
NAME ' ts JE NNA" and
v..e.1r 11 whcnt'\Cl ..,he 1s
,!mund them ~.II be II LOUJd
IIIJt:'Lt

~OJ1l('

hul1101

\\

hde

genmg them to 1e111embc-1 to
use h~1 COIIC'CI !Mille II they
slip up s h ~ '" " S!lllpl) po1nt
to the '- 1\.! 11 ami hm~ them
repe,n ',md 1epe,n
,md
repe,lt
Ullt! l they fmally
c~t It JJ !_dll - Eileen
, Dear' Eileen: Old IMbJtS
d1e h.u d d l'l-1.. 1 n._llllt' tags
"'"' t help \\hell lctte" ,1re
..tdt!Jl?~..,l'd

lllU)II Ctll\

lllJ~Lt• n g IH111WJ ,..,
guod \\.:1\ to ~l't ,,

hut

u!te n a
ddtlLUit

rh.lllk"'
A IIIII&lt; \ Mmlhtl\ i1 11ritte11
hr hath; Mllchcll and Marcy
!:Jugm. longtime edt/011 of
th e r ll//1 l .anden wllllll/1 .
Plell~e e-mail wwt qlle'itirm~
pl llllt &lt;ill\)..,..,

tn
alflfll'\lllllllbox@t:omca\l.llt!l , m u tiff to : .~.tnuie 's

Mmlbo1, P.O. /Jo.t 118190,
Clllca!{o. II. (i()(,J I. 7rl find
out mme aii&lt;IIJI ·\11111e's
Mmlbot, and read features
by other Crwton .~)lldlcate
wrlfet' and £m1oom\l~. l'i5it

the Cr mton 'lyl/{flcate We/!

paJ.:e at

w1t

u·.Ciealw ~.com.

3 Ohio teens in custody after Alabama chase
GADSDEN, Ala (AP) Three Oh10 teenagers are m
custody in Alabama after they
drove from pursumg deput1es
and later rammed two patrol
cars to end a 30-mmute chase
Etowah County Shenff
Todd Entrekm says a 16-

year-old boy, a 16-year-old
gtrl and a 15-year-old giil
are charged with rece1ving
stolen property The boy,
who was dnvmg, also faces
reckless endangerment and
criminal misch1ef cha~ges.
The1r names were not

released.
lnvesti gatot Jell Hoppel
says the teen s stole a Cdr 111
Jackson m southern Ohm.
before headmg to Alabama to
meet a boy who the younge1
gtrl met on the Intel net
The tee11s are accused o1

'&gt; (C ._il lll ~ d ll()ih LI \l'l{tLlt'•

Ill

IIO!th r\i,Jh.llll.l I he pli! Sllil
st.ltll?d .!t .1bout 1 ,, Ill
Mond.11 .!lte1 the l1&lt;11 cliun t
stop .1! d d ll\l" l .., . IILL'IlC.e
chcckpoilll
ThL" teen ... \\L 1e t "h 11 to a
jUWJllic holdill~ l.ll!li l)

$80M in cuts coming to Ohio agency for poor
BY STEPHEN MAJORS
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

COLUMBUS
The
state agency that admmlsters programs for poor and
low-mcome families ts cut·
ting almost $80 million
from its budget, mcluding
m1lhons of dollars for a
welfare program
Records obtamed by The
Assocwted Press Wednesday
show the OhiO Department
of Job and Family Services
also IS cuttmg back on funding for adoption services,
money to detect Med1ca1d
fraud and funds to admmister the state's ch1ld support
program.
In many cases the money
bemg cut goes to county
agenc1es that manage programs for Ohm cttizens It
wtll be up to the count1es to
decide how to rework the1r
local budgets to deal wtth
the loss of state dollars,
wh1ch could lead to cuts m
servtces to Ohioans
As the economy has
worsened. greater numbers
of Ohtoans have been showing up at county agenctes
looking for help for the first
ttme. The latest news led to
renewed calls from advocates of the poor for a second · federal stimulus package to ass 1st state budgets
About $36 million m state
cuts w1ll come from money
that had been set astde for
the Med1care Part D pre~cnpllon drug program but
is no longer needed , sa1d
Ohio Job and Famtly
Serv1ces spokesman Denms
Evans No semor cu'rrently
under the program will lose
coverage, he, sa1d.
The agency made the ct1ts
to comply with Gov. Ted
, Stnckland's request that
most state agenc1es cut 4.75
percent from their budgets
The state faces a projected
budget deficit of $540 mil- ,
lion dunng the fmal year of
the state's two-year, $52 billion budget.
Earlier
thi s
year
Strickland announced a preVIOUS round of cuts that
totaled $733 million
Job and Famtly Serv1ces
was able to avoid making
cuts that would have an
impact on county agency
operations dunng the f1rst
rou'nd of tnmmmg
"In our earlier cuts we '
took the brunt of 1t internal ly, so that the count1es d1dn 't
realize any of those cuts:·
Evans satd. "Thts t11ne
around, while there weren't
any pro~rams that we direct ly elimmated, we couWn't

shteld the count1es"
Strickland ordered that
two of the department's progJams be protected from
budget cuts - the $9.3 billion the state sets aSide to
prov1de Med1cmd to low Ohioans
until
mcome
rece!\illg a federal reimbursement, and $25 million
for d1sabil ity assistance.
The pepartment will be
cuttmg $12 7 milhon - or
about 5 percent - of the
$267.6 m1ll10n It had been
spendmg m its share of the
federal·state
Temporary
As&amp;tstance
for
Needy
Familtes program. The program. Signed into law by former Prestdent Bill Clinton,
pto&gt;ides welfare benefits to
the poor while pushmg them
to ti nd employment

' The agency IS also cutt mg
$4 mtlhon, 01 5 percent. ol
the money 1t l1.1d set '"'de
for adoptiOn SC IVICC,. ,md S
percent 01 ne,u Iy $400.000.
out ol $K 2 million set aSJde
f01 the st,Jte s &lt;: h1id suppm l
program
The cuts come "' ,, ball
ttm e. s.ud Bnlln Gregg,
spokesmdn lor th e Hamtlton
Cmmty Department of Job
and Family Serv 1o; es. wh1ch
setves the Cmcmnat1 area
"At the same ttme we are
be!llg cut. we're actuall)
bemg asked to serve mu1e
people ," he said
About 35 percent of hiS
department's clientele are
members of the work1ng
class who h.tve fallen on
hard ttmes ,md are makmg
the1r f1rst trip to the county

Ue pd tt lltL'!lL Cite~~

Rmt!..!hl'

....ud

onl' ou\ ot

Oh to.u\:-. :u~

Fu~ t tt. L'\L'Llllt\L' d tt ...·LtUI , ; ,

th e... Ohm A..,..,LIL I.IIltt ll nf
Second H,n ',.,, ~nod Bdnb
·Out fond p&lt;~ntJ y ,1nd
..,oup kttchcn lllll"" .ttL' LOI1ttnutn !..! to

~ ltH\

lo n ~c t •

H :un l ci · hl~lrt '· "" ~ Oill
lamllt e:-. .l1e tcl l iiH! u"
thc 1c s nn othc1 pl.!cc l o cut
thet t hud~ch ·She qtle,lioncd "hc•thel
money t 1om tlw .. t.ttc \ 1.lill Y

d.1y fund. eu n ~nll) at S7.)0
million shou ld he used Ill
prevent some oJ thL' nits
Bur Srm kl.md s,llli e,u lie1
thiS month he d1d n t ".mt to
dtp tnt o rile lund hcc.!USC he
femec.l thL' bud!..!L'I .., t!Ltdlt o n
cou ld g1o\\ ''o1~1..'
·

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The Daily Sentinel

�!

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

BY DAVID ESPO
AP SPECIAL CORRESPONDENT

WASHINGTON
www.mydailysentinel.com
President Bush and the two
me11 r unll!ng 1o sttcceed llun
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
r:used the political stakes
chamat !cally Weunesday in
Dan Goodrich
the great b,ulout debate of
Publisher
200R. effectively st.tmpmg a
"too btg to I ail" s1gn on congressJon,Ji eflorts to pa ss .1
Charlene Hoeflich
pre-election cconomtc tesGeneral Manager-News Edtlor
cuc pLm
W1th the nut&lt;:omc all but
oi'Sllled. det,uis ,md a
timetable lm passage of an
Congress shall make 110 law respecting an
unpt ecedented fede1 al Inlet establishment of religion, or prohibiting .the
vent!On 1g the cap1tal matfree exercise tl!ereo.fi or abridging tlu JYeedom of kch ren1.11n to be settled
And both John McCam and
speech, or of the press; or the right of the peo- B,1rack Ob.!llM will be able
to clatm cicd il fm w1nnJng
ple peaceably to assemble, and to petition the

Government for a redress of grievances.
- The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

TODAY IN HISTORY
. Today 1S Thursday, Sept 25, the 269th day of 2008
There are 97 d,tys left m the year.
· Today's H1ghlight 111 H1 st01y On Sept 25, 1789, the first
United States Cong1ess adopted 12 amendments to the
ConstltUI!On anu sent them to the states for rat!fl~dtlon
(Ten of the amendments became the Btl I of Rights.)
On th1s &lt;.late In 1493. Chnstophet Columbus set s.1tl
fr,om Cad1z , Spa1n. With" flotilla of 17 s~tps on hiS second
voyage to the Western Hemtsphere.
In 151 J, SpaniSh explorer Vasco Nunez de Balboa crossed
the Isthmus of Pan.1ma and s1ghtcu the Pa~1f1c Ocean.
In 1690 , one of the ea rliest Amencan newspape!S,
Publtck Occurrences, published Its first - and last - edition m Boston
In 1775. Amet1can Revolutionary War hero Ethan Allen
I'. as captured by the Btlt!Sh as he led an attack 011 Montte,il
In 1890, Willonl Woodrutt. prestdimt ot the Church ot
Jesus Chnst of Lattet -day Samts, tssued a Mamfesto formally renouncmg the pract1ce of polygamy.
In 1919 , President W1ison collapsed after a speech m
Pueblo , Colo .. dunng a nat tonal speaking tour in suppnrt of
the Treaty of Ve1 sat lies
In 1956, the first trans-Atlantic telephone cable went Into
serv1ce
In 1957, nme black students who'd been forced to Withdraw from Central H1gh School m Little Rock , Ark.
because of unruly wh1te crowds were escorted to class by
members of the U.S Army's JOist Airborne Dtylston
In 197R , 144 people were k1lled when a Paciftc
Southwest Atrlines Boemg 727 and a pnvate plane collided mer San D1ego
In 1981 , Sandra Day O'Connor was sworn m as the first
female JUStice on the Supteme Coll!t
One year ago Warren lefts, the leader of a polygamous
Mormon splintet group, was convicted m St George, Utah,
of bemg an accompl1ce to rape for pertormmg a wedd111g
between a 19· yeat·old man and a 14-yeat -old gtrl. (Jeffs
was later sentenced to two consecutive terms of five years
to life m pnson.) ltanian President Mahmoud AhmadmeJad,
addressmg the Untted Nations, announced "the nuclear
tssue of Iran is now closed." and mdtcated Tehran would
dtsregard Secunty Council resolutiOns 1mposed by what he
called "arrogant powers " Japan's lower house of parliament
electea Yasuo Fukuda pnme mmiSter
Today's B1rthdays Broadcast JOUrnalist Barbara Walters
IS 79. Rhythm ·and-blues singer Joe Russell is 69 . Defense
Secretary Robert Gates IS 65 Actor Robert Walden IS 65.
Actor-producer Mtchael Douglas is 64 Model Cheryl
T1egs ts 61. Actor-d1rector Anson W1llmms IS 59. Actor
Mark Hamill is 57 Polka bandleader Jimmy Sturr IS 57.
Actor M1chael Madsen ts 50 Actress Heather Locklear IS
47 Actress A1da Turturro 1s 46. Actor Tate Donovan 1s 45
Basketball player Scottie Pippen IS 43 Actor Will s"mtth IS
;:10. Actor Hal Sparks ts 39. Actress Cathenne Zeta-Jones is
?9 Actress Bndgette Wilson-Sampras ts 35 Actor Chns
Owen ts 28. Rapper T. I is 28. Actor Lee Norris 1s 27
: Thought for Today· "History IS too senous to be left to
histonans ." - lain Maclencl, Bnt1sh politician ( 1913-1970)

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR
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good taste, addres11ng 15-\lte\, not personaht•n Lei/en of
zhank&gt; to orgamzatton.l and mdtvtdual' w11/ not be ac tept·
-ed for pubilcatwn
'

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Lhdnges 111 lhe admlmslia-

I!OII 's ottgu!.il plan - some
of which tl1e Wh1te House
has ,ilre,tdy dccepted
"The whole world "
watchtng to see If we can
act qutckl y,' Ptes1dent Bush
s:ud early 111 the week,
bdme h~&gt; proposal r.1n mto
Cll tlclsm from Democrats
and Republicans al1ke.
So. ton , the Amencan
clectOJate.Six weeks before
choosi ng between two presIdential cancltdates. now
s1,1gmg Side-by -side audi tion s tor the fOb of !Wtlon.tl
CIISIS 11Mild£CI - i 11- Ch ICf
With Tre.tsuty Secret.tty
Henry Paulson and Fede1al
Reserve Chan m,m Ben
Berndnke tss umg d1re Wd lll mgs datly. Bt!Sh ammgcd a
ptllne t11ne .1ddress to the
nat1on . It was des1gned to
1eswe the 1escue pl,m th,!t
Bush ;;ent to CoQgress less
th,m d week ugo aHc1 he was
told that eat lier, piecemea l
bailouts had not resto1ed
conf1dence to the markets
W!lh less th an tour
months 1em.t1ning 111 off1ce
and approval ratmgs 111 the
30 percent range. Bu sh's
persuastve powe rs are as

dS ,mel Obama. th e Democrat.
were tt y1ug out for h1s JOb
they are wilh the puhltc
It was ,, poult some
McCa1n , trailing once
Republican s were willmg to 11101 e 111 the race for the
make. unch.utl.ihly ,It limes Wh1te House . announced he
"It's a tou gh sel l to most wou ld return to Washmgton
of OLII memhcr, ... '''"' Rep to help work on legislation.
'1om D.IVI\. R-Vd. aftet a He &gt;uggesteu lie and Obhma
do s~ d - door meetin g Wilh
hold ,tround·the-clock meetP.tt!lson ,mu U~nMnk~ " It's liH!' wtlh congressional lead
a te111b le pl.m . hut I ha ve n' t et ~ and admimstrauon offihe.mJ anythm g bdtcJ ..
udls until thex had 1eached
"They sold the wa1 they ,111 ,lgteement. and · he sa1d
sold the stimu lus paekuge tim F11day's preSidenttal
.1nd some other thmgs It's debate should be rescheduled
the ·woll at the door ·· t~rg tt ­ 111 defetence to the cnsts
"A ll we mu st do to
ment. s.ud DaviS who IS
.~etueve thts IS tempmanly
re11nng .11 the end olthe ye:u
If Repuhl1 ca ns \\eren't set politics aside , and I'm
exactl y damm1ng lm Bu sh committed to domg so.''
to show them the way. McCam sa 1d 111 New York
Democr,lts msl\ted the p!es- · II w.1s dn echo of the.
Jdent step up. '"' teasons ol acce ptance speech he de I! v
e1cd 111 St Paul. Mmn .. less
then own
"It IS t1me io1 him IO th.111 " month ago "Afte r
cxpl,un why hts mlm ln!stl.l- we· vc won, we· re go mg to
!lon s.1t on tts h.u1ds lo1 JC.Ich out our ha.Jd to any
months dnd only now lids willmg patllut, make thiS
come to te.Jltze the need fo1 grl\e tnment st&lt;-llt work111g
Immediate· and unprece· lor you agam," he sa1d then.
dented govetnmen t ,tctton.'·
But there was more to 11
McCam's
statement
satd Senate Matonty Lcade1
Han y Re1d ol Nev.tdd
mat ked the second time in a
" It " tllne lot htm to mattet ot weeks that he used a
explai n how he cou ld tell dt.tmallc gesture to shake up
our country lor months th,!t the race for the White House.
1 he f11st was his selection
our eeonom y v. '" lm.e , yet
ovetn1ght decl,uc that 1f ol Alask.t Gov Sarah Palm
1\mei!L.III ldxp,!yel\ uun't ds vtcc pres tdentldl ll1110tng
ciCCCj)l hiS bailout bill. ()lll llldle, .1 ptck that energ1zed
cour111y wlll lace ,111 eco
cume1 vatJVes and helped
nomtc dtsa:-..Lcr ..
fuel .t post-conventton sutge
Tr,msldtlon Nc!lh~i Re1u 111 public suppm t
nor House Speakc1 N,utcy
But the gam s in public
PeloSI 1ntendcu to put the 11 op11110n surveys have now
1ank and fil e Ill the pos!lion d!SS!p.lted. and most polls
of votmg lt11 kg!SI.ttton tlldt show Obama w1th the same
Repuhl1eans LOuld oppose Ieiat!vely modest lead he
and then usc ,Js a cdmpatgn held before the summer. One,
1ssue &lt;~g,un st them Btl! If the Washmgton Post-ABC
mdny Republi ca ns wete survey, gave the Democrat a
pi,lllnlllg Ill \OIC io1 the n111e-pomt advantage, w1th a
measure eve ntu,ill y. th ey commandmg lead among
we1e qwet abou t 11 on voters who sa1d the economy
Wcdnesda)
WdS the top ISSUe.
And while McCam has
While Bush w,Js cxetc!Smg hiS prestdent ldl pnwe!S. lllS!sted Palm IS teady to
would -be
successo!S take ove1 as p1esJdent , he
McCa1n . the Repuhltc.m. made no mentton of mcludum~ ertam

111

Co11g,1c~s

'

mg he1 m the ens1s meetmgs
he w,mts 111 Washmgtun
One atde smd he dtd not
1ntend for he1 to be present
Ohama w.1s next to step
19eto~e the c,m1eras . telhng
reporters that he had 1111tially
called McCun to suggest a
JOint statement that would
make ciC:tr both prestdeniJ,Il
hopefuls supportcu leg"lat1on
to stem the econom1c sltde
Whe1e McCain talked
about
bipatt!Sanslllp.
Obama provided specifics
ac1 oss party hnes
'l also need to g1ve ~red ·
11 ro Republ1c.Jn Sen Tom
Cohurn, who had called me
suggcstm g that a JO int
statement m1 ght be useful
he satd
He also said he had wrged
Dcmocr&lt;~tt~ congresS IOJM I
leade.-s not to pursue efforts
to add an cconom" stmmltt&gt; package to the batlout.
S1milarlv, he smd the
attempt to g1ve' bankruptcy
judges the power to rewnte
mortgage terms. another
DemocratiC pnonty, " 1s
probably someth111g that we
shouldn't try to do m thts
ptece of legislatiOn "
Then came the Jab at h1s
t1val
" My hope 1s. ts that Sen
McCam IS gomg to be talkmg to Republicans and
sendmg them the same message, that there are some
1ssues that they may be concerned about or thmgs that
are p11ont1es 1'01 them. but
w\lat v.e shouldn't do is try
to get everythmg done 111
th1s package ."
Nor was Obama taken wtth
MeCum's call to defer the
debate until &lt;~greement had
been teached on legislation
"You know. presidents ate
going to have to deal with
more than one thmg at a
time." he smd '· It's not necessary tor us to thmk that we
can only do one thing and
suspend everythmg else."

. POMEROY - The Fraternal Order of Police ts endorsmg ltmmy Stewart m h1s race for OhiO's 20th Senate
D1stnct The FOP. Ohio's largest law enforcement organization, has more than 25,000 professtonallaw enforcement
members statewide
Stewart IS currently servmg hts th1rd term as state representauve of Ohto's 92nd House D1stoct. He currently sits
on the House Fmance and Appropnatlons Committee and
serves as chatrman of the Human Services Subcommittee.

Octoberfest, car show
COOLVILLE - Coolville Volunteer Fire Department
Will hold Octuberfest and a car show on Oct. ll.
Plans mclude food, entertainment , drawmgs and a safety
house Vendors are welcome tor a $1.0 space fee No food
vendors are permitted
The pa1&lt;1de will begin at II a.m., With hneup at 10 30
lnformauon IS·ava!lab le from Les Washburn at 667-6891.

Council meets
MARIETTA - RegiOnal Adv1sory Council for Area
Agency on Agmg will meet at I0 a.m. on Oct. 10 m the
Buckeye Hdls/Hockmg Valley Regional Development
DIStnct Are.t Age n'y on Agmg Office, Marietta .

!'
:1

I

'

Community Calendar
Public meetings
Monday, Sept. 29
POMEROY -Veterans
SerY!ce CommiSSIOn, 9
a.m . 117 Memonal Dr
Wednesday, Oct. I
POMEROY
- Meigs
County Board of Health. 5
p.m , Health Dep~rtment
conference room, 112 E.
Memorial Dr

Friday, Sept. 26
MIDDLEPORT - The
Mtddleport Church of Chnst
will have a free community
dmner, 4:30 to 6 p.m. , m the
Middleport Church of Christ
Famtly Ltfe Center, F1fth
and Mam Menu, biscuits
and _gravy, eggs, potatoes
and bacon and dessert
Sunday, Sept. 28
RACINE
Homecomlng at the Eagle

Wall Street welfare

now now:·

People IM\ e often s.ud tll.ll
1f fasc1sm came to r\mcnca.
1t would mrive With" sm1kv
face. So m.tybc u·, fitung
that 1f we're gomg to have

Sachs, he was patd a reported $18 million for helping
turn the nation 's hnanctal
system mto a gwnt shell
game, as mvestors. were
duped mto buymg so·called
Gene
" mot tgage-baeked sec unLyons
ties" based upon bad loans
th&lt;~t will never be repa1d.
At bottom , Republican
economic thmking IS based
M&lt;11 xtst-s tylc I!Sc,tl nauondl- upon two mamfestly false
tZatlon. II should ma1nly ideas The f1rst, endle~s ly
ben~lit
multnniii!Oila!res flogged by Rush Ltm~augh
Sou.11ism lot the wealthy. and his co-h01ts. that sharply
reducmg taxes on people
m,Jrk~t dJSl'iJJimc for you
like the Bushes, the P,!Uisons
a11d me
Judgmg by the plan and the McCams results m
sketched 0111 by T1easury 111creased gove11unent revSec1ci.Jry Hemy P.JUison. enue ,md greater prospenty
hencefcl! th to he known as fo1 all In pract1ce. 1t's led to
the nut ton 's "Money Cur." staggenng budget dehctts.
he must 1m,1g me God LlS " ·decre.tsmg opportumty and
celestml Realtor wttb lots ot n stug mequalit)l. More
listings Ill Gteenwicil, Conn . palaces. !ewer JObs
The second is an updated
where Wall St1eet tycoons
vetston
of the early Chnstmn
erect compctmg pal,tces
Pelagtan
hetesy, denymg the
A tccent New Yorke! arttclc
by Ntck P.mmg.u1en limned un1versaltty of Ongmal Sm.
the scene Uncle Scrooge Always and everywhere
gove rnment
McDuck's manSICln wou ld be denouncmg
oversight
and
tegulation
of
a teat down uppo11um ty tot
these JOkets. Only one bullion banks. mvestment fmllS.
pool to dabble m:' Rather hke bruke1age houses and msurJohn and Cindy McCain. they ance compames. free-m,trket
requtre 35.000 sqtJaJe feet , 10· fundamentalists assured us
em gawgcs. and mdoor and th,ll the financtal system was
olit\loor he&lt;~tcd pools. along inherently self-regulatmg
Gentlemen
gemuses
With movtc thcatc!S. ba&gt;ket·
ball arems. wme cellm s, preSided: greed was a cardiskeet-shootmg wnges and ser- nal v1rtue.
The ·result was the creation
vants quarters modeled upon
of
a g1g.tnttc Ponz1 scheme.
Versailles L1tet ;tlly
fhcy're not so much hous- Tl1e quamt concept of "due
es as theme p:u ks , the theme dtligence" vamshed from the
bcmg latilomleS&gt; greed and financwl system from bottom
elemental pnmate st,ltus fren- to top Fee-churnmg brokers
zy· bas1c ch11np stull Except. peudleu aliJustable rate mortoops. forcclosll! es arc mount- g&lt;~gcs on 'overvalued real
lilt! Ill G1l'J;Il\\ld1 . 100
csl,!lc ''' suckers mc·apable ol
\loll&lt;:) Ct.JI l',u!l"m del - lllctklllg the payments. then
p&lt;~wncu oil the bdd lmms on
lllltCI) kno w&gt; Ill ~ ICIIIIOIY
In 200) . il" 1."1 lull vc.u ,,, specui&lt;~tOts who, m turn ,
CEO of the (JJDIV ·s ha~ y) !ep&lt;~ck.J gc d them '" (now
mvcstmeut bank Goldm,m, worth lc") sec unties

Nobody evet expected to
pay A greater fool would
borrow more to buy tire
p1operty tomotrow.
People hke Pnnceton econonust and New York Ttmes
colummst Paul Krugman
who warned that the speculative bubble was sure to burst
w1th potentmlly catastrophic
consequences were scorned
as backward-thmkmg pes·
stm1sts and lampooned f01
thetr clumsy prose.
Fearing collapse, Paulson
demantls an estimated $700
b1llion blank check to buy
up the bad paper from h1s
Wall Street fnends . Het e's
hts tdea ot takmg respons ibility "Dec!SIOIIS by the
Secretary pursuant to the
auth011ty of th1s Act are
t]On-rev!ewable and committed to agency dtscret1on ,
and may not be rev1ewed by
any court of law or any
admmtstrat1ve agency."
Everybody says some·
th1n g hke what Paul son pro·
poses must be done; every·
body's probably nght
Democrats.
mnreover.
a1en't Without blame. Bill
Clinton s1gned legtslat1on
gtea!ly 1educing regulatory
safeguards m 1999
We must now pray that
the fm,mctal wizards who
created th1s maze can tmd
thetr way out.
•
Meanttme.
here 's
a
phrase that should van1sh
ftom the language forever
"Republican f1 scal conservative ,

( A1 kanw~
DemocratGazelle wlumnw Gene
L\ on.\
"
a Natwnal
Maga::.llle AH wd wumer
aml w·alllho r of " Th e
Hlllll/111{ of rhe Pres1denr"
(St Martin'5 P1e&lt;s, 2000).
You can e·/11(11/ L10ns at
fllgenelvlllll2@ wl1oO &lt;om.)

Rtdge Commumty Church,
Eagle Ridge Road. dmner ar
noon, smging at I p.m by
B1ssells , Jerry and Diane
Frederick, and Everett
Grant and Fnends.
Sunday, Oct. 5
HEMLOCK GROVE
Homecoming at Hemlock
Grove Christian Church.
Worshtp at 9.30 am., dmner
at Grange Hall at 12:30 p m
Afternoon program at 2
p.m wtll feature Forgtven
Again Trio, with other readmgs and mus1c

Clubs and
organizations

Church events

Friday, Sept. 26
POMEROY
Alzhe1mer's/memory loss
careg1ver support group wtll
meet from 1:15 to 2:15pm.
at the Meigs Semor Center.
Those attending may bnng
thetr loved ones for a ume of
structured actiVIty during
the support group's meeting.
Kathy McDaniel and Sharon
Dean are co-facilitators for
the support group. For more
information, call 992-2161.
Tuesday, Sept. 30
POMEROY - OH-KAN
Com Club, change of meetmg from Monday to
Tuesday at the Pomeroy
Ltbrary, 7 p.m.
MIDDLEPORT
Middleport L1terary Club, 2
p.m Gay Pemn will review
"A Thousand Splendtd
Suns." Leah Ord hostess.
CHESTER
- Shade
Rtver Lodge 453, monthly
stated meeting, 7:30 p.m.
Refreshments follow.

Local Weather
Thursday...Patchy fog m
the mommg Sunny Highs
m the upper 70s. Northeast
winds 10 to 15 mph
Thursday night...Partly
cloudy m the evening . .Then
mostly cloudy w1th a slight
chance ot ram alter midmght Lows m the lower 50s.
Chance of ram 20 percent.
Friday...Cioudy wtth ram '
likely Highs around 70
Northeast winds I0 to ' 15
mph with gusts up to 25
mph Chance of ram 60 perFriday night ...Cloudy
with ram likely. Lows m the
mid 50s. Northeast winds
I 0 to 15 mph Chance of
rain 60 percent.
Saturday ...Cioudy w1th a

40 percent chance of ram.
Highs in the mid 70s
Saturday nlght ... Mostly
cloudy with a 40 percent
chance of rain. Lows in the
mid 50s.
Suuday...Mostly cloudy
m the morning ..Then
becommg partly sunny.
Highs in the mid 70s
Sunday night through
Monday
night ... Partly
cloudy. Lows around 50.
Highs in the upper 70s.
Tuesday ...Mostly sunny
with a 40 percent chance of
showers. Htghs m the lower
70s.
Tuesday night ... Mostly
cloudy with a 30 percent
chance of showers. Lows in
the lower 50s.

Stocks
(NYSE) - 36.79
(NASDAQ) - 57.55
~~=~~~~~~~Inc (NYSE) - 29.35
;.J
Lots (NYSE) - 29 60
Evans (NASDAQ) - 26.78
Bot·aW:arn••; (NYSE) - 32.84
tJ t:e~~u!~ Aluminum (NASDAQ)
n (:ha!11PI•m (NASDAQ) - 4.48
Charming Shops (NASDAQ) 5.10
City Holding (NASDAQ) 42.5Q
Collins (NYSE) - 46.67
DuPont (NYSE) - 43.74
US Bank (NYSE) - 33.85
Gannett (NYSE) - 17.09
General Electric (NYSE) 24.59
Harley-Davidson (NYSE) 39.18
JP Morgan (NYSE) - 40.50
Kroger (NYSE) - 26.35
Limited Brandl (NYSE) 18.24
Norfolk Southern (NYSE) •

www.mydailysentinel.com

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

ANNIE'S MAILBOX

Receives endorsement

mgs

If PreSident Bush seems
oddly unshaken . what With
a 19 percent apptoval t&lt;Jtmg
and an astomshmg zeto')&gt;ercent of the pub he opttmtst!c
about the economy, 1t 's
because fo1 h1m, m the
Immortal words of Yogi
Berra. the Wall Street meltdown baSically amounts to
"deja vu all over agam."
Pnor to inhenting the
Whtte House. tinanchll cnses
were the story ot Bush 's hfe
He'd talk college friends 1nto
baekmg a Texds wtldcat 011
venture, dnll some dry holes
then get bought out by
Daddy's f11ends at a profit
Pnor to Daddy 's fnends buy·
mg the Tex.Js Rdngers hiS
b1ggest payday had come
from cashmg out nf a It ou·
bled 011 comp&lt;tny days ahead
of a lousy e,unm gs tepot1
Sure, there was an
Secunties .1nd Exchange
Comm1sston ms1der-tradmg
mvesttgat1on, but Poppy·
Bush was president So you
know how far that went. Joe
Conason n:I!Tated the sord1d
tale for Harper 's back m
2000 , but nobody wanted to
hear 1t. The make-bel1eve
Texas rancher was a "compassionate conservative"
everybody w.mted to ha ve a
beer w1th .
So now we're all m what
Poppy once called "deep
doo-doo ," .md the same
bniiiant economic team that
assured us tiJ ,Jt a ll was well
two weeks ago warns. m
Paul Krugman's words. that
''the sky 1s falling. and that
to save the world we h.1ve to
do exactly what It says now

2008

Local Briefs

Thursday, September 25, 2008

Analysis: A bailout plan too big to fail

(740) 992-2156 ·FAX (740) 992-2157

Reader Services

PageA4

P NIO

The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, September 25,

65.85
Ohio Valley Bane Corp. (NASDAQ)- 20.55
BBT (NYSE) - 38.54
Peoples (NASDAQ) - 23.45
Papaleo (NYSE) - 70.10
Premier (NASDAQ) - 9.50
Rockwell (NYSE) - 36.69
Rocky Boots (NASDAQ) 4.05
Royal Dutch Shell - 62.72
Sears Holding (NASDAQ) 94.50 ·

Wat·Mart (NYSE) - 58.92
Wendy's (NYSE)- 21.79
WeaBanco (NYSE) - 27.87
Worthington (NYSE) - 17.11
Dally stock reports are the 4
p.m. ET closing quotes ol
transaction• lor Sept. 24,
2008, provided by Edward
Jonas financial advlaora Isaac
Milia In Gallipolis at (740) 4419441 and Lesley Marrero In
Point Pleaunt at (304) 8740174. Member SIPC.

Game drug-free, but still dangerous
BY KATHY MITCHELL
AND MARCY ~UGAA
Dear Annie: Our grandson d1ed a year ago at the
age of 15 Hts death was the
result of playmg the
extreme! y dangerous "chok ·
mg game " Thousands of
ktds between the ages of 9
and 16 are playin g this
game There are other
names for tt, such as ''pass
out game'' and "space monkey." Kids play tt 111 groups
and alone. Playmg alone ts
the most hfe-threatenmg.
The
game
mvolve s
squeezing the neck to lim1t
blood flow and oxygen to
the brain m order to ach1eve
a high Most of the children
who play th1s game are
good k1ds who are agamst
the use of drugs and alco·
hoi. Ktds th1nk tt 's a sate
way to achteve a ru sh wtth
out using. But it is not safe
at all. Lack of oxygen to the
bram k1lls brain cells, whtch
do not replenish them.
selves. Hundreds of k1d s
have suffered brain damage
and heart problems, or died
from asphyxmtlon.
Most parents are unaware
that thts 1s somethmg thetr
chtldren may be mvolved
in Schools teach about
drugs, but no school I know

of teaches the dangers or
this game There 1s a webSJte that addresses the w~u nmg &gt;~gns at www.chokmggame net I am hopeful
others will learn about this
pract1ce before 11 happens to
thm child
Still
Grieving Grandma in
Davenport, Iowa
Dear Grandma: Our
condole.nces on your temble loss We have thscussed
thiS toptc before. but 1t certamly bears another mention Chtldren and young
teens thmk th1 s self-asphyxIation game ts harmless
because 1t 's drug ftee But
depnvmg the bram of oxygen. even for short penods.
nsks permanent bram dam.tge. se izures and death
P&lt;~rents should &gt;Natch for
marks a10und the neck .
bloodshot eyes, complamts
of headaches , dJsonentat1on
after spendmg time alone
and paraphetnalia such as
plastic hags, dog leashes.
bungee cords, t1es. ropes,
scarves and belts, especially
II they are lied to bedroom
furniture or doorknobs or
found knotted on the floor.
We hope all parents of
young c·hildrcn wtll dtscuss
the dangers as they would
talk about drugs or alcohol
The best protection ts han·
est mtonnanon

Dear Annie: I ,m1 a 12ye,tr-olcl p.l!Hilne college
student with .t lull-lime JOb
. I recently got cng"ged
wh1ch I' m excited about I
moved m wuh my boyh 1end
a ye.1r altet we started datmg
and everythmg IS gomg 'et)
smoothly
The ptoblem is. my par.
ents are s tt on~ Catholics und
were extren1ely upset tlld t
we moved 111 togethe1 They
wouldn't VISit our .tp.ntment
or allow my fi ,mce to come
to theu home fo r any Je,Json
They still wont. n cn
though we're eng,tged H"
whole tamtly loves me to
death and couldn 't be h.1pp1
er f01 us When will PI )' p.u ents ever accept hun ' Worried Fiancee
Dear
Worried:
Hopefully, when you diC
mamed Your parent s d.m ·,
want to g1ve the 1111pres\lon
that they approve ol you1
ltvmg at ran gement-- The
same vvay they don ' t ag1 cc
w1th the chmce you nt.~de to
move m toget her, you don ·,
have to a~ree w1th th cu s.
but try to respect their lee[
mg s on the subject. Once
you ha ve legal1zed th"
arrangement 111 chUJch. th ey
will be more comlo11.ible
welcommg your ltancc 1nto
the famil) If not , ask vo ut
pnest for hcl p

Dear Annie : rh" " 111
1esponsc to (Jet It R1ght
Pl e ._t ~c'
'' IHl'-~L' t n - l~t\~ :-,

lfl"l'-~lllllldiiJJl~ hl"r 'fcllll)"

tnste,td of hc-1 con t'll n. tmc.
wh1ch ,.., " Jen11.1
" She shoulu m,1 ~c ,, huge
name ta~ that Je.tu&gt; "M Y
NAME ' ts JE NNA" and
v..e.1r 11 whcnt'\Cl ..,he 1s
,!mund them ~.II be II LOUJd
IIIJt:'Lt

~OJ1l('

hul1101

\\

hde

genmg them to 1e111embc-1 to
use h~1 COIIC'CI !Mille II they
slip up s h ~ '" " S!lllpl) po1nt
to the '- 1\.! 11 ami hm~ them
repe,n ',md 1epe,n
,md
repe,lt
Ullt! l they fmally
c~t It JJ !_dll - Eileen
, Dear' Eileen: Old IMbJtS
d1e h.u d d l'l-1.. 1 n._llllt' tags
"'"' t help \\hell lctte" ,1re
..tdt!Jl?~..,l'd

lllU)II Ctll\

lllJ~Lt• n g IH111WJ ,..,
guod \\.:1\ to ~l't ,,

hut

u!te n a
ddtlLUit

rh.lllk"'
A IIIII&lt; \ Mmlhtl\ i1 11ritte11
hr hath; Mllchcll and Marcy
!:Jugm. longtime edt/011 of
th e r ll//1 l .anden wllllll/1 .
Plell~e e-mail wwt qlle'itirm~
pl llllt &lt;ill\)..,..,

tn
alflfll'\lllllllbox@t:omca\l.llt!l , m u tiff to : .~.tnuie 's

Mmlbo1, P.O. /Jo.t 118190,
Clllca!{o. II. (i()(,J I. 7rl find
out mme aii&lt;IIJI ·\11111e's
Mmlbot, and read features
by other Crwton .~)lldlcate
wrlfet' and £m1oom\l~. l'i5it

the Cr mton 'lyl/{flcate We/!

paJ.:e at

w1t

u·.Ciealw ~.com.

3 Ohio teens in custody after Alabama chase
GADSDEN, Ala (AP) Three Oh10 teenagers are m
custody in Alabama after they
drove from pursumg deput1es
and later rammed two patrol
cars to end a 30-mmute chase
Etowah County Shenff
Todd Entrekm says a 16-

year-old boy, a 16-year-old
gtrl and a 15-year-old giil
are charged with rece1ving
stolen property The boy,
who was dnvmg, also faces
reckless endangerment and
criminal misch1ef cha~ges.
The1r names were not

released.
lnvesti gatot Jell Hoppel
says the teen s stole a Cdr 111
Jackson m southern Ohm.
before headmg to Alabama to
meet a boy who the younge1
gtrl met on the Intel net
The tee11s are accused o1

'&gt; (C ._il lll ~ d ll()ih LI \l'l{tLlt'•

Ill

IIO!th r\i,Jh.llll.l I he pli! Sllil
st.ltll?d .!t .1bout 1 ,, Ill
Mond.11 .!lte1 the l1&lt;11 cliun t
stop .1! d d ll\l" l .., . IILL'IlC.e
chcckpoilll
ThL" teen ... \\L 1e t "h 11 to a
jUWJllic holdill~ l.ll!li l)

$80M in cuts coming to Ohio agency for poor
BY STEPHEN MAJORS
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

COLUMBUS
The
state agency that admmlsters programs for poor and
low-mcome families ts cut·
ting almost $80 million
from its budget, mcluding
m1lhons of dollars for a
welfare program
Records obtamed by The
Assocwted Press Wednesday
show the OhiO Department
of Job and Family Services
also IS cuttmg back on funding for adoption services,
money to detect Med1ca1d
fraud and funds to admmister the state's ch1ld support
program.
In many cases the money
bemg cut goes to county
agenc1es that manage programs for Ohm cttizens It
wtll be up to the count1es to
decide how to rework the1r
local budgets to deal wtth
the loss of state dollars,
wh1ch could lead to cuts m
servtces to Ohioans
As the economy has
worsened. greater numbers
of Ohtoans have been showing up at county agenctes
looking for help for the first
ttme. The latest news led to
renewed calls from advocates of the poor for a second · federal stimulus package to ass 1st state budgets
About $36 million m state
cuts w1ll come from money
that had been set astde for
the Med1care Part D pre~cnpllon drug program but
is no longer needed , sa1d
Ohio Job and Famtly
Serv1ces spokesman Denms
Evans No semor cu'rrently
under the program will lose
coverage, he, sa1d.
The agency made the ct1ts
to comply with Gov. Ted
, Stnckland's request that
most state agenc1es cut 4.75
percent from their budgets
The state faces a projected
budget deficit of $540 mil- ,
lion dunng the fmal year of
the state's two-year, $52 billion budget.
Earlier
thi s
year
Strickland announced a preVIOUS round of cuts that
totaled $733 million
Job and Famtly Serv1ces
was able to avoid making
cuts that would have an
impact on county agency
operations dunng the f1rst
rou'nd of tnmmmg
"In our earlier cuts we '
took the brunt of 1t internal ly, so that the count1es d1dn 't
realize any of those cuts:·
Evans satd. "Thts t11ne
around, while there weren't
any pro~rams that we direct ly elimmated, we couWn't

shteld the count1es"
Strickland ordered that
two of the department's progJams be protected from
budget cuts - the $9.3 billion the state sets aSide to
prov1de Med1cmd to low Ohioans
until
mcome
rece!\illg a federal reimbursement, and $25 million
for d1sabil ity assistance.
The pepartment will be
cuttmg $12 7 milhon - or
about 5 percent - of the
$267.6 m1ll10n It had been
spendmg m its share of the
federal·state
Temporary
As&amp;tstance
for
Needy
Familtes program. The program. Signed into law by former Prestdent Bill Clinton,
pto&gt;ides welfare benefits to
the poor while pushmg them
to ti nd employment

' The agency IS also cutt mg
$4 mtlhon, 01 5 percent. ol
the money 1t l1.1d set '"'de
for adoptiOn SC IVICC,. ,md S
percent 01 ne,u Iy $400.000.
out ol $K 2 million set aSJde
f01 the st,Jte s &lt;: h1id suppm l
program
The cuts come "' ,, ball
ttm e. s.ud Bnlln Gregg,
spokesmdn lor th e Hamtlton
Cmmty Department of Job
and Family Serv 1o; es. wh1ch
setves the Cmcmnat1 area
"At the same ttme we are
be!llg cut. we're actuall)
bemg asked to serve mu1e
people ," he said
About 35 percent of hiS
department's clientele are
members of the work1ng
class who h.tve fallen on
hard ttmes ,md are makmg
the1r f1rst trip to the county

Ue pd tt lltL'!lL Cite~~

Rmt!..!hl'

....ud

onl' ou\ ot

Oh to.u\:-. :u~

Fu~ t tt. L'\L'Llllt\L' d tt ...·LtUI , ; ,

th e... Ohm A..,..,LIL I.IIltt ll nf
Second H,n ',.,, ~nod Bdnb
·Out fond p&lt;~ntJ y ,1nd
..,oup kttchcn lllll"" .ttL' LOI1ttnutn !..! to

~ ltH\

lo n ~c t •

H :un l ci · hl~lrt '· "" ~ Oill
lamllt e:-. .l1e tcl l iiH! u"
thc 1c s nn othc1 pl.!cc l o cut
thet t hud~ch ·She qtle,lioncd "hc•thel
money t 1om tlw .. t.ttc \ 1.lill Y

d.1y fund. eu n ~nll) at S7.)0
million shou ld he used Ill
prevent some oJ thL' nits
Bur Srm kl.md s,llli e,u lie1
thiS month he d1d n t ".mt to
dtp tnt o rile lund hcc.!USC he
femec.l thL' bud!..!L'I .., t!Ltdlt o n
cou ld g1o\\ ''o1~1..'
·

'We h ,we the profesSional

photos l h.tt fe at UJ ed
you in tl;JS n ewspaper.
'lhesc photpgrnphs are
nn\V available to you
through e.1Sy online
purchase,
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not p1 1nted but "vere
a part of,, news story
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J[)

on lood
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•

The Daily Sentinel

�'

Inside

Bl

.The Daily Sentinel

•'. The Extra Point, Page B2
•

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Thursday, September 25,

www.mydailys~ntinel.com

Page A6 ·The Daily Sentinel

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2008

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Thursday, September 25, 2008

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~·LocAL

Entertainment .Briefs
Wahama High
School will host
the inaugural
White Falcon
Invitational at
11 a.m.
Saturday. The
band competition is designed
for bands with
less than 45
playing mem·
bers. Pictured
from Ieft are
band members
Ezra Zuspan ,
Maria Keathley,
Desiree Sines ,
Devan ·
VanMeter and
Katie Hendricks
posing with the
trophies that will
be awarded th is
weekend.

I ."
•'

•l 'I

SubmiHed photo ·

band
MASON. W.Va . - In an
~!Tort to give sma lkr marching bands a chance to win the
coveted gra nd champion
honor, Wahama High School
wi ll host its first band competition th is weekend.
to
· Ch ip
Accord ing
Hendricks. band di rector.
plans currently are under way
for the inaugural Wahama
White Falcon In vitational. set
to begin at II a.m. Saturday
at the high schoo l in Mason.
T he festival is unique'because
it is designed for marching
. bands that have 45 or fewer·
playing members.
"There aren't a whole lot or
competitiom strict ly fo r smaller bands.'' Hendricks said.
"We wanted to even out the
playing field for them. Our
fe stival wi ll give small bands a
chance to wi n awa rds thev
normally don't win."
'

Hendrick&gt; certainly knows
what he's talki ng abo ut. as
Wahama's band has onl y 44'
playi ng members. Despite an
award-winning hi story and
distinc t ·marching
sty le,
Wahama , like other small
bands . often sees itse'lf competing against banos with I00
or more members. Even
though small bands might. do
we ll in their respective classes. which are div.ided accord,
ing to size, the top prize and
any overall awards are given
regardless of class. which usually means the bi gger bands
take home the top trophies .
That won't be the case this
weekend . Bands scheduled to
co tnpere 'in Saturday's event
wi II be from Herbert Hoover
High School, Buffa lo Hi gh
School . Linco.ln County High
School , Logan High School,
Williamstown High School,

Group plans poker run

{

Wayne High School and
James Monroe High .school.
Wahama also will perform its
competition show, "Classical
Moods," in exhibition pri or to
the awards ceremony, which is
set for I :30 p.m.
,
Hendricks pointed out that
even though some of the
schools these bands represent
are large. the bands. themselves are small.
In addition. Hendricks said
all the judges for the festival
have ties to the hi gh school in
some way, whether they are
forme r band directors. graduates or have lent their musical
ex pertise in .the past.
·c huck Yeago will judge
music, while marching will be
judged by Kenny Bond . Gary
Stewart wi ll score ge neral
effect, and Jonathan Dillon
will judge percussion. Rachel
Reynold s wil l judge drum

majors, while nag corps will
be judged by Tiffany Preston
and majorettes will be judged
by Melissa VanMeter.
Hendricks added that organi zers are hopin g for a good
turnout , and they want to
make the competition an annual event. Plus, he plans to ask
the directors of the visiting
bands for feedback so the
competition can be even better
in the years to come.
Park in g will be available in
the school 's parking lot s, with
overflow parking available in
the fields in front of the
school. Hendricks added that
all proceeds, minus the cost of
expenses , will be split with
the Wahama High School athletic boosters.
Fo r more infor-mation or
admission
prices,
call
Wahama High School at (304)
773-5539.

including Woody Pines and
The Lonesome Two and Pokey
LaFarge . Roundin g out the
lineup are Columbus's The Ill
Fits (who feature members of
Tough and Lovely, Bygones,
and Los Caminos) and Fat
Possum Records' indic-folkster
AA Bondy. Athens' very own
Factory Street Dance Studio
will be kicking oil the day with
a special dance petformance.
Reclaim i£ an outdoor music
and community festival held at
one of the most scenic venues
in Ohio. There will be children
activities, do-it-yourself workshops, nature hikes and more.
The venue consists of a ~o lid

oak stage nestled amongst
hundreds of acres of fields and
forest. Now in its third yea r
Reclai'm continues its celebration of music in Southeast
Ohio all day and ni ght.
Schedules. directions and
updates are avai Iable at
www.reclaimmusicfestival.com.
The event will start at 2 p.m.
with the gates opening at I p.m.,
camping is encouraged. Those
attending are encouraged to take
chairs and blankets, drinking
water, snacks, and coolers. No
glass or pets are allowed. For
those interested in volunteering
at Reclaim Music Fest contact.
reel ai mmusic@gmail.com.

com1trf!ek.m'f.: ., or contucf Ben lvlcCm!U'IIf u t

Benefit dinner

HOLZER
CLINIC ·.

740-446-5381

·

· .&lt; '

Erlday, September 26

Football ·
~ ~ : Portsmouth at Gallia Academy. 7:30
J l 1 p.m.
,, .' 1 Federal Hocking at Southern. 7:30p.m
~~./ Tnmble at Eastern, 7:30p.m.
~ ") South Point at River Valley,·7:30 p.m
',. 1 Buffalo at South Gallta. 7:30p.m.
Hannan at Burch. 7:3D 'p.m.

, !1

J Jl'~ r----------,
' ·j
~ ,J l

:tJ Prep Football
WEEK6

·'II

GALLIPOLIS - Gallipolis Shrine Cluh will
host a spaghett i dinncr.on Saturda y at 6:30p.m .
for the benefit of Shrine rs hospita ls for burned
and handicapped children.
Adinis sion is $ 10 . Entertainment will he by the
River City .Players.

~
"''. ,, .
:~~
(~ k
).
.,_ ·'

,

,

Meigs has best outing of season in win over Federal Hocking
STAFF REPORT
• SPORTS@MYDAILYSENTINELCOM

. STEWART
When
Meigs is in firing on all
cy linders .- watch out.
Federa l Hocking fou nd
out just how dangerous the
Lady Marauders (I 2-2) can
be when playing to their fu ll
potential as Meigs claimed
an easy 25-8, 25- 10 and 2510 vic tory over the host
Lady Lancers Wedne~ day in
Stewart.
The Lady Marauders , who
won the ir fifth straight .contest, played nearly perfect in
aJI. facets at the game
Wednesday with good pass-

poi n\s and 14 Iii lis while
Catie Wolfe also broke double digits with 13 points and
13 kills .
·., , With the leading trio rack;
ing up most of the points
only six players scored on
the even ing as Emalee Glass
added five markers and a
team -leadi ng 24 assis\s.
Morgan Howard had a point
Smith
Bailey
and four blocks and Chandra
Stancly had a point. eight
ing setting up several easy kilb and two blocks.
As a team th e Lady
points.
Marauders
were a nearly
Trjcia Smi th led the Meigs
attack with 18 points while perfect 70-for-73 se rving
also setting her teammates while ta llying 42 kil ls. 37
up With 13 assists. Shellie assists and seven blocks.
And keeping with the
Bai ley was next with 14

trend the Me igs reserve team
also won in two games,
improving to 12-2 on the
season.
Meigs will now take a littic bit of a break before
returnin g to action Monday
· in a tri-match wit h Southern
and River Valley at Meigs
High School.
Gallia Academy gets
: . by Lady Raiders
C HESH IR E - For the
second night in a row a
quick start for the River
Valley vo lleyball team gave
little in ret urn . .
The Lady Raiders (8-4)

Thursday, Sept. 2&amp;
Point Plea sa nt at Mldlan'cl Trail

,,.

Zanesville at Logan
Ironton at Chillicothe
r . Portsmouth at Gallia Academ}l
• 1...Jackson at Marietta
l ~~~p .' Fede ral, Hocking at Southern
. .•. /&gt;'
. Trimble at Eastern
Waterford at Mille r
Athens at Alexander
r·' •
' , Nelsonville-York at Belpre
Vi nton Coun ty at Wellston
South Point at River Valley
.-~
Coa t Grove at Chesapeake
\,. 't
Fairland 'at Rock Hill
," v.
Bultalo (WV ) at South Ga lli a
·~~
H8nnan at Burch
' . ,~~·
Chapmanville at Logan
.
Clay at Herbert Hoover

.

446-0586.

&gt;r''

",'·.

'

't ~:

Tolsia at Poca

i: i

Performing Saturday

Wayne at Sissonv'ille

BY BRYAN WALTERS

Saturday, Sept. 27

BWALTEAS@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

Meigs at Wa rren

· - All games start at 7:30p.m.

MILTON. W.Va. - Dave Eva ns and River
Bend from Kentucky wi ll perform Saturday at
7:30p.m. at the Mountaineer Or.ry House. 1"64
Exit 28 at Milton.
Standard admission is S I 2 for adul ts. $ 10 for
seniors 55 and over and $5 for children 12 and.
under. Concessions are ava il ab le and tickets wil l
be sold at the door the day of the show. ·

SPORTS BRIEFS

MGM Marshall
chapter holding
tailgate party .

For information. mil (304) 743 -5749.

Hospice fund-raiser
RIO GRAN DE - Alpha Mu Beta Sorority of
the . University of Rio Grande/ Ri o Grande
Community College will hold their second annu·
al. Fox Trot 5-K on Saturday, Oct. 4.
Registration wil l held at the Bob Evans Farms
Hal l parking lot on the Rio Grande campus at 7
a.m ., with the race to fo ll ow· at 8 a.m.
Registratio n fee for school-aged and un iversity
studentswill be $ 10 . adults wi ll be $ 15 lor early
registration .
Day of the event registration will be ~20. All
proceeds benefi t the AMB Sorority and Holzer
Hospice . Holzer Hospice services patients with a
life- limiting illness regardl.ess of abil ity to pay in
Athens. Gallia, Jackson. Meigs and surTOUtlding
counties.
For more informathm or to register .f(w ril e
event. ca ll (740) 649-9800 or email alphamuhetafoxes@yohon .com.

'2nd Chance' yard sale

Poker run ·

All cr(jfters are ll'elcome tn contact !'am
Ramsey at ( 740) 418-2552 to ,,·ell rheir crajh at
the event.

Medical Excellence.

..

HUNTINGTON - The
Big Green Scholarship
Foundation would li ke to
mvite MGM Chapter Big
.Green Members to bring a
friend to a pregame tailgate
at the Cincinnati football
ga me ·a n Friday, October 3,
between 6 p.m. and ·7:30
p.m.
The tailgate will be located between gates B and C
on the West side of Joan C.
Edwards Stadium. The
game. ki cks off at 8 p.m .
The cost of the tailgate is
$ 15 for one person and $25
for two people.
Reservations must be
made in adva nce with a
' credit card by calling the
Big Green Office at 304696-466 1 or David Steele at

www.holzerclinic.com

Members of the Eastern football team run onto the field just befo re a high school football
this file photo from Week 4.

STAFF REPORT
SPORTS@MYDAILYSENTIN EL.COM

Me·igs basketball
golf scramble

a

30 victory over Fort
Loramie. The Red and Gray
have been consistent on both
sides of the ball , scoring and
al lo wi ng 2 1.4 points per
game.
THS has played a sc hed.ule with a combined record
of 13- 12, although fo ur of
those five contest have been
played' against schools big-.
ger than· D6. Both of
Trimble's looses have ·come
on the road thi s yea r at
Nelsonville-York (4 1- t 3)
and at Crooksville (19-6).
The Tomcats have home
wins again st Alexander (217), Belpre (26-10) and last
week against Ft . Loramie the lone D6 program that
THS has played this fall.
Senior quarterback Kacey
(5-foot-9,
160
Cru se
pounds) has oeen the leader
of a ve ry potent offensiv.e
attack. Cruse went 10-of-13
last week for 190 passing
yards and a touchdown, as
well as rushing for two more
scores.
Sophomore running back
Tyler Dyla (5-7; 160) ran for
148 yards and two scores
last week , whil e senior
wideouts Joe Ei ng (5- I I ,
195) and Adam Mulford (60, 160) bring big-play capa-

bilit.ies to the outside.
Easter'n fast beat THS in
2000, a . span of seve n
stra ight seasons. Kickoff is
schecluled for 7:30p.m.
Fed Hock invades

Southern
RACINE
Southern
football wi ll ta ke a twogaine winning streak into
· Tri- Va lley
Confere nce
Hocking Division play thi.s
Friday ni ght when it hosts
Federa l Hocking in a Week 6
.teague opener at Roger Lee
Adams Field in Meigs
Cou nty.
The Tornadoes (2-3) have
been hot late ly, scoring 88
points the last two· weeks
afte r ·manag ing onl y three
points throu gh the first three
weeks of the season. The
Purple and Gold are averaging 18.2 points and 288.6
yards per game offensively.
whi le allowing 24.4 points
and 258.2 ya rds as . a
defense.
The La ncers (3-2) ..,.. on
the other hand - enter
Frid ay night on a down note,
. being shutout last week by
Alexander 27-0. That loss
ended a three-game winning
streak for the Maroon and

Tressel coaching Buckeyes' offensive line

.

1'

&lt;

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CHILLICOT HE - With
the exception of Saturday's
Ri vers ide
upcom ing
In vita tional.
Tuesday
marked the end of the golf
season for both Meigs and
River Valley after neither
qualified out · o f the 2008
Division II sectional tournament held at the Chillicothe
Jaycee's Golf Cours~ in
Ross Count y.
There were a total of I'i
teams and 75 partic-i pants at
the D2 sectional. wit h the
top five tellms and top fi ve
Bryan Walters/photo
indi
vidua ls lldvllncing to
game against River Valley in
district com peti tion next
week at the Marietta
C lub
in
Cou ntry
Was.hin gto n Count y. The
event was al so in an IS-ho le
Gold. who have wins over format.
The Marauders fini shed
Athens ( 16-0). Fort Frye
II
th overal l m the 15-team
(28-20 OT) and St. Peter
Cha ne! (33-8). Caldwell fi eld with a score of JH5.
defeated FHHS in Week I while the Raiders were 14th
with a team tall y of 402.
by a 32 -7 margin.
Logan Elm won the team
Fed Hock enters Friday
averaging 16.8 points per title with 310. fo llowed by
game offensively and is a lso Un ioto (324). Sheridan
allowing 17.4 points as a (337). Circleville (358) and
defense . Fed Hock is 0-1 Westfall (359) in the topaga inst Division VI pro: five. Dylan .Davi&gt; of Zane
gra ms thi s yea r and has Trace won medalist honors
played a schedule with a with a low round of 83. folcombined record of I0- 15. . lowed by Cody Johnson of
Southern 's opponents are Washington Cou rt House
a . combi ned 10- 12, all of with an 85. Josh Baker
,which have been D6 pro- (McClain), Matt Harley
and
Lexington)
grams. Kick -off is sc hed uled (New
Michael Cannon (New
for 7:30p.m.
Lexington) all shot . rounds
Meigs travels to Warren of 88 to complete the dis trict qualifying list.
Tbe Marauders were led.
VINCENT - Meigs football will have to wait a dav by Tyler Andrews with a
for redemption after .Jast round of 89. fo llowed by
week 's heanbreaking 30-28 Joey Blackston with 9 1 and
setback to Nelsonville-York, Rya n Jeffers with 102 .
as tbe Marauders will make Bobby King and Ben H6od
the t(ip to Washington also .!lad respective rounds
County on Saturday for a of- 103 and 105 .
Todd Simms and Cody
Wee,k 6 ·non -league contest
Wimmer paced RVHS with
with host Warren .
The Marauders (4-1) suf- matching scores of 98. fol fered their only loss of the . lowed by Ky le Brya.nt with
season last weekend after !OJ. Chris Goodrich and
Matt Ball a!so had respecPlease see Football, Bl
ti ve rounds of 105 and J 14.

Eastern, Southern defend home; Meigs hits road

TUPPERS PLAINS Eastern foot ball - fresh off
a season-best 49-8 thra ~h in g
of Hannan last week ~
enters Tri-Valley Conference
Hock ing Division play on a
very high note thi s Friday
night when rival Trimble
304~696-2483.
comes to East Shade River
Stadium for a Week 6 gridiron matchup.
_
It 's been three years ·si nce
the Eagles (2-3) entered
TVC Hock ing play with a
MASON, W.Va . . - The victory. more-or-less two .
Meigs High School boys The hosts are also co ming
basketba ll team will be
holding a golf scramble on off . season highs for points
Saturday, October II, at (49), marg in of victory (41 ).
rushing yards (3 14) and total
Riverside Golf C lub .
The event will be four- yards of offense (354).
The Green and White are
man team format, with one
averaging
23.4 points and
playe r from each team ·
ya\ds
per game offen289.4
required to have an undersively,
while
allowing 25
JO handicap. The event is
18 holes and rules will be points and 270 .2 yards as a
explained the day of the defense . HIS is 1- 1 at home
this year and 2-1 overa ll
tournament.
The cost is $320 per team aga inst similar Division VI
...:. $80 per person - with opponents. Eastern's se h ed~
food , bev.erages and mulli - ule has a colle.c tiverecord of
g'ans included in the entrY 10-13.
f~e. The $5 skins game. and
The Tomcats (3-2) are also
Dptional cash pot are not com in g into Friday night
included in . the entry fee. fresh off their bigges t offen ~
:Phe event is limited to the sive output of the year.• a 41first 30 teams that sign-up .
z\ny extra teams go a wart;
tng list. .
:: The purpose of th is
scramble is to raise · money
rpr purchas ing equipment
for the Meigs boys basketCOLU MBU S (AP)
nail program . The goal is to The
most important numraise $3 ,000.
'
bers
attached
to a foo tball
:: For more informatio n,
team
make
up
its
record .
ci:mtact MHS head basketNo. 14-ranked Ohio State
b,all coach Ben Ewing at
is
3- 1 in that regard.
740-416-0824.
But four games inio the
season the Buckeyes are
way. way down the list
CoNTAcrUs
when it comes to the numbers that make up most
1-740-446-2342 ext. 33
NCAA offensi·ve categories.
Fax - 1-740-446-3008
They stand No. 92 in total
t::·mell - sports @.mydailysentinel.com
offense, 56th in rushing and
. lllll&gt;tlO..lilllll
are 104th (of 11 9 teams in
Football
Bowl
Bryan Walters, Sports Writer the
Subdivis ion, or Division Ii740) 446-2342, eXt. 33
b'fValters@ mydailytribune .c.o m
A) in passing. Averaging 25
points a game, the Buckeyes
Larry Crum, Sports Writer
rank
73rd in the nation .
t74&lt;l) 446·2342 .•, 33
Offensive tack le Alex
ICfum@ mydaUyregister.com
1

.

Local Caring."

Please see Volleyball, Bl

RV,.Meigs
come up
short at
sectionals

,

. GALLIPOLIS - Founder's Day . Wi ll be
observed at the Our House Museum ; .\3c First
Ave .. on Satu rday from II ti.m. until 2 p.m.
There will be free admi&gt;Sion to the museum .
"along with a free bean lunch. period music. apple
butter and familv fun .
For infrmnarfon. collfclct . the Ou r Hm1se w

came out and edged their
Gallia Countv foe 26-24 in
game one. bu"t cou ldn 't keep
up that momentum as Gallia
Academy ( 10-4) battled
back and took the final three
games 25- 17. 25- 16 and 2521 to claim the wi n
Wednesday in Cheshire .
River Valley also jlllnped
out front early in its game
against Eastern on Tuesday.
but the Eagles fo ught back
and took the win in five.
Gall ia
Acadcmy:s
Caroline Baxter led the Blue
and Wh ite offensively on
Wednesday with l'i points

Prep Golf Roundup

Friday, Sept. 28

",..
"!""

At Holzer Clinic, Yo.u Can Always Count on ...
.,

,. ·t'·

·A
~i

GALLIPOLI S
Gall ia , .Ja ckso n - M e i ~s
Continuum of Ca re will be hosting a fund-n11 s~r ·
titled "2nd Chanc.e Yard Sale."
.
It is a benefit to rai se funds to give pe,·wns
who are homeless or at ri sk or being hom e l e.~&gt; a
'
second chance. It wi ll be h~ld Saturday, Oct. I I
from 8 a.m. to 4 p.m. at the Woodland Ce nters
build ing/parking lot located at 3086 Ohi l' 16\) .
The National Archery 111 - Gall ipolis.
Persons wish ing to donate yard sale items for
. Schools Program (NASP)
the
fund-raiser shou ld drop them off at Woodla11d
brings students from schools
Centers
on Friday, Oct. 10.
wi thin· ODNR 's southeast
Wildlife Di strict to com pete
with bows and arrows in a
Friday competition.
Animals from the Columbus
. OAK HILL - The Oak Hill Commumty
Zoo will return and the Fred Relay for Li fe Team wi ll sponsor a poker run on
Scheer Lumberjack Show Satu rday. Oct. II . Registration wil l begin at I I
offers chopping and sawing .. a.m. at Aetna Park in Oak Hil l.
tree climbing and log birling
Registration wi ll be $ 10 per bik~r and $5 for an
throughout the weekend.
additional rider. Door pri zes, li ve entertainment
Sojourners will offer canoe and plenty of food wi ll be available.
and kayak safety tips and padThis event will be in conjuncti on wi th the Oak
dling technique demonstra- Hill Community Relay for Life Team Day af the
tions.
park . .Crafts. food, live enter1ainment. and ·a
For additional information , sweet shop wi ll be availab le.

Durango Bull Ride Mania the Valley takes ATVers along
combines the original extreme a 20-mile stretch of the Wayne
sport of bull riding with bone· National Forest during nonjarring excitement of bareback speed event.
and sadd le bronco riding onto
The Polaris QuadMasters
one actio n packed , adrenaline ATV challenge occurs on a
man-made ·course with 8- I0
pumped ride.
.
T he
Hocking
College components that are timed
Mounted Patrol and Drill Team wi th in a closed-course venue.
will perform between Durango
Law enforcement tearris
Bull Ride Mania shows on from arou nd the state will
compete
111
the
Law
Saturday and Sunday.
A competition for profes- Enforce ment Shoot Out.
sional heayy equ ipment opera·
Chai n saw carving is center
tors ·is sponsored by Co lumbus stage throu ghout the weekend
Equipment Co. and provides as Hocking Co llege instructor
an opportun ity for competi tors Dale Hatfield , a professional
to try their sk ill s as they carver, puts his ability to the
maneuver five different pieces test against several other tal- fees and competition registra ented-. ·and acco mpli shed tiDn forms visit www.grea tourof'hea vy equipment .
The Arctic Cat ATV Ral ly in curvers.
dooradventureslww.com.

.,.

( 740) 597-1-173. or en111il mcc({IJI&lt;'Ilf @, •hio .erlu.

Hocking schedules outdoor adventure
NELSONVILLE
Get
ready for a wee kend of fun in
the great outdoors as the
Outdoor
Rocky
Great
Adventure comes tO the
Hocking College campus in
Nelsonville Friday th rough
Sunday.
·
Vis itors will find new activities have added · and changes
have been made to son1e old
favorites. Longtime supporter
Rocky Brand Inc. is the 2008
title sponsor and FMG Events
is partnering wi th Hockin g
Col lege in managing the
event.
· ·cabela's
Dock Dogs
t;:hampionships return with
. dock -jumping and dock-div- .
li1g canine performances .

Tbyrsd!l'f Seotember 25
Football
~J ~J Pam! Pleasant ,v s Mt dland Tratl ~I
•u l; laldley Fteld, 7:30p.m.
, ~··,
Soccer
l' 1 logan at Galha Academy, 5 p.m.
J.{; Point Pleasant at OVCS, 4:30p.m.
't '
Volleyball
• 4 1 Ea stern at Walerford . 6 p.m.
(, 1"~ Gallta Academy at Portsmouth. 5:1 5
ll~.t p. m .
'
t~ y 1 Chesapeake at River Valley. 5:30p.m
~ r' Tri mble e.t Southern. 6 p.m.
I o:(J
i · t

.

Prep Volleyball Roundup

1

ATHEN S - The Raccoon Creek Pallnc· r, hr p
will hold ih first anm1al poker run ·ruml - r&lt;~ i ,i n~
event on Saturday._Thi' 103-mile scenrc wute "·rh
begin at the Lake Hope State P&lt;~rk 111 th,· Lah&lt;'
Hope Furnace parking lot.Sign in time is II &lt;1.11 1.
Join participant;., for · a hog roast at R :tl'l'UOJ i
Creek Countv Park in Galli;t Countv. where '"·' I'
prizes wil l 'be awarded for th e- be't pok,:r
hand( s). Proceeds from this c\·ci11 wil l hcnd l!
watershed re&gt;toration and cduunitH)al l'ITnn&gt; in
rhe Raccoon Creek WMershed.
The Raccoon Creek Partnership i&gt; a non-pro fi r
orga ni za ti,on formed to improve and prote ct
water quality in the Raccoon Creek \Yalcc·hed .
For nwn.: poker run ddaUs. ~·h"il lt'\\'tl'nlc -

.•

SCHEDU\E

PO MER OY - A schedule ol upcomtng h1gh
r·~ !lc l'lool· vars1 ty sportrng events invo l\ltng
"~~ea.ms fr om Me tgs and Galha counti es

Founder's Day sch~duled

Reclaim Music Festival coming to Meigs County
RUTLAND - The thid an nu- Felice Brothers are "taking
al Reclaim Music Festival will clues from thei r larger-th antake place this Saturday at Triple life Americana predecessors,
Oak Music Center near Rutland. namely Bob Dylan and Woody
Local , regional and national Guthrie. the Felice Brothers
touring bands wi ll play from 2 specialize in boozy, rambling
p.m. until past midnight. rain or tales of backwoods nostalgia
shine. Tickets are $ 10. which told in rootsy piano, gu itar,
includes primitive campi ng. and drum renderings."
and will be available at the gate.
The Reclaim Music Festival
'Reclaim will introduce The also works tn highl ight the li ve
felice Brothers as the head line music scene of Athens and the
national act. Hai ling frbm surTounding region with local
upstate New York , The Felice acts Southeast Engi ne, J:D.
Brothers are fresh off stints at Hutchison, Wheels On Fire. and
Bonnaroo and th~ Newport .· The Never Evers all set to play.
Folk Festi val and are heading
There are also a few regional ·
right for southeast Ohio.
favorites that should be known
Spin Magaz ine says The to most all Athens music fans,

~3

"

'

Boone said he wasn't a bit ·'Beanie" Wells to a foot
surprised that Ohio State is injury midway through their
ranked so low in those key season opener.
Part of the problem has
statistical categories.
"Would it surpri se me" been the transition to ·
No. I don' t want to make unproven reds hirr fres hman
excuses.'' he said th is week · Dan l;lerron as Well's'
during preparation s for replacement. Part of it is the
Saturday's Big Ten opener even bigger transition from
agains t
Minnesota. fifth -year senior , Todd
"Obviously, we just haven 't Boeckman at quarterback to
been playing well."
even more unproven freshThen he did offer an man Terrel le Pryor.
excuse, albeit an underTopping it all off. the line
standable one that play s tai l- has been porous at times.
It hasn't just been the
back, stan.ds 6-foot- 1 and
we ighs 237 pounds .
USC game . . however. The
The Buckeyes have been Buckeyes romped over
in a three-game swoon Youngstown State 43 -0 in
offensively - ever since their first game. but lest
they lost tailback Chris Wells. In the three games

since, · they 've had two
fewer first downs than the
oppositi on and have averaged a little over 4 .yards per
play .
A year ago. with almost
the exact same offense the on ly graduation losses
were at fullback and offensive tack le - they averaged
seven more first downs a
game than the opposition
and almost 6 yards per play.
a 50 percent decline.
Ar least Wells appears to
be close to returning .
Tressel listed him as proba ble for \he game at Ohio
~radium against Minnesota.
If the falloff ht"n't been
apparent in the team's

record, it has certainly been
evident to the .coachi ng
staff.
1VJaybe that explains why
coach Jim Tressel suddenly
strolled down to where the
offensive linemen were
working out early last' week
and started yelling at them
at the top of his lungs.
He told them that they had
to play faste r. that they had
to work hardet. that they had
to start blocking f~r their
teammates.

And. yes. Tressel was
yelling - something that
seems almo' t unimaginable
to those who have see n him
quietly coun seling a player
during a typical practice.

�'

Inside

Bl

.The Daily Sentinel

•'. The Extra Point, Page B2
•

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Thursday, September 25,

www.mydailys~ntinel.com

Page A6 ·The Daily Sentinel

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Thursday, September 25, 2008

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~·LocAL

Entertainment .Briefs
Wahama High
School will host
the inaugural
White Falcon
Invitational at
11 a.m.
Saturday. The
band competition is designed
for bands with
less than 45
playing mem·
bers. Pictured
from Ieft are
band members
Ezra Zuspan ,
Maria Keathley,
Desiree Sines ,
Devan ·
VanMeter and
Katie Hendricks
posing with the
trophies that will
be awarded th is
weekend.

I ."
•'

•l 'I

SubmiHed photo ·

band
MASON. W.Va . - In an
~!Tort to give sma lkr marching bands a chance to win the
coveted gra nd champion
honor, Wahama High School
wi ll host its first band competition th is weekend.
to
· Ch ip
Accord ing
Hendricks. band di rector.
plans currently are under way
for the inaugural Wahama
White Falcon In vitational. set
to begin at II a.m. Saturday
at the high schoo l in Mason.
T he festival is unique'because
it is designed for marching
. bands that have 45 or fewer·
playing members.
"There aren't a whole lot or
competitiom strict ly fo r smaller bands.'' Hendricks said.
"We wanted to even out the
playing field for them. Our
fe stival wi ll give small bands a
chance to wi n awa rds thev
normally don't win."
'

Hendrick&gt; certainly knows
what he's talki ng abo ut. as
Wahama's band has onl y 44'
playi ng members. Despite an
award-winning hi story and
distinc t ·marching
sty le,
Wahama , like other small
bands . often sees itse'lf competing against banos with I00
or more members. Even
though small bands might. do
we ll in their respective classes. which are div.ided accord,
ing to size, the top prize and
any overall awards are given
regardless of class. which usually means the bi gger bands
take home the top trophies .
That won't be the case this
weekend . Bands scheduled to
co tnpere 'in Saturday's event
wi II be from Herbert Hoover
High School, Buffa lo Hi gh
School . Linco.ln County High
School , Logan High School,
Williamstown High School,

Group plans poker run

{

Wayne High School and
James Monroe High .school.
Wahama also will perform its
competition show, "Classical
Moods," in exhibition pri or to
the awards ceremony, which is
set for I :30 p.m.
,
Hendricks pointed out that
even though some of the
schools these bands represent
are large. the bands. themselves are small.
In addition. Hendricks said
all the judges for the festival
have ties to the hi gh school in
some way, whether they are
forme r band directors. graduates or have lent their musical
ex pertise in .the past.
·c huck Yeago will judge
music, while marching will be
judged by Kenny Bond . Gary
Stewart wi ll score ge neral
effect, and Jonathan Dillon
will judge percussion. Rachel
Reynold s wil l judge drum

majors, while nag corps will
be judged by Tiffany Preston
and majorettes will be judged
by Melissa VanMeter.
Hendricks added that organi zers are hopin g for a good
turnout , and they want to
make the competition an annual event. Plus, he plans to ask
the directors of the visiting
bands for feedback so the
competition can be even better
in the years to come.
Park in g will be available in
the school 's parking lot s, with
overflow parking available in
the fields in front of the
school. Hendricks added that
all proceeds, minus the cost of
expenses , will be split with
the Wahama High School athletic boosters.
Fo r more infor-mation or
admission
prices,
call
Wahama High School at (304)
773-5539.

including Woody Pines and
The Lonesome Two and Pokey
LaFarge . Roundin g out the
lineup are Columbus's The Ill
Fits (who feature members of
Tough and Lovely, Bygones,
and Los Caminos) and Fat
Possum Records' indic-folkster
AA Bondy. Athens' very own
Factory Street Dance Studio
will be kicking oil the day with
a special dance petformance.
Reclaim i£ an outdoor music
and community festival held at
one of the most scenic venues
in Ohio. There will be children
activities, do-it-yourself workshops, nature hikes and more.
The venue consists of a ~o lid

oak stage nestled amongst
hundreds of acres of fields and
forest. Now in its third yea r
Reclai'm continues its celebration of music in Southeast
Ohio all day and ni ght.
Schedules. directions and
updates are avai Iable at
www.reclaimmusicfestival.com.
The event will start at 2 p.m.
with the gates opening at I p.m.,
camping is encouraged. Those
attending are encouraged to take
chairs and blankets, drinking
water, snacks, and coolers. No
glass or pets are allowed. For
those interested in volunteering
at Reclaim Music Fest contact.
reel ai mmusic@gmail.com.

com1trf!ek.m'f.: ., or contucf Ben lvlcCm!U'IIf u t

Benefit dinner

HOLZER
CLINIC ·.

740-446-5381

·

· .&lt; '

Erlday, September 26

Football ·
~ ~ : Portsmouth at Gallia Academy. 7:30
J l 1 p.m.
,, .' 1 Federal Hocking at Southern. 7:30p.m
~~./ Tnmble at Eastern, 7:30p.m.
~ ") South Point at River Valley,·7:30 p.m
',. 1 Buffalo at South Gallta. 7:30p.m.
Hannan at Burch. 7:3D 'p.m.

, !1

J Jl'~ r----------,
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:tJ Prep Football
WEEK6

·'II

GALLIPOLIS - Gallipolis Shrine Cluh will
host a spaghett i dinncr.on Saturda y at 6:30p.m .
for the benefit of Shrine rs hospita ls for burned
and handicapped children.
Adinis sion is $ 10 . Entertainment will he by the
River City .Players.

~
"''. ,, .
:~~
(~ k
).
.,_ ·'

,

,

Meigs has best outing of season in win over Federal Hocking
STAFF REPORT
• SPORTS@MYDAILYSENTINELCOM

. STEWART
When
Meigs is in firing on all
cy linders .- watch out.
Federa l Hocking fou nd
out just how dangerous the
Lady Marauders (I 2-2) can
be when playing to their fu ll
potential as Meigs claimed
an easy 25-8, 25- 10 and 2510 vic tory over the host
Lady Lancers Wedne~ day in
Stewart.
The Lady Marauders , who
won the ir fifth straight .contest, played nearly perfect in
aJI. facets at the game
Wednesday with good pass-

poi n\s and 14 Iii lis while
Catie Wolfe also broke double digits with 13 points and
13 kills .
·., , With the leading trio rack;
ing up most of the points
only six players scored on
the even ing as Emalee Glass
added five markers and a
team -leadi ng 24 assis\s.
Morgan Howard had a point
Smith
Bailey
and four blocks and Chandra
Stancly had a point. eight
ing setting up several easy kilb and two blocks.
As a team th e Lady
points.
Marauders
were a nearly
Trjcia Smi th led the Meigs
attack with 18 points while perfect 70-for-73 se rving
also setting her teammates while ta llying 42 kil ls. 37
up With 13 assists. Shellie assists and seven blocks.
And keeping with the
Bai ley was next with 14

trend the Me igs reserve team
also won in two games,
improving to 12-2 on the
season.
Meigs will now take a littic bit of a break before
returnin g to action Monday
· in a tri-match wit h Southern
and River Valley at Meigs
High School.
Gallia Academy gets
: . by Lady Raiders
C HESH IR E - For the
second night in a row a
quick start for the River
Valley vo lleyball team gave
little in ret urn . .
The Lady Raiders (8-4)

Thursday, Sept. 2&amp;
Point Plea sa nt at Mldlan'cl Trail

,,.

Zanesville at Logan
Ironton at Chillicothe
r . Portsmouth at Gallia Academ}l
• 1...Jackson at Marietta
l ~~~p .' Fede ral, Hocking at Southern
. .•. /&gt;'
. Trimble at Eastern
Waterford at Mille r
Athens at Alexander
r·' •
' , Nelsonville-York at Belpre
Vi nton Coun ty at Wellston
South Point at River Valley
.-~
Coa t Grove at Chesapeake
\,. 't
Fairland 'at Rock Hill
," v.
Bultalo (WV ) at South Ga lli a
·~~
H8nnan at Burch
' . ,~~·
Chapmanville at Logan
.
Clay at Herbert Hoover

.

446-0586.

&gt;r''

",'·.

'

't ~:

Tolsia at Poca

i: i

Performing Saturday

Wayne at Sissonv'ille

BY BRYAN WALTERS

Saturday, Sept. 27

BWALTEAS@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

Meigs at Wa rren

· - All games start at 7:30p.m.

MILTON. W.Va. - Dave Eva ns and River
Bend from Kentucky wi ll perform Saturday at
7:30p.m. at the Mountaineer Or.ry House. 1"64
Exit 28 at Milton.
Standard admission is S I 2 for adul ts. $ 10 for
seniors 55 and over and $5 for children 12 and.
under. Concessions are ava il ab le and tickets wil l
be sold at the door the day of the show. ·

SPORTS BRIEFS

MGM Marshall
chapter holding
tailgate party .

For information. mil (304) 743 -5749.

Hospice fund-raiser
RIO GRAN DE - Alpha Mu Beta Sorority of
the . University of Rio Grande/ Ri o Grande
Community College will hold their second annu·
al. Fox Trot 5-K on Saturday, Oct. 4.
Registration wil l held at the Bob Evans Farms
Hal l parking lot on the Rio Grande campus at 7
a.m ., with the race to fo ll ow· at 8 a.m.
Registratio n fee for school-aged and un iversity
studentswill be $ 10 . adults wi ll be $ 15 lor early
registration .
Day of the event registration will be ~20. All
proceeds benefi t the AMB Sorority and Holzer
Hospice . Holzer Hospice services patients with a
life- limiting illness regardl.ess of abil ity to pay in
Athens. Gallia, Jackson. Meigs and surTOUtlding
counties.
For more informathm or to register .f(w ril e
event. ca ll (740) 649-9800 or email alphamuhetafoxes@yohon .com.

'2nd Chance' yard sale

Poker run ·

All cr(jfters are ll'elcome tn contact !'am
Ramsey at ( 740) 418-2552 to ,,·ell rheir crajh at
the event.

Medical Excellence.

..

HUNTINGTON - The
Big Green Scholarship
Foundation would li ke to
mvite MGM Chapter Big
.Green Members to bring a
friend to a pregame tailgate
at the Cincinnati football
ga me ·a n Friday, October 3,
between 6 p.m. and ·7:30
p.m.
The tailgate will be located between gates B and C
on the West side of Joan C.
Edwards Stadium. The
game. ki cks off at 8 p.m .
The cost of the tailgate is
$ 15 for one person and $25
for two people.
Reservations must be
made in adva nce with a
' credit card by calling the
Big Green Office at 304696-466 1 or David Steele at

www.holzerclinic.com

Members of the Eastern football team run onto the field just befo re a high school football
this file photo from Week 4.

STAFF REPORT
SPORTS@MYDAILYSENTIN EL.COM

Me·igs basketball
golf scramble

a

30 victory over Fort
Loramie. The Red and Gray
have been consistent on both
sides of the ball , scoring and
al lo wi ng 2 1.4 points per
game.
THS has played a sc hed.ule with a combined record
of 13- 12, although fo ur of
those five contest have been
played' against schools big-.
ger than· D6. Both of
Trimble's looses have ·come
on the road thi s yea r at
Nelsonville-York (4 1- t 3)
and at Crooksville (19-6).
The Tomcats have home
wins again st Alexander (217), Belpre (26-10) and last
week against Ft . Loramie the lone D6 program that
THS has played this fall.
Senior quarterback Kacey
(5-foot-9,
160
Cru se
pounds) has oeen the leader
of a ve ry potent offensiv.e
attack. Cruse went 10-of-13
last week for 190 passing
yards and a touchdown, as
well as rushing for two more
scores.
Sophomore running back
Tyler Dyla (5-7; 160) ran for
148 yards and two scores
last week , whil e senior
wideouts Joe Ei ng (5- I I ,
195) and Adam Mulford (60, 160) bring big-play capa-

bilit.ies to the outside.
Easter'n fast beat THS in
2000, a . span of seve n
stra ight seasons. Kickoff is
schecluled for 7:30p.m.
Fed Hock invades

Southern
RACINE
Southern
football wi ll ta ke a twogaine winning streak into
· Tri- Va lley
Confere nce
Hocking Division play thi.s
Friday ni ght when it hosts
Federa l Hocking in a Week 6
.teague opener at Roger Lee
Adams Field in Meigs
Cou nty.
The Tornadoes (2-3) have
been hot late ly, scoring 88
points the last two· weeks
afte r ·manag ing onl y three
points throu gh the first three
weeks of the season. The
Purple and Gold are averaging 18.2 points and 288.6
yards per game offensively.
whi le allowing 24.4 points
and 258.2 ya rds as . a
defense.
The La ncers (3-2) ..,.. on
the other hand - enter
Frid ay night on a down note,
. being shutout last week by
Alexander 27-0. That loss
ended a three-game winning
streak for the Maroon and

Tressel coaching Buckeyes' offensive line

.

1'

&lt;

'.

CHILLICOT HE - With
the exception of Saturday's
Ri vers ide
upcom ing
In vita tional.
Tuesday
marked the end of the golf
season for both Meigs and
River Valley after neither
qualified out · o f the 2008
Division II sectional tournament held at the Chillicothe
Jaycee's Golf Cours~ in
Ross Count y.
There were a total of I'i
teams and 75 partic-i pants at
the D2 sectional. wit h the
top five tellms and top fi ve
Bryan Walters/photo
indi
vidua ls lldvllncing to
game against River Valley in
district com peti tion next
week at the Marietta
C lub
in
Cou ntry
Was.hin gto n Count y. The
event was al so in an IS-ho le
Gold. who have wins over format.
The Marauders fini shed
Athens ( 16-0). Fort Frye
II
th overal l m the 15-team
(28-20 OT) and St. Peter
Cha ne! (33-8). Caldwell fi eld with a score of JH5.
defeated FHHS in Week I while the Raiders were 14th
with a team tall y of 402.
by a 32 -7 margin.
Logan Elm won the team
Fed Hock enters Friday
averaging 16.8 points per title with 310. fo llowed by
game offensively and is a lso Un ioto (324). Sheridan
allowing 17.4 points as a (337). Circleville (358) and
defense . Fed Hock is 0-1 Westfall (359) in the topaga inst Division VI pro: five. Dylan .Davi&gt; of Zane
gra ms thi s yea r and has Trace won medalist honors
played a schedule with a with a low round of 83. folcombined record of I0- 15. . lowed by Cody Johnson of
Southern 's opponents are Washington Cou rt House
a . combi ned 10- 12, all of with an 85. Josh Baker
,which have been D6 pro- (McClain), Matt Harley
and
Lexington)
grams. Kick -off is sc hed uled (New
Michael Cannon (New
for 7:30p.m.
Lexington) all shot . rounds
Meigs travels to Warren of 88 to complete the dis trict qualifying list.
Tbe Marauders were led.
VINCENT - Meigs football will have to wait a dav by Tyler Andrews with a
for redemption after .Jast round of 89. fo llowed by
week 's heanbreaking 30-28 Joey Blackston with 9 1 and
setback to Nelsonville-York, Rya n Jeffers with 102 .
as tbe Marauders will make Bobby King and Ben H6od
the t(ip to Washington also .!lad respective rounds
County on Saturday for a of- 103 and 105 .
Todd Simms and Cody
Wee,k 6 ·non -league contest
Wimmer paced RVHS with
with host Warren .
The Marauders (4-1) suf- matching scores of 98. fol fered their only loss of the . lowed by Ky le Brya.nt with
season last weekend after !OJ. Chris Goodrich and
Matt Ball a!so had respecPlease see Football, Bl
ti ve rounds of 105 and J 14.

Eastern, Southern defend home; Meigs hits road

TUPPERS PLAINS Eastern foot ball - fresh off
a season-best 49-8 thra ~h in g
of Hannan last week ~
enters Tri-Valley Conference
Hock ing Division play on a
very high note thi s Friday
night when rival Trimble
304~696-2483.
comes to East Shade River
Stadium for a Week 6 gridiron matchup.
_
It 's been three years ·si nce
the Eagles (2-3) entered
TVC Hock ing play with a
MASON, W.Va . . - The victory. more-or-less two .
Meigs High School boys The hosts are also co ming
basketba ll team will be
holding a golf scramble on off . season highs for points
Saturday, October II, at (49), marg in of victory (41 ).
rushing yards (3 14) and total
Riverside Golf C lub .
The event will be four- yards of offense (354).
The Green and White are
man team format, with one
averaging
23.4 points and
playe r from each team ·
ya\ds
per game offen289.4
required to have an undersively,
while
allowing 25
JO handicap. The event is
18 holes and rules will be points and 270 .2 yards as a
explained the day of the defense . HIS is 1- 1 at home
this year and 2-1 overa ll
tournament.
The cost is $320 per team aga inst similar Division VI
...:. $80 per person - with opponents. Eastern's se h ed~
food , bev.erages and mulli - ule has a colle.c tiverecord of
g'ans included in the entrY 10-13.
f~e. The $5 skins game. and
The Tomcats (3-2) are also
Dptional cash pot are not com in g into Friday night
included in . the entry fee. fresh off their bigges t offen ~
:Phe event is limited to the sive output of the year.• a 41first 30 teams that sign-up .
z\ny extra teams go a wart;
tng list. .
:: The purpose of th is
scramble is to raise · money
rpr purchas ing equipment
for the Meigs boys basketCOLU MBU S (AP)
nail program . The goal is to The
most important numraise $3 ,000.
'
bers
attached
to a foo tball
:: For more informatio n,
team
make
up
its
record .
ci:mtact MHS head basketNo. 14-ranked Ohio State
b,all coach Ben Ewing at
is
3- 1 in that regard.
740-416-0824.
But four games inio the
season the Buckeyes are
way. way down the list
CoNTAcrUs
when it comes to the numbers that make up most
1-740-446-2342 ext. 33
NCAA offensi·ve categories.
Fax - 1-740-446-3008
They stand No. 92 in total
t::·mell - sports @.mydailysentinel.com
offense, 56th in rushing and
. lllll&gt;tlO..lilllll
are 104th (of 11 9 teams in
Football
Bowl
Bryan Walters, Sports Writer the
Subdivis ion, or Division Ii740) 446-2342, eXt. 33
b'fValters@ mydailytribune .c.o m
A) in passing. Averaging 25
points a game, the Buckeyes
Larry Crum, Sports Writer
rank
73rd in the nation .
t74&lt;l) 446·2342 .•, 33
Offensive tack le Alex
ICfum@ mydaUyregister.com
1

.

Local Caring."

Please see Volleyball, Bl

RV,.Meigs
come up
short at
sectionals

,

. GALLIPOLIS - Founder's Day . Wi ll be
observed at the Our House Museum ; .\3c First
Ave .. on Satu rday from II ti.m. until 2 p.m.
There will be free admi&gt;Sion to the museum .
"along with a free bean lunch. period music. apple
butter and familv fun .
For infrmnarfon. collfclct . the Ou r Hm1se w

came out and edged their
Gallia Countv foe 26-24 in
game one. bu"t cou ldn 't keep
up that momentum as Gallia
Academy ( 10-4) battled
back and took the final three
games 25- 17. 25- 16 and 2521 to claim the wi n
Wednesday in Cheshire .
River Valley also jlllnped
out front early in its game
against Eastern on Tuesday.
but the Eagles fo ught back
and took the win in five.
Gall ia
Acadcmy:s
Caroline Baxter led the Blue
and Wh ite offensively on
Wednesday with l'i points

Prep Golf Roundup

Friday, Sept. 28

",..
"!""

At Holzer Clinic, Yo.u Can Always Count on ...
.,

,. ·t'·

·A
~i

GALLIPOLI S
Gall ia , .Ja ckso n - M e i ~s
Continuum of Ca re will be hosting a fund-n11 s~r ·
titled "2nd Chanc.e Yard Sale."
.
It is a benefit to rai se funds to give pe,·wns
who are homeless or at ri sk or being hom e l e.~&gt; a
'
second chance. It wi ll be h~ld Saturday, Oct. I I
from 8 a.m. to 4 p.m. at the Woodland Ce nters
build ing/parking lot located at 3086 Ohi l' 16\) .
The National Archery 111 - Gall ipolis.
Persons wish ing to donate yard sale items for
. Schools Program (NASP)
the
fund-raiser shou ld drop them off at Woodla11d
brings students from schools
Centers
on Friday, Oct. 10.
wi thin· ODNR 's southeast
Wildlife Di strict to com pete
with bows and arrows in a
Friday competition.
Animals from the Columbus
. OAK HILL - The Oak Hill Commumty
Zoo will return and the Fred Relay for Li fe Team wi ll sponsor a poker run on
Scheer Lumberjack Show Satu rday. Oct. II . Registration wil l begin at I I
offers chopping and sawing .. a.m. at Aetna Park in Oak Hil l.
tree climbing and log birling
Registration wi ll be $ 10 per bik~r and $5 for an
throughout the weekend.
additional rider. Door pri zes, li ve entertainment
Sojourners will offer canoe and plenty of food wi ll be available.
and kayak safety tips and padThis event will be in conjuncti on wi th the Oak
dling technique demonstra- Hill Community Relay for Life Team Day af the
tions.
park . .Crafts. food, live enter1ainment. and ·a
For additional information , sweet shop wi ll be availab le.

Durango Bull Ride Mania the Valley takes ATVers along
combines the original extreme a 20-mile stretch of the Wayne
sport of bull riding with bone· National Forest during nonjarring excitement of bareback speed event.
and sadd le bronco riding onto
The Polaris QuadMasters
one actio n packed , adrenaline ATV challenge occurs on a
man-made ·course with 8- I0
pumped ride.
.
T he
Hocking
College components that are timed
Mounted Patrol and Drill Team wi th in a closed-course venue.
will perform between Durango
Law enforcement tearris
Bull Ride Mania shows on from arou nd the state will
compete
111
the
Law
Saturday and Sunday.
A competition for profes- Enforce ment Shoot Out.
sional heayy equ ipment opera·
Chai n saw carving is center
tors ·is sponsored by Co lumbus stage throu ghout the weekend
Equipment Co. and provides as Hocking Co llege instructor
an opportun ity for competi tors Dale Hatfield , a professional
to try their sk ill s as they carver, puts his ability to the
maneuver five different pieces test against several other tal- fees and competition registra ented-. ·and acco mpli shed tiDn forms visit www.grea tourof'hea vy equipment .
The Arctic Cat ATV Ral ly in curvers.
dooradventureslww.com.

.,.

( 740) 597-1-173. or en111il mcc({IJI&lt;'Ilf @, •hio .erlu.

Hocking schedules outdoor adventure
NELSONVILLE
Get
ready for a wee kend of fun in
the great outdoors as the
Outdoor
Rocky
Great
Adventure comes tO the
Hocking College campus in
Nelsonville Friday th rough
Sunday.
·
Vis itors will find new activities have added · and changes
have been made to son1e old
favorites. Longtime supporter
Rocky Brand Inc. is the 2008
title sponsor and FMG Events
is partnering wi th Hockin g
Col lege in managing the
event.
· ·cabela's
Dock Dogs
t;:hampionships return with
. dock -jumping and dock-div- .
li1g canine performances .

Tbyrsd!l'f Seotember 25
Football
~J ~J Pam! Pleasant ,v s Mt dland Tratl ~I
•u l; laldley Fteld, 7:30p.m.
, ~··,
Soccer
l' 1 logan at Galha Academy, 5 p.m.
J.{; Point Pleasant at OVCS, 4:30p.m.
't '
Volleyball
• 4 1 Ea stern at Walerford . 6 p.m.
(, 1"~ Gallta Academy at Portsmouth. 5:1 5
ll~.t p. m .
'
t~ y 1 Chesapeake at River Valley. 5:30p.m
~ r' Tri mble e.t Southern. 6 p.m.
I o:(J
i · t

.

Prep Volleyball Roundup

1

ATHEN S - The Raccoon Creek Pallnc· r, hr p
will hold ih first anm1al poker run ·ruml - r&lt;~ i ,i n~
event on Saturday._Thi' 103-mile scenrc wute "·rh
begin at the Lake Hope State P&lt;~rk 111 th,· Lah&lt;'
Hope Furnace parking lot.Sign in time is II &lt;1.11 1.
Join participant;., for · a hog roast at R :tl'l'UOJ i
Creek Countv Park in Galli;t Countv. where '"·' I'
prizes wil l 'be awarded for th e- be't pok,:r
hand( s). Proceeds from this c\·ci11 wil l hcnd l!
watershed re&gt;toration and cduunitH)al l'ITnn&gt; in
rhe Raccoon Creek WMershed.
The Raccoon Creek Partnership i&gt; a non-pro fi r
orga ni za ti,on formed to improve and prote ct
water quality in the Raccoon Creek \Yalcc·hed .
For nwn.: poker run ddaUs. ~·h"il lt'\\'tl'nlc -

.•

SCHEDU\E

PO MER OY - A schedule ol upcomtng h1gh
r·~ !lc l'lool· vars1 ty sportrng events invo l\ltng
"~~ea.ms fr om Me tgs and Galha counti es

Founder's Day sch~duled

Reclaim Music Festival coming to Meigs County
RUTLAND - The thid an nu- Felice Brothers are "taking
al Reclaim Music Festival will clues from thei r larger-th antake place this Saturday at Triple life Americana predecessors,
Oak Music Center near Rutland. namely Bob Dylan and Woody
Local , regional and national Guthrie. the Felice Brothers
touring bands wi ll play from 2 specialize in boozy, rambling
p.m. until past midnight. rain or tales of backwoods nostalgia
shine. Tickets are $ 10. which told in rootsy piano, gu itar,
includes primitive campi ng. and drum renderings."
and will be available at the gate.
The Reclaim Music Festival
'Reclaim will introduce The also works tn highl ight the li ve
felice Brothers as the head line music scene of Athens and the
national act. Hai ling frbm surTounding region with local
upstate New York , The Felice acts Southeast Engi ne, J:D.
Brothers are fresh off stints at Hutchison, Wheels On Fire. and
Bonnaroo and th~ Newport .· The Never Evers all set to play.
Folk Festi val and are heading
There are also a few regional ·
right for southeast Ohio.
favorites that should be known
Spin Magaz ine says The to most all Athens music fans,

~3

"

'

Boone said he wasn't a bit ·'Beanie" Wells to a foot
surprised that Ohio State is injury midway through their
ranked so low in those key season opener.
Part of the problem has
statistical categories.
"Would it surpri se me" been the transition to ·
No. I don' t want to make unproven reds hirr fres hman
excuses.'' he said th is week · Dan l;lerron as Well's'
during preparation s for replacement. Part of it is the
Saturday's Big Ten opener even bigger transition from
agains t
Minnesota. fifth -year senior , Todd
"Obviously, we just haven 't Boeckman at quarterback to
been playing well."
even more unproven freshThen he did offer an man Terrel le Pryor.
excuse, albeit an underTopping it all off. the line
standable one that play s tai l- has been porous at times.
It hasn't just been the
back, stan.ds 6-foot- 1 and
we ighs 237 pounds .
USC game . . however. The
The Buckeyes have been Buckeyes romped over
in a three-game swoon Youngstown State 43 -0 in
offensively - ever since their first game. but lest
they lost tailback Chris Wells. In the three games

since, · they 've had two
fewer first downs than the
oppositi on and have averaged a little over 4 .yards per
play .
A year ago. with almost
the exact same offense the on ly graduation losses
were at fullback and offensive tack le - they averaged
seven more first downs a
game than the opposition
and almost 6 yards per play.
a 50 percent decline.
Ar least Wells appears to
be close to returning .
Tressel listed him as proba ble for \he game at Ohio
~radium against Minnesota.
If the falloff ht"n't been
apparent in the team's

record, it has certainly been
evident to the .coachi ng
staff.
1VJaybe that explains why
coach Jim Tressel suddenly
strolled down to where the
offensive linemen were
working out early last' week
and started yelling at them
at the top of his lungs.
He told them that they had
to play faste r. that they had
to work hardet. that they had
to start blocking f~r their
teammates.

And. yes. Tressel was
yelling - something that
seems almo' t unimaginable
to those who have see n him
quietly coun seling a player
during a typical practice.

�Page B2 • The Daily Sentinel

,_

I

•
Thursday, September 25,

www.mydailysentinel.com

2008·

Thursday, September 25, 2008

www.mydailysentinel.com

utribune - Sentinel - l\egister
CLASSlFIEO
We Cove
Meigs, Gellle,
And MelOn
Counti.. Like
NoQne
ElseCenl
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OUR 'EXPE RT S' BREAK DOWN THIS WEEK'S HIGH SCHOOL FOOTBALL GAMES

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Football
from

'

Page Bl

season.

MHS is also averagtng
. 30 2 pomts and 3 1!).6 total
yards per game offensively
and all owi ng 18 6 points
and 246 total yatds as a
defensive
unit.
The
Marauders are dl so 2-0
agamst Warren tlus decade,
Wtth WtnS In 2005 (29-7 )
and 2004 (2 X-7).
The Warnors (2-3) enter
Fnday with a two-game losin g streak agatnst SEOAL
opponents Marietta (26-21)
and Zanesville (49-3) both of which were on the
road. WHS begins a twogame h0me stand thi s weekend before ftni shmg the
year wtth three strai ght road
contests.
The Blue and Whue are
averagmg II points per
game o ffens ively and
,allowmg 22.4 on the defenSIVe side Wan·e n's schedul e
has combmed to go 9-15
overall tht s fa ll
The Wa rnors are led by a
potent ru shmg at'tack with
multiple weapons, mclud ing senior Andtew Dunfee
(5-foot-!) . 162 pounds).
semor Andrew Coffman (59, 148). jumor Kaleb Wolfe
(6-0 , 197) and semor Seth
· Well spnng (5-9, 168).
Junior quarterback Clay
Ellenwood (6-3, 190) is also
a runnmg threat, but ts also
capable of puttmg up good
numbers through the air.
Wolfe, Dunfee, sophomore
Grant Venham (6-5, 198)
and senior Tyler Cox (6-4,
180) are the primary targets
' for Ellenwood.
The Barlow Fatr is currently go ing on. which is
why the game is being
played on Saturday mstead
of Friday. Ktckoff is scheduled for 7:30p.m.
Devils host Trojans

GALLIPOLIS - Gallia
Academy football made a
. very !Sud statement to the
rest of the Southeastern
Ohio Athletic League last
week when it came _from
behind to defeat previously
unbeaten Jackson.
Thi s Friday niglll, the
\

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starttng the year perfec t.
beattng Coal Grove ( 18-7).
Fairland (26-23 ), R1ver
Valley (53-20) and Athens
(26-13). The Maroon and
Gold's schedule has combmed to go 9- 15 overall thiS

.

Tri-Val~ Conference
Ohio Division
Nelsonville-York
Meigs

Belpre .
Athens .
Wellston
.Alexander
Vinton County .

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Hocking Division
TVC
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PF
Federal Hockmg
Tnmble

Eastern .
Southern ...

Watertord
M1ller

PA

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Blue Devils mu st agatn
make the1r 'otces heard
when they ho st a very
deceptive Portsmouth team
during a Week 6 SEOAL
gridiron
matchup
at
Memorial Fteld .
The Devils (3 -2 , 1- 1
SEOAL) are coming off
thetr best overall performance of the year, a 36-28
victory that saw. the Blue
and Whtte rally back from
three ditTerent two-touchdown defiCits to win their
first league contest of the
year
The Blue Dev il s also put
up a season-h1gh 111 both
ru shing yards (205) and
total offense (423) in that
deciston while holdin g
Jackson to just 264 yards of
total offense.
Through five weeks.
GAHS is averaging 2 1.6
points and 237.4 yards
offenstvcly per game wh1le
allowmg 30.6 pomts and
313.6 vards as a defensive
uni t. Gallta Academy has
also pla}ed a schedule that
has gone a combined 15-9.
'!'he Trojans (1 -4, 0-2) on the othet hand - enter
Friday in the midst of a
four-game losing streak and
are only one of two squads
winless in the SEOAL. The
Red, White and Blue are
averaging 13 6 potnts offensively and are allowmg 26.4
points per game as a
defense . PHS has also
played a schedule tha1 is a
combmed 19-6.
The Trojans defeated
South Point 111 Week I by a
28- 15 margin , but has smce
dropped decistOJlS to the
likes of Portsmouth West
(34-0) , Wheelersburg (286), Jackson (2 1-20) and
(34- 14)
Chillicothe
Portsmouth ts also begin a
two-game road stand this
weekend when they come to
Gallia County.
Sophomore quarterback
Josh Myers (6-foot·O. 170
pounds) acc umul ated 2 14

W·~ ,

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1-4
1-4
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PF

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76
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104
139
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ALL
PF

PA
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91
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PA
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. 107 .. 107
. 117 .125
" 91
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and Portsmouth (28-15) ,
which are a combined 11 -4
so far this season.
And the recent Pointer
turnaround can be attributed
to one o[ the best rushing
attack s in the area .
South Pomt has three rush,
ers - Doug Dillon , Jacob
Seagraves and Ryan Plants
- that have tore up visttmg
detenses all season long. In
fact, durin~ one of their best
outings of the season , all
three Htrpassed the I00-yard
mark in a wm over Point
Pleasant just two weeks ago
while racking up over 400
ya rds on the g ro~nd .
Adversely, the Pointer
attack is mostly limtted to
that ground game as quarterbacks Seagraves and Chase
Kt atzenburg. who have split
time under center. have
lat gely beet\ in-effective this

total ya rds of' otfense last
week agamst Clulltcothe,
throwing for 184 and tunnmg for another 30 yards on
10 cames. PHS also features weapons in senior nmnmg back R}all Jordan (6-0.
180) and se n1or wideout
Davtd Mallor} (5-9, 185), season .
Rtve r Valley, however,
as well as a patr of Dtvtston
I stgnees in semor lmemen hasn't had a problem going
Jon Prior (6-7, 283) and to the air.
The Raiders spend most of
Nate Cadogan (6-7 . 280).
theit
time passmg the ball.
Pnor has stgned with
throwing
for 227 yards last
Florida State and Cadogan
week
in
the 20-point win
has inked with Penn State.
Gallia Academy owns an over Waterford while rush11 -9- 1 overall recm d 1n thiS ing fm 87 yards. Clayton
head-to-head . match up . Curnutte has led that air
mcluding wins m stx of the attack and had one of his
last seven
although best outmgs of ·the season
Portsmouth won last year's last week in a 17-for-24
contest 40-10. The Blue and night with no picks. three
White are 2-0 at Memorial touchdowns and 224 yards.
Field this year. while the He also added 14 yards on
the ground .
Tro1ans are 0-3 on the road
Most of those passes this
thts fall. Ktckoff is sched- ~easo
n have found Jordan
uled for 7:30p.m.
Deel. who had nine catches
for 136 yards. last week,
South Point travels
while Cody McAvena, Kody
to River Valley
Johnson. Zach Batrd and
others have contributed in
CHESHIRE - After twel the pass game. On the
straight wins and plenty of ground Cody Strahler and
exc itement on the River Jarrod Eichhorn have carried
Valley campus, it is finally most of the load
time to buckle down and get
While the big arm of
·ready to take care of bust- Curnutte has helped lead the
ness.
team to two stratght wms, it
It 's conference time .
is gomg to take the commg
The Raiders (2-3) wi ll together of all ot its parts to
open
Ohto
Valley get by the powerful Pomters.
Con ference play with a
Friday night matchup v,fth
Buffalo battles
South Point (2-3) as River
South GaUia
Valley tries to do somethmg
It hasn't done smce 2003 MERCERVILLE - The
win three straight.
fi rst five weeks of the season
But it won't be an easy haven't been kind to etther
task as the 2-3 Pointers vis tt South G ~lli a or Buffalo, but
the Cheshire campus wtth a for one team , Friday will be
record not equal to the tal- a bi g step m the right dtrec.
ent they will put on the tion.
Both teams have posted
fie ld.
Despite two consecutive just one win this season and
wins over Valley (28- 7) and both have seen their fair
Point Pleasant (36-24). share of heartbreakers, but
South Point opened the sea- neither IS wilhng to raise the
son with three straight loss- while nag JUSt yet.
Buffalo ( 1-3) has had the
es to Portsmouth West (28toughest
road so far thi s
7), Wheelershurg (28-20)
J

MeH:hand1se

(J

9:00am
year, losing three strai~ht to
Parkersburg Catholic (L6-0),
Sciotoville
Commumty
School
( 13- 12)
and
Matewan (37-12) , who are a
combmed 10-2 thts year.
while the lone Bison win
came against Gilbert (22-6)
in Week I.
That brutal schedule has
left the usually dommant
Bison 29th m the lat est
SSAC football ratm gs wnh
the top In making the West
Virgmia playoffs.
But not all is lost in
Buft'alo.
The Blue and Gold ha ve a
strong core despite avet aging JUst II points per game.
but the defense has been
shaky at ttmes gtvmg up 20
pomts per contest this yea r.
And· Buffalo ts commg oft
of an especially tough contest with the brutal Matewan
attack injuring several players wtth a handful of other
BHS players bemg ejected
from the game.
That contest has the Btson
ready to get back 111 the
Class A battle.
Buffalo is led by quartetback Cory Goode. who
rushed for 80 yards and
passed for 100 in last weeks
contest. He was JOmed by
Cody Cnug. who had 74
y-ards against the tough
Matewan defense , while Ty
Davis and Matt Moore also
contributed. On defen se the
Bison arc led by Chns
' Blackburn .
South Gal Ita hasn't had
quite the road Buffalo has,
but the Rebels ( 1-4) have
still struggled .
·
South Galli a's lone wi n
came agamst Southern ( 140) two weeks ago wtth a
quartet of losses wedged on
etther stde agamst Waterford
(41·20), Eastern (35-8).
Wahama (41-6) and Notre
Dame (35-6) That schedule
shows the Rebels averagmg
II points per game while
giving up 30 points defensively.
The Rebels' main -focus is
on their ground game, with
Bryce Clary, Austin Phill ips.
Caleb McClanahan and others toting the ball. Under
center Jeff Combs has handled quarterback duties this
year, although he is coming
off of his worst outing of the
year completing just one
pass for fi ve yards
While the start to the 2008
season hasn't been what
etther team had hoped for,
Friday could go a lmi'g way
in turnmg things around
heading into the second patt
of the year.

\

Volleyball
from

Page Bl

,mel five aces v.hile helping
out on sevetal othet scores
wtlh seven a"tsts. Amanda
McGhee al "' broke 'double
dt git s tn potn ts wtth 13
lll.lrkers· t nducling two aces
and she ,tlso h,t&lt;J two di gs .
Amv Noe was next v.ith
etght jJ&lt;llnh. eight kills , four
dt gs and tv.o .tees while
Bre.t Close h.td a big night
f01 the Blue An~cls wtth six
points. 16 .ts; ists. seven
digs. thtcc kills and three
blocks. A)cxis Gegier and
Kactc S hne m&lt;~ker ro unded
out the scoring wtth five
points ,tpieee while Gei!let
added seven di gs . f1ve ktlls
and three block s and
Shoemaker had 25 digs and
em nee.
Rounding out the contributotS · fo1 GAHS were
Megan Fostet who had eight
block s and seven ktll s,
Mollie Blake who had six
kill s and five blocks .
Hannah Cunnmgham had
SIX dtgs . three kil ls and a
block and Samantha Barnes
had 17 d1os
Whtle ~ second stratght
loss may stmg for the Lady
Ratders, the Silver and
Black showed plenty of
promise aga1nst their Galha
County counterpart.
Ltn sey Stover led the
Lady Ratders wtth II points
and lour kills while Kayla
Smtth chtpped in seven
poi im
and SIX kill.s.
Mackenzie Cluxton added
stx point s, seven assists and
a patr of kill s. Aubrie Rice
had five pom ts and ftve
kills, Jacqueline Jacobs had
fout points, six kills and four
blocks and !Iiana Cor.fias
had a pomt to go along with
five kil ls and three blocks.
Cmissa Gilmore added SIX
assb ts in the setback.
In the teserve contest it
, was River Valley gettmg the
upperhand 25-15,21-25 and
25-2 1 Katelyn Birchfield
led the Lady Raiders with 13
points
wh ile · Ashley
Randolph posted a dozen
markers
Taylor Foster led Gallia
Acade my wuh lO points ,
while Mandy Foster posted
seven pomts and a pair of
aces and Morgan Daniel s
had stx points and three

aces.
Gallta Academy will wrap
up a grueling four game
stretch on Thursday at
Portsmouth while Rtver
Valley h0sts Chesapeake.

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CLASSIFIED INDEX
legals .... .................. .. ............................... 100

Recreational Vehicles ............................... 1000

Announcements ......................................... 200
Birth da ylAnn 1versary .................................. 205

ATV ......... .. .......................... .............. 1005
Bicycles .................... :........ .................. 1010

Happy Ads...................................... ......... 210
Lost &amp; Found ............... . . .. : ................... 215

Boats/Accessories ...... ..................... .. ....... 1015

Memory/Thank You ........ ............ ................. 220
Notices ............... ....... ................. .................. 225
Personals ...................... ........ .............. 230

Wanted ,.................................................... 235
Services ....................................................... 300

CamperfRVs &amp; Trailers ............................ 1020
Motorcycles ....................................... 1025

01her ....................................... ....... 1030
Want to buy . .. ...... .. ...... .. .......... ...... 1035
Automotive ......... ........ ... ............................ 2000
Auto Rental/Lease .................. . ...... .. .. ...... 2005 ·

Appliance Service ........ .............................. 302

Autos ........... :.................................... ..... 2010

· · Automotive ............................., .... ............. 304

C lassie/A11t1ques ..... .. ... ...... .. ............ ....... 20 15
Commerclalllndustrlal .... ................... ....... 2020

Building Materials ..................................... 306
Business ................: .. ........ .... ................... .. 308

Trucks ............... ............................ .. . ....... 2035
Utility Trailers ........... .......... ... .. .... ..... 2040

Contractors ............................................... 316
Domest• cs!Ja nltorial ................................... 318

Vans .. ..........................................................2045
Want to buy ......................................... 2050

Electrical .................... .................................. 320
Financial .... . .. .................................. ...........322
Health ................ ................................... 326

Real Estate Sales ............................... .... 3000
Cemetery Plots .................................... 3005

Commercial ................................................30 10

Insurance .............................................. 332

Condominiums ......................................3015
For Sale by Owner ..................................3020
Houses for Sale ... .... ... ... ... .... ........... .... ..... 3025

Lawn Serv1ce .......... .... ........ . ....... ........... .. . 334
Mus Ic/O anca/D rama .................................... 336

Land (Acreage) .......................................... 3030
Lots ........... ...............................................303~

Olher Services ............................................338
Plumbing/Electrical. ............................ ..... 340
Professional Services ......... ,.. ........ .. .. ... 342
Repairs:.................................................... 344

Roofing...... .. .... .... .. ...... .... ... .. ...... .. .. ............. 346
Securlly .............................................. 346
Tax/Accounting ..... . ........ .......... .. ......... 350
Travei!Entertalnmenl .................................. 352
Financial........ ................. .... .................. ......400
Financial Services ..................................... 405
Insurance ......................... ................. . ... 410
Money to Lend ..........: .................................. 415
Education .......: ..: ........................................ 500
Business &amp; Trade School .......................... 505
ln.structlon &amp; Training ............................. 510
Lessons ....................................................... 515
Personal ............. ......................................... 520

Animals ............. .................................... 600
Animal Supplies ..................................... 605
Horses ... .. ....................... ........................... 610
Livestock............................................ ........ 615

Pets .......................................................620
Want to buy ............. .............................. 625

Agriculture . .... ................ ............. ..............~ . 700
Farm Equipment.. ..... ... :............... .. ............ 705
Garden &amp; Produce •.'.. .. ............................. 710
Hay, Feed, Seed, Grain ............... ~ .............. 715
Hunllng &amp; Land ........................................... 720

Want to buy .............................. .. .................. 725

Wafit to buy ................... .. ........... ... ........ 3040
Real Estate Renlals .............................. ..3500
Apartments/Townhouses .... ... .. ................ 3505
Commercial ............................................. 3510
Condominiums ....................................... 3515
Houses for Rent .................... .................. 3520

Land (Acreage) .......................................... 3525

Sales ............................................... ............ 4020
Supplies .................................................4025
Want 1o Buy ...... ................................... 4030

Appliances

Food Servlcea ............................................6024

Computers ........................... ........ ....... ...... 930

Equtpmont/Suppllos.................................... 935
Fleo Markets ............................................... 940

Management/Supervisory ........................ 6034
Mechanics............. ..... ..... ...... ..... ............... 6036

Fuel Oil Coal/WoOd/Gas ........................... 945
Furniture ..........................................., ....... 950

Medical ....................................... ............... 6038

Musical ....................................................... 6040
Part-Time-Temporaries ................ ,........ .6042
Restaurants .........................................

6044

Sales ........................................................6048

Technical Tradea ....................................... 6050
Textltea/Factory ........................................ 6052

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blue/while approx 3500
m1les, Yosh p1pe · 1a11 kit
$4500

Call

740-645-747t
os Hayabusa

low miles.

!.:74;,:;U:;,;-4;;,1;
6·,;;99~9:;5...,...,...,.., · - - - - - - = Garden &amp; Product~ NEW AND USED STEEL

orlg. owner, many exlras
'l
1
d
aon try to 11 tn , stan
P1pe Rebar out $7 900 446·2254

Foun d ,
Inen dl y Free WaInuIs Io ur bags for
Concrete
AnQie
very
1o
sma II I1g ht gra~ sIr~pe d wt'lh
more
come Channel, Flat Bar, Sleet
cat' 400 block ol 1st ave 740-446·7124
Grating lor Dra•ns Dnveways 8. Walkways l&amp;L
Galhpohs 446-0547
Scrap Melals Open Mon
7 Kittens to giVe away P•ck your own canning Tue.
Wed
&amp;
Fn
7
peppers Bam·4 30pm
Vanous colors. 7 weeks . tomaloes
Closed
(Bell, Sweel, Banana &amp; Th urs
Sat
&amp;
Sun
old 446-0235
Hot,
Red,
Yellow
or 740·446·7300
Beagle pups $5() each tn Green)
$4
a bucket ,..,...,,.....,,...,,...,,....,..
colorec:1,
gOOd
hunt1ng , Bring your own cootam· Pole Bam 30x40x10 only
gOOd

cap abthtles
shower
pony, fridge, 1979 20ft.
cen1ury
mere
cru1ser
Cuc:1dy cab•n&amp;!raller new
!Ires &amp; wheel banngs
wJnew 350 Chevy molar
Cush1ons&amp;seats
ha-.e
been
reupholslered
por1a potty solc:1 together
for $14 000 or can be
separated,

DR table w/ 6 chairs, 2 ::D;
a';,;'~...,...,...,...,=
leaves$300, sewi ng · m~- =
ch1ne $25. LA cha~r &amp; ta·
Campers RVs &amp;
ble $50, 2 BBO gnlls $40
Trailers
each 446-4333
;;;;;~~===~- - - - - - - - AV Serv1ce at Carmi·
Berber Carpet 56 95 yd chael
TrailerS
carpel remnants 540 00 740·446·3825
&amp; up Mollohan carpet 'R~V------22 12 Eastetn Ave GalliCarmichael
Serv•ce
at
polls, Oh1o 740-446-7444
Tra1lers

Sleel Beams

"""'=""'""""""""""""""
::'h;;;o~
ts;..7;..4;;,0·~44;..1;..·1;..4.;40~-

had ers or buy ours for ,$1
each
Troyers Produce

~
AKC mrniature Schnau· 171 lak1n Ad, Gallipolis ,
zers .
now
ava•tab!e, Oh 9 m•les West of Gal·
Pel
Cremaltons
Call while
or
saiVpepper, lrpdh oft Sl Rt t 41
(740)992-132a
Watch lor cann 1ng lorna·
740-446·3745
1oes Signs Closed Sun
Bassett
Hound
puppy days
Prolollional Sorvicoo Male, 9wks old, Vet .~-..,.--~~~Chec~ed .
$150 ·Pumpk.ns and Fall deco·
304·675.0 153
rat1ons lor sale at the
TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY 551 free to good trome , baby Melon Patch on SR 141
~-Ba2· 2385 9 m1les !rom Gallipolis
No Fee Unless We W1n1 K1ttens
leave message
Open Thur - Sat
1-868·582·3345

Other S.rvic.s
--======;;;;;
-

,;;~~~"""""""""""

Jet AerallOn

Have you pnced a John
Uvooloc:k
Deere lalel~? You It be
sur pnsedl Check oUI ou r
B year old mare horse used
1nven1ory
at
$250 Call740-256·1498
www CARED com
Ca rEquipment
Show Calves tor sale miChael
Ca ll 446-4562 af1er 5 30 740-446-24 12
pm
One e1ghty All is Charm-

23ft
SeaRay
Cabin &amp; Trailer
350
w/Merc

wJnew
cru1ser, sleeps 6, cenlral
ACIHeat Ship lo shore

breed
w/..

HORSE/LIVE·
TRAI LERS

Boob I Acc.uori•s

~=--;ii.i.i;..i=iiiii

Free to good home neut
male mix
good

Recreati Onal
Vehicl es

1000

Fuel 1Oil 1Coal I

Furniture

VALLE Y
STOCK

Ca ll

""'======-

Law Enforcement ............................. ... 6030
MalntenancaiDomestlc ..... : ....................... 6032

Yard Sale ..........................................,.... ,. .... 975

Skaggs
moved

Cashier/Clerk .............................. ............ 6006
Child/Elderly Care ................ ...... ... ........ 601111
Cieri cal ....................................................... 601 0

Government &amp; Federal Jobs .................... 6026
Help anted· General. ............................. 6028

Kid 's Corner .............. ................................... 960
Miscellaneous ............................................. 965
Want to buy .................................................. 970

ommends that you do
bus1ness w1th people you
know, and NOT to send
money through the ma 11
until you have 1nvest1gatlOg the offering

~""""""""""""""""""=

Appliance ... .............................. ................... 910
Auctions .......... .. ........................................... 915
Bargain Basement. ............. ... ..................... 920

Hobby/Hunt &amp; Sport ............................... 955

NOTICE OHI O VALLEY
PUB LISHING CO
rec-

Accounting/Financial ..................... ....... 6002
Administrative/Professional ....... ~ ............ 6004

Ant lq ues ....................................................... 905

Collectibles ................................................ 925

No6coo

Employment. .................. ................, ...... .6000

Construction ........................................ ....., 6012
Drivers &amp; Delivery ... .............................. 6014
Education ........................ ............... ........ .~016

urday 27 Item off shop·
p1ng networks, plu s s1ze
tash1on lor all women
chllc:1ref'! clothing lor lod·
dlers 29 Henkle Ave

o

Lond

KIEFER BUILT,

Unconc:11110nell1 fellme
guarantee local refer·
ences furn1shed Es tab·
hshed 1975 Call24 Hrs
740·44&amp;-0B70 Rogers
Basement WaterprOOfing

Resort Property ......................... •.......... .. 5000
Resort Property for sale ... .. ... ........ ... .. ...... 5025
Resort Property for rent ........................ 5050

Space Available .
Conlacl
Charlie
Perry
(740)992-SOBB
perry·
cola @suddentlnk net

Found -White dog w / ==~~~~=- Huge yard sale· 390a1
Black spots arou'nd Wen· Sland up Maytag used Bradbury
Ad ,
M1dct1e·
dys In Pt Pleasant Sat 1 times "New ' 2 dryers por1,
Sept
23rd·26th,
10:::•::,m:;;·5:~;:P~m...,...,...,...,
lop &amp; boltom pd 52 000 .:;
304-675-5740

EBY,

Lots .............................................................4005
Movers......................... ... . .....................401 0
Rentals ................................................. 4015

Dealer

dog ' K•ng Headboard Grec•an
klc:1S Style made In Italy Wi th 2
740·1145·6909.
c:1raws on bolh s•des of
oea
$ 99 g
call
7 00
Agr1C\IIIure
740
645-8599
serv1ce
announcement
Losl Pt Pleasani -Whrle , from the OhiO Valley
male
Bosto n
Temer Publl shlng,Company)
Sanyo 68 rn HDTV 5
"Cy' Chrldren's Pel Ca lr =:i~~~~~~~·
Fartn Equipment
years old paid $7 ,500
304 593-4972
~~=;;;;;;;~~~~ ask1ng
$4,999
call

Storage ........................................ ........ 3535
Want to Rent . ... .... ......... ... ..............3540
Manufactured Houslng ............................. 4000

Elec1rtcal Plumblng ................................... 6018
Employment Agencies .............................6020
Entertainment ........................................... 6022

Merchandise ............................... .... ........... 900

Monoy To

Founc:t· 1 black puppy on NOTICE Borrow Smart
Shoes trtng
R1dge Contact the OhiO Dtvl441·1501
s1on of F•nanc•al lnslilu li ons Off•ce of Consumer
Lost S•benan Husky gray
Affa1rs BEFORE you reliand while With an orange
nanol!l yo ur home or ob
collar
Dog has been ta1n a loan BEWARE of
spayec:1 1s on med1cat1on '"quests for any large
Rewarc:1 740-256-9275
advance
payments
of
Found - young cat been fees or 1nsurance Call
neutered '(s titches) call the Office of Consume r
Afflars
toll
tree
at
Kenl (740)7 42 3163
1·866-278-0003 10 team
Found approx 7 month •f the mortgage broker or
old Black Lab Mus! , P1ck 'lender IS
properly
II:
Up Call (740)742·87t l'
censed (Th•s 15 a publiC

Parts &amp; Accessories ............ :.....................2025
Sports Utility ... ...... .. .. .............. .. ....... 2030

Catering.,.... ..... ,, .... .',, ........................ ,.... ,,.... ,31 0
Child/Elderly Care ....... ......:...................... 312
Computers .................................................. 314

Healing It Coollng ..... ..... ........................... .. 328
Home Improvements 330

Garage Sale Ra1n or
Sh1ne Sept 25 26, &amp; 27
Oct 2 3 &amp; 4 F1rst t1me
tappan gas range TV,
Longanoerger baskets &amp;
m1sc Located oti of 850
9-6 401 Denney Come·

Appliance•

Loot &amp; Found

The Daily Sentinel

~unbap

Poll

A n n :~cmceme'I IS

200

'

'

Sept
27
9am-3pm
39594
Un1onAve
Pome10y lois of home
goods elc
d1nu;g 10om
table clothes gtasswares

1ng Sloneware, Milk Bot·1a
'';,iry~R~o:;
ad:::,.::B;;:
'dw
:;;e:;:ll,.....,.lle s.
ColleCIIbles
Free •
,
ap
1st
T1me
Yard
Sale Saiadm lSs 1On 110
pra1s 81s

• r, .. Area Sliiodf

I

Yard Sale

10 acres of ,gooc:1 Hay 2 fam11y sale Saturday
reac:1y to cut 1n
Leon Sept 27 9·3 at 39594
304·458-1661
Un1on
Ave
Pomeroy
Oh1o
Lo ts
ot
home·
WantTo Buy
goods c:1tntng room table
clothes glassware etc
Wanted lo Buy - Paw
Paws
Black
Walnuts 2 Fa m•ly Yard Sale Sal

C;;•;;;II_,;7_;;40;.,·6;,;9;;;B.,;6;;;,06;;;0;..,...,~

"Saturday Morning Sports Clinics"

PREP FOOTBALL STAm&gt;INGS

Gallia
County
OH l\-~~

2007 Honda VTX 1300R
miles
"lack )
1800
-P
$7aOO 388-8360
2007
KawasaKI
Nlnla •
250 under 1500 m1les
red helmet and tank bag
$2,800 740-645·1912
2007
Kawasaki
250 under 1500

NinJa
miles

$6 ,995, other s•zes, Free red helmet and tank bag
Delivery an-773-8356
S2,aOO 740-645·19t2

Want To

luy

:WOO

Au'OillOII~('

Absolute Top Dollar • sll·
ver/gotd
coins.
any
"utoo
10Kil4KJ18K gold 10w- ~~~~,..~~=;;;;;;~.
elry dental gold. pre 01 Hone:! a CIVIC LX 5
1935'
IJS
currency
,
spd 98,000 m1les over
proollmllll
sets
maS OOQ 1n e11.tras Lambe
monds MTS Co1n Shop Doors
$7 700
080
t 5~ 2nd Avenue Galh- 74 o- 709 . t
398
pol1s 446·2842

�Page B2 • The Daily Sentinel

,_

I

•
Thursday, September 25,

www.mydailysentinel.com

2008·

Thursday, September 25, 2008

www.mydailysentinel.com

utribune - Sentinel - l\egister
CLASSlFIEO
We Cove
Meigs, Gellle,
And MelOn
Counti.. Like
NoQne
ElseCenl
' .

OUR 'EXPE RT S' BREAK DOWN THIS WEEK'S HIGH SCHOOL FOOTBALL GAMES

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To Place
utribune
Sentinel
l\egister
Your Ad, (7 40) 446-2342 (7 40) 992-2156 (304) 675-1333
can Today•••
675-5234

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pjsplay Ads

Dally In- Column: 9 : 00 a.m.

All Display: 12 Noon 2
Business Days Prior To
Publication

ln Next Day's Paper
Sunday In - Column : 9:00 a.m.
Friday For Sundays Paper

• All ads

• Start Vour Ads With A Keyword • Include Complete
Description • Include A Price • Avoid Abbrevliltlon&amp;
• Include Phone Number And Address When Needed
• Ads Stlould Run 1 Days

~ . If

It

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Wprd Ads
Monday-Friday for Insertion

Monday thru Friday
8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.

(,tilt 1

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GET YOUR CLASSIFIED LINE AD NOTICED

Offtee 11(1~8'

Tr i.!!.!.blr. .tt
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Websites:
www.myda1lytnbune com
www mydatlysentinel com
www mydailyreg 1ster com

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E-mail
class1fled@ myda1lytnbune .com

In One Week With Us
REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS

Sundilty Dl&amp;plilty: 1:00 p.m.
Thursday for Sunday5 Pa1oe&lt;

must be prepaid"

Now you can have borders and graphics
~
added to your classified ads
(.~_
1m
Borders $3.00/per od
~
Graphics SO« for small
$1.00 for large

POLICIES Ohio Valley Pub!lahlng relltiJI&amp; the right to edit. reject. or cancel any ad al any Ume. Ertora must be reported on thellrat day of publication and the
Tr lbune-Sentlnei·Regl&amp;ter wtll be respon sible lor no more than the c:o&amp;t oltht spate occupied by the error and only the llratlnsertlon We shall not be liable lor
any loa&amp; or ak~&amp;ethat reaultf. from the publltallon or omlaalon of en advertisement CorreeHon will be made In the flratevallable edition Box number ad1
are alway&amp; conUdentlal ·Current rate Card appllft · All real11tate adverttumantaara aub[aet to the Fedartl Fair Housing Act of 19&amp;8 • lhl1 newapaper
accepts only help wanted ad1 meeting EOE 1tandards We will not knowingly accept any advertising In violation of the law Will not be responsible lor any
em:naln an ad taken over the phone.
-

KIT &amp; CARLYLE

11

Hoy, FHd, Seoct Grain

Al,•xander
Ohio Valley
Publishing reserves
the Tlgtlt to edit.
reject or cancel any
ad at any time .
Errors
~ust
~eporte• d on the

Get back into action with
Dr. Kelly Roush, Certified Chiropractic Sports Physician.

kitncarlyle@comcast net

'(tiL, Ci\1N 1\"

mY

I'?

ol
the

MoUS~

f?Ac£fVI A~!

900

()

AnHqueo
Ant1que Flea Market Pt
Pleasant , WV
at the
West Virg•nm State Farm
Museum , Oclober 41h &amp;
5th hours 9-4
Advert1s-

Holzer Clinic Sycamore Branch • 740-446-5818

Football
from

'

Page Bl

season.

MHS is also averagtng
. 30 2 pomts and 3 1!).6 total
yards per game offensively
and all owi ng 18 6 points
and 246 total yatds as a
defensive
unit.
The
Marauders are dl so 2-0
agamst Warren tlus decade,
Wtth WtnS In 2005 (29-7 )
and 2004 (2 X-7).
The Warnors (2-3) enter
Fnday with a two-game losin g streak agatnst SEOAL
opponents Marietta (26-21)
and Zanesville (49-3) both of which were on the
road. WHS begins a twogame h0me stand thi s weekend before ftni shmg the
year wtth three strai ght road
contests.
The Blue and Whue are
averagmg II points per
game o ffens ively and
,allowmg 22.4 on the defenSIVe side Wan·e n's schedul e
has combmed to go 9-15
overall tht s fa ll
The Wa rnors are led by a
potent ru shmg at'tack with
multiple weapons, mclud ing senior Andtew Dunfee
(5-foot-!) . 162 pounds).
semor Andrew Coffman (59, 148). jumor Kaleb Wolfe
(6-0 , 197) and semor Seth
· Well spnng (5-9, 168).
Junior quarterback Clay
Ellenwood (6-3, 190) is also
a runnmg threat, but ts also
capable of puttmg up good
numbers through the air.
Wolfe, Dunfee, sophomore
Grant Venham (6-5, 198)
and senior Tyler Cox (6-4,
180) are the primary targets
' for Ellenwood.
The Barlow Fatr is currently go ing on. which is
why the game is being
played on Saturday mstead
of Friday. Ktckoff is scheduled for 7:30p.m.
Devils host Trojans

GALLIPOLIS - Gallia
Academy football made a
. very !Sud statement to the
rest of the Southeastern
Ohio Athletic League last
week when it came _from
behind to defeat previously
unbeaten Jackson.
Thi s Friday niglll, the
\

'

TVC·Pf

PA

1-1
.54
.1-1 . .39
" ,_, " .38
1·1
56
0-1
14
. 0-1 . 7

. .43
..42
.. 33
. 47
26
25

w-L

starttng the year perfec t.
beattng Coal Grove ( 18-7).
Fairland (26-23 ), R1ver
Valley (53-20) and Athens
(26-13). The Maroon and
Gold's schedule has combmed to go 9- 15 overall thiS

.

Tri-Val~ Conference
Ohio Division
Nelsonville-York
Meigs

Belpre .
Athens .
Wellston
.Alexander
Vinton County .

.2-o " '114 ..66

Hocking Division
TVC
W·L
PF
Federal Hockmg
Tnmble

Eastern .
Southern ...

Watertord
M1ller

PA

.. o-o . .o . . o
0·0
.0·0
.0·0.
.0·0
0-0

Blue Devils mu st agatn
make the1r 'otces heard
when they ho st a very
deceptive Portsmouth team
during a Week 6 SEOAL
gridiron
matchup
at
Memorial Fteld .
The Devils (3 -2 , 1- 1
SEOAL) are coming off
thetr best overall performance of the year, a 36-28
victory that saw. the Blue
and Whtte rally back from
three ditTerent two-touchdown defiCits to win their
first league contest of the
year
The Blue Dev il s also put
up a season-h1gh 111 both
ru shing yards (205) and
total offense (423) in that
deciston while holdin g
Jackson to just 264 yards of
total offense.
Through five weeks.
GAHS is averaging 2 1.6
points and 237.4 yards
offenstvcly per game wh1le
allowmg 30.6 pomts and
313.6 vards as a defensive
uni t. Gallta Academy has
also pla}ed a schedule that
has gone a combined 15-9.
'!'he Trojans (1 -4, 0-2) on the othet hand - enter
Friday in the midst of a
four-game losing streak and
are only one of two squads
winless in the SEOAL. The
Red, White and Blue are
averaging 13 6 potnts offensively and are allowmg 26.4
points per game as a
defense . PHS has also
played a schedule tha1 is a
combmed 19-6.
The Trojans defeated
South Point 111 Week I by a
28- 15 margin , but has smce
dropped decistOJlS to the
likes of Portsmouth West
(34-0) , Wheelersburg (286), Jackson (2 1-20) and
(34- 14)
Chillicothe
Portsmouth ts also begin a
two-game road stand this
weekend when they come to
Gallia County.
Sophomore quarterback
Josh Myers (6-foot·O. 170
pounds) acc umul ated 2 14

W·~ ,

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1-4
1-4
3·2
1-4

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0 " .. 0 "
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PF

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76
.73
104
139
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ALL
PF

PA
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91
.107
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73
145

PA
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. 107 .. 107
. 117 .125
" 91
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" .79 " .114
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and Portsmouth (28-15) ,
which are a combined 11 -4
so far this season.
And the recent Pointer
turnaround can be attributed
to one o[ the best rushing
attack s in the area .
South Pomt has three rush,
ers - Doug Dillon , Jacob
Seagraves and Ryan Plants
- that have tore up visttmg
detenses all season long. In
fact, durin~ one of their best
outings of the season , all
three Htrpassed the I00-yard
mark in a wm over Point
Pleasant just two weeks ago
while racking up over 400
ya rds on the g ro~nd .
Adversely, the Pointer
attack is mostly limtted to
that ground game as quarterbacks Seagraves and Chase
Kt atzenburg. who have split
time under center. have
lat gely beet\ in-effective this

total ya rds of' otfense last
week agamst Clulltcothe,
throwing for 184 and tunnmg for another 30 yards on
10 cames. PHS also features weapons in senior nmnmg back R}all Jordan (6-0.
180) and se n1or wideout
Davtd Mallor} (5-9, 185), season .
Rtve r Valley, however,
as well as a patr of Dtvtston
I stgnees in semor lmemen hasn't had a problem going
Jon Prior (6-7, 283) and to the air.
The Raiders spend most of
Nate Cadogan (6-7 . 280).
theit
time passmg the ball.
Pnor has stgned with
throwing
for 227 yards last
Florida State and Cadogan
week
in
the 20-point win
has inked with Penn State.
Gallia Academy owns an over Waterford while rush11 -9- 1 overall recm d 1n thiS ing fm 87 yards. Clayton
head-to-head . match up . Curnutte has led that air
mcluding wins m stx of the attack and had one of his
last seven
although best outmgs of ·the season
Portsmouth won last year's last week in a 17-for-24
contest 40-10. The Blue and night with no picks. three
White are 2-0 at Memorial touchdowns and 224 yards.
Field this year. while the He also added 14 yards on
the ground .
Tro1ans are 0-3 on the road
Most of those passes this
thts fall. Ktckoff is sched- ~easo
n have found Jordan
uled for 7:30p.m.
Deel. who had nine catches
for 136 yards. last week,
South Point travels
while Cody McAvena, Kody
to River Valley
Johnson. Zach Batrd and
others have contributed in
CHESHIRE - After twel the pass game. On the
straight wins and plenty of ground Cody Strahler and
exc itement on the River Jarrod Eichhorn have carried
Valley campus, it is finally most of the load
time to buckle down and get
While the big arm of
·ready to take care of bust- Curnutte has helped lead the
ness.
team to two stratght wms, it
It 's conference time .
is gomg to take the commg
The Raiders (2-3) wi ll together of all ot its parts to
open
Ohto
Valley get by the powerful Pomters.
Con ference play with a
Friday night matchup v,fth
Buffalo battles
South Point (2-3) as River
South GaUia
Valley tries to do somethmg
It hasn't done smce 2003 MERCERVILLE - The
win three straight.
fi rst five weeks of the season
But it won't be an easy haven't been kind to etther
task as the 2-3 Pointers vis tt South G ~lli a or Buffalo, but
the Cheshire campus wtth a for one team , Friday will be
record not equal to the tal- a bi g step m the right dtrec.
ent they will put on the tion.
Both teams have posted
fie ld.
Despite two consecutive just one win this season and
wins over Valley (28- 7) and both have seen their fair
Point Pleasant (36-24). share of heartbreakers, but
South Point opened the sea- neither IS wilhng to raise the
son with three straight loss- while nag JUSt yet.
Buffalo ( 1-3) has had the
es to Portsmouth West (28toughest
road so far thi s
7), Wheelershurg (28-20)
J

MeH:hand1se

(J

9:00am
year, losing three strai~ht to
Parkersburg Catholic (L6-0),
Sciotoville
Commumty
School
( 13- 12)
and
Matewan (37-12) , who are a
combmed 10-2 thts year.
while the lone Bison win
came against Gilbert (22-6)
in Week I.
That brutal schedule has
left the usually dommant
Bison 29th m the lat est
SSAC football ratm gs wnh
the top In making the West
Virgmia playoffs.
But not all is lost in
Buft'alo.
The Blue and Gold ha ve a
strong core despite avet aging JUst II points per game.
but the defense has been
shaky at ttmes gtvmg up 20
pomts per contest this yea r.
And· Buffalo ts commg oft
of an especially tough contest with the brutal Matewan
attack injuring several players wtth a handful of other
BHS players bemg ejected
from the game.
That contest has the Btson
ready to get back 111 the
Class A battle.
Buffalo is led by quartetback Cory Goode. who
rushed for 80 yards and
passed for 100 in last weeks
contest. He was JOmed by
Cody Cnug. who had 74
y-ards against the tough
Matewan defense , while Ty
Davis and Matt Moore also
contributed. On defen se the
Bison arc led by Chns
' Blackburn .
South Gal Ita hasn't had
quite the road Buffalo has,
but the Rebels ( 1-4) have
still struggled .
·
South Galli a's lone wi n
came agamst Southern ( 140) two weeks ago wtth a
quartet of losses wedged on
etther stde agamst Waterford
(41·20), Eastern (35-8).
Wahama (41-6) and Notre
Dame (35-6) That schedule
shows the Rebels averagmg
II points per game while
giving up 30 points defensively.
The Rebels' main -focus is
on their ground game, with
Bryce Clary, Austin Phill ips.
Caleb McClanahan and others toting the ball. Under
center Jeff Combs has handled quarterback duties this
year, although he is coming
off of his worst outing of the
year completing just one
pass for fi ve yards
While the start to the 2008
season hasn't been what
etther team had hoped for,
Friday could go a lmi'g way
in turnmg things around
heading into the second patt
of the year.

\

Volleyball
from

Page Bl

,mel five aces v.hile helping
out on sevetal othet scores
wtlh seven a"tsts. Amanda
McGhee al "' broke 'double
dt git s tn potn ts wtth 13
lll.lrkers· t nducling two aces
and she ,tlso h,t&lt;J two di gs .
Amv Noe was next v.ith
etght jJ&lt;llnh. eight kills , four
dt gs and tv.o .tees while
Bre.t Close h.td a big night
f01 the Blue An~cls wtth six
points. 16 .ts; ists. seven
digs. thtcc kills and three
blocks. A)cxis Gegier and
Kactc S hne m&lt;~ker ro unded
out the scoring wtth five
points ,tpieee while Gei!let
added seven di gs . f1ve ktlls
and three block s and
Shoemaker had 25 digs and
em nee.
Rounding out the contributotS · fo1 GAHS were
Megan Fostet who had eight
block s and seven ktll s,
Mollie Blake who had six
kill s and five blocks .
Hannah Cunnmgham had
SIX dtgs . three kil ls and a
block and Samantha Barnes
had 17 d1os
Whtle ~ second stratght
loss may stmg for the Lady
Ratders, the Silver and
Black showed plenty of
promise aga1nst their Galha
County counterpart.
Ltn sey Stover led the
Lady Ratders wtth II points
and lour kills while Kayla
Smtth chtpped in seven
poi im
and SIX kill.s.
Mackenzie Cluxton added
stx point s, seven assists and
a patr of kill s. Aubrie Rice
had five pom ts and ftve
kills, Jacqueline Jacobs had
fout points, six kills and four
blocks and !Iiana Cor.fias
had a pomt to go along with
five kil ls and three blocks.
Cmissa Gilmore added SIX
assb ts in the setback.
In the teserve contest it
, was River Valley gettmg the
upperhand 25-15,21-25 and
25-2 1 Katelyn Birchfield
led the Lady Raiders with 13
points
wh ile · Ashley
Randolph posted a dozen
markers
Taylor Foster led Gallia
Acade my wuh lO points ,
while Mandy Foster posted
seven pomts and a pair of
aces and Morgan Daniel s
had stx points and three

aces.
Gallta Academy will wrap
up a grueling four game
stretch on Thursday at
Portsmouth while Rtver
Valley h0sts Chesapeake.

•

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CLASSIFIED INDEX
legals .... .................. .. ............................... 100

Recreational Vehicles ............................... 1000

Announcements ......................................... 200
Birth da ylAnn 1versary .................................. 205

ATV ......... .. .......................... .............. 1005
Bicycles .................... :........ .................. 1010

Happy Ads...................................... ......... 210
Lost &amp; Found ............... . . .. : ................... 215

Boats/Accessories ...... ..................... .. ....... 1015

Memory/Thank You ........ ............ ................. 220
Notices ............... ....... ................. .................. 225
Personals ...................... ........ .............. 230

Wanted ,.................................................... 235
Services ....................................................... 300

CamperfRVs &amp; Trailers ............................ 1020
Motorcycles ....................................... 1025

01her ....................................... ....... 1030
Want to buy . .. ...... .. ...... .. .......... ...... 1035
Automotive ......... ........ ... ............................ 2000
Auto Rental/Lease .................. . ...... .. .. ...... 2005 ·

Appliance Service ........ .............................. 302

Autos ........... :.................................... ..... 2010

· · Automotive ............................., .... ............. 304

C lassie/A11t1ques ..... .. ... ...... .. ............ ....... 20 15
Commerclalllndustrlal .... ................... ....... 2020

Building Materials ..................................... 306
Business ................: .. ........ .... ................... .. 308

Trucks ............... ............................ .. . ....... 2035
Utility Trailers ........... .......... ... .. .... ..... 2040

Contractors ............................................... 316
Domest• cs!Ja nltorial ................................... 318

Vans .. ..........................................................2045
Want to buy ......................................... 2050

Electrical .................... .................................. 320
Financial .... . .. .................................. ...........322
Health ................ ................................... 326

Real Estate Sales ............................... .... 3000
Cemetery Plots .................................... 3005

Commercial ................................................30 10

Insurance .............................................. 332

Condominiums ......................................3015
For Sale by Owner ..................................3020
Houses for Sale ... .... ... ... ... .... ........... .... ..... 3025

Lawn Serv1ce .......... .... ........ . ....... ........... .. . 334
Mus Ic/O anca/D rama .................................... 336

Land (Acreage) .......................................... 3030
Lots ........... ...............................................303~

Olher Services ............................................338
Plumbing/Electrical. ............................ ..... 340
Professional Services ......... ,.. ........ .. .. ... 342
Repairs:.................................................... 344

Roofing...... .. .... .... .. ...... .... ... .. ...... .. .. ............. 346
Securlly .............................................. 346
Tax/Accounting ..... . ........ .......... .. ......... 350
Travei!Entertalnmenl .................................. 352
Financial........ ................. .... .................. ......400
Financial Services ..................................... 405
Insurance ......................... ................. . ... 410
Money to Lend ..........: .................................. 415
Education .......: ..: ........................................ 500
Business &amp; Trade School .......................... 505
ln.structlon &amp; Training ............................. 510
Lessons ....................................................... 515
Personal ............. ......................................... 520

Animals ............. .................................... 600
Animal Supplies ..................................... 605
Horses ... .. ....................... ........................... 610
Livestock............................................ ........ 615

Pets .......................................................620
Want to buy ............. .............................. 625

Agriculture . .... ................ ............. ..............~ . 700
Farm Equipment.. ..... ... :............... .. ............ 705
Garden &amp; Produce •.'.. .. ............................. 710
Hay, Feed, Seed, Grain ............... ~ .............. 715
Hunllng &amp; Land ........................................... 720

Want to buy .............................. .. .................. 725

Wafit to buy ................... .. ........... ... ........ 3040
Real Estate Renlals .............................. ..3500
Apartments/Townhouses .... ... .. ................ 3505
Commercial ............................................. 3510
Condominiums ....................................... 3515
Houses for Rent .................... .................. 3520

Land (Acreage) .......................................... 3525

Sales ............................................... ............ 4020
Supplies .................................................4025
Want 1o Buy ...... ................................... 4030

Appliances

Food Servlcea ............................................6024

Computers ........................... ........ ....... ...... 930

Equtpmont/Suppllos.................................... 935
Fleo Markets ............................................... 940

Management/Supervisory ........................ 6034
Mechanics............. ..... ..... ...... ..... ............... 6036

Fuel Oil Coal/WoOd/Gas ........................... 945
Furniture ..........................................., ....... 950

Medical ....................................... ............... 6038

Musical ....................................................... 6040
Part-Time-Temporaries ................ ,........ .6042
Restaurants .........................................

6044

Sales ........................................................6048

Technical Tradea ....................................... 6050
Textltea/Factory ........................................ 6052

-----..,.-FREE K1!1ens 1 male orange/whlte,
! ·female
gray/white
call
Kelly
304-593-3822
,:.;....:.;.:.:,:.;,:..,._..,._
free to good home. 3 yr
old
male
Black Lab,
needs
room
to
run
304·937-3192

GIBBS
ANTIQUES·
Also restore furniture IO·
ca led on Tornaao Ad off
At
33
Rac1ne
(Park&amp; R•c:1e)
ex11
740·949·2246

31am lly, Thurs 8 30·3 1
m 1le N Chester leU oft
St AI 7 Sumnsr W1l
son 's
4pc
hv1ngraom
sull e,
m•s c
lurmlure
clea n clolh1ng &amp; house
holc:1 rtems

..

ask1ng
$899
call
740 645·8599
,;,:;,::;;:;;;;;;,...,...,...,,.,

Wood 1 Gas

Seasoned

F1rewooc:1,

$55
llardwooc:1
30HI82·2567

all t

989
1oa d Cudc:1y

has

740-379-9034

3 00

&amp;uoino11 &amp; Trado
School
=~o;;;;;;;~==-

INTEGRITY, 740 _645 ssg9

Gallipolis Career
Collega
(Careers Close To Home )
Call Todayl 740·4 46·4367
1·8()().2 14·0452
galltpotlscareercollege e!lu
Accrethl&amp;d Member Acc redlf
111g Counc11lor Independent
Colleges and School&amp; 12746

600

Ser .. 1ces

'

Basement
Waterproofing

lawn Service

0 &amp; R Lawn ca re mow•ng weed eat•ng · heelge
mmmtng, fall clean up
and leal removal Day
740·853·1702 or N1ght

740·379-2599

An1 mats

LOAD
MAX
EQUIPMENT
TRAIL ERS
CARGO
EXPRESS
&amp;
HOMESTEADE R
CARGOICON~ESSION
TRAILERS
B+W
GOOSENECK FLATBED
$3999 VIEW OUR EN·
TIRE TRAILER IN-VEN·
TORY AT
WWWCAAMICHAEL·

TRAILERS COM
740-446-3825

p-.

,.,.
=,.===iiiiiiiiii'!'i'.'!'

ets

tractor,

S4,500

Found med1um s1zed le- (740)985·4291

I

male dog Woodsm11 Rd .
Blc:1well 3Sfl·9338 call to
1dent1fy

Miocollanoouo

=iiiii'"'"''"'"-'-""'=

d•esel.

0 80 ,
or

pets

have

[740)591·341 I

01

ask

304 773-5277

lor

I

Motors

re- :,
74::,;0:,;·4;;:4i'
6·;;;3;,:;82"5"""""""""""

pa• red new &amp; rebuilt 1n
slock Ca ll Ron Evans ,
1-800-537-9528
...__ _ _ _ _..;..._
Babystuff
lor
sale
Stroller
ana
•nfanl
ca rseal playpen and lots
more
Call
Jodi
al
740 -446-7473
,__ _ _ _ _..,.._
Grvea way
large Tram
pohne, 304.-675-5161 of
I
no answer eave mess

sage

Motorcycl•s
~~~;'§~~-::
2000 Honda XR 250 all
ong1nal low mrles Ex
Cone
S1 500
3041·675·4 131
-------200t
Yamaha
R6
blue/while approx 3500
m1les, Yosh p1pe · 1a11 kit
$4500

Call

740-645-747t
os Hayabusa

low miles.

!.:74;,:;U:;,;-4;;,1;
6·,;;99~9:;5...,...,...,.., · - - - - - - = Garden &amp; Product~ NEW AND USED STEEL

orlg. owner, many exlras
'l
1
d
aon try to 11 tn , stan
P1pe Rebar out $7 900 446·2254

Foun d ,
Inen dl y Free WaInuIs Io ur bags for
Concrete
AnQie
very
1o
sma II I1g ht gra~ sIr~pe d wt'lh
more
come Channel, Flat Bar, Sleet
cat' 400 block ol 1st ave 740-446·7124
Grating lor Dra•ns Dnveways 8. Walkways l&amp;L
Galhpohs 446-0547
Scrap Melals Open Mon
7 Kittens to giVe away P•ck your own canning Tue.
Wed
&amp;
Fn
7
peppers Bam·4 30pm
Vanous colors. 7 weeks . tomaloes
Closed
(Bell, Sweel, Banana &amp; Th urs
Sat
&amp;
Sun
old 446-0235
Hot,
Red,
Yellow
or 740·446·7300
Beagle pups $5() each tn Green)
$4
a bucket ,..,...,,.....,,...,,...,,....,..
colorec:1,
gOOd
hunt1ng , Bring your own cootam· Pole Bam 30x40x10 only
gOOd

cap abthtles
shower
pony, fridge, 1979 20ft.
cen1ury
mere
cru1ser
Cuc:1dy cab•n&amp;!raller new
!Ires &amp; wheel banngs
wJnew 350 Chevy molar
Cush1ons&amp;seats
ha-.e
been
reupholslered
por1a potty solc:1 together
for $14 000 or can be
separated,

DR table w/ 6 chairs, 2 ::D;
a';,;'~...,...,...,...,=
leaves$300, sewi ng · m~- =
ch1ne $25. LA cha~r &amp; ta·
Campers RVs &amp;
ble $50, 2 BBO gnlls $40
Trailers
each 446-4333
;;;;;~~===~- - - - - - - - AV Serv1ce at Carmi·
Berber Carpet 56 95 yd chael
TrailerS
carpel remnants 540 00 740·446·3825
&amp; up Mollohan carpet 'R~V------22 12 Eastetn Ave GalliCarmichael
Serv•ce
at
polls, Oh1o 740-446-7444
Tra1lers

Sleel Beams

"""'=""'""""""""""""""
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ts;..7;..4;;,0·~44;..1;..·1;..4.;40~-

had ers or buy ours for ,$1
each
Troyers Produce

~
AKC mrniature Schnau· 171 lak1n Ad, Gallipolis ,
zers .
now
ava•tab!e, Oh 9 m•les West of Gal·
Pel
Cremaltons
Call while
or
saiVpepper, lrpdh oft Sl Rt t 41
(740)992-132a
Watch lor cann 1ng lorna·
740-446·3745
1oes Signs Closed Sun
Bassett
Hound
puppy days
Prolollional Sorvicoo Male, 9wks old, Vet .~-..,.--~~~Chec~ed .
$150 ·Pumpk.ns and Fall deco·
304·675.0 153
rat1ons lor sale at the
TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY 551 free to good trome , baby Melon Patch on SR 141
~-Ba2· 2385 9 m1les !rom Gallipolis
No Fee Unless We W1n1 K1ttens
leave message
Open Thur - Sat
1-868·582·3345

Other S.rvic.s
--======;;;;;
-

,;;~~~"""""""""""

Jet AerallOn

Have you pnced a John
Uvooloc:k
Deere lalel~? You It be
sur pnsedl Check oUI ou r
B year old mare horse used
1nven1ory
at
$250 Call740-256·1498
www CARED com
Ca rEquipment
Show Calves tor sale miChael
Ca ll 446-4562 af1er 5 30 740-446-24 12
pm
One e1ghty All is Charm-

23ft
SeaRay
Cabin &amp; Trailer
350
w/Merc

wJnew
cru1ser, sleeps 6, cenlral
ACIHeat Ship lo shore

breed
w/..

HORSE/LIVE·
TRAI LERS

Boob I Acc.uori•s

~=--;ii.i.i;..i=iiiii

Free to good home neut
male mix
good

Recreati Onal
Vehicl es

1000

Fuel 1Oil 1Coal I

Furniture

VALLE Y
STOCK

Ca ll

""'======-

Law Enforcement ............................. ... 6030
MalntenancaiDomestlc ..... : ....................... 6032

Yard Sale ..........................................,.... ,. .... 975

Skaggs
moved

Cashier/Clerk .............................. ............ 6006
Child/Elderly Care ................ ...... ... ........ 601111
Cieri cal ....................................................... 601 0

Government &amp; Federal Jobs .................... 6026
Help anted· General. ............................. 6028

Kid 's Corner .............. ................................... 960
Miscellaneous ............................................. 965
Want to buy .................................................. 970

ommends that you do
bus1ness w1th people you
know, and NOT to send
money through the ma 11
until you have 1nvest1gatlOg the offering

~""""""""""""""""""=

Appliance ... .............................. ................... 910
Auctions .......... .. ........................................... 915
Bargain Basement. ............. ... ..................... 920

Hobby/Hunt &amp; Sport ............................... 955

NOTICE OHI O VALLEY
PUB LISHING CO
rec-

Accounting/Financial ..................... ....... 6002
Administrative/Professional ....... ~ ............ 6004

Ant lq ues ....................................................... 905

Collectibles ................................................ 925

No6coo

Employment. .................. ................, ...... .6000

Construction ........................................ ....., 6012
Drivers &amp; Delivery ... .............................. 6014
Education ........................ ............... ........ .~016

urday 27 Item off shop·
p1ng networks, plu s s1ze
tash1on lor all women
chllc:1ref'! clothing lor lod·
dlers 29 Henkle Ave

o

Lond

KIEFER BUILT,

Unconc:11110nell1 fellme
guarantee local refer·
ences furn1shed Es tab·
hshed 1975 Call24 Hrs
740·44&amp;-0B70 Rogers
Basement WaterprOOfing

Resort Property ......................... •.......... .. 5000
Resort Property for sale ... .. ... ........ ... .. ...... 5025
Resort Property for rent ........................ 5050

Space Available .
Conlacl
Charlie
Perry
(740)992-SOBB
perry·
cola @suddentlnk net

Found -White dog w / ==~~~~=- Huge yard sale· 390a1
Black spots arou'nd Wen· Sland up Maytag used Bradbury
Ad ,
M1dct1e·
dys In Pt Pleasant Sat 1 times "New ' 2 dryers por1,
Sept
23rd·26th,
10:::•::,m:;;·5:~;:P~m...,...,...,...,
lop &amp; boltom pd 52 000 .:;
304-675-5740

EBY,

Lots .............................................................4005
Movers......................... ... . .....................401 0
Rentals ................................................. 4015

Dealer

dog ' K•ng Headboard Grec•an
klc:1S Style made In Italy Wi th 2
740·1145·6909.
c:1raws on bolh s•des of
oea
$ 99 g
call
7 00
Agr1C\IIIure
740
645-8599
serv1ce
announcement
Losl Pt Pleasani -Whrle , from the OhiO Valley
male
Bosto n
Temer Publl shlng,Company)
Sanyo 68 rn HDTV 5
"Cy' Chrldren's Pel Ca lr =:i~~~~~~~·
Fartn Equipment
years old paid $7 ,500
304 593-4972
~~=;;;;;;;~~~~ ask1ng
$4,999
call

Storage ........................................ ........ 3535
Want to Rent . ... .... ......... ... ..............3540
Manufactured Houslng ............................. 4000

Elec1rtcal Plumblng ................................... 6018
Employment Agencies .............................6020
Entertainment ........................................... 6022

Merchandise ............................... .... ........... 900

Monoy To

Founc:t· 1 black puppy on NOTICE Borrow Smart
Shoes trtng
R1dge Contact the OhiO Dtvl441·1501
s1on of F•nanc•al lnslilu li ons Off•ce of Consumer
Lost S•benan Husky gray
Affa1rs BEFORE you reliand while With an orange
nanol!l yo ur home or ob
collar
Dog has been ta1n a loan BEWARE of
spayec:1 1s on med1cat1on '"quests for any large
Rewarc:1 740-256-9275
advance
payments
of
Found - young cat been fees or 1nsurance Call
neutered '(s titches) call the Office of Consume r
Afflars
toll
tree
at
Kenl (740)7 42 3163
1·866-278-0003 10 team
Found approx 7 month •f the mortgage broker or
old Black Lab Mus! , P1ck 'lender IS
properly
II:
Up Call (740)742·87t l'
censed (Th•s 15 a publiC

Parts &amp; Accessories ............ :.....................2025
Sports Utility ... ...... .. .. .............. .. ....... 2030

Catering.,.... ..... ,, .... .',, ........................ ,.... ,,.... ,31 0
Child/Elderly Care ....... ......:...................... 312
Computers .................................................. 314

Healing It Coollng ..... ..... ........................... .. 328
Home Improvements 330

Garage Sale Ra1n or
Sh1ne Sept 25 26, &amp; 27
Oct 2 3 &amp; 4 F1rst t1me
tappan gas range TV,
Longanoerger baskets &amp;
m1sc Located oti of 850
9-6 401 Denney Come·

Appliance•

Loot &amp; Found

The Daily Sentinel

~unbap

Poll

A n n :~cmceme'I IS

200

'

'

Sept
27
9am-3pm
39594
Un1onAve
Pome10y lois of home
goods elc
d1nu;g 10om
table clothes gtasswares

1ng Sloneware, Milk Bot·1a
'';,iry~R~o:;
ad:::,.::B;;:
'dw
:;;e:;:ll,.....,.lle s.
ColleCIIbles
Free •
,
ap
1st
T1me
Yard
Sale Saiadm lSs 1On 110
pra1s 81s

• r, .. Area Sliiodf

I

Yard Sale

10 acres of ,gooc:1 Hay 2 fam11y sale Saturday
reac:1y to cut 1n
Leon Sept 27 9·3 at 39594
304·458-1661
Un1on
Ave
Pomeroy
Oh1o
Lo ts
ot
home·
WantTo Buy
goods c:1tntng room table
clothes glassware etc
Wanted lo Buy - Paw
Paws
Black
Walnuts 2 Fa m•ly Yard Sale Sal

C;;•;;;II_,;7_;;40;.,·6;,;9;;;B.,;6;;;,06;;;0;..,...,~

"Saturday Morning Sports Clinics"

PREP FOOTBALL STAm&gt;INGS

Gallia
County
OH l\-~~

2007 Honda VTX 1300R
miles
"lack )
1800
-P
$7aOO 388-8360
2007
KawasaKI
Nlnla •
250 under 1500 m1les
red helmet and tank bag
$2,800 740-645·1912
2007
Kawasaki
250 under 1500

NinJa
miles

$6 ,995, other s•zes, Free red helmet and tank bag
Delivery an-773-8356
S2,aOO 740-645·19t2

Want To

luy

:WOO

Au'OillOII~('

Absolute Top Dollar • sll·
ver/gotd
coins.
any
"utoo
10Kil4KJ18K gold 10w- ~~~~,..~~=;;;;;;~.
elry dental gold. pre 01 Hone:! a CIVIC LX 5
1935'
IJS
currency
,
spd 98,000 m1les over
proollmllll
sets
maS OOQ 1n e11.tras Lambe
monds MTS Co1n Shop Doors
$7 700
080
t 5~ 2nd Avenue Galh- 74 o- 709 . t
398
pol1s 446·2842

�Page 84 • The Daily Sentinel
J SOO

RP 1 E:,t llf

HouMa For

Rent

Government &amp; Federal
Jobo

~ e n ! ] •':&gt;

2007 Hoo&lt;la VTX 1300R
1800 miles black 57800.
388-8380

TownhovMo

Sports Ulility
Clip lh1s AD and take 11
w1th you wh en you VI.SII
our community to get
this spec1al discounl.
Move -in in Oct and get
$100.00 your 2BR Apt.
oft Nov rent Currently
rent1ng 1 &amp; 2 BR un1ts
SpaCious floor plans,
ranch &amp; town home style
living, playground &amp;
basketball,coun . on-site
laundry tacihty, 24 hr
emergency maintenance, quiet coun try loca tion close to major
medical
facilities,
pharmacies. grocery
store .. Just minutes
away !rom other ma1or
shopp1ng 1n the area.
Honeysuckle Hills
Apartments
266 Colonial Qrive #1 13
.Bidwell, Ohio 456 14
740-446-3344
Office Hours M, W, F
9AM - SPM

Jeep
Grande
:Cherokee lorado , gold
o utside _wlgray trim , 4 0,
'ale , cruise. tilt , EC, 1601&lt;.,
4999

$4 ,800, no Sunday calls
please (740)992-7599 ·

Trud.a
2002 Ford Ra nger XLT,
41,775 m1les, 4.0 6cyl.
aLJt omatic,

4x4;

PW,PlocK, MP3 CO stereo, Sliding rear window,

bed-liner. hard Tonneau
cover, Excellent Condition 304-773-5626
2006

Silverado.

Chevy

low .miles· ,
304·593-0876
304-593-0959.

4-

WD.
O&lt;

1988 · E-350 Box Truck
but needs work.
339·0885

runs

Vans
2003
Ford
Windstar
$4,500 740-367-7166

Want To

Re&lt;1

.
Apt ,

E ~ta t e

Sales

=;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
~

~;;;;;;;;;C;;;o:;;m;;;m;;;o;;;r;;;ci;;;o;;;l~;;;;;;
For
sale
or
lease
offi celwarehouse/storage
great 1ocat19n in Gallipolis.
1800
sq.
tt
$400/monih. Call · Wayne
_404-456-3802
For Salo

MII(J .fi!U...tll -4{) q

POST
OFFICE
NO W
HIRING avg. Pay $20/hr
0
or
o57Kfyr,
includes
Fed.Ben, OT. Place by
adSource ,. flO! affil iated
with USPS who hires
2br in Pt. Pl. $450/mo .. 1-866-403-2582
dep. req., no pets, de'I
_,
I
tached
garage .
w/d He p Wantaa - Genera

hookup 304 -812-5030 or "A Place to Ca ll HOME"
3.04-675-6474
Foster Paren ts Neededlll
2br. 1ba. Ou1te Neigh - $30-$48 a day with pd
Dorhood,
No· Smoking, respi te Tra imng begins
No Pe ts $450 month plus ifl Seplember Call Oasis
Depsoit
&amp;
Reference. to help a ch ild lind a
to call
home.
WatmfTrashfSewcr
pa1d place
1-877-32
5-1558.
740-446-6939
$250 Sign o n Bonus
Ten pos1!10ns need hlled
by next week!
No e)(per1 ence required!
No Sales1
No Collections!

IAcreogel

1BR
WID hOokups,
Storage
satellite TV incl. w/rent,
close to hoSpital. Ca ll Storage Rent al Mason
County
Fairgrounds
· 740· 339-0362
$8.00 per foot accepting
1 BR Apt s tor Rent 1st
month of October Wed
A&lt;Je ,
Gallipolis.
&amp;
Sat
9am-4pm
$375-$325
No
Pets
304-675 -S463 "
HUD
01
cons11uct1011.
Wa sher/Dryer
Hook-up,
Manufact ured
Oepos1t
Req. 4000
Housmg
(740)339·3063

By Owner

2 bedroom apartment in

2 BR

~ og Cabin
surrounded by wood s and
farm land Bidwell area .
$60.000 740-24,5-S981

Full and ParHime
Positions
D&lt;iy and Evening
Shifts
Professional Work
En"Ji ronment!
Medical, Denta l. EAP,
401KI
On·site DoCtor
Weekl y Pay and
Bonus Incentives!

=;;;:":"....~Ro;;;n;;;lo:OI;;;'o:-~:":"

Centenary,
all
utilit1es
paid except electriC · :
2 1:.11': trailer beside Wal$350 . a moflth Ca ll 740 man in Mason $475 mo.
256-11 35 lea ve
mesplus depos1t, references
sage
required, (740)992·3961

2 001 Clayton Rockwood
14x70 trailer 1".287 acre 2BR APT. CIA. (740)
2BA trailer.. wid. rei ,
441' 0194
land calt44 6-667B
stove, HIP. fenced back
;;;;;;;,;;;;;,;;;,:;:,,;;;;;,;;,""""" 3 rooms and bath up- yard . NO PETs and. NO
":"'H;;;;;;o~O:oe;;;o;;;Fo~r;;;Sa;;;;;;l;;;e~ stairs. Completely fur- SMOKING. S300 deposit
~
nished with WID. No plus · $375 month rent
2 bdrm Fixer ~pper 2913 pets. Ref. Req. 441 _0245
firm. G[}ll
Ferry
cau
AS IS
Madison· Ave.
2nd
304-849-2932
leave
Furnished
apartment
$1 3,000
Firm
ave. Upsta 1rs all utilities number
304·675- 1905
1 ·2
-~~~-::-~-pm'd , 1 BR, no· pe1s, G·aBR 1 bath like n"w
"
3 Bed , HUD Homes! lipolis. 446- 9523
3675 Sulaville Pike no
Only $15,300 for listings
electric
CONVENIENTLY
LO· B00-820- 4946 ex A019
CATED
&amp;
AFFORDor
38A 2.58A 1721 sq .- It ABLE ! Townhouse
and/or
with tull Bsml. , 2 car 2FP m~nt~.
on 0.6AC . in Spring Va l- houses for rent.
ley Est. move in ready. 740-44 1-1 11.1 f.or
Appoint. ,
Only cation &amp; informa tion
740-286 -52 80

Sportswriter
The Ohio Valley· Publish·
1119 'Co. rs seekmg mo\1"Ja ted. people-oriented
llldlvidual ti 1111 a vacancy
tn the news dept as a
Sportswnter. The successful candida te w1ll
cover high school athletics ifl the area lor the
da1ly edition Or Um newspapal. as we ll as assist
with the production ol,
spo·rts pag es. E~ce llent
writing and English skills,
photograp hy SkillS and
knowledge of desktop
publishing are sought.
The posifiOn is lull t1me.
40 hours a week, wi th
bene fitS. Interested par·
ties can send resumes to
Kevm Kelly. Manag1ng
EditOr, Oh10 Valley PubliShing Go.. 82 5 Th1rd
Ave.,·Gallipofis, Ohio
4563 1 or kkelly @mydaily tribune.co m. No
phofle calls please.

Recru1t "JO iunteers lm
non -profi t organizations
such as St. Jude
Children's Research
Hosp1lal
Get pa1d to make &lt;1
'
difference'

Wanted To Lease. Bow
hunting
land
need
enough for 3 people
(828) -380-0594

Call TODAY!
Interview

TOMORROW!r
Work NEXT WEEK!!!

1-888-IMC-PAYU
Ext 1901
http :/ljobs.l nto~lsion .c
om
OeliveryM/arehouse
person needed, lull time. 1mmediate opening, must
hB.ve good dri"Jing
re'
cord . App lY- Lifes tyle Furniture 856 Third Ave.
Gallipolis, 9:30·5:00 No
Phone Calls

Phillip
Alder

~~
YOUNG'S

CARPENTER
SERVICE
• Room Addition • &amp;
Remodtllni:J
· New G..-ages
· Ele&lt;:trlcel &amp; Plumbing
• Rooting &amp; Gr.rtter1
· Vinyl Siding &amp; Painting
· Pallo and Porch Deck&amp;
wv 036725

V.C. YOUNG Ill
992-621 S
Pomeroy d hto
25 Years Loca l b pc'IC'nce

Hill's Self
Storage
29670 Bashan Road
Racine, Ohio

4 577 1

coamucno11

Hours

• New Homes

St.lll124 Ptmlfll, 11

Auctioneer:
Billv R. Goble Jr.
140-416-1164

· CDmplete Tree Care
ln1urotd · Fr~ E1tlm11 tn
740-44 1-9381
20 ~ •

.I

..,. ,,,_,,..,c.

Dealer; N orth
Vu lnerable: N either

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

AT

0

·1 "'
O r;'
~~

i

\

wofl.l:

~~~
~l ~

~- ~~
.l ,. ~

Sflt/ol Cit/all
f1iKQ11rlf

~2" ~

~~g
~

f.~

~

tBARNEY

1·25
::';~~~~~=~~~i~~:~~~=~=~~~~~~~~~~~==~=~~,.:!~~~J

Rd .

l)1 nn t'rny, OH
Pni nt :-. ) ..,

New &amp; U!-.~J 'l;ires.

We bu~ liSed ti res ..
co mpu ter

·wheel

a l ig mn e nt ~ ·. l ig.h t
mechani L' work.
~o m plet e

Hardwood CabJne1ry And FurniCure
www.tJm b erereekca'binetry.com

senril'e oil

THAT'LL BE

PLUS ANOTHER

WHAT?!

TWENNY

FER ONE

DOLLARS,

FIVE

!!

BOOKAY ?!

MtSTOFER
SMIF !!

change!-.. small c11 gine
repair..
We servi&lt;.:e uml

wi nterize boats ;md
RV· s

be~

(740) 992-5344
41

Mainttmance /
Oorfteatic

M on- Fri .
g: ()() am·-

4:30pm
· Sut. ~ :00 am - 12
We appreciate your

Part -time
maintenance
wm ker,
25-30hrs
per
wee k, Pay ba sed on experience.
Call
(740)379-908 3
Mon-Fri
"be tween 9am -3pm

-·''

I I 1\ I'

Racine, Qhio 740-247-2019

([)~(1 {111

l l l \SI I( L( 110\

Concrete Removal

TtjE BORN LOSER

"iT's f&gt;.. &amp;AU\If"Ul ~IG.Il.'t I'OIZ..""!

business

Cell :

Owners :
Jon Van Meter

FOO't\'&gt;M..L! II\ IS IS it.~
J/o-tiiE.S-l'LL &amp;.1\1\1'\DLI t-IC.
T~E.

740-416-5047

y-A,t-1\&gt; 11\'{. PAA\t\ER 1-\t:.RE, ~
.ltr-\00 ~. WII..L &amp; 00\ti.C.
1&gt;\E. C.OLOR COtl\r-\Et-1\r-R'&lt;.

""'q

PLI&gt;.'{-

(','{- PLf&gt;l'&lt;...

email:

&amp;

jrshadfrm@aol.com

Paul Rowe

740-992-6971
Insured
WV042t82 Free Estimates
Help Wanted

0

Stanley TreeTrimming
&amp; Removal

Quality Improvement

I

* l~c:~ so nable

Joint Commission Director
Pleasant

Vall ey .

Hospital

acceptin g resumes f o r

a

Is

t urrent ly

full -t im e Qu ality

Improve m e nt/ Joint Commission Director.
Direc t Care StaH in residential youth program.
Must be 21 years of age.
~~""':~':':"~-..,.., Pay based on experl2004 Doublewide
in enc:e .
Call
new condition . · 4 bed - (740)379 -9083
Mon-Fri
room, 2 bath, all appli- 9am -3pm.
included,
ances
$37,000
located
at Hours from 9·5 Fi"J e (5)
176 Zuspan Lane Ma- days a week , Secretaria l
son City 304-675-211 7 ··
wo rk. filing, typin g, computer updates,
Wages
n9goliable. No Benefi ts
Poin t Pleasant Bu siness
Se fi d Resume to CLA I 5
c/o Point Pleasant Regi ster, 200 Main St Pt.
Pleasant,WV 25550

Must have· cwre ni

WV RN

lice nse. BSN or

e quivale nt r equired . Exper ience in acu te

care sett ing in a ·Joint .Commi ssion
a ccredited . h ospital

prefe rred .

manage m e nt/Supe rv iso ry
prefe rr ed .

Previ ou s

OK/'•.Y. NOW

,

Previo u s

expe ri en ce

exp eri en ce

in

th e

Pe rform an ce Impro v emen t fi eld prefe rre d .
Previous e xp erie nce in

Joint

Commi ssion

Surveys pref e rre d .

Rates

* l n~ ured

*' Ex per ienced
Rcfercn..:es Av ai l ab l e ~
C:t ll (Ja ry Sta nley @
74ll.5 9 1-g044,
Please leave messaoe

TR EE WORK
~ r.,ppl'fl ,

Take DoWn

&amp; R emo val
. Affordabl e,
Rcusunublc Price

Vinyl
Sid ing/Replace menr
Windows/Remodeling
Bonded &amp; Insured
740-992-1493 Offi ce
740-416-8339 Ce ll
Free E~l i mated
Pomeroy , Oh io

c/o Human Resources

2520 Valley Drive
Point Pleasant. WV 25550
304· 675 -6975, or apply on- line

AA/EOE

_8oo
~-6·20
""';·4~6~46~e·x•T•4•6,.2~ --:~-:-:~--

~H otJ se w1th 2 acres m
· SR
160. Will consider .. land

contract.
379-2923

441-5062

or

Now apcepling
applications at·
Valley View Apartments
800 State Route 325

Thurman, Ohio 45685
740-245-9170
Nice 4 br, 2 ba home on
Klneon · Dr in GallipoliS. ' 1-2 Bedroom Apanments
Quite neighborhood Ofl with appliances fum ished
On site laundry fac1lity.
Qead end street. large 2
Call
lor detailS or pick up
ca r garage and finished
application at rental
tlasement. 740-256-11 09
office.
;Tri-level brickJcedar on
Poss1bi lity of rental
·. 98 acres, Rutland, Oh,
assistance.
'private
Settir\g ,
eat-In
Equal Housing
kitchen, 3""' br., 2 fu ll
Opportunity
b"alhs. !g. livingroom. lg.
TOO# 41 9·526-0466
family room , out of Uood
"Ttlis insti tution is an
plain, (740)742-2404 or
Equal Opportu nity
/ 41l-949-293Q
Provider and Employer"
Land

(Aa.agel '

Salary based on e~perience. EEO Employe&lt;
_

Drivers &amp; De~very

'1 2"p~umo lr.:h w~days

Driver's Education po sition open in the Gallipolis
and Meigs area. Flellible
hours. Mu'st b6 able to
work
e"Jening~
· and
weekends. Job entails
classroom and behind
the wheel ii"ls truction for
new
drivers
Qualified
candidates mu.st have a
school
diploma,
high
valid
dri"Jers
license,
&lt;f@ · 'ii' . .. .. . ... . " ..
pass
background
checks, e)(p. preferred in
traffic sa fety. taw en·
lorcement, or teaching. '::""--~--~­
or we will train . EOE
Owner Operator Opper·
tunl11es A&amp;J Truck1ng .
Eledrical f Plumbing
Ma&lt;lella, Ohio has opportunities available tOr
EKperienced MIG Welder Owner Operators within
. w1th the ability to read the reg1on. We feature

~

;.,""!!!!!!""',;""'!!!!!!"""

2doac.
+I·
on
Oa!!ia/Moigs o., Ot-j border. Great hunting land.
$210,000
neg. ""'""":"'""""""""""" blue prints, Competitive
304-593-5280
Commercial
Wages
with
excellent
~nefil package. Evening
.t O Acres/garage/camper Commerical Space for shift . Send Resume To:
Rent, Main St. Pt. Pleas. Imperial Electric Co. 345
contact
or $400/mo.
2000
sq/H Sycamore St: Middleport,
'shroese@yahoo.com
OH 45760
740-245-9015
703·50 1·4808

' weekly settlements
Illeluding tu et surch;:u ge &amp;
tra11er rerltal. Operators
hould have newer equipmen!. For mqre
information- contact Oennis at 800-462-9365

Guttering
Seamless Gutt ers
Roofing . Siding, Gutters
Insured &amp; Bonded
740-653- 9657

Racycllng

PEANUTS
AND THIS ONE 6U'( RAN
FASTER THAN TI-lE REST OF
TllEM,AND THAT'S SPORTS
FOR TOt&lt;l 16~T. AND W~O CARES?

'' AND THEN THIS ONE TEAM
BEAT THE OTHER TEAM IN
SOME KIND OF 6AME .. ''

503 Mlllll• MldiiiiPOft. 01145110
JIIO-IBHII4
Slllrti1Vt.H Dl2:H1m .

Advertise
in this
space
for

........................
PlYING TOP PRICES RIB

hiiiiiiC.._... ......

111•n1111n1
ICIII fir Cli I •ll'rlclll

COW and BOY
NOT·EVERYONE WILL
LOVE YOU THE WAY
YOU WOWLO LIKE.

PSI CONSTRUCTION

$64

needing a full ti me job .
You need to be honest, a
person ot in tegrity, wiih
good pe ople ·s~ ill s. You
also need to be able to
follow instructions and
have an ability to listen
and lead people in the
right direction. I need
peopl e who want to work
an d will show up for
Work. II you are a rcce fl!
college grad an.d cannot
find employment and leel
that you are qualified,
gi"Je us a phance until a
job in your career path
becomes avail able. Call
Pa t Hill, New Car Manager for afl interview at
446-9800.

H&amp;H

Man lay's

Pleasant Valley Hospital

at www.pvalley.orz .

f need to find (2) people

---,,--

IIIII MIHIV-fi'IIIIVI:OD llll-6:. 1m

{304) 675 - 4340

New H.3ven, one bedroom apartment, de"posit
&amp;
refe rences,
740-992-0165
~-::-~~--~
Nil·e I hr. ;\ ppl ilml'c ~. fu rConttnJction
ni~hed . ~.17.~ + deposit. nc11r. ~~~::;;;o;;;;;;::;;;o;;;;;;~
PPIIS
JL14-fJ75 ·' 10(.)
ur Skilled Carpenters, must
.~M- 6 7 ~ -.'i.'iOY
have own tools. FaK re·
::N~
ice~""';C::Ie~a~n--G~&lt;~o~un~d sumas to 740-388 -9530
Foreclosure
4br,
2ba, Floor, 2br, WID hookup , o r ma1
·1 1o: PO BOK 55 ,
only ' $29,900! Prices to
B'd ell
OH
456 14
ReterencesiPeposiVNo
I w ,
.
Sell!
For
listings Pets 304·675-5162
Some
travel
required .

' MOUNT

ANNOYING:'

Com me rl"it!l ~~ R,,sid('lllial

740-444-5 152

Send resumes to :

O r fax :

YOU 'RE
ST"-RTING
TO A!&gt;CENt&gt;

Quality Seamless
Gutters
Maintenance Plus

. *Prompt and Q uality
Wu rk ...

L

RICK PRICE

per
month

'20" c~umo lnctl Sunday .
" ""'· ~un OFFIOE AT 992·2155

Public Notice
· NOTICE OF LIEN SALE
t he personal property
and contents of the fol·
lowing storage units

BU SINESS AFTER
HOURS
at The Middleport Clinic
Introducing .
.

Tess Simon, MD
Pysician specializing ·in
Internal Medicine

Wednesday,
September 24, 2008
4 p.m. to 6 p.m.
Located at 788 North
Second Avenue
Middleport, OH
(740) 992-6434
Hosteq by Pleasant Valley
Hospital &amp; Meigs County
Chamber of Commerce
Special gifts appetizers and
a grand prize drawing
PUBLI C IS INVITED

will be auctioned for
sale t o satisfy the lien
of Hartwell Storage.
The sale' will be held at
the Hartwell Storage
facility, :14055 Gaegllen
Rd., Pomeroy, Ohio on
October 1t , 2008 at
10:00 a.m.
Unl1147
Kelly Miller
P.O. BOK 884
New Haven , WV 25265
Uni11 59
KellyMIIIer
P.O. Bo&gt;884
New Haven, WV 25265
Unll 112
Kelly Miller
P.O, BoK 884
New Haven, WV 25265
Unll l76
•
Kelly Miller
P.O. BoK884
New Ha ven , WV 25265
Unl1117
J ane Jennings
1457 Hocking Rd •
Llltle Hock ing, Ohio
45742
Unit 145
Terra Hart
6 Oa k St.
Pom eroy, Oh io 4 5769
(9) 25 (10) 2

Obi
2•
ol A

Pass
Pass
Pass

Construction
• VInyl Siding

Roofing, Siding,
Soffit, Decks,
Doors, Windows;

• Replacement
Windows
·Rooting
• Decks
· Garages'

Electric, Plumbing,

YOU HAVE
MAIL.

· Pole Buildings
• Room Additions
Owner :

James Keesee II
742·2332

GARFIELD
Dear Spider,
3... 2 ... 1...

)

Local Contractor

740-367-0544
Free Eatlmatea

740-367-0536

,(;LICK
For Remodeling und New Hbuse Building
C all :

MARC UM CONSTRUCTION

Additions • Garages • Vinyl
a n d WoOd Siding • Roofing • Pole
Barns • Patio 's. Porches and Decks

• R oo m

MIKE W. MARCUM, OWNER
472 39 Riebe l

Road. t ong Bollom. O H

GRIZZWELLS

! &amp;01).. 7\UI&lt;.\1% FE'il.l\'\6 ~~~~ l\E'tl
6\~l.fRltNI? CAWT \IE ~STED

YoU' MU~T

46 Melee
48 Held up
50 Ro le
- Ia vista!
pl ayers
Notre Dame 54 Sky hunter
Dilate
55- Lama
Permit
56 Hormone
Brewing
produeer
need
57 Inch alo ng
(2 wda.)
Put down turf
DOWN

North
Pass
2t
34
Pa ss

15
16

East
l t
Pass
Pass
Pass

WIIASTA'TEP

Cell : 740-4 16- 1834
25+ yea r.~ experie11ce Free E.~timllle!i

r·
____

,.l _____ _

1 Amigo

numeral
21 Rough
shelter
22 Kill a bill
23 Vehicle
on runners
25 Vu
'
28 Player' s rep
30 Large

of Fidel

2 Negligent
3 Deadl y

20 Thing s

snake

22 Flower '

4

Whistlestop
5 Glass

container

24 Copy
a cassette
square
25 Publish
antelope
6 Insult witl ily 26 ·Cibud31 - Paul o,
7 Baseball
burs ts
Brazil
stat
27 Hong32 Well-known 8 Slernum
29 Make lace
uncle
bones
34 Miser's .
33 So!
9 Fjord po"
cache
35 Water
10 Drop
36 Kind ot
holder
feathers
lineup
14 Telegraph
37 USN rank
(h yph.)
38 Bullring bull
syllabl es
39 Whale like
40 Gill
15 Gobbled up
Shamu
alternative 17 Sofia's
43 Long tiring
41 Tire filler
country
walk
42 Brown of
19 Meal
44 James -

renown

avolder

Jones

45 Big
continent
46 . Ward off
47 Heavymetal band

49

unit

Fre i ~hl

51 Comda ·cry

52 ''Norma _ ..

53 Nurse

a drink

·

.

bid
shOws 0·6by
points.
a nts.
single
jtJmp 7-9.
re quirements
two poi
A simple
suit
and a cue-bid 10-t t (or a poor 12
deemed nol wo&lt;lh an opening bid) .
In today's deal. if North were not a
passed hand, he would jump to two
spa des ove r South's double, South
would raise to three spa des, and North
would go on to game. Here, !hough,
North cue-bids two diamonds. then raises two spades to three. South is happy
(o have a shot at game.
West leads the diamond three , low from
a tripleton when he has not supported
his partner's suit. (If he Md raised, he
would have led the eigh t, top of nothing.
to warn partner that he had no honor in
the suit.)
East takes two diamond tricks. then
plays a third rou nd. After rulling, how
should South continue?
Wit h three red-suit losers, declarer mus t
find the club queen . And he should leave
clubs for as late ·as possible. First, he
ct1ecks the points, noting that only 16
' .
.
are mlsstng. Second, he draws trumps.
Third, he plays on hearts tOfind out who
holds the ace. When il tu rns out to be
West, East is marked with the club
queen lor his opening bid. South finesses clubs through East to ma~e his con·
tract. ·

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos

Cele:lt1ty C1pner cryp1ograms a·e created I•OI""" cjucl aiiO'S b). lambu~ ce~o e O:!SI a1o ~'esel'lt
Ea:h le~e· ~\the c1 ~her 51aM siJ' a~~t'" e&lt;
Toaay·s clue · H equa!S C

" V

HSK

UVKW

CN

X E X ON

USDGX

DSG I L

Z.

AL X
•

AL S A V

X CXOY PK

PNYA X O 'Y

U.

DVP TDS I L N VK

" AL X IXSOG

'lllur~Birthd.,y :

Friday, Sept. 26, 2008
By Bernice Beda O•ol
Because yo u'll be a bil bolder than usual
in t!le year Shead, you'll have an edge
over your competitors: you'll also be luCkier than usual In all your undertakings.
Yo u wofl'l be ·a foolish risk taker. bu t a
bold enlrepreneur instead .
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0 cl. 23) - Th e probabrtities for making a ct ulet breakthrough
look bet ter than usual. Even tho ugh
you've kept this matter to yourself. when
comp leted, you might shout aboul it to all
who'lllisten.
SCOA PIO (Oct 24-NO'J. 22) - You migh t
find yourself in a position where you can
help a · lriefld ifl a meaningful way. It"ll
gladden your heart to do something nice
for a person you like.
SAGIITAAIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) Don't hesitate to as sisl an as s ~ i a te
when lhe occasion ari ses. Th is person
will be so apprecialive. he or she will look
tor reasons to recipr&lt;X:ate in more ways
than anyone would expect.
CAPRI CORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) - Your
powers ol observation make you a persoil to be reckoned with , but this skill will
b~ di rected toward correc ting errors others ere• about to make without being a
know-it-all.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) - You
won"t be pusl'\y in assuming a leadership
role when d~ ng someth ing wiih another, ,
and he or she w1tt be glad you're takciflg
on the responsibility. This per son will recognize that you are competent.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) Cooperation is the key to accomplishiflg
things. Once yoiJ show a willingness to
unite and collaborate, your associates
will, too. Tt1ey'll pull for you if you'" p~J II Ior
them.
ARIE S (March 21·April 19) - Get a firm
commitmem with regard to yow remuneration before agreeing to take nn a
large assignment for another. You'll do a
be tter job If you like the. size of the
reward.
•
TAURUS (April 20-Mey 20) - Even if
you don't feel the same way about your
associates, you'll treat everyone with
eq ual consideration . More than a few will
appreciate tt1e compliment.
-· ·~
GEMINI (May 21-JUfle 20) - Thi s Is a
better·lt1an -average day lor completing
assignments - even though you found
them to be a bit distasteful in the Past.
Your good attitude w111 make them seem
easy.
CANCER {June 21-July 22) - Get
together with a friend you haven' t seen
lor a while. It could pro"Je to be an
extremely goo d meeting - OfiB you
haven't t1ad In a long time.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) - You're a generous person "to begin with, bu t this type of
behavior could take ·C!" a different !wist
when your klndneSI pays off lfl far
greeter measure for you tha n II dOes lor
lha recipient.
VI RGO (AIJg. 23-Sepl. 22)- The major
raaton you r words are likely to carry
more waight than usual I&amp; becauaa you 'll
talk straight from the heart. The ring ol
alncerlty and compa111on can't bl miltaken.

VY

S MAP DV P TDS I LN . "

U X GGVKV

...........

AstroGraph

DXSW .

PR EVIOUS SOLUTION - "Those who dwell among the be aut1es and
mysler1es of the earth are never alone or weary of l1fe . ·Rathel Carson

..

-~

':~~~~~T S©tt4U}A- ~bt/J~£ GA M!
- - , - -- -- Edh•d by CLAY R. POnAN - - - -- 0 four
Rearrange leffers · ol the
scrambled words billow

I
~

to form fcur

WORD

~ imple word.1

OI L OU R

I I I 1I
2

NI L E N
,------ -'-- -, m
1---r--r---r-·l'.,.-) ~'
0

Dad to son !-(Oing tt w a~ to
sc hool. ·· He c;1rl'!ll l of ll'i inr

~

~~~L_~~~ ~

I'
I

@)

UNI( !Af,\RIE AB() 'I ( l[lifR'.

TO Gtf ANSWtR

,

I

'

I TJ

SCRAMLETS AN S WER S ~ · 2 HJ ~
·· IJosnge - Awoke - Wl1 isk
Ove rh eard at sporting

they tit•nol

n 11c

\l'oo dt•n \\'11 0 WINo
c vco l . "The mmbk '~ ith r cfcrt.: l' ~ l:.

WHO \V [ /\S."

ARLO &amp; JANIS
HOW DO YOU H.!.~&lt;

AI.J'I !&gt;PECIFIC PR01&gt;\.E.M51

I'M ~LL ~ I GHT, I GUf.. ~ b,
IOUL

HlAVE T" IH ibT OfTHI&gt;l&amp;.~

11&lt;&lt; DRUG&lt; COMPMJY AOO Oil TV
GI.ID !

5~0ULDA5~ YOUA~Our

----v-

SOUP TO NUTZ

~\Jt. ~EE~

740-985-4141

Advertise
in this space for
$64 per month

e~t pan se

1 Embrace
6 Round
numbers?

last week we covered the basic replies
to a one-level takeout dotJbte. A simple
advan ce in a suit shows 0-8 points. a
single jump in a suit promises 9-11, and
a cue-b1d annotJnces 12-plus. But what
happens if the advancer (doubler's part ner) Is a passed hand, so cannot have
12 points?
ln this situation. the advancer lowers !lis

G

David Lewis

Help Wanted

We st

When partner is
a passed hand

GO At'I~Al&gt; ANI&gt; TAl'~ A LITTL.~ NAP--~'L/.. (.,OVE/l FOil YOlJ.

/&lt;!lEN

E-mail: captbill65 @yahoo.com
www.auctionzip.com
#5548

L &amp; L Tire Barn

S outh

Openi ng lead: • 3

Chur~h

440S7 W i pp lc

76 5
t A K Q J 10
.. Q 5 3

mo. pd

AUCTIONS/ANTIQUES

Johnson ' s Tree
Service

6 3

•

Sou th
4 K Q J 10
¥ K -1 2
• 9 1
.. A J 8:!

Stop &amp; Compare

BOGER HYSEllS
GARAIIE
IDIR 9-6 M·F
9-12 Sal. .

•

43 Vast

18
19 Sundial

Eas t

t

'I A.I 09 :1
+ a "' ~
... 7 6 4

740-992-1611

7:60 AM- 8:00 PM

l40-9!l2-5682

• a5

Remodeling

to 10'x30'

111411

Wes t

· Complete

Slzu5'xtO'

,_'

+

6 5, 2
.. K 10 9

• Garages

740.949-2 217

09 -2s-oa

4 A 9 7 &lt;1
• QJ a

ROBERT
BISSEll

ACROS S

11
12
13

j

Nl)rth

28 Years Experience

For sale by owner. 312 ·
home on 1/2 acre level
lot. located at 3089 e uIaviii e Pike. Attached garage . .
Appraised
.$1 10,000.
· · Asking.
$98,500.
Call
740-446·4910

NEA Crossword. Pu zz l e

·BRIDGE

A
CelebratiOn
ol
l1fe Overbrook
Center,
loca ted at 333 Page
Ten positions need hlle ~
Street . Middleport, Ohio
by next week!
is pleasea to announce
No expe t~ ence requned!
t!"!at
due
to
Internal
No Sales!
h&lt;l
fl
ges
in
our
faCility,
C
No Cottect1ons1
we are accepting appli·
cation s
for
full
time
Full and Part·hme
7P-7_
A
LPN's,
part
time
Positions!
Professional Work' . 7A-7P LPN'S and lull
cpld
part
time
tome
Env1ronmen.t'
STNA
's·
to
J
O
in
our
Medical. Der1 tal. EAP,
fnendly and dedi cated
40, K!
statt .
Applicant's must
On-site Doctor!
be
dependable.
team
Weekly Pay and
player s with pos1tive aliiBonus lncenii'JBS I
tud es
lpterested applicant s car) pick LIP an apCafl TODAYf
plication
M-F
8:30
Interview
AM-4:30 PM. All eligible
TOMORROW!!
applicar1ts will then be
Work NEXT W~EKU!
coot acted by Holl 1e Bum·
garner. LPN. Stall DevelH 88-IMC-PAYU
opment
EKI. 2331
Coordin ator@ 740 -992htt p :/~ob •.l nlocisio n . com
64 72. EOE &amp; A ParticiServ1ce Manager &amp; Serv- pan t ol the Drug-Free
Ice Te chnic1an pos1 tions workplace prograff] . .
av a1lable. Health care &amp;
Rehrement plans a\'allabl e Please send re sume
to
LLC@C AAEQ.CO M
or
fax to 740-44 6-9 104

2 BR house 1n (,lalhpolis,
WID
conn.
$41 5/mo
$150/dep. You pay all
ut11ities. No sOCtion 8 or
Cilll
Wayr~e
HUD.
404-456-3802

basement
w/gara ge.
hahd1cap
accessible.
$650
per
mo.,
740-94H303

The Daily Sentinel • Page B5

Sign on Bonya

$17.89-$28.27/HR.,
now
hiring
For
applicahon
and free government jOb
info , call Amertcan As·
soc
of
labOr
1-913-599-8226.
24 fh rs
emp. serv

3 bd:, 2 bath Pomeroy,

www.mydailysentinel.com

Offeri ng a $250

POSTAL JOBS

f(0~ 7

Thursday, September 25, 2008
ALLEY OOP

Modica I

Help Want.il - General

FEDERAL

1br , House in New Haven. WV. total electric,
everyth ing 1n walk1ng diStance $300 month. $300
deposit.
No ·
Pels
304-882-3652

Land

Buy

Want to buy Junk Cars.
call 74()..388·0884

3000

4 h..•~o l. 1 harh .
!:lank R..: pu ' (:i'i Lh '" '!. .!tJ
p:ar~ . IVi APR 1 11'1 h~ llnt! ~
~B!Ir mu'

Apartmonfl/

Thursday, September 25, 2008

www.mydailysentinel.com

Ma~

r

~ve

a ll:&gt;~n

EGe;s, Please ?

�Page 84 • The Daily Sentinel
J SOO

RP 1 E:,t llf

HouMa For

Rent

Government &amp; Federal
Jobo

~ e n ! ] •':&gt;

2007 Hoo&lt;la VTX 1300R
1800 miles black 57800.
388-8380

TownhovMo

Sports Ulility
Clip lh1s AD and take 11
w1th you wh en you VI.SII
our community to get
this spec1al discounl.
Move -in in Oct and get
$100.00 your 2BR Apt.
oft Nov rent Currently
rent1ng 1 &amp; 2 BR un1ts
SpaCious floor plans,
ranch &amp; town home style
living, playground &amp;
basketball,coun . on-site
laundry tacihty, 24 hr
emergency maintenance, quiet coun try loca tion close to major
medical
facilities,
pharmacies. grocery
store .. Just minutes
away !rom other ma1or
shopp1ng 1n the area.
Honeysuckle Hills
Apartments
266 Colonial Qrive #1 13
.Bidwell, Ohio 456 14
740-446-3344
Office Hours M, W, F
9AM - SPM

Jeep
Grande
:Cherokee lorado , gold
o utside _wlgray trim , 4 0,
'ale , cruise. tilt , EC, 1601&lt;.,
4999

$4 ,800, no Sunday calls
please (740)992-7599 ·

Trud.a
2002 Ford Ra nger XLT,
41,775 m1les, 4.0 6cyl.
aLJt omatic,

4x4;

PW,PlocK, MP3 CO stereo, Sliding rear window,

bed-liner. hard Tonneau
cover, Excellent Condition 304-773-5626
2006

Silverado.

Chevy

low .miles· ,
304·593-0876
304-593-0959.

4-

WD.
O&lt;

1988 · E-350 Box Truck
but needs work.
339·0885

runs

Vans
2003
Ford
Windstar
$4,500 740-367-7166

Want To

Re&lt;1

.
Apt ,

E ~ta t e

Sales

=;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
~

~;;;;;;;;;C;;;o:;;m;;;m;;;o;;;r;;;ci;;;o;;;l~;;;;;;
For
sale
or
lease
offi celwarehouse/storage
great 1ocat19n in Gallipolis.
1800
sq.
tt
$400/monih. Call · Wayne
_404-456-3802
For Salo

MII(J .fi!U...tll -4{) q

POST
OFFICE
NO W
HIRING avg. Pay $20/hr
0
or
o57Kfyr,
includes
Fed.Ben, OT. Place by
adSource ,. flO! affil iated
with USPS who hires
2br in Pt. Pl. $450/mo .. 1-866-403-2582
dep. req., no pets, de'I
_,
I
tached
garage .
w/d He p Wantaa - Genera

hookup 304 -812-5030 or "A Place to Ca ll HOME"
3.04-675-6474
Foster Paren ts Neededlll
2br. 1ba. Ou1te Neigh - $30-$48 a day with pd
Dorhood,
No· Smoking, respi te Tra imng begins
No Pe ts $450 month plus ifl Seplember Call Oasis
Depsoit
&amp;
Reference. to help a ch ild lind a
to call
home.
WatmfTrashfSewcr
pa1d place
1-877-32
5-1558.
740-446-6939
$250 Sign o n Bonus
Ten pos1!10ns need hlled
by next week!
No e)(per1 ence required!
No Sales1
No Collections!

IAcreogel

1BR
WID hOokups,
Storage
satellite TV incl. w/rent,
close to hoSpital. Ca ll Storage Rent al Mason
County
Fairgrounds
· 740· 339-0362
$8.00 per foot accepting
1 BR Apt s tor Rent 1st
month of October Wed
A&lt;Je ,
Gallipolis.
&amp;
Sat
9am-4pm
$375-$325
No
Pets
304-675 -S463 "
HUD
01
cons11uct1011.
Wa sher/Dryer
Hook-up,
Manufact ured
Oepos1t
Req. 4000
Housmg
(740)339·3063

By Owner

2 bedroom apartment in

2 BR

~ og Cabin
surrounded by wood s and
farm land Bidwell area .
$60.000 740-24,5-S981

Full and ParHime
Positions
D&lt;iy and Evening
Shifts
Professional Work
En"Ji ronment!
Medical, Denta l. EAP,
401KI
On·site DoCtor
Weekl y Pay and
Bonus Incentives!

=;;;:":"....~Ro;;;n;;;lo:OI;;;'o:-~:":"

Centenary,
all
utilit1es
paid except electriC · :
2 1:.11': trailer beside Wal$350 . a moflth Ca ll 740 man in Mason $475 mo.
256-11 35 lea ve
mesplus depos1t, references
sage
required, (740)992·3961

2 001 Clayton Rockwood
14x70 trailer 1".287 acre 2BR APT. CIA. (740)
2BA trailer.. wid. rei ,
441' 0194
land calt44 6-667B
stove, HIP. fenced back
;;;;;;;,;;;;;,;;;,:;:,,;;;;;,;;,""""" 3 rooms and bath up- yard . NO PETs and. NO
":"'H;;;;;;o~O:oe;;;o;;;Fo~r;;;Sa;;;;;;l;;;e~ stairs. Completely fur- SMOKING. S300 deposit
~
nished with WID. No plus · $375 month rent
2 bdrm Fixer ~pper 2913 pets. Ref. Req. 441 _0245
firm. G[}ll
Ferry
cau
AS IS
Madison· Ave.
2nd
304-849-2932
leave
Furnished
apartment
$1 3,000
Firm
ave. Upsta 1rs all utilities number
304·675- 1905
1 ·2
-~~~-::-~-pm'd , 1 BR, no· pe1s, G·aBR 1 bath like n"w
"
3 Bed , HUD Homes! lipolis. 446- 9523
3675 Sulaville Pike no
Only $15,300 for listings
electric
CONVENIENTLY
LO· B00-820- 4946 ex A019
CATED
&amp;
AFFORDor
38A 2.58A 1721 sq .- It ABLE ! Townhouse
and/or
with tull Bsml. , 2 car 2FP m~nt~.
on 0.6AC . in Spring Va l- houses for rent.
ley Est. move in ready. 740-44 1-1 11.1 f.or
Appoint. ,
Only cation &amp; informa tion
740-286 -52 80

Sportswriter
The Ohio Valley· Publish·
1119 'Co. rs seekmg mo\1"Ja ted. people-oriented
llldlvidual ti 1111 a vacancy
tn the news dept as a
Sportswnter. The successful candida te w1ll
cover high school athletics ifl the area lor the
da1ly edition Or Um newspapal. as we ll as assist
with the production ol,
spo·rts pag es. E~ce llent
writing and English skills,
photograp hy SkillS and
knowledge of desktop
publishing are sought.
The posifiOn is lull t1me.
40 hours a week, wi th
bene fitS. Interested par·
ties can send resumes to
Kevm Kelly. Manag1ng
EditOr, Oh10 Valley PubliShing Go.. 82 5 Th1rd
Ave.,·Gallipofis, Ohio
4563 1 or kkelly @mydaily tribune.co m. No
phofle calls please.

Recru1t "JO iunteers lm
non -profi t organizations
such as St. Jude
Children's Research
Hosp1lal
Get pa1d to make &lt;1
'
difference'

Wanted To Lease. Bow
hunting
land
need
enough for 3 people
(828) -380-0594

Call TODAY!
Interview

TOMORROW!r
Work NEXT WEEK!!!

1-888-IMC-PAYU
Ext 1901
http :/ljobs.l nto~lsion .c
om
OeliveryM/arehouse
person needed, lull time. 1mmediate opening, must
hB.ve good dri"Jing
re'
cord . App lY- Lifes tyle Furniture 856 Third Ave.
Gallipolis, 9:30·5:00 No
Phone Calls

Phillip
Alder

~~
YOUNG'S

CARPENTER
SERVICE
• Room Addition • &amp;
Remodtllni:J
· New G..-ages
· Ele&lt;:trlcel &amp; Plumbing
• Rooting &amp; Gr.rtter1
· Vinyl Siding &amp; Painting
· Pallo and Porch Deck&amp;
wv 036725

V.C. YOUNG Ill
992-621 S
Pomeroy d hto
25 Years Loca l b pc'IC'nce

Hill's Self
Storage
29670 Bashan Road
Racine, Ohio

4 577 1

coamucno11

Hours

• New Homes

St.lll124 Ptmlfll, 11

Auctioneer:
Billv R. Goble Jr.
140-416-1164

· CDmplete Tree Care
ln1urotd · Fr~ E1tlm11 tn
740-44 1-9381
20 ~ •

.I

..,. ,,,_,,..,c.

Dealer; N orth
Vu lnerable: N either

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

AT

0

·1 "'
O r;'
~~

i

\

wofl.l:

~~~
~l ~

~- ~~
.l ,. ~

Sflt/ol Cit/all
f1iKQ11rlf

~2" ~

~~g
~

f.~

~

tBARNEY

1·25
::';~~~~~=~~~i~~:~~~=~=~~~~~~~~~~~==~=~~,.:!~~~J

Rd .

l)1 nn t'rny, OH
Pni nt :-. ) ..,

New &amp; U!-.~J 'l;ires.

We bu~ liSed ti res ..
co mpu ter

·wheel

a l ig mn e nt ~ ·. l ig.h t
mechani L' work.
~o m plet e

Hardwood CabJne1ry And FurniCure
www.tJm b erereekca'binetry.com

senril'e oil

THAT'LL BE

PLUS ANOTHER

WHAT?!

TWENNY

FER ONE

DOLLARS,

FIVE

!!

BOOKAY ?!

MtSTOFER
SMIF !!

change!-.. small c11 gine
repair..
We servi&lt;.:e uml

wi nterize boats ;md
RV· s

be~

(740) 992-5344
41

Mainttmance /
Oorfteatic

M on- Fri .
g: ()() am·-

4:30pm
· Sut. ~ :00 am - 12
We appreciate your

Part -time
maintenance
wm ker,
25-30hrs
per
wee k, Pay ba sed on experience.
Call
(740)379-908 3
Mon-Fri
"be tween 9am -3pm

-·''

I I 1\ I'

Racine, Qhio 740-247-2019

([)~(1 {111

l l l \SI I( L( 110\

Concrete Removal

TtjE BORN LOSER

"iT's f&gt;.. &amp;AU\If"Ul ~IG.Il.'t I'OIZ..""!

business

Cell :

Owners :
Jon Van Meter

FOO't\'&gt;M..L! II\ IS IS it.~
J/o-tiiE.S-l'LL &amp;.1\1\1'\DLI t-IC.
T~E.

740-416-5047

y-A,t-1\&gt; 11\'{. PAA\t\ER 1-\t:.RE, ~
.ltr-\00 ~. WII..L &amp; 00\ti.C.
1&gt;\E. C.OLOR COtl\r-\Et-1\r-R'&lt;.

""'q

PLI&gt;.'{-

(','{- PLf&gt;l'&lt;...

email:

&amp;

jrshadfrm@aol.com

Paul Rowe

740-992-6971
Insured
WV042t82 Free Estimates
Help Wanted

0

Stanley TreeTrimming
&amp; Removal

Quality Improvement

I

* l~c:~ so nable

Joint Commission Director
Pleasant

Vall ey .

Hospital

acceptin g resumes f o r

a

Is

t urrent ly

full -t im e Qu ality

Improve m e nt/ Joint Commission Director.
Direc t Care StaH in residential youth program.
Must be 21 years of age.
~~""':~':':"~-..,.., Pay based on experl2004 Doublewide
in enc:e .
Call
new condition . · 4 bed - (740)379 -9083
Mon-Fri
room, 2 bath, all appli- 9am -3pm.
included,
ances
$37,000
located
at Hours from 9·5 Fi"J e (5)
176 Zuspan Lane Ma- days a week , Secretaria l
son City 304-675-211 7 ··
wo rk. filing, typin g, computer updates,
Wages
n9goliable. No Benefi ts
Poin t Pleasant Bu siness
Se fi d Resume to CLA I 5
c/o Point Pleasant Regi ster, 200 Main St Pt.
Pleasant,WV 25550

Must have· cwre ni

WV RN

lice nse. BSN or

e quivale nt r equired . Exper ience in acu te

care sett ing in a ·Joint .Commi ssion
a ccredited . h ospital

prefe rred .

manage m e nt/Supe rv iso ry
prefe rr ed .

Previ ou s

OK/'•.Y. NOW

,

Previo u s

expe ri en ce

exp eri en ce

in

th e

Pe rform an ce Impro v emen t fi eld prefe rre d .
Previous e xp erie nce in

Joint

Commi ssion

Surveys pref e rre d .

Rates

* l n~ ured

*' Ex per ienced
Rcfercn..:es Av ai l ab l e ~
C:t ll (Ja ry Sta nley @
74ll.5 9 1-g044,
Please leave messaoe

TR EE WORK
~ r.,ppl'fl ,

Take DoWn

&amp; R emo val
. Affordabl e,
Rcusunublc Price

Vinyl
Sid ing/Replace menr
Windows/Remodeling
Bonded &amp; Insured
740-992-1493 Offi ce
740-416-8339 Ce ll
Free E~l i mated
Pomeroy , Oh io

c/o Human Resources

2520 Valley Drive
Point Pleasant. WV 25550
304· 675 -6975, or apply on- line

AA/EOE

_8oo
~-6·20
""';·4~6~46~e·x•T•4•6,.2~ --:~-:-:~--

~H otJ se w1th 2 acres m
· SR
160. Will consider .. land

contract.
379-2923

441-5062

or

Now apcepling
applications at·
Valley View Apartments
800 State Route 325

Thurman, Ohio 45685
740-245-9170
Nice 4 br, 2 ba home on
Klneon · Dr in GallipoliS. ' 1-2 Bedroom Apanments
Quite neighborhood Ofl with appliances fum ished
On site laundry fac1lity.
Qead end street. large 2
Call
lor detailS or pick up
ca r garage and finished
application at rental
tlasement. 740-256-11 09
office.
;Tri-level brickJcedar on
Poss1bi lity of rental
·. 98 acres, Rutland, Oh,
assistance.
'private
Settir\g ,
eat-In
Equal Housing
kitchen, 3""' br., 2 fu ll
Opportunity
b"alhs. !g. livingroom. lg.
TOO# 41 9·526-0466
family room , out of Uood
"Ttlis insti tution is an
plain, (740)742-2404 or
Equal Opportu nity
/ 41l-949-293Q
Provider and Employer"
Land

(Aa.agel '

Salary based on e~perience. EEO Employe&lt;
_

Drivers &amp; De~very

'1 2"p~umo lr.:h w~days

Driver's Education po sition open in the Gallipolis
and Meigs area. Flellible
hours. Mu'st b6 able to
work
e"Jening~
· and
weekends. Job entails
classroom and behind
the wheel ii"ls truction for
new
drivers
Qualified
candidates mu.st have a
school
diploma,
high
valid
dri"Jers
license,
&lt;f@ · 'ii' . .. .. . ... . " ..
pass
background
checks, e)(p. preferred in
traffic sa fety. taw en·
lorcement, or teaching. '::""--~--~­
or we will train . EOE
Owner Operator Opper·
tunl11es A&amp;J Truck1ng .
Eledrical f Plumbing
Ma&lt;lella, Ohio has opportunities available tOr
EKperienced MIG Welder Owner Operators within
. w1th the ability to read the reg1on. We feature

~

;.,""!!!!!!""',;""'!!!!!!"""

2doac.
+I·
on
Oa!!ia/Moigs o., Ot-j border. Great hunting land.
$210,000
neg. ""'""":"'""""""""""" blue prints, Competitive
304-593-5280
Commercial
Wages
with
excellent
~nefil package. Evening
.t O Acres/garage/camper Commerical Space for shift . Send Resume To:
Rent, Main St. Pt. Pleas. Imperial Electric Co. 345
contact
or $400/mo.
2000
sq/H Sycamore St: Middleport,
'shroese@yahoo.com
OH 45760
740-245-9015
703·50 1·4808

' weekly settlements
Illeluding tu et surch;:u ge &amp;
tra11er rerltal. Operators
hould have newer equipmen!. For mqre
information- contact Oennis at 800-462-9365

Guttering
Seamless Gutt ers
Roofing . Siding, Gutters
Insured &amp; Bonded
740-653- 9657

Racycllng

PEANUTS
AND THIS ONE 6U'( RAN
FASTER THAN TI-lE REST OF
TllEM,AND THAT'S SPORTS
FOR TOt&lt;l 16~T. AND W~O CARES?

'' AND THEN THIS ONE TEAM
BEAT THE OTHER TEAM IN
SOME KIND OF 6AME .. ''

503 Mlllll• MldiiiiPOft. 01145110
JIIO-IBHII4
Slllrti1Vt.H Dl2:H1m .

Advertise
in this
space
for

........................
PlYING TOP PRICES RIB

hiiiiiiC.._... ......

111•n1111n1
ICIII fir Cli I •ll'rlclll

COW and BOY
NOT·EVERYONE WILL
LOVE YOU THE WAY
YOU WOWLO LIKE.

PSI CONSTRUCTION

$64

needing a full ti me job .
You need to be honest, a
person ot in tegrity, wiih
good pe ople ·s~ ill s. You
also need to be able to
follow instructions and
have an ability to listen
and lead people in the
right direction. I need
peopl e who want to work
an d will show up for
Work. II you are a rcce fl!
college grad an.d cannot
find employment and leel
that you are qualified,
gi"Je us a phance until a
job in your career path
becomes avail able. Call
Pa t Hill, New Car Manager for afl interview at
446-9800.

H&amp;H

Man lay's

Pleasant Valley Hospital

at www.pvalley.orz .

f need to find (2) people

---,,--

IIIII MIHIV-fi'IIIIVI:OD llll-6:. 1m

{304) 675 - 4340

New H.3ven, one bedroom apartment, de"posit
&amp;
refe rences,
740-992-0165
~-::-~~--~
Nil·e I hr. ;\ ppl ilml'c ~. fu rConttnJction
ni~hed . ~.17.~ + deposit. nc11r. ~~~::;;;o;;;;;;::;;;o;;;;;;~
PPIIS
JL14-fJ75 ·' 10(.)
ur Skilled Carpenters, must
.~M- 6 7 ~ -.'i.'iOY
have own tools. FaK re·
::N~
ice~""';C::Ie~a~n--G~&lt;~o~un~d sumas to 740-388 -9530
Foreclosure
4br,
2ba, Floor, 2br, WID hookup , o r ma1
·1 1o: PO BOK 55 ,
only ' $29,900! Prices to
B'd ell
OH
456 14
ReterencesiPeposiVNo
I w ,
.
Sell!
For
listings Pets 304·675-5162
Some
travel
required .

' MOUNT

ANNOYING:'

Com me rl"it!l ~~ R,,sid('lllial

740-444-5 152

Send resumes to :

O r fax :

YOU 'RE
ST"-RTING
TO A!&gt;CENt&gt;

Quality Seamless
Gutters
Maintenance Plus

. *Prompt and Q uality
Wu rk ...

L

RICK PRICE

per
month

'20" c~umo lnctl Sunday .
" ""'· ~un OFFIOE AT 992·2155

Public Notice
· NOTICE OF LIEN SALE
t he personal property
and contents of the fol·
lowing storage units

BU SINESS AFTER
HOURS
at The Middleport Clinic
Introducing .
.

Tess Simon, MD
Pysician specializing ·in
Internal Medicine

Wednesday,
September 24, 2008
4 p.m. to 6 p.m.
Located at 788 North
Second Avenue
Middleport, OH
(740) 992-6434
Hosteq by Pleasant Valley
Hospital &amp; Meigs County
Chamber of Commerce
Special gifts appetizers and
a grand prize drawing
PUBLI C IS INVITED

will be auctioned for
sale t o satisfy the lien
of Hartwell Storage.
The sale' will be held at
the Hartwell Storage
facility, :14055 Gaegllen
Rd., Pomeroy, Ohio on
October 1t , 2008 at
10:00 a.m.
Unl1147
Kelly Miller
P.O. BOK 884
New Haven , WV 25265
Uni11 59
KellyMIIIer
P.O. Bo&gt;884
New Haven, WV 25265
Unll 112
Kelly Miller
P.O, BoK 884
New Haven, WV 25265
Unll l76
•
Kelly Miller
P.O. BoK884
New Ha ven , WV 25265
Unl1117
J ane Jennings
1457 Hocking Rd •
Llltle Hock ing, Ohio
45742
Unit 145
Terra Hart
6 Oa k St.
Pom eroy, Oh io 4 5769
(9) 25 (10) 2

Obi
2•
ol A

Pass
Pass
Pass

Construction
• VInyl Siding

Roofing, Siding,
Soffit, Decks,
Doors, Windows;

• Replacement
Windows
·Rooting
• Decks
· Garages'

Electric, Plumbing,

YOU HAVE
MAIL.

· Pole Buildings
• Room Additions
Owner :

James Keesee II
742·2332

GARFIELD
Dear Spider,
3... 2 ... 1...

)

Local Contractor

740-367-0544
Free Eatlmatea

740-367-0536

,(;LICK
For Remodeling und New Hbuse Building
C all :

MARC UM CONSTRUCTION

Additions • Garages • Vinyl
a n d WoOd Siding • Roofing • Pole
Barns • Patio 's. Porches and Decks

• R oo m

MIKE W. MARCUM, OWNER
472 39 Riebe l

Road. t ong Bollom. O H

GRIZZWELLS

! &amp;01).. 7\UI&lt;.\1% FE'il.l\'\6 ~~~~ l\E'tl
6\~l.fRltNI? CAWT \IE ~STED

YoU' MU~T

46 Melee
48 Held up
50 Ro le
- Ia vista!
pl ayers
Notre Dame 54 Sky hunter
Dilate
55- Lama
Permit
56 Hormone
Brewing
produeer
need
57 Inch alo ng
(2 wda.)
Put down turf
DOWN

North
Pass
2t
34
Pa ss

15
16

East
l t
Pass
Pass
Pass

WIIASTA'TEP

Cell : 740-4 16- 1834
25+ yea r.~ experie11ce Free E.~timllle!i

r·
____

,.l _____ _

1 Amigo

numeral
21 Rough
shelter
22 Kill a bill
23 Vehicle
on runners
25 Vu
'
28 Player' s rep
30 Large

of Fidel

2 Negligent
3 Deadl y

20 Thing s

snake

22 Flower '

4

Whistlestop
5 Glass

container

24 Copy
a cassette
square
25 Publish
antelope
6 Insult witl ily 26 ·Cibud31 - Paul o,
7 Baseball
burs ts
Brazil
stat
27 Hong32 Well-known 8 Slernum
29 Make lace
uncle
bones
34 Miser's .
33 So!
9 Fjord po"
cache
35 Water
10 Drop
36 Kind ot
holder
feathers
lineup
14 Telegraph
37 USN rank
(h yph.)
38 Bullring bull
syllabl es
39 Whale like
40 Gill
15 Gobbled up
Shamu
alternative 17 Sofia's
43 Long tiring
41 Tire filler
country
walk
42 Brown of
19 Meal
44 James -

renown

avolder

Jones

45 Big
continent
46 . Ward off
47 Heavymetal band

49

unit

Fre i ~hl

51 Comda ·cry

52 ''Norma _ ..

53 Nurse

a drink

·

.

bid
shOws 0·6by
points.
a nts.
single
jtJmp 7-9.
re quirements
two poi
A simple
suit
and a cue-bid 10-t t (or a poor 12
deemed nol wo&lt;lh an opening bid) .
In today's deal. if North were not a
passed hand, he would jump to two
spa des ove r South's double, South
would raise to three spa des, and North
would go on to game. Here, !hough,
North cue-bids two diamonds. then raises two spades to three. South is happy
(o have a shot at game.
West leads the diamond three , low from
a tripleton when he has not supported
his partner's suit. (If he Md raised, he
would have led the eigh t, top of nothing.
to warn partner that he had no honor in
the suit.)
East takes two diamond tricks. then
plays a third rou nd. After rulling, how
should South continue?
Wit h three red-suit losers, declarer mus t
find the club queen . And he should leave
clubs for as late ·as possible. First, he
ct1ecks the points, noting that only 16
' .
.
are mlsstng. Second, he draws trumps.
Third, he plays on hearts tOfind out who
holds the ace. When il tu rns out to be
West, East is marked with the club
queen lor his opening bid. South finesses clubs through East to ma~e his con·
tract. ·

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos

Cele:lt1ty C1pner cryp1ograms a·e created I•OI""" cjucl aiiO'S b). lambu~ ce~o e O:!SI a1o ~'esel'lt
Ea:h le~e· ~\the c1 ~her 51aM siJ' a~~t'" e&lt;
Toaay·s clue · H equa!S C

" V

HSK

UVKW

CN

X E X ON

USDGX

DSG I L

Z.

AL X
•

AL S A V

X CXOY PK

PNYA X O 'Y

U.

DVP TDS I L N VK

" AL X IXSOG

'lllur~Birthd.,y :

Friday, Sept. 26, 2008
By Bernice Beda O•ol
Because yo u'll be a bil bolder than usual
in t!le year Shead, you'll have an edge
over your competitors: you'll also be luCkier than usual In all your undertakings.
Yo u wofl'l be ·a foolish risk taker. bu t a
bold enlrepreneur instead .
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0 cl. 23) - Th e probabrtities for making a ct ulet breakthrough
look bet ter than usual. Even tho ugh
you've kept this matter to yourself. when
comp leted, you might shout aboul it to all
who'lllisten.
SCOA PIO (Oct 24-NO'J. 22) - You migh t
find yourself in a position where you can
help a · lriefld ifl a meaningful way. It"ll
gladden your heart to do something nice
for a person you like.
SAGIITAAIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) Don't hesitate to as sisl an as s ~ i a te
when lhe occasion ari ses. Th is person
will be so apprecialive. he or she will look
tor reasons to recipr&lt;X:ate in more ways
than anyone would expect.
CAPRI CORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) - Your
powers ol observation make you a persoil to be reckoned with , but this skill will
b~ di rected toward correc ting errors others ere• about to make without being a
know-it-all.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) - You
won"t be pusl'\y in assuming a leadership
role when d~ ng someth ing wiih another, ,
and he or she w1tt be glad you're takciflg
on the responsibility. This per son will recognize that you are competent.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) Cooperation is the key to accomplishiflg
things. Once yoiJ show a willingness to
unite and collaborate, your associates
will, too. Tt1ey'll pull for you if you'" p~J II Ior
them.
ARIE S (March 21·April 19) - Get a firm
commitmem with regard to yow remuneration before agreeing to take nn a
large assignment for another. You'll do a
be tter job If you like the. size of the
reward.
•
TAURUS (April 20-Mey 20) - Even if
you don't feel the same way about your
associates, you'll treat everyone with
eq ual consideration . More than a few will
appreciate tt1e compliment.
-· ·~
GEMINI (May 21-JUfle 20) - Thi s Is a
better·lt1an -average day lor completing
assignments - even though you found
them to be a bit distasteful in the Past.
Your good attitude w111 make them seem
easy.
CANCER {June 21-July 22) - Get
together with a friend you haven' t seen
lor a while. It could pro"Je to be an
extremely goo d meeting - OfiB you
haven't t1ad In a long time.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) - You're a generous person "to begin with, bu t this type of
behavior could take ·C!" a different !wist
when your klndneSI pays off lfl far
greeter measure for you tha n II dOes lor
lha recipient.
VI RGO (AIJg. 23-Sepl. 22)- The major
raaton you r words are likely to carry
more waight than usual I&amp; becauaa you 'll
talk straight from the heart. The ring ol
alncerlty and compa111on can't bl miltaken.

VY

S MAP DV P TDS I LN . "

U X GGVKV

...........

AstroGraph

DXSW .

PR EVIOUS SOLUTION - "Those who dwell among the be aut1es and
mysler1es of the earth are never alone or weary of l1fe . ·Rathel Carson

..

-~

':~~~~~T S©tt4U}A- ~bt/J~£ GA M!
- - , - -- -- Edh•d by CLAY R. POnAN - - - -- 0 four
Rearrange leffers · ol the
scrambled words billow

I
~

to form fcur

WORD

~ imple word.1

OI L OU R

I I I 1I
2

NI L E N
,------ -'-- -, m
1---r--r---r-·l'.,.-) ~'
0

Dad to son !-(Oing tt w a~ to
sc hool. ·· He c;1rl'!ll l of ll'i inr

~

~~~L_~~~ ~

I'
I

@)

UNI( !Af,\RIE AB() 'I ( l[lifR'.

TO Gtf ANSWtR

,

I

'

I TJ

SCRAMLETS AN S WER S ~ · 2 HJ ~
·· IJosnge - Awoke - Wl1 isk
Ove rh eard at sporting

they tit•nol

n 11c

\l'oo dt•n \\'11 0 WINo
c vco l . "The mmbk '~ ith r cfcrt.: l' ~ l:.

WHO \V [ /\S."

ARLO &amp; JANIS
HOW DO YOU H.!.~&lt;

AI.J'I !&gt;PECIFIC PR01&gt;\.E.M51

I'M ~LL ~ I GHT, I GUf.. ~ b,
IOUL

HlAVE T" IH ibT OfTHI&gt;l&amp;.~

11&lt;&lt; DRUG&lt; COMPMJY AOO Oil TV
GI.ID !

5~0ULDA5~ YOUA~Our

----v-

SOUP TO NUTZ

~\Jt. ~EE~

740-985-4141

Advertise
in this space for
$64 per month

e~t pan se

1 Embrace
6 Round
numbers?

last week we covered the basic replies
to a one-level takeout dotJbte. A simple
advan ce in a suit shows 0-8 points. a
single jump in a suit promises 9-11, and
a cue-b1d annotJnces 12-plus. But what
happens if the advancer (doubler's part ner) Is a passed hand, so cannot have
12 points?
ln this situation. the advancer lowers !lis

G

David Lewis

Help Wanted

We st

When partner is
a passed hand

GO At'I~Al&gt; ANI&gt; TAl'~ A LITTL.~ NAP--~'L/.. (.,OVE/l FOil YOlJ.

/&lt;!lEN

E-mail: captbill65 @yahoo.com
www.auctionzip.com
#5548

L &amp; L Tire Barn

S outh

Openi ng lead: • 3

Chur~h

440S7 W i pp lc

76 5
t A K Q J 10
.. Q 5 3

mo. pd

AUCTIONS/ANTIQUES

Johnson ' s Tree
Service

6 3

•

Sou th
4 K Q J 10
¥ K -1 2
• 9 1
.. A J 8:!

Stop &amp; Compare

BOGER HYSEllS
GARAIIE
IDIR 9-6 M·F
9-12 Sal. .

•

43 Vast

18
19 Sundial

Eas t

t

'I A.I 09 :1
+ a "' ~
... 7 6 4

740-992-1611

7:60 AM- 8:00 PM

l40-9!l2-5682

• a5

Remodeling

to 10'x30'

111411

Wes t

· Complete

Slzu5'xtO'

,_'

+

6 5, 2
.. K 10 9

• Garages

740.949-2 217

09 -2s-oa

4 A 9 7 &lt;1
• QJ a

ROBERT
BISSEll

ACROS S

11
12
13

j

Nl)rth

28 Years Experience

For sale by owner. 312 ·
home on 1/2 acre level
lot. located at 3089 e uIaviii e Pike. Attached garage . .
Appraised
.$1 10,000.
· · Asking.
$98,500.
Call
740-446·4910

NEA Crossword. Pu zz l e

·BRIDGE

A
CelebratiOn
ol
l1fe Overbrook
Center,
loca ted at 333 Page
Ten positions need hlle ~
Street . Middleport, Ohio
by next week!
is pleasea to announce
No expe t~ ence requned!
t!"!at
due
to
Internal
No Sales!
h&lt;l
fl
ges
in
our
faCility,
C
No Cottect1ons1
we are accepting appli·
cation s
for
full
time
Full and Part·hme
7P-7_
A
LPN's,
part
time
Positions!
Professional Work' . 7A-7P LPN'S and lull
cpld
part
time
tome
Env1ronmen.t'
STNA
's·
to
J
O
in
our
Medical. Der1 tal. EAP,
fnendly and dedi cated
40, K!
statt .
Applicant's must
On-site Doctor!
be
dependable.
team
Weekly Pay and
player s with pos1tive aliiBonus lncenii'JBS I
tud es
lpterested applicant s car) pick LIP an apCafl TODAYf
plication
M-F
8:30
Interview
AM-4:30 PM. All eligible
TOMORROW!!
applicar1ts will then be
Work NEXT W~EKU!
coot acted by Holl 1e Bum·
garner. LPN. Stall DevelH 88-IMC-PAYU
opment
EKI. 2331
Coordin ator@ 740 -992htt p :/~ob •.l nlocisio n . com
64 72. EOE &amp; A ParticiServ1ce Manager &amp; Serv- pan t ol the Drug-Free
Ice Te chnic1an pos1 tions workplace prograff] . .
av a1lable. Health care &amp;
Rehrement plans a\'allabl e Please send re sume
to
LLC@C AAEQ.CO M
or
fax to 740-44 6-9 104

2 BR house 1n (,lalhpolis,
WID
conn.
$41 5/mo
$150/dep. You pay all
ut11ities. No sOCtion 8 or
Cilll
Wayr~e
HUD.
404-456-3802

basement
w/gara ge.
hahd1cap
accessible.
$650
per
mo.,
740-94H303

The Daily Sentinel • Page B5

Sign on Bonya

$17.89-$28.27/HR.,
now
hiring
For
applicahon
and free government jOb
info , call Amertcan As·
soc
of
labOr
1-913-599-8226.
24 fh rs
emp. serv

3 bd:, 2 bath Pomeroy,

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Offeri ng a $250

POSTAL JOBS

f(0~ 7

Thursday, September 25, 2008
ALLEY OOP

Modica I

Help Want.il - General

FEDERAL

1br , House in New Haven. WV. total electric,
everyth ing 1n walk1ng diStance $300 month. $300
deposit.
No ·
Pels
304-882-3652

Land

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Want to buy Junk Cars.
call 74()..388·0884

3000

4 h..•~o l. 1 harh .
!:lank R..: pu ' (:i'i Lh '" '!. .!tJ
p:ar~ . IVi APR 1 11'1 h~ llnt! ~
~B!Ir mu'

Apartmonfl/

Thursday, September 25, 2008

www.mydailysentinel.com

Ma~

r

~ve

a ll:&gt;~n

EGe;s, Please ?

�Page B6- The Da.ily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

Thursday. September 25, 2008

Fall Car Care Guide
inside today's Sentinel

MLEF receives

donations, A2

.

This Weeks Winner!!!

MARILYN
MASON
.CYJNGRATS!

Middlep~rt
;,o CENTS • Vol. :,8, :"ooo. ;,;,

SPORTS

h'nter Tv Win A
FR I:' I:' J.U NCH!

• Southern loses to
Trimble ...see Page Bl

A..,_ of c•lcol•

........

dlecelllltCf!WM
-.~··~

~

,....::~:c

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

VRIDAY, SEI'TE:\1 BEH :!6. :!oo8

...

Tlllllelf .......baa • ..,_,

2 2 08 ~ackson Ave.
Point Pleasant,WV
304-675-5427

STARllNG
SEPTEMBER
.. . . 28.· ' 2008.
..
.

Sodexo Dinning
Senices
III(Oih~l on The l !nilt•t.,..ltl ,,r
Rio (;nuult•'s \'lllllpti, in f:,lm

.

•

.

.

. BY BRIAN

J.

REED

They hope it will be the site
of a picnic and seating area .
Meig s
County
Commissioners met in regular session Thursday with
Larry Woodford , Deputy
Director of the Ohi o
Department
of
Transportation Di slrict 10,
and
ODOT's
Debbie
Fought , to review a list of
proposed ·ODOT projects
for Meigs County through
2017.
That list include s nine
projects for next year.
including construction of
the new shared"use trail in
Middleport, landslide repair
projects and road paving .
Bridge replacements, and
repairs are also included on
the list for nex.t year and the
years ahead.

pours on

w,.

BY BETH SERGENT

hnn• ""'" 1 lh•ms tu dH111.o;e t'l'&lt;lm
indudsn)(: mud a• tu order
· umrlt•ts, (IU.strit'S, sulad har,

BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINELCOM

brcn!..fa~l and lunrh, dt•:o.~•a1.
it't• cream bur, ~uup, piau,

INSIDE

and much nwn•.
Our hrunrh hour-.; an·
II 11.111. to I p.m.

II ring )(lll r fmnil.1 and jninn~.

POMEROY - Although
all the structural. com;rete
pours are finished on the
new· Pomeroy
Mason
Bridge, the overlay pours on
the riding deck began yesterday evening . .
'it.
The first of four pours
. .
each have a minimum of
·' .
•
three days curing time and
..
......
are done a section at a time,
to
Ohio
according
I
Department
of
Transportation
'Project
Engineer Cary Betzing.
Yesterday's pour was to
begin at 6 p.m. and end
around 2 a.m. this morning .
The~e four pours are the
last of the major' construction on the new bridge witn
other incidental construction, including electrical
and finish work, to follow.
Betzing said the slope to
the bridge's Ohio approach
was done " with
the
approach slab poured
Wednesday . He added the
earth work on the new
Ohio 833 (near the threeway stop) should be done
before inclement fall
weather anJ' will include
two additional lane s of
traffi c.
,
Last week the form traveler,
a
piece
of
equipment/apparatus used
by workers to connect the
former spans, was removed
from the structure. Workers
began attaching the form
traveler to then two spans
last October. The apparatus
had to be redesigned in
Beth Sargent/photo
2006 causing an additional
Yesterday
evening
the
first
of
four
overlay
pours
on
the
new
.Pomeroy
_Mason
Bridge began
delay to the project due to
and wrapped up early this morning. The pours. over what w11l be the ndmg surface, are the
Please see Bridge, Al
last of the major construction on the new bridge.
~ ·~

$7.95 for adults 1111d I'· ~ ufl't•r
diM·uunlt'tlr·ut&lt;-s for t•hildn·n.

• Ohio communities
chilled by costly road
salt See Page A3
• Army Reserve
t,akes airli at
Cleveiand Clinic
jobs. See Page A3
• A Hunger For More.
. See Page Ali
• Religion News Briefs.
See Page A6

j'TI;;r(· ''IS'-:-s~,~h A Thing As
I
A Free Lunch!
I
Hnte r Here For A
I
I $30 Gift Certificate
I 'Ji&gt; One (H'/'hese Great Restaurants
I
Drawing_E ach Week!
I Name=~~~----~~~-t
1
I Phone#__~~~~~--------~-­
Mail to: Free Lunch
I.
• Gallipolis Daily Tribune
L
825 3rd Ave. Gallipolis , OH 45631

WEATIIER

·- - ...... ~ . ~ ........
;. ~ ~· 1111!!~.,.,· -·
. ' . {··~'ill, '' ~·
.. i':-··· . 't·!'l:'f·•,\',"!1,; ~"&lt;·
.

;i :

'!

Details on Page A2

BY BETH SERGENT '

$4.99
lunch Buffet

11 :oo

PO:AEROY
The
Meigs County American
Annie's Mailbox · A2 Cancer Society Advisory
Board recently met for its
Buckeye Edition
AS reg ular meeting and was
Calendars
A2 updated on a variety of free
ACS program s serving
Classifieds
84-6 Meigs County, including the
ACS ' Ferman E .. Moore
Comics
B7 Cancer
Resource Center.
Meig
s
ACS
Board
Editorials
A4
Member Courtney . ~im
faith • Values
As-7 reported the CRC, located at
Meigs Com~ty Health
~ovies
A3 the
Department ,
recently
NASCAR
B8
received
several
wigs
from
.
Hope's Boutique in various
Sports
B Section colors, style:s and lengths.
'
A2 Hope's Boutique is located
:Weather
at The Ohio State University
. Hospital and the wigs are
free to cancer patients .
Sim, who oversees the
CRC, said sh.e has ~ade
client referrals to av31lable
ACS programs inCluding but
2 SECTIONS-

AM -- 3:30

Mon. -Sat
Thank Yo u
to Our ,\~anv
( 'u .\·ton1ers.

/ 0 Y ears irt

Gallipolis

•

·Chicken
..
1 Rms..

l.lioo

Ave.

DOWtfTQ...
45131

16 PAGFS

.

••

·,~

~ ·

Moore Cancer Center offers free _programs
BSERQENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

INDEX

{;1&gt;

www . mydni~yst·ntinl'l .wm

.

BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

nnd t•:li7JIIwth llu1 is l ! uiwr·~it)
Ct•tll.t•l· invii~'S tt~t tu ·uur
SunduJ hr·und•.hut'Ct•(.

22S W l\Jain,l'oml·ro'.
992-5-Ul

Rt'(,\·ck&gt;d Newsprini

ODOT outlines future Meigs projects
POMEROY
State
funds remammg after
paving a new parking lot at
the
Meigs
County
Courthouse could be used to
create a picnic area and park
behind the courthouse .
County Commissiopers
received funding fo~ the
paving project through
ODOT's Metro Park program . They have developed
the ·site where the Pomeroy
Masonic Temple building ·
once stood into an employee parking lot . While the lot
Brian J. Reed/photo
was created , a terraced area
Deputy Director Larry Woodford and Debbie Fought of the was also constructed, with a
Ohio Department of Transportation reviewed a list ot view of downtown Pomeroy
future ODOT projects for Meigs County with .and
the
new
Commissioner Jim Sheets.
Pomeroy/Mason Bridge.

11111~1· wltll m_, .............. I

l'rinted 1111 IOOo/&lt;

• Pomeroy, Ohio

·-

not limited to the .Patient presently is available to the Initiative , In c.'s (MCCI)
Navigator Program, Hope public from 7:30 a.m. - 4 Think Pink Program will
Lodge, Reach to Recovery p,m .
on ' weekdays. host a breast cancer sur· &gt;nd assisted a local Girl · According to Brumfield , the vivorship workshop on from
Scout with her "Caps for . school district intends to 10 a.m. - 3 p.m ., Oct . 29 at
Cancer Project" which was accessorize the walking the Ohio Valley Christian
to be judged atthe state level. path with outdoor fitness Assembly. To register, conSim noted that " Look equipment in the future.
tact ACS at 1-888-227-6446
Good, Feel Better" training
Sim announced Norma by or before Oct. 15 .
is scheduled for 10 a.m .- 2 Torres was chosen as the
The ACS' Luke Sulfridge
p.m ., Oct. II at the recipient of the lOth Annual discu'ssed the status of pro·
Pomeroy Library. Two . Janet Voinovich Service posed federal and state legMeigs County licensed cos- Award (which is conferred islation including the Pain
metologists will be trained by the Ohio Breast and Management Bill and . that
in addition to some beauai- Cervical Cancer Coalition) which would give the
cians from Athens and for her promotion of breast · Federal
Drug
Washington Counties. The· and cervical cancer aware- Administration fhe authoriprogram assists cancer ness .· The ceremony will ty to regulate tobo~~co prodpatients with maintaining . take place on Oct. 16. Also ucts . .Sulfridge relayed 12
their physica l appearance an observance of Ohio Ohio senators support
during cancer treatments. ,.
Mammography Day will Senate Bill 346, which
Member Andy Brumfield take place 2-3:30 p.m . at the woulp·· "gut" the state-wi de
spoke about the new walk-. M1ddl eport Church . of smokl~,t~ regulaJiion (i.e . ·by
ing path that was recently Chnst Famrly Lafe Cen~r..I.J!Il~~;ilyJa,1!)g ,. f:l;mily-owned
, , insta lled aroun:d ~perime- To RSVP, contact ACS ar·J,;.·!!!'tlus'fiiesse&amp;)~ . thlis, he said ,
ter ef .f,l\~'. Eas1e.i;!J Local 888:227-6446.
. Sim '. maidng;lt unfair for all busi. Schw):~~~-' ··~mfield recerve~ the award m 2002, nesses. ACS polls renect
encouii{gf;{i·lltle!ldqels. to use
Sam an formed attendees
. the ex.elcise resource; which the Meigs County Cancer. Please see Programs. Al

·'

During the ir regular business meetinc.. comm iss ioners voted to-reject the only
bid received .for construction of a new pumphouse .
for the TLtppers Plain s
Reg ional Sewer District.
because th e cnst

wa~ over
e~ tim ate.

the engi neer's
Hom e Creek Ente rprises.
Pomeroy. bid $3'1.400 for
the project. which was esli . mated to cost $23.000 . ·
Commissioners also:
• Approved &lt;1ppropriations transfers for the county sheriff, $ 10.000 from the
DARE line and $6.000
from the food line. into
employee salaries.
• M~ide referral In
Engineer Eugene Tripl ett &lt;i
Please see Projects, Al

Uses for
old hospital
.building
still possible
.BY BRIAN

J.

REED

BREED@ MYDAIL':'SENTINEL. COM

POMEROY - The fat e
of the . former Veterans
Memorial Hospital building
remains uncertain, but
Meigs
County
Commissioners
said
Thursday they are willing to
assist a potential tenant in
any way in order to put the
45 year-old building back to
work for the county.
The conversation was
sparked by a visit from
Gladys Cui11ings of Raci ne
at commissioners' regular
meeting. Cumings asked
commissioners to offer the
building to the Veteran s
Administration for a medical clinic. After all. she
said, the building's use was
dedicated in memory of the
county's veterans and the
building sti ll bears the
"Veteran s Memori al.. name.
Commissioners
have
ruled out any future use of
the building as .&lt;l medical
facility. Re-opening it as a
hospital or cl inic would
require
cc)st-prohibitive
code Llpgrades. If the build ing is used. in ste;id . as an
office complex. it. coLild be
renovated at less cost.
There· have heen private
business owners interested
in using pari ofth~ building.
" We have had bites. tiut
none of them have followed
through." Co mmi ssio ner
Mick Davenporl said yesterday .
Earlier thi s year. commissioner5 considered renovating the old emerge ncy
room wing in the hos pital
for use by the 9 11 am[ .
Emergency · . Medical
Services operatio ns. The
cost of making the necessary repairs and insta lling
the air condi tionin g and
heating syste m req ui red for
the comput er eq ui pment
was estimated at $300 .0()0 .
Commissioners said they
would still consider dividing the hospital. which has
over 30,000 square feet of
space, but even that would
be complicated. The utility
service for the building
does not eas il y allow the
service to be divided, and
that would be an expe nse to
consider.
"We are sti ll interested in
. doing whate ver we can if
there are people · interested
in
loca ting
there.''
Davenport said .
The building is now being
used as another storage
space for the count y. There
is also considerable fumi Piease see Building. Al

...

I

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