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                  <text>Page BG • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com '

Monday, October 6,

2008.

Gennan, 2French

Rite Aid presents
gift, A3

share.Nobel medicine
prize, As .

•

at
Printed 1111 100 %
Rrcycled Newsprint

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

· • Tornadcles Sweep up
Hannan. See Page Bl

BY BETH SERGENt
BSEAGENTOMYOAILYSE'flNEL.COM

POMEROY - Officers
with the Pomeroy Police·
Department ha"Ve been busy
processing .the following
traffic accidents in the viiIage, according to Chief
Mark E. Proffitt.
Vehicles
driven
by
Brenda L. Merritt, New
Haven, W.Va. and James D.
Lunsford, .Bloomingville,

OBITUARIES
Page AS
·• Samuel A. Gibbs, Ill, 61
. • John Johnson, Sr.; 63
• Gregory Garretson, 53
·. • Jackie Leach, 39

made contact on West Main
George
Chapman,
Street at the three-way stop Pomeroy. was · cited for
sign near the Pomeroy assured clear distance , when
· Mason Bridge. No further a vehide he was driving
fnformation was available . allegedly failed to slow
on this accident.
down and struck a vehicle
A vehicle owned by driven by Christine E.
Jeffrey Daniels. Louisville. · Miceli. Pomeroy. which
which was parked on Spring was stopped in traffic on
Valley Lane near 352 East West Main Street in front of
Main Street, was allegedly the Wild Horse Cafe. A tow. sideswiped by a vehicle dri- ing service was required for
ven by Julie A. Gilkey, Chapman's vehicle. There
Pomeroy.
were no injuries.

.i; ' '

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LANCASTtR. OH 43130
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TUPPERS PLAINS The Eastern Local Board
of Education approved
personnel action and supplemental contracts at its
recent meeting.
The board approved the
following supplemental
contracts for the 2008-09
school year: Julie Sp1mn,

·')·•

Beth Se'llenllphotoa

· ·· ·
·- _-·""'
~. &gt;--\"'~-- ~-.· -'T,;-.
COU'Ple chosen ·as 'ho~town ~roes' '
..r: ·;

·

•

•

-·- -:r---,. "::-&gt; ...

BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENTCMYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

RUTLAND - On a special Saturday in September, the
Dill Farm just outside of Rutland is ooe busy place with its
annual St. Jude Saddle Up Trail Ride which this year raised
a record amount as well as held an unexpected surprise .
. Michael and Isabel Dill, who started the ·yearly event 13
years ago, were nominated by friend Pat Vaughan and cho,
sen by WSAZ Newschannel Three as "Hometown Heroes."
The segment aired this weekend and will soon be posted on
the channel's website.
...It was definitely the most shocking moment of the day,"
Isabel said Of the moment she realized WSAZ personnel
weren't just there to film the trail ride but were there to present she and husband Michael with the awards.
"!cried ...! told them (camera crew) 'I hope you can cut
all this (crying) out,"' Isabel said .
Isabel went on to say: "I don't deserve this. Everybody
that helps me is included in getting this award . We could
not do this without family , friends and volunteers helpmg
· us. If it weren't for them, there wouldn ' I be a ride."
If it weren't for the trail ride over the past 13 years, St.
Jude would have gone.without an estimated $85,000. As of
last year, Isabel estimated the trail rides had raised owr
$65,000 and with this year's record total of $17,285, 1t !S
conceivable the trail ride could one day hit $100.000 m
fundraising which goes directly to the children's research
hospitaL All of this happens on that spedal Saturday m
September in a hayfield just outside of Rutland.
In addition to being a record fundra,ising year. the ride
had a record 251 registered riders. up from last year's 200.
There were 192 door prizes given out to riders from not
only Meigs County but from Logan, Huntington. Mason.
New ·Haven and Ravenswood. W.Va., as welt as Vinton.
Jackson Counties in Ohio and Logan. lsabei said this year
a group from Kentucky even brought their horses liP for the
ride and plan to return next year.
All of these riders Who were from out of the county
showed up to what has txicome a tourist attraction just outside of Rutland. After the IO-m1le tra1l nde through the h1Hs
in Rutland Township. the riders were fed and then sent on
their way with a keepsake in the fonn of their photo taken · Isabel and Michael Dill (pictured) were recently chosen as
by Isabel's sister Martha McDanieL
"Hometown Heroes" for founding a trail ride to benefit St.
From McDaniel's photos. to the volunteers who cook the Jude Children's Research Hospital. Also pictured is daugh·
food, to the volunteers whlll register the riders and prepare ter Paige with horse Sugar.
the trails, all are examples or why Isabel is quick to say she
and Michael aren't the only ones included in the tenn
"hometown heroes."

Meigs taking,advantage of,early voting
J. REED

tion~

have been received so
BREEOOMYDAILVSENTINELCOM .
far, both by mail and in the
board office.
POMEROY
- The
She said the office has
Meigs County Board of been busy with ·mail appliElections has received near- cations as well as voters visly 800 applications for iting the office in the county
absentee ballots in only a annex to vole early.
week of early voting·.
Smith said tel ev ision
stations
have incorrectly
Director Rita Smith said
500 applications were reported that the deadline
mailed on the first day they for early ·voting has
were available . 785 applica- arrived. but tluH\ not true .
BY BRIAN

-·· .

•

.• t

For the past 13
years, Michael and
Isabel Dill, along with
the help of family and
friends , have organized the St. Jude.
Saddlp Up Trail Ride
in this hayfield outside of Rutland, rais·
ing an estimated
$85,000 since it
. began.

•

,.

Please see Traffic. AS

STAFF REPORT

INDEX

FAMILY OWNED SINCE 1996

of

..

BaaJ~1~o~~pho~i;~ .

• 24 HPt diesel engine
; . :oHydrostatic transmission with selectable 4WD .
• Shift-On-The-Go• ran ;e~ ontrollets you shift from
tow to high without stopping
• Highest loader tilt capacity in its class•••
• Auxiliary work lights for alter dusk or before dawn

Main Street in front of
Dettwitler Lumber involved
vehicles driven by Edward
E. Murphy, Marietta. and
Ronald F. Gleason, Point
Pleasant, W.Va. Murphy
said he had slowed in traffic
to turn in to Dettwiller
Lumber when Gleason
allegedly struck the rear
Murphy's vehicle. Both
vehicles received damage.

NEWS@ MYD.AILYSENTINELCOM

class
Bowen, fall weightroom
coordinator.
The followin~ were
approved as substitutes for
the · remainder of the
.. school year: Robin Lynn
· Swain, secretar·y and
• Latest warning
c9ok; Stephanie Allen,
secretary; Corinie Soul sby.
. highlights dangers of
cook.
. microwaving.
In
other
personnel
. See Page A6
action, the board: .
· ·Accepted the resigna~
• Congress opens
tion of Pam Boyd as a subhearings
Stitute bus driver · ·
on financial meltdown.
Mayla
• Approved
SeePageA2
Puckett as a . guidance
counselor intern .
• Advance warning he
• Approved
Becky
will cheat. See Page A3 Edwards as Lead Mentor.
• Approved. extended
: • Debate stakes higher
days
of serv1ce for Chad
for McCain; insults
Griffith and Sheryl Roush.
·mount. See Page AS
• Approved
Chris
~tewart as a long term
substitute, effective Aug.
I.
.
· • Accepted the resignaWEATHER
tion of Tawney Helgesen
effective Sept .. 18.
The board Approved the
following list of volunteers
at
.Eastern
Elementary for the 200809 school year: Norma
Arbaugh, Lisa Averion,
Christy Barney, Patrece
Beegle, Laurie Boyles,
Paula Buckley, Mandy
Bush, Rhonda Carnahan,
Rose · Causey, Tarnmi
Detail• on Page A&amp;
Causey, Delcie · Clonch,
Jenni Dailey , Angela
Damewood, Brenda Day.
Linda Dunlap, Kim
Ewing, ·Kevin Fick, Sue
Hayman, Linda Hensley,
2 SECTIONS - 12 PAGtiS
Rae Lynn Kim~s •. Dee
A3
Kimes, Sarah Kuhn, Tanya
Annie's Mailbox
Lambert, Serena Lemley,
A3 Shilo 'Little. Carri Long,
Calendars
Jennifer McBride.
. Debra
McDaniel.
Classifieds
Cliristy Maxey, Michael
Moore, Richard Nease.
Comics
Pamela Newell , Jenny
Ridenour, Bobbi Salyer,
Editorials
Melissa Scyoc, Teresa
As Shamp, Alice Sharp,
Obituaries
Dawn Weddle, Shelley
B Section Welch, and Paula Wood .
Sports
'
The board also:
• Approved the memberA6
Weather
ship to CORAS for the
© 2oo8 Ohio Volley Publlohin&amp; Co.
2008-09 schoL ~ year at a
• •
fee of $300.
• Approved membership
with The Ohio Coalition
PleaH IH Bo1rd, A5

Sc2400
. SUB-COMPACT TRACTOR

Edward T. Baer reported .
his vehicle was parked at
his property at 333
Mechanic Street and whi le ·
subjects working for R&amp;R
Pipeline. Newark; were
loading stone into a dump
truck beside his vehicle. his
vehicle's left rear glass was
allegedly shattered during
the process. The company
agreed to make restitution
for damages.
A vehicle crush on East

·Eastern
.board
approves
contracts

~Jtrt5b~~ir~~ct.s·;~;~~~~~;.; l-'~ iJ;:-~T:~::··J··--:-~· ~

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w~w.myduilyscntincl.com

Pomeroy_investigating traffic accidents

SPORTS

INSIDE

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IT I·:Sll \\ , 0( TOBFR -, :!On I!

50 CENTS • Vol. !JM, !'Jo. h:!

~
·

Anyon~ regi stered to do so lot early , there is an identican vote by mail or in the fkation requirement for
board office until Nov. 3. .an yone who goe~ to the
but applications must be polls on Nov. 4 . A photo
received for mail service identification or other
no later than Nov . l .
document verifying resi The major political par, dence address must be
ties and candidates for presented at the polls .
office are . encouraging
Those who cast absentee
voters to cast hallol s right ballots nu.lst only provide a
away . While voters are no driver's license number or
longer required to provide the last four digits of their
a reason for casting a tial- Social Security number.

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ACROSS THE N ATION

Jhe Daily Sentinel

us-

ASSOCIATED PRESS WR ITERS

'

~Small

asteroid headed for
:. light show over Africa
•

Bv SETH BORENSTEIN
AP SCIENCE WAITER

WASHINGTON - A smalf asteroid was headed for a
•fiery but harmless dive into Earth's atmosphere early
Tuesday morning over Africa . astronomers said in a first of
its kind advance warning.
Harvard scientists announced late Monday afternoon
that the asteroid 2008 TC3 would burn up in the sky. making a fireball potentially visible to people in northern
.Africa. Measuring between 3 feet and 15 feet in diameter,
the rock was expected to enter Earth's atmosphere' above
Sudan at 10:46 p.m. EDT Monday, just before dawn in
A~~ .
.
Harvard astronomer Tim Spahr said the asteroid was so .
small it wouldn't reach the ground before burning up and
wouldn 't hurt anvone, but the fireball should be seen heading from west to.east .
. · .
·
.
.
·
''It's the first time we ' ve been able to predtct an tmpactor
in advance and it' II be quite a celestial show for the world,"
said Donald Yeomans . manager of NASA's Near Eanh
Object program , which trac~s asteroids .and comets that
·
come close.
There are 5.681 such objects. but only 757 of them are
large enough to cause any damage if they hit Eanh.
This ob ject. spotted by· an Anzona telescope late Sunday
and calcuiat ed on Monday to be heading to~ard Earth. i_sn:t
one of them. Amonomers don 't know prec1sely how b1g 11
is or what it i ~ made of. but they know that it is small
enough that i1 will bun\ up harmlessly. As it enteJS the
atmosphere becomin g a meteor, it compresses the air in
-front of it. whi ch then ue ts hotter. causing a fireworks dis·
play.
. Roch this 'ilc hi t Eanh 's atmosphere about two or three
t1mes a year. but without warn in!! . Yeomans said.
· . A str~n ome rs were onl y abl e-to give the world about
. stx hours not1 ce beca u,c the rock is so dark and small.
It was spotted a little, fariher away fro m Earth than the
moon . satd Spahr. direc tor of the International
•1\ stron omi ca\ ·Unio n's M inor
Pl anet Center.
:A stronomers hopt; hy sc annin g th e sky they can even:rually £ll'e Earth warnm g for more worri some rocks
:that come thts wa y.
: "If thi s were somethin g larger and it was 11oing to hit the
. ground we would he able to get people out of the way."
;Spahr sa1d. But Wlth "'methmg this si ze. they can tell peo;ple to l~ok up for a '!ghtth at could be "pretty cool from the
:ground. he 'a1d .
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On the Net

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Nea r

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lmp :l/um jpl.rw.w .goo•!

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Advance warning
he will cheat

WASHINGTON -- The
now-bankrupt investment
bank Lehman · Brothers
arranged millio ns in bonuses for fired executives as it .
pleaded for a federal Iife1ine. lawmakers learned
Monday, as Congress began
, investigating what went sCl
wrong on W~ll Street to
prompt a $700 billion government bailout.
The first in a series of
congressional hearings on
the roots of th ~ financial
meltdown yielded few
major revelations about
Lehman 's collapse. and ,
none about why government officials. as they
scrambled to avert economic catasirophe. declined to
rescue the !lagging company while injecting tens of
billions of dollars into others.
But it allowed lawmakers
still sma11ing from a politi cally painful vote Friday for
the largest federal market
resc.ue in histpry to put a culture of entitlement at
face on their outrage at cor- Lehman even as the compa- ·
porate chieftains who took ny's performance nosehome hundreds of mil!ions dived .
The panel unearthed
of dollars while betting on
risky
mortgage-backed internal documents shCJwing
investments that ultimately that on Sept. II, Lehman
brought the financial system planned to approve "special
payments" worth $18 .2 mil'
to its knees.
That face was RichardS. lion for two executives who
Fuld Jr.. the Lehman chief were terminated involuntarexecutive who sat for a . ily. and another $5 million
two-hour-plus
grilling for one who was le~ving on
before .the House Oversight his own .
That was just four days
and Government Reform
Committee as the panel before the government let
combed through his pay Lehman go under, .touching
history; management prac- off a cascading series · of
tices and financial strate- . financial shocks and failgies .
· · .
ures that put Washi~gton on
"You made all this money track · for the multibillionby taking risks with other dollar . .re,s,~;;ue the Bush
urgently
people's money.'' Rep . administration
Henry Waxman, D-Calif .• requested from Congress at
the panel's chairman, said . the end of that week.
On Wall Street, uncertain"lhe system worked for
you, but it didn 't seem to ty Mond.ay abqut the effec-.
work for the rest of the tiveness of the rescue sent
country and the taxpayers. the Dow Jones industrials
who now have to pay $700 sinkinQ below 10.000 for
billion
., to . bail out' our econ- the first time in four years.
Investors fear the crisis will
omy.
A subdued Fuld opened weigh down the global
his testimony declaring. " I economy and the bailout
take full responsibility for won ' t work quickly to
the decisions that I made loosen credit markets.
The bailout . now law,
and for the actions that I
took," but he conceded no was so rushed that the usual
errors or misjudgments in congressional scrutiny is
the chaotic period that led to only coming now, after the'
fact.
the firm '6 bankruptcy.
"AitllOugh it comes too late
And he said a compensato
help Lehman Brothers. the
tion system that he estimated paid him about $350 mil- so-called bailout program .
l ion between 2000 and 2007 will have to make wrenching
even as the company head- choices. picking winners and
ed for disaster was appro- losers ·from a shattered and
I fragile economic landscape,''
priate.
· "We had a compensation said Rep. Tom Davis of .
committee that spent a Virginia . the committee's
tremendous amount of time' senior Republican .
making sure that the interFuld said Lehman did
ests of the executives and . everything it could to limit
the employees were aligned its risks and save itself. It
with shareholders," Fuld failed . he said. because of a
said. ·
"cri sis in confidence" on
That wasn't good enough . Wall Street . market manipufor some . lawmakers who lation in which inveslors
decried what they called a preyed on di stressed finan-

Lehman
Brothers
Holdings Inc.
·chief
Executive
RichardS.
Fuld Jr., testifies before ·
the House
Oversight
and
Government
Reform
Committee
on Capitol
Hill in
Washington,
Monday, on
the collapse
of L!~llman .
Brothers.
APphoto

cia! players by betting on - they are only peopi~ who
their demise. and would-be think about their own pock·
buyers who waited for the ets."
government to step in to
The suggesti.on came
help fund a sale.
.
from
executtves
at
"In the end. despite all of Lehman's money manageour efforts. we were over- ment subsidiary. Neuberger
whelmed." Fuld said. look- Berman. who also were recing uncomfortable seated by ommending that Lehman
himself at a witness table spin off its business to insuwhere he fiddled with a late its employees - and
pehcil and removed and their bonuses from
donned his glasses habitual- Lehman's sagging stock
ly as he fielded at-times price and from "management mistakes.''
·
angry questions.
"Do you think it's fair?"
George
H.
Walker,
Waxman demanded of Fuld President Bush's cousin and
as he outlined his exorbitant· a member · of Lehman's
pay packages and noted ihat exe.cutive
committee,
shareholders ended up with breezily shot down the
nothing.
ideas. according to the eFuld said he is . haunted mails . ·. ·
nightly wondering what he
"Sorry team. I am not sure
might have done to avert what's in the water at"
Lehman's bankruptcy, the Neuberger Berman, Walker
largest in U.S. history.
wrote to the rest of the exec"This is a pain that will utive · comtriittee. "I'm
stay with me for the rest of ' embarr-assed and I apologize."
·
my life," he said.
Also haunting him, Fuld
Republicans dismissed
said. is the question of why the hearing as little more
Lehman didn't get a federal than a political stunt given
rescue while ' Others did: . that it failed to probe the
Bear Stearns ,' the mortgage role of Fannie Mae and
giants Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac ~ huge play·
Freddie Mac, and insurance ers in the mortgage market
giant
American - in the financial melt·
down.
International Group Inc.
"Until the day they put me .
"If you haven't discov·
in the ground, I will won- erect your role' today, you're
der." Fuld told the commit- the villain. so you have to
tee.
act like .the villain," Rep.
But the committee 's John Mica. R·Fla.,told Fuld
investigation painted Fuld facetiously. earning a tight
as anything but a victim.
smile.
Waxman released e-mail
In a statement, Rep. John
correspondence from June Boehner, R-Ohio, the Hous·e
2008 iti which Fuld dis- minoritv . leader, accused
missed the suggestion from Waxman of · refusing to
executives at a ·Lehman investigate the mortgage
subsidiary that the compa- giants "solely to shield his
ny 's top people forgo fellow Democrats politicalbonuses to "send a strong ly.'' and said it "cheats the
message to both employees American people
key
and investors that manage- facts that could help all of
ment is not shirking us learn how we got here accountability for recem and what we must do to
performance ."
make certain this situation
Fuld wrote. "Don't worry · never repeats itself."

of

Bus driver fu fatal California·crash is arrested

,
WlLLIAMS, Calif. (AP)
- A bus driver with a string
of motor vehicle offenses
and a history of· substance
abuse wa~ arrested on suspicion of driving under the
influence Monday; hours
after his casino-bound charter bus ran into a ditch.
killing eight people.
Investigators also said the
bus had an invalid license
plate, and they were looking
into whether the driver had
'
.
proper penmts to operate
the vehicle . The bus ran off'
the road Sunday while taking passengers to a northern
California casino. About 30
people were injured.
Records show 52· yearold Quintin Watts of
Stockton ·had been cited for
speeding and other violations that resulted in loss of
his license for nearly two
years . He regained his dri ving privileges last January.
Watts was arre ~ted as he
lay critically injured in his
hos pital bed . His mot~er
said he had WfCStJed With
dru11 and alcohol problems.
was jailed several times on
Program : dru g cha rges and . had
'
. smas hed a car carrymg a
.

friend into a tree a few years
ago, .though neither was
seriously hurt.
He was a longtime truck
drjver. but, had been unable
to find a trucking job since
being relea&lt;;ed from jail on a
domestic violence charge
six months ago, hi s mother
said.
Chaney Mae Watts said
she bel ievc'd the crash came
on her son 's first day behind
tlte wheel of the bus after
se,·cral training trips watchinc the owner drive. She
and her husband told their
son the\' were uncomfortabl e with him driving a
vehicle that carried people '
instead of cargo .
·
·
"He wasn't the best dri ver." she said. "He knew we
didn't want him to drive.''
The accident was at least
the eighth serious crash in
the U.S. in the last three
vears in volvinc buses carrying people to and from casinos .
Authorities were investioatin " whether prescription ·
~r m~nprescription drugs .or
alcoho l. or a combination.
were invoh ed in the crash.
Blood test resu Its are not

expected for two to six
weeks.
"W&lt;: believe he was dri·
ving .under the influence of
something. That's why we ·
placed him under arrest," ·
said California Highway
Patrol · spokesman Robert .
Kays.
Another CHP spokesman,
Patrick Landreth, said any
criminal proceedings would
be on hold while the driver
is ti·eated for his major
injuries.
Colusia County District
Attorney John Poyner said
Monday it will be at least
two to three months before
the full accident reports are·
available and any criminal
charges are made.
The bus carrying the driver and 42 passengers,
many Laotian, was heading
to the Colusa Casino Resort.
According to a witness, it
drifted off a rural two-lane
road before the driver
and
"overcorrected"
swerved back . The bus
ejected some passengers as
it rolled and crushed others.
Landreth said.
"The roof was collapsed ·
down . the windows were

broken out, and the bus was
not only TQIIed over onto its
side , it rolled completely
over," Landreth said . ·'It
was facing the opposite
direction and it was on its
wheels ."
. Families flooded hospi· .
tals . lonking for relatives · 1
who ntay have been
involv.e d in the crash .
· Yvonne Haynes, 35, of
Merced got a phone call
Surlday night from her
brother Tou Xiong, 29, say·
ing there had been a bus
accident. They staned call·
ing hospitals looking for
their mother.
"We couldn't find her,"
said Xiong . "She came in as
a Jane Doe. Her purse was
lost in the accident and she
did not have any lD.''
Finally. at 3 a.m .. the sibIings found their mother at
UC Davis Medical Center
in Sacram~nto. Mai Cha,
74. of Sacramento has a broken rib, face and right
wrist and with the tubes in
her mouth. she cannot
speak, said Haynes.
"She squeezed my hand
'o I know she hears me."
said Haynes.

Public meetings
1\tesday, Oct. 7
ALFRED
- Orange
Township Trustees regular
meeting, 7:30p.m., home of
Fi~cal Officer Osie Follrod . .

Bv KATIIY MITCHELL
AND MARCY SuGAR

ASSOCIATED PRESS WAITER

Tuesda~

October 7,

2008

Community Calendar

ANNIE'S MAILBOX

BY JULIE HIRSCHFELD DAVIS

WASHINGTON - China has abruptly canceled a series
of military and diplomatic contacts with the Un i' ~d States
to protest a planned $6.5 billion package of U.S . arms sales.
to Taiwan. American officials told The Associated Press on
'Monday.
· . Beijin~ '"" notifi ed the U.S. that it will not go forward
with seventl se nior lcv~l visits and other cooperative mili)ary-[o-military plans be~ au se of . the sale . which was
announced last week . Pentagon and State Department officials said .
'·in respon'e to Friday·, announcement of Taiwan arms
sales. the People's Republic of China canceled or post'poned several upcoming military-to -military exchanges ,"
said Marine Ci1rps Maj . Stewart Upton . a Defense
Department spokesman . lamenting that ''China's continued
,politicization of our military relation ship results in missed
opportunities ."
_
· The Chinese action will not stop the country's participaiion with the United States in international efforts over
'lran's and North Korea 's nuclear programs. U.S. officials
·said .
·
. Bur it does include tile ca ncellation ,,fan upcoming U.S .
visit by a senior Chinese general, other similar visits , port
calls by naval \essels and the indefinite postponement of
meetings on .stopping the spread of weapons ot . mass
destruction . the offi c ials said.
China will also not part icipate in an exchange with the
United States on humanitarian assistance and disaster relief
.that was to take place bel&lt;1re the end ·of November, they
•said.
."It's an lin fortunate step," said deputy State Department
spokesman Robert Wood _
·
· - Beijing is fu1:ious with the U.S. decision to sell Taiwan
the huge package of ad vanced weaponry, including 182
Javelin ~uideJ mi ." ile rounds and 20 launch umts, 32
Harpoon- mi"ib . J .10 Patriot missiles and 30 Apache
~1ttack helicopters . China. which regards Taiwan as a renegade province. '"Y' the sa.le interferes with internal
Chinese affairs and harms its national security.
''The Chinese government and the Chinese ·people
strongly oppose and object to the U.S. government's
actions. wl'lich harm Chinese interests and Sino-U.S. rela.tions ," its foreign ministry said in a statement Saturday,
'adding that U . ~. diplomats had been summoned to hear a
strong protest.
China's Ambassador to the United States, Zhou
Wenzhong . re g i s t~r e d a similar protest at the State
Department on MonJay. A,Chinese Embassy spokesman in
Washington -"till it would be "only natural" for the ambas.
.sador to lodge :1 protest.
• Upton stressed that the sale does not represent a change
:in U.S . p1llic y and that Washington is only upholding the
:provisions. of tile Ta.iwan Relations Act under which the
:U.S. make s al'ailable items necessary for Taiwan to maintain a ·"1flicient self-defense .
·. Taiwan relies on U.S. weapons to keep pace with China's
:massive arn1S buildup across the Taiwan Strait. U.S. arms
:sales to Taiwan are a crucial matter because any dispute
; between China and laiwan could ensnare the United States .
: Washington is Taiwan 's most important ally and largest
•anns supplier.
·
:: The Defense Security Cooperation Agency on Friday
;notified Congress of the plan to sell up to 56.5 billion in
:advanced weaponry and military items to Taiwan. Under
·pi:ocedures for such foreign military sales, the deal would
~roceed if lawmakers do not voice objections within 30
.days of the notification.
: Beijing claims Taiwan as its own territory and has threat·ened to invade should the self-governing island ever for·lnalize its de facto independence.
.·

...

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PageA3

BYTHEBEND

The Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, October 7, 2008

nuresso ns rings
eltdown
on lin

China cancels military
contacts with
BY PAULINE JELINEK
AND
MATTHEW LEE

PageA2

Dear Annie! I've been dating ,;Josh," a wonderful man,
for just over a month. We were instant friends and started
off our romance extremely slowly. We have a lot in common. He lives two hours away and sees me on weekends.
his past weekend. Josh told me he is falling in love and
wants me to move in .with him. I have a 4-year-old daughter and don't want to rush things. I love him and he understands we need stability for my daughter.
.
Here' s the problem. Last night. Josh said that although he
loves me and wants to be with me, he is so accustomed to
being single that he isn't sure he'll be able to say "no" if a
woman tempts him.
Annie, I was tlevastated. I told him everyone has to fight
temptation, but he has to think I'm worth it. I don't want to
stay with a man who says he loves me, but could be with
someone else anytime he gets the urge. Should I give up
and walk away before I am so far in that I can't'leave? I'm
hurt. mad and surprised all at the same time. - Not
Whimsical in Alabama
Dear Alabama: Josh is telling you in advance that he's
going to cheat and he thinks he 's giving you a plausible
excuse to accept it. Tell him it's been fun, but you need
more stable, committed relationship than what he is offering. And, by the way, moving in after a month of dating is
not "taking it slowly." It's racin,t&gt; at light speed . .For your
sake as well as . your daughter s, please don't rush into
·
cohabitation.
Dear Annie: I've been havi,ng trouble dealing with my
nephew, little Mr. Know-It-All. Not only does he corr-ect
other kids, he also corrects adults . He will argue even if his
information is completely wrong.
While I think it can be a good thing for a child to have a
discussion with an adult , this kid frequently interrupts conversations and does so with a snotty attitude. His parents
set no boundaries whatsoever.
My mother advises me to let it roll off of my back. As he
often plays with my children , should I be concerned with
·his behavior? - Annoyed Aunt
. Dear Aunt: We bet his parents think he's just adorable,
so he'll be unbearably obnoxious for a while. Your mother's advice is sound. but if you are willing. you are in a
wonderful position to help this child modify his behavior.
When he's in your house, explain nicely that interrupting a
.conversation is rude and adults ' in particular find it disrespectful. Tell him a sign of intelligence is the ability to listen with an open mind. Help him understand that friendships require give-and-take . Teach him how to be approprtately sociable so others will find him a pleasure to be
around.
Dear Annie: My heart went out to "Not Looking
.Fotward to Another Father's Day" who said he and his wife
could not have children. He added that they are too old to
adopt and too cautious to be.c ome foster parents. Please tell
-them to reconsider.
My husband and I adopted two babies through the foster
.system. Fostering allows you to share your love with children who are in great need of it. even if it's only for a short
-time, while waiting for the perfect one to capture your heart
and be able to adopt.
When meeting with caseworkers to become foster parents,
let theni know you are looking for long·tenn possible adop:tiorl. There are thousands of children in the foster care system
just waiting for a mother and father, and most importantly, the
love of a family. - Moni of Many and Loving It
Dear Mom: Thanks to you and all readers who wrote
·telling this couple not to ~ive up on having a family.
. An~one interested in becommg a foster parent can contact
the1r local Child Wei fare League or State Department· of
Human Resources, or the National Foster Parent
Association (nfpainc .org) at 1-800-557-5238.

ATHENS
- Athens Meigs · Educational Service
Center Govern ing Board.
special session. 9:30 a.m :,
Athens City Community
Center, discuss long-term
strategic planning.
Thursday, Oct. 9
POMEROY
·- Meigs
County
Commissioners
meet at II a.m .. due to
scheduling conflict.
"fuesday, Oct. 14
SHADE P - Bedford
Township Trustees, regular
meeting, 7 p.m., town hall.

Clubs and
a .organizations
1\tesd.ay, Oct: 7
POMEROY
- Meigs
School
Band
High
Boosters, 6 p.m., bandroom.
all band parents are urged to
. attend to .discuss and plan to
meet tlie tlnancial needs of
the band.
·

TUPPERS PLAINS Eastern Music Boosters. 7
p.m., library conference
room.

Installation of new officers.

Recdsl'ille
Methodist Church.

United

Saturday, Oct. 11
CHESTER
- Special
CHESHIRE - Cheshire
breakfast meeting of Shade Baptist Church will host a
River Lodge 453. to confer benefit gospel sing. 7 p.m .. to
Entered Apprentice degree benefit , Fall Harvest Gospel
on one candidate. and Sing . Featured will be Dan
Fellowcraft degree on one Hayman
and
Country
candidate. Breakfast at 7 :30 . Hymntimers . Faith Hayman.
a.m .. followed by degree Sid and Carol Hayman,Carlie
work . 8:30.
and Sandra Wise, Priscilla
Dodrill and Ann -Sayre.
Monday, Oct. 13
Cheryle Knight , Debbie
POMEROY - Big Bend Dodrill. Jerry and Diana
Farm Antique Club, 7 :30 Frederick. Brian &amp; Family
p.m., Mulberr-y Community Connections. Rita Oliver.
Center.
Sunday, Oct. 12
POMEROY - Carleton
Church homecoming, with
Sunday school at 9:30a.m ..
Tuesday, Oct. 7
POMEROY - Revival followed by dinner at noon.
service
to
begins at Calvary l'ilgrim Afternoon
include
"Dayspring
Chapel. through Sunday. 7
church
p.m. James Southerland Singers" . and
speaker,
and · spe&lt;:ial singers. Church located on
· singing . Questions to Pastor King sbury Road. Robert
Charles McKehzie, 992- Vance is pastor.
2952.

MIDDLEPORT
Middleport Masonic Lodge
#363 meets · at Middleport
Masonic Tenlple. All members and Masons invited.
Refreshments at 6:30 p.m ..
Lodge at 7:30 .
Wednesday, Oct. 8
HARRISONVILLE Past
matrons
of
Harrisonville Order of
Eastern Star Chapter 255.
12:30 p.m. , Wild Horse
Cafe.

Church events

1\tesday, Oct. 9
CHE;STER
Shade
River Lodge 453, reg'u(ar
stated meeting. 7 p.m.
Refreshments follow.
RUTLAND . - Meigs
Local Archery Boosters
meet
at
the
Meigs
·intermediate School , 6 p.m.

LONG BOTTOM
'' Delivered.'' 7 p.m .. Faith
Full Gospel Church.

POMEROY
Wildwood Garden Club ,
6:30 p.m., at the home of
Betty
Milhoan
on
Flatwoods Road. Rich and
Ann Tomsu will speak on
organic
gardening.

Saturday, Oct. 11
REEDSVILLE - Soup
supper. 5 p.m .• "Dayspring"
gospel group. 7 p .m ..

. Birthdays

Sunday, Oct. 12
REEDSVILLE - Ruth
Koenig will celebrate her
85th birthday on Oct. 12.
Cards m~y be sent to 39054
Ridge
Rd.;
Silver
Reedsville ,. Ohio 45772 . . '

Local Briefs
Plan tournament
MIDDLEPORT - A Full Ball Bush
Co-ed Softball Tournament will be
held Oct. 24-26 at General Hartinger
Park. j\11 proceeds will benefit the
Chester Ball Association and .the
Angela Eason Memorial Fields. The

cost is $100 per team plus two 12-inch
44 core balls and two canned goods
per player, for donatio.n to food banks . .
Rules and other information are
available by calling Angie Edwards at
416-6956 or Kristi Finlaw a't 9923136.
Beans and cornbread, vegetable

soup, chili and · homemade desserts
will be served on Sunday.

Office closed
POMERbY
- Meigs . County
Health Department will be closed on
Columbus Day, Oct. 13.
·

FIVE GENERATIONS

Annie's Mailbox is written by Kathy Mitchell and
Marcy Sugar, longtime editors of the Ann Landers column.
Please
e-mail
your
questions
to
anniesmailbox@comcast.net, or write to: Annie's
.Mailbox, P.O. Box JJ8190, Chicago, IL 60611. To find out
more about Annie's Mailbox, and read features by other
Creators Syndicate writers and cartoonists, visit the
Creators Syndicate Web page at www.creators.com.

Swann birthday
RACINE
Kyrie
Jordanne Swann celebrated
·her 14th birthday recently at
.the home of her grandparents.
David and Ann Zirkle of
Racine.
.
She played croquet and
badminton with family and
friends, and enjoyed a cook·
out followed by birthday
cake
and
ice
cream·.
· Attending were her ,moth~r.
Brenda
Seagraves
of
Middleport; Bruce and Terri
Kyrie Swann
HySell, Nitro, W.Va.; Debbie
.
Quivey, Greg, Jess1ca and Zackery Km~. Roger, Samantha
and Austin Smith. all of Pomeroy; Jenmfer McCoy, A1mee
:Snd Stephanie Pyles of Racine. . .
Sending gifts were her great gnmdmother, Roberta
Swisher New Haven, W.Va.; Stetany Seagraves of
Flatwoods, Ky.; Nik and Jessica Seagraves. Lila, Sophie
-and Joe Beattie of Letart, W.Va.

Rite Aid
present gift
The pharmacy staff at Rite Aid present Kathleen Scott with a gilt tor
her 103rd birthday Monday. It is a
tradition between the drug store
and Scott, a regular customer at
the store. Pictured are Store
·
Manager Sue Sigman, Pharmacist
Hugh McPhail, Nicole Jones, and ·
Kristiina Williams.
Brian J. Reed/photo

Grange discusses household tips
. HEMLOCK GROVE .- Kim Romine and Helen Quivey
·gave household tips for the lecture program at the recent
meeting of Hemlock Grange .
Ammonia will loosen burned-on food. The way to season
·an iron skillet was given. After peeling garlic, rub hands on
RAVENSWOOD , W.Va :
One of Jack E. Fruth's
a stainless steel kitchen tool in order to remove the odor. - Fruth Pharmacy held its greatest emphases was
Place bay leaves in kitchen drawers and in flour and sugar · 17th Annual Scholarship always towards education
:sacks to keep crawling insects away.
Golf Tournament recently at and giving back to the comOven temperatures: very slow oven, 275 degrees; slow . the Greenhills Country Club munity
stated
Charles
-325; moderate, 350 to 375; hot or quick, 425; bread or pasin Ravenswood. W.Va.
"Laddie" Burdette. President.
try, 360.
.
There were 132 golfers
Scholarships funded from
Handouts on emergency food substitutions closed the
which included 58 vendors this event include, Marshall
,
program.
The Grange met at the Grange Hall, with Master Rosalie and Fruth Pharmacy, associ- University , West Virginia
Story conducting the meeting. It was shortened so members ales that panicipated in this University. University of
year's event to help rnise Rio Grande and University
·could watch the vice presidential debate.
over
$24,000. The proceeds of Charleston School of
Members discussed serving an auction on Saturday.
Members who can help or donate items will be welcomed. from this tournament are Pharmacy. Krysta Jenkins
used to fund the Fruth · and Jennifer· Rou sh were
· Vada Brickles and Nancy Radford were reported ill .
The November meeting will be a turkey dinner. Janice Scholarship Program for this year's recipients for the
University
Weber will provide turkey, dres~ing and gravy. All mem· Fruth employees and their Marshall
families.
· Scholarships .
bers are welcome.

Hold golf benefit

•

'

Plans are already underway for next year's event. .
Fruth Pharmacy has been

serving southwestern West
Virginia and southern Ohio
since 1952.

TEXAS HOLD,EM'
Beneiit Oasis Foster Care. Based on 100 players,
top prizes $1600.00. Initial buy in $50.00
Re buys $20.00 with unlimitied re buys
during the first blind levels.
October 10 &amp; 11th at
American Legion Hall

520 West Union St., Athena, OH
7:00 Pm Sharp
·
•

�•

ACROSS THE N ATION

Jhe Daily Sentinel

us-

ASSOCIATED PRESS WR ITERS

'

~Small

asteroid headed for
:. light show over Africa
•

Bv SETH BORENSTEIN
AP SCIENCE WAITER

WASHINGTON - A smalf asteroid was headed for a
•fiery but harmless dive into Earth's atmosphere early
Tuesday morning over Africa . astronomers said in a first of
its kind advance warning.
Harvard scientists announced late Monday afternoon
that the asteroid 2008 TC3 would burn up in the sky. making a fireball potentially visible to people in northern
.Africa. Measuring between 3 feet and 15 feet in diameter,
the rock was expected to enter Earth's atmosphere' above
Sudan at 10:46 p.m. EDT Monday, just before dawn in
A~~ .
.
Harvard astronomer Tim Spahr said the asteroid was so .
small it wouldn't reach the ground before burning up and
wouldn 't hurt anvone, but the fireball should be seen heading from west to.east .
. · .
·
.
.
·
''It's the first time we ' ve been able to predtct an tmpactor
in advance and it' II be quite a celestial show for the world,"
said Donald Yeomans . manager of NASA's Near Eanh
Object program , which trac~s asteroids .and comets that
·
come close.
There are 5.681 such objects. but only 757 of them are
large enough to cause any damage if they hit Eanh.
This ob ject. spotted by· an Anzona telescope late Sunday
and calcuiat ed on Monday to be heading to~ard Earth. i_sn:t
one of them. Amonomers don 't know prec1sely how b1g 11
is or what it i ~ made of. but they know that it is small
enough that i1 will bun\ up harmlessly. As it enteJS the
atmosphere becomin g a meteor, it compresses the air in
-front of it. whi ch then ue ts hotter. causing a fireworks dis·
play.
. Roch this 'ilc hi t Eanh 's atmosphere about two or three
t1mes a year. but without warn in!! . Yeomans said.
· . A str~n ome rs were onl y abl e-to give the world about
. stx hours not1 ce beca u,c the rock is so dark and small.
It was spotted a little, fariher away fro m Earth than the
moon . satd Spahr. direc tor of the International
•1\ stron omi ca\ ·Unio n's M inor
Pl anet Center.
:A stronomers hopt; hy sc annin g th e sky they can even:rually £ll'e Earth warnm g for more worri some rocks
:that come thts wa y.
: "If thi s were somethin g larger and it was 11oing to hit the
. ground we would he able to get people out of the way."
;Spahr sa1d. But Wlth "'methmg this si ze. they can tell peo;ple to l~ok up for a '!ghtth at could be "pretty cool from the
:ground. he 'a1d .
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••

On the Net

•

NA SA\

Nea r

Ean h

lmp :l/um jpl.rw.w .goo•!

•

Ob,iecr

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Advance warning
he will cheat

WASHINGTON -- The
now-bankrupt investment
bank Lehman · Brothers
arranged millio ns in bonuses for fired executives as it .
pleaded for a federal Iife1ine. lawmakers learned
Monday, as Congress began
, investigating what went sCl
wrong on W~ll Street to
prompt a $700 billion government bailout.
The first in a series of
congressional hearings on
the roots of th ~ financial
meltdown yielded few
major revelations about
Lehman 's collapse. and ,
none about why government officials. as they
scrambled to avert economic catasirophe. declined to
rescue the !lagging company while injecting tens of
billions of dollars into others.
But it allowed lawmakers
still sma11ing from a politi cally painful vote Friday for
the largest federal market
resc.ue in histpry to put a culture of entitlement at
face on their outrage at cor- Lehman even as the compa- ·
porate chieftains who took ny's performance nosehome hundreds of mil!ions dived .
The panel unearthed
of dollars while betting on
risky
mortgage-backed internal documents shCJwing
investments that ultimately that on Sept. II, Lehman
brought the financial system planned to approve "special
payments" worth $18 .2 mil'
to its knees.
That face was RichardS. lion for two executives who
Fuld Jr.. the Lehman chief were terminated involuntarexecutive who sat for a . ily. and another $5 million
two-hour-plus
grilling for one who was le~ving on
before .the House Oversight his own .
That was just four days
and Government Reform
Committee as the panel before the government let
combed through his pay Lehman go under, .touching
history; management prac- off a cascading series · of
tices and financial strate- . financial shocks and failgies .
· · .
ures that put Washi~gton on
"You made all this money track · for the multibillionby taking risks with other dollar . .re,s,~;;ue the Bush
urgently
people's money.'' Rep . administration
Henry Waxman, D-Calif .• requested from Congress at
the panel's chairman, said . the end of that week.
On Wall Street, uncertain"lhe system worked for
you, but it didn 't seem to ty Mond.ay abqut the effec-.
work for the rest of the tiveness of the rescue sent
country and the taxpayers. the Dow Jones industrials
who now have to pay $700 sinkinQ below 10.000 for
billion
., to . bail out' our econ- the first time in four years.
Investors fear the crisis will
omy.
A subdued Fuld opened weigh down the global
his testimony declaring. " I economy and the bailout
take full responsibility for won ' t work quickly to
the decisions that I made loosen credit markets.
The bailout . now law,
and for the actions that I
took," but he conceded no was so rushed that the usual
errors or misjudgments in congressional scrutiny is
the chaotic period that led to only coming now, after the'
fact.
the firm '6 bankruptcy.
"AitllOugh it comes too late
And he said a compensato
help Lehman Brothers. the
tion system that he estimated paid him about $350 mil- so-called bailout program .
l ion between 2000 and 2007 will have to make wrenching
even as the company head- choices. picking winners and
ed for disaster was appro- losers ·from a shattered and
I fragile economic landscape,''
priate.
· "We had a compensation said Rep. Tom Davis of .
committee that spent a Virginia . the committee's
tremendous amount of time' senior Republican .
making sure that the interFuld said Lehman did
ests of the executives and . everything it could to limit
the employees were aligned its risks and save itself. It
with shareholders," Fuld failed . he said. because of a
said. ·
"cri sis in confidence" on
That wasn't good enough . Wall Street . market manipufor some . lawmakers who lation in which inveslors
decried what they called a preyed on di stressed finan-

Lehman
Brothers
Holdings Inc.
·chief
Executive
RichardS.
Fuld Jr., testifies before ·
the House
Oversight
and
Government
Reform
Committee
on Capitol
Hill in
Washington,
Monday, on
the collapse
of L!~llman .
Brothers.
APphoto

cia! players by betting on - they are only peopi~ who
their demise. and would-be think about their own pock·
buyers who waited for the ets."
government to step in to
The suggesti.on came
help fund a sale.
.
from
executtves
at
"In the end. despite all of Lehman's money manageour efforts. we were over- ment subsidiary. Neuberger
whelmed." Fuld said. look- Berman. who also were recing uncomfortable seated by ommending that Lehman
himself at a witness table spin off its business to insuwhere he fiddled with a late its employees - and
pehcil and removed and their bonuses from
donned his glasses habitual- Lehman's sagging stock
ly as he fielded at-times price and from "management mistakes.''
·
angry questions.
"Do you think it's fair?"
George
H.
Walker,
Waxman demanded of Fuld President Bush's cousin and
as he outlined his exorbitant· a member · of Lehman's
pay packages and noted ihat exe.cutive
committee,
shareholders ended up with breezily shot down the
nothing.
ideas. according to the eFuld said he is . haunted mails . ·. ·
nightly wondering what he
"Sorry team. I am not sure
might have done to avert what's in the water at"
Lehman's bankruptcy, the Neuberger Berman, Walker
largest in U.S. history.
wrote to the rest of the exec"This is a pain that will utive · comtriittee. "I'm
stay with me for the rest of ' embarr-assed and I apologize."
·
my life," he said.
Also haunting him, Fuld
Republicans dismissed
said. is the question of why the hearing as little more
Lehman didn't get a federal than a political stunt given
rescue while ' Others did: . that it failed to probe the
Bear Stearns ,' the mortgage role of Fannie Mae and
giants Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac ~ huge play·
Freddie Mac, and insurance ers in the mortgage market
giant
American - in the financial melt·
down.
International Group Inc.
"Until the day they put me .
"If you haven't discov·
in the ground, I will won- erect your role' today, you're
der." Fuld told the commit- the villain. so you have to
tee.
act like .the villain," Rep.
But the committee 's John Mica. R·Fla.,told Fuld
investigation painted Fuld facetiously. earning a tight
as anything but a victim.
smile.
Waxman released e-mail
In a statement, Rep. John
correspondence from June Boehner, R-Ohio, the Hous·e
2008 iti which Fuld dis- minoritv . leader, accused
missed the suggestion from Waxman of · refusing to
executives at a ·Lehman investigate the mortgage
subsidiary that the compa- giants "solely to shield his
ny 's top people forgo fellow Democrats politicalbonuses to "send a strong ly.'' and said it "cheats the
message to both employees American people
key
and investors that manage- facts that could help all of
ment is not shirking us learn how we got here accountability for recem and what we must do to
performance ."
make certain this situation
Fuld wrote. "Don't worry · never repeats itself."

of

Bus driver fu fatal California·crash is arrested

,
WlLLIAMS, Calif. (AP)
- A bus driver with a string
of motor vehicle offenses
and a history of· substance
abuse wa~ arrested on suspicion of driving under the
influence Monday; hours
after his casino-bound charter bus ran into a ditch.
killing eight people.
Investigators also said the
bus had an invalid license
plate, and they were looking
into whether the driver had
'
.
proper penmts to operate
the vehicle . The bus ran off'
the road Sunday while taking passengers to a northern
California casino. About 30
people were injured.
Records show 52· yearold Quintin Watts of
Stockton ·had been cited for
speeding and other violations that resulted in loss of
his license for nearly two
years . He regained his dri ving privileges last January.
Watts was arre ~ted as he
lay critically injured in his
hos pital bed . His mot~er
said he had WfCStJed With
dru11 and alcohol problems.
was jailed several times on
Program : dru g cha rges and . had
'
. smas hed a car carrymg a
.

friend into a tree a few years
ago, .though neither was
seriously hurt.
He was a longtime truck
drjver. but, had been unable
to find a trucking job since
being relea&lt;;ed from jail on a
domestic violence charge
six months ago, hi s mother
said.
Chaney Mae Watts said
she bel ievc'd the crash came
on her son 's first day behind
tlte wheel of the bus after
se,·cral training trips watchinc the owner drive. She
and her husband told their
son the\' were uncomfortabl e with him driving a
vehicle that carried people '
instead of cargo .
·
·
"He wasn't the best dri ver." she said. "He knew we
didn't want him to drive.''
The accident was at least
the eighth serious crash in
the U.S. in the last three
vears in volvinc buses carrying people to and from casinos .
Authorities were investioatin " whether prescription ·
~r m~nprescription drugs .or
alcoho l. or a combination.
were invoh ed in the crash.
Blood test resu Its are not

expected for two to six
weeks.
"W&lt;: believe he was dri·
ving .under the influence of
something. That's why we ·
placed him under arrest," ·
said California Highway
Patrol · spokesman Robert .
Kays.
Another CHP spokesman,
Patrick Landreth, said any
criminal proceedings would
be on hold while the driver
is ti·eated for his major
injuries.
Colusia County District
Attorney John Poyner said
Monday it will be at least
two to three months before
the full accident reports are·
available and any criminal
charges are made.
The bus carrying the driver and 42 passengers,
many Laotian, was heading
to the Colusa Casino Resort.
According to a witness, it
drifted off a rural two-lane
road before the driver
and
"overcorrected"
swerved back . The bus
ejected some passengers as
it rolled and crushed others.
Landreth said.
"The roof was collapsed ·
down . the windows were

broken out, and the bus was
not only TQIIed over onto its
side , it rolled completely
over," Landreth said . ·'It
was facing the opposite
direction and it was on its
wheels ."
. Families flooded hospi· .
tals . lonking for relatives · 1
who ntay have been
involv.e d in the crash .
· Yvonne Haynes, 35, of
Merced got a phone call
Surlday night from her
brother Tou Xiong, 29, say·
ing there had been a bus
accident. They staned call·
ing hospitals looking for
their mother.
"We couldn't find her,"
said Xiong . "She came in as
a Jane Doe. Her purse was
lost in the accident and she
did not have any lD.''
Finally. at 3 a.m .. the sibIings found their mother at
UC Davis Medical Center
in Sacram~nto. Mai Cha,
74. of Sacramento has a broken rib, face and right
wrist and with the tubes in
her mouth. she cannot
speak, said Haynes.
"She squeezed my hand
'o I know she hears me."
said Haynes.

Public meetings
1\tesday, Oct. 7
ALFRED
- Orange
Township Trustees regular
meeting, 7:30p.m., home of
Fi~cal Officer Osie Follrod . .

Bv KATIIY MITCHELL
AND MARCY SuGAR

ASSOCIATED PRESS WAITER

Tuesda~

October 7,

2008

Community Calendar

ANNIE'S MAILBOX

BY JULIE HIRSCHFELD DAVIS

WASHINGTON - China has abruptly canceled a series
of military and diplomatic contacts with the Un i' ~d States
to protest a planned $6.5 billion package of U.S . arms sales.
to Taiwan. American officials told The Associated Press on
'Monday.
· . Beijin~ '"" notifi ed the U.S. that it will not go forward
with seventl se nior lcv~l visits and other cooperative mili)ary-[o-military plans be~ au se of . the sale . which was
announced last week . Pentagon and State Department officials said .
'·in respon'e to Friday·, announcement of Taiwan arms
sales. the People's Republic of China canceled or post'poned several upcoming military-to -military exchanges ,"
said Marine Ci1rps Maj . Stewart Upton . a Defense
Department spokesman . lamenting that ''China's continued
,politicization of our military relation ship results in missed
opportunities ."
_
· The Chinese action will not stop the country's participaiion with the United States in international efforts over
'lran's and North Korea 's nuclear programs. U.S. officials
·said .
·
. Bur it does include tile ca ncellation ,,fan upcoming U.S .
visit by a senior Chinese general, other similar visits , port
calls by naval \essels and the indefinite postponement of
meetings on .stopping the spread of weapons ot . mass
destruction . the offi c ials said.
China will also not part icipate in an exchange with the
United States on humanitarian assistance and disaster relief
.that was to take place bel&lt;1re the end ·of November, they
•said.
."It's an lin fortunate step," said deputy State Department
spokesman Robert Wood _
·
· - Beijing is fu1:ious with the U.S. decision to sell Taiwan
the huge package of ad vanced weaponry, including 182
Javelin ~uideJ mi ." ile rounds and 20 launch umts, 32
Harpoon- mi"ib . J .10 Patriot missiles and 30 Apache
~1ttack helicopters . China. which regards Taiwan as a renegade province. '"Y' the sa.le interferes with internal
Chinese affairs and harms its national security.
''The Chinese government and the Chinese ·people
strongly oppose and object to the U.S. government's
actions. wl'lich harm Chinese interests and Sino-U.S. rela.tions ," its foreign ministry said in a statement Saturday,
'adding that U . ~. diplomats had been summoned to hear a
strong protest.
China's Ambassador to the United States, Zhou
Wenzhong . re g i s t~r e d a similar protest at the State
Department on MonJay. A,Chinese Embassy spokesman in
Washington -"till it would be "only natural" for the ambas.
.sador to lodge :1 protest.
• Upton stressed that the sale does not represent a change
:in U.S . p1llic y and that Washington is only upholding the
:provisions. of tile Ta.iwan Relations Act under which the
:U.S. make s al'ailable items necessary for Taiwan to maintain a ·"1flicient self-defense .
·. Taiwan relies on U.S. weapons to keep pace with China's
:massive arn1S buildup across the Taiwan Strait. U.S. arms
:sales to Taiwan are a crucial matter because any dispute
; between China and laiwan could ensnare the United States .
: Washington is Taiwan 's most important ally and largest
•anns supplier.
·
:: The Defense Security Cooperation Agency on Friday
;notified Congress of the plan to sell up to 56.5 billion in
:advanced weaponry and military items to Taiwan. Under
·pi:ocedures for such foreign military sales, the deal would
~roceed if lawmakers do not voice objections within 30
.days of the notification.
: Beijing claims Taiwan as its own territory and has threat·ened to invade should the self-governing island ever for·lnalize its de facto independence.
.·

...

'

PageA3

BYTHEBEND

The Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, October 7, 2008

nuresso ns rings
eltdown
on lin

China cancels military
contacts with
BY PAULINE JELINEK
AND
MATTHEW LEE

PageA2

Dear Annie! I've been dating ,;Josh," a wonderful man,
for just over a month. We were instant friends and started
off our romance extremely slowly. We have a lot in common. He lives two hours away and sees me on weekends.
his past weekend. Josh told me he is falling in love and
wants me to move in .with him. I have a 4-year-old daughter and don't want to rush things. I love him and he understands we need stability for my daughter.
.
Here' s the problem. Last night. Josh said that although he
loves me and wants to be with me, he is so accustomed to
being single that he isn't sure he'll be able to say "no" if a
woman tempts him.
Annie, I was tlevastated. I told him everyone has to fight
temptation, but he has to think I'm worth it. I don't want to
stay with a man who says he loves me, but could be with
someone else anytime he gets the urge. Should I give up
and walk away before I am so far in that I can't'leave? I'm
hurt. mad and surprised all at the same time. - Not
Whimsical in Alabama
Dear Alabama: Josh is telling you in advance that he's
going to cheat and he thinks he 's giving you a plausible
excuse to accept it. Tell him it's been fun, but you need
more stable, committed relationship than what he is offering. And, by the way, moving in after a month of dating is
not "taking it slowly." It's racin,t&gt; at light speed . .For your
sake as well as . your daughter s, please don't rush into
·
cohabitation.
Dear Annie: I've been havi,ng trouble dealing with my
nephew, little Mr. Know-It-All. Not only does he corr-ect
other kids, he also corrects adults . He will argue even if his
information is completely wrong.
While I think it can be a good thing for a child to have a
discussion with an adult , this kid frequently interrupts conversations and does so with a snotty attitude. His parents
set no boundaries whatsoever.
My mother advises me to let it roll off of my back. As he
often plays with my children , should I be concerned with
·his behavior? - Annoyed Aunt
. Dear Aunt: We bet his parents think he's just adorable,
so he'll be unbearably obnoxious for a while. Your mother's advice is sound. but if you are willing. you are in a
wonderful position to help this child modify his behavior.
When he's in your house, explain nicely that interrupting a
.conversation is rude and adults ' in particular find it disrespectful. Tell him a sign of intelligence is the ability to listen with an open mind. Help him understand that friendships require give-and-take . Teach him how to be approprtately sociable so others will find him a pleasure to be
around.
Dear Annie: My heart went out to "Not Looking
.Fotward to Another Father's Day" who said he and his wife
could not have children. He added that they are too old to
adopt and too cautious to be.c ome foster parents. Please tell
-them to reconsider.
My husband and I adopted two babies through the foster
.system. Fostering allows you to share your love with children who are in great need of it. even if it's only for a short
-time, while waiting for the perfect one to capture your heart
and be able to adopt.
When meeting with caseworkers to become foster parents,
let theni know you are looking for long·tenn possible adop:tiorl. There are thousands of children in the foster care system
just waiting for a mother and father, and most importantly, the
love of a family. - Moni of Many and Loving It
Dear Mom: Thanks to you and all readers who wrote
·telling this couple not to ~ive up on having a family.
. An~one interested in becommg a foster parent can contact
the1r local Child Wei fare League or State Department· of
Human Resources, or the National Foster Parent
Association (nfpainc .org) at 1-800-557-5238.

ATHENS
- Athens Meigs · Educational Service
Center Govern ing Board.
special session. 9:30 a.m :,
Athens City Community
Center, discuss long-term
strategic planning.
Thursday, Oct. 9
POMEROY
·- Meigs
County
Commissioners
meet at II a.m .. due to
scheduling conflict.
"fuesday, Oct. 14
SHADE P - Bedford
Township Trustees, regular
meeting, 7 p.m., town hall.

Clubs and
a .organizations
1\tesd.ay, Oct: 7
POMEROY
- Meigs
School
Band
High
Boosters, 6 p.m., bandroom.
all band parents are urged to
. attend to .discuss and plan to
meet tlie tlnancial needs of
the band.
·

TUPPERS PLAINS Eastern Music Boosters. 7
p.m., library conference
room.

Installation of new officers.

Recdsl'ille
Methodist Church.

United

Saturday, Oct. 11
CHESTER
- Special
CHESHIRE - Cheshire
breakfast meeting of Shade Baptist Church will host a
River Lodge 453. to confer benefit gospel sing. 7 p.m .. to
Entered Apprentice degree benefit , Fall Harvest Gospel
on one candidate. and Sing . Featured will be Dan
Fellowcraft degree on one Hayman
and
Country
candidate. Breakfast at 7 :30 . Hymntimers . Faith Hayman.
a.m .. followed by degree Sid and Carol Hayman,Carlie
work . 8:30.
and Sandra Wise, Priscilla
Dodrill and Ann -Sayre.
Monday, Oct. 13
Cheryle Knight , Debbie
POMEROY - Big Bend Dodrill. Jerry and Diana
Farm Antique Club, 7 :30 Frederick. Brian &amp; Family
p.m., Mulberr-y Community Connections. Rita Oliver.
Center.
Sunday, Oct. 12
POMEROY - Carleton
Church homecoming, with
Sunday school at 9:30a.m ..
Tuesday, Oct. 7
POMEROY - Revival followed by dinner at noon.
service
to
begins at Calvary l'ilgrim Afternoon
include
"Dayspring
Chapel. through Sunday. 7
church
p.m. James Southerland Singers" . and
speaker,
and · spe&lt;:ial singers. Church located on
· singing . Questions to Pastor King sbury Road. Robert
Charles McKehzie, 992- Vance is pastor.
2952.

MIDDLEPORT
Middleport Masonic Lodge
#363 meets · at Middleport
Masonic Tenlple. All members and Masons invited.
Refreshments at 6:30 p.m ..
Lodge at 7:30 .
Wednesday, Oct. 8
HARRISONVILLE Past
matrons
of
Harrisonville Order of
Eastern Star Chapter 255.
12:30 p.m. , Wild Horse
Cafe.

Church events

1\tesday, Oct. 9
CHE;STER
Shade
River Lodge 453, reg'u(ar
stated meeting. 7 p.m.
Refreshments follow.
RUTLAND . - Meigs
Local Archery Boosters
meet
at
the
Meigs
·intermediate School , 6 p.m.

LONG BOTTOM
'' Delivered.'' 7 p.m .. Faith
Full Gospel Church.

POMEROY
Wildwood Garden Club ,
6:30 p.m., at the home of
Betty
Milhoan
on
Flatwoods Road. Rich and
Ann Tomsu will speak on
organic
gardening.

Saturday, Oct. 11
REEDSVILLE - Soup
supper. 5 p.m .• "Dayspring"
gospel group. 7 p .m ..

. Birthdays

Sunday, Oct. 12
REEDSVILLE - Ruth
Koenig will celebrate her
85th birthday on Oct. 12.
Cards m~y be sent to 39054
Ridge
Rd.;
Silver
Reedsville ,. Ohio 45772 . . '

Local Briefs
Plan tournament
MIDDLEPORT - A Full Ball Bush
Co-ed Softball Tournament will be
held Oct. 24-26 at General Hartinger
Park. j\11 proceeds will benefit the
Chester Ball Association and .the
Angela Eason Memorial Fields. The

cost is $100 per team plus two 12-inch
44 core balls and two canned goods
per player, for donatio.n to food banks . .
Rules and other information are
available by calling Angie Edwards at
416-6956 or Kristi Finlaw a't 9923136.
Beans and cornbread, vegetable

soup, chili and · homemade desserts
will be served on Sunday.

Office closed
POMERbY
- Meigs . County
Health Department will be closed on
Columbus Day, Oct. 13.
·

FIVE GENERATIONS

Annie's Mailbox is written by Kathy Mitchell and
Marcy Sugar, longtime editors of the Ann Landers column.
Please
e-mail
your
questions
to
anniesmailbox@comcast.net, or write to: Annie's
.Mailbox, P.O. Box JJ8190, Chicago, IL 60611. To find out
more about Annie's Mailbox, and read features by other
Creators Syndicate writers and cartoonists, visit the
Creators Syndicate Web page at www.creators.com.

Swann birthday
RACINE
Kyrie
Jordanne Swann celebrated
·her 14th birthday recently at
.the home of her grandparents.
David and Ann Zirkle of
Racine.
.
She played croquet and
badminton with family and
friends, and enjoyed a cook·
out followed by birthday
cake
and
ice
cream·.
· Attending were her ,moth~r.
Brenda
Seagraves
of
Middleport; Bruce and Terri
Kyrie Swann
HySell, Nitro, W.Va.; Debbie
.
Quivey, Greg, Jess1ca and Zackery Km~. Roger, Samantha
and Austin Smith. all of Pomeroy; Jenmfer McCoy, A1mee
:Snd Stephanie Pyles of Racine. . .
Sending gifts were her great gnmdmother, Roberta
Swisher New Haven, W.Va.; Stetany Seagraves of
Flatwoods, Ky.; Nik and Jessica Seagraves. Lila, Sophie
-and Joe Beattie of Letart, W.Va.

Rite Aid
present gift
The pharmacy staff at Rite Aid present Kathleen Scott with a gilt tor
her 103rd birthday Monday. It is a
tradition between the drug store
and Scott, a regular customer at
the store. Pictured are Store
·
Manager Sue Sigman, Pharmacist
Hugh McPhail, Nicole Jones, and ·
Kristiina Williams.
Brian J. Reed/photo

Grange discusses household tips
. HEMLOCK GROVE .- Kim Romine and Helen Quivey
·gave household tips for the lecture program at the recent
meeting of Hemlock Grange .
Ammonia will loosen burned-on food. The way to season
·an iron skillet was given. After peeling garlic, rub hands on
RAVENSWOOD , W.Va :
One of Jack E. Fruth's
a stainless steel kitchen tool in order to remove the odor. - Fruth Pharmacy held its greatest emphases was
Place bay leaves in kitchen drawers and in flour and sugar · 17th Annual Scholarship always towards education
:sacks to keep crawling insects away.
Golf Tournament recently at and giving back to the comOven temperatures: very slow oven, 275 degrees; slow . the Greenhills Country Club munity
stated
Charles
-325; moderate, 350 to 375; hot or quick, 425; bread or pasin Ravenswood. W.Va.
"Laddie" Burdette. President.
try, 360.
.
There were 132 golfers
Scholarships funded from
Handouts on emergency food substitutions closed the
which included 58 vendors this event include, Marshall
,
program.
The Grange met at the Grange Hall, with Master Rosalie and Fruth Pharmacy, associ- University , West Virginia
Story conducting the meeting. It was shortened so members ales that panicipated in this University. University of
year's event to help rnise Rio Grande and University
·could watch the vice presidential debate.
over
$24,000. The proceeds of Charleston School of
Members discussed serving an auction on Saturday.
Members who can help or donate items will be welcomed. from this tournament are Pharmacy. Krysta Jenkins
used to fund the Fruth · and Jennifer· Rou sh were
· Vada Brickles and Nancy Radford were reported ill .
The November meeting will be a turkey dinner. Janice Scholarship Program for this year's recipients for the
University
Weber will provide turkey, dres~ing and gravy. All mem· Fruth employees and their Marshall
families.
· Scholarships .
bers are welcome.

Hold golf benefit

•

'

Plans are already underway for next year's event. .
Fruth Pharmacy has been

serving southwestern West
Virginia and southern Ohio
since 1952.

TEXAS HOLD,EM'
Beneiit Oasis Foster Care. Based on 100 players,
top prizes $1600.00. Initial buy in $50.00
Re buys $20.00 with unlimitied re buys
during the first blind levels.
October 10 &amp; 11th at
American Legion Hall

520 West Union St., Athena, OH
7:00 Pm Sharp
·
•

�•

..

·'Dte Daily Sentinel

The Daily Sentinel

OPINION

Staring into the aby, .; of
economic ruin - to be
(740) 992-2156 ·FAX (740) 992-2157
followed quickly by politwww.mydallysentlnel.com
ical ruin - America' s
political leaders are struggling to come together on
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
a financial rescue package.
Dan Goodrich
With President Bu sh
Publisher
seemingly unable to· convince anyone of anyth.ing ,
Charlene Hoeflich
Sen s. Barack Obama and
John McCain have abanGeneral Manager-News Editor
do ned ambiguity to call
wholeheartedly _ for pas sage of a package.
And congressional leadCongress shall make no law respecting an
ers, as of this writing.
establishment of religion, or prohibiting the
b
once agam are scram ling
free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom for a formula that will
gain the 12 votes needed
of speech, or of the press; .or the right of the
.
pass t he rescue tn the
. people peaceably to assemble, and to petition · to
House.
It's emphatically true
·· , the Government for a redress ofgrievances.
that the House's 23 _vote
?
rejection Monday of what .
- The FirSt Amendment to the U.S. Constitution was widely tagged as a
"$700 billion Wall Street
bailout" constituted a
massive , bipartisan failure

-TODAY IN HISTORY

',\

Today is Tuesday, Oct. 7, the 281 st day of 2008 . There
are 85 days left in the year.
. Today's Highlight in History:
. On Oct. 7, 1777, the second Battle of Saratoga began durmg the American Revolution . (British forces under Gen.
f.ohn Burgoyne surrendered 10 days later.) ·
·
On this date:
' In 1571. allied Christian forces defeated an Ottoman fleet
\n the naval Battle of Lepanto. ·
·
. In 1858, the fifth debate between Illinois senatorial candidates Abraham Lincoln and Stephen Douglas took place
in Galesburg.
·
· In 1868, Cornell University was inaugurated in Ithaca,
N.Y.
, In 1916, in the most lopsided victory in college football
history, Georgia Tech defeated Cumberland University
2,22-0 in Atlanta.
.
In 1949, the Republic of East Germany was formed.
. In 1954, Marian Anderson became the first black singer
bired by the Metropolitan Opera Company in New York.
_ In 1960. Democratic presidential candidate John F.
Ke~nedy and Republican opponent Richard M. Nixon held
·
the1r second televised debate, in Washington; D.C. ·
. In 1979, Pope John Paul II concluded his weeklong tour
of the United States with a Mass on the Washington MalL
; In 1985, Palestinian gunmen hijacked the Italian cruise
~hip Achille Lauro in the Mediterranean. (The hijackers.
.who killed an elderly Jewish American tourist, surrendered
two-days after taking the ship.)
·
.
In 1991, University of Oklahoma law professor Anita
Hill publidy accused Supreme Court nominee Clarence
lhomas of making sexually inappropriate comments when
~he worked for him; Thomas denied Hill's allegations . .
Ten years ago: Matthew Shepard, a gay college student at
. 1~e University of Wyoming, was beaten, robbed and left
t1ed to a wooden fence post outside of Laramie; he died five
qays_ late~. (Russell Henders~m an~ Aaron McKinney are
servmg hfe sentences for Shepard s murder.) The Justice
Department sued Visa and MasterCard·, the nation's largest
cred1t card netwo~ks; _on grounds they were restraining
compe.llllon and hm111ng consumers' choices. (A judge
later ruled ~hat the Visa and MasterCard associations had to
allow their member banks to issue other credit cards.)
Ft~e yea:rS ago: California voters recalled Gov. Gray
Dav1s and elected Arnold Schwarzenegger their new governor. Turkey's parliament voted overwhelmingly to allow
furkish troops to be sent to Iraq. Ten Southeast Asian
nati~ns signed' ~n accord establishing a Europe-like economtc commumty by 2020. American scientists Alexei
A.brikosov and Anthony Leggett and Russian Vitaly
Qmzburg won the Nobel Prize in physics for their work in
liow matter can behave at extremely low temperatures. ·
Thought for Today : "'Character cohsists of what you do
on the thtrd and fourth tnes." - James Michener
·
.'
American novelist (1907-1997) .

Tuesday, October 7,

2008

!f rescue passes, heres who gets credit and blame

· 111 Coun Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

•

PageA4

of leadership .
Still. certain members
stood out as profiles in
courage while their !:Olleagues headed for ·the
high grass. And some
leaders deserve credit for
trying to save the day and for contintJing to try.
Of 41 members considerect to be facing the
toughest re-election races,
only
nine
six
Democrats and
three
Republicans bucked
Inflamed public opinion
and voted to save the
economy from ruin. ·
The roll of honor
de _serves to be called:
Democratic Reps. Bill
Foster ·
(Ill.),
Paul
(Pa.) , Tim
Kanjorski
Mahoney
(Fla.) ,
Jim
Marshall (Ga .), Jerry
McNerney (Calif.) and
Christopher
· Murphy
(Conn.) .
And, even more so, the
three Republicans , who
did ~he right thing in the
face of a Democratic tide
raging against them: Reps.
Mark Kirk (Ill.) , Jon
Porter
(Nev.)
and
Christopher
Shays
(Conn.).
Kirk recommended to
GOP leaders a political
pact that might have saved
the
rescue
package

Morton
Kondracke

Monday - and might help
pass a new one.
It is : Have the · House
campaign
committee s
agree not to mo unt earnpaign ads again st mem bers
favoring
the
'"bailout." So far, the idea
has gone nowhere·
. Another standout is Rep .
John Can_lpbcll (Calif.) .
whose support for the_rescue may have cost him
leadership of the conserv ative Republican Study
Group. Other members
also de serve credit for
their roles in trying to save
the financial markets from
lock down - and the econ omy from collapse.
Certa.inly. Rep . Barney
Frank. D-Ma ss .. chairman
of' the House Financial
Services Committee, is at
. the top . of the .list for
wOrking with Treasury
Secretary Henry Paulson
to craft an acceptable rescue package _ unsuccessfully , as it turned out.
Paulson was widely
deemed the financial sec tor's savior - . a Wall
Street David Petraeus when he brokered the
takeovers of Bear Stearns
and
the
American
Insurance Group and
nationalized Fannie Mae
and Freddie Mac.
Now, he's being pilloried as a political George
Custer for presenting
Congress with a plan . for
massive government intervention in the economy
w1th too few safeguards.
No ·question , Frank · and
Paulson erred- in not fully
consulting
House
Republicans - as
they
worked up fixes,' even
thou·gh Speaker Nancy
Pelosi,
D-CaliL.
had
decreed that the GOP was
expected· to de liver at least
90 votes to pass the package and share ownership.
Even though McCain

has been legitimately crit- not make the same misic ized for grandstanding take."
when he announced he
The other best speech would "suspend cam- actually , the be st - was
paigning:· and perhaps that of Hou se Majority
postpone hi s debate with Leader Steny Hoyer. DObama last week. he did Md ., who said . "When it
play a conslructive role in
gaining traction for House comes .to our economy,
Republicans.
none of us is an. island . We
Kirk .
a
lon gtime are all ,bound togetlier in
McCain backer. gives his boom or bu sl , in growth or
candidate
credit
for collapse . from the bankers
increasing the number of on Wall Street to the
~ e publicans wh·o voted · smallest rural community
for the package from 20 or that we represent."
30 to 65 - far short of
He went on to paint a
enough ,. but ~etter than · vivid picture of the wide
doubl e 1ts on gmal sup - destruction th at financial
poFrt. .
.
panic would cau se to ordiacmg a mass.1ve revo 1t ,
House Minority . Leader nary p eop 1e and went out
John Boehner, R-Ohio, of hts way to pra.se the
resorted to a Lincolnesque work of all lhe Democrats
"team of rivals" strategy a~d Republican s . who had
to .recoup. appointing . tned to save th e day.
· Hoyer's speech was in
Minority Whip Roy Blunt
(Mo.) as chief negotiator utter contrast to that of
with . Democrats
and Pelosi . who departed from
adoptmg the agenda of . her prepared remarks to
Cluef f?eputy Mmonty rail against Republicans
Whtp En,c Cantor, R- Va.
for catising the cri sis
Cantors pohcy proposal before asking for their
was the work of Rep . Paul
. . .
Ryan (Wis.), one of the support m contammg II.
smarte st conservatives in
GOP leaders lamely
Congress, and key Ryan tned· to ,blame her for the
ideas -- chiefly a loan packages defeat. when m
option for banks ;;longside · fact they never ·could gar~
Paul son's
government ner more than 70 · GOP
buy -up of securities votes and ended up five
were included in the final short of that. Evidently ,
they
failed
to
tell
package.
Ryan also recommended Democrats how short they
the mcrease m Federal were - else. why bring a
Deposit lnsura~ce Corp. loser up for a vote?
guarantees that s now an
With both presidential
agreed Item , and mtro- candidates and th
•
.,
e
duced the proposal to &gt;USp.e nd
mark-to-market lame-duck president · accounting rules. whi.ch he n~w workmg. on the probdescribes as liable to lem along w1th bipartisan
throw banks into "a death leaders in both the House
spiral" because no market and Senate. a rescue packnow exists for their assets. age should prevail.
· Ryan made one of the
If it does not - or even
two best floor speeches of if it does - mark down
the day on Monday, the names of those who
declaring.
'.'This
bill vote "no." .They are risko.ffends my prmc1ples. But ing economic disaster for
1 m I)Otng to vote. for this the country for the sake of
btll m order to preserve id 1
..
my principles, in order to
eo ogy or po 1lltcs.
preserve the free-enter. But some people are
prise system. This is a nskmg the1r careers to
Herbert Hoover moment. - save the country, and they.
He made some big mis- . deserve due credit .
.takes
in
the
Great
(Morton Kondracke is
Depression, and we have executil'e editor of Roll
lived with those conse- Call, the 11ewspaper of
quences for decades. Let's Capiro/ Hill .)
·

My tortured vote for president

The cold fact that
· Barack Obama voted four
separate times ·in the
Illinois state legislature to
dt;ny care to a baby born
ahve -after a botched abortion makes him the most
repugnant candidate I will
have ever voted for. I am
pro-life; but whenever I'm
asked my religion . I
always
an swer:
" the
LETTERS T 0 THE
Constitution" (as my writE D I TO R
ing for some 60 years has
.
shown). I admire much
· Letters to the editor are welcome. They should be les.&lt; about John McCain, and
lhan 300 words. Allletrers are subject to editing must be especially Sarah Palin, but
~igned, and include address and telephone nu:nber. No neither is up to the enor!Jnsigned tellers will be published. Letters should be in mous challenge, as world
good taste, addressing issue~ . not per.wno.lities. Letters of terrorism continues, of
thanks to orgamzatwns and mdrv1duals will not be accept- restoring the Constitution
ed for publication.
- our Excalibur sword
for generations ahead .
' --~--------------------~
Neither
is
Obama.
During the early stages of
his campaign , there were
wispy indications he had
(USPS
213-960)
·
learned
something while
Reader Services
Ohio Valle~:.ubllshlng · _ teaching
constitutional ,
law at the University of
Correction Polley '
Published every afternoon, 'Monday
Chica~o. But over time,
Our main concern in all stories is to through Friday, 111 Court Street,
and
on his well-worn
:be accurate. If you know' of an error Pomeroy, Ohio. Second-class postage
teleprompter, l)is princiin a story, call the newsroom at (740) paid at Pomeroy.
ples have proved watery.
Member: The Associated PreSs and .
992-2156.
the Ohio Newspaper Association.
As former Bush speechPostmaater: Senq, address cortec·
writer Michael Gerson
Our main number Is
lions to The Daily SentineL 1 11 Court
wrote in the Alig. 18
(740) 992-2156.
Stre~t , Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.
Washington
Post: "Obama
· Department eX1enolons are:
IS
one
of
those
rare politiSubscription Rates
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_Editor: Charlene Hqellich, Ext 12
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· .
Dolly
50'
Reporter: Brian Reed. Ext 14
In
pulling
the
lev
er
for
Senior CHizeri reteo
Reportor: Beth Sergent, Ext: 13
him, I am actual!~ voting
One month
'10.27
for the vice pres1dent on
One year
'103.90
the ticket, Joe Biden. As
Advertising
Sobscolbenl should in advance
direcl to the Daily Sentinel. No sub·
I've written in this column
Outalde Baln:: Dave Harris, Ext. 15
scription by mail permitted in areas
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informed and pasC,_../Circ.: Judy Clark. Ext. io
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sionate protector of the
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source of our -liberties General Manager
lnotde Melgo County
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26 Weeks
'64.20
During the course of hi s
52 Weeks
' 127.11
E-mail:
failed
campai gn for th.e
newa Omydailysentinel.com
Outside Melgo County
presidency, Biden detailed
13 weeks
'53.55
how Bush's disregard for
Wtb:
26Weeks
'107.10
the
separation of powers
wwW.mydailysentinel.com
52 Weeks
'214.21
"has undermined the basic

- The Daily Sentinel

rights of detainees: "'He's
worried," Palin said, "that
someone won't · read them
their rights ." If McCain
wins, Palin will be 'next in
line to select Supreme
Nat
Court justices.
The head of her · camHentoff
paign , McCain, characterized the Supreme Court's
validating the habeas cor•
civil liberti es of American pu s rights of detainees at
citizen s .lhc terrorists win Guantanamo Bay in the
when we abandon our · Boumediene v. Bush decicivil liberties." I have not sion as '•one of the worst
heard so insistent a ring- decisi&lt;;&gt;ns in the history of
ing of the liberty bell from this country." I expect neiObama , McCain or Palin . ther McCain nor Palin rec,
I am far from alone in ognizes why habeas corpus, embedded in the
believing that the extent Constitution,
is called "the
and the depth of what the Great Writ."
Bush administration has
As for the effect of Vice
done to the Constitution
President Joe Biden on
and to our standing in the
future
Supreme Court nomworld (very much includ·inations,
The New York
ing our allies) will remain
unless and until enough Ti.mes (Sept. 12) reported
Americans understand how that on a Fort Myers, Fla..
much harm has been done. campaign stop , Biden
A patriotic new admini s- -referred to the "flioen
before
tration can start revealing administration"
correcting
the · damage and begin the immediately
repair work. And the next himself to say the "Obamapresident's nominations Biden administration."
He then added, laughfor Supreme Court vacancies could prevent the cur- ing, "Believe me, that
rent
Roberts-Alito wasn 't a Freudian slip."
Supreme
Court from Well, both by temperablocking the return of the ment and experien~
separation of powers and B iden will not be a pas:
sive vice president in an
the Bill of Ri ghts.
admini stration.
McCain ha s assured us Obama
that his model s f'or nomi- And Obama will have to
nations for new Supreme rely on Biden's long and
Court justices will be John deserved reputation as a
Roberts and Samuel Alito. frontline expert on foreign
Obama opposed the con- affairs. With regard to
firmation of both and has Supreme Court choices,
been critical of a number B 1den has also had extenof their subsequent High sive direct experience parCourt opinion s. As for ticipating in sometimesPalin, her manifest virtue s stormy Senate confirrnado not - as her record rion hearings.
indi cates - include a . On Aug . 26. in Denver,
stron g interes t in individ- Bide n said (Legal Time s,
ual constitutional liber- Sept. 8), "The single most
ties. She has mockingly significant thing . that
referred to Biden's . sup- Barack Obama will do,
port of the due process and I hope I'll be able to

.
-·

help him, will be to determine who the next members of the Supreme Court
are going to be."
Since Obama does not
agree with McCain about
the stature . of Justices
Roberts and Ali-to, and has
high regar.d for former
Chief
Justice
Earl
Warren's
accomplishments on the · Court , a
President Obama is very
likely to pay considerable
attention to his vice president's view on potential
Supreme Court justices.
And, as I've written durmg the presidential primaries and after; it was
Biden who, unsuccessfully, introduced the National
Security with Justice Act
of 2007 that would have
- among other restoralions of our American rule
of law - ended CIA kidnappings ("Extraordinary
renditions") and abol i; hed
CIA s~ret prisons .
Biden is indeed prone to
gaffes, but he can be elod
quent. An as vice president, he could act ori .
Thomas Jefferson 's counsel
that "the most effectual
means of preventing the per- ·
· version of power into tyranny are to illuminate the
ITlinds of the people." 1
_expect that as vice president,
Biden could bring the
Constitution back into
Americans' con'l'ersation _
not just on Constitution Day.

(Nat Hentoff is a nation ally re110wn ed authoritv
on the First Amendmetit
and the Bill of Rights and
a11rh or of man v books
inc./uding " Th e War on
Bill of Ri!(hls and tire
Gather.illg
Resistance "
(Sev en Storr'e.&lt; Press.
200&lt;1.) )

t},;

-Tuesday, October 7,

The Daily Sentinel ~ Page As

www.mydailysentinel.com

2008

Obituaries
•

'

John M. Johnson. Sr.
John M. Johnson, Sr., age 63, of Sandyville, passed away
Sunday morning in Aultman Hospital. ·
He was born in Racine, a son of the late Eugene and Lily
Grady Johnson , and had been a resident of the Sandyville
area 15 years.
John was a retired truck driver, and previously had
worked for Ford Motor Co. and Tandy Leather Co . He was
a member of Sandy Valley Eagles #3228. ·
He was preceded in death by his wife, Clarys F. Johnson,
on Feb. 26, 2006, and a son, Thomas W. Johnson, on April
6; 1992.
~e is survived by two sisters and ,a brother-in-law:
· Elizabeth and Pat O,Connor, of Reedsville, and Mary
O'Connor Of Maple F~ls, Wash.; two brothers aitd a sisterm-law: George Johnson, of Racine, and Paul and Nedra
Jghnson, of Gratiot; several children and several grandchildren.
Ser\lice will be conducted at II a.m. on Wednesday, Oct.'
8, 2008, at the Finefrock-Gordon Funeral Home in
Magnolia with Pastor Ruthann Bosley officiating.
. The family was so appreciative of her prayers and visits
to John . Interment in Greenlawn Cemetery in Sandyville.
Fnends may call one hour befo~e the service.
The family wi~hes to express their appreciation to all the
netghbors, especially Greg and Cari, Wanda~ Dan, Connie,
Dorothy, and Pam , for all the•help they gave to John and his
family over the years. ·
Also 'to the Nurses from Aultman Hospice who were so
loving and caring during his illness. _,

German cancer researcher
Harald zur Hausen stands
in his laboratory in
Heidelberg, Germany,
Monday. Zur Hausen and
French researchers
Francoise Barre-Sinoussi
and Luc Montagnier shared
the 2008 Nobel Prize in
medicine Monday for discovering the AIDS. virus
and the role of viruses in
cervical cancer.
AP photo

German, 2 French share Nobel medicine prize
Bu I&lt;AFa.. RITTER

decreased ~lidified the French position
researchers shared the other substantially
spread
of
the
disease
and dra- that Montagnier had isolated
AND M•n MOORE
half.
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITERS
Zur Hausen discovered twO matically increased life the virus in 1983 , a year
high-risk types of the HPV expectancy among treated before Gallo.
STOCKHOLM, Sweden virus and made them avail- patients," the citation said.
Maria Masucci, member of
- Three European scientists able to the scientific commuBarre-Sinoussi said that the Nobel Assembly. said
shared the 2008 Nobel Prize nity, ultimately leading to the when she and Montagnier there was no dispute in the
in medicine on Monday for development of vaccines pro- isolated the virus 25 years ago scientific community that the
'.
separate
discoveries of virus- tecting against infection .
they naively 'hoped that they French pair discovered and
POMEROY -Samuel A: Gibbs, IIi, 61, of Pomeroy,
es
that
cause
AIDS
and
cerviThe
U.S.
Food
and
Drug
would be able to prevent tl'te characterized the virus.
passed away on Thursday, Oct. 2, 2008, at Rocksprings
Administraiion
approved
the
cal
cancer,
breakthroughs
that
global
AIDS epidemic that
Dr. Anthony Fauci, director
Rehabilitatiol) Center in Pomeroy.
in
2006
for
vaccine
Gardasil
helped
doctors
fight
the_
deadfollowed.
of the National Institute of
He was born Sept. 26, 1947, in Racine, son of Verna
of
cervical
the
prevention
ly
diseases.
"We
naively
thought
that
.
Allergy . and
Infectious .
Martin and the late Samuel A. Gibbs II.
. · ·
qmcer in girls and women the discovery of the virus
·
French
·
researchers
· He was. a veteran of the U.S . Af!OY and employed as a
would allow us 10 quickly Diseases
in
Bethesda,
.
Francoise Barre-Sinoussi and age5 9 to 26.
copper mmer.
learn
more
about
it,
to
develMaryland,
agreed
there's
no
The vaccine works by pro- ·
He is survived by his wife, Gloria Gibbs of Pomeroy; -Luc Montagilier were cited
op
diagnostic
tests
_
which
doubt
the
French
scientists
sons, Richard Gibbs of Middleport, Samuel A. Gibbs IV of for their discovery of human teeting against strains of the has been done _ and to first identified the virus. He
Arizona, William Milliron al)d Roger Partlow, both of immunodeficiency virus, or human papillomavirus , or develop treatments, which said they, and zur Hausen;
HPV - including the two
PomeroY., and Ephriain Herdman of Middleport; a daugh- HJV, in 1983.
•
that
zur Hausen discovered has also been done to a large deserved the Nobel.
They
shared
the
award
with
ter, Apnl Hart of Nelsonville; his mother, Verna Martin of
extent
anu.
most
of
all,
develFauci
said
that
if
additional
that
cause
most
cases
of
Harald
zur
Rutland; sister, Connie Bales of Rutland; brother, Kevin Germany's
who
was
honored
for cervical cancers. The HPV op a vaccme that would pre- researchers could have been
Hausen,
Gibbs of Columbus; and several grandchildren. ·
vent the global epidemic," she included, Gallo "would have
Services were held at II a.m., Mon{lay, OcU,i, 2008, at finding human papilloma virus, transmitted by sexual told the AP by telephone from been an obvious choice to IJe
Anderson McDaniel Funeral Home in Pomeroy. Officiating viruses that cause cervical contact, causes genital warts Cambodia. .
added to that list."
was Rev. Dewayne Stutler and burial was in Union cancer, the second most com- that sometimes· develop into
Gallo,
director
of
the
That's because of Gallo's
cancer.
Cemetery. Military honors were presented by the American mon t:ancer among women.
''I'm not prepared for this," Institute for Human Virology roles ' in showiilg that HIV
U.S. researcher Dr. Robert
Legion. Friends called at.the funeral ho.me on Sunday, Oct.
zur
Hausep, 72, of the at the University of Maryland " causes AIDS and in the techGallo was locked in a dispute
5, 2008, from 6 to 8 p.m.
.
.
An online registry is. available at www.andersonmc- . with Montagnier iii the 1980s German Cancer Research and a prominent early meal advance that allowed the
over the relative importance Center in Heidelberg, told the . researcher m HJV, said it was isolation of HIV, Fauci said. ··
daniel.com.
· The Nobel Assembly said
of their roles in groundbreak- AP by telephone . "We're. "a disappoiiltmerit" not to .be
w1th zur Hausen "went against cutiilg research into HIV and its drinking a little glass of bub- honored . along
Montagmer and Barre- rent dogma" when he found
role in AIDS. Gallo told The bly right now."
In · its citation, the Nobel Smousst.
Associated Press that he was
that some ·kinds of humarl
Jackie Christina Leach, 39, of Cheshire, passed away -disappointed at not being Assembly
Barresaid
But ,he said all three of the papilloma virus, or HPV,
Sinoussi and Montagnier's award s rec1p1ents deserved caused cervical cancer. He
Monday, Oct. 6, 2008, at home.
included in the prize.
She was born on April 16, 1969 in Knoxville, Tenn., · Montagnier told the AP in discovery was one prerequi- the honor. No more than three realized that DNA of HPV
daugbter of Johnny Johnson of Gallipolis and Linda Abidjan, Ivory Coast, where -site for understanding the people can share a Nobel could be detected in tumors,
Newell of Gallipolis .
· · _ he is attending an internation- biology of AIDS and its treat- · l'rize..
.
.
and uncovered a family of
She is survived by her husband, John Leach of Cheshire; al AIDS conference, that he ment with antiviral drugs. The
Hts . dtspute ·
w•t? JiPV types, only some of
moth~~~ 1,-i~da N~well of Gallipolis; father, Johnny Johnsoq was still optimistic abo\ltwn- · paif:'s work iii the early l980s Monta~er .reached such a which cause cancer .
.
·
·
made it possible to study the level tn 1987 that thenof Galhpohs; chtldren, Tanya Roberts of Cheshtre, Jeffrey quering the di~.
President Ronald Reagan and
The d1~overy led to an
Moss of Gallipolis and Jacob Leach · of Cheshire; sister,.. The prize, he said, "encour- .virus closely.
That in turn let scientists Prime Minister Jacques .' understandmg of how HP~
Misty Newell of Gallipolis; brother, Samuel and Jennifer ages us all to keep going until
Newell of Leon, W.Va.; step-father, Nelson and Trenda we reach the goal at the end of identify important details in Chirac of France penned an causes cancer and the devel
Newell of Letart, W.Va.; grandmother, Nora Glover of this effort."
how J-IJV ~plicates and how agreement dividing millions opment of vaccmes aga':"st
·Gallipolis; mother-in-law, Dorothy Leach of Cheshire;
Montagnier said he wished it iilteracts with the cells it of dollars iii royalties from the H~V mfectlon, the citatiOn
brothers and sisters-in-law, Ro~er and Mary Leach of Long the prize had also gone to infects, the citation said. It AIDS blood test. The settle- sa1d.
Barre-Sinoussi. 61, is direc•
Bottom and Danny and Marcta Cripple of Ashland, Ky.; Gallo.
also led to ways to diagnose ment led to an agreement that
·
and several nieces and nephews.
"It is certain that he infected people and to screen officially credited the Gallo tor of the Regulat10~ of
She was preceded in death by grandparents: Samuel deserved this as much as us · blood for HJV, which has lim· and Montagnier labs with co- Retrovrral Infecnons Uruon at
the Institut Pasteur in France,
Glover, John and Dorothy Veith, Joe and Margaret Leach, two," he said.
ited spread of the epidemic, discovering the virus.
In
the
1990s,
however,
the
while Montagnier, 76, is the
Grant and Freda Johnson; and father-in-law, Don Leach.
Zur Hausen, a German and helped scientists develop
Funeral services will be held at I p.m. on ThUrsday, Oct. medical doctor and scientist; anti-HIV drugs, the citation U.S. government acknowl- director for the World
edged that the French Foundation · · for . AIDS
·
9, 2008, at Anderson McDaniel Funeral Home in Pomeroy received half.of the I 0 million said. ·
"'The combination of pre- · deserved a greater share of the Research iii Prevention, also
with Pastor Steve Little and Rev. Andrew Parsons officiat- kronor (US$1.4 million)
ing. Burial will follow at Gravel f:lill Cemetery. Visiting prize, while the two French vention and .. treatment has royalties. The admis~ion in the French capital.
hours will be from 6-8 p.m. Wednesday at the funeral
·home.
A registry is available . on-line at www .andersonmcdaniel.com . ·
first-term fundamentally altered unless
lions may well dominate. As Obama, the
Bv LIZ SIDOTI
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER
markets were plunging . in Illinois senator, wants to Obama also made a pretty
Europe and As ia as well as solidify his lead and avoid dramatic and serious misWASHINGTON
the U.S. on Monday, the can- any . major debate misstep take," said Chris Lehane,
Running short on time, John dictates were going after that could set him back in his Demqcratic strategist in Vice
McCain has the most 'riding each ,other.
quest to become the coun- . President AI Gore's 2000
'•
In Florida, GOP vice pres- try's ftrst black president.
campatgn.
on . the second presidential
debate, though Barack idential nominee Sarah Palin
Each hunkered down with
McCain . is most comfortRACINE- Gregory Paul Garretson, 53,Racine and for' Obama will be out of his raised Obama 's ties to top aides over the weekend able during the give-andmerly of Ravenswood, W.Va., died on Saturday, Oct, 4 at scripted comfort zone in the 1960s-era radical William
to prepare, McCain at his take_of question-and-answeihis nome after a short illness,
town hall-style confronta- Ayers and to the Democrat's vacation compound near
A funeral service will take place at noon, Wednesday, tion. It could be ugly if former pastor, the incendiary Sedona, Ariz., Obarpa in the events that' were a hallmark
Oct. 8 at Roush Funeral Home, Ravenswood, W.Va. Burial Monday's tussling is any Rev. Jeremiah Wright. In western mountains of newly of his 2000 campaign, and
will take place in Jackson County Memory Gardens, indication.
New Mexico, McCain, him- competitive North Carolina. . his 2008 primary effort. B11t
Cottageville; W.Va. Friends may call from 10 a.m .. Until
In the 90-minute debate, his consistency largely
Tuesday night's debate self asked, "Who is the real
time of the funeral service on Wednesday at Roush Funeral comes exactly four weeks · Sen. Obama," referred io NBC newsman Tom Brokaw depends on his moock-When
Home. ·
before Election Day with a him critically as a "Chicago will facilitate questions from he's on his game, McCain is
Friends · may
express
their condolences
at lot goirtg on both inside and politician'' and argued that the audience as tens of mil- winy and channing, filled
·roush I us2(){)0@ yahoo .com.
outside the · campaign: the Democrat says one thing lions of viewers tune in from with ready one-liners and
across the country.
stories from his past. When
Polling shows Obama and does another.
270
Obama, in tum, asserted in · "Generally, the stakes in he's off. McCain can come
approaching
the
_Electoral
College
votes
North
Carolina that McCain this are higher for McCain," across cranky, surly and
,, ..
from Page At
needed for victory, Wall • was engaging "in the usual said Phil Musser, .a former · prone to gaffes.
Obama typically is much
A vehicle parked on Court
A vehicle driven . by .Street is tumbling even fur- political shenanigans and executive director of the
Governors more at ease giving·speeches
Street and owned by D-;mald G. , Smith, Point ther and ·both candidates are smear tactics" to distract Republican
Charles Ritchie, Pomeroy, Pleasant, W.Va., allegedly escalating character attacks. from economic issues, even . Association. "It's probably from behind a lectern;
Their target audience in ·.as his own aides in Chicago one of the last and ·most though he has taken
was allegedly struck by a struck a the rear of a vehicle
the
debate: the roughly 10 assailed the Republican important opportunities for impromptu questions from
tractor trailer driven by driven by Clarice L. aeaver,
d h
percent
of the electorate wh&lt;;&gt; nominee for "an angry him .to lay out an economic • d'
Steven G. Moffett, Spring Crow'n City, near 118 East
vision that · resonates with au •ences an
as grown
an
additirade"
and
went
after
hlm
are
undecided
and
City, Tenn. and owned by Main and Court Streets. No
middle
America
in
a
fon'nat
much
more
adept
at the
tional quarter who say they for his role in the 1980s
Volunteer Trucking, Inc., injuries were reported .
that lends itself to doing just back-and-forth of voter'
A vehicle drive11 by might still change their Keating Five savings and that." ,
Dayton, •Tenn. There were
question sessions throughout
loan scandal.
•
Kathryn L. Meredith, minds before Nov. 4.
no injuries .
The depate, at Belmont
McCain, a four-term . But Republic~ns and the campaign . The debate
Paula ·J. Justis, Racine, Pomeroy, allegedly struck~
Democrats alike say even a provides the professorial
was cited for assured clear vehicle \!riven )&gt;y Blondena University in Nashville, Arizona senator, is trailing in strong McCain performance Obama with an opportunity
. distance, when a vehicle she B. Kelley, · Long Bottom, · Tenn., i~ sur,posed to. be polls and facing dwindling may· not be enough.
to show some einotion and
was driving allegedly rear- near the intersection of divided .equal .y bc;tween _the options to thwart Democrat
"McCain
can
win
·
the
seal the deal with voters still
economy and foreign pohcy, •· Obama in an enormously
ended a vehicle driven by CoiK't and East Main but given the global finan- troublesome political land- debate, but the trajectory of struggling to see him as pres,
Debra L .. Hurlow, Mason, Streets. Meredith, who was
cial turmoil, economic ques- scape for Republicans. this election would not be . ident. _
W.Va. on East Main Street. p1111ing out of the Pomeroy
A _vehicle · driven · by parking lot when she made
Romana
M.
Hawk, . contact with Kelly driving ·
from Page At
Pomeroy, allegedly struck east on East Main, alleged.
.
the rear of a vehicle driven Iy failed to yield. However,
$1.390.89 from the Class
by - Opal D , Whitlatch, the stop light at the inter- for Equtty and ~dequacy . period Oct. I, through period · Oct. I through
of . 2008 to the Class of
, Sept. 30, 2009.
Middleport, on \Vest Main section where . the accident at a rate of $.50 per aver- Sept. 30, 2009.
2009 .
Approved
an
agree•
Approved
a
schedule
•
Street near the .three-way occurred was in "flash age daily membership.
• Set the next m.eetin&amp;
stop near . the Pomeroy mode'·' due to a nearby
• Approved an . agree- ment with Medical Claims of class fees for the 2008for 6:30 p.m ., Oct. 21 , a!
Mason Bridge. Hawk was work 'zone. Both vehicles ment with Anthem to pro· Services, .Inc. to provide 09 school year.
the
Eas tern Elementary
• Approved the transfer
cited for assured clear dis- received damage. There Vide medical and prescrip- third party .claims services
·' ·
tance.
were nO injuries . ·
'
tion drug coverage for the for dental claims for the of funds 'in the amount of Library.

Samuel A. Gibbs, Ill

Jackie Christina Lead•

Debate stakes higher for McCain; insults mount

Deaths

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Board

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·'Dte Daily Sentinel

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OPINION

Staring into the aby, .; of
economic ruin - to be
(740) 992-2156 ·FAX (740) 992-2157
followed quickly by politwww.mydallysentlnel.com
ical ruin - America' s
political leaders are struggling to come together on
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
a financial rescue package.
Dan Goodrich
With President Bu sh
Publisher
seemingly unable to· convince anyone of anyth.ing ,
Charlene Hoeflich
Sen s. Barack Obama and
John McCain have abanGeneral Manager-News Editor
do ned ambiguity to call
wholeheartedly _ for pas sage of a package.
And congressional leadCongress shall make no law respecting an
ers, as of this writing.
establishment of religion, or prohibiting the
b
once agam are scram ling
free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom for a formula that will
gain the 12 votes needed
of speech, or of the press; .or the right of the
.
pass t he rescue tn the
. people peaceably to assemble, and to petition · to
House.
It's emphatically true
·· , the Government for a redress ofgrievances.
that the House's 23 _vote
?
rejection Monday of what .
- The FirSt Amendment to the U.S. Constitution was widely tagged as a
"$700 billion Wall Street
bailout" constituted a
massive , bipartisan failure

-TODAY IN HISTORY

',\

Today is Tuesday, Oct. 7, the 281 st day of 2008 . There
are 85 days left in the year.
. Today's Highlight in History:
. On Oct. 7, 1777, the second Battle of Saratoga began durmg the American Revolution . (British forces under Gen.
f.ohn Burgoyne surrendered 10 days later.) ·
·
On this date:
' In 1571. allied Christian forces defeated an Ottoman fleet
\n the naval Battle of Lepanto. ·
·
. In 1858, the fifth debate between Illinois senatorial candidates Abraham Lincoln and Stephen Douglas took place
in Galesburg.
·
· In 1868, Cornell University was inaugurated in Ithaca,
N.Y.
, In 1916, in the most lopsided victory in college football
history, Georgia Tech defeated Cumberland University
2,22-0 in Atlanta.
.
In 1949, the Republic of East Germany was formed.
. In 1954, Marian Anderson became the first black singer
bired by the Metropolitan Opera Company in New York.
_ In 1960. Democratic presidential candidate John F.
Ke~nedy and Republican opponent Richard M. Nixon held
·
the1r second televised debate, in Washington; D.C. ·
. In 1979, Pope John Paul II concluded his weeklong tour
of the United States with a Mass on the Washington MalL
; In 1985, Palestinian gunmen hijacked the Italian cruise
~hip Achille Lauro in the Mediterranean. (The hijackers.
.who killed an elderly Jewish American tourist, surrendered
two-days after taking the ship.)
·
.
In 1991, University of Oklahoma law professor Anita
Hill publidy accused Supreme Court nominee Clarence
lhomas of making sexually inappropriate comments when
~he worked for him; Thomas denied Hill's allegations . .
Ten years ago: Matthew Shepard, a gay college student at
. 1~e University of Wyoming, was beaten, robbed and left
t1ed to a wooden fence post outside of Laramie; he died five
qays_ late~. (Russell Henders~m an~ Aaron McKinney are
servmg hfe sentences for Shepard s murder.) The Justice
Department sued Visa and MasterCard·, the nation's largest
cred1t card netwo~ks; _on grounds they were restraining
compe.llllon and hm111ng consumers' choices. (A judge
later ruled ~hat the Visa and MasterCard associations had to
allow their member banks to issue other credit cards.)
Ft~e yea:rS ago: California voters recalled Gov. Gray
Dav1s and elected Arnold Schwarzenegger their new governor. Turkey's parliament voted overwhelmingly to allow
furkish troops to be sent to Iraq. Ten Southeast Asian
nati~ns signed' ~n accord establishing a Europe-like economtc commumty by 2020. American scientists Alexei
A.brikosov and Anthony Leggett and Russian Vitaly
Qmzburg won the Nobel Prize in physics for their work in
liow matter can behave at extremely low temperatures. ·
Thought for Today : "'Character cohsists of what you do
on the thtrd and fourth tnes." - James Michener
·
.'
American novelist (1907-1997) .

Tuesday, October 7,

2008

!f rescue passes, heres who gets credit and blame

· 111 Coun Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

•

PageA4

of leadership .
Still. certain members
stood out as profiles in
courage while their !:Olleagues headed for ·the
high grass. And some
leaders deserve credit for
trying to save the day and for contintJing to try.
Of 41 members considerect to be facing the
toughest re-election races,
only
nine
six
Democrats and
three
Republicans bucked
Inflamed public opinion
and voted to save the
economy from ruin. ·
The roll of honor
de _serves to be called:
Democratic Reps. Bill
Foster ·
(Ill.),
Paul
(Pa.) , Tim
Kanjorski
Mahoney
(Fla.) ,
Jim
Marshall (Ga .), Jerry
McNerney (Calif.) and
Christopher
· Murphy
(Conn.) .
And, even more so, the
three Republicans , who
did ~he right thing in the
face of a Democratic tide
raging against them: Reps.
Mark Kirk (Ill.) , Jon
Porter
(Nev.)
and
Christopher
Shays
(Conn.).
Kirk recommended to
GOP leaders a political
pact that might have saved
the
rescue
package

Morton
Kondracke

Monday - and might help
pass a new one.
It is : Have the · House
campaign
committee s
agree not to mo unt earnpaign ads again st mem bers
favoring
the
'"bailout." So far, the idea
has gone nowhere·
. Another standout is Rep .
John Can_lpbcll (Calif.) .
whose support for the_rescue may have cost him
leadership of the conserv ative Republican Study
Group. Other members
also de serve credit for
their roles in trying to save
the financial markets from
lock down - and the econ omy from collapse.
Certa.inly. Rep . Barney
Frank. D-Ma ss .. chairman
of' the House Financial
Services Committee, is at
. the top . of the .list for
wOrking with Treasury
Secretary Henry Paulson
to craft an acceptable rescue package _ unsuccessfully , as it turned out.
Paulson was widely
deemed the financial sec tor's savior - . a Wall
Street David Petraeus when he brokered the
takeovers of Bear Stearns
and
the
American
Insurance Group and
nationalized Fannie Mae
and Freddie Mac.
Now, he's being pilloried as a political George
Custer for presenting
Congress with a plan . for
massive government intervention in the economy
w1th too few safeguards.
No ·question , Frank · and
Paulson erred- in not fully
consulting
House
Republicans - as
they
worked up fixes,' even
thou·gh Speaker Nancy
Pelosi,
D-CaliL.
had
decreed that the GOP was
expected· to de liver at least
90 votes to pass the package and share ownership.
Even though McCain

has been legitimately crit- not make the same misic ized for grandstanding take."
when he announced he
The other best speech would "suspend cam- actually , the be st - was
paigning:· and perhaps that of Hou se Majority
postpone hi s debate with Leader Steny Hoyer. DObama last week. he did Md ., who said . "When it
play a conslructive role in
gaining traction for House comes .to our economy,
Republicans.
none of us is an. island . We
Kirk .
a
lon gtime are all ,bound togetlier in
McCain backer. gives his boom or bu sl , in growth or
candidate
credit
for collapse . from the bankers
increasing the number of on Wall Street to the
~ e publicans wh·o voted · smallest rural community
for the package from 20 or that we represent."
30 to 65 - far short of
He went on to paint a
enough ,. but ~etter than · vivid picture of the wide
doubl e 1ts on gmal sup - destruction th at financial
poFrt. .
.
panic would cau se to ordiacmg a mass.1ve revo 1t ,
House Minority . Leader nary p eop 1e and went out
John Boehner, R-Ohio, of hts way to pra.se the
resorted to a Lincolnesque work of all lhe Democrats
"team of rivals" strategy a~d Republican s . who had
to .recoup. appointing . tned to save th e day.
· Hoyer's speech was in
Minority Whip Roy Blunt
(Mo.) as chief negotiator utter contrast to that of
with . Democrats
and Pelosi . who departed from
adoptmg the agenda of . her prepared remarks to
Cluef f?eputy Mmonty rail against Republicans
Whtp En,c Cantor, R- Va.
for catising the cri sis
Cantors pohcy proposal before asking for their
was the work of Rep . Paul
. . .
Ryan (Wis.), one of the support m contammg II.
smarte st conservatives in
GOP leaders lamely
Congress, and key Ryan tned· to ,blame her for the
ideas -- chiefly a loan packages defeat. when m
option for banks ;;longside · fact they never ·could gar~
Paul son's
government ner more than 70 · GOP
buy -up of securities votes and ended up five
were included in the final short of that. Evidently ,
they
failed
to
tell
package.
Ryan also recommended Democrats how short they
the mcrease m Federal were - else. why bring a
Deposit lnsura~ce Corp. loser up for a vote?
guarantees that s now an
With both presidential
agreed Item , and mtro- candidates and th
•
.,
e
duced the proposal to &gt;USp.e nd
mark-to-market lame-duck president · accounting rules. whi.ch he n~w workmg. on the probdescribes as liable to lem along w1th bipartisan
throw banks into "a death leaders in both the House
spiral" because no market and Senate. a rescue packnow exists for their assets. age should prevail.
· Ryan made one of the
If it does not - or even
two best floor speeches of if it does - mark down
the day on Monday, the names of those who
declaring.
'.'This
bill vote "no." .They are risko.ffends my prmc1ples. But ing economic disaster for
1 m I)Otng to vote. for this the country for the sake of
btll m order to preserve id 1
..
my principles, in order to
eo ogy or po 1lltcs.
preserve the free-enter. But some people are
prise system. This is a nskmg the1r careers to
Herbert Hoover moment. - save the country, and they.
He made some big mis- . deserve due credit .
.takes
in
the
Great
(Morton Kondracke is
Depression, and we have executil'e editor of Roll
lived with those conse- Call, the 11ewspaper of
quences for decades. Let's Capiro/ Hill .)
·

My tortured vote for president

The cold fact that
· Barack Obama voted four
separate times ·in the
Illinois state legislature to
dt;ny care to a baby born
ahve -after a botched abortion makes him the most
repugnant candidate I will
have ever voted for. I am
pro-life; but whenever I'm
asked my religion . I
always
an swer:
" the
LETTERS T 0 THE
Constitution" (as my writE D I TO R
ing for some 60 years has
.
shown). I admire much
· Letters to the editor are welcome. They should be les.&lt; about John McCain, and
lhan 300 words. Allletrers are subject to editing must be especially Sarah Palin, but
~igned, and include address and telephone nu:nber. No neither is up to the enor!Jnsigned tellers will be published. Letters should be in mous challenge, as world
good taste, addressing issue~ . not per.wno.lities. Letters of terrorism continues, of
thanks to orgamzatwns and mdrv1duals will not be accept- restoring the Constitution
ed for publication.
- our Excalibur sword
for generations ahead .
' --~--------------------~
Neither
is
Obama.
During the early stages of
his campaign , there were
wispy indications he had
(USPS
213-960)
·
learned
something while
Reader Services
Ohio Valle~:.ubllshlng · _ teaching
constitutional ,
law at the University of
Correction Polley '
Published every afternoon, 'Monday
Chica~o. But over time,
Our main concern in all stories is to through Friday, 111 Court Street,
and
on his well-worn
:be accurate. If you know' of an error Pomeroy, Ohio. Second-class postage
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ples have proved watery.
Member: The Associated PreSs and .
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As former Bush speechPostmaater: Senq, address cortec·
writer Michael Gerson
Our main number Is
lions to The Daily SentineL 1 11 Court
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Post: "Obama
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· .
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50'
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In
pulling
the
lev
er
for
Senior CHizeri reteo
Reportor: Beth Sergent, Ext: 13
him, I am actual!~ voting
One month
'10.27
for the vice pres1dent on
One year
'103.90
the ticket, Joe Biden. As
Advertising
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direcl to the Daily Sentinel. No sub·
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Outalde Baln:: Dave Harris, Ext. 15
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lnotde Melgo County
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During the course of hi s
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newa Omydailysentinel.com
Outside Melgo County
presidency, Biden detailed
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wwW.mydailysentinel.com
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- The Daily Sentinel

rights of detainees: "'He's
worried," Palin said, "that
someone won't · read them
their rights ." If McCain
wins, Palin will be 'next in
line to select Supreme
Nat
Court justices.
The head of her · camHentoff
paign , McCain, characterized the Supreme Court's
validating the habeas cor•
civil liberti es of American pu s rights of detainees at
citizen s .lhc terrorists win Guantanamo Bay in the
when we abandon our · Boumediene v. Bush decicivil liberties." I have not sion as '•one of the worst
heard so insistent a ring- decisi&lt;;&gt;ns in the history of
ing of the liberty bell from this country." I expect neiObama , McCain or Palin . ther McCain nor Palin rec,
I am far from alone in ognizes why habeas corpus, embedded in the
believing that the extent Constitution,
is called "the
and the depth of what the Great Writ."
Bush administration has
As for the effect of Vice
done to the Constitution
President Joe Biden on
and to our standing in the
future
Supreme Court nomworld (very much includ·inations,
The New York
ing our allies) will remain
unless and until enough Ti.mes (Sept. 12) reported
Americans understand how that on a Fort Myers, Fla..
much harm has been done. campaign stop , Biden
A patriotic new admini s- -referred to the "flioen
before
tration can start revealing administration"
correcting
the · damage and begin the immediately
repair work. And the next himself to say the "Obamapresident's nominations Biden administration."
He then added, laughfor Supreme Court vacancies could prevent the cur- ing, "Believe me, that
rent
Roberts-Alito wasn 't a Freudian slip."
Supreme
Court from Well, both by temperablocking the return of the ment and experien~
separation of powers and B iden will not be a pas:
sive vice president in an
the Bill of Ri ghts.
admini stration.
McCain ha s assured us Obama
that his model s f'or nomi- And Obama will have to
nations for new Supreme rely on Biden's long and
Court justices will be John deserved reputation as a
Roberts and Samuel Alito. frontline expert on foreign
Obama opposed the con- affairs. With regard to
firmation of both and has Supreme Court choices,
been critical of a number B 1den has also had extenof their subsequent High sive direct experience parCourt opinion s. As for ticipating in sometimesPalin, her manifest virtue s stormy Senate confirrnado not - as her record rion hearings.
indi cates - include a . On Aug . 26. in Denver,
stron g interes t in individ- Bide n said (Legal Time s,
ual constitutional liber- Sept. 8), "The single most
ties. She has mockingly significant thing . that
referred to Biden's . sup- Barack Obama will do,
port of the due process and I hope I'll be able to

.
-·

help him, will be to determine who the next members of the Supreme Court
are going to be."
Since Obama does not
agree with McCain about
the stature . of Justices
Roberts and Ali-to, and has
high regar.d for former
Chief
Justice
Earl
Warren's
accomplishments on the · Court , a
President Obama is very
likely to pay considerable
attention to his vice president's view on potential
Supreme Court justices.
And, as I've written durmg the presidential primaries and after; it was
Biden who, unsuccessfully, introduced the National
Security with Justice Act
of 2007 that would have
- among other restoralions of our American rule
of law - ended CIA kidnappings ("Extraordinary
renditions") and abol i; hed
CIA s~ret prisons .
Biden is indeed prone to
gaffes, but he can be elod
quent. An as vice president, he could act ori .
Thomas Jefferson 's counsel
that "the most effectual
means of preventing the per- ·
· version of power into tyranny are to illuminate the
ITlinds of the people." 1
_expect that as vice president,
Biden could bring the
Constitution back into
Americans' con'l'ersation _
not just on Constitution Day.

(Nat Hentoff is a nation ally re110wn ed authoritv
on the First Amendmetit
and the Bill of Rights and
a11rh or of man v books
inc./uding " Th e War on
Bill of Ri!(hls and tire
Gather.illg
Resistance "
(Sev en Storr'e.&lt; Press.
200&lt;1.) )

t},;

-Tuesday, October 7,

The Daily Sentinel ~ Page As

www.mydailysentinel.com

2008

Obituaries
•

'

John M. Johnson. Sr.
John M. Johnson, Sr., age 63, of Sandyville, passed away
Sunday morning in Aultman Hospital. ·
He was born in Racine, a son of the late Eugene and Lily
Grady Johnson , and had been a resident of the Sandyville
area 15 years.
John was a retired truck driver, and previously had
worked for Ford Motor Co. and Tandy Leather Co . He was
a member of Sandy Valley Eagles #3228. ·
He was preceded in death by his wife, Clarys F. Johnson,
on Feb. 26, 2006, and a son, Thomas W. Johnson, on April
6; 1992.
~e is survived by two sisters and ,a brother-in-law:
· Elizabeth and Pat O,Connor, of Reedsville, and Mary
O'Connor Of Maple F~ls, Wash.; two brothers aitd a sisterm-law: George Johnson, of Racine, and Paul and Nedra
Jghnson, of Gratiot; several children and several grandchildren.
Ser\lice will be conducted at II a.m. on Wednesday, Oct.'
8, 2008, at the Finefrock-Gordon Funeral Home in
Magnolia with Pastor Ruthann Bosley officiating.
. The family was so appreciative of her prayers and visits
to John . Interment in Greenlawn Cemetery in Sandyville.
Fnends may call one hour befo~e the service.
The family wi~hes to express their appreciation to all the
netghbors, especially Greg and Cari, Wanda~ Dan, Connie,
Dorothy, and Pam , for all the•help they gave to John and his
family over the years. ·
Also 'to the Nurses from Aultman Hospice who were so
loving and caring during his illness. _,

German cancer researcher
Harald zur Hausen stands
in his laboratory in
Heidelberg, Germany,
Monday. Zur Hausen and
French researchers
Francoise Barre-Sinoussi
and Luc Montagnier shared
the 2008 Nobel Prize in
medicine Monday for discovering the AIDS. virus
and the role of viruses in
cervical cancer.
AP photo

German, 2 French share Nobel medicine prize
Bu I&lt;AFa.. RITTER

decreased ~lidified the French position
researchers shared the other substantially
spread
of
the
disease
and dra- that Montagnier had isolated
AND M•n MOORE
half.
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITERS
Zur Hausen discovered twO matically increased life the virus in 1983 , a year
high-risk types of the HPV expectancy among treated before Gallo.
STOCKHOLM, Sweden virus and made them avail- patients," the citation said.
Maria Masucci, member of
- Three European scientists able to the scientific commuBarre-Sinoussi said that the Nobel Assembly. said
shared the 2008 Nobel Prize nity, ultimately leading to the when she and Montagnier there was no dispute in the
in medicine on Monday for development of vaccines pro- isolated the virus 25 years ago scientific community that the
'.
separate
discoveries of virus- tecting against infection .
they naively 'hoped that they French pair discovered and
POMEROY -Samuel A: Gibbs, IIi, 61, of Pomeroy,
es
that
cause
AIDS
and
cerviThe
U.S.
Food
and
Drug
would be able to prevent tl'te characterized the virus.
passed away on Thursday, Oct. 2, 2008, at Rocksprings
Administraiion
approved
the
cal
cancer,
breakthroughs
that
global
AIDS epidemic that
Dr. Anthony Fauci, director
Rehabilitatiol) Center in Pomeroy.
in
2006
for
vaccine
Gardasil
helped
doctors
fight
the_
deadfollowed.
of the National Institute of
He was born Sept. 26, 1947, in Racine, son of Verna
of
cervical
the
prevention
ly
diseases.
"We
naively
thought
that
.
Allergy . and
Infectious .
Martin and the late Samuel A. Gibbs II.
. · ·
qmcer in girls and women the discovery of the virus
·
French
·
researchers
· He was. a veteran of the U.S . Af!OY and employed as a
would allow us 10 quickly Diseases
in
Bethesda,
.
Francoise Barre-Sinoussi and age5 9 to 26.
copper mmer.
learn
more
about
it,
to
develMaryland,
agreed
there's
no
The vaccine works by pro- ·
He is survived by his wife, Gloria Gibbs of Pomeroy; -Luc Montagilier were cited
op
diagnostic
tests
_
which
doubt
the
French
scientists
sons, Richard Gibbs of Middleport, Samuel A. Gibbs IV of for their discovery of human teeting against strains of the has been done _ and to first identified the virus. He
Arizona, William Milliron al)d Roger Partlow, both of immunodeficiency virus, or human papillomavirus , or develop treatments, which said they, and zur Hausen;
HPV - including the two
PomeroY., and Ephriain Herdman of Middleport; a daugh- HJV, in 1983.
•
that
zur Hausen discovered has also been done to a large deserved the Nobel.
They
shared
the
award
with
ter, Apnl Hart of Nelsonville; his mother, Verna Martin of
extent
anu.
most
of
all,
develFauci
said
that
if
additional
that
cause
most
cases
of
Harald
zur
Rutland; sister, Connie Bales of Rutland; brother, Kevin Germany's
who
was
honored
for cervical cancers. The HPV op a vaccme that would pre- researchers could have been
Hausen,
Gibbs of Columbus; and several grandchildren. ·
vent the global epidemic," she included, Gallo "would have
Services were held at II a.m., Mon{lay, OcU,i, 2008, at finding human papilloma virus, transmitted by sexual told the AP by telephone from been an obvious choice to IJe
Anderson McDaniel Funeral Home in Pomeroy. Officiating viruses that cause cervical contact, causes genital warts Cambodia. .
added to that list."
was Rev. Dewayne Stutler and burial was in Union cancer, the second most com- that sometimes· develop into
Gallo,
director
of
the
That's because of Gallo's
cancer.
Cemetery. Military honors were presented by the American mon t:ancer among women.
''I'm not prepared for this," Institute for Human Virology roles ' in showiilg that HIV
U.S. researcher Dr. Robert
Legion. Friends called at.the funeral ho.me on Sunday, Oct.
zur
Hausep, 72, of the at the University of Maryland " causes AIDS and in the techGallo was locked in a dispute
5, 2008, from 6 to 8 p.m.
.
.
An online registry is. available at www.andersonmc- . with Montagnier iii the 1980s German Cancer Research and a prominent early meal advance that allowed the
over the relative importance Center in Heidelberg, told the . researcher m HJV, said it was isolation of HIV, Fauci said. ··
daniel.com.
· The Nobel Assembly said
of their roles in groundbreak- AP by telephone . "We're. "a disappoiiltmerit" not to .be
w1th zur Hausen "went against cutiilg research into HIV and its drinking a little glass of bub- honored . along
Montagmer and Barre- rent dogma" when he found
role in AIDS. Gallo told The bly right now."
In · its citation, the Nobel Smousst.
Associated Press that he was
that some ·kinds of humarl
Jackie Christina Leach, 39, of Cheshire, passed away -disappointed at not being Assembly
Barresaid
But ,he said all three of the papilloma virus, or HPV,
Sinoussi and Montagnier's award s rec1p1ents deserved caused cervical cancer. He
Monday, Oct. 6, 2008, at home.
included in the prize.
She was born on April 16, 1969 in Knoxville, Tenn., · Montagnier told the AP in discovery was one prerequi- the honor. No more than three realized that DNA of HPV
daugbter of Johnny Johnson of Gallipolis and Linda Abidjan, Ivory Coast, where -site for understanding the people can share a Nobel could be detected in tumors,
Newell of Gallipolis .
· · _ he is attending an internation- biology of AIDS and its treat- · l'rize..
.
.
and uncovered a family of
She is survived by her husband, John Leach of Cheshire; al AIDS conference, that he ment with antiviral drugs. The
Hts . dtspute ·
w•t? JiPV types, only some of
moth~~~ 1,-i~da N~well of Gallipolis; father, Johnny Johnsoq was still optimistic abo\ltwn- · paif:'s work iii the early l980s Monta~er .reached such a which cause cancer .
.
·
·
made it possible to study the level tn 1987 that thenof Galhpohs; chtldren, Tanya Roberts of Cheshtre, Jeffrey quering the di~.
President Ronald Reagan and
The d1~overy led to an
Moss of Gallipolis and Jacob Leach · of Cheshire; sister,.. The prize, he said, "encour- .virus closely.
That in turn let scientists Prime Minister Jacques .' understandmg of how HP~
Misty Newell of Gallipolis; brother, Samuel and Jennifer ages us all to keep going until
Newell of Leon, W.Va.; step-father, Nelson and Trenda we reach the goal at the end of identify important details in Chirac of France penned an causes cancer and the devel
Newell of Letart, W.Va.; grandmother, Nora Glover of this effort."
how J-IJV ~plicates and how agreement dividing millions opment of vaccmes aga':"st
·Gallipolis; mother-in-law, Dorothy Leach of Cheshire;
Montagnier said he wished it iilteracts with the cells it of dollars iii royalties from the H~V mfectlon, the citatiOn
brothers and sisters-in-law, Ro~er and Mary Leach of Long the prize had also gone to infects, the citation said. It AIDS blood test. The settle- sa1d.
Barre-Sinoussi. 61, is direc•
Bottom and Danny and Marcta Cripple of Ashland, Ky.; Gallo.
also led to ways to diagnose ment led to an agreement that
·
and several nieces and nephews.
"It is certain that he infected people and to screen officially credited the Gallo tor of the Regulat10~ of
She was preceded in death by grandparents: Samuel deserved this as much as us · blood for HJV, which has lim· and Montagnier labs with co- Retrovrral Infecnons Uruon at
the Institut Pasteur in France,
Glover, John and Dorothy Veith, Joe and Margaret Leach, two," he said.
ited spread of the epidemic, discovering the virus.
In
the
1990s,
however,
the
while Montagnier, 76, is the
Grant and Freda Johnson; and father-in-law, Don Leach.
Zur Hausen, a German and helped scientists develop
Funeral services will be held at I p.m. on ThUrsday, Oct. medical doctor and scientist; anti-HIV drugs, the citation U.S. government acknowl- director for the World
edged that the French Foundation · · for . AIDS
·
9, 2008, at Anderson McDaniel Funeral Home in Pomeroy received half.of the I 0 million said. ·
"'The combination of pre- · deserved a greater share of the Research iii Prevention, also
with Pastor Steve Little and Rev. Andrew Parsons officiat- kronor (US$1.4 million)
ing. Burial will follow at Gravel f:lill Cemetery. Visiting prize, while the two French vention and .. treatment has royalties. The admis~ion in the French capital.
hours will be from 6-8 p.m. Wednesday at the funeral
·home.
A registry is available . on-line at www .andersonmcdaniel.com . ·
first-term fundamentally altered unless
lions may well dominate. As Obama, the
Bv LIZ SIDOTI
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER
markets were plunging . in Illinois senator, wants to Obama also made a pretty
Europe and As ia as well as solidify his lead and avoid dramatic and serious misWASHINGTON
the U.S. on Monday, the can- any . major debate misstep take," said Chris Lehane,
Running short on time, John dictates were going after that could set him back in his Demqcratic strategist in Vice
McCain has the most 'riding each ,other.
quest to become the coun- . President AI Gore's 2000
'•
In Florida, GOP vice pres- try's ftrst black president.
campatgn.
on . the second presidential
debate, though Barack idential nominee Sarah Palin
Each hunkered down with
McCain . is most comfortRACINE- Gregory Paul Garretson, 53,Racine and for' Obama will be out of his raised Obama 's ties to top aides over the weekend able during the give-andmerly of Ravenswood, W.Va., died on Saturday, Oct, 4 at scripted comfort zone in the 1960s-era radical William
to prepare, McCain at his take_of question-and-answeihis nome after a short illness,
town hall-style confronta- Ayers and to the Democrat's vacation compound near
A funeral service will take place at noon, Wednesday, tion. It could be ugly if former pastor, the incendiary Sedona, Ariz., Obarpa in the events that' were a hallmark
Oct. 8 at Roush Funeral Home, Ravenswood, W.Va. Burial Monday's tussling is any Rev. Jeremiah Wright. In western mountains of newly of his 2000 campaign, and
will take place in Jackson County Memory Gardens, indication.
New Mexico, McCain, him- competitive North Carolina. . his 2008 primary effort. B11t
Cottageville; W.Va. Friends may call from 10 a.m .. Until
In the 90-minute debate, his consistency largely
Tuesday night's debate self asked, "Who is the real
time of the funeral service on Wednesday at Roush Funeral comes exactly four weeks · Sen. Obama," referred io NBC newsman Tom Brokaw depends on his moock-When
Home. ·
before Election Day with a him critically as a "Chicago will facilitate questions from he's on his game, McCain is
Friends · may
express
their condolences
at lot goirtg on both inside and politician'' and argued that the audience as tens of mil- winy and channing, filled
·roush I us2(){)0@ yahoo .com.
outside the · campaign: the Democrat says one thing lions of viewers tune in from with ready one-liners and
across the country.
stories from his past. When
Polling shows Obama and does another.
270
Obama, in tum, asserted in · "Generally, the stakes in he's off. McCain can come
approaching
the
_Electoral
College
votes
North
Carolina that McCain this are higher for McCain," across cranky, surly and
,, ..
from Page At
needed for victory, Wall • was engaging "in the usual said Phil Musser, .a former · prone to gaffes.
Obama typically is much
A vehicle parked on Court
A vehicle driven . by .Street is tumbling even fur- political shenanigans and executive director of the
Governors more at ease giving·speeches
Street and owned by D-;mald G. , Smith, Point ther and ·both candidates are smear tactics" to distract Republican
Charles Ritchie, Pomeroy, Pleasant, W.Va., allegedly escalating character attacks. from economic issues, even . Association. "It's probably from behind a lectern;
Their target audience in ·.as his own aides in Chicago one of the last and ·most though he has taken
was allegedly struck by a struck a the rear of a vehicle
the
debate: the roughly 10 assailed the Republican important opportunities for impromptu questions from
tractor trailer driven by driven by Clarice L. aeaver,
d h
percent
of the electorate wh&lt;;&gt; nominee for "an angry him .to lay out an economic • d'
Steven G. Moffett, Spring Crow'n City, near 118 East
vision that · resonates with au •ences an
as grown
an
additirade"
and
went
after
hlm
are
undecided
and
City, Tenn. and owned by Main and Court Streets. No
middle
America
in
a
fon'nat
much
more
adept
at the
tional quarter who say they for his role in the 1980s
Volunteer Trucking, Inc., injuries were reported .
that lends itself to doing just back-and-forth of voter'
A vehicle drive11 by might still change their Keating Five savings and that." ,
Dayton, •Tenn. There were
question sessions throughout
loan scandal.
•
Kathryn L. Meredith, minds before Nov. 4.
no injuries .
The depate, at Belmont
McCain, a four-term . But Republic~ns and the campaign . The debate
Paula ·J. Justis, Racine, Pomeroy, allegedly struck~
Democrats alike say even a provides the professorial
was cited for assured clear vehicle \!riven )&gt;y Blondena University in Nashville, Arizona senator, is trailing in strong McCain performance Obama with an opportunity
. distance, when a vehicle she B. Kelley, · Long Bottom, · Tenn., i~ sur,posed to. be polls and facing dwindling may· not be enough.
to show some einotion and
was driving allegedly rear- near the intersection of divided .equal .y bc;tween _the options to thwart Democrat
"McCain
can
win
·
the
seal the deal with voters still
economy and foreign pohcy, •· Obama in an enormously
ended a vehicle driven by CoiK't and East Main but given the global finan- troublesome political land- debate, but the trajectory of struggling to see him as pres,
Debra L .. Hurlow, Mason, Streets. Meredith, who was
cial turmoil, economic ques- scape for Republicans. this election would not be . ident. _
W.Va. on East Main Street. p1111ing out of the Pomeroy
A _vehicle · driven · by parking lot when she made
Romana
M.
Hawk, . contact with Kelly driving ·
from Page At
Pomeroy, allegedly struck east on East Main, alleged.
.
the rear of a vehicle driven Iy failed to yield. However,
$1.390.89 from the Class
by - Opal D , Whitlatch, the stop light at the inter- for Equtty and ~dequacy . period Oct. I, through period · Oct. I through
of . 2008 to the Class of
, Sept. 30, 2009.
Middleport, on \Vest Main section where . the accident at a rate of $.50 per aver- Sept. 30, 2009.
2009 .
Approved
an
agree•
Approved
a
schedule
•
Street near the .three-way occurred was in "flash age daily membership.
• Set the next m.eetin&amp;
stop near . the Pomeroy mode'·' due to a nearby
• Approved an . agree- ment with Medical Claims of class fees for the 2008for 6:30 p.m ., Oct. 21 , a!
Mason Bridge. Hawk was work 'zone. Both vehicles ment with Anthem to pro· Services, .Inc. to provide 09 school year.
the
Eas tern Elementary
• Approved the transfer
cited for assured clear dis- received damage. There Vide medical and prescrip- third party .claims services
·' ·
tance.
were nO injuries . ·
'
tion drug coverage for the for dental claims for the of funds 'in the amount of Library.

Samuel A. Gibbs, Ill

Jackie Christina Lead•

Debate stakes higher for McCain; insults mount

Deaths

a

Traffic

Board

.. ...

~

,
I

,.

I

•

�'

AcRoss THE NATION

the Daily Sentinel
1

PageA6

.

Tuesday, October 7, 2008

Local Weather
Tuesday .•.Sunny. Highs
in the upper 70s. Northeast
around"&gt;
5
winds
mph ... Becoming southeast
around 5 mph in the afternoon .
Tuesday night ...Partly
cloudy. Lows in the lower
50s. South winds around 5
mph.
·
.
Wednesday ... Part·!y
sunny with a chance of
· showers with isolated thunderstorms. Highs in the
lower 70s. Southeast winds
around · 5 mph. Chance of
rain 50 percent.
Wednesday night .. .Mostly

Bv JOSH FUNK

AP BUSINESS WRITER
OMAHA.
Neb.
Zapping frozen meals in the
microwave may be fast and
easy, but it also can make
:tou sick if it's not done
properly.
That message has been
slow to catch on. despite a
spate of illnesses last year
from
· improperly
microwaved frozen foods.
Qn Sunday, the government
~ssued a new warning urgmg consumers to thoroughly cook frozen chicken dinners after 32 people in 12
states were sickened with
salmonella poisoning .
. "Given how people use
microwaves, it's great for
reheating, but maybe not so
good for cooking." said
Doug Powell , scientific
director of the International
Food Safety Network based
&lt;!t Kansas State University.
- The problem is that
microwaves heat uneven!~.
imd can leave cold spots 111
the food that harbor dangerous bacteria, such as E. coli,
salmonella or listeria. So ·
microwaving anything that
jpc.h.1des raw meat, whether
l('s frozen or thawed, can
cause problems. ·
· "I think most food-safety
experts probably. ' would
have said it's not a good
idea to microwave anything
that's from a raw ~tate," said
Michael
Davidson , a
tJniversity of Tennessee
food microbiologist.
Many people wrongly
~sume all frozen meals are
precooked and only need to
be warmed. It's a misconcep!ion fostered .in part by foods
prepared to appear cooked,
such as chicken that has been
breaded or pre-browned. .
"I haven't worried about
the safety of frozen food.
Maybe I should," Kathy
Tewhil! said while perusing
the· frozen food aisle of a
Hy-Vee grocery store.
In reality, even some meals

cloudy with a chance of
showers with isolated thunderstorms. Lows in the mid
50s. Southeast winds around
5 mph. Chance of rain SO percent.
Thursday ...Cioudy wi!h a
SO percent chance of showers. Highs in the lower 70s.
Thursday night and
Friday .•. Mostly Cloudy. A
30 percent chance of showers. Lows in the mid 50s.
Highs inthe mid 70s.
Friday night through
Columbus
Day .•. ~artly
cloudy. Lows in the mid
50s. Highs in the mid 70s:

HyVee employee Kevin Kruger stocks the freezers, in Omaha, Neb. ;. Thursday, Aug. 28.
Zapping frozen meals in the microwave may be last and easy, but it also can make you
sick if not done properly.
designed to be microwaved largest frozen foods produccan be unsafe if they are not ers, have rolled out revised
heated thoroughly enough. or instructions on many of their
which
include
are cooked using directions brands
Stouffer's,
Lean
Cuisine,
meant for a microwave with
Banquet and Healthy Choice.
. different wattage.
But preparing frozen
The government doesn't
foods
safely may require a
track microwave-related
food -borne illnesses, but · change in consumers'
every year more than microwave habits , too. In
325 ,000 people are hospital- the latest outbreak, some of
ized for food-related illness- the meals were microwaved
es. Last· fall. hundreds J:Ven though the products
became ill when Banquet weren't intended to be. .
Microwaves produce short
pot pies made by ConAgra
Foods were linked to a sal- radio waves that penetrate
monella outbreak and food about I inch and exc'ite
frozen pizzas made by water. fat and 'sugar moleGeneral Mills were tied to cules to produce heat Food
an E. coli outbreak. Both safety experts say thar
method poses more.risk than
products were recalled.
Since then, food compa- a stove or oven because it
nies have revamped the heats food unevenly.
cooking-instructions on their ' .To be safe, they suggest
frozen foods to ensure they getting a food thermometer
are sufficient for killing off and using it .to check the
any dangerous oacteria, says temperature of microwaved
Leslie Sarasin, head of the food in several places , espeAmerican Frozen Food cially if the product
Institute trade group.
includes raw ingredients.
ConAgra and Nestle
"If you were going to
Prepared Foods, two of the make one of these things for

a kid, you'd definitely want
to be checking the temperatures on the things or using
your (conventional) oven ,"
Davidson said.
But spotting raw ingredient isn't always easy
because the only clue most
companies offer is the two
words "COOK THOROUGHLY" on the front -of
the package.
Consumers also need to .
become better · acquainted
with the technical specifications of their microwaves.
The unit's wattage - how
powerful it is - influences
how well it heats food. and
cooking instructions are written for specific wattage~.
But microwaves lose
power over time, and' some
.smaller microwaves may
not produce enough power
to safely cook some products. Banquet pot pies, for
example, now include a ·
warning that the product ,
shouldn't be cooked in
microwaves with less than
1,100 watts output.

.

'
Red Sox beat Angels,
Page 82

Thesday, October 7, 2008 ·

LocAL SCHEDULE
POMEROY - A. IOhedule ol upoomlng high
achool varsity sporting even11 Involving
team• from Meigs end G.. l• eountles.

Drd\,t Octqlllr 7
SOccor .
Gallia Academy at ovcs. 5:30p.m.
Yoltoyt&gt;oll

. Alexander at Melga, 6 p.m.
Fed Hock at Eastern , 6 p.m.
Miller at Southern, 6 p.m.

Grace Christian at South Galli&amp;, 5:30

p.m.

Aoc:k Hill at River Valley, 5:30 p.m.

Yotteyball

Meigs at Belpre, 6 p.m.
South Gallia at South Point, 5:30p.m.

'

c..... CGuntry

Meigs, Eastern, Southern at TVC
Championships, 4 p.m.

Market watch
October 6, 2008

JhurMq Octpber p

Socic•r

DawlonH

tndustrtlls

ovcs at -Elk Vallev. 5 p.m.

9,955 .50

YDnevban

Eastern afTrimble, 6 p.m.

Noodoq

composlta
Stand•nl &amp;

....,&gt;It;

Poor's 500
Russell

2000

SOuthern at Fed Hock, 6 p.m .
River Valley at Fairland, 5:30 p.m.
OVCS at Elk Valley, 6 p.m.

1,862 .96

1,056.89

-

&gt;

Fifth weekly 2008
.AP lfigh School
Football
PoD List
•

•

595.90

NYSE diary
Ad-v•nced :
Declined:

235
2 ,998

19

~~~-~:
VOlume:

COLUMBU~

VoluJM:

the runner-up with a time of
18:52.
GAHS scored a team total
-PIKETON - Freshman of 86 points. finishing well
Peyton Adkins added anoth- behind team champion
er great accolade to her Cabell Midland with 40
quickly-expanding resume · points. Zane Trace ( 112)
on Saturday at the Piketon was third. Unioto (139)
Cross Country Invitational, placed fourth and Logan
winning the 141-competitor Elm (147) rounded out the
girls' competition in record top-five.
.
Senior Lauren Adkins
fashion while leading the
Blue Angels to a runner-up. also had a top-five effort for
the Blue and White, pll!cing
finish out of 16 teams .
Adkins - who has fin- fifth overall with a time of
ished no lower than second 20:01. McKenna Warner
in any varsity ·race during (21 :09) was also 19th and
herfirst season - set a new Genna Baker (21: 12) fincourse record with a win- ished 21st. Kavla Harrison
ning time of 18:20, finish- (22:56)rounded out the
ing more than 30 seconds of team tot;tl b~ finishing 57th.
the entire field. Taylor
Katie Dunlap (24:31 ).
Hatfield of Zane Trace was Mariah Green (30:24) and
BY BRYAN WALTERS

,·

,

On the boys' side of
Parker
Holling sworth
and
Jared
things, there were 167 indi- (20:48)
vidual runners and a total of Hollingswo rth (21: 15.5)
22 teams in competition. rounded out the .team scar. Unioto (42) won the team ing by finishing I 13th and
contest by II points over I ZOth. respectively. Mike
runner-up Cabell Midland, Wojtaszek . (23:28) also
and Adrian Ross of UHS placed 149th.
. won the indi vidual competi - Galli a Academy had four
tion with a time of 16 :10.
individuals compete at
Locally, the top finisher Piketon, with Dallas Craft
P Adkins
Watson
was South Gallia's Jacob (19:15) leading the way hy
Watson - who placed 23rd placing 69th. Morgan
with a time of 17 :38. McKinniss (19:18.5) was
overall
Allison Nolan (33:04i al so
River
Valley was the lone next in 72nd. D.J. Faro
had respective placements
the event, (22:35) and Cody Pullins
team
entered
of 73rd, !30th and I 36th for placing 15that with
381 (22:37) were also ·I 44th and
the Angel{
points . David Householder !45th .
River Valley
senior ( 18:47) led the Raiders in · Complete results of the .
Ashley Fitch also competed 58th. followed by Matt 2008
Piketon
Cross
in the girls ' race at Piketon , Goodrich ( 19:20) in 75th Country Invitational are ·
finishing 39th overall with a and Jon Porter (20:21) in available on the web at
t·ime of22: 14 .5.
97th.
www.baumspage.com

Prep Volleyball Roundup

Nashville's
3 teams
• •
enJoymg
combined
15-1 start
'

{AP) - How a state panel

· poll ot 2008, by OHSAA divisions. wHh

WOil•lost record and total points (first•
place votes in parentheses):

390

-----------··--------

2,119

-~~~!.""~:

.

fifth of seven weekly Associated Press

Nasdaq diary
Declined:

H, •'

o1 sports writers and broacfcasters rates
Ohio high school footb8:11 t8ams In the

7 .95b

Advanced:

Peyton Adkins sets course record at Piketon CC Invitational·
BWAlTERSCIMVDAtlYTRIBUNE.COM

Wtdntldny. Pctobtr a

AEP (NYSE) - 34.10
Akzo (NASDAQ) - 46.51
Ashland Inc. (NVSE) - 27.01
Big Lots (NVSE) - 26.66
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C.e ntury Aluminum (NASDAQ} ·
- 18.10
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Charming Shops (NASDAQ} 4.50
City Holding (NAf!DAQ) - 42.48
Col!lns (NYSE) - 42
DuPont (NYSE) - 37.46
US Bank (NYSE) - 34.80
Gannett (NYSE) - t 4. 98
[ieneral Electric (NVSE) - 21.38
Hartey-Davldson (NVSE) - 31.95
JP Morgan (NYSE) - 44
Kroger (NYSE) - 26.52
Limited Brands (NYSE}- 15.94
No_r(olk Southern (NYSE) _;_ 56.97
Ohio Valley Banc ·corp. (NAS- .
DAQ)- 21
'
BBT (NYSE) - 35.61
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Pepsico (NYSE) - 66.64
Premier (NASDAQ) - 9.25
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Sears Holding (NASDAQ} - 85.74
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Dally stock reports are tho 4

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

Rays headed. to M.CS, Page BCi

Local Stocks
AP photo

Inside

_____~

DIVISION I

813 .14m

••
p.m. ET closing quotes of trans·
action• lor Oct. 6, 2008, provld·
ad by Edward Janos financial
advisors Isaac Mills In Galllpollt
at (740) 441-9441 ond Losloy
Marrero tn·Polnt Pleasant at
(304) 674-0t74. Member SIPC.

Visit us
online at
www.mydailysentinel.com

1, Cle. Glenville (2i) 7·0
2, Pickerington Cent. (3) 7-0

3, HiiHard Davidson (1) 7-0
- 4, Dublin Coffman 7·0
5, Cln. Elder {3) 6-1
Brunswick (2} 7-0
. 7, Cin. Colerain 6-1

8, Cle. St. Ignatius {I) 6-t

• 9, Amherst Steele 7-0
.10, Lakewood St. Edward 6-1

285

267
216
t59
-152
152

147
127
73 .
26

Others receiving 12 or more:points : 11,
Middletown 20. 12, C!lll. GlenOak 17.

DIVISION II
t, Cols. OeSalas {19)7-0
2, Louisville (9) 7..()
. 3, Tot. Cent. Cath . 7-&lt;J
4, Lexington 7-Q

289
2S8 .
235

191

:5.logan (1) 7-0

9, Medina Highland 7·0

186
144
121
85
51

10, Cin. Winton Woods 6·1

37

6, Sylvania Southview (2) 7-Q
7,.New Carlisle Tecumseh 7-Q
~ a~ E. Cle. Shaw 7.0

•

Others receiving 12 or more points: 11 ,

Cola. Marion-Franklin 32. 1~ 1 CJn, rurp1.n+
t7. )3, Oreadon Trt-11111~ 14,

DIVISION Ill
1, St. Marys Memorl•IIIB) 7·0
2, Thornvllte Sheridan (3) 7·0
3, Tipp City Tlppecanoo (3) 7-0
4, Youngs. llborty (2) 7-0
5, Clrd!MIIelogan Elm {I) 7-0
6. Pl&gt;land S.mlnary {116-1
7, canal Winchester (1) 7-Q
B.Avon (2) 7-0

•9, Canal Fulton NW 6·1
'10, New Philadelphia 7..(1

272
200

Members of the Southern varsity volleyball team collectively clap while members of opposing Hannan are introduced during f1:1onday night's non-conference contest at Charles W. Hayman Gymnasium in Racine .

114

Southern sweeps Hannan; Eastern avenges Meigs

258

176
157
125
95
82
40

. Others receiving 12 or more points: 11,
Aewark Licking Valley 31 . 12', Ct"tagrin
Falls 26. 13, Betlevue 25.. 14,
GermantoWn Valley View 24. 15, Dover
19. 16, Cuyahoga Falls Walsh Jesu;t 15.

17,Can. s . 13.

2107
Clltlvy .......

:11108

c.n ora
,_,.,_.
....................

.............
t

·

·~8,Btli

, 1

81,Btli

.

cmr••·
H I - , Ill,

-·-....
--

lf2,-.-.•
r m

!-

-.

~

16,886

1

·

DIVISION IV
1, Coldwater {25) 7-0
2, Steubenville (51 7-0

262

3, Youngs. Mooney 6-1
4, Misslllon Tuslaw 7.0

209
148

5, New llllling11m 7-0
6,
7.
· 8,
9.

:!001
Cllavy M-.u

,._t:D,

Til, CNII,IIr

*17,688

__ _

....!J:1iDI
........
,_, ,Ual .....

...

*14,688

---·
~L

.......

.

*18,686

-.-.c--

L. .111,,_ _ . . . , _

*17,886

---.
... -....

--·-·

...tiL.

...
_'
"
__
...1'1114,.
.--.. .--

J..:'fL.t,
,_~

*12,400

••..__
=..

·--

..

. ..,jljir....

*8,886

·~·

...... ......_.- ......
____
.
Cllnll"-'
................
"·--·-'---"·
....
.... ,,

*16,688

_,_

._.,,.,

.....,..._, ...... eu

118,.

...

''

*18,Btli

110~---••IAioh
l .....

*11,488

IlK--·'--•
-· ,_tw• rt"""

*18,800

-----==io
---.1
•aa.•

a.vya-ft.l71
~

................
r.-.

. . . . ., lKIII

118,.
•

302
131

Plain Clly Jon. Alder (1) 7-0 · 121
Kettering Aher 5-2
·116'
Clarksville Cllntoli-Massle 7-Q 104
Genoa Area 7..0
79

10. Akr. SVSM 6-1

73

Others receiving 12 Dr more points: 11.
Fostoria 42. 12, Lorain Clearvtew 32 . 13,
Marlon .Ptaasant 23. 14. Brookville 17.
15, Martins Ferry 15.

DIVISIONV
1, Youngs. Ursuline (23) 7-0
.2. Archbol&amp; (2) 7-0
3. Hamlet Patrk:k Henry {1) 7·0
4, MS Morlon Local (3)6-1
4, Findlay liberty-Benton 7-0
6, Wheetersi&gt;Jrg {2) 7-0
7, Kirtland 7-0
8, Anna 6-1

9, Cln. Hills 7.0

.

10, Bucyrus \VYn1ord 7-0

290
22 1

2t6
t76
176
158
118
95
70
38

Others receiving 12 or more point$: 11 ,

Detphoa Jetf8r110r1 26. 12. w. Ullerty·
Salem 22. t3, Portsmouth w. 21 . 14,
Nelsonvllle·York 18. 15, Columbiana
~•lvlew 13. 18, w. Jefferaon 12.

DIVISION VI
:1, HOpoWiti-LOuctOn {15) 7-0
· 2. MoQIIdoro (5) 7.0
3, Mechank:aOOrg (5) 7-0.
;o~, Norwalk St. Paul (ol) 7-0
•5,Ada7-0
' 6, Matvom {11 7-0
: 1. McOonakt (I) 7-0
•8, Hannlba1Rhler7-o
•9, Oolphoo St. John's 6-1

286
240
234
207
175
134
119
113

:1o, earev e-1

.

78

41

Others recel\llng 12 or mora points: 11 ,

PantloJ&amp;-GIIboa 31 . 12, Be~ln Cen1ar

__
..__
Nl •='-II
----

.... -.
--""111111....
' 114,• ·

Western Reserve 16.

C...CII,J71f ..... !I&amp;J
1 .......... .....

*18~

- " " " ' - 111•

IIlii

'

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

__

Cllll. 171, .............,

114,486

.

CoNTAcrUs
1-740-446-2342 ext. 33
fax - 1-7olil-4411-3008
~-moll - III&gt;Orl80rnyUall)'aor1tlnet.com
Sport• Steff

Bryan,Walte,., Sporls Writer

{740) 446-2342, ""'· 33

bwatt.rtOmydaltytrlbune.com

Larry Crum, Sport&amp; Writer

{740) 446-2342, ext. 33

lerumOmydollyreglster.com

•

•

Bryan Waltera/photo

STAFF REPORT

SPOATSCIMVDAILYSENTINEL.COM
RACINE - The Southern
Lady Tornadoes blanked the
Hannan Lady Wildcats
Monday night in picking up
their seventh win of the year.
Southern defeated Hannan
in three sets 25-14, 25-13,
and 25-7. ·
·Br:ittany Foley put Hannan
on top 3-0 in the first game.
but the lead was short-lived.
Hannan led 5-3 before
Courtney Thomas caught
fire and put the Tornadoes
on top 11-8. Southern never
looked back as consecutive
four · point efforts from
Chelsea Pape 11nd Bre Taylor
forti fled the Southern cause.
Rashell Boso ended the
· game with four straight to
give SHS the 25-14 win.
Brittany Edmonds had a
three-point game for the vis-

itors.
·Southern went up 6-3 in
the second game on dual
three-point efforts from
Emma Hunter and Ashley
Walker.
Edmonds
put
Hannan on the board, but the
SHS defense was just too
much:
In the second round of
serving; Hunter put SHS up
16-9 with four straight, then
Boso closed out a strong
Southern effort with six tallies and Thomas added the
game-winner in the 25-13
win.
The final game was all
Southern. Hunter, Taylor
and Walker all scored five or
more points in string up the
Wildcats. SHS rolled to the
25-7 win.
Hunter, Taylor and Boso
all had three aces for
Southern, while Walker had
four. Overall the Tornadoes

were 67-for-73 in serving was led by Megan Adkins
with 26 aces overall-. with 10.
Hol singer was 16-of-18
Southern hosts Miller
blocking. Boso I 0-of-12 and Tuesday while Hannan travStephanie Shamblin was l 0- els to Valley Fayette for a trifor-10. Overall , spiking was n,1atch also on Tuesday. ·
47-for·53 with 26 aces .
In passing Hunter· was 10- EASTERN AVENGES MEIGS
for-11 with II assists, Boso
8-for-8, Thomas 7-for-7
TUPPERS PLAINS with seven assists, Shamblin Eastern volleyball won its
9-for-10. Pape 12-for-14, . fourth consecutive overall
Samantha Patterson •~0-for- decision - and exacted a
21 with a good floor game little revenge in the process
and Holsinger 9-for-9. - during Monday night's
Southern was 93-for-103 for straight game 25-2l, 25-23,
90 percent on passing. 25-17 victory over visiting
Shamblin had four kills , Meigs in . a Tri- Valley
Taylor three , Boso one and Conference non-divisional
Holsinger led the team with matchup .
nine.
·
The Lady Bagles (16-4)
Southem won the reserve avenged a four-game 26-24,
match with 25-14 and 27-25 27-25, 25-20, 25-22 setback
scor~&lt;s. SHS was led by to the Lady Marauders (I 5Bobbi Harris with 15, Hope 4) at Larry R. Morrison
Teaford had fourteen and
Vada Counts ten. Hannan Please see Volleyball, Bl .

NASHVILLE. Tenn. (AP)
- Music City's three football teams are turning the
town into Pigskinville.
The Tennessee Titans are
off to the best stan in fran·
chise history. one of the
NFL's two remaining .undefeated. teams at. the .first to
5-0 . The
13th-ranked
Yimderbilt . Commodores,
who've never been ranked
higher, are a victory away
from their . best stan since ·
1928 and sitting atop the
mighty
. Southeastern
Conference's East Division.
. The succ"H~'iffi:ruoes even
Tennessee State of the
Football
Championship
Series leading the Ohio Valley Conference.
Together, the teams are a
combined 15-1.
"I hope everything keeps
going," Vanderbilt coach
Johnson
said
.Bobby
Monday. ''I'd like to see all
three teams keep it moving .
That would be fantastic for
the city. But I don't think
there's · anything in the
water. There's probably
some things in the water but.
not affecting football."
The Commodores' success is the most surprising
of the three .
The Titans, who can enjoy
their 5-0 stan with a bye this
week. went 10-6 a year ago
and reached the playoffs.
They currently lead the
NFL with eight straight regular-season .wins that ties
for the franchise's thirdlongest · such winnirrg
streak, first set during 2000
when they had the NFL's·
best record at 13-3.
·
Tennessee State went 8-3
in 200 l and even won conPlease see Start. Bl

Vikings escape New
Orleans with -victory
NEW ORLEANS (AP) The New Orleans Saints
committed so many blun:
ders, not even Reggi~
Bush's tecqrd-tying two
punt returns for touchdowns
could make up for them in a
30-27 loss to the Minnesota
Vikings on Monday night.
Gus Frerotte passed for
222 yards and a game-tying
touchdown to Bernard
Berrian with 7 :10 to play,
and Ryan Longwell's 30yard field goal with 13 seconds left gave the Vikings
comeback win.
"This is as good a win as it
gets," Vikings coach Brad
Childress said . "I don't
know if I've ever been
involved in one that went
that way."
•.
Longwell's game-winning
kick was set up by a pass
interference call on a long
throw to Berrian. who was

rim into before the ball came
down despite being double·covered. That was only the
latest gaffe by New Orleans.
Martin Gramatica , who
had a.field goal blocked and
returned 59 yards for a
touchdown in !he ftrst quarter, missed a 46-yarder that
could have given the Saints
(2'3) a lead with two minutes to go.
Soo'l after. Minnesota (2,3)
was
celebrating
Lo,,gwell's ~inning kick.
New Orleans committed
four to · .•,overs, dropped several passes and was called
for II penalties for 102
yards. New Orleans also
tried to catch the Vikings off
guard with an on side kick.
but Minnesota recovered,
AP photo
setting up Longwell's 53yard field goal, which tied . New Orleans Saints running back Reggie Bush (25) tries to get away from Minnesota
Viking linebacker Ben Leber (51) in the fjrst half of an NFL loQtball game in New .
.PlutH lie Vlldnp, Bl
Orleans on Monday.
· '
I

•
•

�'

AcRoss THE NATION

the Daily Sentinel
1

PageA6

.

Tuesday, October 7, 2008

Local Weather
Tuesday .•.Sunny. Highs
in the upper 70s. Northeast
around"&gt;
5
winds
mph ... Becoming southeast
around 5 mph in the afternoon .
Tuesday night ...Partly
cloudy. Lows in the lower
50s. South winds around 5
mph.
·
.
Wednesday ... Part·!y
sunny with a chance of
· showers with isolated thunderstorms. Highs in the
lower 70s. Southeast winds
around · 5 mph. Chance of
rain 50 percent.
Wednesday night .. .Mostly

Bv JOSH FUNK

AP BUSINESS WRITER
OMAHA.
Neb.
Zapping frozen meals in the
microwave may be fast and
easy, but it also can make
:tou sick if it's not done
properly.
That message has been
slow to catch on. despite a
spate of illnesses last year
from
· improperly
microwaved frozen foods.
Qn Sunday, the government
~ssued a new warning urgmg consumers to thoroughly cook frozen chicken dinners after 32 people in 12
states were sickened with
salmonella poisoning .
. "Given how people use
microwaves, it's great for
reheating, but maybe not so
good for cooking." said
Doug Powell , scientific
director of the International
Food Safety Network based
&lt;!t Kansas State University.
- The problem is that
microwaves heat uneven!~.
imd can leave cold spots 111
the food that harbor dangerous bacteria, such as E. coli,
salmonella or listeria. So ·
microwaving anything that
jpc.h.1des raw meat, whether
l('s frozen or thawed, can
cause problems. ·
· "I think most food-safety
experts probably. ' would
have said it's not a good
idea to microwave anything
that's from a raw ~tate," said
Michael
Davidson , a
tJniversity of Tennessee
food microbiologist.
Many people wrongly
~sume all frozen meals are
precooked and only need to
be warmed. It's a misconcep!ion fostered .in part by foods
prepared to appear cooked,
such as chicken that has been
breaded or pre-browned. .
"I haven't worried about
the safety of frozen food.
Maybe I should," Kathy
Tewhil! said while perusing
the· frozen food aisle of a
Hy-Vee grocery store.
In reality, even some meals

cloudy with a chance of
showers with isolated thunderstorms. Lows in the mid
50s. Southeast winds around
5 mph. Chance of rain SO percent.
Thursday ...Cioudy wi!h a
SO percent chance of showers. Highs in the lower 70s.
Thursday night and
Friday .•. Mostly Cloudy. A
30 percent chance of showers. Lows in the mid 50s.
Highs inthe mid 70s.
Friday night through
Columbus
Day .•. ~artly
cloudy. Lows in the mid
50s. Highs in the mid 70s:

HyVee employee Kevin Kruger stocks the freezers, in Omaha, Neb. ;. Thursday, Aug. 28.
Zapping frozen meals in the microwave may be last and easy, but it also can make you
sick if not done properly.
designed to be microwaved largest frozen foods produccan be unsafe if they are not ers, have rolled out revised
heated thoroughly enough. or instructions on many of their
which
include
are cooked using directions brands
Stouffer's,
Lean
Cuisine,
meant for a microwave with
Banquet and Healthy Choice.
. different wattage.
But preparing frozen
The government doesn't
foods
safely may require a
track microwave-related
food -borne illnesses, but · change in consumers'
every year more than microwave habits , too. In
325 ,000 people are hospital- the latest outbreak, some of
ized for food-related illness- the meals were microwaved
es. Last· fall. hundreds J:Ven though the products
became ill when Banquet weren't intended to be. .
Microwaves produce short
pot pies made by ConAgra
Foods were linked to a sal- radio waves that penetrate
monella outbreak and food about I inch and exc'ite
frozen pizzas made by water. fat and 'sugar moleGeneral Mills were tied to cules to produce heat Food
an E. coli outbreak. Both safety experts say thar
method poses more.risk than
products were recalled.
Since then, food compa- a stove or oven because it
nies have revamped the heats food unevenly.
cooking-instructions on their ' .To be safe, they suggest
frozen foods to ensure they getting a food thermometer
are sufficient for killing off and using it .to check the
any dangerous oacteria, says temperature of microwaved
Leslie Sarasin, head of the food in several places , espeAmerican Frozen Food cially if the product
Institute trade group.
includes raw ingredients.
ConAgra and Nestle
"If you were going to
Prepared Foods, two of the make one of these things for

a kid, you'd definitely want
to be checking the temperatures on the things or using
your (conventional) oven ,"
Davidson said.
But spotting raw ingredient isn't always easy
because the only clue most
companies offer is the two
words "COOK THOROUGHLY" on the front -of
the package.
Consumers also need to .
become better · acquainted
with the technical specifications of their microwaves.
The unit's wattage - how
powerful it is - influences
how well it heats food. and
cooking instructions are written for specific wattage~.
But microwaves lose
power over time, and' some
.smaller microwaves may
not produce enough power
to safely cook some products. Banquet pot pies, for
example, now include a ·
warning that the product ,
shouldn't be cooked in
microwaves with less than
1,100 watts output.

.

'
Red Sox beat Angels,
Page 82

Thesday, October 7, 2008 ·

LocAL SCHEDULE
POMEROY - A. IOhedule ol upoomlng high
achool varsity sporting even11 Involving
team• from Meigs end G.. l• eountles.

Drd\,t Octqlllr 7
SOccor .
Gallia Academy at ovcs. 5:30p.m.
Yoltoyt&gt;oll

. Alexander at Melga, 6 p.m.
Fed Hock at Eastern , 6 p.m.
Miller at Southern, 6 p.m.

Grace Christian at South Galli&amp;, 5:30

p.m.

Aoc:k Hill at River Valley, 5:30 p.m.

Yotteyball

Meigs at Belpre, 6 p.m.
South Gallia at South Point, 5:30p.m.

'

c..... CGuntry

Meigs, Eastern, Southern at TVC
Championships, 4 p.m.

Market watch
October 6, 2008

JhurMq Octpber p

Socic•r

DawlonH

tndustrtlls

ovcs at -Elk Vallev. 5 p.m.

9,955 .50

YDnevban

Eastern afTrimble, 6 p.m.

Noodoq

composlta
Stand•nl &amp;

....,&gt;It;

Poor's 500
Russell

2000

SOuthern at Fed Hock, 6 p.m .
River Valley at Fairland, 5:30 p.m.
OVCS at Elk Valley, 6 p.m.

1,862 .96

1,056.89

-

&gt;

Fifth weekly 2008
.AP lfigh School
Football
PoD List
•

•

595.90

NYSE diary
Ad-v•nced :
Declined:

235
2 ,998

19

~~~-~:
VOlume:

COLUMBU~

VoluJM:

the runner-up with a time of
18:52.
GAHS scored a team total
-PIKETON - Freshman of 86 points. finishing well
Peyton Adkins added anoth- behind team champion
er great accolade to her Cabell Midland with 40
quickly-expanding resume · points. Zane Trace ( 112)
on Saturday at the Piketon was third. Unioto (139)
Cross Country Invitational, placed fourth and Logan
winning the 141-competitor Elm (147) rounded out the
girls' competition in record top-five.
.
Senior Lauren Adkins
fashion while leading the
Blue Angels to a runner-up. also had a top-five effort for
the Blue and White, pll!cing
finish out of 16 teams .
Adkins - who has fin- fifth overall with a time of
ished no lower than second 20:01. McKenna Warner
in any varsity ·race during (21 :09) was also 19th and
herfirst season - set a new Genna Baker (21: 12) fincourse record with a win- ished 21st. Kavla Harrison
ning time of 18:20, finish- (22:56)rounded out the
ing more than 30 seconds of team tot;tl b~ finishing 57th.
the entire field. Taylor
Katie Dunlap (24:31 ).
Hatfield of Zane Trace was Mariah Green (30:24) and
BY BRYAN WALTERS

,·

,

On the boys' side of
Parker
Holling sworth
and
Jared
things, there were 167 indi- (20:48)
vidual runners and a total of Hollingswo rth (21: 15.5)
22 teams in competition. rounded out the .team scar. Unioto (42) won the team ing by finishing I 13th and
contest by II points over I ZOth. respectively. Mike
runner-up Cabell Midland, Wojtaszek . (23:28) also
and Adrian Ross of UHS placed 149th.
. won the indi vidual competi - Galli a Academy had four
tion with a time of 16 :10.
individuals compete at
Locally, the top finisher Piketon, with Dallas Craft
P Adkins
Watson
was South Gallia's Jacob (19:15) leading the way hy
Watson - who placed 23rd placing 69th. Morgan
with a time of 17 :38. McKinniss (19:18.5) was
overall
Allison Nolan (33:04i al so
River
Valley was the lone next in 72nd. D.J. Faro
had respective placements
the event, (22:35) and Cody Pullins
team
entered
of 73rd, !30th and I 36th for placing 15that with
381 (22:37) were also ·I 44th and
the Angel{
points . David Householder !45th .
River Valley
senior ( 18:47) led the Raiders in · Complete results of the .
Ashley Fitch also competed 58th. followed by Matt 2008
Piketon
Cross
in the girls ' race at Piketon , Goodrich ( 19:20) in 75th Country Invitational are ·
finishing 39th overall with a and Jon Porter (20:21) in available on the web at
t·ime of22: 14 .5.
97th.
www.baumspage.com

Prep Volleyball Roundup

Nashville's
3 teams
• •
enJoymg
combined
15-1 start
'

{AP) - How a state panel

· poll ot 2008, by OHSAA divisions. wHh

WOil•lost record and total points (first•
place votes in parentheses):

390

-----------··--------

2,119

-~~~!.""~:

.

fifth of seven weekly Associated Press

Nasdaq diary
Declined:

H, •'

o1 sports writers and broacfcasters rates
Ohio high school footb8:11 t8ams In the

7 .95b

Advanced:

Peyton Adkins sets course record at Piketon CC Invitational·
BWAlTERSCIMVDAtlYTRIBUNE.COM

Wtdntldny. Pctobtr a

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C.e ntury Aluminum (NASDAQ} ·
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City Holding (NAf!DAQ) - 42.48
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DuPont (NYSE) - 37.46
US Bank (NYSE) - 34.80
Gannett (NYSE) - t 4. 98
[ieneral Electric (NVSE) - 21.38
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JP Morgan (NYSE) - 44
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Limited Brands (NYSE}- 15.94
No_r(olk Southern (NYSE) _;_ 56.97
Ohio Valley Banc ·corp. (NAS- .
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'
BBT (NYSE) - 35.61
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Dally stock reports are tho 4

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

Rays headed. to M.CS, Page BCi

Local Stocks
AP photo

Inside

_____~

DIVISION I

813 .14m

••
p.m. ET closing quotes of trans·
action• lor Oct. 6, 2008, provld·
ad by Edward Janos financial
advisors Isaac Mills In Galllpollt
at (740) 441-9441 ond Losloy
Marrero tn·Polnt Pleasant at
(304) 674-0t74. Member SIPC.

Visit us
online at
www.mydailysentinel.com

1, Cle. Glenville (2i) 7·0
2, Pickerington Cent. (3) 7-0

3, HiiHard Davidson (1) 7-0
- 4, Dublin Coffman 7·0
5, Cln. Elder {3) 6-1
Brunswick (2} 7-0
. 7, Cin. Colerain 6-1

8, Cle. St. Ignatius {I) 6-t

• 9, Amherst Steele 7-0
.10, Lakewood St. Edward 6-1

285

267
216
t59
-152
152

147
127
73 .
26

Others receiving 12 or more:points : 11,
Middletown 20. 12, C!lll. GlenOak 17.

DIVISION II
t, Cols. OeSalas {19)7-0
2, Louisville (9) 7..()
. 3, Tot. Cent. Cath . 7-&lt;J
4, Lexington 7-Q

289
2S8 .
235

191

:5.logan (1) 7-0

9, Medina Highland 7·0

186
144
121
85
51

10, Cin. Winton Woods 6·1

37

6, Sylvania Southview (2) 7-Q
7,.New Carlisle Tecumseh 7-Q
~ a~ E. Cle. Shaw 7.0

•

Others receiving 12 or more points: 11 ,

Cola. Marion-Franklin 32. 1~ 1 CJn, rurp1.n+
t7. )3, Oreadon Trt-11111~ 14,

DIVISION Ill
1, St. Marys Memorl•IIIB) 7·0
2, Thornvllte Sheridan (3) 7·0
3, Tipp City Tlppecanoo (3) 7-0
4, Youngs. llborty (2) 7-0
5, Clrd!MIIelogan Elm {I) 7-0
6. Pl&gt;land S.mlnary {116-1
7, canal Winchester (1) 7-Q
B.Avon (2) 7-0

•9, Canal Fulton NW 6·1
'10, New Philadelphia 7..(1

272
200

Members of the Southern varsity volleyball team collectively clap while members of opposing Hannan are introduced during f1:1onday night's non-conference contest at Charles W. Hayman Gymnasium in Racine .

114

Southern sweeps Hannan; Eastern avenges Meigs

258

176
157
125
95
82
40

. Others receiving 12 or more points: 11,
Aewark Licking Valley 31 . 12', Ct"tagrin
Falls 26. 13, Betlevue 25.. 14,
GermantoWn Valley View 24. 15, Dover
19. 16, Cuyahoga Falls Walsh Jesu;t 15.

17,Can. s . 13.

2107
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--

lf2,-.-.•
r m

!-

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~

16,886

1

·

DIVISION IV
1, Coldwater {25) 7-0
2, Steubenville (51 7-0

262

3, Youngs. Mooney 6-1
4, Misslllon Tuslaw 7.0

209
148

5, New llllling11m 7-0
6,
7.
· 8,
9.

:!001
Cllavy M-.u

,._t:D,

Til, CNII,IIr

*17,688

__ _

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*14,688

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.

*18,686

-.-.c--

L. .111,,_ _ . . . , _

*17,886

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J..:'fL.t,
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*12,400

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*8,886

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...... ......_.- ......
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Cllnll"-'
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*16,688

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118,.

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110~---••IAioh
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*11,488

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118,.
•

302
131

Plain Clly Jon. Alder (1) 7-0 · 121
Kettering Aher 5-2
·116'
Clarksville Cllntoli-Massle 7-Q 104
Genoa Area 7..0
79

10. Akr. SVSM 6-1

73

Others receiving 12 Dr more points: 11.
Fostoria 42. 12, Lorain Clearvtew 32 . 13,
Marlon .Ptaasant 23. 14. Brookville 17.
15, Martins Ferry 15.

DIVISIONV
1, Youngs. Ursuline (23) 7-0
.2. Archbol&amp; (2) 7-0
3. Hamlet Patrk:k Henry {1) 7·0
4, MS Morlon Local (3)6-1
4, Findlay liberty-Benton 7-0
6, Wheetersi&gt;Jrg {2) 7-0
7, Kirtland 7-0
8, Anna 6-1

9, Cln. Hills 7.0

.

10, Bucyrus \VYn1ord 7-0

290
22 1

2t6
t76
176
158
118
95
70
38

Others receiving 12 or more point$: 11 ,

Detphoa Jetf8r110r1 26. 12. w. Ullerty·
Salem 22. t3, Portsmouth w. 21 . 14,
Nelsonvllle·York 18. 15, Columbiana
~•lvlew 13. 18, w. Jefferaon 12.

DIVISION VI
:1, HOpoWiti-LOuctOn {15) 7-0
· 2. MoQIIdoro (5) 7.0
3, Mechank:aOOrg (5) 7-0.
;o~, Norwalk St. Paul (ol) 7-0
•5,Ada7-0
' 6, Matvom {11 7-0
: 1. McOonakt (I) 7-0
•8, Hannlba1Rhler7-o
•9, Oolphoo St. John's 6-1

286
240
234
207
175
134
119
113

:1o, earev e-1

.

78

41

Others recel\llng 12 or mora points: 11 ,

PantloJ&amp;-GIIboa 31 . 12, Be~ln Cen1ar

__
..__
Nl •='-II
----

.... -.
--""111111....
' 114,• ·

Western Reserve 16.

C...CII,J71f ..... !I&amp;J
1 .......... .....

*18~

- " " " ' - 111•

IIlii

'

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

__

Cllll. 171, .............,

114,486

.

CoNTAcrUs
1-740-446-2342 ext. 33
fax - 1-7olil-4411-3008
~-moll - III&gt;Orl80rnyUall)'aor1tlnet.com
Sport• Steff

Bryan,Walte,., Sporls Writer

{740) 446-2342, ""'· 33

bwatt.rtOmydaltytrlbune.com

Larry Crum, Sport&amp; Writer

{740) 446-2342, ext. 33

lerumOmydollyreglster.com

•

•

Bryan Waltera/photo

STAFF REPORT

SPOATSCIMVDAILYSENTINEL.COM
RACINE - The Southern
Lady Tornadoes blanked the
Hannan Lady Wildcats
Monday night in picking up
their seventh win of the year.
Southern defeated Hannan
in three sets 25-14, 25-13,
and 25-7. ·
·Br:ittany Foley put Hannan
on top 3-0 in the first game.
but the lead was short-lived.
Hannan led 5-3 before
Courtney Thomas caught
fire and put the Tornadoes
on top 11-8. Southern never
looked back as consecutive
four · point efforts from
Chelsea Pape 11nd Bre Taylor
forti fled the Southern cause.
Rashell Boso ended the
· game with four straight to
give SHS the 25-14 win.
Brittany Edmonds had a
three-point game for the vis-

itors.
·Southern went up 6-3 in
the second game on dual
three-point efforts from
Emma Hunter and Ashley
Walker.
Edmonds
put
Hannan on the board, but the
SHS defense was just too
much:
In the second round of
serving; Hunter put SHS up
16-9 with four straight, then
Boso closed out a strong
Southern effort with six tallies and Thomas added the
game-winner in the 25-13
win.
The final game was all
Southern. Hunter, Taylor
and Walker all scored five or
more points in string up the
Wildcats. SHS rolled to the
25-7 win.
Hunter, Taylor and Boso
all had three aces for
Southern, while Walker had
four. Overall the Tornadoes

were 67-for-73 in serving was led by Megan Adkins
with 26 aces overall-. with 10.
Hol singer was 16-of-18
Southern hosts Miller
blocking. Boso I 0-of-12 and Tuesday while Hannan travStephanie Shamblin was l 0- els to Valley Fayette for a trifor-10. Overall , spiking was n,1atch also on Tuesday. ·
47-for·53 with 26 aces .
In passing Hunter· was 10- EASTERN AVENGES MEIGS
for-11 with II assists, Boso
8-for-8, Thomas 7-for-7
TUPPERS PLAINS with seven assists, Shamblin Eastern volleyball won its
9-for-10. Pape 12-for-14, . fourth consecutive overall
Samantha Patterson •~0-for- decision - and exacted a
21 with a good floor game little revenge in the process
and Holsinger 9-for-9. - during Monday night's
Southern was 93-for-103 for straight game 25-2l, 25-23,
90 percent on passing. 25-17 victory over visiting
Shamblin had four kills , Meigs in . a Tri- Valley
Taylor three , Boso one and Conference non-divisional
Holsinger led the team with matchup .
nine.
·
The Lady Bagles (16-4)
Southem won the reserve avenged a four-game 26-24,
match with 25-14 and 27-25 27-25, 25-20, 25-22 setback
scor~&lt;s. SHS was led by to the Lady Marauders (I 5Bobbi Harris with 15, Hope 4) at Larry R. Morrison
Teaford had fourteen and
Vada Counts ten. Hannan Please see Volleyball, Bl .

NASHVILLE. Tenn. (AP)
- Music City's three football teams are turning the
town into Pigskinville.
The Tennessee Titans are
off to the best stan in fran·
chise history. one of the
NFL's two remaining .undefeated. teams at. the .first to
5-0 . The
13th-ranked
Yimderbilt . Commodores,
who've never been ranked
higher, are a victory away
from their . best stan since ·
1928 and sitting atop the
mighty
. Southeastern
Conference's East Division.
. The succ"H~'iffi:ruoes even
Tennessee State of the
Football
Championship
Series leading the Ohio Valley Conference.
Together, the teams are a
combined 15-1.
"I hope everything keeps
going," Vanderbilt coach
Johnson
said
.Bobby
Monday. ''I'd like to see all
three teams keep it moving .
That would be fantastic for
the city. But I don't think
there's · anything in the
water. There's probably
some things in the water but.
not affecting football."
The Commodores' success is the most surprising
of the three .
The Titans, who can enjoy
their 5-0 stan with a bye this
week. went 10-6 a year ago
and reached the playoffs.
They currently lead the
NFL with eight straight regular-season .wins that ties
for the franchise's thirdlongest · such winnirrg
streak, first set during 2000
when they had the NFL's·
best record at 13-3.
·
Tennessee State went 8-3
in 200 l and even won conPlease see Start. Bl

Vikings escape New
Orleans with -victory
NEW ORLEANS (AP) The New Orleans Saints
committed so many blun:
ders, not even Reggi~
Bush's tecqrd-tying two
punt returns for touchdowns
could make up for them in a
30-27 loss to the Minnesota
Vikings on Monday night.
Gus Frerotte passed for
222 yards and a game-tying
touchdown to Bernard
Berrian with 7 :10 to play,
and Ryan Longwell's 30yard field goal with 13 seconds left gave the Vikings
comeback win.
"This is as good a win as it
gets," Vikings coach Brad
Childress said . "I don't
know if I've ever been
involved in one that went
that way."
•.
Longwell's game-winning
kick was set up by a pass
interference call on a long
throw to Berrian. who was

rim into before the ball came
down despite being double·covered. That was only the
latest gaffe by New Orleans.
Martin Gramatica , who
had a.field goal blocked and
returned 59 yards for a
touchdown in !he ftrst quarter, missed a 46-yarder that
could have given the Saints
(2'3) a lead with two minutes to go.
Soo'l after. Minnesota (2,3)
was
celebrating
Lo,,gwell's ~inning kick.
New Orleans committed
four to · .•,overs, dropped several passes and was called
for II penalties for 102
yards. New Orleans also
tried to catch the Vikings off
guard with an on side kick.
but Minnesota recovered,
AP photo
setting up Longwell's 53yard field goal, which tied . New Orleans Saints running back Reggie Bush (25) tries to get away from Minnesota
Viking linebacker Ben Leber (51) in the fjrst half of an NFL loQtball game in New .
.PlutH lie Vlldnp, Bl
Orleans on Monday.
· '
I

•
•

�Page 82 • The Daily Sentinel .

www. mydailysentinel.com

Tuesda~October7,2008

Tuesday, October 7, 2008

•'

Vikings
from Page BI

•

lli s season long
: ··Jr 's probably one of the
Weirdes1 g~unes I've ever
~een mvOived m." Saints

quarterback Drew Brees
"Ju st the way th rs
kmd of went bac:k
tind fo rth . I'm trymg to
l.ligest 11 all nght now and
:In the end rt's a luss . That's
-extremely d""PiJOlllttng. ,
~spec r a ll y when once agam
'!Ne have a chance to Will 11
jlt the end ..
~aid.
~hm g

• The los ~ \\ ~ts remtnJ~cent

(o a J-+-12 set b.1c k .11
Denver 111 Week J. when
Cramam.1 mJSsed ,, -+Jyard field ~oal that cou ld
l)ave put the Samts "head
:.Vtth about two m1nutes to
~0.

: W1th the Samts uailmg
~0- 10 lute m the th1rd quar~r. Bti&gt;h had hts l1rst
iouchdown 1etur n fm 7 1
yards. siJpptng a tackle
early .tncl accelerat ing P"'t
:a bone-pn mg block at
)lHdlteiJ
by · Jo Lonn
'Dun hat
:. Bush nearl y broke &lt;~noth­
~r punt rerum hut tripped
.and fell at the Mmnesotd
:49. Still, New Orleans only
•teeded one lt rs t down to
:Set up Gramdtlca·s 53-y.trd
:field g\&gt;.tl to tte 11
· The v,kings' ki cked to
Bu ~h .tgain and paid for t t '
Bu sh c.tught the k1ck on the
ru n .tnd burst between the
only defenders who re.dl y
had a shot at hun be lore
c uttmg outstde t nto th e
bpen f1e ld tm a 64-)ard
score.
"Great block1ng by my
teammates," Bush saKI. " It

The last do 11 was Eddie
Drummond of Detroit
agamst Jitckson vtile on
Nov. ~4. 2004
Frcrotte. who repeatedly
deltvered clutch throws
under heavy pressure and
absorbed several hard htts.
connected wtth Bernan for
36 yards to the New
Orleans 27, then found him
agam for a 33-yard score to
tte 11 at 27 Ytk1n gs
cornerback
AntOine Wmlteld scored
.tfter
recovenng
Gramattca 's blocked ktck
111 the ftrst quarter and set
up Mmnesota 's second TD
wtth a forced tumble on a
sack of Brees that he recovered at the New Orleans 5yard ltne
Mmnesota cashed m
when Chester Taylot threw
a haltb.tck pass to Visanthe
Sh1.mcoe, which gave
MmnesotA a 17- 10 lead m
the second quarter.
Longwe ll h11 a 33-yard
fteld goal lo~te m the ftrst
hall
The Vtkmgs defense
proved too much to overcome tor a Samts offense
th.tt ,tlready was hu'ttmg
Itself
Brees was 26-of-46 for
:1.10 yards but was mtcrccpted twtcc. once on a
lipped pass deep m Vtkmgs
tet11tory and once on a despenttJon heave m the fmal
seconds.
Hts lone touchdown pass we nt for 17 yards to
Devery Henderson on the
Samts' frrst senes of the
game.
Notes: Bush's 176 return
yards m the game set a
Samts
record
Drummond's returns - 55
and 83 yards - were both
m the fourth quarter of the
LIOns' 23-17 mernme loss.
The Yikmgs have won
tour strarght Monday mght
games, whtle the Satnts are
8-17 all-ttme on Monday
ntght

Red Sox beat Angels,_move on to ALCS and Rays

t!tribune - S~ntinel - l\egi~ter

BOSTON (AP) - The
Boston Red Sox brushed astde
the 100-wm Angels 1n four
sames. distmssmg thetr bestm-baseball regular season as
Ia~t month\ news
When 1t rums to October. no
one donunatcs ltke Boston.
Jason Bay sltd headfirst mto
home plate to score on rookie
Jed Lowrie's two-out smgle in
the nmth mnnic Monday mght
and the detendino Wotld
Senes champtons e'i'immated
the Los Angeles Angels wrth a
3-2 victory in Game 4 of their
1irst-round playoff senes.
Boston, whtch also won tt
all m 2004. wrll have a chance
at a th1rd title in five years tf it
can get past the Rays m the
best-of-seven AL championship senes that struts Friday•
mght at Tampa Bay
'
"We JUSt beat a phenomenal
team. We· rc gomg to

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AP photo

The Red Sox celebrate after their w1n .over the Los Angeles Angels 1n Game 4 of base·
ball's Amencan League diVISion senes in Boston on Monday. The Red Sox won 3-2 to
advance to the AL championship series agamst the Tampa Bay Rays
ticld line that Regg te Wtlhts
''He's our anchor," Bay said pulled up one step before secpursued and dove fat before 11 about Vantek. "The way he ond ba~e to bang hrs hands
one-hopped mto the stands for ran Reggie down - he's a fast together m celebrntion .
a ~rround-rule double Ftrst runner. That speaks volumes ..
But the Angels tted tt in the
ba~eman M.trk Teixeira made
Vantek lost the ball as he htt etghth when TetxeJra drew a
a dtvmg catch of Mark the ground, but th1rd base two-out walk from Htdeki
Kotsay\ Ime dnve fm the sec- umptre T1m Welke ruled that ObJima,
then
Ju stin
ond out before Lowrie he had already apphed the tag. Masterson walked Vladtmtr
grmmded a smgle to nght.
Angels manager Mil(e Guerrem. The runners moved
"C1•rveb,tll down in the Sciascia argued, but replays up on Vruttek 's pasSed ball,
zone," Lowrie said "I know showed that the out waS' which proved costl y when
he's got a good one. !'was just recorded before the ball came they scored on Toni Hunter's
able to get the barrel on it
loose.
smgle to nght
Acqui 1ed from Pillsburgh at
Scot Shields took the loss,
Pedrma's contldence never
the July 31 trade deadline a~ allowing two hits and a run wavered dunng the slump, as
Manny Ramitez's replace- whrle striking out three m I 2- he showed when he popped
mem. Bay raced around thml 3 innings.
·
ol the dugout for pregame
and shd headfi1 st mto home · "We have to keep trying to out
battmg
pract1ce and smd, "You
while hiS teammates poured get better. that's all we can
can't
keep
a good man down."
out of the dugout to celebrate. do," Sciascia srud. "A lot of
Or a good team.
"Somettmes 1t's better to be guys are frustrated right now.
The
Red Sox may have
lucky than good," he smd.
But I can't tell you how proud
nussed
a
chance to sweep with
Manny D&lt;:lcarmen got two we are of the way our guys
Sunday's
5-4, 12-inning loss .
out~ m the nmth for the win, played the whole summer. It's
but
they
saved
themselves a
squelchmg the Angels' unfortunate the way It came
tnp back to Anahetm. Calif..
chances to take the lead by out."
for
a winneHake-all Game 5.
getting Aybar to whtff at\ a
Lester and John Lackey,
Instead. they wtll play AL
bum try with one out and a who also faced each other m
runner on thrrd . Red Sox Boston's Game 1 victory. East wmner Tampa Bay.
catcher Jason Wutek, whose matched scoreless inniQgs whrch advanced with a 6-2
passed ball helped Los through fou r before Kotsay victory over the Chicago
Angeles tte the game m the and Varitek smgled and Dustin Whtte Sox earlter Monday. A
eighth, pursued pinch-runner Pedroia doubled them both in. year after posting the worst
Willtts back toward thrrd and An AL MYP candidate who record m the majors, the Rays
made the dtving tag a step was hitless m his first 15 at- won the dt vrsJon with a 97-65
before the bag
bats of the playoffs, Pedrma record.

Volleyball

I

•

Gallia
County
OH .

pia~

another phenomenal team,'
Red Sox manager Terry
Fmncona &lt;did "It Will be verv
exciting We're lookmg for·
ward io that. For nght now
though.. that's probably
enough.'
Boston tS 31-16 m October
smce the tum of the century.
ami both World Senes nms
began wnh a playoff sweep of
the Angels.
Tampa Bay beat out Boston
by two games in the AL East
thts season The teams also
beat each other up dunng a
benc h -clearin ~;
brawl at
Fenway Park m June - the
Rays and Red Sox have often
sctapped over the years.
Los Angeles was able to
force the senes to a fourth
game w1th an extm-mnmg VICtory Sunday night that
snapped an 11 -s;ame playoff
losmg streak agamst Boston.
As tt turned out, that gave
the
Angels less than an 24
was obv1ously a huge play
extra
hours.
at a t1me ol need It would
Jon
Lester held Los Angeles
have been e'en sweete1 if
to
four
Juts in seven shutout
'we had won th is gan1e ..
innings
but
lost his chance at a
Bush w'" 12th'pi.tyet tn
second v1ctory m the series
NFL hJStory to return two
when the Ange ls scored twrce
punts tor TDs m a game.
m the ei.!dtth to tie it 2-all . The
Angels 'had a chance. to go
ahead m the ninth before Erick
N1ckson the past two games Aybar, whose I2th-mning sinand fmrshed off come-trom- gle was the wmner m Game 3,
behmd wms.
missed on a sutctde squeeze
When the T1tans went to attempt, thwarting the threat
from Page Bl
their lone Super Bowl m
In the bottom half, Bay loftJanuary 2000 , Nashville ed a t1y ball down the nghtsecuti ve OVC ti tles 111 tans co uldn 't have been
1998-1991J. An I 1-0 mark in more grddy about havmg a
I999 also earned the Ttgers
m town.
a 14th black collc•&gt;e natJon- wmner
Nashvdle
sports fans dal'ai champ10nshtp. "'
lied w1th basketball a few
But Vandet btlt " tt ~ mg to months
ago
when
from Page 81
end a 25-year sktd s1nce 1ts Yanderbtlt upset
then-No
I
last Winnin g ;e.tson The
only three days
Commodores beat Auburn Tennessee
the Vols knocked off Gymnaslllm back in earl y
last weekend 14· 13 to reac h atte1
then-No. I Mcmphts . But September - a Loss wh1ch
5-0 for the f1 rst ltmc smce football
is the fi rs t love here snapped the Green and
!943. and a w1n .S.ttutday at 111 the town called the White's 17-game regu lat
!\;liss tsSippi State would at Athens of the Scuth.
season wnvung streak dat·
least ensu re a 500 record
V.tndy htred Johnson in mg back to last year. EHS
and match the 6-0 start of
Decem!Jt!r 200 I away from also handed the Maroon and
the 1928 team
Futman. fresh off a loss in Gold their second loss m
Tttans coach Jcl t FISher the
then-DIVISIOn 1-A A their last three outings.
satd he senses people are champ1on
The hosts posted collec
sh1p. He has
exc ited about the success
worked pat1ently to bUild tJ ve numbers of 42 kills. 38
: '· I'm very exc tted fot depth
and add speed and ass tsts and three blocks to
Vanderbilt. They've done a athletJctsm
to hrs roster, and go along With a 65-ol-74
good JOb They 've been the results have
been paying servmg effort for 88 perpat 1ent They've done a . off The Commodores
cent. MHS fmt shed the
great JOb butldmg thetr 13- I 2 over their past are
evemng wtth team tallies of
25
:club .•tnd the) re ve r) wel i- games, with wins ove1 23 kills. 21 asststs and three
'('Qached ... Ftsher s,ud
South Carolina blocks to go along wtth a
: The . Ti tans
and Georgta,
(twtce) and now Auburn m 60-of-63 servmg perfor:commodores are very 511111- that stretch.
mance for 95 percent.
lar. Wtth both teams unde Kan ssa Connolly led the
Commodores recetver
feated. each coach sounds Gemge
one of three vtctors' serv mg attack with
as 1f he JS t eadmg off the SEC piaSm1th.
13 po1nts. followed by
yet
s
111
same scnpt Alter reac h1n g season, has not1cedhiSthestxth
Kat1e
Wilfong wtth eight
dif5-0 , John so n w.ts a ~ ked fere nce He sa1d they used and Morgan
Burt With s1x.
:what the Victory meant. and to treat playmg at home as Brittany Casto
, Tresa
Jus answer: " It g1ves us a
road
tnps
because
of
the
Swatzel
and
Samt
Cummms
·chanFe to go 6-0. · FISher lack of fan support. Agamst all added three pomts,
fol Said Monday. "We're trymg Auburn. Yandy fans had a lowed by Bntney Momson
to wm the next game. pen defm1te edge in the sold-out and Beverly Maxson with
ad ..
crowd
and dtdn't want to go two apiece
; Tennessee State's on ly home after
the wm
Swatzel led the net attack
·loss
Cdnte a week uno
111
•
e
kept stoppmg hrm wtth a game-high 24 krlls,
.Atlanta to Flortda A&amp;M to People
congratulate
the followed by Momson with
'after the Tigers ' first 4-0 Commodores when he went
stat1 smce 2001. The T1gets to VISit hi s father at a hotel stx and Casto wrth ftve .
W11 fang added fo ur for
:tre led by quat terback alter the vtctorv
EHS,
wtth Butt, Connolly
Antonio Heffnet , who 11 ans"You can feel the atmos- and Maxson all chrppmg m
.f~rred from South Carolina,
phere changmg. It's a good one. Connolly also had a
;and coached by James thmg.
The ctty's behind us, game-high 33 assists and
.Webster
and we're domg tt for them Maxson added a team-h1gh
: "1 hate losmg ," said as well as for us. It's good to
.
Webster who was htred have everybody involved ," 2 1 d!gs .
Emalee
Glass
led the
away Irom an asSIStant's JOb Smtth said.
Lady Marauders at the serv·
bt North Carolina m 2005 to
Both the Titans and Ttgers ing line with 10 points, fol.return the T1gers to t~etr are off th1s week. Johnson
lowed by Morgan Howard
;wmning ways
has to deal with h1gher with nine and Chandra
: On the fteld, the Titans expectations for Vandy, but
·and Commodores share sa1d his Commodores are Stanley WJth three pomts.
Catie Wolfe, Tric1a Smith
'some sJmilarittes
smart enough to stay level· and Shellie Bailey all con: Both pia~ stmgy. oppor- headed.
tunistic defense. The Titans
"They know it's there. tributed two points each and
lead the NFL m turnover and you can't fool them. So Valerie Conde added one.
.Wolfe led the net attack
:margin With an NFL- best 14 I told them (Sunday) we're
:takeaways. Yanderbtlt leads not worried a!)out getting with seven kills , followed
:all of the Football Bowl six wins. We're worrying by Howard with six kills.
·Subdtvts ion m that category about playing the sixth Both Bailey and Stanley
)ollith a plus-9 dtfferentJal game. That's all we worry added five kills as well.
and an SEC-best 15 take- about," Johnson ~aid. "If Smith had a team-high 13
·aways.
that gtves us an OpPOrtunity, assists and Howard added a
;· The Tttans turned to back- fine. It's the mth game team-high two blocks.
:up quarterback Kerry we're womed about, not the
Meigs did salvage a spill
:collins when Ymce Young six wms.H
on the evening with a three;got ,hurt m the opener, and
Hard to argue wtth an game 25-21, 19-25, 25-15
)ie has made them only bet· approach that's worked well victory in the JUnior varsity
ter. Mackenzt Adams so far .:__ for three Music contest.
replaced an irtjured •Chns Ctty teams
Both Meigs and Eastern

The Daily Sentinel • Page 83

www.mydailysentinel.com

•
•

Bryan WaHeralphbto

Eastern blockers Kanssa Connolly, left, and Brtttany Casto
defend a spike attempt by Meigs' Calle Wolle (15) dunng
Monday n1ght's volleyball contest at Tuppers Plams
wtll hold Sen1or N1ght not only celebratmg senior
tomght m then fma l regular mght at GAHS, but also
season home m.ttches of the playmg m their final regular
year. Met gs wtll host season game ever at the curAlexancleJ 111 a TVC Ohio rent high school.
matchup, while Eastern
But it wasn 't easy.
host Fede1 al Hockmg in a
The Lady Raiders (12-7)
TVC Hock1n g contest Both came ready for a fight and
JV games wil l begm at 6 proved just that Wtth a quick
p.m.
.25-22 vtctory in the first
game~.
Gall1a Academy
~ ANGELS OUTLAST RV
responded rn the second
game when~nmngham,
GALLIPOLIS - It has who finished with a game
been a w1 ld season so far for high 19 points, turned a narthe Galh a Academy volley- row 16-14 advantage into a
ball team, so it was only fi t· big 25-14 victory with mne
ting that the1r fmal regular straight service points .
season ~ame of the year
River Valley answered
play out 1.n equally dramatic right back with another 25fash1on.
22 win in game three to take
After fallmg behind 2-1 a 2-1 lead and seemingly all
on a btg mght at Gallia the momentum - but Jhe
Academy Htgh School, the Angels would not so down
Blue Angels rallied behind without a fight .
the play of Hannah
Gallia Academy rallied
Cunnmgham, Amy Noe and back to take game four 2.5Morgan Daniels to wm the 22 and made a brg statement
fmal two games to defeat in the final game with a
vrsrtmg Rtver Valley m ftve commandmg 15-1 victory.
games 22-25, 25-14, 22&lt;2'5, Noe served the first five
25-2::! and 15-1 Monday points in that big win
behmd the strength of three
evening Ill Galltpolis.
It was a big wm for the aces before a Stde-out
Angels ( 13-7). who were awarded the Raiders their

will

orif)i' point of the game.
Daniels then put it away
With eight stratght points off
of four aces to seal the big
Wtn.
Cunnmgham not only led
the Blue and Whtte wnl) 19
markers, but also posted I3
digs a ktll and a block.
Dantels was just behmd her
with 13 pomts mcluding
seven aces while also coming away with 10 kills, three
blocks a dt g and an assist
while Noe also fimshed
wnh double figure points at
II With SIX aces, e1ght ktlls
and 16 dt gs.
Bttttany Htvely added srx
points, four drgs and had a
game high 21 aSSists, Alex1s
Geiger had four points, 19
asststs, 14 kills and two
blocks, Brea Close had
seven ktlls, four digs and
four assists and Megan
Foster posted four kills and
an asst sl.
Rtver Valley played a
sohd game desprte commg
up just short m the end as
the Raiders were led offensively by Linsey Stover
with e1ght points and two
kills Mackenzie Cluxton
was JUSt behind her with
seven pomts , 10 assists and
a pair of kills whtle Kayla
S m1th and Jacq ueline
Jacobs put up s1x points
ap1ece. Jacobs a!so had
e1ght kills while Smith had
five.
Aubne Rice and Iliana
Corf1as chipped in four
pomts aptece with Corfias
also p_ostmg seven kills and
Rice ,three and Canssa
Gilmore added four assists.
Despite falling in the varsity contest, the Lady
Raiders reserve team put on
a btg show m front of the
Blue and White crowd with
a victory .in .both th7 fresh·
men and Jumor vars1ty contests.
RVHS won the reserve
contest 25-27, 25·20 and
2.5-20 with Kaltlyn Roberts
leading the • way with 14
points.
Gallia Academy will now
gear up for the SEOAL Day
of Champions this weekend
before hostmg Waver! y in
tournament actton next
Monday while River Valley
returns home for rts final
home game of the year
against Rock Hill on
Tuesday

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loll &amp; Found

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74tJ.446-374o

POL.tCIES Ohio Valley Publlahlng raserveathe right to edit, reject, or cancet any ad at any time Errora must bt reported on the
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errore In an ad taken over the phone

500

Educat

kttncartyte®comcast net

Can

Busintlll. Trade
Ponable Saw·
Schoot
Found
near
don't haul your l ogs =~~~~==
SA 325 &amp; My Caramel to the Mill JUSt call
Gallipolis Career
Call alter 5 30 pm to :::304-;;;,:,;67'"o"'9;;,;
t" o7""'""'""'""
College
identttv 740·245-9218
=
(Careers Close To Home)
Prof.llional
Call Today' 740·446·4367
Noll...
1·800·21 4-0452
TURNED DOWN ON
gall!pcllscareoroollage edu
NOTICE OHIO VALLEY SOCIAL SECURITY SSt
Aceredi!EIO Member Accredit
PUBLISHING CO rec· No Fee Unless We Win I
1ng CoUIYllllor lnrlependen1
Colleges and Schools 12749
ommends that you do
1·888·582·3345
bustness Wtth people you ~-~~--~
J&lt;now, and NOT to send All types hdme remodel600
Anunals
lnoney through the matl 1ng from leaky faucats to
unltl you have 1nvest1gat· new construction, 15+yrs
th ff
expenence call ManO
•:...~....._..._
~~ng~e~o~en~n~g~~= M·N-S
ConstructiOn, ~~-u=-..""""~-:-:=or Stack pure bread L1mou
300
Sr ·v1ccs (740)992"3437
74().444·1308
s1n hetfers $700 each
call JR 7402o6·8160 or
~ 'liln~ Jl 304·751-6872
Clu'ld Elclorly Care 400

mil

...,""'""'""'""'""'=

We

will
accept

•====""'=-

CLASSIFIED INDEX
Legals ........................................................... tOO
Announcamenta .......................................... 200
Birthday/Anniversary .... .. ........................... 205
Happy Ad1 .................................................... 21 0
Lost &amp; Found .............................................. 215

Memory/Thank You ..................................... 220
Nottcea ......................................................... 225
Personals ..................................................... 230
Wanted ...................................................... 23~
Servtcea ....................................................... 300
Appliance Servlce ....................................... 302
Automollve ................................................. 304
Building Matorlato ....................................... 306
1

Buelneaa ...................................................... 308
catertng........................................................ 310
ChtldiEtderty Care ...................................... 312
Computers ................................................... 314
Contractora ............................. ..................... 316
Oomeattca/JanHartal ................................... 318

Electrical ...,.................................................. 320
Ftnanclat....................................................... 3~
Heal1h .. .......................................... ............... 326
Healing &amp; Cootlng ....................................... 328
Home Improvement&amp; 330

lnaurance ................1.......... .... ... ..

....... ......... 332

Lawn Servlce ............................................... 334
Muolc:/Danco1Drama .................................... 336
Other Servtceo .............~ ............................... 336
PtumbtngolEiectrtcel .................................... 340
Prolnatonal Senrtcoa ..................... .......... 342
Repetra ......................................................... 344
Rooting ............. ........................................... 348
Security .................................................... :.·.. 348
Tax/Accounllng .. ........................................ 350
Travel/Entertainment .................................. 352
Financial ............................................., .. ...... 400
Financial Servtcea .. ..................................... 405
lnaurance ................................... ,................ 410
Money to Lond ............................................. 415
Education ..... ............................................... 500
Buolneu &amp; Trade School ...- ..................... 505
Instruction &amp; Training ................................ 510

LtiiOna ...... ............. ..... .................... ........... 515
Peroonal ..................................................... 520
Animate ....................................................... 600
Animal Supp11eo .......................................... 605

Hoi'HI ........... ............................... ............. 610
Ltveotock ......................................................615
Ptlt............ ................................................. 620
Want to buy ................................................ 625
Agriculture .................................................. 700
Farm Equipment .......................................... 705
Gordon I Produce ............................ ,.......... 710
Hay, Feed, Seed, Grain ............................... 715
Hunting I Land .......................................... 720
Wont to buy ....................................... ........... 725
Merchandloo ............................................... 900
Antlquoo ........................... ,........................... 905
Appttonct .................................................... 910
Aucttqno ....................................................... 915
Bargain Baoemtnl.. .................................... 920
Collecttbloo .................................................. 925
Computtro ................................................. 930
Equ1pmen11Suppttoo.... ................................ 935
Flea Marketa ............... ...........!.................... 940
Fuel 011 CoaVWood/Gas ............................. 945
Furniture ....... .............................................. 950
Hobby/Hunt &amp; Sport .................................... 955
Ktd't Corner ................................................. 960
Mlecattonoouo....................................... " ... 965
Wont to buy .................................................. 970
Yard Sale ..................................................... 975

'

ooo
o

Recraattonal Ve11lctea .............................. 1
ATV ............. ,.................o:!............................ 1005
Btcyctta..................................................... 101
Boala/Acceaaorlea .................................... t015
Camper/RVo &amp; Trallero ............................. 1020
Motorcycloo ........... .................................... 1025
Other ..........................................................1030
Want to buy ...............................................1035
Automollve ................................................ 2000
Auto Rental/lease ..... ............................. 2005
Autoa .......................................................... 2010
Ctaulc/Anllquea ............................ .......... 2015
Commercialllnduatrlal .............................. 2020
Porta &amp; Acceaaortea ..................................2025
Sporta Uttllly......................................... ..2030
Trucka .........................................................2035
Utility Trotters ............................................ 2040
Vana ......................................................... ... 2045
Want to buy ..............................................2050
Real Estate Sa toe ...................................... 3000
Cemetery Ptoto .......................................... 3005
Commerclal ................................................301 o
Condomlnluma .......................................... 30t5
For Sole by Owner .....................................3020
Houaeator Selt ............................ ... .......... 3025
Land (Acreage) .......................................... 3030
Lota ............................................................3035
Want to buy ................................................3040
Real Eotata Rentato ...................................3500
Apartmon1111Townhouoaa ......................... 3505
Commerctat ........................................:....... 3510
Condomtnluma .......................................... 3515
Houses lor Rent ........................................ 3520
Land (Acroogt) ..........................................35.25
S1orage .......................................................3535
Wont to Rent .............................................. 3540
Manufactured Houalng .......... :.................. 400D
Lo11............................................................. 4005
Movers....... ............................................ .....401D
Rentalo ....................................................... 4015
Satoo ........................................................... 4020
Suppltta ..................................................... 4025
Wont to Buy ............................................... 4030
Resort Property ......................................... 5000
Rooort Property lor sale ........................... 5025
Reoort Property tor rent ........................... 5050
Employment.............................................6000
Accountlng1Financlal ................................ 6002
Admtntatrattve/Prolaoalonal.....................6004
Caohlor/Cierk ........................ ..................... 8006
Chttci'Eiderty Cere ..................................... 6008
Clorlcat .......................... .............................8010
Conotructlon ..............................................601 2
Driver• &amp; Delivery ..................................... 80t4
Educatton ...................................................8016
Ettclrlcat Plumbing ..................................6018
Employmtnt Ag•neleo .............................6020
Entertotnmont... ............................ ............ 60~
Food Servlctt ............................................ 6024
· Government &amp; Federal Jobtt .................... 6026
Help anted- Qenoral .................................. 8028
Law Enforcement ..................................... 6030
Malntenonco/Dome-ttc ............................. 6032
Manogemen1/Supervlaory ........................ 6034
Mechlnlce ..................................................6036
Medtcef ................................ ..................... 6036
Muaicel .......................................................6040

Part·Ttme-Ttmporarleo ............................ 6042
Reetauranta ............. :. ................................. 6044
Satae ........................................................... 6048
Technical Tradeo ....................................... 8050
Textltti/Factory .........................................6052

•

For sBie 1986 Honda
scooter Ehte 250 ioK
mtfes, call (740)949-2220
2000

Aulomo1tve

~M~"Iiigs~H!;;o!;;lz~er~C.;;;Ion.;;;'c~= ~02~H~on-d~a~Ao~c·o·rd~EX~4
1000

Recreattonat
Vel11cles

door
auto,
loaded
92 000 m1les 245-5526

; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; 93 Ford Temp o, 4cyl ,
Boah / Accenoria
2dr
blue good worl&lt;
$6oo.
~;;;;-~"""':"'""""'""'
~r
740
591
8936
1989 Stratos Bass boal ( )

=======

Older lady of Good
Polled Hereford Bulls &amp;
Character available tor
Money To t..nd
Hefers, 4 to 5 months
Elder Care In your Home ~~;;;;;;;§;;;;;;=~=. old Call 304·882·2 774
304-675·2959
NOTICE Borrow Smart Regtstered Black Angus
Contact the OhiO OtVI· hetfers
and , bred
Home lnt""'O¥WIIIOID • StOn of F1nanc1al lnstitu·
,...
tlons Office of Consumer hetfers/cows
AI stre's
GAR Pnme Design GAR
B......nt
Affairs BEFOFIE you ref1· Retail Products, Boyd on
Waterproofing
nance your home or ob- Target
Travelor
004,
Uncondttlonalltfetlme
tatn a loan BEWARE of SAV DeSity,
Gar New
guarantee Local refer
requests for any large Destgn 5050 and others
ences furmShed Estab·
advance payments
of Grand
v1ew
Farm
hshed 1975 Call 24 Hrs
fees or Insurance Call SouthSide,
WV
740 446·0870, Rog ers
the OffiCe of Consumer 304.6 75 •2098
Basement Waterproohng
Afftars
toll
free
at
t·B66·2 7S-ooo3 to learn .,;;;;
Pita
Sul;)enor Home Matnte- 1l lhe mo rt gage broker or
nance
carpentry, Iender Is propery
I
II·
Plumbtng,
E16ctncal, censed (This Is a public 2 AKC lemale Boston
Rental s No Job to Small servtce
announcemenI •.erner puppIes beauIft u1
Reasonable
Pnces from the Ohto Valley marktngs black &amp; white
339·3442 or 446·2BOo
Pubhshong Company)
$12o ea 740·388·8743

Gallipolis Thursday 9th
&amp; Fnday 10th 47 West
wood
Dnve
Joanne
·sheets'
Fillinger
9·4
both days

Other

HugeOct
9· 11
9am Spm
household
crafts good quality 1een ::'!:"":':""A~uto~s~~~
clothes boys small &amp; '2oo7 Honda VTX 1300A
10 14 1800 mtle s black 57800
medtum
gtrls
ad_ylt
clothes
vartous 388_8380
stzes, Mulberry Hts near

s.r.;..,,

I

1

Yard Solt

O"

:;""~'"::'~--:;;;;;;;;;--- George's

Small dog

I

&amp; CARLYLE

Other S.rvic:u

AnPOLncements

reurvea

ttMt rlghlto

• Sl11rt Your Adl With A Keyword • Include Complete

ads must be prepaid'

1~ ~ 1
~
'-!+
@ 2008 by

NEA, Inc.

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~;;;=;;;;;;-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:-:;:;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;!
Pelt
~;;;;;;;::-=~::""':""':

...,""'""'""'""'""'"""'

Want To Buy

:::=-:-=;;;;;;:-';;;;;;:=

AK C German Shepherd Wanted to Buy- Paw
Pups, 8 left fmm ltfler ol Paws, Black Walnu ts,
11 only 3 mates Dam Caii 740·69B·6,060
and Stre are famtly pets
9 wks old, reduced 10
$350_304
nS-6062
_

WaM To Buy
':'~=-:-;;;;;;:;;;;;;'==.

=

Absolute Top Dollar . sll·
ver/gold
COins,
any
10KI14Kf18K gOld JSW·
airy, dental gold, pre
1935
US
currency.
proof/mtnt
sets,
dtamonds MTS C01n Shop
151 2nd Avenue, Galh·
polls 446·2842

Free male ktHen , 10
weeks old htter·tratned,
Antim304· 200 · 7'17
•r
:!=~-:--',~--~~
"'
v
r
304 "82 3995
G
-u •
IB
ANTI QUESFree to good home 6 Also, restore fumtture, lo·
hound mtxed puppies, cated on Tornado Ad off

--..,..==:-'---,
SHOP

es

great hunters, 12 weeks
(740)696·1017
~~~~:"""'.....~
free to good home baby
kitlens
304·882·2385
leave message

At
33,
Aactne
(Park&amp;Rtde)
ex1t
740·949·2246
;.,;;;,;,;;;,;;;;;;;,""'""'"""'
Fuoll Od 1 Coal/
Wood / Gas

::-=o=.-:"=iiiii"':"'
de·

Free to good home , Jee·
gle t/2 Beagle t/2 Jack Seasoned Ftrewood
Russell 8 wks old, 1 (F) livered Call446·9204
left 740·367·0141
Lost F chihuahua
black
and
tan
Whtte
Hill
Rd area needs
medical
attan!IOn, Reward 740
742·311 0

Berber Carpet $6 95 yd
carpet remna nts $40 00
female, 3 yrs. old, great &amp; up Mollohan carpet
w/ktds, up on all shots 22 12 Eastern Ave Galli·
$200 · ' 7401992 ' 5108
polls, Ohto 740·446·7444
A~r1cu ',1::

Farm Equipmonl

~~=..;;~~=

EBV,
INTEGRITY,
KIEFER BUILT,
VAllEY
HORSE/LIVE·
STOCK
TRAILERS,
LOAO
MAX
EQUIP·
MENT
TRAILERS
CARGO EXPRES~ &amp;
HOMESTEADER
CARGO/CONCESSION
TRAILERS
B+W
GOOSENECK FLATBED
$3999 VIEW OUR ENTIRE TRAILER INVEN
TORY AT
I/INoiW CARMICHAEL
TRAILERS COM
740·446·3825

Jet Aeralton Motors re·
patred, new &amp; rebuilt In
stock Call Ron Evans
1 BOO o37·9028
Hot Tub, 6 person, Like
New wtlh cover Must
Sell·
Mcvmg
$1600
740•640 •3333

~--:::o~---:--

House Shutters, vartous
stzes
$80
Whtrlpool
Washer
$7o
304·67o·501 5
NEW AND USED STEEL
Steel Beams, Pipe Rebar
lor
Concrete
Angle,
Channel Aat Bar Steel
Grat1ng for Dratns. Orwe·
ways &amp; Walkways L&amp;L
Scrap Metals Open Man,
Tue,
Wed
&amp;
Frl,
8am·4 30pm
Closed

:-:---------~
Thurs
Sat
Have you pnced a John 740--446·7300

&amp;

Sun

Deere lately? You II be
aurpnsed! Check out our
used
at
1nventory
wwwCAREQ com
car·
michael
Equipment
;,
74;,;0;,;446;,;;;,·2;;,;4;,;,12...,...,...,!!!!
Gardtn &amp; Product

~~-~~~~

Ktwt jusl E of Syracuse
on
St
At
124.
(740)992-7449
;;,;;;;;;,;;;;,;,,;,;;""'"""""'"
Hoy, Food, s..d, Groin

Stand-up tanning
bed
$1200 74o-367-n62

Pole Bam 30x40x10 only
$6 995, other St~es, Free
Dehvery 877·773·8356
$cag
Tiger
Ct~b
zero·IIJm
mower,
e:.
con low hours, $3 000
740 742 2373

Up 10 4 Nascar Ticl&lt;.t:;ts
10111108
Night ·Race.
Lowes Speedway, Char·
Hay for sale 800 lb cost lotte NC 304· 773-5626
$35 per, bales, 12001b.
cost $50 per bales Call
Wont To Buy
446-1947 or 794-1151
Buy1ng tools sell or trade
Want Ta Buy
mechamc-carpenter lawn
~=~-:-="-~ &amp; garden power tools,.
Firewood fdr sale cell Call 740·388-1515 or coli
446-1947or794-11o1
74().208 0320

!"0--==-=.;;i;;;;;;=

~~M;;;;o;;;;to;;;;rq;;;i;;;d;;;;o;;;;siiiiiiiii

::"~""':;;;;;;;"="'-~

97 Ford Expedition, 4x4,
~
runs great. looks good,
2007
Kawasaki
NtnJa
250 under 1500 m1les tow pkg 3rd seat $2700
.:.;
74;;0!;
·3;;,
79;,;·2,1;;,
79; ,""'""'""
red helmet and tank bag ;:;;;
$2,800 740·64!;•1912
J-·.L
nKD
2007
Kawasaki
N1n1a
250 under 1500 m11es
red helmet and tank bag
52 ,800 740·645·19i2

~--;;;;;;:~iiiii~=
~
97 Ford F250 4WD ex·
tende d
cab
power
tocklwtndows tinted wmdowsSspeed 645-5357

Are you 65
or older?

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

2 Fire Place 1nserts, 1
Suck 1 Kindel Wood
304 675·3818

-

f:;;;~=====~;:::::~:'·~=~;;;;;;.::.

Miacellaneou&amp;

i:Po;.;odO:I:'"e~fo-r·sa-.l•e·r-eg-r~
ed,

700

CLASSIFIEDS

w/1 OOhp Ev1nrude out947 Grand Prtx GT 9R5
ooard
good
shape,
Grand Pnx runs good
l37oo
oeo. 304-!;93·2604
(740)992 2892
~,.,;;;,;;;;;;;;,""'""'"""' We have quality SUV's
Campen/ RVs &amp;
wtth warranty Pnced to
Trailers
Sell Blazer Satum Vue,
Butc k Aendezvous VIS n
RV ServiCe at Carmt- us
at
chael
Tratler.:&gt; I
k
I
gocoo motors com.
or
ca II
740·446-3825
S top
: : : : - - - - - - - 740 446 0103, 328 Jack
RV
son Ptke
Serv1ce at Carmtchael COOK MOTORS
Tratlers
-74"'0"'4"'46,.·38
""'2o""'""'""'""
Sports Utilfty

If so, you qualify for a

Se.n ior Discount*
when you pay for a 6 or 12
month subscription on your
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Phone____________~----------Mall or drop off this coupon along
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.

.

--------------------·----------

�Page 82 • The Daily Sentinel .

www. mydailysentinel.com

Tuesda~October7,2008

Tuesday, October 7, 2008

•'

Vikings
from Page BI

•

lli s season long
: ··Jr 's probably one of the
Weirdes1 g~unes I've ever
~een mvOived m." Saints

quarterback Drew Brees
"Ju st the way th rs
kmd of went bac:k
tind fo rth . I'm trymg to
l.ligest 11 all nght now and
:In the end rt's a luss . That's
-extremely d""PiJOlllttng. ,
~spec r a ll y when once agam
'!Ne have a chance to Will 11
jlt the end ..
~aid.
~hm g

• The los ~ \\ ~ts remtnJ~cent

(o a J-+-12 set b.1c k .11
Denver 111 Week J. when
Cramam.1 mJSsed ,, -+Jyard field ~oal that cou ld
l)ave put the Samts "head
:.Vtth about two m1nutes to
~0.

: W1th the Samts uailmg
~0- 10 lute m the th1rd quar~r. Bti&gt;h had hts l1rst
iouchdown 1etur n fm 7 1
yards. siJpptng a tackle
early .tncl accelerat ing P"'t
:a bone-pn mg block at
)lHdlteiJ
by · Jo Lonn
'Dun hat
:. Bush nearl y broke &lt;~noth­
~r punt rerum hut tripped
.and fell at the Mmnesotd
:49. Still, New Orleans only
•teeded one lt rs t down to
:Set up Gramdtlca·s 53-y.trd
:field g\&gt;.tl to tte 11
· The v,kings' ki cked to
Bu ~h .tgain and paid for t t '
Bu sh c.tught the k1ck on the
ru n .tnd burst between the
only defenders who re.dl y
had a shot at hun be lore
c uttmg outstde t nto th e
bpen f1e ld tm a 64-)ard
score.
"Great block1ng by my
teammates," Bush saKI. " It

The last do 11 was Eddie
Drummond of Detroit
agamst Jitckson vtile on
Nov. ~4. 2004
Frcrotte. who repeatedly
deltvered clutch throws
under heavy pressure and
absorbed several hard htts.
connected wtth Bernan for
36 yards to the New
Orleans 27, then found him
agam for a 33-yard score to
tte 11 at 27 Ytk1n gs
cornerback
AntOine Wmlteld scored
.tfter
recovenng
Gramattca 's blocked ktck
111 the ftrst quarter and set
up Mmnesota 's second TD
wtth a forced tumble on a
sack of Brees that he recovered at the New Orleans 5yard ltne
Mmnesota cashed m
when Chester Taylot threw
a haltb.tck pass to Visanthe
Sh1.mcoe, which gave
MmnesotA a 17- 10 lead m
the second quarter.
Longwe ll h11 a 33-yard
fteld goal lo~te m the ftrst
hall
The Vtkmgs defense
proved too much to overcome tor a Samts offense
th.tt ,tlready was hu'ttmg
Itself
Brees was 26-of-46 for
:1.10 yards but was mtcrccpted twtcc. once on a
lipped pass deep m Vtkmgs
tet11tory and once on a despenttJon heave m the fmal
seconds.
Hts lone touchdown pass we nt for 17 yards to
Devery Henderson on the
Samts' frrst senes of the
game.
Notes: Bush's 176 return
yards m the game set a
Samts
record
Drummond's returns - 55
and 83 yards - were both
m the fourth quarter of the
LIOns' 23-17 mernme loss.
The Yikmgs have won
tour strarght Monday mght
games, whtle the Satnts are
8-17 all-ttme on Monday
ntght

Red Sox beat Angels,_move on to ALCS and Rays

t!tribune - S~ntinel - l\egi~ter

BOSTON (AP) - The
Boston Red Sox brushed astde
the 100-wm Angels 1n four
sames. distmssmg thetr bestm-baseball regular season as
Ia~t month\ news
When 1t rums to October. no
one donunatcs ltke Boston.
Jason Bay sltd headfirst mto
home plate to score on rookie
Jed Lowrie's two-out smgle in
the nmth mnnic Monday mght
and the detendino Wotld
Senes champtons e'i'immated
the Los Angeles Angels wrth a
3-2 victory in Game 4 of their
1irst-round playoff senes.
Boston, whtch also won tt
all m 2004. wrll have a chance
at a th1rd title in five years tf it
can get past the Rays m the
best-of-seven AL championship senes that struts Friday•
mght at Tampa Bay
'
"We JUSt beat a phenomenal
team. We· rc gomg to

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AP photo

The Red Sox celebrate after their w1n .over the Los Angeles Angels 1n Game 4 of base·
ball's Amencan League diVISion senes in Boston on Monday. The Red Sox won 3-2 to
advance to the AL championship series agamst the Tampa Bay Rays
ticld line that Regg te Wtlhts
''He's our anchor," Bay said pulled up one step before secpursued and dove fat before 11 about Vantek. "The way he ond ba~e to bang hrs hands
one-hopped mto the stands for ran Reggie down - he's a fast together m celebrntion .
a ~rround-rule double Ftrst runner. That speaks volumes ..
But the Angels tted tt in the
ba~eman M.trk Teixeira made
Vantek lost the ball as he htt etghth when TetxeJra drew a
a dtvmg catch of Mark the ground, but th1rd base two-out walk from Htdeki
Kotsay\ Ime dnve fm the sec- umptre T1m Welke ruled that ObJima,
then
Ju stin
ond out before Lowrie he had already apphed the tag. Masterson walked Vladtmtr
grmmded a smgle to nght.
Angels manager Mil(e Guerrem. The runners moved
"C1•rveb,tll down in the Sciascia argued, but replays up on Vruttek 's pasSed ball,
zone," Lowrie said "I know showed that the out waS' which proved costl y when
he's got a good one. !'was just recorded before the ball came they scored on Toni Hunter's
able to get the barrel on it
loose.
smgle to nght
Acqui 1ed from Pillsburgh at
Scot Shields took the loss,
Pedrma's contldence never
the July 31 trade deadline a~ allowing two hits and a run wavered dunng the slump, as
Manny Ramitez's replace- whrle striking out three m I 2- he showed when he popped
mem. Bay raced around thml 3 innings.
·
ol the dugout for pregame
and shd headfi1 st mto home · "We have to keep trying to out
battmg
pract1ce and smd, "You
while hiS teammates poured get better. that's all we can
can't
keep
a good man down."
out of the dugout to celebrate. do," Sciascia srud. "A lot of
Or a good team.
"Somettmes 1t's better to be guys are frustrated right now.
The
Red Sox may have
lucky than good," he smd.
But I can't tell you how proud
nussed
a
chance to sweep with
Manny D&lt;:lcarmen got two we are of the way our guys
Sunday's
5-4, 12-inning loss .
out~ m the nmth for the win, played the whole summer. It's
but
they
saved
themselves a
squelchmg the Angels' unfortunate the way It came
tnp back to Anahetm. Calif..
chances to take the lead by out."
for
a winneHake-all Game 5.
getting Aybar to whtff at\ a
Lester and John Lackey,
Instead. they wtll play AL
bum try with one out and a who also faced each other m
runner on thrrd . Red Sox Boston's Game 1 victory. East wmner Tampa Bay.
catcher Jason Wutek, whose matched scoreless inniQgs whrch advanced with a 6-2
passed ball helped Los through fou r before Kotsay victory over the Chicago
Angeles tte the game m the and Varitek smgled and Dustin Whtte Sox earlter Monday. A
eighth, pursued pinch-runner Pedroia doubled them both in. year after posting the worst
Willtts back toward thrrd and An AL MYP candidate who record m the majors, the Rays
made the dtving tag a step was hitless m his first 15 at- won the dt vrsJon with a 97-65
before the bag
bats of the playoffs, Pedrma record.

Volleyball

I

•

Gallia
County
OH .

pia~

another phenomenal team,'
Red Sox manager Terry
Fmncona &lt;did "It Will be verv
exciting We're lookmg for·
ward io that. For nght now
though.. that's probably
enough.'
Boston tS 31-16 m October
smce the tum of the century.
ami both World Senes nms
began wnh a playoff sweep of
the Angels.
Tampa Bay beat out Boston
by two games in the AL East
thts season The teams also
beat each other up dunng a
benc h -clearin ~;
brawl at
Fenway Park m June - the
Rays and Red Sox have often
sctapped over the years.
Los Angeles was able to
force the senes to a fourth
game w1th an extm-mnmg VICtory Sunday night that
snapped an 11 -s;ame playoff
losmg streak agamst Boston.
As tt turned out, that gave
the
Angels less than an 24
was obv1ously a huge play
extra
hours.
at a t1me ol need It would
Jon
Lester held Los Angeles
have been e'en sweete1 if
to
four
Juts in seven shutout
'we had won th is gan1e ..
innings
but
lost his chance at a
Bush w'" 12th'pi.tyet tn
second v1ctory m the series
NFL hJStory to return two
when the Ange ls scored twrce
punts tor TDs m a game.
m the ei.!dtth to tie it 2-all . The
Angels 'had a chance. to go
ahead m the ninth before Erick
N1ckson the past two games Aybar, whose I2th-mning sinand fmrshed off come-trom- gle was the wmner m Game 3,
behmd wms.
missed on a sutctde squeeze
When the T1tans went to attempt, thwarting the threat
from Page Bl
their lone Super Bowl m
In the bottom half, Bay loftJanuary 2000 , Nashville ed a t1y ball down the nghtsecuti ve OVC ti tles 111 tans co uldn 't have been
1998-1991J. An I 1-0 mark in more grddy about havmg a
I999 also earned the Ttgers
m town.
a 14th black collc•&gt;e natJon- wmner
Nashvdle
sports fans dal'ai champ10nshtp. "'
lied w1th basketball a few
But Vandet btlt " tt ~ mg to months
ago
when
from Page 81
end a 25-year sktd s1nce 1ts Yanderbtlt upset
then-No
I
last Winnin g ;e.tson The
only three days
Commodores beat Auburn Tennessee
the Vols knocked off Gymnaslllm back in earl y
last weekend 14· 13 to reac h atte1
then-No. I Mcmphts . But September - a Loss wh1ch
5-0 for the f1 rst ltmc smce football
is the fi rs t love here snapped the Green and
!943. and a w1n .S.ttutday at 111 the town called the White's 17-game regu lat
!\;liss tsSippi State would at Athens of the Scuth.
season wnvung streak dat·
least ensu re a 500 record
V.tndy htred Johnson in mg back to last year. EHS
and match the 6-0 start of
Decem!Jt!r 200 I away from also handed the Maroon and
the 1928 team
Futman. fresh off a loss in Gold their second loss m
Tttans coach Jcl t FISher the
then-DIVISIOn 1-A A their last three outings.
satd he senses people are champ1on
The hosts posted collec
sh1p. He has
exc ited about the success
worked pat1ently to bUild tJ ve numbers of 42 kills. 38
: '· I'm very exc tted fot depth
and add speed and ass tsts and three blocks to
Vanderbilt. They've done a athletJctsm
to hrs roster, and go along With a 65-ol-74
good JOb They 've been the results have
been paying servmg effort for 88 perpat 1ent They've done a . off The Commodores
cent. MHS fmt shed the
great JOb butldmg thetr 13- I 2 over their past are
evemng wtth team tallies of
25
:club .•tnd the) re ve r) wel i- games, with wins ove1 23 kills. 21 asststs and three
'('Qached ... Ftsher s,ud
South Carolina blocks to go along wtth a
: The . Ti tans
and Georgta,
(twtce) and now Auburn m 60-of-63 servmg perfor:commodores are very 511111- that stretch.
mance for 95 percent.
lar. Wtth both teams unde Kan ssa Connolly led the
Commodores recetver
feated. each coach sounds Gemge
one of three vtctors' serv mg attack with
as 1f he JS t eadmg off the SEC piaSm1th.
13 po1nts. followed by
yet
s
111
same scnpt Alter reac h1n g season, has not1cedhiSthestxth
Kat1e
Wilfong wtth eight
dif5-0 , John so n w.ts a ~ ked fere nce He sa1d they used and Morgan
Burt With s1x.
:what the Victory meant. and to treat playmg at home as Brittany Casto
, Tresa
Jus answer: " It g1ves us a
road
tnps
because
of
the
Swatzel
and
Samt
Cummms
·chanFe to go 6-0. · FISher lack of fan support. Agamst all added three pomts,
fol Said Monday. "We're trymg Auburn. Yandy fans had a lowed by Bntney Momson
to wm the next game. pen defm1te edge in the sold-out and Beverly Maxson with
ad ..
crowd
and dtdn't want to go two apiece
; Tennessee State's on ly home after
the wm
Swatzel led the net attack
·loss
Cdnte a week uno
111
•
e
kept stoppmg hrm wtth a game-high 24 krlls,
.Atlanta to Flortda A&amp;M to People
congratulate
the followed by Momson with
'after the Tigers ' first 4-0 Commodores when he went
stat1 smce 2001. The T1gets to VISit hi s father at a hotel stx and Casto wrth ftve .
W11 fang added fo ur for
:tre led by quat terback alter the vtctorv
EHS,
wtth Butt, Connolly
Antonio Heffnet , who 11 ans"You can feel the atmos- and Maxson all chrppmg m
.f~rred from South Carolina,
phere changmg. It's a good one. Connolly also had a
;and coached by James thmg.
The ctty's behind us, game-high 33 assists and
.Webster
and we're domg tt for them Maxson added a team-h1gh
: "1 hate losmg ," said as well as for us. It's good to
.
Webster who was htred have everybody involved ," 2 1 d!gs .
Emalee
Glass
led the
away Irom an asSIStant's JOb Smtth said.
Lady Marauders at the serv·
bt North Carolina m 2005 to
Both the Titans and Ttgers ing line with 10 points, fol.return the T1gers to t~etr are off th1s week. Johnson
lowed by Morgan Howard
;wmning ways
has to deal with h1gher with nine and Chandra
: On the fteld, the Titans expectations for Vandy, but
·and Commodores share sa1d his Commodores are Stanley WJth three pomts.
Catie Wolfe, Tric1a Smith
'some sJmilarittes
smart enough to stay level· and Shellie Bailey all con: Both pia~ stmgy. oppor- headed.
tunistic defense. The Titans
"They know it's there. tributed two points each and
lead the NFL m turnover and you can't fool them. So Valerie Conde added one.
.Wolfe led the net attack
:margin With an NFL- best 14 I told them (Sunday) we're
:takeaways. Yanderbtlt leads not worried a!)out getting with seven kills , followed
:all of the Football Bowl six wins. We're worrying by Howard with six kills.
·Subdtvts ion m that category about playing the sixth Both Bailey and Stanley
)ollith a plus-9 dtfferentJal game. That's all we worry added five kills as well.
and an SEC-best 15 take- about," Johnson ~aid. "If Smith had a team-high 13
·aways.
that gtves us an OpPOrtunity, assists and Howard added a
;· The Tttans turned to back- fine. It's the mth game team-high two blocks.
:up quarterback Kerry we're womed about, not the
Meigs did salvage a spill
:collins when Ymce Young six wms.H
on the evening with a three;got ,hurt m the opener, and
Hard to argue wtth an game 25-21, 19-25, 25-15
)ie has made them only bet· approach that's worked well victory in the JUnior varsity
ter. Mackenzt Adams so far .:__ for three Music contest.
replaced an irtjured •Chns Ctty teams
Both Meigs and Eastern

The Daily Sentinel • Page 83

www.mydailysentinel.com

•
•

Bryan WaHeralphbto

Eastern blockers Kanssa Connolly, left, and Brtttany Casto
defend a spike attempt by Meigs' Calle Wolle (15) dunng
Monday n1ght's volleyball contest at Tuppers Plams
wtll hold Sen1or N1ght not only celebratmg senior
tomght m then fma l regular mght at GAHS, but also
season home m.ttches of the playmg m their final regular
year. Met gs wtll host season game ever at the curAlexancleJ 111 a TVC Ohio rent high school.
matchup, while Eastern
But it wasn 't easy.
host Fede1 al Hockmg in a
The Lady Raiders (12-7)
TVC Hock1n g contest Both came ready for a fight and
JV games wil l begm at 6 proved just that Wtth a quick
p.m.
.25-22 vtctory in the first
game~.
Gall1a Academy
~ ANGELS OUTLAST RV
responded rn the second
game when~nmngham,
GALLIPOLIS - It has who finished with a game
been a w1 ld season so far for high 19 points, turned a narthe Galh a Academy volley- row 16-14 advantage into a
ball team, so it was only fi t· big 25-14 victory with mne
ting that the1r fmal regular straight service points .
season ~ame of the year
River Valley answered
play out 1.n equally dramatic right back with another 25fash1on.
22 win in game three to take
After fallmg behind 2-1 a 2-1 lead and seemingly all
on a btg mght at Gallia the momentum - but Jhe
Academy Htgh School, the Angels would not so down
Blue Angels rallied behind without a fight .
the play of Hannah
Gallia Academy rallied
Cunnmgham, Amy Noe and back to take game four 2.5Morgan Daniels to wm the 22 and made a brg statement
fmal two games to defeat in the final game with a
vrsrtmg Rtver Valley m ftve commandmg 15-1 victory.
games 22-25, 25-14, 22&lt;2'5, Noe served the first five
25-2::! and 15-1 Monday points in that big win
behmd the strength of three
evening Ill Galltpolis.
It was a big wm for the aces before a Stde-out
Angels ( 13-7). who were awarded the Raiders their

will

orif)i' point of the game.
Daniels then put it away
With eight stratght points off
of four aces to seal the big
Wtn.
Cunnmgham not only led
the Blue and Whtte wnl) 19
markers, but also posted I3
digs a ktll and a block.
Dantels was just behmd her
with 13 pomts mcluding
seven aces while also coming away with 10 kills, three
blocks a dt g and an assist
while Noe also fimshed
wnh double figure points at
II With SIX aces, e1ght ktlls
and 16 dt gs.
Bttttany Htvely added srx
points, four drgs and had a
game high 21 aSSists, Alex1s
Geiger had four points, 19
asststs, 14 kills and two
blocks, Brea Close had
seven ktlls, four digs and
four assists and Megan
Foster posted four kills and
an asst sl.
Rtver Valley played a
sohd game desprte commg
up just short m the end as
the Raiders were led offensively by Linsey Stover
with e1ght points and two
kills Mackenzie Cluxton
was JUSt behind her with
seven pomts , 10 assists and
a pair of kills whtle Kayla
S m1th and Jacq ueline
Jacobs put up s1x points
ap1ece. Jacobs a!so had
e1ght kills while Smith had
five.
Aubne Rice and Iliana
Corf1as chipped in four
pomts aptece with Corfias
also p_ostmg seven kills and
Rice ,three and Canssa
Gilmore added four assists.
Despite falling in the varsity contest, the Lady
Raiders reserve team put on
a btg show m front of the
Blue and White crowd with
a victory .in .both th7 fresh·
men and Jumor vars1ty contests.
RVHS won the reserve
contest 25-27, 25·20 and
2.5-20 with Kaltlyn Roberts
leading the • way with 14
points.
Gallia Academy will now
gear up for the SEOAL Day
of Champions this weekend
before hostmg Waver! y in
tournament actton next
Monday while River Valley
returns home for rts final
home game of the year
against Rock Hill on
Tuesday

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CLASSIFIED INDEX
Legals ........................................................... tOO
Announcamenta .......................................... 200
Birthday/Anniversary .... .. ........................... 205
Happy Ad1 .................................................... 21 0
Lost &amp; Found .............................................. 215

Memory/Thank You ..................................... 220
Nottcea ......................................................... 225
Personals ..................................................... 230
Wanted ...................................................... 23~
Servtcea ....................................................... 300
Appliance Servlce ....................................... 302
Automollve ................................................. 304
Building Matorlato ....................................... 306
1

Buelneaa ...................................................... 308
catertng........................................................ 310
ChtldiEtderty Care ...................................... 312
Computers ................................................... 314
Contractora ............................. ..................... 316
Oomeattca/JanHartal ................................... 318

Electrical ...,.................................................. 320
Ftnanclat....................................................... 3~
Heal1h .. .......................................... ............... 326
Healing &amp; Cootlng ....................................... 328
Home Improvement&amp; 330

lnaurance ................1.......... .... ... ..

....... ......... 332

Lawn Servlce ............................................... 334
Muolc:/Danco1Drama .................................... 336
Other Servtceo .............~ ............................... 336
PtumbtngolEiectrtcel .................................... 340
Prolnatonal Senrtcoa ..................... .......... 342
Repetra ......................................................... 344
Rooting ............. ........................................... 348
Security .................................................... :.·.. 348
Tax/Accounllng .. ........................................ 350
Travel/Entertainment .................................. 352
Financial ............................................., .. ...... 400
Financial Servtcea .. ..................................... 405
lnaurance ................................... ,................ 410
Money to Lond ............................................. 415
Education ..... ............................................... 500
Buolneu &amp; Trade School ...- ..................... 505
Instruction &amp; Training ................................ 510

LtiiOna ...... ............. ..... .................... ........... 515
Peroonal ..................................................... 520
Animate ....................................................... 600
Animal Supp11eo .......................................... 605

Hoi'HI ........... ............................... ............. 610
Ltveotock ......................................................615
Ptlt............ ................................................. 620
Want to buy ................................................ 625
Agriculture .................................................. 700
Farm Equipment .......................................... 705
Gordon I Produce ............................ ,.......... 710
Hay, Feed, Seed, Grain ............................... 715
Hunting I Land .......................................... 720
Wont to buy ....................................... ........... 725
Merchandloo ............................................... 900
Antlquoo ........................... ,........................... 905
Appttonct .................................................... 910
Aucttqno ....................................................... 915
Bargain Baoemtnl.. .................................... 920
Collecttbloo .................................................. 925
Computtro ................................................. 930
Equ1pmen11Suppttoo.... ................................ 935
Flea Marketa ............... ...........!.................... 940
Fuel 011 CoaVWood/Gas ............................. 945
Furniture ....... .............................................. 950
Hobby/Hunt &amp; Sport .................................... 955
Ktd't Corner ................................................. 960
Mlecattonoouo....................................... " ... 965
Wont to buy .................................................. 970
Yard Sale ..................................................... 975

'

ooo
o

Recraattonal Ve11lctea .............................. 1
ATV ............. ,.................o:!............................ 1005
Btcyctta..................................................... 101
Boala/Acceaaorlea .................................... t015
Camper/RVo &amp; Trallero ............................. 1020
Motorcycloo ........... .................................... 1025
Other ..........................................................1030
Want to buy ...............................................1035
Automollve ................................................ 2000
Auto Rental/lease ..... ............................. 2005
Autoa .......................................................... 2010
Ctaulc/Anllquea ............................ .......... 2015
Commercialllnduatrlal .............................. 2020
Porta &amp; Acceaaortea ..................................2025
Sporta Uttllly......................................... ..2030
Trucka .........................................................2035
Utility Trotters ............................................ 2040
Vana ......................................................... ... 2045
Want to buy ..............................................2050
Real Estate Sa toe ...................................... 3000
Cemetery Ptoto .......................................... 3005
Commerclal ................................................301 o
Condomlnluma .......................................... 30t5
For Sole by Owner .....................................3020
Houaeator Selt ............................ ... .......... 3025
Land (Acreage) .......................................... 3030
Lota ............................................................3035
Want to buy ................................................3040
Real Eotata Rentato ...................................3500
Apartmon1111Townhouoaa ......................... 3505
Commerctat ........................................:....... 3510
Condomtnluma .......................................... 3515
Houses lor Rent ........................................ 3520
Land (Acroogt) ..........................................35.25
S1orage .......................................................3535
Wont to Rent .............................................. 3540
Manufactured Houalng .......... :.................. 400D
Lo11............................................................. 4005
Movers....... ............................................ .....401D
Rentalo ....................................................... 4015
Satoo ........................................................... 4020
Suppltta ..................................................... 4025
Wont to Buy ............................................... 4030
Resort Property ......................................... 5000
Rooort Property lor sale ........................... 5025
Reoort Property tor rent ........................... 5050
Employment.............................................6000
Accountlng1Financlal ................................ 6002
Admtntatrattve/Prolaoalonal.....................6004
Caohlor/Cierk ........................ ..................... 8006
Chttci'Eiderty Cere ..................................... 6008
Clorlcat .......................... .............................8010
Conotructlon ..............................................601 2
Driver• &amp; Delivery ..................................... 80t4
Educatton ...................................................8016
Ettclrlcat Plumbing ..................................6018
Employmtnt Ag•neleo .............................6020
Entertotnmont... ............................ ............ 60~
Food Servlctt ............................................ 6024
· Government &amp; Federal Jobtt .................... 6026
Help anted- Qenoral .................................. 8028
Law Enforcement ..................................... 6030
Malntenonco/Dome-ttc ............................. 6032
Manogemen1/Supervlaory ........................ 6034
Mechlnlce ..................................................6036
Medtcef ................................ ..................... 6036
Muaicel .......................................................6040

Part·Ttme-Ttmporarleo ............................ 6042
Reetauranta ............. :. ................................. 6044
Satae ........................................................... 6048
Technical Tradeo ....................................... 8050
Textltti/Factory .........................................6052

•

For sBie 1986 Honda
scooter Ehte 250 ioK
mtfes, call (740)949-2220
2000

Aulomo1tve

~M~"Iiigs~H!;;o!;;lz~er~C.;;;Ion.;;;'c~= ~02~H~on-d~a~Ao~c·o·rd~EX~4
1000

Recreattonat
Vel11cles

door
auto,
loaded
92 000 m1les 245-5526

; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; 93 Ford Temp o, 4cyl ,
Boah / Accenoria
2dr
blue good worl&lt;
$6oo.
~;;;;-~"""':"'""""'""'
~r
740
591
8936
1989 Stratos Bass boal ( )

=======

Older lady of Good
Polled Hereford Bulls &amp;
Character available tor
Money To t..nd
Hefers, 4 to 5 months
Elder Care In your Home ~~;;;;;;;§;;;;;;=~=. old Call 304·882·2 774
304-675·2959
NOTICE Borrow Smart Regtstered Black Angus
Contact the OhiO OtVI· hetfers
and , bred
Home lnt""'O¥WIIIOID • StOn of F1nanc1al lnstitu·
,...
tlons Office of Consumer hetfers/cows
AI stre's
GAR Pnme Design GAR
B......nt
Affairs BEFOFIE you ref1· Retail Products, Boyd on
Waterproofing
nance your home or ob- Target
Travelor
004,
Uncondttlonalltfetlme
tatn a loan BEWARE of SAV DeSity,
Gar New
guarantee Local refer
requests for any large Destgn 5050 and others
ences furmShed Estab·
advance payments
of Grand
v1ew
Farm
hshed 1975 Call 24 Hrs
fees or Insurance Call SouthSide,
WV
740 446·0870, Rog ers
the OffiCe of Consumer 304.6 75 •2098
Basement Waterproohng
Afftars
toll
free
at
t·B66·2 7S-ooo3 to learn .,;;;;
Pita
Sul;)enor Home Matnte- 1l lhe mo rt gage broker or
nance
carpentry, Iender Is propery
I
II·
Plumbtng,
E16ctncal, censed (This Is a public 2 AKC lemale Boston
Rental s No Job to Small servtce
announcemenI •.erner puppIes beauIft u1
Reasonable
Pnces from the Ohto Valley marktngs black &amp; white
339·3442 or 446·2BOo
Pubhshong Company)
$12o ea 740·388·8743

Gallipolis Thursday 9th
&amp; Fnday 10th 47 West
wood
Dnve
Joanne
·sheets'
Fillinger
9·4
both days

Other

HugeOct
9· 11
9am Spm
household
crafts good quality 1een ::'!:"":':""A~uto~s~~~
clothes boys small &amp; '2oo7 Honda VTX 1300A
10 14 1800 mtle s black 57800
medtum
gtrls
ad_ylt
clothes
vartous 388_8380
stzes, Mulberry Hts near

s.r.;..,,

I

1

Yard Solt

O"

:;""~'"::'~--:;;;;;;;;;--- George's

Small dog

I

&amp; CARLYLE

Other S.rvic:u

AnPOLncements

reurvea

ttMt rlghlto

• Sl11rt Your Adl With A Keyword • Include Complete

ads must be prepaid'

1~ ~ 1
~
'-!+
@ 2008 by

NEA, Inc.

www comics.c om

~;;;=;;;;;;-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:-:;:;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;!
Pelt
~;;;;;;;::-=~::""':""':

...,""'""'""'""'""'"""'

Want To Buy

:::=-:-=;;;;;;:-';;;;;;:=

AK C German Shepherd Wanted to Buy- Paw
Pups, 8 left fmm ltfler ol Paws, Black Walnu ts,
11 only 3 mates Dam Caii 740·69B·6,060
and Stre are famtly pets
9 wks old, reduced 10
$350_304
nS-6062
_

WaM To Buy
':'~=-:-;;;;;;:;;;;;;'==.

=

Absolute Top Dollar . sll·
ver/gold
COins,
any
10KI14Kf18K gOld JSW·
airy, dental gold, pre
1935
US
currency.
proof/mtnt
sets,
dtamonds MTS C01n Shop
151 2nd Avenue, Galh·
polls 446·2842

Free male ktHen , 10
weeks old htter·tratned,
Antim304· 200 · 7'17
•r
:!=~-:--',~--~~
"'
v
r
304 "82 3995
G
-u •
IB
ANTI QUESFree to good home 6 Also, restore fumtture, lo·
hound mtxed puppies, cated on Tornado Ad off

--..,..==:-'---,
SHOP

es

great hunters, 12 weeks
(740)696·1017
~~~~:"""'.....~
free to good home baby
kitlens
304·882·2385
leave message

At
33,
Aactne
(Park&amp;Rtde)
ex1t
740·949·2246
;.,;;;,;,;;;,;;;;;;;,""'""'"""'
Fuoll Od 1 Coal/
Wood / Gas

::-=o=.-:"=iiiii"':"'
de·

Free to good home , Jee·
gle t/2 Beagle t/2 Jack Seasoned Ftrewood
Russell 8 wks old, 1 (F) livered Call446·9204
left 740·367·0141
Lost F chihuahua
black
and
tan
Whtte
Hill
Rd area needs
medical
attan!IOn, Reward 740
742·311 0

Berber Carpet $6 95 yd
carpet remna nts $40 00
female, 3 yrs. old, great &amp; up Mollohan carpet
w/ktds, up on all shots 22 12 Eastern Ave Galli·
$200 · ' 7401992 ' 5108
polls, Ohto 740·446·7444
A~r1cu ',1::

Farm Equipmonl

~~=..;;~~=

EBV,
INTEGRITY,
KIEFER BUILT,
VAllEY
HORSE/LIVE·
STOCK
TRAILERS,
LOAO
MAX
EQUIP·
MENT
TRAILERS
CARGO EXPRES~ &amp;
HOMESTEADER
CARGO/CONCESSION
TRAILERS
B+W
GOOSENECK FLATBED
$3999 VIEW OUR ENTIRE TRAILER INVEN
TORY AT
I/INoiW CARMICHAEL
TRAILERS COM
740·446·3825

Jet Aeralton Motors re·
patred, new &amp; rebuilt In
stock Call Ron Evans
1 BOO o37·9028
Hot Tub, 6 person, Like
New wtlh cover Must
Sell·
Mcvmg
$1600
740•640 •3333

~--:::o~---:--

House Shutters, vartous
stzes
$80
Whtrlpool
Washer
$7o
304·67o·501 5
NEW AND USED STEEL
Steel Beams, Pipe Rebar
lor
Concrete
Angle,
Channel Aat Bar Steel
Grat1ng for Dratns. Orwe·
ways &amp; Walkways L&amp;L
Scrap Metals Open Man,
Tue,
Wed
&amp;
Frl,
8am·4 30pm
Closed

:-:---------~
Thurs
Sat
Have you pnced a John 740--446·7300

&amp;

Sun

Deere lately? You II be
aurpnsed! Check out our
used
at
1nventory
wwwCAREQ com
car·
michael
Equipment
;,
74;,;0;,;446;,;;;,·2;;,;4;,;,12...,...,...,!!!!
Gardtn &amp; Product

~~-~~~~

Ktwt jusl E of Syracuse
on
St
At
124.
(740)992-7449
;;,;;;;;;,;;;;,;,,;,;;""'"""""'"
Hoy, Food, s..d, Groin

Stand-up tanning
bed
$1200 74o-367-n62

Pole Bam 30x40x10 only
$6 995, other St~es, Free
Dehvery 877·773·8356
$cag
Tiger
Ct~b
zero·IIJm
mower,
e:.
con low hours, $3 000
740 742 2373

Up 10 4 Nascar Ticl&lt;.t:;ts
10111108
Night ·Race.
Lowes Speedway, Char·
Hay for sale 800 lb cost lotte NC 304· 773-5626
$35 per, bales, 12001b.
cost $50 per bales Call
Wont To Buy
446-1947 or 794-1151
Buy1ng tools sell or trade
Want Ta Buy
mechamc-carpenter lawn
~=~-:-="-~ &amp; garden power tools,.
Firewood fdr sale cell Call 740·388-1515 or coli
446-1947or794-11o1
74().208 0320

!"0--==-=.;;i;;;;;;=

~~M;;;;o;;;;to;;;;rq;;;i;;;d;;;;o;;;;siiiiiiiii

::"~""':;;;;;;;"="'-~

97 Ford Expedition, 4x4,
~
runs great. looks good,
2007
Kawasaki
NtnJa
250 under 1500 m1les tow pkg 3rd seat $2700
.:.;
74;;0!;
·3;;,
79;,;·2,1;;,
79; ,""'""'""
red helmet and tank bag ;:;;;
$2,800 740·64!;•1912
J-·.L
nKD
2007
Kawasaki
N1n1a
250 under 1500 m11es
red helmet and tank bag
52 ,800 740·645·19i2

~--;;;;;;:~iiiii~=
~
97 Ford F250 4WD ex·
tende d
cab
power
tocklwtndows tinted wmdowsSspeed 645-5357

Are you 65
or older?

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

2 Fire Place 1nserts, 1
Suck 1 Kindel Wood
304 675·3818

-

f:;;;~=====~;:::::~:'·~=~;;;;;;.::.

Miacellaneou&amp;

i:Po;.;odO:I:'"e~fo-r·sa-.l•e·r-eg-r~
ed,

700

CLASSIFIEDS

w/1 OOhp Ev1nrude out947 Grand Prtx GT 9R5
ooard
good
shape,
Grand Pnx runs good
l37oo
oeo. 304-!;93·2604
(740)992 2892
~,.,;;;,;;;;;;;;,""'""'"""' We have quality SUV's
Campen/ RVs &amp;
wtth warranty Pnced to
Trailers
Sell Blazer Satum Vue,
Butc k Aendezvous VIS n
RV ServiCe at Carmt- us
at
chael
Tratler.:&gt; I
k
I
gocoo motors com.
or
ca II
740·446-3825
S top
: : : : - - - - - - - 740 446 0103, 328 Jack
RV
son Ptke
Serv1ce at Carmtchael COOK MOTORS
Tratlers
-74"'0"'4"'46,.·38
""'2o""'""'""'""
Sports Utilfty

If so, you qualify for a

Se.n ior Discount*
when you pay for a 6 or 12
month subscription on your
•
home delivered subscription!
Here's all you
need to do ...
Fill out the coupon below
and drop off or mail it with a
copy of your photo ID.

'D«il!' tlr::ribune
~}oint ~leasant JL\egister.
The J;&gt;aily Sentinel
~unba~ m:tme&amp; -&amp;entinel
~allipolts

t

•

·------------------------------Subscriber's Name -----------~Address --'-------~------

Ctty/Sta!e/Zip - - - - - - - " - - - - - - c '

Phone____________~----------Mall or drop off this coupon along
wllh a copy of your photo 10 to
Ohio Valley Publlahlng P.O. Box 469, Qolllpolle, OH 4563t

.

.

--------------------·----------

�~.,

h:IWII/

Hou111 Far Rent

!i!· ;;;~T~o~w~~~h~o=~~·~.-.

New 2BA 2 .. bath your
(740) eM~ of renting com«Hl1~
pletely fumished &amp; all
~---~~:-- utilities paid or you pro3 rooms and bath up- vidlng furniture &amp; utilities
stairs. Completely fur· NO LEASE 446-7029
nlshed wi1h WID. No
pets. Ref. Req. 441.0245
2BR, 1 baltl in Gal!ipoHs,
CONVENIENTLY
LO· no smokers or pels, rei.
F.or
sale
or
lease
Otficetwar6houseJstorage
GATED
&amp;
AFFORD· &amp; deposit requ1red. $450
G 1
ABLE! Townhouse apart- per
mo.
Inc,
great (location in at ipo- menls,
and'or
small walsew/'tfash.

2BR APT. CIA.

=,_...,....,;._.,...,,....,...

~m~~ ·Cai~·Wayn:

404-456·3802

;:;;;;;;:;;,;;;;;;;;,.,,.,,.,=

i'

Houlli Far Solo

houses for rent Call 740-256-9190
740-441· tt11 tor appli· -1_P_ _ _
2b- 1- b- h
cation &amp; information.
n omeroy,
r,
at '
;;;;;;;;,.;.;;;;;;;;;;.;;;;;;,.,.,.....,. stove &amp; !rig.. no Pets, no
FREE

RENT

SFtECIAL smoking,

quiet, $475 a
Jordan landing 2br, 3br mo. plus dep.,
pick-up
&amp; 4br Available No Pets, applk:ations at DO · Mid·
Tenant Responsible for 1
Rent
&amp;
Electric
304-67,.·0023
or
304-610-0776
;;;;.;.;;,;.;;.;;.;.;.;;...._ __

1-86 North Park Dr. call
304-f575-5640
or
304-593·1204 will sell on
Land Contract or Out
Right. Also a Wellington
Plano call tor appointmenl to see them both.
Free
Rent
Special!!l
2&amp;3BR and up, Central
4 bed 2 bath &amp; office in Air, WID hookup, tenant
town , hw &amp; tile floors . pays electric. EHO Elm
updated kitchen &amp; baths, View
Apts.
priVacy fence &amp; above ~~304~)88::;2;;:·30
;:::.;,1;,7---..ground
pool,
security Twin Rivers Tower is ac·
system, much more. 130 cepting applications tor
Bastlani Dr. $129,000 waiting list for HUO sub446·2923
sidlzed, 1·BR apartment
New 2BR 2 bath on 3 ac. tor 111e · etderlyfdlsabled,
neW refrig, .ranQe &amp; dish- ,ca:;l~l6~75;;·;66:;:7;.9-:-~...,..~
washer Included $75,000 :Beautiful Apia. at Jack~
740-446-7029
800 blat". 52 Westl y ld SA 588 I
wood Or., from· $365 to
•• r o
or more
info and ptc:tures go to $560.
740-4-46·2566.
~.ol"llb.com
!.D. Equal Housing 6pponu8 rownmg
. 740-446 · 7204
nity. This ·institution is an
.
abr, 1 bath, Needs some Equal ' Opportunity F'ro~ork, large· tot, $25,000 ~v:;
lde;::r.,:a:;:
nd~E:;:m~p~l;o~ye;::r:;,.~~
304·882·2688
Eftk:iency Apt.
1624
Chatham
Ave.
{rear).
3BR,2BA, 2 car gar. $
&amp;
Patio, DR/FR.. Relocating
325 (water, sewer
;$115,000.
740-446-081 7 garbage
included).
7 40-446-4234
or
~eave msg
_ 06740 2 7861
For Sale by OWnet". 312 ;.;;;:..:;;.,;,;;;;,;__ _.,...,
~ome on, 1/2 acre level Gracious Living 1 am;:J 2
~'
lot. Located at 3089 Bu- Bedroom Apts. at Village
.
'd
1
.avllle Pike: .A.ttact1ed · ga· Manor
and . A1vers1 e
·
. ed A.pts. in Middleport, from
~ll" AppraiS
$327
to
$5 92 .
•110.000.
Asking 740 992 5064
$98,500. ·
Call
· ·
·
Equal
}40-446-4910
'Housing Opportunity.

•

House tor sale in Ct1es- Modem 1BA apt. Call
,er, 3 br:, separate ga- 740·446·0390
iann,
contact
"'u
New Haven, ooe bed·
J740)985-4131
room apanment, deposit
t:touse In Clifton lor &amp;
references,
rent,4
bedrOQ!f!S, ~74;::o-~99~2-~0!'16~5:,_~:-~
Kitct1en, basement, livirtg Nice
Clean
Ground
roOm. 1 bath, gas heat. Floor, 2br, WID hoOkup,
city water, untarnished. References/Deposit/No
$500 month + utilities Pets 304 .675 _5162
, and
deposit
possible
sale Of1 lal")d contract,or
Now accepllrig
sell fo r 35,000 304 593
applications at:
8167 or 593 8107
Valley View Apartments ·
600 State Route 325,
Tri·level brick/cedar on
Thunnan, Ohio 45685
.98 acrn Rutland. Oh,
740-245-9170
private
setting,
eat-in
1-2 Bedroom Apartments
kitchen, 3 br., 2 ·rull
witt1 appliances furnished
baths, lg. livingroom, lg.
On site laundry facUlty.
family room, out of flood Call for details or pick up
plain, (740)742·2404 or
application at rental
740·949·2930
office,
Possibility of rental
Land
assistance.
Equal
Housing
Appro)( . 25 acres mit re·
Opportunity
mote,
rough
access.
TDDU 19·526·0466
$40K, Buyer must Sur"This
institution is an
vey , Call after 5pm
Equal
Opportunity
304-895·3390
Provider a"nd Employer"

Tuesday, October 7, 2008

www.mydallysentlnel.com
.
.

Page B4 • The Daily Sentinel

""'""'""'""'""'""'""'=

Rentals

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

2 br. mobile home in
Racine, $325 per mo.,
$325 dep., , yrs. tease,
$60 rton-relundable water dep .. no pets, no calls
after
9pm,
(740)992-&gt;097
~:-~:-'-:-...,.-:-­
Federal Funds just re·
leased for Land Owners.
No closing cost and
ZERO DOWNI Will do
land
improvements.
Bankruptcy &amp; . Bad Credit
OK 2 • .4
d 5 bed
· ' ,),
an
•
rooms ·
available.
740-446·3384

~~--.-~"':'""::"

Holp Wam.d • Gon...,l Holp Want.d · Genonol Holp Want.d • Genoral
$250 Sign-on. , Bonual
Vo1od TOP FIVE Beo1
Ptecea to Work In Ohio I
Corne S.O Whyl
No Salesl No
Collections! Recruit
volunteers for non-prori!
organizations that help
save li ves and prevent
diseases such as cancer,
tung and heart disease!
Get paicl to make a
differenceI
"' Full and Pari-lime ·
Positions
"' Day and Evening
Shifts
"' Professional Work
Environment!
.t Medical. Dental,
· EAP, 401 Kl '
.r On-site Doctor
./ Weekly Pay and
Bonus lncenbVesl
Call TODAY I
Interview
TOMORROWII

Work NEXT WEEK Ill
VOur tutyre career In
waiting tpr voul!!

1-881HMC·PAYU
EXt. 1901

Sign On
Bonus!!

'3"'br, -2"'b-a. "'Pt"""
. "'P"'I_ea_s-anl
a.rea 304-273r6622 or
304·674·6204
~~"':'"-"':'"~-.":"
Mobile Home for Aent Pt
Pleasant a,rea HUD accepted, Deposit required
Call304·675-3423

No experience
required!
No Credit Card
Sales!
No Coilections!

~~-.-.-.---

Scenk: location , conven·
lent to town and afford-

able, 2 &amp; 3 bedrooms
available
call

~17,;;4~0),;99;,;2;;;·5639;;;;;;,.,.,,.,=

=·

Salu

;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
1996, 16)(80 Clayton mobile home, total elec.,
needs
minor
repair,
$3000
080,
740·590·0164
2 2006 16x80 ClaytCln 3 ·
bed 2 bath, 200 16x70
Fleetwood 2 bed 1 bath.
1999. Fortune 3 bed 2
bath. we deliver block
lev'e~ and anchor. We
dan do Jlle footers also.
Daytime
740-388·0000
or 740-388-8513 Evenings 740·388·8017 or
740-245·9213.

IA&lt;nagel

Here's what yott.
do;
Raise funds and
renew
memberships lor
the National Rille
Association

llfflr;
-./ Weekly Pay and
Bonus Incentives!
-./ Fult and
Part-time
Posit•ons!
-./Professional
Work
Environment'
-./ Medical, Dental,
EAP. 401KI
-./ On-site Doctor!

H1ll s Self
Storage

ROBERT
BISSELL

29670 Bashan Road

COISTIUmON

YOUNG'S

CARPENTER
SERVICE
· Room AddHiont •
Remodeling
· NfwGII'IIgel

· Racine. Ohio

· Roofing &amp; Guttaira

• VInyl Siding &amp; P1in1ing
··Pallo •nd Porch Decks

WV036725

V.C. YOUNG Ill

-

............
--\· '" "
to.10'4Y' '
~

1$

992 ·6215

Hours

PD!Il('IO\ OhiO

7·:00 AM· 8:00PM

~1'.1t '&gt;

; ,

,.

L or .11 [lrf'llt• nrt•

111411

101111 HYSEllS
UJIJIE
St ftl124 ....,.....

• is

&lt;JAQJ 109

• 75•
• 7

De~ler: North
Vulnerable: Both

740~16·1164

we

~r~AL•:ze ~ow

2.459 St. Rt. 160 • Gallipolis

HOW'S THAT
SHIFTLESS
" MAN OF
'fO~ES,

LOWEEZ'f?

I)'
"--" •0]

'In w~l-lrtt&gt; \W-.1, r'l&gt; ,::::::&lt;::;':::]

Racine, Ohio 740·247-2019

Paul Rowe

BE 00\t-11~--.,__...c~
~~l-IE~ ~"'

Cell: 740.416-5047
email:
jrshadlrm@aol.com

I{Cif.£!

Rllllaun&gt;nll
".i , .• , .. .

.

TREE WORK
Topped, Take Down
&amp; Removal
AITordable,

Allparrs

Pus

Opening lead: 6 7

Wodnoodoy. Oct. 8, 20011
By Bomlco Oool
It behOovas you to work hard and put
your best toot forwafd In the year ahead,
especially when chaos Is prevailing all

Seamless Gutters
Roofing, S1ding, Gutters
Insured &amp; Bonded
740·653·9657

Vinyl
Siding/Repl acement

Windows/Remodeling
Bonded &amp; insured
740-992· 1493 Office
740-416-8339 Cell
Free Estimated
Pomeroy, Ohio

Stanley TreeTrimming
&amp; Removal

•AND TilE KIN6 .LOVED THE
PEOPI.E. AND THE PEOPLE KIND
OF l.OVED THJ1' KIN6 ••"

''AND TilE'( All PRETTV MUCH

THE TRUTH, MIJ.AM. ..

Work
• RectSt1nablc Ratei\

*Insured
*Experiencet.l
Referem. ..:~ A\'Uilable!
Call Gary Stanley @
740-59 1·8044
Please

~======! ·
Ill

leave messa e

SO LEfS CHECK IN

WITH FORAGING EXPERT,
MARTIN. TO LE~ JJST
WHICH TWIGS Alf) BERRES
A.QE EDIBLE All&gt;
.•.----... WIIICH()£5

IELJ!O·
TOXINS. •

_ _ _...,,__ __
Agricultural Engineer po- ·
sltion
opening. . Have
knowledge of engineering practices in natural
resources; forestry is·
sues; natural resource
education
programs.
Prefer associate/ technlcal · degrae in forestry,
wildlife,
natural
resources, education. Ba·
sk: computer skills re·
qulred.
Excellent
oral
and wrinen communication skills ' required. Start ing salary deJ)6nds upon
educatiQn and experi·
ence· with bene"fit pack·
age ,irteluded. A valid
dffver's
license
along
with
federal
security
clearance required. For
more infonnation on this
position check on the
scon labor exchange
via tile internet Send resume to Gama Jobs and
Family
SeNices.
648
Third Avenue, ' Gallipol~s,
OH 45631 or fax to
740-446-11942.

James Kaasee II
742·2332

Roofing, Siding,
Soffit, Decks,
Doors, Windows,
Electric, Plumbing,
Drywall,
Remodeling, Ro.om I
Additions

IN IXlST

Fti'TUN MJNOfU

Local CoqJractor

740..367·0544
Fraa Eatlmattl

740..367·0536

The Daily Sentinel

WMINING.

With someone who fHts u strongly
about his or her q:JpOSing views as )'01.1
do youn.. H you open tNs &lt;:en of wonns,
you11 be sorry.
ARIES (March 21-Aprfl 19) - When '
comet to forming • partnet.ahlp. be cilreh.ll to team up only with those who haw
prown themsetYes to be aboYeboaro.
8a::k out of an 811Bllgement if you sus·

44 'Yuck!

45 Retu..lo
46 Friar

of lagend
48 Diatant
49 Conatruclion lay
50 Foot·tllk .
52 Almoet•

•

grldl
·
53 Ouha spicy·
54 NASA
counterp11r1

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos

Ce1~ Cijtl"ererntogramsare CJMted !rom (lUcta~ons by famous people pGs! aM pre9811

Each ltltef mthe cipher slandslor ai"IOther

'

·

TAVF

TZXW

Today's cJue: M equals N·

"HTWXKVH

FHI

SKLLKVABC
GZCWMCKHB

LHV -WS

CK ·TWI ;

KMVBASKMO

IIHCKZMHB

WDCKMVCKZ -M , JKCFZAC
LBKMVFKIIO."

•

MKVE

VBZZMWR

PREVIOUS SOLUTION - ·everything is possible aston~ as you put your
mind to it and you

put 1he work and time Into o.· · Michael Phelps

T:~:~'
S©tt~lA-L&amp;~!fs·
.
1&lt;11N1t loy ClAY I. POllAN
Reorrcngo ltttitS of
O
· four ICrOmblod words

low 1o fornt lOili

~mplo

....
WOlD

the

bt·
words.

THRUNU

I r 1• I I
SUQEr;

I
I
I
I
I
.--,..--,.--...,.....,.,
RHYUR

..

h--.-&lt;-T,_,.......,..-1~

L...L..I...L.I'-LI...JI...J ~

l

"The reason people can't
accepl criticism," tbe dad
lectured,."is because it's usually:
tho--.
.

L A WH E T .
1-.,.j..;;...,,...-,..,-.,
...! ..,,....-j 0
.

Camploto the c:hudtio quotod
· bv hllino In 1!10 miailt!l --~
Olio .....,.
No. 3 beloW-

m.. ....

8 PRINT
NUMB ERED lfiTERS IN
THESE
SQUARES

•

UNSCtAMalE ABOVE tEllERS
10 GET ANSWER

SCRAMLETS ANSWERS · I016108
Offset - Right - Guih.- Lotion - FOOT in IT .
.
GTamps to neighbor's son, "If you ka:p your mouth shut you
will not put your FOOT in IT."

ARLO&amp;JANIS

pect 80f'lle()ll8 Is ~Shou~

GEMINI (May 21-.ble20) -Don1 mll&lt;o
the mistllke of thinking subotdina.tes can
be driven or pulhed into submission~ II
OOtJid prove to be a regrenab6e lactic lead by exll!'lfl)o.

CANCER (Juno 21.Ju~ 22) - h mfghl
be OK to be a ril6(--takef when you sense
1he odds .... In your tawr. but this isn't
lblyro be 'ooo!ll - - - hyou
a~ to do 10 anyway, the results
mlghlbe~ .

tD..,..

. ,.,. !'9""-~

the lnohft I II Md gtv. your.tll'

~~~~
be.
VtAtlo (Aug. U:lopl. U)- Un- you

-

til "" -

.,.., d l -

ooro!ully. •lOb you.,. -ilono btfort

""*' lum out 10 bo a """"' d -r.
tAim "" -

fil'll.

/

SOUPlONUTZ

47239 Riebel Road. Long Bottom. OH

.

ITOLOHIM
i&lt;ED N8Jff

PISCES (Feb. 20-March 201 - tt's rarely
a good day to-..,. politics or raliglon '

37 Walt awhile
41 Soft and
luilrouo
43 Debit'1
oppolite

LEO (Ju~ 2:Mog. 22) - ft might be dil·
ftc:ult
that JOY 'MIN wrong about
oomolhlng .,.,. you thiiiO be •
10c1. Bul. )'OU dO, you wll only P&lt;O-

IIIE W.IIRCUI, DWIIU

II)t l3oint
.
..t}Ita~ant ~~liter

the
same benWolence.
AQUARIUS
(Jan. 20-Feb. 19) - Toke
care 1hat you don't come Olf as being
friendly only to llOse who haw something to offer. II ~u appear to be manipulatlvei, you could jeopardize. several

TAURUS (April 20-May 201 -

• Room Additions • Garages • Vinyl
and Wood Siding • Roofing • Pole
Barns • Patio 's, Porches and Decks

'

40 Prof.
41 Tlke iegot
a EIIT
42 ocdon
llinOnll
lochnlquo
.........
11 RoUt
44 Prtor to
, • ..__. 47 Applllo
12W-.
t-*
to Juana
51 Rllnwnr ·
13
55prop
56 Goth dam I
15 Ill. LuPino 57 Trelllo .
·16 Requl~ng
cOYIIIIr
mueh effOrt 56 Bock whlln
18 Lealld
59 Aurora
9 Molel plus
.lhrough
locale
20 Fjord
40 Pronto
10 BOUitdtr ·
21 Ely al
. 111 Tlckol Into 14 Wash. lime
17 Flslt habltal
"Tarzan"
23 FOR org.
19 Verb fnom
DOWN
24 Leaot bit
Latin 101
22 Bom lhere
27 Farmaru
1H111dy
unh
ewab
23 AWOL
29 Cooltout
(hyph.l
sludent
ptuo ·
2 Mock
24 Nile wider
32 u... piper
25 Eanhen pot
fanfare
towel
(hyph.l
26 Dlvulgld
33Tmel
3 Jaggodtear 28 Firat nama
In perfume
anound
4 llr.
34 Any ahlp
29 GenghlsMagtio'o
30 Morays and
35 Under the
nephew
weather
congers
5 Turkloh tiUI
36 Typewriter 6 C.uoe
31 Coarse
a bllater
sand
'¥T ~~Island 7 - Toe-tung 36 Abdul or
38 Feeling low 8 Dinnerware
Zsltn

effective allies be hard to come by, don't
hesilate to go it alone, especially in ma1·
te"!&gt; ol axtreme importance. Rely on your
own assets, and they won\f kM you oown,

For R&lt;modeling and New'House Building
Call: MARCUM CONSTRUCTION

..
~- laUipollf iailp 1tdbutte

case: team trom it Instead of merely
grumbling about your plight.
SCORPIO (Oct. 2HJov. 22) - In situa·
tiona where being mildly usertlw is
enough1 take care not to be loa aggressive. To establiSh a good mode of behav·
lor and oonducf, utnlze charm - which is
a far superior tool.
·
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23·0e&lt;:. 21) - We
all experience lhe &lt;llflculty ol lrylng to
f9rgive and torvet. whidl COUld be your
probiem at this tlma. It YBually ~ to
be coonterproductlve, so let It QO and oet
on with your life.
CAPRICORN iDee. 22-Jan. 1'9) - Yotr11
deal wfth others In a generous manner
as long as lhey aro going along with your
tho&lt;rghl&gt;. Meet a chOIIonge, ·
and that individual won't be treatad with

relatiOnshipS .

~!£DEADLY

• Vinyl Siding
• Replacement
. Windows
·Roofing
• Decks
·Garages
• Pole Buildings
• Room Addition•
Owner:

J.UST TIPTOEIN6 AROUND

•Prompt and Quality

RICK PRICE
New Homes, Room Additions. Remodeling,
Metal &amp; Shingle RooFs , Siding, Decks,
Bathroom
Licensed &amp; Insured

emp. seN.

,.

lrllgrlm

1 liNk 111111.
4 RIIM tho

around you. Your ability to keep your

• head could tum out to be the best way to
gratify your hlgheot ambitions.
UBRA (Sapl. 23-0ct. 23) - 'rbur lack of
fiscal discipline could be sowing me
seeds of spendefs remoJSe.lt this is the

PSI CONSTRUCTION

•'

2. •
4.

Pall

'l!ur .........:

H&amp;H
Guttering

Commt&gt;rcial &amp;: Rt&gt;sidtntilll

Supervisor Barb

Pass

Eut

· ·. ~ ~AstroGraph

Maintenance Plus

Evelyn
Craig
Jeff
Janetta
Evan

Obi.

,.

t•r•

... ....

I

Fran
Kitty
Jackie
Dottie
Penny
Amy

~

I

Quality Seamless
Gutters

Thank you

MOSTLY LikE THIS,
SOMETlMES FLAT
HIS BACIC !! ..---! l"::;:;:;:v,.-q-'r:T("""&lt;.w~

SNUFF'( FOUND A
COMF'TABLE POSITION .
IN TH' SEAFOOb
INDUSTRY, EDNA !!

PEANUTS

From one employee to her other "
co-wurkers at Overbrook Dietary on
food service week

we Aile·

BARNEY

740.446.9200

North

ltlha opener bids ona ola suit and the
nel!f player overcalls In a suit. a nega•iYe
double by responder usually promises
four cards in an unbid major. However,
the responde r rna~ make a negative
double when he has a 1ive· or si~o:·card
SlJH. but does nor have lhe high-card
count for an Immediate two- or threefevet bid in that suit.
In today's Qeal, South Is not strong
enough to respond two hearts, whict1
would promise 10 points (or an excellent
nine). So he makes a negative double,
hoping to bid his suit on, the second
round to describe his hand. North cue·
blds two spades tO show game-forcing
power. He is !loping SoUth .can rebid in
no-trump, but ~eh Soulh continues
with three hearts, st1owing five (or six)
hearts. North goes lor game in that'
strain.
West leads the spade seven. let's
assume East wins the first Irick and
st1itts to a trump. How should South plan
the play?
There are differen1 winning plans, but
the simplest is to take trlck two in hand,
play a club to dummy's ace, and call for
the club queen.
Oeclarer plans ttlat H East covers with
(tle kmg, rye will ruff, draw trumpS;, cross
10 the diamond ace, and discard two
spades on the winning clubs, losing only
two spades and one diamond.
Here. when EaSI plays low. S&lt;xrth dis·
cards a spade. West wins with 1lle king
and shifts to a diamond, but declarer
lakes dummy's ace (East SlJrely has lhe
kinQ), draws trumps ending on the
board, and discards his tall two spades
on lhe top clllls. South loses one spade,
one diamond and one dub.

Barn

www.tlm-..lr.ealolaetry.com

West

With few points,
hold extra cards

UNTI.L
.IHVtNTel&gt;
_.,, ~ ./ COUNTING,
.
~ l&gt;ll&gt;l'l'T
POOil

Hardwood Cabintirr And fumiiure

South

"'

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

Jon Van Meier &amp;

" 85

t K 8 fl
.. K ·l I 3 2 ,
.. 9 5 4
South
• 865 .

AUCTIONS/ANTIQUES

Owners:

.AKJI0•9

2

mo. pd

Johnson's Tree

740-444-5152

·Card of Thanks

Well

Q J 10
East'--

• 1 3
• 7 t 2

Construction

: Card of Thanks

p,;;

A

1--

39 Nova ·

IJon.llo••'•

.AQJIO

•

Stop &amp; Compare

9·12Sat

L

"""' /1111.
CR.tM'IN&amp;S
"""'"'""" .fi0001 CUR .,.,._ R&amp;-115

" K&amp; 9

-

J40-992-1m

..........

L

"lllllllf ..... W bJM( Mf ,.,

• Garages
·Complete
Remodeling

Auctioneer:
BIIIV R. Goble Jr.

740·992·5682

,....,

ort
• Q2

• New Ho111es

45n1
740-9411-2217

· Eleclrlt:al &amp; Plumbing

Reasonable Price

2BR house for rent $400
1BA Apt, WID hookups, rent
$400
deposit.
satellite TV incl. w/rent, .256-6408 or 441.()583 in
close to hospital. Call Eureka.
740·339-0362
3BA brick ranch· quiet
Jbr,
Apartment. neighborhood near new
$300/month
$300/de· high school, . no pets
~sit,
References, No $650 month &amp; $650 de·
Pets304-675-2749
posit. 614·575·1613 or
2 bedroom Apartment '&amp; ~6,;;14;:·9;,:1::;5·..:,7;::62:;4~-:-'~':"':: ·
~
2 bedroom House on 5th 3 Bedroom 2 bath full
St. 304-612-4350 ask lor basement In Mercerville.
Oon
25fi. 8132

110

ACROSS

Phillip
Alder

Commercial Cleaners
Manag.ment /
Complete Tree Care
Immediate Openings
Supervisory·
lftlund • FIN Eltlmalll
•
1~·1·W7 •
Buffalo. Full-time, Must ~!"'"~~;;;;i;;;;.;;;;;;;;;;
t1ave driver's lie. &amp; pass
propertv Management
to veer. UPI!Ienc:e
Senior CfH1en
background
check. P.T. Community Man·
a Church 04te(lunl
304·768·6309 · EOE
agar needed for local
-apartment community to~~.,.-~.,..-- cated 1n Ga llipolis, Ohio·:
Direct Care Staff in resl·
&amp; Tire
dential youth program ldeal candidate wi tt·have
440K7 Wipple Rd.
Must be 21 years of age previous 9)(perience in
Pomeroy, OH
Pay based , on experi· property management at
ence .
Call a Aural Development
(5 Pnintsl
(740)379·9083
Mon-Fri property. excellent co·m·
New &amp; u~cd Tii'es,
9am-3pm.
munlcatlon and organiza·
We -buy usc~ tires.
t1ona1skills and be de·
~{1111pu tcr w.ht::cl
pendable. "Health Insuralignmcnl
s.l igbt
I need to find (2) people
ance &amp; 401k available.
needirig a lull time job.
mechanic
work.
Salary dependent upon
You need to be honest, a eKperience. Submit re·
compl ete serv ice oil
person of integrity, with
sume &amp; salary reQuire- ·
changes. small engi ne
good people skills. You
ments to: Gallipolis C.M.,
repair.
a lso need to be able to
Gorsuch Mgt., P.O. Box
We
service
and
follow instructions and
190, Lancaster OH
winterize
boats
and
have an ability lo llslen
43130·0190 or email to:
RV's
and lead people in the
kdasbury@errtbarqmail.com
right direction. I need
EOE
(740) 992-5344
people who want to work
Mon-Fri .
amt wilt show up for
Modical
8:00 mn · 4:30 pm
work. If yoU are a recent
Sal. 8:00am· i2
Home
Health
college grad and cannot Local
We
appreciate your
Agency
hiring
STNA's,
.
1ind employment and feel
CNA's,
and
PCA·s.
Flexibusiness
that you are qualified,
ble Scheduling, Monthly
give us a chance until a
Bonus, and Coverage
job in your career path
Pay
Opportunities. local ·
becOmes available. Call
coverage
area.
Don't
Pat Hill, New Car Manmiss your chance to win
ager for an interview at
a Gas Card. If interested
446·9600.
call740-441·1377.

~

NEA Croaaword Puzzle

BRIDGE

Service

&amp;
Motor
Homes tots for Rent year
round
hook
up
304·675-6900

Clip tt1is AD
take it
wltll you when yOu visit
our commuriity to get
· tt1is special discount.
Move-iri in Oct and get
$100.00 oil your 2BR
Apt in Nov. Currentty
renting 1 &amp; 2 BA units
Spacious floor plans,
ranch &amp; townhome style
living, playground &amp;
basketball coun, on·~ite
laundry facility, 24 hr
emergency maintenance, quiet country-location close to major
medical
1acllities,
, pnarmacies, grocery
store ... just minutes
away 1rom other major
shopping In the area.
Hon·eysuckle Hilla
Apartment•
266 Colonial Drive lt113
Bidwell, Ohio 45tl14
740·446·3344
Oftice Hours M, W, F
9AM- 5PM

The Daily Sentinel • Page 85 _

SporUwrlter
The Ohio Valley PublishIng CO. IS seel&lt;.ing motl·
vated. people-orienteo
Individual tl flit a vacancy
in the news dep1. as a
Spor1 swriter. The sucResCare Home Care is
cessful 'candidate will
acx;epllng
applk:ations
cover
high school athlet·
tor S~Jpport Associates.
ics in me area lor the
CNA &amp; STNA. MR/DD
daily edition of the news·
e~t:p. pre/erred. Apply at
paper, as well as a~s ist
620' Carla Drive, Galli·
with the producliol;l of
polis, Mon • Fri. 8·4
sports pages. Excellent
Email resume to: rharriwriting and English skills,
son@rescare.com.
. photography skills and
knowledge ol desktop
A LOCAL MANUFAC·
pub lis~ing are sought.
TUAER is tak1ng apptica·
Tt1e position is tull time.
lions lor EXPEB!EN¢ED
40 hours a week, with
Mig Welders. Please apbenefits. Interested parply in person at 2150
ties can send resumes to
Eastern Avenue. Gallipo·
Kevin Kelly, Managing
lls,OH
Editor, Ohio Valley Pub·
hshing Co., 825 Tt1ird
An Excellent way to earn
Ave. , Gallipolis, Ohio
money. The New AVon.
45631 or kkeUy@myCan
Marilyn
dailylribune .com. ,No
304·662·2645
phone calls please.
Pomeroy Business need
experienced
welder.
Hours between 8·4. Call
740·992·3020

Campers

G)

www.mydallysentlnel.com

Delivery/Warehouse per- SeNice · Manager &amp; SeN·
son needed, full t1me, lm · 1ce Technician positions·
mediate opening, must ava1lable. Health care &amp;
have good driving re· Retirement plans avail·
cord. Apply-Lifestyle Fur· · able. Please send re·
niture 656 Third Ave. sume
to
Gallipolis, 9:30·5·00 No LLCOCAREQ .COM
or
Phone Calls
fax to 740-446-9104

tmp:I!Jobl.lntoel•lon.com

3BA locatect on Bulaville
P'ike
$475/rent
740·367-7762

Tuesday, October 7, 2008
ALLEYOOP

740-985-4141

~ lo!HIT?

r Heve

a IIQ)-!.l4nfo!IO Oilii~Ge.J

Cell': 740-416-1834
25+ years txptrience Free Estimates

. Advertise
in this space for
$64 per month

. .,
'

,.

·- --· ·-

�~.,

h:IWII/

Hou111 Far Rent

!i!· ;;;~T~o~w~~~h~o=~~·~.-.

New 2BA 2 .. bath your
(740) eM~ of renting com«Hl1~
pletely fumished &amp; all
~---~~:-- utilities paid or you pro3 rooms and bath up- vidlng furniture &amp; utilities
stairs. Completely fur· NO LEASE 446-7029
nlshed wi1h WID. No
pets. Ref. Req. 441.0245
2BR, 1 baltl in Gal!ipoHs,
CONVENIENTLY
LO· no smokers or pels, rei.
F.or
sale
or
lease
Otficetwar6houseJstorage
GATED
&amp;
AFFORD· &amp; deposit requ1red. $450
G 1
ABLE! Townhouse apart- per
mo.
Inc,
great (location in at ipo- menls,
and'or
small walsew/'tfash.

2BR APT. CIA.

=,_...,....,;._.,...,,....,...

~m~~ ·Cai~·Wayn:

404-456·3802

;:;;;;;;:;;,;;;;;;;;,.,,.,,.,=

i'

Houlli Far Solo

houses for rent Call 740-256-9190
740-441· tt11 tor appli· -1_P_ _ _
2b- 1- b- h
cation &amp; information.
n omeroy,
r,
at '
;;;;;;;;,.;.;;;;;;;;;;.;;;;;;,.,.,.....,. stove &amp; !rig.. no Pets, no
FREE

RENT

SFtECIAL smoking,

quiet, $475 a
Jordan landing 2br, 3br mo. plus dep.,
pick-up
&amp; 4br Available No Pets, applk:ations at DO · Mid·
Tenant Responsible for 1
Rent
&amp;
Electric
304-67,.·0023
or
304-610-0776
;;;;.;.;;,;.;;.;;.;.;.;;...._ __

1-86 North Park Dr. call
304-f575-5640
or
304-593·1204 will sell on
Land Contract or Out
Right. Also a Wellington
Plano call tor appointmenl to see them both.
Free
Rent
Special!!l
2&amp;3BR and up, Central
4 bed 2 bath &amp; office in Air, WID hookup, tenant
town , hw &amp; tile floors . pays electric. EHO Elm
updated kitchen &amp; baths, View
Apts.
priVacy fence &amp; above ~~304~)88::;2;;:·30
;:::.;,1;,7---..ground
pool,
security Twin Rivers Tower is ac·
system, much more. 130 cepting applications tor
Bastlani Dr. $129,000 waiting list for HUO sub446·2923
sidlzed, 1·BR apartment
New 2BR 2 bath on 3 ac. tor 111e · etderlyfdlsabled,
neW refrig, .ranQe &amp; dish- ,ca:;l~l6~75;;·;66:;:7;.9-:-~...,..~
washer Included $75,000 :Beautiful Apia. at Jack~
740-446-7029
800 blat". 52 Westl y ld SA 588 I
wood Or., from· $365 to
•• r o
or more
info and ptc:tures go to $560.
740-4-46·2566.
~.ol"llb.com
!.D. Equal Housing 6pponu8 rownmg
. 740-446 · 7204
nity. This ·institution is an
.
abr, 1 bath, Needs some Equal ' Opportunity F'ro~ork, large· tot, $25,000 ~v:;
lde;::r.,:a:;:
nd~E:;:m~p~l;o~ye;::r:;,.~~
304·882·2688
Eftk:iency Apt.
1624
Chatham
Ave.
{rear).
3BR,2BA, 2 car gar. $
&amp;
Patio, DR/FR.. Relocating
325 (water, sewer
;$115,000.
740-446-081 7 garbage
included).
7 40-446-4234
or
~eave msg
_ 06740 2 7861
For Sale by OWnet". 312 ;.;;;:..:;;.,;,;;;;,;__ _.,...,
~ome on, 1/2 acre level Gracious Living 1 am;:J 2
~'
lot. Located at 3089 Bu- Bedroom Apts. at Village
.
'd
1
.avllle Pike: .A.ttact1ed · ga· Manor
and . A1vers1 e
·
. ed A.pts. in Middleport, from
~ll" AppraiS
$327
to
$5 92 .
•110.000.
Asking 740 992 5064
$98,500. ·
Call
· ·
·
Equal
}40-446-4910
'Housing Opportunity.

•

House tor sale in Ct1es- Modem 1BA apt. Call
,er, 3 br:, separate ga- 740·446·0390
iann,
contact
"'u
New Haven, ooe bed·
J740)985-4131
room apanment, deposit
t:touse In Clifton lor &amp;
references,
rent,4
bedrOQ!f!S, ~74;::o-~99~2-~0!'16~5:,_~:-~
Kitct1en, basement, livirtg Nice
Clean
Ground
roOm. 1 bath, gas heat. Floor, 2br, WID hoOkup,
city water, untarnished. References/Deposit/No
$500 month + utilities Pets 304 .675 _5162
, and
deposit
possible
sale Of1 lal")d contract,or
Now accepllrig
sell fo r 35,000 304 593
applications at:
8167 or 593 8107
Valley View Apartments ·
600 State Route 325,
Tri·level brick/cedar on
Thunnan, Ohio 45685
.98 acrn Rutland. Oh,
740-245-9170
private
setting,
eat-in
1-2 Bedroom Apartments
kitchen, 3 br., 2 ·rull
witt1 appliances furnished
baths, lg. livingroom, lg.
On site laundry facUlty.
family room, out of flood Call for details or pick up
plain, (740)742·2404 or
application at rental
740·949·2930
office,
Possibility of rental
Land
assistance.
Equal
Housing
Appro)( . 25 acres mit re·
Opportunity
mote,
rough
access.
TDDU 19·526·0466
$40K, Buyer must Sur"This
institution is an
vey , Call after 5pm
Equal
Opportunity
304-895·3390
Provider a"nd Employer"

Tuesday, October 7, 2008

www.mydallysentlnel.com
.
.

Page B4 • The Daily Sentinel

""'""'""'""'""'""'""'=

Rentals

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

2 br. mobile home in
Racine, $325 per mo.,
$325 dep., , yrs. tease,
$60 rton-relundable water dep .. no pets, no calls
after
9pm,
(740)992-&gt;097
~:-~:-'-:-...,.-:-­
Federal Funds just re·
leased for Land Owners.
No closing cost and
ZERO DOWNI Will do
land
improvements.
Bankruptcy &amp; . Bad Credit
OK 2 • .4
d 5 bed
· ' ,),
an
•
rooms ·
available.
740-446·3384

~~--.-~"':'""::"

Holp Wam.d • Gon...,l Holp Want.d · Genonol Holp Want.d • Genoral
$250 Sign-on. , Bonual
Vo1od TOP FIVE Beo1
Ptecea to Work In Ohio I
Corne S.O Whyl
No Salesl No
Collections! Recruit
volunteers for non-prori!
organizations that help
save li ves and prevent
diseases such as cancer,
tung and heart disease!
Get paicl to make a
differenceI
"' Full and Pari-lime ·
Positions
"' Day and Evening
Shifts
"' Professional Work
Environment!
.t Medical. Dental,
· EAP, 401 Kl '
.r On-site Doctor
./ Weekly Pay and
Bonus lncenbVesl
Call TODAY I
Interview
TOMORROWII

Work NEXT WEEK Ill
VOur tutyre career In
waiting tpr voul!!

1-881HMC·PAYU
EXt. 1901

Sign On
Bonus!!

'3"'br, -2"'b-a. "'Pt"""
. "'P"'I_ea_s-anl
a.rea 304-273r6622 or
304·674·6204
~~"':'"-"':'"~-.":"
Mobile Home for Aent Pt
Pleasant a,rea HUD accepted, Deposit required
Call304·675-3423

No experience
required!
No Credit Card
Sales!
No Coilections!

~~-.-.-.---

Scenk: location , conven·
lent to town and afford-

able, 2 &amp; 3 bedrooms
available
call

~17,;;4~0),;99;,;2;;;·5639;;;;;;,.,.,,.,=

=·

Salu

;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
1996, 16)(80 Clayton mobile home, total elec.,
needs
minor
repair,
$3000
080,
740·590·0164
2 2006 16x80 ClaytCln 3 ·
bed 2 bath, 200 16x70
Fleetwood 2 bed 1 bath.
1999. Fortune 3 bed 2
bath. we deliver block
lev'e~ and anchor. We
dan do Jlle footers also.
Daytime
740-388·0000
or 740-388-8513 Evenings 740·388·8017 or
740-245·9213.

IA&lt;nagel

Here's what yott.
do;
Raise funds and
renew
memberships lor
the National Rille
Association

llfflr;
-./ Weekly Pay and
Bonus Incentives!
-./ Fult and
Part-time
Posit•ons!
-./Professional
Work
Environment'
-./ Medical, Dental,
EAP. 401KI
-./ On-site Doctor!

H1ll s Self
Storage

ROBERT
BISSELL

29670 Bashan Road

COISTIUmON

YOUNG'S

CARPENTER
SERVICE
· Room AddHiont •
Remodeling
· NfwGII'IIgel

· Racine. Ohio

· Roofing &amp; Guttaira

• VInyl Siding &amp; P1in1ing
··Pallo •nd Porch Decks

WV036725

V.C. YOUNG Ill

-

............
--\· '" "
to.10'4Y' '
~

1$

992 ·6215

Hours

PD!Il('IO\ OhiO

7·:00 AM· 8:00PM

~1'.1t '&gt;

; ,

,.

L or .11 [lrf'llt• nrt•

111411

101111 HYSEllS
UJIJIE
St ftl124 ....,.....

• is

&lt;JAQJ 109

• 75•
• 7

De~ler: North
Vulnerable: Both

740~16·1164

we

~r~AL•:ze ~ow

2.459 St. Rt. 160 • Gallipolis

HOW'S THAT
SHIFTLESS
" MAN OF
'fO~ES,

LOWEEZ'f?

I)'
"--" •0]

'In w~l-lrtt&gt; \W-.1, r'l&gt; ,::::::&lt;::;':::]

Racine, Ohio 740·247-2019

Paul Rowe

BE 00\t-11~--.,__...c~
~~l-IE~ ~"'

Cell: 740.416-5047
email:
jrshadlrm@aol.com

I{Cif.£!

Rllllaun&gt;nll
".i , .• , .. .

.

TREE WORK
Topped, Take Down
&amp; Removal
AITordable,

Allparrs

Pus

Opening lead: 6 7

Wodnoodoy. Oct. 8, 20011
By Bomlco Oool
It behOovas you to work hard and put
your best toot forwafd In the year ahead,
especially when chaos Is prevailing all

Seamless Gutters
Roofing, S1ding, Gutters
Insured &amp; Bonded
740·653·9657

Vinyl
Siding/Repl acement

Windows/Remodeling
Bonded &amp; insured
740-992· 1493 Office
740-416-8339 Cell
Free Estimated
Pomeroy, Ohio

Stanley TreeTrimming
&amp; Removal

•AND TilE KIN6 .LOVED THE
PEOPI.E. AND THE PEOPLE KIND
OF l.OVED THJ1' KIN6 ••"

''AND TilE'( All PRETTV MUCH

THE TRUTH, MIJ.AM. ..

Work
• RectSt1nablc Ratei\

*Insured
*Experiencet.l
Referem. ..:~ A\'Uilable!
Call Gary Stanley @
740-59 1·8044
Please

~======! ·
Ill

leave messa e

SO LEfS CHECK IN

WITH FORAGING EXPERT,
MARTIN. TO LE~ JJST
WHICH TWIGS Alf) BERRES
A.QE EDIBLE All&gt;
.•.----... WIIICH()£5

IELJ!O·
TOXINS. •

_ _ _...,,__ __
Agricultural Engineer po- ·
sltion
opening. . Have
knowledge of engineering practices in natural
resources; forestry is·
sues; natural resource
education
programs.
Prefer associate/ technlcal · degrae in forestry,
wildlife,
natural
resources, education. Ba·
sk: computer skills re·
qulred.
Excellent
oral
and wrinen communication skills ' required. Start ing salary deJ)6nds upon
educatiQn and experi·
ence· with bene"fit pack·
age ,irteluded. A valid
dffver's
license
along
with
federal
security
clearance required. For
more infonnation on this
position check on the
scon labor exchange
via tile internet Send resume to Gama Jobs and
Family
SeNices.
648
Third Avenue, ' Gallipol~s,
OH 45631 or fax to
740-446-11942.

James Kaasee II
742·2332

Roofing, Siding,
Soffit, Decks,
Doors, Windows,
Electric, Plumbing,
Drywall,
Remodeling, Ro.om I
Additions

IN IXlST

Fti'TUN MJNOfU

Local CoqJractor

740..367·0544
Fraa Eatlmattl

740..367·0536

The Daily Sentinel

WMINING.

With someone who fHts u strongly
about his or her q:JpOSing views as )'01.1
do youn.. H you open tNs &lt;:en of wonns,
you11 be sorry.
ARIES (March 21-Aprfl 19) - When '
comet to forming • partnet.ahlp. be cilreh.ll to team up only with those who haw
prown themsetYes to be aboYeboaro.
8a::k out of an 811Bllgement if you sus·

44 'Yuck!

45 Retu..lo
46 Friar

of lagend
48 Diatant
49 Conatruclion lay
50 Foot·tllk .
52 Almoet•

•

grldl
·
53 Ouha spicy·
54 NASA
counterp11r1

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos

Ce1~ Cijtl"ererntogramsare CJMted !rom (lUcta~ons by famous people pGs! aM pre9811

Each ltltef mthe cipher slandslor ai"IOther

'

·

TAVF

TZXW

Today's cJue: M equals N·

"HTWXKVH

FHI

SKLLKVABC
GZCWMCKHB

LHV -WS

CK ·TWI ;

KMVBASKMO

IIHCKZMHB

WDCKMVCKZ -M , JKCFZAC
LBKMVFKIIO."

•

MKVE

VBZZMWR

PREVIOUS SOLUTION - ·everything is possible aston~ as you put your
mind to it and you

put 1he work and time Into o.· · Michael Phelps

T:~:~'
S©tt~lA-L&amp;~!fs·
.
1&lt;11N1t loy ClAY I. POllAN
Reorrcngo ltttitS of
O
· four ICrOmblod words

low 1o fornt lOili

~mplo

....
WOlD

the

bt·
words.

THRUNU

I r 1• I I
SUQEr;

I
I
I
I
I
.--,..--,.--...,.....,.,
RHYUR

..

h--.-&lt;-T,_,.......,..-1~

L...L..I...L.I'-LI...JI...J ~

l

"The reason people can't
accepl criticism," tbe dad
lectured,."is because it's usually:
tho--.
.

L A WH E T .
1-.,.j..;;...,,...-,..,-.,
...! ..,,....-j 0
.

Camploto the c:hudtio quotod
· bv hllino In 1!10 miailt!l --~
Olio .....,.
No. 3 beloW-

m.. ....

8 PRINT
NUMB ERED lfiTERS IN
THESE
SQUARES

•

UNSCtAMalE ABOVE tEllERS
10 GET ANSWER

SCRAMLETS ANSWERS · I016108
Offset - Right - Guih.- Lotion - FOOT in IT .
.
GTamps to neighbor's son, "If you ka:p your mouth shut you
will not put your FOOT in IT."

ARLO&amp;JANIS

pect 80f'lle()ll8 Is ~Shou~

GEMINI (May 21-.ble20) -Don1 mll&lt;o
the mistllke of thinking subotdina.tes can
be driven or pulhed into submission~ II
OOtJid prove to be a regrenab6e lactic lead by exll!'lfl)o.

CANCER (Juno 21.Ju~ 22) - h mfghl
be OK to be a ril6(--takef when you sense
1he odds .... In your tawr. but this isn't
lblyro be 'ooo!ll - - - hyou
a~ to do 10 anyway, the results
mlghlbe~ .

tD..,..

. ,.,. !'9""-~

the lnohft I II Md gtv. your.tll'

~~~~
be.
VtAtlo (Aug. U:lopl. U)- Un- you

-

til "" -

.,.., d l -

ooro!ully. •lOb you.,. -ilono btfort

""*' lum out 10 bo a """"' d -r.
tAim "" -

fil'll.

/

SOUPlONUTZ

47239 Riebel Road. Long Bottom. OH

.

ITOLOHIM
i&lt;ED N8Jff

PISCES (Feb. 20-March 201 - tt's rarely
a good day to-..,. politics or raliglon '

37 Walt awhile
41 Soft and
luilrouo
43 Debit'1
oppolite

LEO (Ju~ 2:Mog. 22) - ft might be dil·
ftc:ult
that JOY 'MIN wrong about
oomolhlng .,.,. you thiiiO be •
10c1. Bul. )'OU dO, you wll only P&lt;O-

IIIE W.IIRCUI, DWIIU

II)t l3oint
.
..t}Ita~ant ~~liter

the
same benWolence.
AQUARIUS
(Jan. 20-Feb. 19) - Toke
care 1hat you don't come Olf as being
friendly only to llOse who haw something to offer. II ~u appear to be manipulatlvei, you could jeopardize. several

TAURUS (April 20-May 201 -

• Room Additions • Garages • Vinyl
and Wood Siding • Roofing • Pole
Barns • Patio 's, Porches and Decks

'

40 Prof.
41 Tlke iegot
a EIIT
42 ocdon
llinOnll
lochnlquo
.........
11 RoUt
44 Prtor to
, • ..__. 47 Applllo
12W-.
t-*
to Juana
51 Rllnwnr ·
13
55prop
56 Goth dam I
15 Ill. LuPino 57 Trelllo .
·16 Requl~ng
cOYIIIIr
mueh effOrt 56 Bock whlln
18 Lealld
59 Aurora
9 Molel plus
.lhrough
locale
20 Fjord
40 Pronto
10 BOUitdtr ·
21 Ely al
. 111 Tlckol Into 14 Wash. lime
17 Flslt habltal
"Tarzan"
23 FOR org.
19 Verb fnom
DOWN
24 Leaot bit
Latin 101
22 Bom lhere
27 Farmaru
1H111dy
unh
ewab
23 AWOL
29 Cooltout
(hyph.l
sludent
ptuo ·
2 Mock
24 Nile wider
32 u... piper
25 Eanhen pot
fanfare
towel
(hyph.l
26 Dlvulgld
33Tmel
3 Jaggodtear 28 Firat nama
In perfume
anound
4 llr.
34 Any ahlp
29 GenghlsMagtio'o
30 Morays and
35 Under the
nephew
weather
congers
5 Turkloh tiUI
36 Typewriter 6 C.uoe
31 Coarse
a bllater
sand
'¥T ~~Island 7 - Toe-tung 36 Abdul or
38 Feeling low 8 Dinnerware
Zsltn

effective allies be hard to come by, don't
hesilate to go it alone, especially in ma1·
te"!&gt; ol axtreme importance. Rely on your
own assets, and they won\f kM you oown,

For R&lt;modeling and New'House Building
Call: MARCUM CONSTRUCTION

..
~- laUipollf iailp 1tdbutte

case: team trom it Instead of merely
grumbling about your plight.
SCORPIO (Oct. 2HJov. 22) - In situa·
tiona where being mildly usertlw is
enough1 take care not to be loa aggressive. To establiSh a good mode of behav·
lor and oonducf, utnlze charm - which is
a far superior tool.
·
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23·0e&lt;:. 21) - We
all experience lhe &lt;llflculty ol lrylng to
f9rgive and torvet. whidl COUld be your
probiem at this tlma. It YBually ~ to
be coonterproductlve, so let It QO and oet
on with your life.
CAPRICORN iDee. 22-Jan. 1'9) - Yotr11
deal wfth others In a generous manner
as long as lhey aro going along with your
tho&lt;rghl&gt;. Meet a chOIIonge, ·
and that individual won't be treatad with

relatiOnshipS .

~!£DEADLY

• Vinyl Siding
• Replacement
. Windows
·Roofing
• Decks
·Garages
• Pole Buildings
• Room Addition•
Owner:

J.UST TIPTOEIN6 AROUND

•Prompt and Quality

RICK PRICE
New Homes, Room Additions. Remodeling,
Metal &amp; Shingle RooFs , Siding, Decks,
Bathroom
Licensed &amp; Insured

emp. seN.

,.

lrllgrlm

1 liNk 111111.
4 RIIM tho

around you. Your ability to keep your

• head could tum out to be the best way to
gratify your hlgheot ambitions.
UBRA (Sapl. 23-0ct. 23) - 'rbur lack of
fiscal discipline could be sowing me
seeds of spendefs remoJSe.lt this is the

PSI CONSTRUCTION

•'

2. •
4.

Pall

'l!ur .........:

H&amp;H
Guttering

Commt&gt;rcial &amp;: Rt&gt;sidtntilll

Supervisor Barb

Pass

Eut

· ·. ~ ~AstroGraph

Maintenance Plus

Evelyn
Craig
Jeff
Janetta
Evan

Obi.

,.

t•r•

... ....

I

Fran
Kitty
Jackie
Dottie
Penny
Amy

~

I

Quality Seamless
Gutters

Thank you

MOSTLY LikE THIS,
SOMETlMES FLAT
HIS BACIC !! ..---! l"::;:;:;:v,.-q-'r:T("""&lt;.w~

SNUFF'( FOUND A
COMF'TABLE POSITION .
IN TH' SEAFOOb
INDUSTRY, EDNA !!

PEANUTS

From one employee to her other "
co-wurkers at Overbrook Dietary on
food service week

we Aile·

BARNEY

740.446.9200

North

ltlha opener bids ona ola suit and the
nel!f player overcalls In a suit. a nega•iYe
double by responder usually promises
four cards in an unbid major. However,
the responde r rna~ make a negative
double when he has a 1ive· or si~o:·card
SlJH. but does nor have lhe high-card
count for an Immediate two- or threefevet bid in that suit.
In today's Qeal, South Is not strong
enough to respond two hearts, whict1
would promise 10 points (or an excellent
nine). So he makes a negative double,
hoping to bid his suit on, the second
round to describe his hand. North cue·
blds two spades tO show game-forcing
power. He is !loping SoUth .can rebid in
no-trump, but ~eh Soulh continues
with three hearts, st1owing five (or six)
hearts. North goes lor game in that'
strain.
West leads the spade seven. let's
assume East wins the first Irick and
st1itts to a trump. How should South plan
the play?
There are differen1 winning plans, but
the simplest is to take trlck two in hand,
play a club to dummy's ace, and call for
the club queen.
Oeclarer plans ttlat H East covers with
(tle kmg, rye will ruff, draw trumpS;, cross
10 the diamond ace, and discard two
spades on the winning clubs, losing only
two spades and one diamond.
Here. when EaSI plays low. S&lt;xrth dis·
cards a spade. West wins with 1lle king
and shifts to a diamond, but declarer
lakes dummy's ace (East SlJrely has lhe
kinQ), draws trumps ending on the
board, and discards his tall two spades
on lhe top clllls. South loses one spade,
one diamond and one dub.

Barn

www.tlm-..lr.ealolaetry.com

West

With few points,
hold extra cards

UNTI.L
.IHVtNTel&gt;
_.,, ~ ./ COUNTING,
.
~ l&gt;ll&gt;l'l'T
POOil

Hardwood Cabintirr And fumiiure

South

"'

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

Jon Van Meier &amp;

" 85

t K 8 fl
.. K ·l I 3 2 ,
.. 9 5 4
South
• 865 .

AUCTIONS/ANTIQUES

Owners:

.AKJI0•9

2

mo. pd

Johnson's Tree

740-444-5152

·Card of Thanks

Well

Q J 10
East'--

• 1 3
• 7 t 2

Construction

: Card of Thanks

p,;;

A

1--

39 Nova ·

IJon.llo••'•

.AQJIO

•

Stop &amp; Compare

9·12Sat

L

"""' /1111.
CR.tM'IN&amp;S
"""'"'""" .fi0001 CUR .,.,._ R&amp;-115

" K&amp; 9

-

J40-992-1m

..........

L

"lllllllf ..... W bJM( Mf ,.,

• Garages
·Complete
Remodeling

Auctioneer:
BIIIV R. Goble Jr.

740·992·5682

,....,

ort
• Q2

• New Ho111es

45n1
740-9411-2217

· Eleclrlt:al &amp; Plumbing

Reasonable Price

2BR house for rent $400
1BA Apt, WID hookups, rent
$400
deposit.
satellite TV incl. w/rent, .256-6408 or 441.()583 in
close to hospital. Call Eureka.
740·339-0362
3BA brick ranch· quiet
Jbr,
Apartment. neighborhood near new
$300/month
$300/de· high school, . no pets
~sit,
References, No $650 month &amp; $650 de·
Pets304-675-2749
posit. 614·575·1613 or
2 bedroom Apartment '&amp; ~6,;;14;:·9;,:1::;5·..:,7;::62:;4~-:-'~':"':: ·
~
2 bedroom House on 5th 3 Bedroom 2 bath full
St. 304-612-4350 ask lor basement In Mercerville.
Oon
25fi. 8132

110

ACROSS

Phillip
Alder

Commercial Cleaners
Manag.ment /
Complete Tree Care
Immediate Openings
Supervisory·
lftlund • FIN Eltlmalll
•
1~·1·W7 •
Buffalo. Full-time, Must ~!"'"~~;;;;i;;;;.;;;;;;;;;;
t1ave driver's lie. &amp; pass
propertv Management
to veer. UPI!Ienc:e
Senior CfH1en
background
check. P.T. Community Man·
a Church 04te(lunl
304·768·6309 · EOE
agar needed for local
-apartment community to~~.,.-~.,..-- cated 1n Ga llipolis, Ohio·:
Direct Care Staff in resl·
&amp; Tire
dential youth program ldeal candidate wi tt·have
440K7 Wipple Rd.
Must be 21 years of age previous 9)(perience in
Pomeroy, OH
Pay based , on experi· property management at
ence .
Call a Aural Development
(5 Pnintsl
(740)379·9083
Mon-Fri property. excellent co·m·
New &amp; u~cd Tii'es,
9am-3pm.
munlcatlon and organiza·
We -buy usc~ tires.
t1ona1skills and be de·
~{1111pu tcr w.ht::cl
pendable. "Health Insuralignmcnl
s.l igbt
I need to find (2) people
ance &amp; 401k available.
needirig a lull time job.
mechanic
work.
Salary dependent upon
You need to be honest, a eKperience. Submit re·
compl ete serv ice oil
person of integrity, with
sume &amp; salary reQuire- ·
changes. small engi ne
good people skills. You
ments to: Gallipolis C.M.,
repair.
a lso need to be able to
Gorsuch Mgt., P.O. Box
We
service
and
follow instructions and
190, Lancaster OH
winterize
boats
and
have an ability lo llslen
43130·0190 or email to:
RV's
and lead people in the
kdasbury@errtbarqmail.com
right direction. I need
EOE
(740) 992-5344
people who want to work
Mon-Fri .
amt wilt show up for
Modical
8:00 mn · 4:30 pm
work. If yoU are a recent
Sal. 8:00am· i2
Home
Health
college grad and cannot Local
We
appreciate your
Agency
hiring
STNA's,
.
1ind employment and feel
CNA's,
and
PCA·s.
Flexibusiness
that you are qualified,
ble Scheduling, Monthly
give us a chance until a
Bonus, and Coverage
job in your career path
Pay
Opportunities. local ·
becOmes available. Call
coverage
area.
Don't
Pat Hill, New Car Manmiss your chance to win
ager for an interview at
a Gas Card. If interested
446·9600.
call740-441·1377.

~

NEA Croaaword Puzzle

BRIDGE

Service

&amp;
Motor
Homes tots for Rent year
round
hook
up
304·675-6900

Clip tt1is AD
take it
wltll you when yOu visit
our commuriity to get
· tt1is special discount.
Move-iri in Oct and get
$100.00 oil your 2BR
Apt in Nov. Currentty
renting 1 &amp; 2 BA units
Spacious floor plans,
ranch &amp; townhome style
living, playground &amp;
basketball coun, on·~ite
laundry facility, 24 hr
emergency maintenance, quiet country-location close to major
medical
1acllities,
, pnarmacies, grocery
store ... just minutes
away 1rom other major
shopping In the area.
Hon·eysuckle Hilla
Apartment•
266 Colonial Drive lt113
Bidwell, Ohio 45tl14
740·446·3344
Oftice Hours M, W, F
9AM- 5PM

The Daily Sentinel • Page 85 _

SporUwrlter
The Ohio Valley PublishIng CO. IS seel&lt;.ing motl·
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Individual tl flit a vacancy
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cover
high school athlet·
tor S~Jpport Associates.
ics in me area lor the
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daily edition of the news·
e~t:p. pre/erred. Apply at
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620' Carla Drive, Galli·
with the producliol;l of
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An Excellent way to earn
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Campers

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·- --· ·-

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•

Page B6 • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

Tuesday, October 7, 2008 ·

Ray-marka))le! Rays beat .White Sox, headed to AL ch~pionship series
· CHICAGO (AP) - BJ.
Upton and these Tampa Bay
Rays are headed home - to
get ready for the American
l:.eague championship series.
:Worst in the majors last
year, the Rays will play for a
spot in the World Series after
tJnishing off the · Chicago .
~ite Sox 6-2 Monday in
~arne 4 of the AL playoffs ..
Ray-markable!
Upton (lomered twice,
'Andy Sonnanstine pitched a
solid 5 2-3 innings and manager Joe Maddon's surprising
Rays won 3-1 in the best-offive series ..o their first trip to
the postseason. Next up, the
Boston Red Sox or the Los
Angeles Angels starting
Friday.
.
"We feel like we belong
and it's showing right now,".
Upton said.
After staving off elimination several times and winning a tiebreaker for the AL
Central title, the White Sox
were f1nally knocked out.
.
.
.
APphoto
:.The loss dashed Chicago's Tampa Bay Rays catcher Dioner Navarro, right, leaps into the arms of relief pitcher Grant
~ope for a championship Balfour after the Rays beat the Chicago White Sox 6-2 to win Game 4 of the American
~ys ago, local fans were league divisiop baseball series Monday in Chicago. Tampa Bay advanced to the American
thinking the Cubs and White league championship series.
Sox might meet in a Windy
·'
City Classic. But the Cubs got from Gavin Aoyd to center, Sonnanstine, who pitched a · the regular season, also
~wept by the Dodgers and ·and the confident Rays had a three-hit shutout against the homered in Sunday's 5-3
White Sox at Tropicana Field loss. Benched by Maddon
two-run cushion.
now both teams are ctone.
Tampa Bay, which never in April, reversed a fate-sea- during the season for not hus: "They piayed better than
wori
more than 70 games dur- son slide that saw him go tling, the talented 24-yearus. There's no doubt. They
pitched better. They execute ing its lO previous seasons, winless in his final seven old's power display came
against a team that relied on
better. They ,got big hits," went from 96 losses last year starts: ·
He
allowed
two
runs
and
·
homers all year and led the
to
97
wins
and
passed
the
bigWhite Sox . manager Ozzie
three
hits
before
J
.P
Howell
majors
in long balls.
.
Guillen said. "They reallydid spending Red Sox and New
"BJ.'s special," Maddon
York Yankees in the AL East. relieved. Grant Balfour comatremendous job."
pleted
the
four-hitter,
striking
said.
"He's very capable of
"It's
a
gratifying
moment
· Upton, the game's second
out
midseason
addition
Ken
those
types of games."
batter. homered to l@ft-center for all of us," Maddon said.
Tampa Bay increased the
No longer bedeviled, the Griffey Jr. to end it.
to put the Rays ahead. He
Upton
,
who
hit
only
nine
lead
to 4-0 in the fourth when
Rays
won
all
year
with
young
went deep again in the third,
driving a full-count pitch talent and improved pitching. homers in 531 at-bats during Carl Crawford walked and

scored as veteran Cliff Aoyd. likes fashionable eye wear,
a Chicago native, doubled to fine wines, good books and
left. Dioner Navarro followed inspirational slogans, has
with an RBI single to finish pusheQ-'a decade-long loser
Floyd. ·
onto the doorstep of a penPaul Konerko hit a solo nant.
homer for the White Sox in · "We all carne together and
the bottom half and the white said we're going to play team
towel-waving crowd dressed ball," Upton said. "That's
in black had a reason to get what we do, day in and day .
excited. But · Tampa Bay out."
struck right back in the fifth
Earlier in the week,
against Clayton Richard as Maddon spotted some fans on
Akinori lwamura singled and his way to U.S . Cellular Fteld
scored on Carlos Pena's sin- wearing "retro Devil .Rays
gle that made it .5-l.
stuff." He'll be looking for
Jermaine Dye hit a solo even more signs of the team's
home run in the sixth to fmish new popularity when he honSonnanstine.
eymoons in Europe next
"Hats off to him," Upton month.
said. "He threw a great game
"My goal i~ to see someone
when we needed it."
walking around eit~r Rome
Tampa Bay kept adding on or, you know•. Barcelona or
and Pena hit his second RBI somewhere with Rays gear
single in the seventh - after on," he added, promising to
the White Sox intentionally photograph it.
walked Upton. Guillen,
Maddon pointed to the
apparently upset wh~n a close Rays' ~ility to. bounce back
pttch from Matt Thornton to alter losmg thetr final seven
Pena was called a ball, had a games before the All-Star
conversation with plate break as a big test. And he
umpire Jeff Kellogg as he hasn't spent a lot of time
headed back to the dugout reflecting on how he has
after a trip to the mound.
taken a team that had 10
The White Sox defeated straight losing season - with
Cleveland on the final at least 91 losses in each of
Sunday of the season to get to those years - to the playoffs.
a makeup game with Detroit
"I really have not penrutted
the following day. They beat myself to totally sit back and
the Tigers and
then absorb all of that yet,"
Minnesota, 1-0.
Maddon said earlier. "But
After losing the first two there's some smaller amounts
games of this se.ries at that I may have had a little bit
Tropicana Field despite lead- of a thought like that."
ing in both, the White Sox . Notes: Rays .RF Gabe
came back home to win Gross mi!de a nice leaping
Sunday. And they were hop- catcher at the fence in ~he first
ing for another three-game to rob AJ. Pterzynski of an
winning streak - but the extra base· hit, maybe even a
Rays were too good.
homer.. :. Griffey struck out
And now Maddon, who three times.

•

McCain, Obama
clash on cause, cure
for econ
crisis,
A2
'

•

•

Printed on tOO%

R«:ycted Newsprint

.

.

· • Alexander dOwns
Meigs. See Page 81

BY BRIAN

J. REED

BREEDOMYDAILVSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY - Plans for
installing equipment for
Meigs County's new 911
system have been postponed because renovations
to the building it will occupy have not been started. ·
Doug Lavender, Director
County·
of
Meigs
Emergency
Medical
Services, said EmergiTech,
the Columbus firm hired to

sell and install the cmnputer equipment necessary to ·
implement the new 911
·system·, was to b~gin
installing the equipment on
Oct. 20. That will not be··
possible, Lavender said,
and a new date has not yet
been determined.
The system will or.erate
from the EMS butlding
located behind the Veterans
Memorial Hospital site.
However, structural failures
·must be addressed . in that

building and renovations and
changes to the office layout
must be completed before
equipment can be installed.
Lavender said. that work has
not ew;it been started. ..
The 911 system must be
up and running by 'the first
of January - two years
after voters approved a 50cent telephone line charge
to fund it and township and
village officials approved a
911 plan for the iiounty.
. Lavender'
earlier
.
.clarifie(l
.· •,
.

reports about the charge 's
· proceeds. Money collected
from the voter-approved
fee can only be used ·for
equipment · and maintenance, and cannot be used
to pay salaries and other
operating expenses. He
said the 911 committee has
still not received a legal
opinion· from Prosecuting
Attorney Patrick Story
addressing wheth'er • EMS
dispatchers can used as 911
dispatchers. He said, how-

Long live the queen?

BY BETH SERGENT

-

BSERGENTOMYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

ANN liRKlE

••~

.

,,..,..e~•

llt u,., Rtvw Ad, Gllllpollt~ Ohio
111 mUtiOI.Ith ot tM IIMt lrldgt
1.~ et 'POOO?NlOO •1111 001 .
b~

Cl noo.tt«JJ Mel 001·

1..________~---------

2. ______________________
3. ______~------------4.~·-----------

5.~·--------~-------SUipnion&amp;

Bodyllftl

Jldlrl.lta.h
WHY ,AIDE LIFT CHAIRI

Stand and sit with ease in
a Pride Ult Chaii -.a fine furnishing
that will aocent your home while
enhancing your life.

Cwtam
Wh....
&amp; Ellhlust

· • No turtles, chicks
or exotic pets for.
youngsters. See Page A7
• Fed to buy massive
amOunts of short-term
debt. See Page A2
• Senior Citizens plan
: trip to Christmas show. ·
See Page A3
: • Family Medicine.
See Page A3
, • Drug oompanies: No
: cold medicines tor kids
: under 4. See Page A7
: • Sunshine Circle makes
· donations. See Page AS
• OCC rep addresses
'. retired
.
teachers. . . ·
• See Page A8

• Single awtllch hand control for ••Y oper.tton

FuiSerflce

_....- &gt;Sl:y1ieh calor and Iabrie cholcea

Shop

• Patented, qulel and emooth lift ayatem

• tnlregraled emergency ballery backup

Call Mike or Scott Juatua
Hours: Mon..fri 8-6, Sat 8-1 ~

NAME: _ _ _..,..._--:----

~iii)

ADDRESS:. _ _ _ _ __

PFami{y
• NllDtCAL. IE.QU,PN.a:NT

.... ~.attth lt.Miitlt'M._.,,
70 Pines- • 740-446-0007 • ~~~

.

INDEX

Each Thesday through Dec. 9, a numbered game will
appear in each participating merchant's ad.

VALLEY
HOSPITAL

..
2520 V•II&lt;'' Orh·e • Point PleMSjiDI, WV •lO l·bed raclllty
304-675-4340 '
._, The Family of Professiohals .

2 SEcnONS- 16 PAGES

Indkate your pick or winners and write It beside the .
col'ftlpondlng number.
Entries must be dropped olf at the:
GaiHpolis Dally Tribune or mailed to:
Football Smackdown
c/o Gallipolis Daily Tribune
8lS 3rd Avenue
Gallipolis, OH 45631
Entries must be postmarked by Thunday to qualify
for that week's contest. The prize wiU be awarded
weeldy on the basis or most winners. selected coi'J'e(tly
and In case or ties, winner will be detennined by blind·
draw. You must be 16 years of
or older to eater; ·
Only one entry per person per week.

qe

'

f.nnie's Mailbox

A3·

Calendars

~

· Classifieds

B4-6

•

HOL7RR CUNIC

Comics

B7

Editorials

A4
B Section

Sports

We'N ENrywliete You A"!

Weather

AS

'

C oooB Oblo Valtey Publlohlng Co.

&lt; - - --

l.,
,(.

-~

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH

MIDDLEPORT - The
Middleport
Community
Association 's ·Hallbween
party, Pumpkinport, will be
· held Nov. I .in Dave Diles
Park.
At Tuesday's regular asso-.
ci&amp;tion meeting, the .group
finalized plans for the event.
It will be held from 3 to 6 .
p.m ., and will include a
pumpkin-decorating contest,
co~tume judging, a bounce
house, face painting and a
" fis~" pond with treats.
' There are also plans for
free hot dogs and other
refreshments , music and
other events.
. The association plans one
more "Lunch along the
River" fundraiser, to be held
from If a.m. to I p.m. on
Oct. 31 in Diles Park. The
September lun·cheon was
the most successful ever,
raising over $60i.l for next
year's fireworks display.
The associati-on expressed
thanks to Beth Gloeckner of
Beth 's Place, who made

HOEFLICHOMYDAILYSENTINELCOM

Beth sergentlphoto

Ever wonder just who·keeps the ball fields maintained and concession stands stocked in
Racine? These types of things just don't happlln by themselves and recently volunteers
Paul Cardone, Gary Evans and the Wild Horse Cafe and Manager r dVe Berry were hbnored with plaques for tl\'e work they did to keep the Racine Yottth league on top of their
game this year. Pictured on the tractor is Cardone being given his plaque by Jonah
Hoback. Also pictured with the plaques for Evans and Berry are (from left)' Garrett and
Festlilltles, A5 ,.,Ashlyn Wolfe. Hoback, Evans and Berry are all players in theJ Racine Youth League .
~

•

PIHse -

RACINE - Meigs Point
Dock, the barge loadout
facility affiliated with the
Gatling, Ohio coal mine
centrally ' located
on
Yellowbush Road, has been
permitted.
The permit, numbered D2323 , was issued on Sept.
22 by the Ohio Division of
Mineral
Resources
Management. according to
Scott Stiteler who works for
the agency.
.
Stiteler said ·Meigs Point
DQc~ .will . lleJPfJlletJ,,&amp;QIYl
Ohio 124 just south, around
a quarter to half-mile , of the
new boat ramp being constructed . by the . Ohio
Department of Nat ural
.Resources. There will be no
coal removal at the 15.6
acre site, only coal loading
onto barges docked at a
main cell to be constructed
in the Ohio River.
The Ohio Division of
Mineral
Resources
Management permitted one
main cell attached to a conveyor for unloading coal
into barged docked at the
celL The proposal calls for
up to eight cells in the river
where barges can wait to be
loaded. These potential
eight barges are under the.
permitting jurisdiction of
the · Army . Corps of
Engineers.
The conveyor att.ached to
the main cell stretches 40
feet from the bank out into
the river and is roughly 30
Ple1se see pennltted, A5

Health sector's
impact on
Meigs County's
economy

Bv BRIAN J. REED

PHONE:, __________

PLEASANT

Volunteers honored

BREEDOMYOAILYSENTINEL.COM .

Delillo on Poge A8

.

Beth Sergentlphcito

Yesterday afternoon the Delta Queen made what could be her final stop in the area during a special recognition ceremony in Point PIE)asant, W.Va. The historic steamboat is due to permanently dock in November though Sen. George
Voinovich, (A-Ohio) introduced a"Save the Delta Queen" bill in the United States Senate last month which was cospon,
sored by several senators, including Sens. Sherrod Brown (D·Ohio) and Barack Obama (D-Ill.) The steamboat Is listed
on the National Register of Historic places, has been named a National Historic landmark and has passed along the
shores of' Meigs County for ·many years now. Whether or not the calliope will play agafn along local riverbanks remains
to be seen and heard.
'
·
.

Association
plans Nov.l
Pumpkinport
festivities ·

eve~, that EMS levy. proceeds will not re·sufficient
to allow for 911 staffing.
The Appalachian Regional
CommissiOn will help fund
the $237.000 cost for compuler equipment, and commissioners plan to finance
the balance with Farmers
Bank and Savings Co.
·
When Emergitech was
selected as the county's
equipment
vendor,
Lavender said it would take
60 to 90 days to. install.

Coal mine's
barge facility
pennitted

INSIDE

OHIOVALLIY

~

911 equipment installation delayed

SPORTS .

•

.week 3Winner

iraq's FM: 'Bold'
decisions needed'
on bases deal, A6

~

..., •

•

.,.
'

.

' I

POMEROY
The
health sector is often considered as a major factor in
determining the quality of
life in a community. and its
ability to attract new businesses . However, it is often
overlooked as a major
employer in rural counties
like Meigs.
"
A report containing information about the total eco'
nomic impact of the. health ·
care sector on Meigs
County has been released
by the Ohio Department of
Health (ODH) and the Ohio
University
Voinovicli
School of Leadership and
Public Affairs.
The report contains information about the total economic impact of the health
care sector on Meigs
County - directly, indirect~
ly, and induced .
··
Dit&gt;'d impacts refer to the
jobs and income created b~
Plelse SH "Hith; ~5 :

•

·~

•

I
1
l

l

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