<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="4095" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="http://66.213.69.5/items/show/4095?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-05-01T20:00:44+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="14015">
      <src>http://66.213.69.5/files/original/9afded84f3c189c881904a0a3a419dab.pdf</src>
      <authentication>ae73c18f574738a77fd321d1776b6825</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="14379">
                  <text>..
•

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

�The Daily Sentinel

ACROSS THE NATION

PageA2
Wednesday, October 8, 2008

Community Calendar

Fed to buy massive .
amounts of short-tenn debt
BY JEANNINE AVERSA
.t.P ECONOMICS WRITER

•

WASHJf\iGTON - The
Federal Reserve·moved swiftly to break through a credit
clog that is imperiling the
' economy, saying Tuesday it
would buy massive amounts
of short-tenn debt and hinting
that it may cut interest rates.
Wall Street was · unimpressed. The Dow Jones
mdustrials shed more than
SOO points.
Fed
Chairman
Ben
Bemanke wamed that the
fmancial crisis has not only
darkened the country's current economic performance
but also could prolong the
pain.
"The outlook for economic . growth has worsened,"
Bernanke said in a speech at
the annual meeting here of
the National Assoc iation for
Business Economics .
His more gloomy assessment appeared to open the
door wider to an interest rate
Cut on or before Oct. 28-29.
the central bank 's next meeting, to brace the wobbly eeonomy. The Fed's key u1terest
rate now sta11ds at 2 percent.
President Bush, saying
the economic meltdown has
1\rought tough ·times for
. many Americans. pledged
that "we're going to come
through this ."
"Have faith, this economy
is going to recover over
time," Bush said in a speech
at an office supply company
ih the Washington suburb of
Chatitilly, Va. "I wish I could
· snap my lingers and make
what- happened stop. But
that's not the way it works .''
· The .president earlier
reached out to European
leaders to urge coordination
on efforts to solve the finanCial crisis spreading around
the globe. The White House
said Bush was open to the
idea of a leaders' summit on
the economic upheaval.
· Stocks slumped, however,
as investors focused on
Bernanke 's warnings and
worries about the weakness
of financial companies. Bank
of America Corp. reported its
third-quarter profits fell 68
percent. The three major U.S.
stock indexes all fell more
than 5 percent a day after a
huge selloff Monday put the
Dow below 10,000 for the
first time in four years.
The statements came
against a backdrop of
iltcreasing concern that a
global recession (s rapidly
developing. There is growing
pressure for the U.S. government to do more beyond the
$700 billion financial bailout
eackage President Bush
signed into law Friday.
: To that end, the Fed
invoked
Depression-era
emergency powers to begin
buying commercial paper short-term funding that many
companies rely on to pay thetr
workers and buy supplies.
: The government's bailout
package is aimed at thawing
lending by. buying rotten
mortgages and other bad
debts from banks and other
(inancial in stitutions . By
getting these bad debts off
&amp;ank's balance sheets, they
might be in a better position
tp raise capital and more
Willing to lend to each other
and to customers .
· Tight credit has made it
~creasingly difficult and
expensive for companies to
iaise money to fund their
Operations.
. "The
expansion
of
Federal Reserve lending is
helping financial firms cope
Y,.ith reduced access to their
l!sual sources of fu nding,"
"emanke explained . .
: Commercial paper is a
way of borrowing money
for short periods, typically
ranging from overnight to
(.ess than a week.
: In more normal- times,
about $100 billion of these
short-term IOUs were out$tanding at any given time,
$old by companies to buyers
that included money market
tnutual funds, pension funds
and other investors. But this
i;narket has virtually dried up
as investors have become
ioo. jittery to buy paper for
tonger than overnight or a
couple of days .
.
: The unstable siruation has
left many companies vuiIierable. The notion under
\he plan is for the government to provide a "backstop" that would give com•

BY THE BEND

!he Daily Sentinel

Democratic
presidential
candidate
Sen. Barack
Obama, DIll., left, and ·
Republican
candidate
Sen." John
McCain, AAriz .. face ·
off during a
townhallstyle presidential
debate at'
Belmont
University in
Nashville,
Tenn.,
Tuesday.

panies a new /lace to get
cash, the lie said. The
action makes the Fed a crucial source of credit for nonfinancial businesses in addition, to commercial banks ·
and investment firms:
Credit markets eased
slightly, however, after the
Fed's move .raised hopes it
would quickly relieve the
short-term funding problems
plaguing some companies.
European stocks were
· mixed on hopes that central
banks around 1he globe
would coordinate on rate
cuts. In Britain, the FfSE
100 index ended 0.4 percent
higher, France's CAC-40
index in Paris gained 0.6 percent hi!;her, bu.t Germany's
AP photo
DAX shpped 1.1 percent.
Iceland is facing. the
prospect of bankruptcy,
according to the Prime
Minister Geir H. Haarde,
after its banks went on a
buying spree across Europe.
accumulating massive debts
in the process.
The Fed said it is creating
a new entity to buy threemonth unsecured and assetbacked commercial paper
directly from eligible companies. It hopes to have the
program up and running·: BY .CHARLES BABINGTON
that said the $300 billion donations from individUals· for their chi'ldren but had yet
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER
soon , Fed officials said. ·
cost of his initiative would at Fannie Mae and Freddie to say what the fine would
Fed officials said they'll
be paid out of the $700 bil- Mac, the two now-disgraced be. "Perha~s we will find
buy as much of the debt as
NASHVILLE, Tenn. lion approved late last week. mortgage industry giants.
that out tomght," he said. ;
necessary to get the market Barack Obama and John
"I would order the secreObama quickly followed
"There were some of us
functioning again. They McCain clashed repeatedly tary of the Treasury to who stood up against it," up, saying that McCain
refused to say how much over the causes and cures immediately buy up the bad McCain said of the lead-up to "voted against the expan~
that might be, but they for the worst economic cri- home loan mortgages in the financial crisis. "There sion" of the children's
noted that around $1.3 tril- sis in 80 years Tuesday America and renegotiate at were others who took a hike." health care program the
lion ·worth of commercial t;~ight i9 a debate i.. which · the new value of those
Obama shot back th'at government runs.
·
paper would qualify.
Republican McCain called hom.es. at the diminished McCain 's,campaign managThe two men prefer dra~
"The commercial paper for sweeping action by the value of those homes, and er, Rick Davis , has a stake matically
different
market has been under con- government · to directly let people be able to make in a Washington lobbying approaches to easing the
siderable strain in recent shield many homeowners those payments and stay in firm that received thousands problem of millions of uniii:
weeks as mo.ney market from mortgage foreclo sure . their homes," he said .
of dollars a month from sured Americans.· McCain
"It's my proposal. It's not
mutual funds and other
'· Is it expensive? Yes. But Freddie Mac until recently. favors a $5.000 tax credit
investors" have become Sen. Obama's proposal. it's we all know, my friends,
Pivoting quickly to show that he says would allow
increasin~ly reluctant to buy
not President Bush's pro- until we stabilize home val- his concern with members families to find and .afford
commercial paper, esJ?CCiiilly posal ," McCain said ·in the · ues in America, we're never of the audience listening health care on their own. .
longer-dated maturities . As debate that he hoped could goins to start turning around from a few feet away, he
Obama wants to build on
the market for commercial revive his fortunes in a pres- and creating jobs and fixing said, "You're not interested the current system , in which
paper shrank, the Fed said idential race trending our economy, and we've got in politicians . ~inting fin- · millions receive coverage
rates on the lonller-tenn debt · toward his rival.
to give some trust and confi- ~er~. Wh~t you re interested through t~e workplace, with.
"increased stgnificantlyi'
In one pointed confronta- dence back to America ."
to 1s trymg to figure O!Jt, government fundmg to help .
making it more expensive for tion on foreign policy,
McCain also said it was how is this going to impact uninsured families obtain
companies to boiTOW.
Obama blt~ntly challenged important ·to reform the you."
· ·
coverage·.
·
The Treasury Department, McCain's steadiness. "This giant benefit programs such
But that didn't sto~ the two
Obama also said that
which worked with the Fed is a guy who sang bomb, as Medicare, Medicaid and men from criticizmg one American
International
on the program, said the bomb, bomb Iran, who Social Security.
another repeatedly as the top- Group Inc., which was
action is "necessary to pre- called for the annihilation of
"My friends, we are. not ics turned to energy, spend- bailed out b the govern•
vent substantial disruphons North Korea - that I don't going to be able to provide ing, taxes and health care.
ment, sho
ive the
to the financial markets and· think is an example of ·the same benefit for preObama said . McCain was Treasury $440
to cover ·
the economy."
speaking softly."
·
sent-day workers that pre- . going to require taxes on the the costs o a company
The Treasury will provide
That came after McCain sent-day retirees have , health benefits workers . retreat at a osh California
money to the Federal Reserve accused him of foolishly today," he said, although he receive from their employ- resort less than a week after.
Bank of New York to support threatening to invade Pakistan · did not elaborate.
ers.at the same time ·his t?lan the federal · intervention.
the new program, the Fed and said, 'Tm not going to
The· two men also com- would wipe out the abtlity "Those executives should be
said. Fed officials would not telegraph my punches, which .peted to demonstrate .their of states to enforce their fired," he said; referring to
say how rtiuch but believed it is what Sen. Obama did."
qualifications as reformers own regulations to require the .participants in the retreat.
would be substantial. The
The debate was the sec- at a. time voters are clamor- · tests such as mammogl'ams.
The debate also veered
money would not come from ond · of three between the ing for change.
McCain countered that into foreign policy, and the
·the $700 billion financial two major party rivals, and
McCain accused Obama under his rival's plan "Sen. disputes were as intense as
bailout President Bush signed the only one to feature a for- of being tbe Senate's sec- Obama will fme you" if par~ on the economy and domes~
into law on Fridat
mat in which voters seated a · ond-highest recipient of ents fail to obtain coverage tic matters.
"'
If a company s commer- few feet away posed quescial paper is not backed by lions to the candidates.
assets or other forms of
They were polite, but the
security acceptable to the ·strain of the campaign
Fed, the company could pay showed. At one point ,
an upfront fee, the central McCain referred to Obama
bank said. The amount of as "that one," rather than
((Yl Cefe6ration of.£ife 11
such a fee has noi yet been speaking his name. ·
determined.
"It's good to be with )OU at .
The. Fed said it hoped its a town hall . meeting ,"
We Invite You To Join Us In Celebrating Our 20th Anniversary
effort would jolt the commer- McCain also jabbed at hi s .
cial paper market back to life. rival, who ·has spurned the
"Thts facility should Republican's calls for numerencourage investors to once ous such joint appearances
again engage in term lend- across the fall campaign.
ing in the commercial paper
They debated on a stage at
market," the Fed said. That Belmont University four
• Hog Roast
• Musical Entertainment .
should eventually spur weeks before Election Day in
• Hayrides
Truly Saved Trio
financial companies to lend a race that has lately favored
. • Holzer Wellness Wagon
Forgiven Four
to each other and to their Obama, both in national
customers, including con- polls and in surveys in piv• Craft Show
• Eye 2 Eye.
.sumers, the Fed said.
·
otal battleground states.
• Innatables &amp; Games
• Free to t!Ie Public
The Fed said it planned to
Not SUIJlrisingly. many of
stop buying commercial the questions dealt with an
paper on April 30, . 2009, .economy in trouble .
unless the Federal . Reserve
Obama said the ~urrent
board agrees to extend the crisis was the "final ·verdict
program. The Fed created a on the failed economic poliseparate entity to pool and cies of the last eight years"
•
hold the commercial paper it · that President Bush pursued
buys. The Fed sajd this sliould and · were "supported by
allow the central bank to Sen. McCain." ·
more easily manage the proHe contended that Bush,
gram and better control risk. McCain and · ·others had
There was $1.61 trillion in favored deregulation of the
outstanding
commercial financial industry, predictpaper, seasonally adjusted, ing that would "let markets
on the market as of last run wild and prosperity
Wednesday, according to the would rain down 'on all of
Specialhing in the Following Seryjces For 20 Yeqrs.·
most recent ·data from the us·. It didn't happen ."
• Short and Long Term Care Provided
·
Fed. That was down from
McCain's pledge to have
• Offering Skilled and lntenncdiatc
$1.70 trillion in the previous the government help indi,.
Levels of Nursing Care ·
week. Since the summer of vidual homeowners avoid
2007, the market has shrunk foreclosure went beyond the
• Reliabilitatipn: Physical Therapy, Occupational Therapy, Speech Th~rapy
from more than $2.2 trillion. details of the bailout that
• Payment Acce~ted Through: Medicare, Medicaid , Workers Compensation ,
As the number of failed recently cleared Congress.
'
Private Insurance and Private Pay
'
banks has gone up sharply this The legislatibn allows but
year, Sheila Bair, head of the does not require Treamry to
For more information or to reserve booth space for the event
Federal Deposit Insurance purchase mortgages directcontact Michelle Kennedy or Emily Casto
Corp., wants to boost fees to ly. Obama has . said previfinancial insiitutions to replen- .ously that idea should be
ish the insurance fund that studied , and his campaign
backs the nation's deposits: contended McCain's pro333 Page Street • Middleport, OH
The increase would double posal was not a new one .
(740) 992·6472
~
the average paid by U.S.
McCain's
campaign
www.overbrook~ehabilitationtenter.com
banks and thrifts next year.
issued a written statement

n, Obama clash on
tor econ crisis.

.

~ Overbrook_!R,g.fia6i£itation Center .

W

Saturday, October 18, 2·008 ..
10:00 a.m.-2:00pm

..

.

'' •,

I

•

•

Public meetings
Thursday, Oct. 9
. POME,ROY
- Meigs
County
Commissioners
meet at I I a.m:, due to
scheduling conflict.
Tuesday, Oct. 14 .
SHADE
- Bedford
Township Trustees; regular
meeting, 7 p.m., town hall.

Clubs and
.organizations
Wednesday, Oct. 8
HARRISONVILLE matrons
of
Past
Harrisonville Order of
Eastern Star Chapter 255,
12:30 p~ .• Wild Horse Cafe.
Thursday, Oct. 9
CHESTER
Shade
River Lodge 453, regular
stated meeting, 7 p.m.
Refreshments follow.
RUTLAND
-Meigs
Local Archery Boosters
meet
at
the
Meigs
Intermediate School, 6 p.m ..

PageA:J.
Wednesday, October 8, 2008

ANNIE'S MAILBOX

POMEROY
Motorcycle
Association
Wildwood Garden Club, "Delivered," regular meeting,
6:30 p.m ., at the home of 5 p.m., Common Grounds,
Betty
Milhoan
on nomination of officers.
Flatwoods Road. Rich and
Monday, Oct. 13
Ann Tomsu will speak on
POMEROY - Big Bend
organic
· gardening. Farm Antique Club, 7:30
Installation of new officers. p.m., Mulberry Community
Center.
Saturday, Oct. 11
CHESTER
- Special
breakfast meeting of Shade
River Lodge 453 , to confer
Entered Apprentice degree
Wednesday, Oct. 8
on one candidate, and
POMEROY - Revival
Pellowcraft degree on one services at Pomeroy Church
candidate. Breakfast at7:30 of the Nazarene , through
a.m., followed by degree Sunday, 7 p.m. Wednesday
work, 8:30.
throu§h Saturday, and · 6
POMEROY - Return p.m. unday. Rev. Herman
Jonathan Meigs Chapter, Stewart of Oak Hill, formerDaughters of the American ly of Hartford. W.Va., will
Revolution, I p.m., at home he the speaker.
of Betty Milhoan. Guest
. S11turday, Oct. 11
speaker will be Amy
REEDSNILLE - Soup
Abercrombie of Athens, supper, 5 p.m .. "Dayspring"
author ·and movie producer gospel group , 7 p.m.,
of'The Other House." Other Reedsville
United
hostesses are Mary Rose ; Methodist Church.
Cleo Smith, Peggy Moore . . CHESHIRE - Chesbire
POMEROY
- Meigs · Baptist Church will host a
County Ch~pter Christian benefit gbspel sing, 7 p.m ., to
•

Church events

benefit Fall Harvest Gospel
Sing. Featured will be Dan
Hayman
and
Country
Hymntirners, Faith Hayman,
Sid and Carol Hayman,Carlie
and Sandra Wise, Priscilla
Dodrill and· Ann Sayre,
Cheryle Knight, Debbie
Dodrill, Jerry · and Diana
Frederick, Brian &amp; Family
Connections, Rita Oliver.
Sunday, Oct. 12
POMEROY - Carleton
Church homecoming, with
Sunday school at 9:30 a.m.,
followed by dinner at noon.
Afternoon ·service to include
"Dayspring Singers" and
church singers. Church
located on Kingsbury Road.
Robert Vance is pastor.

Grandma will reap:
what she sows

diminish my son's impor-,
tance.'' How insulting!
.
This woman is not senile
Dear Annie: I have two nor IS she. from another culchildren with my husband , ture where women are treatand he has a son from his ed as inferior. My sister
first marriage. My mother- insists her mother-in-law is:
in-law treats my stepson . too stupid to be corrected'
"Luke," so much better than and she ignores her. I want,
the other kids. She has to say something to this:
Luke's pictures all over her rude woman in defense of
house, but none of our chil - my sister at the next family
dren. She buys Luke expen- gathering . Should I? sive toys all the time, but Doc.l9r's Sister
Deilr Sister: Absolutely·
our ch'ildren receive used,
scratched presents, and only not . So Mom is old-fash-:
on their birthdays and ioned, sexist and loves her,
Christmas.
son more than her daughter'.
Mom makes no effort to in-law. Your sister gets to .
Sunday, Oct. 12 . · spend time with our kids decide how to deal with this.
she only lives a mile and she has chosen to ignore.
REEDSVILLE - Ruth and
do•vn
the road. We have to it. We know you want to stick·
Koenig will celebrate her
practically
her to be up for her, but we can see how:
85th birthday on Oct. 12. mvolv.ed in beg
their lives . We sh~ earned that doctonite.
Cards may be sent to 39054 do see plenty of her, howevSilver
Ridge
Rd ., er, when Luke spends the Please respect her decision.
Dear Annie: I read the
Reedsville, Ohio 45772 .
weekend with us .
letter from "Not Interesteq'
I' ve asked my .mother-in- in the Stud," whose neigh:.
law . about her favoritism bor constantly adjusts him-.
and she said she feels bad self in her presence.
.
for Luke because his parMany years ago, I was.
ing for the trip an the bal- ents are divorced and, smce employed by a male shop-•.
ance two. weeks · before he is only with us part time . . keeper 10 years my senior.
departure. All seats are on a sh~ feels she has to compen- He, too, kept adjusting h'im~
· first come, first serve basis. sate. My husband has talked self around me. I noticed' he.
A waiting list will be estab- to her, too, but she sees performed the same ritual.
lished if all seats are sold. nothing wrong with "mak- every time he spoke to a.
female customer. but never·
Refunds will only be given ing Luke feel .special."
My children are too when talking to a female
if your ticket is resold .
Checks are to be made out young to realize what's family member. Tums out, he. ·
to the Meigs County · going on, but I hate to think was so self-conscious atbund. ··
Council on Aging. There how they'll feel when they women that he had a nervou~
will be a listed discount trip are older. My husband does- habit of continually checking.
price for members who hold n't want to limit contact . to see if his fly was open,The.
a silver or gold MCCoA because she is their grand- behavior was so ingrained, he.
ma aild they love her. But I had no idea he was doing it.·
. current membership.
would like to see my chil- Once he became aware ·of the.
dren's pictures on her wall, action, it stopped. -: Been
·
·
too . I want her to show the There, Seen That
same affection for my chilDear Been There: Thank
dren as she does for Luke . you for pointing out an
find ' thai we have the What should we do?·- additional, less worrisome.
answer to your . Social Cinderella's Stepmother
reason for this behavior.
Security question. After all,
Dear Stepmother: Mom
Annie's Mailbox is writ-.
we've published the most can dote on Luke without ten by Kathy Mitchell and
cvmmonly asked questions ignoring the other grandchil- Marcy Sugar, longtime edion the website - 600 of dren, but we suspect she tors of the Ann Landers
. them! ·
·
feels that would be disloyal. column. Please e-mail_your
Lasi year, .nearly 30 mil- This dynamic could change questions to anniesmail·
lion people got answers to on its own as Luke gets older bo:r@comcast.net, or write
their questions using our · and your .ehildren are more to: Annie's Mailbox, P.O ..
Frequently Asked Questions . engaging for Grandma . We Box II8190, Chicago, IL.
page. Next time you have a hope so. However .. unless 60611. To find out morfl.
• question, look for answers she says or does mean things about Annie's Mailbox.;,
to ihem online. ,
to your children, don't cur- and read feaJures by other
Just visit the Frequently tail her visits. They will Creators Syndictlle writers
Asked Questions on the accept her as she is if that is ·and cartoonists, visil the
Social Security website at how you present it. Creotors Syndicate Web
www.socialsecmj Iy.gov..
Meanwhile. are your parents page at www.creaJors.com. ·
close? Emphasize that relationship and find other
grandparent figures to till the
gap. Grandma will reap what
she' sows.
Dear Annie: My sister
ing on the .circumstances.
Adoption fees help cover and her husband both have
the cost of main!3imng and Ph.D.s. Her mother'in-law
addre-sses their mail to "Df.
· feeding the anir:nals .
Hahn says he and Kerns and Mrs. Smith" even
hope to receive state and though she knows my sister
• FREf 24t7 T~ SI.WO"
federal grants. The refuge has earned the san\e distinclu!Ofioll
tion as . her son. Thi s has
also accep.ts .4onations.
• 10 Hniillddrnsft wllh
gone on for over a decade .
• Custotn &amp;.! Page - new~ , .....mtr &amp;II'IOftl
When asked' about this, .
her mother-in-law stated,
~!J
.
"Well, my son is the head of
BY KATHY MrrcHELL
AND MARCY SUGAR

&lt;\

Birthdays ·

' J

l..

'l

Senior Citizens plan trip.to C;hristm~ show.
POMEROY - Several
·seats remain on the chartered bus trip to Columbus ·
for the Rlldto City Music
Hall Christmas Spectacular,
Dec . · 10, at Nationwide
Arena.
. The 2008 show is the
biggest production of the
Radio City Christmas
Spectacular in the show's
76-year history. This year
marks the debut of a whole
new show redesigned
specifically for larger are-

nas and will contain all of ence as snow falls on the
the elements· of the 75th crowd, and enjoy the world
· anniversary
· edition. famous
City
Radio
Considered the number one Rockettes performing .their
holiday production in the · high kicks and unparalleled
wprld, the show will cele- precision dance .
brate Christmas with draThe cost for this trip will
malic lighting ·effects, be $90.00 or $85.00 for silbreathtaking imagery, flying ver or gold members. This
sequences, new musical will include motorcoach
compositions and an array transportation and the ticket
of new costumes. ·
to the show. Each one will
The audience will experi- pay for their own meal. The
ence special effects such as trip policy provides for a 50
Santa nying into the' audi - percent deposit hen register-

I

{

'

A popular· Sl•te 10r' gett•mg answers
~

BY ELIZABETH CRUMP
SOCIAL SECURITY
MANAGER. ATHENS

, Do you have a question ·
11bout the Social Security
program that you would
like answered quickly and
simply?
: Many people find that one
&lt;;Jf the easiest and best ways
to get answers to their
Social Security questions is
to visit the · Frequently
Asked Questions on Social
Security's website . Just go
to Social Security Online at
www.socialsecurity.gov. At

the upper riglit-hand side of do I replace a lost Social
the webpage is a pulldown Security card?" .
menu of Frequently Asked
You can get answers to
Questions. The
menu questions like "How do I
includes hundreds of com- . correct my name or birthday
mon questions, convenient- listed on my Statement?" or
ly separated into 25 separate "How do I request a
subject areas.
replacement S SA- 1099,
Under the subject "bene- Benefit Statement for tax
fits" there are more than 70 year 20077 and many more.
comm,on questions. For
If you can't find an
example, "Do I have to pay answer to your particular
income tax on my Social question about Social
Security benefits?" Under Security, you can simply
"Social Security number type in your question and
and card," there are 70 Social Security will respond
answers to common ques- by email.
tions. For example, "How
But in most cases, you'll

Reptile refuge opens in Parkersburg
. PARKERSBURG, W.Va . .
(AP) - They may not be as
cute and cuddly as puppies
and kittens, but snakes and
other cold-blooded critters
~eed love too.
·
..
·· That's the philosophy
behind Scaled Skins Inc., a

reptile and amphibian Society of Parkersburg.
refuge that opened in The humane society can't
Parkersburg three weeks accept reptiles and amphibago.
.
ians at its shelter, and as a
The refuge's operators, result, officials often ·must
Matthew
Hahn
and euthanize these animals.
Scaled Skins also will
Michael Kerns, are working with the Humane . take other animals, depend•

• •

.-Me-... . . .

Weelmil~

Famlly
Medicme
·
~rach1Wphobia nwre comnwn in those of European ancestry
.

.

.

: Ques~ion: My teenage
daughter has developed an
intense fear of spiders. In
fact, every time she sees a
~ug of any type, she think.r
It'S a spider and starts to
icream and run into another
toom. What causes tf!is fear,
11 nd what can be done to
help her?

: Answer: The fear of spiis more prevalent in
!hose of European descent.
Apparently, . this is because
In ' the Middle Ages
~uropeans noted that spiders were often found in the
!hatched roofs of houses
bear black rats. This may
~ave .been one of the reasons that Europeans started
lo believe that spiders were
the source of the plague.
: Jt was actually fleas that
earried the plague from the.
rats to humans, but tl!js was
not discovered until ·many
j:enturies later. This negative
•ttitude toward spiders was
ltpparently passed down in
j:luropean families. In many
~on-European cultures, spt·
ilers are actually considered
iigns of gOod luck.
~ers

.
•

A mild aversion to spiders
because of one's cultural
heritage or other factors is
generally not a major prob!em. But an intense reaction
like your daughter's is called
a phobia. The specific type
of phobia she has is called is
called arachnophobia.
, A phobia can be defined
as an intense fear of an
event, object or feeling , The
fear is so intense that it
causes a person to change
·his or her behavior. Pho~ias, .
which affect 10' to 20 percent of the adult population,
are actually a kind of anxiety disorder.
Arachnophobia is classified by psychologists as a
specific phobia, also cal led
a stmple phobia. These
types of phobi~s involv~ the
fear of an object or sttuation, such as fear of spiders,
snakes, doj!;s, animals,
heights, smalf spaces or flying. The phobia can be so
severe that it changes a person's life.
A person who is phobic
about flying either never
travels by plane, or seeks

'

Racine resident receiving transpla.,t ·
: RACINE - Homer Proffitt of Racine is undergoing
' · suigery today at University f:{ospital in Columbus for a.
aoubie heart .valve'transplant. The 77-year·old man served
to the Korean War and retired from The Ridges (Athens
· State Hospit~.) Cards may be ·sent _to ~im at his home in
Raoine. He IS expected to be hospitalized about a week.
Pomeroy's Chief of Poli~e Maik Proffitt is his son .

..

C::;,., 1o6x

!~oc~~~i~~o~da~_~rt~d ~}

IJgn Up OnHntl www.(ocMNet.~

medical ·attention for help respond well to treatment. · . htm. She IS not as u:nportant
with the problem. · ·
· Psychotherapy can also be as my s~m. so I wtll never
Social phobias are another very effective, especially in use her title because It could
common type of phobia. the case of specific phobias.
These involve a fear of So, I'd recommend that you
embarrassment or humilia- ask your family doctor for
tion in social situations. the proper referral to help
.
.
Sometimes this is limited to your dau!lhter deal with her
specific situations, like stage fear of sptders.
fright, or it may be generalFamily Medicine® is a
ized to any soctal setting. ·
weekly · column. To submit
• Well·\lornan ewns
These phobias also alter qutstions,wrile to Martha A.
• Birth Control Including
behavior, usually through .· Simpson, D.O., M.BA.,
avoidance of a social set- Ohio University College of
•lmplanon (First &amp;ODiy
ling. This causes people to Osteopathic Medicine, P.O.
3-year implantable
miss important e\lents like Box 110, Athens, Ohio
birth control
school plays, company pic- 45701, or via e-~tuUl to read·
nics or meetings at which erquestioils@famllymedi• Gardasil Vaccine
they might be asked to make cinenews.org. Medkol infor·
• STD detet:tion &amp; treatmeot .
areportorotherwisepartici- rnoJioninthiscolumnispro• Minimally·invasive
pate. In some cases, the suf- vided as an educational serferer mi~ht also avoid eating vice ~;·It does not replizce
gynecologic surgical cut
m pubhc ' or shun the use the Jl ment of your per·• Pregnancy Care
public rest-rooms. .
.
sonhl pnysician, _who should
Oftentimes, people wtth be relied on to dio:gnose and
• Essure (Scarless Permanent
socia!J'hobia use alcohol to recommend treatment for
Jane D. Broej:ker, MD Birth Control Sterilization)
try an help them cope with any medical conditions. Past
their fears. Medication is columns an available onUne .
113 East Memorial Drive
available for all r_ypes of aJ
wwwJamilymedicinephobias. and most sufferers news.org;
Pomeroy, OH • 992-9158

..--------------------1
Gynecology Servi·c·es
Available In Meigs County

. TEXAS HOLD EM'
Benefit Oasis Foster Care. Based on 100 player$,
top prizes $1600.00. Initial buy in $50.00
Re buys $20.00 with unlimltied re buys
during the first blind levels.

october 10 a 11ttl'at
7:00Pm~twp

"t1 aftili.t-e of~
O'BLENESS

HfALTH SVSTlM

American Legion Hall

520 Weet Union Sl,

Castrop Center 75 Hospital Dr
Suite 260
Athens, OH • 594-8819

At~M~n*. . OH

www.riverroseobgyn.com
'

••

�The Daily Sentinel

ACROSS THE NATION

PageA2
Wednesday, October 8, 2008

Community Calendar

Fed to buy massive .
amounts of short-tenn debt
BY JEANNINE AVERSA
.t.P ECONOMICS WRITER

•

WASHJf\iGTON - The
Federal Reserve·moved swiftly to break through a credit
clog that is imperiling the
' economy, saying Tuesday it
would buy massive amounts
of short-tenn debt and hinting
that it may cut interest rates.
Wall Street was · unimpressed. The Dow Jones
mdustrials shed more than
SOO points.
Fed
Chairman
Ben
Bemanke wamed that the
fmancial crisis has not only
darkened the country's current economic performance
but also could prolong the
pain.
"The outlook for economic . growth has worsened,"
Bernanke said in a speech at
the annual meeting here of
the National Assoc iation for
Business Economics .
His more gloomy assessment appeared to open the
door wider to an interest rate
Cut on or before Oct. 28-29.
the central bank 's next meeting, to brace the wobbly eeonomy. The Fed's key u1terest
rate now sta11ds at 2 percent.
President Bush, saying
the economic meltdown has
1\rought tough ·times for
. many Americans. pledged
that "we're going to come
through this ."
"Have faith, this economy
is going to recover over
time," Bush said in a speech
at an office supply company
ih the Washington suburb of
Chatitilly, Va. "I wish I could
· snap my lingers and make
what- happened stop. But
that's not the way it works .''
· The .president earlier
reached out to European
leaders to urge coordination
on efforts to solve the finanCial crisis spreading around
the globe. The White House
said Bush was open to the
idea of a leaders' summit on
the economic upheaval.
· Stocks slumped, however,
as investors focused on
Bernanke 's warnings and
worries about the weakness
of financial companies. Bank
of America Corp. reported its
third-quarter profits fell 68
percent. The three major U.S.
stock indexes all fell more
than 5 percent a day after a
huge selloff Monday put the
Dow below 10,000 for the
first time in four years.
The statements came
against a backdrop of
iltcreasing concern that a
global recession (s rapidly
developing. There is growing
pressure for the U.S. government to do more beyond the
$700 billion financial bailout
eackage President Bush
signed into law Friday.
: To that end, the Fed
invoked
Depression-era
emergency powers to begin
buying commercial paper short-term funding that many
companies rely on to pay thetr
workers and buy supplies.
: The government's bailout
package is aimed at thawing
lending by. buying rotten
mortgages and other bad
debts from banks and other
(inancial in stitutions . By
getting these bad debts off
&amp;ank's balance sheets, they
might be in a better position
tp raise capital and more
Willing to lend to each other
and to customers .
· Tight credit has made it
~creasingly difficult and
expensive for companies to
iaise money to fund their
Operations.
. "The
expansion
of
Federal Reserve lending is
helping financial firms cope
Y,.ith reduced access to their
l!sual sources of fu nding,"
"emanke explained . .
: Commercial paper is a
way of borrowing money
for short periods, typically
ranging from overnight to
(.ess than a week.
: In more normal- times,
about $100 billion of these
short-term IOUs were out$tanding at any given time,
$old by companies to buyers
that included money market
tnutual funds, pension funds
and other investors. But this
i;narket has virtually dried up
as investors have become
ioo. jittery to buy paper for
tonger than overnight or a
couple of days .
.
: The unstable siruation has
left many companies vuiIierable. The notion under
\he plan is for the government to provide a "backstop" that would give com•

BY THE BEND

!he Daily Sentinel

Democratic
presidential
candidate
Sen. Barack
Obama, DIll., left, and ·
Republican
candidate
Sen." John
McCain, AAriz .. face ·
off during a
townhallstyle presidential
debate at'
Belmont
University in
Nashville,
Tenn.,
Tuesday.

panies a new /lace to get
cash, the lie said. The
action makes the Fed a crucial source of credit for nonfinancial businesses in addition, to commercial banks ·
and investment firms:
Credit markets eased
slightly, however, after the
Fed's move .raised hopes it
would quickly relieve the
short-term funding problems
plaguing some companies.
European stocks were
· mixed on hopes that central
banks around 1he globe
would coordinate on rate
cuts. In Britain, the FfSE
100 index ended 0.4 percent
higher, France's CAC-40
index in Paris gained 0.6 percent hi!;her, bu.t Germany's
AP photo
DAX shpped 1.1 percent.
Iceland is facing. the
prospect of bankruptcy,
according to the Prime
Minister Geir H. Haarde,
after its banks went on a
buying spree across Europe.
accumulating massive debts
in the process.
The Fed said it is creating
a new entity to buy threemonth unsecured and assetbacked commercial paper
directly from eligible companies. It hopes to have the
program up and running·: BY .CHARLES BABINGTON
that said the $300 billion donations from individUals· for their chi'ldren but had yet
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER
soon , Fed officials said. ·
cost of his initiative would at Fannie Mae and Freddie to say what the fine would
Fed officials said they'll
be paid out of the $700 bil- Mac, the two now-disgraced be. "Perha~s we will find
buy as much of the debt as
NASHVILLE, Tenn. lion approved late last week. mortgage industry giants.
that out tomght," he said. ;
necessary to get the market Barack Obama and John
"I would order the secreObama quickly followed
"There were some of us
functioning again. They McCain clashed repeatedly tary of the Treasury to who stood up against it," up, saying that McCain
refused to say how much over the causes and cures immediately buy up the bad McCain said of the lead-up to "voted against the expan~
that might be, but they for the worst economic cri- home loan mortgages in the financial crisis. "There sion" of the children's
noted that around $1.3 tril- sis in 80 years Tuesday America and renegotiate at were others who took a hike." health care program the
lion ·worth of commercial t;~ight i9 a debate i.. which · the new value of those
Obama shot back th'at government runs.
·
paper would qualify.
Republican McCain called hom.es. at the diminished McCain 's,campaign managThe two men prefer dra~
"The commercial paper for sweeping action by the value of those homes, and er, Rick Davis , has a stake matically
different
market has been under con- government · to directly let people be able to make in a Washington lobbying approaches to easing the
siderable strain in recent shield many homeowners those payments and stay in firm that received thousands problem of millions of uniii:
weeks as mo.ney market from mortgage foreclo sure . their homes," he said .
of dollars a month from sured Americans.· McCain
"It's my proposal. It's not
mutual funds and other
'· Is it expensive? Yes. But Freddie Mac until recently. favors a $5.000 tax credit
investors" have become Sen. Obama's proposal. it's we all know, my friends,
Pivoting quickly to show that he says would allow
increasin~ly reluctant to buy
not President Bush's pro- until we stabilize home val- his concern with members families to find and .afford
commercial paper, esJ?CCiiilly posal ," McCain said ·in the · ues in America, we're never of the audience listening health care on their own. .
longer-dated maturities . As debate that he hoped could goins to start turning around from a few feet away, he
Obama wants to build on
the market for commercial revive his fortunes in a pres- and creating jobs and fixing said, "You're not interested the current system , in which
paper shrank, the Fed said idential race trending our economy, and we've got in politicians . ~inting fin- · millions receive coverage
rates on the lonller-tenn debt · toward his rival.
to give some trust and confi- ~er~. Wh~t you re interested through t~e workplace, with.
"increased stgnificantlyi'
In one pointed confronta- dence back to America ."
to 1s trymg to figure O!Jt, government fundmg to help .
making it more expensive for tion on foreign policy,
McCain also said it was how is this going to impact uninsured families obtain
companies to boiTOW.
Obama blt~ntly challenged important ·to reform the you."
· ·
coverage·.
·
The Treasury Department, McCain's steadiness. "This giant benefit programs such
But that didn't sto~ the two
Obama also said that
which worked with the Fed is a guy who sang bomb, as Medicare, Medicaid and men from criticizmg one American
International
on the program, said the bomb, bomb Iran, who Social Security.
another repeatedly as the top- Group Inc., which was
action is "necessary to pre- called for the annihilation of
"My friends, we are. not ics turned to energy, spend- bailed out b the govern•
vent substantial disruphons North Korea - that I don't going to be able to provide ing, taxes and health care.
ment, sho
ive the
to the financial markets and· think is an example of ·the same benefit for preObama said . McCain was Treasury $440
to cover ·
the economy."
speaking softly."
·
sent-day workers that pre- . going to require taxes on the the costs o a company
The Treasury will provide
That came after McCain sent-day retirees have , health benefits workers . retreat at a osh California
money to the Federal Reserve accused him of foolishly today," he said, although he receive from their employ- resort less than a week after.
Bank of New York to support threatening to invade Pakistan · did not elaborate.
ers.at the same time ·his t?lan the federal · intervention.
the new program, the Fed and said, 'Tm not going to
The· two men also com- would wipe out the abtlity "Those executives should be
said. Fed officials would not telegraph my punches, which .peted to demonstrate .their of states to enforce their fired," he said; referring to
say how rtiuch but believed it is what Sen. Obama did."
qualifications as reformers own regulations to require the .participants in the retreat.
would be substantial. The
The debate was the sec- at a. time voters are clamor- · tests such as mammogl'ams.
The debate also veered
money would not come from ond · of three between the ing for change.
McCain countered that into foreign policy, and the
·the $700 billion financial two major party rivals, and
McCain accused Obama under his rival's plan "Sen. disputes were as intense as
bailout President Bush signed the only one to feature a for- of being tbe Senate's sec- Obama will fme you" if par~ on the economy and domes~
into law on Fridat
mat in which voters seated a · ond-highest recipient of ents fail to obtain coverage tic matters.
"'
If a company s commer- few feet away posed quescial paper is not backed by lions to the candidates.
assets or other forms of
They were polite, but the
security acceptable to the ·strain of the campaign
Fed, the company could pay showed. At one point ,
an upfront fee, the central McCain referred to Obama
bank said. The amount of as "that one," rather than
((Yl Cefe6ration of.£ife 11
such a fee has noi yet been speaking his name. ·
determined.
"It's good to be with )OU at .
The. Fed said it hoped its a town hall . meeting ,"
We Invite You To Join Us In Celebrating Our 20th Anniversary
effort would jolt the commer- McCain also jabbed at hi s .
cial paper market back to life. rival, who ·has spurned the
"Thts facility should Republican's calls for numerencourage investors to once ous such joint appearances
again engage in term lend- across the fall campaign.
ing in the commercial paper
They debated on a stage at
market," the Fed said. That Belmont University four
• Hog Roast
• Musical Entertainment .
should eventually spur weeks before Election Day in
• Hayrides
Truly Saved Trio
financial companies to lend a race that has lately favored
. • Holzer Wellness Wagon
Forgiven Four
to each other and to their Obama, both in national
customers, including con- polls and in surveys in piv• Craft Show
• Eye 2 Eye.
.sumers, the Fed said.
·
otal battleground states.
• Innatables &amp; Games
• Free to t!Ie Public
The Fed said it planned to
Not SUIJlrisingly. many of
stop buying commercial the questions dealt with an
paper on April 30, . 2009, .economy in trouble .
unless the Federal . Reserve
Obama said the ~urrent
board agrees to extend the crisis was the "final ·verdict
program. The Fed created a on the failed economic poliseparate entity to pool and cies of the last eight years"
•
hold the commercial paper it · that President Bush pursued
buys. The Fed sajd this sliould and · were "supported by
allow the central bank to Sen. McCain." ·
more easily manage the proHe contended that Bush,
gram and better control risk. McCain and · ·others had
There was $1.61 trillion in favored deregulation of the
outstanding
commercial financial industry, predictpaper, seasonally adjusted, ing that would "let markets
on the market as of last run wild and prosperity
Wednesday, according to the would rain down 'on all of
Specialhing in the Following Seryjces For 20 Yeqrs.·
most recent ·data from the us·. It didn't happen ."
• Short and Long Term Care Provided
·
Fed. That was down from
McCain's pledge to have
• Offering Skilled and lntenncdiatc
$1.70 trillion in the previous the government help indi,.
Levels of Nursing Care ·
week. Since the summer of vidual homeowners avoid
2007, the market has shrunk foreclosure went beyond the
• Reliabilitatipn: Physical Therapy, Occupational Therapy, Speech Th~rapy
from more than $2.2 trillion. details of the bailout that
• Payment Acce~ted Through: Medicare, Medicaid , Workers Compensation ,
As the number of failed recently cleared Congress.
'
Private Insurance and Private Pay
'
banks has gone up sharply this The legislatibn allows but
year, Sheila Bair, head of the does not require Treamry to
For more information or to reserve booth space for the event
Federal Deposit Insurance purchase mortgages directcontact Michelle Kennedy or Emily Casto
Corp., wants to boost fees to ly. Obama has . said previfinancial insiitutions to replen- .ously that idea should be
ish the insurance fund that studied , and his campaign
backs the nation's deposits: contended McCain's pro333 Page Street • Middleport, OH
The increase would double posal was not a new one .
(740) 992·6472
~
the average paid by U.S.
McCain's
campaign
www.overbrook~ehabilitationtenter.com
banks and thrifts next year.
issued a written statement

n, Obama clash on
tor econ crisis.

.

~ Overbrook_!R,g.fia6i£itation Center .

W

Saturday, October 18, 2·008 ..
10:00 a.m.-2:00pm

..

.

'' •,

I

•

•

Public meetings
Thursday, Oct. 9
. POME,ROY
- Meigs
County
Commissioners
meet at I I a.m:, due to
scheduling conflict.
Tuesday, Oct. 14 .
SHADE
- Bedford
Township Trustees; regular
meeting, 7 p.m., town hall.

Clubs and
.organizations
Wednesday, Oct. 8
HARRISONVILLE matrons
of
Past
Harrisonville Order of
Eastern Star Chapter 255,
12:30 p~ .• Wild Horse Cafe.
Thursday, Oct. 9
CHESTER
Shade
River Lodge 453, regular
stated meeting, 7 p.m.
Refreshments follow.
RUTLAND
-Meigs
Local Archery Boosters
meet
at
the
Meigs
Intermediate School, 6 p.m ..

PageA:J.
Wednesday, October 8, 2008

ANNIE'S MAILBOX

POMEROY
Motorcycle
Association
Wildwood Garden Club, "Delivered," regular meeting,
6:30 p.m ., at the home of 5 p.m., Common Grounds,
Betty
Milhoan
on nomination of officers.
Flatwoods Road. Rich and
Monday, Oct. 13
Ann Tomsu will speak on
POMEROY - Big Bend
organic
· gardening. Farm Antique Club, 7:30
Installation of new officers. p.m., Mulberry Community
Center.
Saturday, Oct. 11
CHESTER
- Special
breakfast meeting of Shade
River Lodge 453 , to confer
Entered Apprentice degree
Wednesday, Oct. 8
on one candidate, and
POMEROY - Revival
Pellowcraft degree on one services at Pomeroy Church
candidate. Breakfast at7:30 of the Nazarene , through
a.m., followed by degree Sunday, 7 p.m. Wednesday
work, 8:30.
throu§h Saturday, and · 6
POMEROY - Return p.m. unday. Rev. Herman
Jonathan Meigs Chapter, Stewart of Oak Hill, formerDaughters of the American ly of Hartford. W.Va., will
Revolution, I p.m., at home he the speaker.
of Betty Milhoan. Guest
. S11turday, Oct. 11
speaker will be Amy
REEDSNILLE - Soup
Abercrombie of Athens, supper, 5 p.m .. "Dayspring"
author ·and movie producer gospel group , 7 p.m.,
of'The Other House." Other Reedsville
United
hostesses are Mary Rose ; Methodist Church.
Cleo Smith, Peggy Moore . . CHESHIRE - Chesbire
POMEROY
- Meigs · Baptist Church will host a
County Ch~pter Christian benefit gbspel sing, 7 p.m ., to
•

Church events

benefit Fall Harvest Gospel
Sing. Featured will be Dan
Hayman
and
Country
Hymntirners, Faith Hayman,
Sid and Carol Hayman,Carlie
and Sandra Wise, Priscilla
Dodrill and· Ann Sayre,
Cheryle Knight, Debbie
Dodrill, Jerry · and Diana
Frederick, Brian &amp; Family
Connections, Rita Oliver.
Sunday, Oct. 12
POMEROY - Carleton
Church homecoming, with
Sunday school at 9:30 a.m.,
followed by dinner at noon.
Afternoon ·service to include
"Dayspring Singers" and
church singers. Church
located on Kingsbury Road.
Robert Vance is pastor.

Grandma will reap:
what she sows

diminish my son's impor-,
tance.'' How insulting!
.
This woman is not senile
Dear Annie: I have two nor IS she. from another culchildren with my husband , ture where women are treatand he has a son from his ed as inferior. My sister
first marriage. My mother- insists her mother-in-law is:
in-law treats my stepson . too stupid to be corrected'
"Luke," so much better than and she ignores her. I want,
the other kids. She has to say something to this:
Luke's pictures all over her rude woman in defense of
house, but none of our chil - my sister at the next family
dren. She buys Luke expen- gathering . Should I? sive toys all the time, but Doc.l9r's Sister
Deilr Sister: Absolutely·
our ch'ildren receive used,
scratched presents, and only not . So Mom is old-fash-:
on their birthdays and ioned, sexist and loves her,
Christmas.
son more than her daughter'.
Mom makes no effort to in-law. Your sister gets to .
Sunday, Oct. 12 . · spend time with our kids decide how to deal with this.
she only lives a mile and she has chosen to ignore.
REEDSVILLE - Ruth and
do•vn
the road. We have to it. We know you want to stick·
Koenig will celebrate her
practically
her to be up for her, but we can see how:
85th birthday on Oct. 12. mvolv.ed in beg
their lives . We sh~ earned that doctonite.
Cards may be sent to 39054 do see plenty of her, howevSilver
Ridge
Rd ., er, when Luke spends the Please respect her decision.
Dear Annie: I read the
Reedsville, Ohio 45772 .
weekend with us .
letter from "Not Interesteq'
I' ve asked my .mother-in- in the Stud," whose neigh:.
law . about her favoritism bor constantly adjusts him-.
and she said she feels bad self in her presence.
.
for Luke because his parMany years ago, I was.
ing for the trip an the bal- ents are divorced and, smce employed by a male shop-•.
ance two. weeks · before he is only with us part time . . keeper 10 years my senior.
departure. All seats are on a sh~ feels she has to compen- He, too, kept adjusting h'im~
· first come, first serve basis. sate. My husband has talked self around me. I noticed' he.
A waiting list will be estab- to her, too, but she sees performed the same ritual.
lished if all seats are sold. nothing wrong with "mak- every time he spoke to a.
female customer. but never·
Refunds will only be given ing Luke feel .special."
My children are too when talking to a female
if your ticket is resold .
Checks are to be made out young to realize what's family member. Tums out, he. ·
to the Meigs County · going on, but I hate to think was so self-conscious atbund. ··
Council on Aging. There how they'll feel when they women that he had a nervou~
will be a listed discount trip are older. My husband does- habit of continually checking.
price for members who hold n't want to limit contact . to see if his fly was open,The.
a silver or gold MCCoA because she is their grand- behavior was so ingrained, he.
ma aild they love her. But I had no idea he was doing it.·
. current membership.
would like to see my chil- Once he became aware ·of the.
dren's pictures on her wall, action, it stopped. -: Been
·
·
too . I want her to show the There, Seen That
same affection for my chilDear Been There: Thank
dren as she does for Luke . you for pointing out an
find ' thai we have the What should we do?·- additional, less worrisome.
answer to your . Social Cinderella's Stepmother
reason for this behavior.
Security question. After all,
Dear Stepmother: Mom
Annie's Mailbox is writ-.
we've published the most can dote on Luke without ten by Kathy Mitchell and
cvmmonly asked questions ignoring the other grandchil- Marcy Sugar, longtime edion the website - 600 of dren, but we suspect she tors of the Ann Landers
. them! ·
·
feels that would be disloyal. column. Please e-mail_your
Lasi year, .nearly 30 mil- This dynamic could change questions to anniesmail·
lion people got answers to on its own as Luke gets older bo:r@comcast.net, or write
their questions using our · and your .ehildren are more to: Annie's Mailbox, P.O ..
Frequently Asked Questions . engaging for Grandma . We Box II8190, Chicago, IL.
page. Next time you have a hope so. However .. unless 60611. To find out morfl.
• question, look for answers she says or does mean things about Annie's Mailbox.;,
to ihem online. ,
to your children, don't cur- and read feaJures by other
Just visit the Frequently tail her visits. They will Creators Syndictlle writers
Asked Questions on the accept her as she is if that is ·and cartoonists, visil the
Social Security website at how you present it. Creotors Syndicate Web
www.socialsecmj Iy.gov..
Meanwhile. are your parents page at www.creaJors.com. ·
close? Emphasize that relationship and find other
grandparent figures to till the
gap. Grandma will reap what
she' sows.
Dear Annie: My sister
ing on the .circumstances.
Adoption fees help cover and her husband both have
the cost of main!3imng and Ph.D.s. Her mother'in-law
addre-sses their mail to "Df.
· feeding the anir:nals .
Hahn says he and Kerns and Mrs. Smith" even
hope to receive state and though she knows my sister
• FREf 24t7 T~ SI.WO"
federal grants. The refuge has earned the san\e distinclu!Ofioll
tion as . her son. Thi s has
also accep.ts .4onations.
• 10 Hniillddrnsft wllh
gone on for over a decade .
• Custotn &amp;.! Page - new~ , .....mtr &amp;II'IOftl
When asked' about this, .
her mother-in-law stated,
~!J
.
"Well, my son is the head of
BY KATHY MrrcHELL
AND MARCY SUGAR

&lt;\

Birthdays ·

' J

l..

'l

Senior Citizens plan trip.to C;hristm~ show.
POMEROY - Several
·seats remain on the chartered bus trip to Columbus ·
for the Rlldto City Music
Hall Christmas Spectacular,
Dec . · 10, at Nationwide
Arena.
. The 2008 show is the
biggest production of the
Radio City Christmas
Spectacular in the show's
76-year history. This year
marks the debut of a whole
new show redesigned
specifically for larger are-

nas and will contain all of ence as snow falls on the
the elements· of the 75th crowd, and enjoy the world
· anniversary
· edition. famous
City
Radio
Considered the number one Rockettes performing .their
holiday production in the · high kicks and unparalleled
wprld, the show will cele- precision dance .
brate Christmas with draThe cost for this trip will
malic lighting ·effects, be $90.00 or $85.00 for silbreathtaking imagery, flying ver or gold members. This
sequences, new musical will include motorcoach
compositions and an array transportation and the ticket
of new costumes. ·
to the show. Each one will
The audience will experi- pay for their own meal. The
ence special effects such as trip policy provides for a 50
Santa nying into the' audi - percent deposit hen register-

I

{

'

A popular· Sl•te 10r' gett•mg answers
~

BY ELIZABETH CRUMP
SOCIAL SECURITY
MANAGER. ATHENS

, Do you have a question ·
11bout the Social Security
program that you would
like answered quickly and
simply?
: Many people find that one
&lt;;Jf the easiest and best ways
to get answers to their
Social Security questions is
to visit the · Frequently
Asked Questions on Social
Security's website . Just go
to Social Security Online at
www.socialsecurity.gov. At

the upper riglit-hand side of do I replace a lost Social
the webpage is a pulldown Security card?" .
menu of Frequently Asked
You can get answers to
Questions. The
menu questions like "How do I
includes hundreds of com- . correct my name or birthday
mon questions, convenient- listed on my Statement?" or
ly separated into 25 separate "How do I request a
subject areas.
replacement S SA- 1099,
Under the subject "bene- Benefit Statement for tax
fits" there are more than 70 year 20077 and many more.
comm,on questions. For
If you can't find an
example, "Do I have to pay answer to your particular
income tax on my Social question about Social
Security benefits?" Under Security, you can simply
"Social Security number type in your question and
and card," there are 70 Social Security will respond
answers to common ques- by email.
tions. For example, "How
But in most cases, you'll

Reptile refuge opens in Parkersburg
. PARKERSBURG, W.Va . .
(AP) - They may not be as
cute and cuddly as puppies
and kittens, but snakes and
other cold-blooded critters
~eed love too.
·
..
·· That's the philosophy
behind Scaled Skins Inc., a

reptile and amphibian Society of Parkersburg.
refuge that opened in The humane society can't
Parkersburg three weeks accept reptiles and amphibago.
.
ians at its shelter, and as a
The refuge's operators, result, officials often ·must
Matthew
Hahn
and euthanize these animals.
Scaled Skins also will
Michael Kerns, are working with the Humane . take other animals, depend•

• •

.-Me-... . . .

Weelmil~

Famlly
Medicme
·
~rach1Wphobia nwre comnwn in those of European ancestry
.

.

.

: Ques~ion: My teenage
daughter has developed an
intense fear of spiders. In
fact, every time she sees a
~ug of any type, she think.r
It'S a spider and starts to
icream and run into another
toom. What causes tf!is fear,
11 nd what can be done to
help her?

: Answer: The fear of spiis more prevalent in
!hose of European descent.
Apparently, . this is because
In ' the Middle Ages
~uropeans noted that spiders were often found in the
!hatched roofs of houses
bear black rats. This may
~ave .been one of the reasons that Europeans started
lo believe that spiders were
the source of the plague.
: Jt was actually fleas that
earried the plague from the.
rats to humans, but tl!js was
not discovered until ·many
j:enturies later. This negative
•ttitude toward spiders was
ltpparently passed down in
j:luropean families. In many
~on-European cultures, spt·
ilers are actually considered
iigns of gOod luck.
~ers

.
•

A mild aversion to spiders
because of one's cultural
heritage or other factors is
generally not a major prob!em. But an intense reaction
like your daughter's is called
a phobia. The specific type
of phobia she has is called is
called arachnophobia.
, A phobia can be defined
as an intense fear of an
event, object or feeling , The
fear is so intense that it
causes a person to change
·his or her behavior. Pho~ias, .
which affect 10' to 20 percent of the adult population,
are actually a kind of anxiety disorder.
Arachnophobia is classified by psychologists as a
specific phobia, also cal led
a stmple phobia. These
types of phobi~s involv~ the
fear of an object or sttuation, such as fear of spiders,
snakes, doj!;s, animals,
heights, smalf spaces or flying. The phobia can be so
severe that it changes a person's life.
A person who is phobic
about flying either never
travels by plane, or seeks

'

Racine resident receiving transpla.,t ·
: RACINE - Homer Proffitt of Racine is undergoing
' · suigery today at University f:{ospital in Columbus for a.
aoubie heart .valve'transplant. The 77-year·old man served
to the Korean War and retired from The Ridges (Athens
· State Hospit~.) Cards may be ·sent _to ~im at his home in
Raoine. He IS expected to be hospitalized about a week.
Pomeroy's Chief of Poli~e Maik Proffitt is his son .

..

C::;,., 1o6x

!~oc~~~i~~o~da~_~rt~d ~}

IJgn Up OnHntl www.(ocMNet.~

medical ·attention for help respond well to treatment. · . htm. She IS not as u:nportant
with the problem. · ·
· Psychotherapy can also be as my s~m. so I wtll never
Social phobias are another very effective, especially in use her title because It could
common type of phobia. the case of specific phobias.
These involve a fear of So, I'd recommend that you
embarrassment or humilia- ask your family doctor for
tion in social situations. the proper referral to help
.
.
Sometimes this is limited to your dau!lhter deal with her
specific situations, like stage fear of sptders.
fright, or it may be generalFamily Medicine® is a
ized to any soctal setting. ·
weekly · column. To submit
• Well·\lornan ewns
These phobias also alter qutstions,wrile to Martha A.
• Birth Control Including
behavior, usually through .· Simpson, D.O., M.BA.,
avoidance of a social set- Ohio University College of
•lmplanon (First &amp;ODiy
ling. This causes people to Osteopathic Medicine, P.O.
3-year implantable
miss important e\lents like Box 110, Athens, Ohio
birth control
school plays, company pic- 45701, or via e-~tuUl to read·
nics or meetings at which erquestioils@famllymedi• Gardasil Vaccine
they might be asked to make cinenews.org. Medkol infor·
• STD detet:tion &amp; treatmeot .
areportorotherwisepartici- rnoJioninthiscolumnispro• Minimally·invasive
pate. In some cases, the suf- vided as an educational serferer mi~ht also avoid eating vice ~;·It does not replizce
gynecologic surgical cut
m pubhc ' or shun the use the Jl ment of your per·• Pregnancy Care
public rest-rooms. .
.
sonhl pnysician, _who should
Oftentimes, people wtth be relied on to dio:gnose and
• Essure (Scarless Permanent
socia!J'hobia use alcohol to recommend treatment for
Jane D. Broej:ker, MD Birth Control Sterilization)
try an help them cope with any medical conditions. Past
their fears. Medication is columns an available onUne .
113 East Memorial Drive
available for all r_ypes of aJ
wwwJamilymedicinephobias. and most sufferers news.org;
Pomeroy, OH • 992-9158

..--------------------1
Gynecology Servi·c·es
Available In Meigs County

. TEXAS HOLD EM'
Benefit Oasis Foster Care. Based on 100 player$,
top prizes $1600.00. Initial buy in $50.00
Re buys $20.00 with unlimltied re buys
during the first blind levels.

october 10 a 11ttl'at
7:00Pm~twp

"t1 aftili.t-e of~
O'BLENESS

HfALTH SVSTlM

American Legion Hall

520 Weet Union Sl,

Castrop Center 75 Hospital Dr
Suite 260
Athens, OH • 594-8819

At~M~n*. . OH

www.riverroseobgyn.com
'

••

�'

'

•

•

~ageA4

OPINION

The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, October 8, 2008

•

•
'

· The Daily Sentinel

Eiden.can't abide by the trnth

authority the vice president
It's ironic that during the
has from the legislative
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio
vice-presidential depate in
standpoint
is the vote, only
(740) 992·2156 ·FAX (740) 992·2157
St. Louis. Joe Biden called
when
there
is a tie vote. He
Vice President Dick Cheney
· www.mydallysentlnal.com
has no authority relative to
·"dangerous." There's somethe
Congress. The idea he's
thing
very
dangerous
about
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Kathryn
part
of the legislative
Joe Biden.
Lopez
branch is a bizarre notion
Just take. a listen to what
Dan Goodrich
invented by Dick Cheney to
the Delaware Democrat had
Publisher
aggrandize.
the power of a
to say six years ago, during
unitary executive. and look ·
the run-up to the U.S. invaCharlene Hoeflich
· sion of Iraq: "I do not ing member of the surrender where it has gotten us . It has
General Manager-News Editor
believe this is a rush to war.' party, insulting Gen. · David been very dangerous."
Not a part of the legislaI believe it is a march to Petraeus as the mastermind
tive
br:•11ch'!
of the surge pleaded his case
peace and security·
Biden
insisted on playing
(Saddam Hussein) possess- before the Senate. So much
es chemical and biological for the long haul. Biden was the constitutional lawyer
Congress shall make n.o law respecting an
weapons and is seeking against war in Iraq before during prime-time televi establishment of religion, or prohibiting the
nuclear weapons." Further, he was for it before he was sion, a role he clearly can't
hack. The doughty senator
free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom
Biden insisted: "We must be against it.
clumsily
attempted to pin
clear
with
the
American
Yet,
somehow,
conven. of speech, or of the press; or the right of the
.
Cheney
to
the ropes with
people that we are commit- tiona! wisdom heralds him
people peaceably to assemble, and to petition
weak
jab:
"The idea he
this
ting to Iraq for · the long
along with Barack
the Government for a redress of, grievances.
haul; not just the day after, Obama , during. the first doesn't realize (sic) that
but the decade after."
presidential debate in Article I of th~ Constitution
It was 'a much different Mississippi - as a wise defines the role of the vice
- The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution
position from the one the man of foreilln policy. But president. That's .the execuchairman of the Senate he's far from at . and, further, tive branch. He works in the
Foreign
Relations Iraq isn' t the on ly area executive branch." A small
Committee took during the where Biden shows bad detail for Biden: Article I of
the Constitution defines the
first Bush administrati·on, judgment.
legislative
powers of the
when he opposed an inter- ' Obama's running mate .
can't
read the federal government. And
vention to drive Hussein's also
,
Iraqi troops .out of Kuwait. Constitution,
a
basic · the veep. shows up there.
And from Cheney, we can ·
After the Gulf :.Var, Biden requirement, one would
admitted he had beenvirong ·think , of-serving in the gov- move onto another branch
and begged Bill Clinton to . ernment that august docu- of the federal government, .
go after the Middle Eastern ment defines. After declar- so we've covered all three
· ·
dictator.
ing Cheney a menace , in discussing the problem
Now, of course, after he Biden went on to unilateral- that is Biden. When
voted
for the war in Iraq ]y redefine the office of the Clarence Thomas went
Dear Editor:
before the Senate Judiciary
If the thought of erasing the ways of God from our gov- under the second Bush vice president.
He proclaimed: "The only Committee in 1991. Biden
ernment does not trouble us, then we ought to take a good administration, he's a standlook at the financial world and the mess that the sins of
:deceit and greed haw placed upon our citizens. When man
perceiveS" that there are no restraints on his activity, the
.worst comes into play: Professionals negotiate mortgages
:with the uninformed, starting them. out with a low rate of
:interest that they may likely not be able to afford later on
:- no credit rating available and no salary history - and
;(\uickly get their cut our of the deal. Then they package
•what is now called toxic paper and sell it as "securities" to
A~f:RS'
:folks all over the world.
Honesty is always C()mmended, even if it hurts.
Deception, fraud and outright lying not only hurts the buyer
when the m0 rtgage isn't being paid, but as we see today in
our current crisis the entire lending industry is in deep trou-.
ble and some have already failed. Our deception now pollutes many other countries, many of whom are lending us
money for our debt. Not a good witness.
•
The Speaker is now calling for several hearings to find
out ·"What went wrong?" We already .know what went
:wrong: Contributions by Fannie and Freddie to Hnuse
;leadership limited oversight of wrong practices and a
;deaf ear to the· problem. So ci tizens suffer and they pay
·for bailouts.
· Partisanship is so fervent that it trumps American's interests. 1 guess George Washington had wisdom when he
opposed political parties from the start.
"
God's ways are above our ways, without any question.
;He lays out the best and right ways, and then leaves it up
;to us to make the choice. Far too many are saying, "I did
·it my way.''
. Bob Weedy

:READER'S

VIEW

Deceit

Wtth ·no restraint, twrSt happens

IS A6CQD FRIEND

OF M/Nf.

put on a show. as he tends
to. He quoted Thomas
allegedly supporting ju~i ­
cial activism. "I:homas drdn't remember the quote.
That's because he never
said such a thing. he learned ·
from his researchers after
the debate. Biden took him
completely out of context.
In his book, "My
Grandfather's Son" (Harper
PerenniaL 2008). Thomas
recalls his interaction with
Biden: "Throughout my life
I've often found truth
embedded in the lyrics of
my favorite records. At
Yale, for example, I'd listened Often to 'Smiling
Faces Sometimes.' a song
by the Undisputed Truth
that warns of the. dangers of
trusting the hypocrites who
'pretend to be your friend'
while secretly planning to
do you wrong. Now I knew
I'd met one of them :
Senator Biden's smooth,
insincere promises that he
would treat me fairly were
nothing but talk."
A dangerously inconsis-·
tent senator full qf "smooth.
insincere promises" doesn't
exactly sound like change
we can believe in, does it'!
· ( Kathrvn Lopez is the edi·
tor of . National Review
Online (II'Ww.nat iona/reviell'.com). She can be contacted at klopez@rrationalrel'iew.com.)

THANKS FOR
MENTIONING' THE
· 'KEATING FIVE'.

Logan

Elections letters advisory
Letters dealing with the Nov. 4 election are welcome and
will be accepted up unti/5 p.m. orr Friday, Oct. 24. Letrers
teceived after that deadline will not be published. Letrers
should be 300 words ilt length or less and must address
·issues, not persu n&lt;1lities. Letrers endorsing local o'r IUition·al candidates. or collfaining personal attacks. will not be
accepted.

•

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR

Greedy, ~asel &amp; Snake is going bankrupt!

: Letters to the editor are welcome. They shou7d be less
;rlran 300 ~&lt;: ords. All/etters are subjett to editing." must be
:siRned. and include address and telephone number. No
·Wt.l'igned letters will be P"blished. Letters should be in
'good taste, addressing issues, not personalities. Letters of
:thunks to or1&lt;ani~arions and individuals will not he accept;ed{ilr pub/icatimi.
.
•

The Daily Sentinel
Reader Services
Correction Policy
Our .main concern •n all storieS is to
be accurate. if you know ol an error
in a story, call the newsroom at (740)
" 992-2158.

Our main number II
(740) 992·2156.

Department extensions are: .

(USPS 213-~)
Ohio Valley Publishing
Co.
PubliShed every afternoon, Monday
through Fri&lt;lay. 111 Court Street,

Pomeroy, Ohio. 5econd-dass postage
patd at Pomeroy.
Member: The Assooated Press and

the OhiO Newspaper Association.
Pottmaalef: ~nd address corrections to The Daily Sentinel , 11 1 Court
Street Pomeroy, Ohio 4 5769.

Subscription Rates
By e•rrier or molar ·r oute

News

'1 0.27

One month

- Edttor: Charlene Hoeflich, Ext. 12

' Reporter:-Bnan Reed, Ext 14

One ynr

• Reportlll': Beth Sergenl, Ext 13

Senior C~lzen ratH
One month
'10.27
One yeoor
'103.90

Advertising ·

'11.5.84
50'

Dotty

'""*

Outolde S.loo: Dave Harris, Ext 15
OutoldeSaloo: Brenda Davis, Ext16
. Clo. .JCirc. : Judy Clark, Ext. 10
•.

General Manager
Charlene Hoeflich, Ext. 12

E-mail:
newsC mydatlysentinel .~
Web:
'«''W.mydailysef1tinel.oom

S..W:.boia l!lnJkj
n """"""
dir9ct 10 Ill Drily Sa'*1al. No sub·
scrlptton bi mail permitted n weas
where home camer &amp;ervice tS ltVBII- .
able.

Mall Sub.crlptlon
lnekle Metgo County
13 Wet.ks
'32.26
26 Weeks
'64.20
52 Weeks
•121.11

Outside Melg1 County
1J Weeks
26 Weeks
52 Weeks

'53.55
'107.10
'214.21

'

I'm not a money expert,
but that's OK because there
are plenty of them on television. So I've been doing what
all the TV experts say: Pay
yourself first, put some
money in every paycheck ,
take advantage of your
employer's matching grants
and diversify, diversify,
diversify. I have done all
those things and I can't tell
you wh4t a comfort it is to
have a substantial and evergrowing nest egg. When I
retire, I won't have to worry
whether Social Security is
still solveni; I won't have to
worry about inflation; I won't
have to worry about money at
all, it's sitting in an account at
my stockbroker's, :mfe,
secure and making babies.
But when I opened my
statement this month, half
my money was gone!
Stolen!
Ripped
off!
Robbed! I did exactly what
anyone who's been robbed
does. I called the pdlice.
They were stunned ~hen I
told them how much money
the thieves got away with.
"Why do you keep that
much money at home? Are
you a drug dealer? Why
didn't they take it alJ?"
"Hey, I'm the victim here.
I pay ruy taxes . You work
for me, remember?"
"Guess what? I pay taxes ,
too. Just an.~wer the· questions." ·

Jim
Mullen

"I'm not a drug · dealer.
·The money wasn't at home.
It supoosed to be safe in my
401k.r. .
"Well , that's not a police
problem, buddy. My pension plan lost money, too."
"Who did you arrest for
that'! It sounds like the same
modus operandi of the guy
who stole my money."
''No one stole your
money. That's just the way
the stock market works .
Some days you're up. some
days you're down . Call
your stock broker, he' II
exr,Iain it all to you."
'I think my stockbroker's
· in on it. He's got to be 'a
person of interest' don't you
think?"
''I'll tell you what," says
the cop, "When they bail
your stock~roker out, tell
ham to g1ve you your
money back."
"How can anyone bail
him out? He's · nof even in
jail yet!" It sounds like the
cops were looking the other
way. Was this an inside job?

•

A conspiracy? I called my
broker at Greedy, Weasel &amp;
Snake. Bradford Mefirst
answered on the first ring.
"Oh, i(s only you," he
answered, "Listen, I can't
talk right now, I'm expecting an important call." ·
"From your bail bonds-·
_ man?"
.
·, "What are you talking
about? I'm expecting a call
from my congressman. I
donate a lot of money to his
campaign. 1 want him to
vote for the $700 billion
bailout."
"Well, throw in a few
hundred thousand fer me
while you're at it, and I
won't press charges."
"Press
charges?"
I
explained that half my 40 I k
had disappeared. .
"Nobody took your
money. Hold. on to your ·
stock and it will go up
again. This is a good time to
buy stocks, things are
cheae."
"Lake my house. Thanks
for reminding me. So, you
think I should put in more
money in my 40 I k?
Wouldn't it be simpler just
to put it in yours?"
"I am not stealing your
money. There 's a financial
crisis. Banks are failing.
Credit must be restored.
Didn 't you hear the
nation's largest car dealer
went out of business

.:Local Briefs

because it couldn't get
credit from its bank?"
"Maybe they went out of
business because they sold
crappy gas-guzzlers that
nobody wants to buy anymore . Maybe they went out .
of business because their
prices were' too high.
Maybe they went out of
business because their
owner didn 't put any of the
money he made for the last
20 years in a 401k - like I
did. Maybe he blew it all on
the ponies and slot
~achine~ . instead of saving
rl'for a ramy day."
,"I feel your pain."
"No, you don't. Not
unless you've had a good
caning recently. Let me ask
you something. Why is it
that if s&lt;imeonc robs a 7Eleven of $~0. they put him .
m Jar! and_throw away the
key. But at a gang loots billions of dollars from small
invest&lt;irs , Congress wants
to 'rescue' them? Does that
sound fair to you?"
•
"Hey. nice talkiflg to you.
I gotta go. Congress is on
the phone . And don't worry
if you hear Greedy, Weasel
&amp; Snake is going bankrupt.
That's just a rumor." .
(Jim Mulle11 is the author
of "It Tt1ke.r a Villa!ie Idiot:
Complicatinli the Simple
Life " wrd ·"Baby:, Fim
Tatloo." You can reada him
at jim_mullen@myway.Com.)
•

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

www.mydailysentinel.com

Feds question new voter checks in'6 states
Bv KATE BRUMBACK

Scout registration

TRICK oR TREAT...

WILLIAM

VVednesday,~ober8,zoo8

POMEROY - Girl Scouts open registrations will be
held as follows: 6-7:30 p.m. , Oct. 9, Eastern Library; II
·a.m. to I p.m., Oct. II, Racine Library ; 1:30-3:30 p.m.,
Oct. 12. Pomeroy Library.
!!)formation about joining Girl Scouts is available by
calting
Deb Dowler
at 594-5455.
.
.
.

Correction
RUTLAND - This year 's St. Jude Saddle Up Trail
Ride raised. $18,930 for the children's research hospital ,
not $17 ,285 .

Ohio man convicted
in deputy's shooting.·
MARIETTA (AP) - A southeast Ohio · man has been
convicted of attempted murder in the wounding of a deputy
'sheriff shot in the face.
.
, A Washington County jury also found 33-year-old Jason
Berecz of Reno guilty Tuesday on a dozen other counts in the
early April shootinll and an all-night standoff that followed.
· Sheriff Larry Mmcks said Sgt. Scott Parks came under
fire whife responding to a call .about a domestic dispute.
The deputy was hit near his right eye and underwent treatment at Ohio State University Medical Center before
returning to work a few weeks later.
Berecz will be sentenced Nov. 18 . Assistant Prosecutor
Kevin Rings says he faces the potential of 50 or more years
in prison .

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

ATLANTA - Federal
officials have asked election
officials in six states to
investigate whether social
security number checks are
being improperly run on
people registering to vote.
Social
Security
Commissioner
Michael
Astrue sent a letter Friday to
the ·secretaries of state of
Alabama, Georgia and battleground states Indiana,
Nevada, North Ca(olina and
Ohio. The letter noted they
had submitted "extraordinarily high levels" of verification requests.
"Such a volume appears
to be much greater than one
would expect, given that
states of comparable or larger populations have a significantly .]ower number of
verification
requests:·
Astrue wrote iri his letter to
Georgia officials.
With nearly two million
requests since Oct I, 2(X}7,
Georgia has made far more
social security number verification requests than any other
state·, according to the Social

Security
Administration . Secretary of State Karen
Alabama was second with · HandeL
about one million requests.
Alabama Secretary of
Helen Butler, of the inde- State Beth Chapman attribpendent Georgia Coalition uted the high number of
for the Peoples' Agenda , verification requests to the
said she would like an large number of people regexplanation why the num- istering to · vote. Alabama
ber of requests far exceeds residents have until 10 days
the number of newly regis- before the ballot to register.
tered Georgia voterS.
"We have had a record
"We certainly will be fol- number of people register to·
lowing this very closely· vote ... If that's increasing
because we want to make the number of times the
sure the process is being Social
Security
carried out correctly." said Administration is having to
Butler." whose advocacy check numbers that's an
excellent problem to have.
group educates voters.
Georgia Deputy Secretary and it means more people
of State Rob Simms said are involved in democracy,"
Tuesday that Astrue's letter Chapman said.
arrived a day earlier and it
Because of the letter,
was the first time state offi- Chapman said she is asking
cials were alerted to an voter registrars to first
unusually high number of check drivers' licenses
requests.
whenever possible.
· "At . this point today. I
Gary Bartlett, director of
would dispute those · fig- North+arolina 's State Board
ures," Simms said · in a of Elections, said the Social
phone interview. .
Security Administration was
By Monday's deadline , questioning why the state
Georgia registered just over has had almost 400 ,000
406,000 new voters this social security validations
year for the Nov. 4 election, for the year. But the state
said Matt Carrothers ; a also has had some 700,000
spokesman . for Georgia voter registrations ahead of

Friday's deadline .
While drivers' license are
used to verify many voters,
said
North
Bartlett
Carolina's large military
and college communities
could be registering with
out-of-state licenses. He
said others may have used
social security numbers as
the easiest to remember.
Under the Help America
Vote Act of 2002. many
states have an agreement
with the Social Security
Administration requiring
them to submit the last four
digits of a new voter's
social security number for
verification if the person
does not have a valid stateissued ID such as a license.
"Rest assured, we think
this is just absolutely offbase," Bartlett said.
Astrue wants the six states
that received the letters to
make sure their officials are
verifying only those new voters who don't have acceptable state-issued identification , in line. with their agreements with the agency, Social
Security
Administration
spokesman Mark Lassiter
said Tuesday by phone.

'

Health from Page At.
the institutions themselves
in the local. economy,
salaries of doctors, nurses,
and maintenance staff
employed by health-related
institutions.
Indirect impacts refer to
second round expenditures
made by health-related
institutions from other sectors within the local econo- my. For example, indirect
impacts can include food
purchased locally for a hospital's cafeteria or office.
supplies purchased locally
for a doctor's office.
Induced impacts refer to
the increased sales of goods
and services in the local
economy dt,te to the health
sector e .: .~loyees living and
working in the county. These
impacts, in turn, positivel,Y
affect other sectors and the1r
emplpyees, who then create
further impacts on additional
sectors, according to the
ODH and OU Voinovich
School release.
To the extent that these
second round expenditures
occur in the same area or
local economy as the original jobs, they se,rve to
enhance the econotruc wellbeing of that area and should ·
be included-when measuring
· the economic benefits of
rural health facilities.
Another way of expressing this concept is that a
dollar spent in any sector of
a local economy will generate additional dollars iri
other sectors. For example,
· a health care worker in
Meigs County purchases
clothes for his or per family
at the local· clothing store,
generating. income for the
stpre 's owner.
The owner .saves sorne of
this money and spends the '
rest, thereby providing
income for another local
resident. The third person
saves part of this money and
,spends the rest,· which

becomes income for a
fourth person , and so forth.
The sum of the total direct,
indirect, and
induced
income is the total income
generated in the local economy by the health sector.
Employment functions in
much the same manner, and
hence employment in health
settings results in additional
employment in the remainder of the local economy. ·
The total impact of the
health sector on the local
economy .can be calculated
using an economic model
known as a "multiplier".
The multiplier expresses the
number of additional jobs or
amou·nt
of
additional
income created by each job
or each dollar earned in the
health .sector.
Employment and income
data were obtained from
IMPLAN , which bases its
data on the Bureau of Labor
Statistics' Quarterly Census
of Employment and Wages
(ES-202) and the Bureau of
Economic
Analysis'
Regional ·
Economic
Information System (REIS).
Retail sales estimates
apply to reiail purchases
made within Meigs County
by persons employed directly and indirectly in the
health sector. These esti. mates are derived from data
from the Ohio Department
of Taxation.
Total Economic Impact
Findings from Meigs
County's latest statistics
show the following:
• The latest statistics show
.the health sector in Meigs
County directly employing
492 people, and directly
generating a total payroll of
$14.7 million.
• In tertns of employment,
·the main contributor within
the health .sector was nursing
and residential care which
employed 242 persons.
• In tenns of income. the

D1Nct Health C1nt Employmlnt In llllp CoulltJ

Nu..lng&amp;

Rroliler&amp;t

c..

41.1%

7.2%

Toll! Economic lmpiCt
Emplopd

0

llulll~llr

lncame Mutllplu Tolllllml*l

Tcallml*t
0

0

0

1.14 ,

8,488

. 1,499

15

8, 115.

1.13

8.908

1,1102'

.31'

621

1.13

5811

138

1

1.20

3

1011

1.11

118

27

0

53

1.21

. 114

1,8811

1.13

2,127

?483

5

15

1.20

11

382

1.24

4114

112

1

us ·

1&amp;1

5,tl&amp;ll

NutPIQ l!ld Nlilllntlll an

242

1.18

280

Haml hulh ... Hl'f1cea

38

1.08

3

l'hlnM!alllllld drug .....

Ollllf -II!Oiy .........

TOIII Mlige County

Economy
........ Sedor • • ~ ol Mligs
County ECOIICIIIIy

main contributor within the
health· sector was nursing
and · residential care, with
earnings of $6.1 million.
• The combined direct,
indirect, and induced impact
of the health sector in Meigs
County was 586 jobs and
$16.7 million in earned
income in 2006.
• The direct, ·indirect, and
induced sales income generated by the health sector
amounted to $3.9 million.
The I .00 percent sale tax
that was retained by the
county resulted in a $39,000

CountY

llleeTIIX

0

145

---Talll Hlllllllector
- - - --·-

.....

" 11*1

0

0.00

lla1plall .
OlllcN ol pltyllcUnl, deilliltl,
llld ather ....... '"'' II lui'...

DenllllorbooiiO&lt;lll

. _ (sn.-ndll

lnccime {$TIIC't•r Mil) .

Emplorment

0.00

- - - · - see
1.14
- ----·
· -----1.11- - - -14,111

---~---

18.701----··-·

5.ezt

5,ezt

128,838

12&amp;,838

8.7%

10.4~

1U~

13.1nlo

contribution to the economy. employment and 13.0% per• In 2006, the health sec- cent for income .
These Meigs County findtor was directly responsible
for 8.7% of the county's ings show the economic benemployment and 11.4% per- efit of the employment and
cent of its . payroll. · income provided by the
Moreover, the combined health sector. The more health
.direct, indirect, and induced services that are provided in
impact of the health sector Meigs County, the greater the
was even ' greater, with . the share of these revenues is capmultiplier effect increasing tured and re-circulated within
these figures to 10.4% for the local economy. The ODH

•

18

- - -·

-3,872
- - - - 311
-

and Voinovich report demonstrates the importarice of the
health sector in Meigs County
and this sector's contributions
to the local economy.
In addition to providing a
"snapshot" of the current
contributions the report also
indicates the economic
development potential of
adding new health services
in Meigs County.

Permitted·rrom·Page Al
feet in diameter. There wiil from the Ohio Department
be a "clean coal pile" on the of Transportation to conactual mine site on struct .a covered conveyor
'Vellowbush Road. The coal over Ohio 124.
Residents will also notice
js then placed onto the conveyor which will CI'()SS O~io ponds, diversion ditches
124 to reach the Mergs .Pomt · and top soil piles at the site.
The law allows residents·
l:lock facility and eventually
the barges : Gatling had who oppose the permit the
already .received consent ·chance to appeal the decision

30 days from the date the
permit was issued. A letter
opposing or appealing ·the
decision must be sent to the
Ohio
Rectamation
·Commission and John
Husted, chief of the Ohio
Division · of
Mineral
Resources
Management
within the30 day time frame .

·

Garne. The event is an annu- viding the fire department .
al fundraiser for the associa- approves the date. The auxtion's holiday promotions. It iliary will se~e refreshwill be held · at the . ments. Doors open at 5 P,.m.,
Middleport firehouse, pro- and the game begins at 6.

. h • discrimination .

. . h . uolily health care w•t OU•

l'nl&gt;i4ing accm to ~·:~:;~h ~ond Avenue

.

Middleport, Ohio 45760
740-992-0540 .

•

·FestivitieSfiomPageAt
chicken and noodles for the
. 'September luncheon. The
luncheon sold out shortly
after noon.
'
' The October lunch will
'include chili and potato
'soup, sandwiches and
desserts. The cost is $5.
Sue Stone, who presided
'at the meeting in the absence
&lt;Of President Brenda Phalin,
·said Some have asked that
the lunches continue into the
winter months, but no plans
for extending them have
.'bten made .
• The association set a· pre.liminary date of Nqv. 18 for
Jts aututn!) Bear Basket

OPEN HOUSE
THURSDAY, OCTOBER 16,2008
I :OOPM.- 4:00 Pjf.

·

· · s as we
.
. d and roud to invite you to JOin u
Family Healthcare. lnc . as pleaseest Ioc~tion in Middleport . .
I
celebrate our new
vie will have a very rnforma
2008
OnTbursday, tober 16H,
r'rom t·OO p.m. to 4:00p.m.
.. Open ouse
·
ff .
·
"meet and greet
..
d introduction of our sta
v·ded .
There will be a facrhty tour an .
.
Light refreshments w•ll be p;o~ 992-0~40 or
S V p t Wanda Edwards at
.
Please ~i-a ~~~i~ at cheertigerrose@yahoo .com
.
.
O
.
c

"'IJe ~ ~.-'It
leJ/et6k~~
-~41uf·

t.

'
\

•

•
•

�'

'

•

•

~ageA4

OPINION

The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, October 8, 2008

•

•
'

· The Daily Sentinel

Eiden.can't abide by the trnth

authority the vice president
It's ironic that during the
has from the legislative
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio
vice-presidential depate in
standpoint
is the vote, only
(740) 992·2156 ·FAX (740) 992·2157
St. Louis. Joe Biden called
when
there
is a tie vote. He
Vice President Dick Cheney
· www.mydallysentlnal.com
has no authority relative to
·"dangerous." There's somethe
Congress. The idea he's
thing
very
dangerous
about
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Kathryn
part
of the legislative
Joe Biden.
Lopez
branch is a bizarre notion
Just take. a listen to what
Dan Goodrich
invented by Dick Cheney to
the Delaware Democrat had
Publisher
aggrandize.
the power of a
to say six years ago, during
unitary executive. and look ·
the run-up to the U.S. invaCharlene Hoeflich
· sion of Iraq: "I do not ing member of the surrender where it has gotten us . It has
General Manager-News Editor
believe this is a rush to war.' party, insulting Gen. · David been very dangerous."
Not a part of the legislaI believe it is a march to Petraeus as the mastermind
tive
br:•11ch'!
of the surge pleaded his case
peace and security·
Biden
insisted on playing
(Saddam Hussein) possess- before the Senate. So much
es chemical and biological for the long haul. Biden was the constitutional lawyer
Congress shall make n.o law respecting an
weapons and is seeking against war in Iraq before during prime-time televi establishment of religion, or prohibiting the
nuclear weapons." Further, he was for it before he was sion, a role he clearly can't
hack. The doughty senator
free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom
Biden insisted: "We must be against it.
clumsily
attempted to pin
clear
with
the
American
Yet,
somehow,
conven. of speech, or of the press; or the right of the
.
Cheney
to
the ropes with
people that we are commit- tiona! wisdom heralds him
people peaceably to assemble, and to petition
weak
jab:
"The idea he
this
ting to Iraq for · the long
along with Barack
the Government for a redress of, grievances.
haul; not just the day after, Obama , during. the first doesn't realize (sic) that
but the decade after."
presidential debate in Article I of th~ Constitution
It was 'a much different Mississippi - as a wise defines the role of the vice
- The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution
position from the one the man of foreilln policy. But president. That's .the execuchairman of the Senate he's far from at . and, further, tive branch. He works in the
Foreign
Relations Iraq isn' t the on ly area executive branch." A small
Committee took during the where Biden shows bad detail for Biden: Article I of
the Constitution defines the
first Bush administrati·on, judgment.
legislative
powers of the
when he opposed an inter- ' Obama's running mate .
can't
read the federal government. And
vention to drive Hussein's also
,
Iraqi troops .out of Kuwait. Constitution,
a
basic · the veep. shows up there.
And from Cheney, we can ·
After the Gulf :.Var, Biden requirement, one would
admitted he had beenvirong ·think , of-serving in the gov- move onto another branch
and begged Bill Clinton to . ernment that august docu- of the federal government, .
go after the Middle Eastern ment defines. After declar- so we've covered all three
· ·
dictator.
ing Cheney a menace , in discussing the problem
Now, of course, after he Biden went on to unilateral- that is Biden. When
voted
for the war in Iraq ]y redefine the office of the Clarence Thomas went
Dear Editor:
before the Senate Judiciary
If the thought of erasing the ways of God from our gov- under the second Bush vice president.
He proclaimed: "The only Committee in 1991. Biden
ernment does not trouble us, then we ought to take a good administration, he's a standlook at the financial world and the mess that the sins of
:deceit and greed haw placed upon our citizens. When man
perceiveS" that there are no restraints on his activity, the
.worst comes into play: Professionals negotiate mortgages
:with the uninformed, starting them. out with a low rate of
:interest that they may likely not be able to afford later on
:- no credit rating available and no salary history - and
;(\uickly get their cut our of the deal. Then they package
•what is now called toxic paper and sell it as "securities" to
A~f:RS'
:folks all over the world.
Honesty is always C()mmended, even if it hurts.
Deception, fraud and outright lying not only hurts the buyer
when the m0 rtgage isn't being paid, but as we see today in
our current crisis the entire lending industry is in deep trou-.
ble and some have already failed. Our deception now pollutes many other countries, many of whom are lending us
money for our debt. Not a good witness.
•
The Speaker is now calling for several hearings to find
out ·"What went wrong?" We already .know what went
:wrong: Contributions by Fannie and Freddie to Hnuse
;leadership limited oversight of wrong practices and a
;deaf ear to the· problem. So ci tizens suffer and they pay
·for bailouts.
· Partisanship is so fervent that it trumps American's interests. 1 guess George Washington had wisdom when he
opposed political parties from the start.
"
God's ways are above our ways, without any question.
;He lays out the best and right ways, and then leaves it up
;to us to make the choice. Far too many are saying, "I did
·it my way.''
. Bob Weedy

:READER'S

VIEW

Deceit

Wtth ·no restraint, twrSt happens

IS A6CQD FRIEND

OF M/Nf.

put on a show. as he tends
to. He quoted Thomas
allegedly supporting ju~i ­
cial activism. "I:homas drdn't remember the quote.
That's because he never
said such a thing. he learned ·
from his researchers after
the debate. Biden took him
completely out of context.
In his book, "My
Grandfather's Son" (Harper
PerenniaL 2008). Thomas
recalls his interaction with
Biden: "Throughout my life
I've often found truth
embedded in the lyrics of
my favorite records. At
Yale, for example, I'd listened Often to 'Smiling
Faces Sometimes.' a song
by the Undisputed Truth
that warns of the. dangers of
trusting the hypocrites who
'pretend to be your friend'
while secretly planning to
do you wrong. Now I knew
I'd met one of them :
Senator Biden's smooth,
insincere promises that he
would treat me fairly were
nothing but talk."
A dangerously inconsis-·
tent senator full qf "smooth.
insincere promises" doesn't
exactly sound like change
we can believe in, does it'!
· ( Kathrvn Lopez is the edi·
tor of . National Review
Online (II'Ww.nat iona/reviell'.com). She can be contacted at klopez@rrationalrel'iew.com.)

THANKS FOR
MENTIONING' THE
· 'KEATING FIVE'.

Logan

Elections letters advisory
Letters dealing with the Nov. 4 election are welcome and
will be accepted up unti/5 p.m. orr Friday, Oct. 24. Letrers
teceived after that deadline will not be published. Letrers
should be 300 words ilt length or less and must address
·issues, not persu n&lt;1lities. Letrers endorsing local o'r IUition·al candidates. or collfaining personal attacks. will not be
accepted.

•

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR

Greedy, ~asel &amp; Snake is going bankrupt!

: Letters to the editor are welcome. They shou7d be less
;rlran 300 ~&lt;: ords. All/etters are subjett to editing." must be
:siRned. and include address and telephone number. No
·Wt.l'igned letters will be P"blished. Letters should be in
'good taste, addressing issues, not personalities. Letters of
:thunks to or1&lt;ani~arions and individuals will not he accept;ed{ilr pub/icatimi.
.
•

The Daily Sentinel
Reader Services
Correction Policy
Our .main concern •n all storieS is to
be accurate. if you know ol an error
in a story, call the newsroom at (740)
" 992-2158.

Our main number II
(740) 992·2156.

Department extensions are: .

(USPS 213-~)
Ohio Valley Publishing
Co.
PubliShed every afternoon, Monday
through Fri&lt;lay. 111 Court Street,

Pomeroy, Ohio. 5econd-dass postage
patd at Pomeroy.
Member: The Assooated Press and

the OhiO Newspaper Association.
Pottmaalef: ~nd address corrections to The Daily Sentinel , 11 1 Court
Street Pomeroy, Ohio 4 5769.

Subscription Rates
By e•rrier or molar ·r oute

News

'1 0.27

One month

- Edttor: Charlene Hoeflich, Ext. 12

' Reporter:-Bnan Reed, Ext 14

One ynr

• Reportlll': Beth Sergenl, Ext 13

Senior C~lzen ratH
One month
'10.27
One yeoor
'103.90

Advertising ·

'11.5.84
50'

Dotty

'""*

Outolde S.loo: Dave Harris, Ext 15
OutoldeSaloo: Brenda Davis, Ext16
. Clo. .JCirc. : Judy Clark, Ext. 10
•.

General Manager
Charlene Hoeflich, Ext. 12

E-mail:
newsC mydatlysentinel .~
Web:
'«''W.mydailysef1tinel.oom

S..W:.boia l!lnJkj
n """"""
dir9ct 10 Ill Drily Sa'*1al. No sub·
scrlptton bi mail permitted n weas
where home camer &amp;ervice tS ltVBII- .
able.

Mall Sub.crlptlon
lnekle Metgo County
13 Wet.ks
'32.26
26 Weeks
'64.20
52 Weeks
•121.11

Outside Melg1 County
1J Weeks
26 Weeks
52 Weeks

'53.55
'107.10
'214.21

'

I'm not a money expert,
but that's OK because there
are plenty of them on television. So I've been doing what
all the TV experts say: Pay
yourself first, put some
money in every paycheck ,
take advantage of your
employer's matching grants
and diversify, diversify,
diversify. I have done all
those things and I can't tell
you wh4t a comfort it is to
have a substantial and evergrowing nest egg. When I
retire, I won't have to worry
whether Social Security is
still solveni; I won't have to
worry about inflation; I won't
have to worry about money at
all, it's sitting in an account at
my stockbroker's, :mfe,
secure and making babies.
But when I opened my
statement this month, half
my money was gone!
Stolen!
Ripped
off!
Robbed! I did exactly what
anyone who's been robbed
does. I called the pdlice.
They were stunned ~hen I
told them how much money
the thieves got away with.
"Why do you keep that
much money at home? Are
you a drug dealer? Why
didn't they take it alJ?"
"Hey, I'm the victim here.
I pay ruy taxes . You work
for me, remember?"
"Guess what? I pay taxes ,
too. Just an.~wer the· questions." ·

Jim
Mullen

"I'm not a drug · dealer.
·The money wasn't at home.
It supoosed to be safe in my
401k.r. .
"Well , that's not a police
problem, buddy. My pension plan lost money, too."
"Who did you arrest for
that'! It sounds like the same
modus operandi of the guy
who stole my money."
''No one stole your
money. That's just the way
the stock market works .
Some days you're up. some
days you're down . Call
your stock broker, he' II
exr,Iain it all to you."
'I think my stockbroker's
· in on it. He's got to be 'a
person of interest' don't you
think?"
''I'll tell you what," says
the cop, "When they bail
your stock~roker out, tell
ham to g1ve you your
money back."
"How can anyone bail
him out? He's · nof even in
jail yet!" It sounds like the
cops were looking the other
way. Was this an inside job?

•

A conspiracy? I called my
broker at Greedy, Weasel &amp;
Snake. Bradford Mefirst
answered on the first ring.
"Oh, i(s only you," he
answered, "Listen, I can't
talk right now, I'm expecting an important call." ·
"From your bail bonds-·
_ man?"
.
·, "What are you talking
about? I'm expecting a call
from my congressman. I
donate a lot of money to his
campaign. 1 want him to
vote for the $700 billion
bailout."
"Well, throw in a few
hundred thousand fer me
while you're at it, and I
won't press charges."
"Press
charges?"
I
explained that half my 40 I k
had disappeared. .
"Nobody took your
money. Hold. on to your ·
stock and it will go up
again. This is a good time to
buy stocks, things are
cheae."
"Lake my house. Thanks
for reminding me. So, you
think I should put in more
money in my 40 I k?
Wouldn't it be simpler just
to put it in yours?"
"I am not stealing your
money. There 's a financial
crisis. Banks are failing.
Credit must be restored.
Didn 't you hear the
nation's largest car dealer
went out of business

.:Local Briefs

because it couldn't get
credit from its bank?"
"Maybe they went out of
business because they sold
crappy gas-guzzlers that
nobody wants to buy anymore . Maybe they went out .
of business because their
prices were' too high.
Maybe they went out of
business because their
owner didn 't put any of the
money he made for the last
20 years in a 401k - like I
did. Maybe he blew it all on
the ponies and slot
~achine~ . instead of saving
rl'for a ramy day."
,"I feel your pain."
"No, you don't. Not
unless you've had a good
caning recently. Let me ask
you something. Why is it
that if s&lt;imeonc robs a 7Eleven of $~0. they put him .
m Jar! and_throw away the
key. But at a gang loots billions of dollars from small
invest&lt;irs , Congress wants
to 'rescue' them? Does that
sound fair to you?"
•
"Hey. nice talkiflg to you.
I gotta go. Congress is on
the phone . And don't worry
if you hear Greedy, Weasel
&amp; Snake is going bankrupt.
That's just a rumor." .
(Jim Mulle11 is the author
of "It Tt1ke.r a Villa!ie Idiot:
Complicatinli the Simple
Life " wrd ·"Baby:, Fim
Tatloo." You can reada him
at jim_mullen@myway.Com.)
•

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

www.mydailysentinel.com

Feds question new voter checks in'6 states
Bv KATE BRUMBACK

Scout registration

TRICK oR TREAT...

WILLIAM

VVednesday,~ober8,zoo8

POMEROY - Girl Scouts open registrations will be
held as follows: 6-7:30 p.m. , Oct. 9, Eastern Library; II
·a.m. to I p.m., Oct. II, Racine Library ; 1:30-3:30 p.m.,
Oct. 12. Pomeroy Library.
!!)formation about joining Girl Scouts is available by
calting
Deb Dowler
at 594-5455.
.
.
.

Correction
RUTLAND - This year 's St. Jude Saddle Up Trail
Ride raised. $18,930 for the children's research hospital ,
not $17 ,285 .

Ohio man convicted
in deputy's shooting.·
MARIETTA (AP) - A southeast Ohio · man has been
convicted of attempted murder in the wounding of a deputy
'sheriff shot in the face.
.
, A Washington County jury also found 33-year-old Jason
Berecz of Reno guilty Tuesday on a dozen other counts in the
early April shootinll and an all-night standoff that followed.
· Sheriff Larry Mmcks said Sgt. Scott Parks came under
fire whife responding to a call .about a domestic dispute.
The deputy was hit near his right eye and underwent treatment at Ohio State University Medical Center before
returning to work a few weeks later.
Berecz will be sentenced Nov. 18 . Assistant Prosecutor
Kevin Rings says he faces the potential of 50 or more years
in prison .

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

ATLANTA - Federal
officials have asked election
officials in six states to
investigate whether social
security number checks are
being improperly run on
people registering to vote.
Social
Security
Commissioner
Michael
Astrue sent a letter Friday to
the ·secretaries of state of
Alabama, Georgia and battleground states Indiana,
Nevada, North Ca(olina and
Ohio. The letter noted they
had submitted "extraordinarily high levels" of verification requests.
"Such a volume appears
to be much greater than one
would expect, given that
states of comparable or larger populations have a significantly .]ower number of
verification
requests:·
Astrue wrote iri his letter to
Georgia officials.
With nearly two million
requests since Oct I, 2(X}7,
Georgia has made far more
social security number verification requests than any other
state·, according to the Social

Security
Administration . Secretary of State Karen
Alabama was second with · HandeL
about one million requests.
Alabama Secretary of
Helen Butler, of the inde- State Beth Chapman attribpendent Georgia Coalition uted the high number of
for the Peoples' Agenda , verification requests to the
said she would like an large number of people regexplanation why the num- istering to · vote. Alabama
ber of requests far exceeds residents have until 10 days
the number of newly regis- before the ballot to register.
tered Georgia voterS.
"We have had a record
"We certainly will be fol- number of people register to·
lowing this very closely· vote ... If that's increasing
because we want to make the number of times the
sure the process is being Social
Security
carried out correctly." said Administration is having to
Butler." whose advocacy check numbers that's an
excellent problem to have.
group educates voters.
Georgia Deputy Secretary and it means more people
of State Rob Simms said are involved in democracy,"
Tuesday that Astrue's letter Chapman said.
arrived a day earlier and it
Because of the letter,
was the first time state offi- Chapman said she is asking
cials were alerted to an voter registrars to first
unusually high number of check drivers' licenses
requests.
whenever possible.
· "At . this point today. I
Gary Bartlett, director of
would dispute those · fig- North+arolina 's State Board
ures," Simms said · in a of Elections, said the Social
phone interview. .
Security Administration was
By Monday's deadline , questioning why the state
Georgia registered just over has had almost 400 ,000
406,000 new voters this social security validations
year for the Nov. 4 election, for the year. But the state
said Matt Carrothers ; a also has had some 700,000
spokesman . for Georgia voter registrations ahead of

Friday's deadline .
While drivers' license are
used to verify many voters,
said
North
Bartlett
Carolina's large military
and college communities
could be registering with
out-of-state licenses. He
said others may have used
social security numbers as
the easiest to remember.
Under the Help America
Vote Act of 2002. many
states have an agreement
with the Social Security
Administration requiring
them to submit the last four
digits of a new voter's
social security number for
verification if the person
does not have a valid stateissued ID such as a license.
"Rest assured, we think
this is just absolutely offbase," Bartlett said.
Astrue wants the six states
that received the letters to
make sure their officials are
verifying only those new voters who don't have acceptable state-issued identification , in line. with their agreements with the agency, Social
Security
Administration
spokesman Mark Lassiter
said Tuesday by phone.

'

Health from Page At.
the institutions themselves
in the local. economy,
salaries of doctors, nurses,
and maintenance staff
employed by health-related
institutions.
Indirect impacts refer to
second round expenditures
made by health-related
institutions from other sectors within the local econo- my. For example, indirect
impacts can include food
purchased locally for a hospital's cafeteria or office.
supplies purchased locally
for a doctor's office.
Induced impacts refer to
the increased sales of goods
and services in the local
economy dt,te to the health
sector e .: .~loyees living and
working in the county. These
impacts, in turn, positivel,Y
affect other sectors and the1r
emplpyees, who then create
further impacts on additional
sectors, according to the
ODH and OU Voinovich
School release.
To the extent that these
second round expenditures
occur in the same area or
local economy as the original jobs, they se,rve to
enhance the econotruc wellbeing of that area and should ·
be included-when measuring
· the economic benefits of
rural health facilities.
Another way of expressing this concept is that a
dollar spent in any sector of
a local economy will generate additional dollars iri
other sectors. For example,
· a health care worker in
Meigs County purchases
clothes for his or per family
at the local· clothing store,
generating. income for the
stpre 's owner.
The owner .saves sorne of
this money and spends the '
rest, thereby providing
income for another local
resident. The third person
saves part of this money and
,spends the rest,· which

becomes income for a
fourth person , and so forth.
The sum of the total direct,
indirect, and
induced
income is the total income
generated in the local economy by the health sector.
Employment functions in
much the same manner, and
hence employment in health
settings results in additional
employment in the remainder of the local economy. ·
The total impact of the
health sector on the local
economy .can be calculated
using an economic model
known as a "multiplier".
The multiplier expresses the
number of additional jobs or
amou·nt
of
additional
income created by each job
or each dollar earned in the
health .sector.
Employment and income
data were obtained from
IMPLAN , which bases its
data on the Bureau of Labor
Statistics' Quarterly Census
of Employment and Wages
(ES-202) and the Bureau of
Economic
Analysis'
Regional ·
Economic
Information System (REIS).
Retail sales estimates
apply to reiail purchases
made within Meigs County
by persons employed directly and indirectly in the
health sector. These esti. mates are derived from data
from the Ohio Department
of Taxation.
Total Economic Impact
Findings from Meigs
County's latest statistics
show the following:
• The latest statistics show
.the health sector in Meigs
County directly employing
492 people, and directly
generating a total payroll of
$14.7 million.
• In tertns of employment,
·the main contributor within
the health .sector was nursing
and residential care which
employed 242 persons.
• In tenns of income. the

D1Nct Health C1nt Employmlnt In llllp CoulltJ

Nu..lng&amp;

Rroliler&amp;t

c..

41.1%

7.2%

Toll! Economic lmpiCt
Emplopd

0

llulll~llr

lncame Mutllplu Tolllllml*l

Tcallml*t
0

0

0

1.14 ,

8,488

. 1,499

15

8, 115.

1.13

8.908

1,1102'

.31'

621

1.13

5811

138

1

1.20

3

1011

1.11

118

27

0

53

1.21

. 114

1,8811

1.13

2,127

?483

5

15

1.20

11

382

1.24

4114

112

1

us ·

1&amp;1

5,tl&amp;ll

NutPIQ l!ld Nlilllntlll an

242

1.18

280

Haml hulh ... Hl'f1cea

38

1.08

3

l'hlnM!alllllld drug .....

Ollllf -II!Oiy .........

TOIII Mlige County

Economy
........ Sedor • • ~ ol Mligs
County ECOIICIIIIy

main contributor within the
health· sector was nursing
and · residential care, with
earnings of $6.1 million.
• The combined direct,
indirect, and induced impact
of the health sector in Meigs
County was 586 jobs and
$16.7 million in earned
income in 2006.
• The direct, ·indirect, and
induced sales income generated by the health sector
amounted to $3.9 million.
The I .00 percent sale tax
that was retained by the
county resulted in a $39,000

CountY

llleeTIIX

0

145

---Talll Hlllllllector
- - - --·-

.....

" 11*1

0

0.00

lla1plall .
OlllcN ol pltyllcUnl, deilliltl,
llld ather ....... '"'' II lui'...

DenllllorbooiiO&lt;lll

. _ (sn.-ndll

lnccime {$TIIC't•r Mil) .

Emplorment

0.00

- - - · - see
1.14
- ----·
· -----1.11- - - -14,111

---~---

18.701----··-·

5.ezt

5,ezt

128,838

12&amp;,838

8.7%

10.4~

1U~

13.1nlo

contribution to the economy. employment and 13.0% per• In 2006, the health sec- cent for income .
These Meigs County findtor was directly responsible
for 8.7% of the county's ings show the economic benemployment and 11.4% per- efit of the employment and
cent of its . payroll. · income provided by the
Moreover, the combined health sector. The more health
.direct, indirect, and induced services that are provided in
impact of the health sector Meigs County, the greater the
was even ' greater, with . the share of these revenues is capmultiplier effect increasing tured and re-circulated within
these figures to 10.4% for the local economy. The ODH

•

18

- - -·

-3,872
- - - - 311
-

and Voinovich report demonstrates the importarice of the
health sector in Meigs County
and this sector's contributions
to the local economy.
In addition to providing a
"snapshot" of the current
contributions the report also
indicates the economic
development potential of
adding new health services
in Meigs County.

Permitted·rrom·Page Al
feet in diameter. There wiil from the Ohio Department
be a "clean coal pile" on the of Transportation to conactual mine site on struct .a covered conveyor
'Vellowbush Road. The coal over Ohio 124.
Residents will also notice
js then placed onto the conveyor which will CI'()SS O~io ponds, diversion ditches
124 to reach the Mergs .Pomt · and top soil piles at the site.
The law allows residents·
l:lock facility and eventually
the barges : Gatling had who oppose the permit the
already .received consent ·chance to appeal the decision

30 days from the date the
permit was issued. A letter
opposing or appealing ·the
decision must be sent to the
Ohio
Rectamation
·Commission and John
Husted, chief of the Ohio
Division · of
Mineral
Resources
Management
within the30 day time frame .

·

Garne. The event is an annu- viding the fire department .
al fundraiser for the associa- approves the date. The auxtion's holiday promotions. It iliary will se~e refreshwill be held · at the . ments. Doors open at 5 P,.m.,
Middleport firehouse, pro- and the game begins at 6.

. h • discrimination .

. . h . uolily health care w•t OU•

l'nl&gt;i4ing accm to ~·:~:;~h ~ond Avenue

.

Middleport, Ohio 45760
740-992-0540 .

•

·FestivitieSfiomPageAt
chicken and noodles for the
. 'September luncheon. The
luncheon sold out shortly
after noon.
'
' The October lunch will
'include chili and potato
'soup, sandwiches and
desserts. The cost is $5.
Sue Stone, who presided
'at the meeting in the absence
&lt;Of President Brenda Phalin,
·said Some have asked that
the lunches continue into the
winter months, but no plans
for extending them have
.'bten made .
• The association set a· pre.liminary date of Nqv. 18 for
Jts aututn!) Bear Basket

OPEN HOUSE
THURSDAY, OCTOBER 16,2008
I :OOPM.- 4:00 Pjf.

·

· · s as we
.
. d and roud to invite you to JOin u
Family Healthcare. lnc . as pleaseest Ioc~tion in Middleport . .
I
celebrate our new
vie will have a very rnforma
2008
OnTbursday, tober 16H,
r'rom t·OO p.m. to 4:00p.m.
.. Open ouse
·
ff .
·
"meet and greet
..
d introduction of our sta
v·ded .
There will be a facrhty tour an .
.
Light refreshments w•ll be p;o~ 992-0~40 or
S V p t Wanda Edwards at
.
Please ~i-a ~~~i~ at cheertigerrose@yahoo .com
.
.
O
.
c

"'IJe ~ ~.-'It
leJ/et6k~~
-~41uf·

t.

'
\

•

•
•

�'fhe Daily Sentinel

PageA6.

AROUND THE WORLD

Wednesday, October 8,

2008

Iraq's FM: 'Bold' decisions needed on bases deal
The Iranians hammered Maliki insisted he wanted a
BY ROBERT H. REID
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER
home their objections dur- security agreement with the
ing 1alks in Tehran with United States bm was fac. BAGHDAD - The Iraqi ·
Iraqi parliament speaker ing pressure "from east and ·
foreign
minisler
said
Mahmoud al-Mashhadandi. west and north and south." '
"Bul we are detennine.d to•
Tuesday it will require
a Sunni.
"~ld political decisions" to
'Today, the duty of the ri ~ ~ above all these difficut- :
resolve the major issue
Iraqi government and nalion ties and pressures because.
standing in the way of a deal
is to resist lhe extravagance we wa11t this agreement to be'
~llowin!l American troops
of the occupiers." Iranian passed : · al-Maliki said.
to remam here nexl year state television quoted "And we w1ll go ahead~
who would try U.S . troops
Ahmadinejad as telling the despile all that is being said."
It is unclear wbat would
lJCCUsed of crimes .
Iraqi official.
. Neighboring Iran stepped •
The report also quoted happen if the talks fail or
up pressure against the proIran 's influential parliament parliament rejects lhe agreeposed agreement, with ·
speaker Ali Larijani as say- ment. The U.S. could ask .
President
Mahmoud
ing lhe proposed agreement the U.N . Security Council
Ahrnedinejad telling ·a visitwould have many "unpleas- to renew lhe mandate. But
ing Iraqi official that Iraq
ant impacts" on Iraq and al-Maliki said his government would oppose another.
had "a duty" to resist . the
regional countries.
Ameri'cans and another
"The Iraqi people won't U.N. resolution because ·it
Iranian leader warning of
be deceived by propaganda would .infringe ·on Iraqi sov-•
·
. •
11nspecified consequences
and the psychological war- ereignty.
Zebari also said the Iraqi
throughout the region .
fare launched by the U.S.
. American and Iraqi ne~o­
and its allies to pressure the government was committed:
liators have been workmg
Iraqi
government
to to an "honorable agree-·
for months to hammer out .
approve the security deal ," ment" and that Iraqi offi-•
'
~~
an agreement governing the US Deputy Secretary of State John Negroponte speaks during a jq,int news conference Gen. Masoud JaLayeri. cials were keenly aware of, ,
operations of U.S. forces in with Iraqi Foreign Minister Hoshyar Zebari, right, inside the heavily fortified Green Zone in deputy chief of staff al lhe lhe ongoing security threats
Ibis country after the current Baghdad, Iraq. Tuesday.
Iranian armedforces , said in despite a sharp decline in ·
U.N. mandate expires at the
violence since last year.
a statement,
"I think every Iraqi offi-,
e.nd of the year.
He gave no details and cau- from the poinl of view of with close links to Shiite"Undoubtedly, 'the Iraqi
cials
is aware of the conse-!
Iraqi officials say the lioned that the government their own national self- dominated Iran.
leaders are careful of any
draft calls for U.S. troops had not accepted them.
interest."
An official of one of the · mischief in this regard and quences of any reversal of•
to leave the country by the . "I don't want to give you
The deal
must be Sunni parliamentary blocs, won'\ allow Iraqi history to the present achievement•
end of. 20 II unless the any false hope about where approved by parliament, Hamid al-Mutlaq, said no be stained With such .a dis- lhat has been won - hard:
l'!aghdad government asks we are, but I think we are and Iraqi officials . fear meaningful' agreement was grace." he added.
won - by the sacrifices of:
very . close," he told opposition unless the agree- possible "between .an
tbem to stay.
In an interview lasl week the multinational forces,
. But legal immunity for reporters ar a press confer- ment satisfies Iraqi nation- occupied country and the with The Associated Press , and by the Iraqi security•
U.S. soldiers under Iraqi ence with U.S. Deputy 'alists and Shiite politicians occupier."
:
Prime Minister · Nouri al - forces." he said.
law has emerged as the Secretary of State John
major obstacle, with neither Negroponte.
Zebari said the immunity
side able to find language to
Salisfy the other.
issue "needs, I think, some
The U.S. wants the exclu- bold political decisions.
slve right to prosecute sol- And we are at that stage."
diers accused of crimes. The
"And that's why I sug(raqis want some form of gested that soon you and!
I~ gal
jurisdiction over . your colleagues wi II see
American soldiers as an hectic political meetings
affirmation of national sov- here. in Baghdad on this
ereignty.
issue to determine the fate
Foreign Minister Hoshyar of the' agreement."
Zebari said the Americans
Negroponte refused to
had submitted new ,ideas . discuss details of the talks,
and language that "could be saying only that "both counacceptable or reasonable:" tries are pursuing this Issue

food stores

700 WEST MAIN STREET • POMEROY OH

Beef Bottom
Round Roast
,

PRODUCTS®
"12 Packs .

$

$2.591b

AP photo

Nepal's new Kumari, or living goddess Mateena Shakya, 4~
is greeted by the crowd, as she is taken to Kumari house,
in Katmandu, Nepal, Tuesday.

for

Nepal appoints
~ew living goddess

'

As a final test, the living
goddess must spend a night
alone in a room among the
KATMANDU, Nepal heads of ritually slaughtered
Hindu and Buddhist priests goats and buffaloes without
~hanted sacred hymns and showing fear:
¢ascaded flowers and grains · Having passed . all the
(If rice over a 3-year-old girl tests, the child will stay in
who was appointed a living almost complete isolation at
i_oddess in Nepal on the temple, and will be
1uesday.
·
allowed to return to her
· Wrapped in red silk and family only at the onset of
adorned with red flowers in menstruation when a new
Iter hair, Matani Shakya goddess will be named to
teceived approval from the replace her.
priests and President Ram
"l feel a bit sad, but since
l3aran Yadav in a centuries- my child has become a liv9ld tradition with deep ties ing goddess I ieel proudi'
\0 Nepal's monarchy, which said her father Pratap Man
was abolished in May.
Shal&lt;ya.
·
: The new "kumari" or livMatani Shakya replaces
ing goddess , ·was carried Sajani Shakya, who sparked
from her parents· home to a public debate about the
$II ancient palatial temple in role of the goddesses.
· ' the heart of the Nepali capiSajaili was temporarily
tal, Katmandu, where she • stripped of her revered stay;ill Jive until she reaches . tus in July last year when
puberty and loses her divine she traveled to the United
States to promote . a docustatus.
: She will be worsh:pped mentary about the living
by Hindus and .Buddhists as goddesses.
•
~ incarnation .o f the powerOfficials removed her title
.fuLHindu deity Taleju .
while she was overseas
; A panel of judges con - because tradition bars living
dueled a series of ancient goddesses from leavil)g the
~eremonies to selec1 the homeland. Popular support
goddess from several 2- to for Sajani apparently forced
4-year-old girls who are all lhem to reverse the decision
lnembers of the impover- and reinstate her. On return
ished Shakya goldsmith to Nepal, Sajani was niet by ·
caste.
hundreds of supporters and
·.; The judges read the can- followers.
Clidates ' horoscopes and
She was retired in March
~heck each one for physical at the age of II, nearly a
imperfections . .The living year afler the controversy.
zoddess must have perfect Priests said her· .retirement
hair, eyes. teeth and skin had nothing · to do . ~ith it
with no scars, and should and was because she had
not be afraid of the dark.
"come of age."
,,

BY YUVRAJ

The Daily Sentinel

Wedpesday, October 8,

Bv LIND8EY TANNER

In this Feb. 3, 2001
file photo, a hedge·
hog curls up in the
hands of its owner
at a hedgehog club
exhibit in
Anchorage, Alaska.
Hedgehogs can be
dangerous for
young children
because their quills .
can penetrate skin
and have been
known to spread a
bacteria germ that
can cause fever,
stomach pain and
a rash, according
to the American
Academy of
Pediatrics in a new
report about dangers from exotic
·animals.

AP'MEOICAL WRITER

2008

Task force: Colon cancer
screenings can stop at 75

Colonoscopy is considered the gold standard but it
is not perfect. A long. thin
PHILADELPHIA
tube with a small video
Most people over 75 should camera is snaked througli
stop gettmg routine colon the large intestine to view
cancer tests, according to a the lining and any growths
·
government heal til task force are removed . ·
that also rejected the latest
The task force 's stance on
X-ray screening t~chnology. CT colonography and the·
The U.S. Preventive stool DNA tesl is contrary to
Services Task Force - in a recent
recommendation~!'
break with other medical from the American Cancer
and cancer organizations ..:... Society, as well as radiology
opted not to give its stamp and gastroenterology groups
of approval to the newest that say the newer tests are
· tests: CT colonography, an effective and could encourX-ray test known as VIrtual age people scared of colona-:
colonoscopy, and a stool · scopies to get checked ou~:
DNA test. The panel said Onlv about half of those whomore research is needed.
need screening have it done.'
The task force for the first
The stool DNA test "·ha.s
- time did endorse three tests potential but it's an evolv. and said everyone age 50 to ing technology." LeFevre
AP photo
75 should get screened with said. "It's also likely to have·
one of them:
a very high cost."
Hedgehogs can be dan- kinds of exotic pets are on
thought to stem from con• a colonoscopy of the
Also in Tuesday's jouma~
tact with lizards, turtles and gerous because their quills the rise, although generally entire colon every 10 years are the results of a study that
other reptiles, Pickering can penetrate skin ·and have fewer than 2 percent of
·• a sigmoidoscopy of the found a newer version of
said. Hamsters ·also can been known to spread a bac- households own them.
lower
colon every 5 years, . the DNA test was better
The veterinarian ·group's combined
carry this germ, which can teria genn that can cause
with a stool blood than an older version or 'a
cause severe diarrhea, fever fever, stoni!!I~pain and a Mike Dutton, a Weare, test every three years
stool blood test in finding
N.H., exotic animal specialrash, the report said.
and stomach cramps.
• a stool blood test every cases of cancer.
'
Salmonella also has been . With sur.ervision and pre- ist, said the recommenda- year
For virtual colonoscopy;
found in baby chicks, and cautions 'hke hand-washmg, tions send an important
After reviewing research the task force expressed con~
young children can get it contact between children message to parents . who on the tests; the · govern' cems about radiation exp&lt;r
by kissing m' touching the and animals "is a good · sometimes buy exotic pets ment-appointed panel of sure a patient would receive'
animals and then putting thing,'' Bocchini said. But on an impulse; "then they independent
medical every five years from it, but
their hands in their mouths, families should wait until ask questions, sometimes experts concluded that the acknowledged that the level
children are older before many months later."
he said.
· benefits of detecting and is relatively low compared tci
But a spokesman for the treating
Study ·co-author Dr. .bringing home an exotic
colon
cancer other kinds of X-rays. They'
International
Hedgehog decline after age 75 and the also worry that it will pick·
Joseph Bocchini said he pet, he said.
Those who already have Association said there's no risks rise. Colonoscopy up blips inside and outside
recently treated an infant
these
pets should contact reason to single out hedge- complications can include the colon that end up being
who got salmonella from the
family's pet iguana, which their veterinarians about hogs or other exotic pets.
infection, perforated colon nothing - but lead to more
"Our recommendation is and reactions to sedatives.
was allowed to roam freely specific risks and possible
follow-up tests.
in the home. The child was new homes for the animals, that no animal should be a
A member of the
Doctors may decide t.o
pet for kids 5 . and under," continue screening those American
·
hospitalized for four weeks he said.
College
of .
Data cited in the- study saidZ.G. Standing Bear: He between 76 and 85 because · Radiology Colon Cancer
but has ··recovered, said
Bocchini, head of the acade- indicate that about 4 million runs a rescue operation near of the patient's medical his- Commiltee said it was "sur''
my's infectious diseases U.S. households have pet Pikes Peak. Colo., for aban- tory and risk factors but prising and unfortunate thar
committee and pediatrics reptiles. According to the doned hedgehogs, which there's very little reason to such a well respected group
Veterinary became fad pets about 10 routinely test · anyone older would not come out and
chairman at Louis1ana State American
Medical Association, all years ago.
University in Shreveport.
than 85, according to the endorse CT colonography.'.' ·
guidelines published in . "The science is behind us
Tuesday's
Annals
of that it works and it works
Internal Medicine.
well," said Dr. Judy Yee of
"The risks of screenin$ at the University of California,
sioner. "There is no evi- president of the Consumer lies spend at least $287 mil- that age are too great to JUS- San Francisco, who has
Bv RICARDO
in
virtual
dence that these products Healthcare
Products lion a year on cold remedies tify any possible benefit,'' involved
ALONso-ZALDIVAR
said
in for kids, according to satd Dr. Michael LeFevre, a colohoscopy research. ''The:
work in kids, and there is Association,
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER
definitely evidence of seri- announcing the changes on ·Nielsen Co. statistics that do task force member ftom the go~ is to get more Americans•
' WASHINGTON -Don't ous side effects."
behalf of the companies. not include Wai-Mart sales. University of . Missouri screened, and this is counter:.
productive to that goal." · ~
give over-the-counter cold
Problems with over-the- "The vast majority of the
Herrera, the Baltimore School of Medicine.
The new advice updates
The task force's guide.remedies to kids under 4, counter cough and cold serious ·adverse"events are family doctor, said kids
drug
companies
said medicines send some 7,000 in 2- to 3-year-olds. They with colds usually get better 2002 guidelines that did not lines could affect wheth«;r
TUesday. What sniffling lit· children to hospital emer- are the ones who get into the in a few days. Coughs and ~ive an age limit for screen- insurers and Medicari
tie ones need, doctors said, gency rooms each .year, · products by being curious sniffles can be distressing, m~.ThetaskforceinAugust decide to pay for the tesi,
but they are also a sign that satd men over 75 should not Yee said. The cost of virtual'
are plenty of fluids a11d Jots with symptoms including toddlers."
of tender, loving care.
· hives, drowsiness and • Sen. Christopher Dodd, tht; body is doing its work. · be screened for prostate can- colonoscopy can vary wide!~
"The best thing a parent unsteady walking. Many D-Conn., · an advocate for
Parents may want to give cer; it didn't recommend for ly bUt it's generally muclt
can do is comfort their chil· kids overdose by taking children's health care, said Tylenol or Motrin if a child or against prostate screening cheaper than a traditional
colonoscopy, which can rwr
dren," said Dr. Laura medicines when their par- he will continue to press the is running a fever of !OJ of men under 75. ·
Colon
cancer
is
the
counseveral thousand dollars. tf
Herrera, a .Baltimore f~mily _ents aren't looking.
FDA to ban the drugs for degrees or higher, Herrera
practitioner and mother of
"The 2- and 3-year-olds children under 6. Outside said .. Sniffles can be cleaned try's second leading cancer growths are found in a vi~.
Nearly
50,000 tual colonoscopy, a trad1~
two. "Keeping .them as are definitely the . highest advisers made that recom- up with tissues or gently killer.
Americans
are
expected
to tiona! colonoscopy is need
comfortable as possible is · risk,". said Sharfstein. mendation to the agency a suctioned if kids are too
certainly better than ~iving "More· than 50 percent of year ago.
young to blow their noses. die of colorectal cancer thi.s to remove them.
The task force will revieW'
cough and cold medic1i1es." the problem is with these · "While I'm pleased to see And children should be year. Screening to spot early
In a concession to -pedia- kids. If they don't have this that the drug companies are watched for any signs of cancer or precancerous its recommendations in five'
tricians, who doubt the stuff around the home, voluntarily taking some trouble · breathing, which growths has resulted in years and may make
drugs do much good for they're less likely to grab it steps to ensure the safety and could signal more serious fewer deaths over the last changes if more research
.two decades.
emerges, LeFevre said.
children and worry about and ingest it."
well being of our children, I problems.
risks, the companies that
The new advice could ere- am. disappointed that the
make
over-the-counter ate its own kind of quandary. FDA .has not ~Bowed the
remedies like Dimetapp and For example, what to do in a recommendations of its own
Pediacare announced they family with a 3-year-old and advisory panel," Dodd said.
had changed their advice to a 6-year-old?
' Dr. Janet Woodcock, . a
parents for the second cold
Dr. Herrera said parents senior · FDA official, said
The Public Utilities Commlaaion of Ohio hes SCI1eduled local hearings in Case Nos, 08-917season in a row.
should resist the urge to restricting use of the mediEL.SSO and 08-91&amp;-EL.SSO, In the Matter of ths Application of Columbus Southern Power
Besides recommendin~· give the medications . to the cines to children .over 4
·
d'
·
older
child.
"They
feel
like
makes
sense
as
an
interim
Company snd Otilo Power Compsny for Approval of Their Elecllic Security Plans. In their
against cold me tcmes o
drugstore and grocery !hay're doing !!Oo&lt;! by giv- step, while the agency conrespective applications, Columbus Southern Power Company and Ohio Power Company
shelves, the companies say ing these rned1ca!lons, but tinues to study the risks and
seek Commission appl1lval of an alecllic security plan fled pursuant 10 Am. Sub. Senate Bill
·
·
not to give antih1stammes
to in some cases th.ey could be benefits in children underd
221, which wes signed Into taw oa May 1, 2008. The bill requires electric utilities to establish
kids to help them sleep. The doing more harm t~an ·12. It's a process that coul
·
take years,.
new instructions are on good," she saiq.
a standard service ot1er and, as part of that process, to file an application for approval of an
·
Herrera has a 6-year-old
"This was .a logical cuteledric security plan. Acoording 10 1he applications, Columbus Southern Power Company's
packages that started hittmg daughter and 7-year:old off," said Woodcock,
stores this week.
arid Ohio Power Company's eleclric security plans would imit tile increases in customer
·Last year, the industry son, and neither of them adding, "It was some'o'{hat
ratlls for generation and distribution charges lo epproxlmately 15 pen:ent per year lor each
went against cough and. cold have gotten cold remedies. of a judgment call." She
The drug makers said · said government officials
of the years 2009, 2010 1111d 2011. In addition, the applications propose investment in capital
medicines for children they are also introducing fear that taking the medi- ·
h~oven l8lll8 for lla companies' energy delivaty systems, e~y efticiancy initiatives,
under 2. The latest changes neW dispensers to help par- cines off the ·Shelves' might
. · aa wellaa ecooomic development and job retention programs and for Columbus Southern
c11me after discussio~s ents make sure they give the prompt parents to give 'their
between drug compani s right amount of medicines,. children adult medicines
Power Company's transfer of generation assets.
and the Food and Drug and not too much. The -instead.
Tlie local hear1ilga .,a acheduled for the puqioS8 of providing an oppOrtunity for interested
Administration. The talks industry · is expanding a
~acting cough -and cold
were kept quiet for months . nationwide
educational brands include Dimetapp,
members of the public 1o llstify In this proceeding. The local hearings will be held as follows:
as federal health officials campaign aimed at getting Pediacare,
Robitussin,
(a) Tuesday, October 14, 2008. at 6:30 p.m., at washington State Community College, Arts
debated how. to rc;:spond to a parents to be more careful.
Triaminic, Little Colds and
· pediatricians' petltto_n seek- . "We are doing this volun-· versions of Tylenol that
&amp;Science BuHding, Harvey Grahlm Auditorium, 710 COlegate Drive, M81iette, Ohio
uig to. ban the med1callot:'s
'I
t f
b dlln
h
·
d · t t t at
'or kids. under 6. . At.a pubhc tan Y ou o ~ a un ce
ave mgre 1en s o re.
45750.
1'
of caution," Ltn.da Suydam, cold symptoms. U.S. famlhearing IB$t week, neither
(b) Thlnday, Oc;lober 16, 2008, at 6:30 p.m., at Glenwood Middle School, Aud~orium, 1015
illdustry officials ~or regu- .
lators gave any hmt of 1111
44111 S1reet N.W., Canton, Ohio 44709.
impending announcement.
Cough and cold products
(c) ~· October 20.' 2008, at 6:30 p.m., at Lima Senior High School, 1 Spartan Way,
have been given to children
Uma, Ohio 45801.
for decades, but it turns out
Klde 12..UnderF,.• vvlth Pa,..nt.
'
the medicines were never
General Admlealon S1• • Pita •30
(d) Tuesday, October21, 2008. at 12:30 p.m., at the offices of the Commission, 180 East
ar.
Cltla.n•
juet
110
wtth
Golden
Buok~e
Card
scientifically tested to see
O.n•NI Admleelon Onlyl
Broad Slretl, Haar'o1g Room 11-C. Columbus. Ohio 43215.
.,
' · ••
how well they work in kids.
.
And recent research has ··
. · •:aoo ~ . Shirl
(e) Monday, Oc:lober 21, 2008. at 6:30. p.m., at Whetstone Pari&lt; of ~oses Shelter House,
found some untoward side
£ate .,.,,.,.
·
$'175 to Start
effects, mostly stemming
3901 N. High Slnlllt, Columbus, Ohio 43214_
-lllodi,J.:I u,_ ... ~.,.. Sttx;lfe
from accidental overdoses.
..fi'IND 4-Cyllnct.r. -St,..., S'focb
Tlte~helringwillcommem:eon Nov~ 17, 2008,at 10:00 a.m., attlleoftices
Pediatricians who support
·fllllnUW~
'•''
No lf.clnfl Oct.18 due to OTWC
of the Com;rdtlon, Hearing Room 11-C, 180 East Broad Street, Columbus, Ohio 4321 S.
a ban for ·kids under 6
M ·K -·C R•c•w•yl
nonetheles&amp; said they were
llf411Ce _ , . , . DTWC
Further Information may.lle obtained by contacting lhe Public Utilities Commission of Ohio,
Octobel' 21!1
pleased with ... the industry
180 East Brold Slreet.. Columbus, Ohio 4321!i:J793, viewing the Commission's web page at
announcement.
hltp://www.puco.ohlo.gov, or oontacting lhe CommiSiion's holline at 1-800-686-7826
"It's ahuge step forward,'~
said Dr. Joshua Sharfstein,
Baltimore's health commis-

CIDCAGO - Warning:
young ,.children should not
keep liedgehogs as pets or hamsters, baby chicks,
lizards and turtles, for that
matter - because of risks
for disease. ·
Thai's according to the
nation's leading pediatri- ·
cians' group in a new report
about dang,ers from exotic
animals.
Besil)es evjdence that they
can carry dangerous and
sometimes potentially deadly germs, exotic pets may be
more p1'9ne than cats and
dogs to bite, scratch or claw
- putting children younger
. than 5 particularly at risk,
the report says ..
Young children are vu 1nerable because ofdevelop. · ing iminune systems plus
they often put their hands in
the1r mouths.
That means families with
children younger than 5
should avoid owning "non. traditional" pets. Also, kids
that young should avoid ·
contact with these animals
in petting zoos or other pub·
· lie places, according to the
report from the American
Academy of Pediatrics. The
report appears in ·the
October edition of the
group's medical journal,
Pediatrics.
·
"Many parents clearly
don't understand the risks
from various infections"
these animals often carry,
said Dr. Larry Pickering, the
report's lead author and an
infectious disease specialist
at the federal Centers for
Disease
Coptrol
and
Prevention.
For example, about 11
percent of salmonella illnesses in children are

BY JOANN LOVIGLIO

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

Drug·companies: No cold medicines for kids under 4

been

LEGAL NOTICE

ACHARVA

ASSOCIATED PRESS WAil:ER

•

·pageA7

Washington State
· .NASCAR

G~ld

$3 99
.

·

Ye!IOw$
On1ons· •

or
· • .
·Gala Apples
- - - - these special buys available while supplies last
Betty Crocker

1 29

Hamburger
Helper
5.8oz pkg

99¢

Stouffer's
Frozen
Dinners
11·12ozbox

2JS4

rimo
Bratwurst or
Eggo .
Italian Sausage
Waffles ·
19.76 oz pkg
9.9 ·12.3 oz box

Pringles

Potato
Crisps

5.7 • 6 oz can

$2.99

99¢

Everyday!

General Ills

Cereal ·
10.7 ·12 oz box

CO/Iiii!~~G~~:.!

HJ.-..Jenf.,.

51.79

· Kraft
VeiYHta Shtll1 ·
&amp;Cheddar or

Power Cycle
Liquid Laundry
Detergent .

&amp;Chee1e

41 ·50 loads

Dtluxe . .ronl
12 -14 oz pkg,

2/54

3/55

•

..

s2.99

.•, .....,........ -,..,

•.aoe ,. ,.,,

'

...

:J

I

.l

I

1

.

,.

•'
I

•J

!

'

...

�'fhe Daily Sentinel

PageA6.

AROUND THE WORLD

Wednesday, October 8,

2008

Iraq's FM: 'Bold' decisions needed on bases deal
The Iranians hammered Maliki insisted he wanted a
BY ROBERT H. REID
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER
home their objections dur- security agreement with the
ing 1alks in Tehran with United States bm was fac. BAGHDAD - The Iraqi ·
Iraqi parliament speaker ing pressure "from east and ·
foreign
minisler
said
Mahmoud al-Mashhadandi. west and north and south." '
"Bul we are detennine.d to•
Tuesday it will require
a Sunni.
"~ld political decisions" to
'Today, the duty of the ri ~ ~ above all these difficut- :
resolve the major issue
Iraqi government and nalion ties and pressures because.
standing in the way of a deal
is to resist lhe extravagance we wa11t this agreement to be'
~llowin!l American troops
of the occupiers." Iranian passed : · al-Maliki said.
to remam here nexl year state television quoted "And we w1ll go ahead~
who would try U.S . troops
Ahmadinejad as telling the despile all that is being said."
It is unclear wbat would
lJCCUsed of crimes .
Iraqi official.
. Neighboring Iran stepped •
The report also quoted happen if the talks fail or
up pressure against the proIran 's influential parliament parliament rejects lhe agreeposed agreement, with ·
speaker Ali Larijani as say- ment. The U.S. could ask .
President
Mahmoud
ing lhe proposed agreement the U.N . Security Council
Ahrnedinejad telling ·a visitwould have many "unpleas- to renew lhe mandate. But
ing Iraqi official that Iraq
ant impacts" on Iraq and al-Maliki said his government would oppose another.
had "a duty" to resist . the
regional countries.
Ameri'cans and another
"The Iraqi people won't U.N. resolution because ·it
Iranian leader warning of
be deceived by propaganda would .infringe ·on Iraqi sov-•
·
. •
11nspecified consequences
and the psychological war- ereignty.
Zebari also said the Iraqi
throughout the region .
fare launched by the U.S.
. American and Iraqi ne~o­
and its allies to pressure the government was committed:
liators have been workmg
Iraqi
government
to to an "honorable agree-·
for months to hammer out .
approve the security deal ," ment" and that Iraqi offi-•
'
~~
an agreement governing the US Deputy Secretary of State John Negroponte speaks during a jq,int news conference Gen. Masoud JaLayeri. cials were keenly aware of, ,
operations of U.S. forces in with Iraqi Foreign Minister Hoshyar Zebari, right, inside the heavily fortified Green Zone in deputy chief of staff al lhe lhe ongoing security threats
Ibis country after the current Baghdad, Iraq. Tuesday.
Iranian armedforces , said in despite a sharp decline in ·
U.N. mandate expires at the
violence since last year.
a statement,
"I think every Iraqi offi-,
e.nd of the year.
He gave no details and cau- from the poinl of view of with close links to Shiite"Undoubtedly, 'the Iraqi
cials
is aware of the conse-!
Iraqi officials say the lioned that the government their own national self- dominated Iran.
leaders are careful of any
draft calls for U.S. troops had not accepted them.
interest."
An official of one of the · mischief in this regard and quences of any reversal of•
to leave the country by the . "I don't want to give you
The deal
must be Sunni parliamentary blocs, won'\ allow Iraqi history to the present achievement•
end of. 20 II unless the any false hope about where approved by parliament, Hamid al-Mutlaq, said no be stained With such .a dis- lhat has been won - hard:
l'!aghdad government asks we are, but I think we are and Iraqi officials . fear meaningful' agreement was grace." he added.
won - by the sacrifices of:
very . close," he told opposition unless the agree- possible "between .an
tbem to stay.
In an interview lasl week the multinational forces,
. But legal immunity for reporters ar a press confer- ment satisfies Iraqi nation- occupied country and the with The Associated Press , and by the Iraqi security•
U.S. soldiers under Iraqi ence with U.S. Deputy 'alists and Shiite politicians occupier."
:
Prime Minister · Nouri al - forces." he said.
law has emerged as the Secretary of State John
major obstacle, with neither Negroponte.
Zebari said the immunity
side able to find language to
Salisfy the other.
issue "needs, I think, some
The U.S. wants the exclu- bold political decisions.
slve right to prosecute sol- And we are at that stage."
diers accused of crimes. The
"And that's why I sug(raqis want some form of gested that soon you and!
I~ gal
jurisdiction over . your colleagues wi II see
American soldiers as an hectic political meetings
affirmation of national sov- here. in Baghdad on this
ereignty.
issue to determine the fate
Foreign Minister Hoshyar of the' agreement."
Zebari said the Americans
Negroponte refused to
had submitted new ,ideas . discuss details of the talks,
and language that "could be saying only that "both counacceptable or reasonable:" tries are pursuing this Issue

food stores

700 WEST MAIN STREET • POMEROY OH

Beef Bottom
Round Roast
,

PRODUCTS®
"12 Packs .

$

$2.591b

AP photo

Nepal's new Kumari, or living goddess Mateena Shakya, 4~
is greeted by the crowd, as she is taken to Kumari house,
in Katmandu, Nepal, Tuesday.

for

Nepal appoints
~ew living goddess

'

As a final test, the living
goddess must spend a night
alone in a room among the
KATMANDU, Nepal heads of ritually slaughtered
Hindu and Buddhist priests goats and buffaloes without
~hanted sacred hymns and showing fear:
¢ascaded flowers and grains · Having passed . all the
(If rice over a 3-year-old girl tests, the child will stay in
who was appointed a living almost complete isolation at
i_oddess in Nepal on the temple, and will be
1uesday.
·
allowed to return to her
· Wrapped in red silk and family only at the onset of
adorned with red flowers in menstruation when a new
Iter hair, Matani Shakya goddess will be named to
teceived approval from the replace her.
priests and President Ram
"l feel a bit sad, but since
l3aran Yadav in a centuries- my child has become a liv9ld tradition with deep ties ing goddess I ieel proudi'
\0 Nepal's monarchy, which said her father Pratap Man
was abolished in May.
Shal&lt;ya.
·
: The new "kumari" or livMatani Shakya replaces
ing goddess , ·was carried Sajani Shakya, who sparked
from her parents· home to a public debate about the
$II ancient palatial temple in role of the goddesses.
· ' the heart of the Nepali capiSajaili was temporarily
tal, Katmandu, where she • stripped of her revered stay;ill Jive until she reaches . tus in July last year when
puberty and loses her divine she traveled to the United
States to promote . a docustatus.
: She will be worsh:pped mentary about the living
by Hindus and .Buddhists as goddesses.
•
~ incarnation .o f the powerOfficials removed her title
.fuLHindu deity Taleju .
while she was overseas
; A panel of judges con - because tradition bars living
dueled a series of ancient goddesses from leavil)g the
~eremonies to selec1 the homeland. Popular support
goddess from several 2- to for Sajani apparently forced
4-year-old girls who are all lhem to reverse the decision
lnembers of the impover- and reinstate her. On return
ished Shakya goldsmith to Nepal, Sajani was niet by ·
caste.
hundreds of supporters and
·.; The judges read the can- followers.
Clidates ' horoscopes and
She was retired in March
~heck each one for physical at the age of II, nearly a
imperfections . .The living year afler the controversy.
zoddess must have perfect Priests said her· .retirement
hair, eyes. teeth and skin had nothing · to do . ~ith it
with no scars, and should and was because she had
not be afraid of the dark.
"come of age."
,,

BY YUVRAJ

The Daily Sentinel

Wedpesday, October 8,

Bv LIND8EY TANNER

In this Feb. 3, 2001
file photo, a hedge·
hog curls up in the
hands of its owner
at a hedgehog club
exhibit in
Anchorage, Alaska.
Hedgehogs can be
dangerous for
young children
because their quills .
can penetrate skin
and have been
known to spread a
bacteria germ that
can cause fever,
stomach pain and
a rash, according
to the American
Academy of
Pediatrics in a new
report about dangers from exotic
·animals.

AP'MEOICAL WRITER

2008

Task force: Colon cancer
screenings can stop at 75

Colonoscopy is considered the gold standard but it
is not perfect. A long. thin
PHILADELPHIA
tube with a small video
Most people over 75 should camera is snaked througli
stop gettmg routine colon the large intestine to view
cancer tests, according to a the lining and any growths
·
government heal til task force are removed . ·
that also rejected the latest
The task force 's stance on
X-ray screening t~chnology. CT colonography and the·
The U.S. Preventive stool DNA tesl is contrary to
Services Task Force - in a recent
recommendation~!'
break with other medical from the American Cancer
and cancer organizations ..:... Society, as well as radiology
opted not to give its stamp and gastroenterology groups
of approval to the newest that say the newer tests are
· tests: CT colonography, an effective and could encourX-ray test known as VIrtual age people scared of colona-:
colonoscopy, and a stool · scopies to get checked ou~:
DNA test. The panel said Onlv about half of those whomore research is needed.
need screening have it done.'
The task force for the first
The stool DNA test "·ha.s
- time did endorse three tests potential but it's an evolv. and said everyone age 50 to ing technology." LeFevre
AP photo
75 should get screened with said. "It's also likely to have·
one of them:
a very high cost."
Hedgehogs can be dan- kinds of exotic pets are on
thought to stem from con• a colonoscopy of the
Also in Tuesday's jouma~
tact with lizards, turtles and gerous because their quills the rise, although generally entire colon every 10 years are the results of a study that
other reptiles, Pickering can penetrate skin ·and have fewer than 2 percent of
·• a sigmoidoscopy of the found a newer version of
said. Hamsters ·also can been known to spread a bac- households own them.
lower
colon every 5 years, . the DNA test was better
The veterinarian ·group's combined
carry this germ, which can teria genn that can cause
with a stool blood than an older version or 'a
cause severe diarrhea, fever fever, stoni!!I~pain and a Mike Dutton, a Weare, test every three years
stool blood test in finding
N.H., exotic animal specialrash, the report said.
and stomach cramps.
• a stool blood test every cases of cancer.
'
Salmonella also has been . With sur.ervision and pre- ist, said the recommenda- year
For virtual colonoscopy;
found in baby chicks, and cautions 'hke hand-washmg, tions send an important
After reviewing research the task force expressed con~
young children can get it contact between children message to parents . who on the tests; the · govern' cems about radiation exp&lt;r
by kissing m' touching the and animals "is a good · sometimes buy exotic pets ment-appointed panel of sure a patient would receive'
animals and then putting thing,'' Bocchini said. But on an impulse; "then they independent
medical every five years from it, but
their hands in their mouths, families should wait until ask questions, sometimes experts concluded that the acknowledged that the level
children are older before many months later."
he said.
· benefits of detecting and is relatively low compared tci
But a spokesman for the treating
Study ·co-author Dr. .bringing home an exotic
colon
cancer other kinds of X-rays. They'
International
Hedgehog decline after age 75 and the also worry that it will pick·
Joseph Bocchini said he pet, he said.
Those who already have Association said there's no risks rise. Colonoscopy up blips inside and outside
recently treated an infant
these
pets should contact reason to single out hedge- complications can include the colon that end up being
who got salmonella from the
family's pet iguana, which their veterinarians about hogs or other exotic pets.
infection, perforated colon nothing - but lead to more
"Our recommendation is and reactions to sedatives.
was allowed to roam freely specific risks and possible
follow-up tests.
in the home. The child was new homes for the animals, that no animal should be a
A member of the
Doctors may decide t.o
pet for kids 5 . and under," continue screening those American
·
hospitalized for four weeks he said.
College
of .
Data cited in the- study saidZ.G. Standing Bear: He between 76 and 85 because · Radiology Colon Cancer
but has ··recovered, said
Bocchini, head of the acade- indicate that about 4 million runs a rescue operation near of the patient's medical his- Commiltee said it was "sur''
my's infectious diseases U.S. households have pet Pikes Peak. Colo., for aban- tory and risk factors but prising and unfortunate thar
committee and pediatrics reptiles. According to the doned hedgehogs, which there's very little reason to such a well respected group
Veterinary became fad pets about 10 routinely test · anyone older would not come out and
chairman at Louis1ana State American
Medical Association, all years ago.
University in Shreveport.
than 85, according to the endorse CT colonography.'.' ·
guidelines published in . "The science is behind us
Tuesday's
Annals
of that it works and it works
Internal Medicine.
well," said Dr. Judy Yee of
"The risks of screenin$ at the University of California,
sioner. "There is no evi- president of the Consumer lies spend at least $287 mil- that age are too great to JUS- San Francisco, who has
Bv RICARDO
in
virtual
dence that these products Healthcare
Products lion a year on cold remedies tify any possible benefit,'' involved
ALONso-ZALDIVAR
said
in for kids, according to satd Dr. Michael LeFevre, a colohoscopy research. ''The:
work in kids, and there is Association,
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER
definitely evidence of seri- announcing the changes on ·Nielsen Co. statistics that do task force member ftom the go~ is to get more Americans•
' WASHINGTON -Don't ous side effects."
behalf of the companies. not include Wai-Mart sales. University of . Missouri screened, and this is counter:.
productive to that goal." · ~
give over-the-counter cold
Problems with over-the- "The vast majority of the
Herrera, the Baltimore School of Medicine.
The new advice updates
The task force's guide.remedies to kids under 4, counter cough and cold serious ·adverse"events are family doctor, said kids
drug
companies
said medicines send some 7,000 in 2- to 3-year-olds. They with colds usually get better 2002 guidelines that did not lines could affect wheth«;r
TUesday. What sniffling lit· children to hospital emer- are the ones who get into the in a few days. Coughs and ~ive an age limit for screen- insurers and Medicari
tie ones need, doctors said, gency rooms each .year, · products by being curious sniffles can be distressing, m~.ThetaskforceinAugust decide to pay for the tesi,
but they are also a sign that satd men over 75 should not Yee said. The cost of virtual'
are plenty of fluids a11d Jots with symptoms including toddlers."
of tender, loving care.
· hives, drowsiness and • Sen. Christopher Dodd, tht; body is doing its work. · be screened for prostate can- colonoscopy can vary wide!~
"The best thing a parent unsteady walking. Many D-Conn., · an advocate for
Parents may want to give cer; it didn't recommend for ly bUt it's generally muclt
can do is comfort their chil· kids overdose by taking children's health care, said Tylenol or Motrin if a child or against prostate screening cheaper than a traditional
colonoscopy, which can rwr
dren," said Dr. Laura medicines when their par- he will continue to press the is running a fever of !OJ of men under 75. ·
Colon
cancer
is
the
counseveral thousand dollars. tf
Herrera, a .Baltimore f~mily _ents aren't looking.
FDA to ban the drugs for degrees or higher, Herrera
practitioner and mother of
"The 2- and 3-year-olds children under 6. Outside said .. Sniffles can be cleaned try's second leading cancer growths are found in a vi~.
Nearly
50,000 tual colonoscopy, a trad1~
two. "Keeping .them as are definitely the . highest advisers made that recom- up with tissues or gently killer.
Americans
are
expected
to tiona! colonoscopy is need
comfortable as possible is · risk,". said Sharfstein. mendation to the agency a suctioned if kids are too
certainly better than ~iving "More· than 50 percent of year ago.
young to blow their noses. die of colorectal cancer thi.s to remove them.
The task force will revieW'
cough and cold medic1i1es." the problem is with these · "While I'm pleased to see And children should be year. Screening to spot early
In a concession to -pedia- kids. If they don't have this that the drug companies are watched for any signs of cancer or precancerous its recommendations in five'
tricians, who doubt the stuff around the home, voluntarily taking some trouble · breathing, which growths has resulted in years and may make
drugs do much good for they're less likely to grab it steps to ensure the safety and could signal more serious fewer deaths over the last changes if more research
.two decades.
emerges, LeFevre said.
children and worry about and ingest it."
well being of our children, I problems.
risks, the companies that
The new advice could ere- am. disappointed that the
make
over-the-counter ate its own kind of quandary. FDA .has not ~Bowed the
remedies like Dimetapp and For example, what to do in a recommendations of its own
Pediacare announced they family with a 3-year-old and advisory panel," Dodd said.
had changed their advice to a 6-year-old?
' Dr. Janet Woodcock, . a
parents for the second cold
Dr. Herrera said parents senior · FDA official, said
The Public Utilities Commlaaion of Ohio hes SCI1eduled local hearings in Case Nos, 08-917season in a row.
should resist the urge to restricting use of the mediEL.SSO and 08-91&amp;-EL.SSO, In the Matter of ths Application of Columbus Southern Power
Besides recommendin~· give the medications . to the cines to children .over 4
·
d'
·
older
child.
"They
feel
like
makes
sense
as
an
interim
Company snd Otilo Power Compsny for Approval of Their Elecllic Security Plans. In their
against cold me tcmes o
drugstore and grocery !hay're doing !!Oo&lt;! by giv- step, while the agency conrespective applications, Columbus Southern Power Company and Ohio Power Company
shelves, the companies say ing these rned1ca!lons, but tinues to study the risks and
seek Commission appl1lval of an alecllic security plan fled pursuant 10 Am. Sub. Senate Bill
·
·
not to give antih1stammes
to in some cases th.ey could be benefits in children underd
221, which wes signed Into taw oa May 1, 2008. The bill requires electric utilities to establish
kids to help them sleep. The doing more harm t~an ·12. It's a process that coul
·
take years,.
new instructions are on good," she saiq.
a standard service ot1er and, as part of that process, to file an application for approval of an
·
Herrera has a 6-year-old
"This was .a logical cuteledric security plan. Acoording 10 1he applications, Columbus Southern Power Company's
packages that started hittmg daughter and 7-year:old off," said Woodcock,
stores this week.
arid Ohio Power Company's eleclric security plans would imit tile increases in customer
·Last year, the industry son, and neither of them adding, "It was some'o'{hat
ratlls for generation and distribution charges lo epproxlmately 15 pen:ent per year lor each
went against cough and. cold have gotten cold remedies. of a judgment call." She
The drug makers said · said government officials
of the years 2009, 2010 1111d 2011. In addition, the applications propose investment in capital
medicines for children they are also introducing fear that taking the medi- ·
h~oven l8lll8 for lla companies' energy delivaty systems, e~y efticiancy initiatives,
under 2. The latest changes neW dispensers to help par- cines off the ·Shelves' might
. · aa wellaa ecooomic development and job retention programs and for Columbus Southern
c11me after discussio~s ents make sure they give the prompt parents to give 'their
between drug compani s right amount of medicines,. children adult medicines
Power Company's transfer of generation assets.
and the Food and Drug and not too much. The -instead.
Tlie local hear1ilga .,a acheduled for the puqioS8 of providing an oppOrtunity for interested
Administration. The talks industry · is expanding a
~acting cough -and cold
were kept quiet for months . nationwide
educational brands include Dimetapp,
members of the public 1o llstify In this proceeding. The local hearings will be held as follows:
as federal health officials campaign aimed at getting Pediacare,
Robitussin,
(a) Tuesday, October 14, 2008. at 6:30 p.m., at washington State Community College, Arts
debated how. to rc;:spond to a parents to be more careful.
Triaminic, Little Colds and
· pediatricians' petltto_n seek- . "We are doing this volun-· versions of Tylenol that
&amp;Science BuHding, Harvey Grahlm Auditorium, 710 COlegate Drive, M81iette, Ohio
uig to. ban the med1callot:'s
'I
t f
b dlln
h
·
d · t t t at
'or kids. under 6. . At.a pubhc tan Y ou o ~ a un ce
ave mgre 1en s o re.
45750.
1'
of caution," Ltn.da Suydam, cold symptoms. U.S. famlhearing IB$t week, neither
(b) Thlnday, Oc;lober 16, 2008, at 6:30 p.m., at Glenwood Middle School, Aud~orium, 1015
illdustry officials ~or regu- .
lators gave any hmt of 1111
44111 S1reet N.W., Canton, Ohio 44709.
impending announcement.
Cough and cold products
(c) ~· October 20.' 2008, at 6:30 p.m., at Lima Senior High School, 1 Spartan Way,
have been given to children
Uma, Ohio 45801.
for decades, but it turns out
Klde 12..UnderF,.• vvlth Pa,..nt.
'
the medicines were never
General Admlealon S1• • Pita •30
(d) Tuesday, October21, 2008. at 12:30 p.m., at the offices of the Commission, 180 East
ar.
Cltla.n•
juet
110
wtth
Golden
Buok~e
Card
scientifically tested to see
O.n•NI Admleelon Onlyl
Broad Slretl, Haar'o1g Room 11-C. Columbus. Ohio 43215.
.,
' · ••
how well they work in kids.
.
And recent research has ··
. · •:aoo ~ . Shirl
(e) Monday, Oc:lober 21, 2008. at 6:30. p.m., at Whetstone Pari&lt; of ~oses Shelter House,
found some untoward side
£ate .,.,,.,.
·
$'175 to Start
effects, mostly stemming
3901 N. High Slnlllt, Columbus, Ohio 43214_
-lllodi,J.:I u,_ ... ~.,.. Sttx;lfe
from accidental overdoses.
..fi'IND 4-Cyllnct.r. -St,..., S'focb
Tlte~helringwillcommem:eon Nov~ 17, 2008,at 10:00 a.m., attlleoftices
Pediatricians who support
·fllllnUW~
'•''
No lf.clnfl Oct.18 due to OTWC
of the Com;rdtlon, Hearing Room 11-C, 180 East Broad Street, Columbus, Ohio 4321 S.
a ban for ·kids under 6
M ·K -·C R•c•w•yl
nonetheles&amp; said they were
llf411Ce _ , . , . DTWC
Further Information may.lle obtained by contacting lhe Public Utilities Commission of Ohio,
Octobel' 21!1
pleased with ... the industry
180 East Brold Slreet.. Columbus, Ohio 4321!i:J793, viewing the Commission's web page at
announcement.
hltp://www.puco.ohlo.gov, or oontacting lhe CommiSiion's holline at 1-800-686-7826
"It's ahuge step forward,'~
said Dr. Joshua Sharfstein,
Baltimore's health commis-

CIDCAGO - Warning:
young ,.children should not
keep liedgehogs as pets or hamsters, baby chicks,
lizards and turtles, for that
matter - because of risks
for disease. ·
Thai's according to the
nation's leading pediatri- ·
cians' group in a new report
about dang,ers from exotic
animals.
Besil)es evjdence that they
can carry dangerous and
sometimes potentially deadly germs, exotic pets may be
more p1'9ne than cats and
dogs to bite, scratch or claw
- putting children younger
. than 5 particularly at risk,
the report says ..
Young children are vu 1nerable because ofdevelop. · ing iminune systems plus
they often put their hands in
the1r mouths.
That means families with
children younger than 5
should avoid owning "non. traditional" pets. Also, kids
that young should avoid ·
contact with these animals
in petting zoos or other pub·
· lie places, according to the
report from the American
Academy of Pediatrics. The
report appears in ·the
October edition of the
group's medical journal,
Pediatrics.
·
"Many parents clearly
don't understand the risks
from various infections"
these animals often carry,
said Dr. Larry Pickering, the
report's lead author and an
infectious disease specialist
at the federal Centers for
Disease
Coptrol
and
Prevention.
For example, about 11
percent of salmonella illnesses in children are

BY JOANN LOVIGLIO

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

Drug·companies: No cold medicines for kids under 4

been

LEGAL NOTICE

ACHARVA

ASSOCIATED PRESS WAil:ER

•

·pageA7

Washington State
· .NASCAR

G~ld

$3 99
.

·

Ye!IOw$
On1ons· •

or
· • .
·Gala Apples
- - - - these special buys available while supplies last
Betty Crocker

1 29

Hamburger
Helper
5.8oz pkg

99¢

Stouffer's
Frozen
Dinners
11·12ozbox

2JS4

rimo
Bratwurst or
Eggo .
Italian Sausage
Waffles ·
19.76 oz pkg
9.9 ·12.3 oz box

Pringles

Potato
Crisps

5.7 • 6 oz can

$2.99

99¢

Everyday!

General Ills

Cereal ·
10.7 ·12 oz box

CO/Iiii!~~G~~:.!

HJ.-..Jenf.,.

51.79

· Kraft
VeiYHta Shtll1 ·
&amp;Cheddar or

Power Cycle
Liquid Laundry
Detergent .

&amp;Chee1e

41 ·50 loads

Dtluxe . .ronl
12 -14 oz pkg,

2/54

3/55

•

..

s2.99

.•, .....,........ -,..,

•.aoe ,. ,.,,

'

...

:J

I

.l

I

1

.

,.

•'
I

•J

!

'

...

�Page AS

OHIO

The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, October 8,

2008

~ockeyes adapting, Page B4

The group sang Happy
Birthday to Bernice Theiss,
Edna Knopp, and Blondena
Rainer. Evelyn Forem'an
had prayer before refreshments were served by
Hayman, Simpson. and
Theiss to 23 members
attending and a guest, Joann
Proffitt.
Next meeting 'will be
Thursday at 7 p.m.. with
Mildred Hart and Mabel
Brace presenting the program. A silent auction will
be held. All area women are
invited to join the group.

build the plant; and continuing construction and opera!ing costs.
··
The OCC appealed to the
Supreme Court about colleering fees in advance of
building and right now,
plans are frozen. The court
did say if the plant is not
built by 20!'1, a refund may
· be collected by the consumers.
He also spoke about
Ohio's electric energy policy (S.B. 221), which
requires a 22 percent reductio11 in energy demand by
2025, and includes bench-

marks and penalties. He
gave the members fact
sheets about this.
.
Gay Perrin , president,
opened the meeting with the
Pledge of Allegiance and
Barbara Beegle had devolions, "The Bridge Builder,"
and offered· prayer before
the meal, served by .ladies of
Trinity Church.
Members signed cards for
Eileen Buck, Vinas Lee,
Helen Maag, . Maurita
Miller,
and
Dorothy
Woodard. Secretary's and
treasurer's reports were
given. Dues are to be paid.

Wednesday, October 8, 2008::

.

~AL SCHEDULE

with a life-limiting illness in
Athens, Gallia, Jackson,
Meigs, Vinton and portions
of Lawrence and Scioto
CountieS. The focus of hospice care is to provide qual· tty of life with emotiqnal
and spiritual support for the
patients and family members. Holzer Hospice will
accept any patient, regardless of ability to pay.

'

The court did not indicate
But Justice Paul Pfeifer
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER
when it would rule.
wondered what value the
..
" The· caSe it!Volves a gi~l recoros·would h!We '. whe0:
. ·..
-:-~~~us.v-~ Ohio• ·•·who •wn-·M··atolthe ·time· of•:-&gt;they.. d!Mt't·• includ~Hhe··~
S,UjW~i~e-~Cowt ...,Justices..,..Jier. abw;tion ~~....ll'~ ....llf,..IA~,..Wen inv~'l.l!~,, ,.l!~
appeared skepttcal '1\tesqay the state's parental c&lt;insent noted that Ohio law requtres
{hat an abortion clinic's med- law had not been complete- neither the girl nor her paricai records on other patients ly settled by the courts. She ents to volunteer the identiare relevant to a lawsUit had been impregnated by ty of the father to employbrought by parents of a 14- her 21-year-old youth soc- eesoftheclinic.
year-old girl who had an a~r- cer coach,.Johri Haller.
"Are the~ required to
lion without their consent.
The family's lawsuit interrogate?' he asked. f
, Lawyers for the girl's accuses
the
Planned
"No, but they're not entifamily argued that the in for- Parenthood clinic of failing tied ro stick their head in the
mation they seek is neces- to g~t ,parental consent, to ground," replied Brian
sary to prove that Planned repo suspected abuse or to Hurley, another family
Parenthood of Cincinnati inform the girl of risks and attorney.
had a pattern of violating alternatives.
It
seeks
Hurley said abortion clioOhio's parental consent law unspecified damages.
ics should be expected to
and failing to report abuse.
Court records say the girl ask underage girls to identiThe unusual case pits a sin- gave Haller's cell phone fy who. got them pre~n~nt .
gle plamttff agamst the pn- number as her father's, and Otherwtse, they're shtrkmg
vacy interests of a decade's clinic officials thought they their duty to potentially
worth of patients.
had reached the father when .· identify statutory rape
Planned Parenthood attor- they called inquiring about between adults and minors
ney Daniel Buckley says the parental consent. Haller was arid the type of abuse
, clinic has a legal obligation later convicted on seven endured by hts client.
to protect the privacy of its counts of sexual battery.
Buckley argued that the
clients' records.
An appeals court ruled family already has all the
Charles Miller. an attor- last year that records on access it needs to argue its
ney for the parents, told the other patients weren't nee- case on behalf of the girl,
justices the plaintiffs seek essary for the family's law- including her own medical
only three facts about other suit..
records, and statements of a
minors treated at the clinic:
But family members nurse, adoctor and a social
the girls ' ages, whether any believe they will find that worker.
·
had a sexually transmitted Planned Parenthood rouHe said the family is seekdi sease. and whether they · tinely ignored signs that ing unprecedented access to
entered the clinic pregnant. underage patients were sex' the medical records of third
H~ said about 200 cases a ually abused or statutorily parties that will be of little
year would be involved.
raped by adults, Miller said. use in the case. Federal
. Chief Justi&lt;.:e Thomas
Miller said the family courts, for example, ruled
Moyer questioned how any hopes to show that· Planned out using damages against
of those thrte details would Parenthood's history of
advance,_ the fal]).ily 's qse reporting virtually no susfor damages.
pected abuse cases defies sta"Where 's the linkage?" he tistics on teenage pregnan- ·
· asked .
cies caused by older men.

,

Thymdp October I

•

Soccer

OVCS a1 Elk Valley, 5 p.m.
Volleyball
bstern at Trimble, 6 p.m.

Meigs at Belpre. 6 p.m.
Soultlern at Fed Hock. 6 p.m.

LEFT'- From left, Eastern
seniors Katie Wilfong,
Morgan Burt, Tresa Swatzef
and Brittany Casto share a ·
final moment together at
home before the Lady ·
Eagles' contest with
Federal Hocking .

~1\&lt;er Valley

The scholarship 'will be
given at the December
meeting.
Patti Struble and Kathryn .
White were presented door
prizes as new members.
Barbara Beegle and Maxine
Whitehead also received
them . .
Members brought school
supplies for local needy students.
.
Di~ie Sayre led a singalong,
with
Maxine
Whitehead accompanying.
Tbe next meeting will be
at Wild Horse Cafe for a
"meet the candidates."

Community support and
fundraising activtties such
as this event enables Holzer
Hospice to continue this
servtce throughout our communities.
· Donations are still being
accepted for the event. For
more information please
call Holzer Hospice at (740)
446-5074 or 1-800-5004850.

at Fairland, 5:30 p,m.
OVCS a1 Elk Valley, 6 p.m.

f.ddQ. Octgtier' 10
Foatbllll
Wetlston at Gatlla ~cademy, 7:30p.m.

Poca at Point Pleasant, 7:30p.m.
Meigs at Alexander, 7:30 p.m.
Alver Valley at Chesapeake, 7:30p.m.
..,l!ler at ~astern, 7:30 p.m.

Wahama at Wlrt County, 7:30p.m.

8. Ga!Ua-at ~clotovllle East, 7:30p.m.

BELOW - From left,
.
Southern seniors Chelsea :_
Pape, Samantha Patterson;
Emma Hunter and Rashell '
Boso pose for a picture
before their final home
game at Charles W.
Hayman Gymnasium in
Racine.

Seturdey. Oc;t•r 11

Soccer

~ama Academy at Point Pleasant, 7:30
p.m.
•
Volloybllll
..
Gall/a Academy a1 Marlet\a (SEOAl
Day of Champions) . TBA
. ·
Cro11 Country
SEOAL Championships at Warren, 10

Submitted photo
Chelsey Imboden, formerly of Racine, was named homecoming queen at Nelsonville-York High School Friday. She
is lhl! daughter .of Joy Spaun Barron of Nelsonville anlf Tim
Imboden of ·Mason, W.Va ., and ·granddaughter of Charles
and Betty Spaun of Racine and Frank Imboden of 'Rutland.

a.m.

·HSfootbau
WEEK 8

Wednesday ... Showers
likely with a slight chance
of thunderstorms . Highs in
the upper 60s. South winds
5 to 10 mph . Chance ofrain
70 percent.
Wednesday
night...
Cloudy with a 50 percent
chance of showers. Lows in
the mid 50s. South winds 5
to I0 mph .
Thursday... Partly sunny
with a 20 percent chance of
showers. Highs in the lower

GAMES'

Warren at logan
Chllllcoth~ at Jackson
Ironton at Portsmouth
Marietta at Zanesville
Fed Hock at Trimble

Athans at Nels-York
Vinton County at Belpre
Rock Hltl ~~ Coal Grove
South Point at Fairland
Man at Chapmanvltte
S!asonvttle at Herbert Hoover

• - qttte_r leag,u• gamss golqg on
In tho SOIJthOIStem Ohio Athletic
LNI/UO,
Ohio,
Hocking,

rvc

Valley

rvc

and

Cardfntll

Conltlrenceo

Local Weather

•

CoNTAcrUs

70s. West winds around ,5
mph.
·
Thursday night ••• Partly
cloudy. Lows in the mid
50s.
Northeast winds
around 5 mph.
Friday...Partly sunny.
Highs in the upper 70s.
Friday night through
Monday
night ... Partly
cloudy . . Lows in the mid
50s. Highs in the upper 70s.
Tuesday.•• Partly sunny.
· Highs in the mid 70s.

- 17.90

.

Champion (NASDAQ) - 3.50
Charming Shops (NASDAQ) 4.10
City Holding (NASDAQ)- 41.51
CotUna (NYSE) - 41 '
DuPont (NYSE) - 36.1.0
US Bank (NYSE) - 31.80
Gannett (NYSE) - 14.50
General Electric (NYSE) - 20.30
Harley·Davldeon (NYSE) -:

.~p~~~~~~~i:·
29.09

- 14.77 •
- 54.St

1-740-446-2342 ext. 33
Fix - 1-7 4Cl-446-3008

E-rnott -

ilports0mydally,.n11nel.com

Eastern, Southern both
victorious on Senior Night
STAFF REPORT
SPORTSOMYDAilYSENTINEL.COM
TUPPERS PLAINS Eastern volleyball kept its
slim Tri-Valley Conference
Hocking Division championship hopes alive Tuesday
night with a four-game 2522,20-25 , 25-15 , 25-22 victory over visiting Federal
Hocking on Senior Night.
Tl]e Lady Eagles (17-4 , 72 TVC Hocking) moved into
second place by themselves
in the league standings after
Trimble (6-3) fell to
Waterford (8 -1) in five
games Tuesday night.
Waterford h~s clinched ·a
share of the 2008 title and
can win it outright on
Thursday when it hosts

£ooldn' Up A £are
.t

,

Pie, Cookie.&amp;Cake Baking Challenge 2008

Friday, OCtober 17, 2008 • OPEN TO THE PUBUCI
t Juilgiog begins at Nooo- PVH Main Lobby·

Ohio Vettoy
DAQ)- 21

Bone Corp. (NAB- ·

t $5 Cor first entry (ln·rcgisttation)
$3 for each 1dditiooal entry (pre--registtation)
t Same-day registration iS available at an adclitiooal $2 per entry

BBT (NYSE) - 33.89
Pwoptea (NASDAQ) - 20.16
Pepolco (NYSE) - DS.12
Premier (NASDAQ! - 9.25
Rockwell (NYSE) - 30.07
Rocky Boot• (NASDAQ) - 3
Royal Dutch Shell - 51.68
Seare Holding (NASDAQ) -

t Pte-regisllltioo deadJine is Tuesday, October 14, 2008
'
t Enttits ~uld .be brought to the PVH Main Lobby two hoUIS prior to ~Klging
t WlDIICD recdv~ awds for top six places in cach atrgory
~
t For JJlO[t information please~ PVH Community Rtlations, (304) 675-4340, Ext 1326 .

78.79

Wat-Mart (NYSE) - 54.84
Wendy'l (NYSE) - 4.05
Wes8anto (NYSE) - 24.75
Wor'lhlngton (NYSE) _: 11.96
Dally otock reports are the 4
p.m. ET closing qucitea ol.trane•
action• lor Qcl. 7, 2008, provided by. Edward Jon11 ftnanclel
advloora II!IIC Mltta In Gattlpotll
at (740) 441·8441 and Lntey
·
Marrero In Point Pteaoant at
(304) 674-0174. Member StPC.

Special Note:

r

•

.

t

·.Meigs
falls to Spartans
..
.

•

Miller in the TVC Hocking
finale. EHS needs a Miller
wiri, combined with a win
over Trimble on Thursd'&lt;ty,
to keep its I I -year TVC
Hocking ti.tle winning streak
intact.
As for Tuesday night, the
Green anil Whtte finished
the evening with collective .
totals of 48 kills, 46 assists
and six blocks to go along
with 89-of-93 serving for 96
percent.
Brittany Casto led the service attack with 19 points
and five aces ,' followed by
Beverly Maxson with 10
points and four aces; "Kalie
Wilfong and Morgan Burt
added seven points and two
Pleese see VolleyiNIII, 11

.

Bryan W."leralftte lllhOito
,
Meigs senior Catie Wolfe (15)- the lone upperclassman
for the Lady Marauders - played in her final regular season home contest Tuesday night against Alexander in a
tvc Ohio volleyball match at Larry R. Morrison
Ciymnasium in Rocksprings.

,-,.

t

Bryan Waltaralphotoo

Local Stocks
AEP (NYSE) - 32.99
AkZo (NASDAQ) - 42.20
Alhland Inc. (NYSE) - 25.40
Big lola (NYSE) - 23.94
Bob Evans (NASDAQ) - 25.19
BorgWarner (NYSE) - 26.50
Century Aluminum (NASDAQ)

I'

'

Ohio

third parties in an individual
. smoker's case . against
tobacco giant Philip Morris,
he&gt;·silid.
· ·., . ··.
He also said that Planned
Parenthood denies underreporting or ignoring cases of
abuse.
·
Lining up behind the faroily in the case are abortion
rights foes - including
Jack ·Willke, former president of the National Right
to
Life
Committee;
Cincinnati-based Citizens
for Community Values; and
Republican mell)bers of
Ohto's congressional delegation.
Opposing the release of
the records are the
American
Medical
Association and ' a dozen
associations representing
domestic violence · victims,
obstetricians, gynecologist,s,
pediatricians, psychologists
and other medical professionals.
"It comes down to the
sanctity of medical records
privacy," said Cl~Jlie Davis
of the American Civil
Liberties Union-Ohio . "All
these people who aren't
even parties to this case, it
comes down to whether
their medical records can be
turned over to a private
P.laintiff, whether theu privtlege should be breached in
th;ll way."

·

Southern at Waterlord, 7:30p.m.
Gilmer County at Hannan, 7:30p.m.

RACINE - Kathryn Hart of the Racine Area ·
Community Organization and Star Mill Park Board members are working with the Village of Racine to purchase a
new piece of playgroun&lt;\ equipment fo~ the park.
Hart reported that the equipment is expensive and more
donations are needed. She has received several donations
so far, and the village has provided part of the funding
through a grant.
Anyone interested in making a donation is asked to
contact Hart at 949-2656, or send a check, made payable
to RACO, and mail it to her at P.O. Box 347, Racine.
Ohio 45771:

· "P~ctJ ~ ~ f? ~$ ft; ~(/'
,

Crooo COuniry

Meigs, Eastern, Southem at TVC
~hamp ion~hips . 4 p.m.
•

steered the bus out of a
truck 's path and into a
bridge support. No one was
severely injured .
Weir was fined $600 on
Tuesday and put on 1probation for one year. His attorney could·not be reached for
comment.
Bus owner Aqua Limo of
Westlake and the charter
school pleaded no contest to
two counts of endangering
children. Each face up to
$10,000 in fines at a sentencing Nov. 13 ;

. . ' ~g Thursday in the Sentinel.., . .

Senior Night made its way :
to all of Meigs County on
Tuesday night, as the
. respective volleyball teams ·
al Eastern. Southern and ·
. Meigs high schools played :
their 2008 regular season
home finales.

Volloybllll

$outh Gallia at South Ftoint, 5:30 p.m.

Driver of runaway bus
gets probation in Ohio
CLEVELAND (AP) The driver of a runaway
school bus in Cleveland has
pleaded no conte st tl!l
endangering children and
failing to have a commercial driver's license.
'
Michael Weir was driving
children · to The Arts
Academy on April 7 when
he stopped for fuel at a
downtown gas ·station.
When he went into the
restroom, the bus rolled
down a hill. ·
· An
I I -year-old boy

Prep Volleyball Roundup

Wtct!Midev Octobar a

•

Ohio top court mulls Planned Parenthood files
Bv JuuE CARR SMVTH

I.

tPOMEAOY -A schedul e of upcoming high
~chool veral1y , por1ing events in11olvi ng
~ams from Meig• and Galli&amp; countias.

Bob Evans Farms holds benefit silent auction Donations needed for
playground equipment

GALLIPOLIS :... Area from the Bob Evans Craft
residents can find unique Barn, Bob Evans Farm
holiday gift and craft items Festival, as well as local
during the "Deck the Halls, artisans. The items will be
Walls and Tables" silent on dis!? lay and participants
auction to benefit Holzer are invJted to submit bids ·on
Hospice from 10)0 a.m. to paper ·throughout · the day,
5:30 p.m. on Nov. 8 at the with the highest bidder
Bob
Evans
Farms · receiving each item at the
Homestead Museum
close of the auction.
Holzer Hospice provides
Items for the auction have
been donated by artisans end of life care for patients

·.

•

OCC rep addresseS retired teachers
POMEROY ..,.. Andrew
Tinkham, outreach and education specialist with the
Office of the
Ohio
Consumer's Council, discussed the proposed AEP
plant when the Meigs
County Retired Teachers met
recently at Trinity Church.
The plant was proposed
three years ago, and AEP
requested recovery of construction costs prior to custurners receiving any benefit from it. He told of three
phases: Money for research ,
pre-construction costs . and
engineering fees: charges to

The Daily Sentinel

Weekly footbaU computer ratings, Page 82
•
~Scoreboard, Page '83

Homecoming queen

Sunshine Circle· makes donations
RACINE - Donati011s
"Back to School" was the Ball and Ann Zirkle. Edie
were made to the Meigs program presented by Lillian Hubbard, corresponding secCounty Council on Aging Hayman, Ruth Simpson, and retary. reported that she had
and to God's Net for school Bernice Theiss at the meet- mailed 13 cards out before
supplies
which
also ing. Theiss gave devotions the meeting and 6 I cards
received desserts for the and members repeated the were signed at the meeting.
~hildren at a recent meeting
Lord's Prayer. Simpson-read She read thank you notes
of the Sunshine 'Circle at "Sunday School Lesson" from Zana Middleswart, Jr.
Bethany Circle.. The dona- and 'Lay Great Errors to Neigler, and Don Hamilton .
tion to the Council on Aging Rest." Hayman read an arti- Donations were accepted
is a monthlv gift.
cle titled "Out of the Nest." from Jean Alkire and Lena
, A report was given on the Judy Gimore sang "The Hewitt. Hubbard also colnew pasta machines which September Song."
lected 7fl stuffed animals
will be used for noodle
Kathryl) Hart conducted from the ·members and will
making, a fund raising pro- the business
meeting. present them to local law
gram of the Circle during Secretary and treasurer enforcement to be given to
reports were ·given by Mary children.
September and November.

Inside

.
son series with the Lady
: 'By BRYAN WALTERS
)WALTERSeMYDIIILVTRIBUNE.COM Spartans ( 19- I , 11 -0) who won their fifth con: ROCKSPRINGS - So secutive TVC Ohio title.
AHS also won the first
much for a grand finale .
: Alexander
spoiled matchup in Albany by a
Senior Night for host 25-16, 25-15 , 25-12 count.
l\1eigs - and captured the
It was also the regular
2008
Tri-Valley season home finale for
Conference Ohio Division ·four-year MHS starter
in
the Catie Wolfe, the lone
championship
process
during a senior for the Maroon and
·$traight game 25- 12, 25- Gold. Meigs had' team tall! , 25-\2 road decision at lies of riine kills .- seven
Morrison assists and two blocks to
Larry · R.
Gy"!nasium.
go along with 35-of-36
The Lady Marauders serving for 97 percent.
(lS-5 , 8-3 TVC Ohio)
Wolfe and Tricia Smith
dropped· .tbeir second led the service attack with
straight overall contest and
Plnse see Melp, 11
~ere also s~ept in the sea'

Competitors in tbe cookie
division are asked to provide a
biter's dozen. Pleae altadt a
recipe with eacb Cllby ~they
.may he inlcuded in a COCJtbook
1bat will be crated after tbe
competition. ~pants ~re
lllowed to enter as many sweet
cr c. ts as tbcy wish. Sevenl forms
. Clll, be li!ed, ·if nee tied. All entries
in .the competitioo become lbc .
propaty ofPlwu Valley .
HospillliDCI will be sold •the
end of lbc dlallcnac· All tbe
pr&gt;.:ce elis ftcm this very special
event will go to s sist womat
who- heaJina t.CIIIl (8fUI' in
ourlocll-.

~-----------------------,

II £8okln'
Up
A
. :,. .
·

~ore:

I
I
I

le~

I

~ i

.

1

· eAdclJ t·

I
'
I
• Elllry II (PleMe cin:le):
Pie
Cootie
Cake I
·~ 'Naneofca~ry:
--~....• - - - - - - - II
·:,

:.

Tell~

_ _ ___._ __.____

..

Pic

Cookie

·C.U
'

:

I

.

I
" I ICI•••'*tuml.ddrlllltlldUmwilb ..ymemto
I
JILIA&amp;\NTVAU.IY BOSPITALCOOICIN'UP ACURl. I
Mia; ('c • lldit)'Rtl Iic-.2$20\~a~Wy Driw. PoilltPimmt, I
WV 2SSSO All•hit h sbould be nwh out to PVH FOI'•w•• I
FordM;dcniies}ll! m pick....,•o"t'eu
I
PYll ~· f:et 1c or Clll. (]04) 675-4340., .Eli:t. 1326. l1C

bm••

I

L-----------------------~
'

Proudly sponsored by:
PLEASANT VAU.m' HOSPITAL
&amp; PVH Auxiliary
•

•
•

�Page AS

OHIO

The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, October 8,

2008

~ockeyes adapting, Page B4

The group sang Happy
Birthday to Bernice Theiss,
Edna Knopp, and Blondena
Rainer. Evelyn Forem'an
had prayer before refreshments were served by
Hayman, Simpson. and
Theiss to 23 members
attending and a guest, Joann
Proffitt.
Next meeting 'will be
Thursday at 7 p.m.. with
Mildred Hart and Mabel
Brace presenting the program. A silent auction will
be held. All area women are
invited to join the group.

build the plant; and continuing construction and opera!ing costs.
··
The OCC appealed to the
Supreme Court about colleering fees in advance of
building and right now,
plans are frozen. The court
did say if the plant is not
built by 20!'1, a refund may
· be collected by the consumers.
He also spoke about
Ohio's electric energy policy (S.B. 221), which
requires a 22 percent reductio11 in energy demand by
2025, and includes bench-

marks and penalties. He
gave the members fact
sheets about this.
.
Gay Perrin , president,
opened the meeting with the
Pledge of Allegiance and
Barbara Beegle had devolions, "The Bridge Builder,"
and offered· prayer before
the meal, served by .ladies of
Trinity Church.
Members signed cards for
Eileen Buck, Vinas Lee,
Helen Maag, . Maurita
Miller,
and
Dorothy
Woodard. Secretary's and
treasurer's reports were
given. Dues are to be paid.

Wednesday, October 8, 2008::

.

~AL SCHEDULE

with a life-limiting illness in
Athens, Gallia, Jackson,
Meigs, Vinton and portions
of Lawrence and Scioto
CountieS. The focus of hospice care is to provide qual· tty of life with emotiqnal
and spiritual support for the
patients and family members. Holzer Hospice will
accept any patient, regardless of ability to pay.

'

The court did not indicate
But Justice Paul Pfeifer
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER
when it would rule.
wondered what value the
..
" The· caSe it!Volves a gi~l recoros·would h!We '. whe0:
. ·..
-:-~~~us.v-~ Ohio• ·•·who •wn-·M··atolthe ·time· of•:-&gt;they.. d!Mt't·• includ~Hhe··~
S,UjW~i~e-~Cowt ...,Justices..,..Jier. abw;tion ~~....ll'~ ....llf,..IA~,..Wen inv~'l.l!~,, ,.l!~
appeared skepttcal '1\tesqay the state's parental c&lt;insent noted that Ohio law requtres
{hat an abortion clinic's med- law had not been complete- neither the girl nor her paricai records on other patients ly settled by the courts. She ents to volunteer the identiare relevant to a lawsUit had been impregnated by ty of the father to employbrought by parents of a 14- her 21-year-old youth soc- eesoftheclinic.
year-old girl who had an a~r- cer coach,.Johri Haller.
"Are the~ required to
lion without their consent.
The family's lawsuit interrogate?' he asked. f
, Lawyers for the girl's accuses
the
Planned
"No, but they're not entifamily argued that the in for- Parenthood clinic of failing tied ro stick their head in the
mation they seek is neces- to g~t ,parental consent, to ground," replied Brian
sary to prove that Planned repo suspected abuse or to Hurley, another family
Parenthood of Cincinnati inform the girl of risks and attorney.
had a pattern of violating alternatives.
It
seeks
Hurley said abortion clioOhio's parental consent law unspecified damages.
ics should be expected to
and failing to report abuse.
Court records say the girl ask underage girls to identiThe unusual case pits a sin- gave Haller's cell phone fy who. got them pre~n~nt .
gle plamttff agamst the pn- number as her father's, and Otherwtse, they're shtrkmg
vacy interests of a decade's clinic officials thought they their duty to potentially
worth of patients.
had reached the father when .· identify statutory rape
Planned Parenthood attor- they called inquiring about between adults and minors
ney Daniel Buckley says the parental consent. Haller was arid the type of abuse
, clinic has a legal obligation later convicted on seven endured by hts client.
to protect the privacy of its counts of sexual battery.
Buckley argued that the
clients' records.
An appeals court ruled family already has all the
Charles Miller. an attor- last year that records on access it needs to argue its
ney for the parents, told the other patients weren't nee- case on behalf of the girl,
justices the plaintiffs seek essary for the family's law- including her own medical
only three facts about other suit..
records, and statements of a
minors treated at the clinic:
But family members nurse, adoctor and a social
the girls ' ages, whether any believe they will find that worker.
·
had a sexually transmitted Planned Parenthood rouHe said the family is seekdi sease. and whether they · tinely ignored signs that ing unprecedented access to
entered the clinic pregnant. underage patients were sex' the medical records of third
H~ said about 200 cases a ually abused or statutorily parties that will be of little
year would be involved.
raped by adults, Miller said. use in the case. Federal
. Chief Justi&lt;.:e Thomas
Miller said the family courts, for example, ruled
Moyer questioned how any hopes to show that· Planned out using damages against
of those thrte details would Parenthood's history of
advance,_ the fal]).ily 's qse reporting virtually no susfor damages.
pected abuse cases defies sta"Where 's the linkage?" he tistics on teenage pregnan- ·
· asked .
cies caused by older men.

,

Thymdp October I

•

Soccer

OVCS a1 Elk Valley, 5 p.m.
Volleyball
bstern at Trimble, 6 p.m.

Meigs at Belpre. 6 p.m.
Soultlern at Fed Hock. 6 p.m.

LEFT'- From left, Eastern
seniors Katie Wilfong,
Morgan Burt, Tresa Swatzef
and Brittany Casto share a ·
final moment together at
home before the Lady ·
Eagles' contest with
Federal Hocking .

~1\&lt;er Valley

The scholarship 'will be
given at the December
meeting.
Patti Struble and Kathryn .
White were presented door
prizes as new members.
Barbara Beegle and Maxine
Whitehead also received
them . .
Members brought school
supplies for local needy students.
.
Di~ie Sayre led a singalong,
with
Maxine
Whitehead accompanying.
Tbe next meeting will be
at Wild Horse Cafe for a
"meet the candidates."

Community support and
fundraising activtties such
as this event enables Holzer
Hospice to continue this
servtce throughout our communities.
· Donations are still being
accepted for the event. For
more information please
call Holzer Hospice at (740)
446-5074 or 1-800-5004850.

at Fairland, 5:30 p,m.
OVCS a1 Elk Valley, 6 p.m.

f.ddQ. Octgtier' 10
Foatbllll
Wetlston at Gatlla ~cademy, 7:30p.m.

Poca at Point Pleasant, 7:30p.m.
Meigs at Alexander, 7:30 p.m.
Alver Valley at Chesapeake, 7:30p.m.
..,l!ler at ~astern, 7:30 p.m.

Wahama at Wlrt County, 7:30p.m.

8. Ga!Ua-at ~clotovllle East, 7:30p.m.

BELOW - From left,
.
Southern seniors Chelsea :_
Pape, Samantha Patterson;
Emma Hunter and Rashell '
Boso pose for a picture
before their final home
game at Charles W.
Hayman Gymnasium in
Racine.

Seturdey. Oc;t•r 11

Soccer

~ama Academy at Point Pleasant, 7:30
p.m.
•
Volloybllll
..
Gall/a Academy a1 Marlet\a (SEOAl
Day of Champions) . TBA
. ·
Cro11 Country
SEOAL Championships at Warren, 10

Submitted photo
Chelsey Imboden, formerly of Racine, was named homecoming queen at Nelsonville-York High School Friday. She
is lhl! daughter .of Joy Spaun Barron of Nelsonville anlf Tim
Imboden of ·Mason, W.Va ., and ·granddaughter of Charles
and Betty Spaun of Racine and Frank Imboden of 'Rutland.

a.m.

·HSfootbau
WEEK 8

Wednesday ... Showers
likely with a slight chance
of thunderstorms . Highs in
the upper 60s. South winds
5 to 10 mph . Chance ofrain
70 percent.
Wednesday
night...
Cloudy with a 50 percent
chance of showers. Lows in
the mid 50s. South winds 5
to I0 mph .
Thursday... Partly sunny
with a 20 percent chance of
showers. Highs in the lower

GAMES'

Warren at logan
Chllllcoth~ at Jackson
Ironton at Portsmouth
Marietta at Zanesville
Fed Hock at Trimble

Athans at Nels-York
Vinton County at Belpre
Rock Hltl ~~ Coal Grove
South Point at Fairland
Man at Chapmanvltte
S!asonvttle at Herbert Hoover

• - qttte_r leag,u• gamss golqg on
In tho SOIJthOIStem Ohio Athletic
LNI/UO,
Ohio,
Hocking,

rvc

Valley

rvc

and

Cardfntll

Conltlrenceo

Local Weather

•

CoNTAcrUs

70s. West winds around ,5
mph.
·
Thursday night ••• Partly
cloudy. Lows in the mid
50s.
Northeast winds
around 5 mph.
Friday...Partly sunny.
Highs in the upper 70s.
Friday night through
Monday
night ... Partly
cloudy . . Lows in the mid
50s. Highs in the upper 70s.
Tuesday.•• Partly sunny.
· Highs in the mid 70s.

- 17.90

.

Champion (NASDAQ) - 3.50
Charming Shops (NASDAQ) 4.10
City Holding (NASDAQ)- 41.51
CotUna (NYSE) - 41 '
DuPont (NYSE) - 36.1.0
US Bank (NYSE) - 31.80
Gannett (NYSE) - 14.50
General Electric (NYSE) - 20.30
Harley·Davldeon (NYSE) -:

.~p~~~~~~~i:·
29.09

- 14.77 •
- 54.St

1-740-446-2342 ext. 33
Fix - 1-7 4Cl-446-3008

E-rnott -

ilports0mydally,.n11nel.com

Eastern, Southern both
victorious on Senior Night
STAFF REPORT
SPORTSOMYDAilYSENTINEL.COM
TUPPERS PLAINS Eastern volleyball kept its
slim Tri-Valley Conference
Hocking Division championship hopes alive Tuesday
night with a four-game 2522,20-25 , 25-15 , 25-22 victory over visiting Federal
Hocking on Senior Night.
Tl]e Lady Eagles (17-4 , 72 TVC Hocking) moved into
second place by themselves
in the league standings after
Trimble (6-3) fell to
Waterford (8 -1) in five
games Tuesday night.
Waterford h~s clinched ·a
share of the 2008 title and
can win it outright on
Thursday when it hosts

£ooldn' Up A £are
.t

,

Pie, Cookie.&amp;Cake Baking Challenge 2008

Friday, OCtober 17, 2008 • OPEN TO THE PUBUCI
t Juilgiog begins at Nooo- PVH Main Lobby·

Ohio Vettoy
DAQ)- 21

Bone Corp. (NAB- ·

t $5 Cor first entry (ln·rcgisttation)
$3 for each 1dditiooal entry (pre--registtation)
t Same-day registration iS available at an adclitiooal $2 per entry

BBT (NYSE) - 33.89
Pwoptea (NASDAQ) - 20.16
Pepolco (NYSE) - DS.12
Premier (NASDAQ! - 9.25
Rockwell (NYSE) - 30.07
Rocky Boot• (NASDAQ) - 3
Royal Dutch Shell - 51.68
Seare Holding (NASDAQ) -

t Pte-regisllltioo deadJine is Tuesday, October 14, 2008
'
t Enttits ~uld .be brought to the PVH Main Lobby two hoUIS prior to ~Klging
t WlDIICD recdv~ awds for top six places in cach atrgory
~
t For JJlO[t information please~ PVH Community Rtlations, (304) 675-4340, Ext 1326 .

78.79

Wat-Mart (NYSE) - 54.84
Wendy'l (NYSE) - 4.05
Wes8anto (NYSE) - 24.75
Wor'lhlngton (NYSE) _: 11.96
Dally otock reports are the 4
p.m. ET closing qucitea ol.trane•
action• lor Qcl. 7, 2008, provided by. Edward Jon11 ftnanclel
advloora II!IIC Mltta In Gattlpotll
at (740) 441·8441 and Lntey
·
Marrero In Point Pteaoant at
(304) 674-0174. Member StPC.

Special Note:

r

•

.

t

·.Meigs
falls to Spartans
..
.

•

Miller in the TVC Hocking
finale. EHS needs a Miller
wiri, combined with a win
over Trimble on Thursd'&lt;ty,
to keep its I I -year TVC
Hocking ti.tle winning streak
intact.
As for Tuesday night, the
Green anil Whtte finished
the evening with collective .
totals of 48 kills, 46 assists
and six blocks to go along
with 89-of-93 serving for 96
percent.
Brittany Casto led the service attack with 19 points
and five aces ,' followed by
Beverly Maxson with 10
points and four aces; "Kalie
Wilfong and Morgan Burt
added seven points and two
Pleese see VolleyiNIII, 11

.

Bryan W."leralftte lllhOito
,
Meigs senior Catie Wolfe (15)- the lone upperclassman
for the Lady Marauders - played in her final regular season home contest Tuesday night against Alexander in a
tvc Ohio volleyball match at Larry R. Morrison
Ciymnasium in Rocksprings.

,-,.

t

Bryan Waltaralphotoo

Local Stocks
AEP (NYSE) - 32.99
AkZo (NASDAQ) - 42.20
Alhland Inc. (NYSE) - 25.40
Big lola (NYSE) - 23.94
Bob Evans (NASDAQ) - 25.19
BorgWarner (NYSE) - 26.50
Century Aluminum (NASDAQ)

I'

'

Ohio

third parties in an individual
. smoker's case . against
tobacco giant Philip Morris,
he&gt;·silid.
· ·., . ··.
He also said that Planned
Parenthood denies underreporting or ignoring cases of
abuse.
·
Lining up behind the faroily in the case are abortion
rights foes - including
Jack ·Willke, former president of the National Right
to
Life
Committee;
Cincinnati-based Citizens
for Community Values; and
Republican mell)bers of
Ohto's congressional delegation.
Opposing the release of
the records are the
American
Medical
Association and ' a dozen
associations representing
domestic violence · victims,
obstetricians, gynecologist,s,
pediatricians, psychologists
and other medical professionals.
"It comes down to the
sanctity of medical records
privacy," said Cl~Jlie Davis
of the American Civil
Liberties Union-Ohio . "All
these people who aren't
even parties to this case, it
comes down to whether
their medical records can be
turned over to a private
P.laintiff, whether theu privtlege should be breached in
th;ll way."

·

Southern at Waterlord, 7:30p.m.
Gilmer County at Hannan, 7:30p.m.

RACINE - Kathryn Hart of the Racine Area ·
Community Organization and Star Mill Park Board members are working with the Village of Racine to purchase a
new piece of playgroun&lt;\ equipment fo~ the park.
Hart reported that the equipment is expensive and more
donations are needed. She has received several donations
so far, and the village has provided part of the funding
through a grant.
Anyone interested in making a donation is asked to
contact Hart at 949-2656, or send a check, made payable
to RACO, and mail it to her at P.O. Box 347, Racine.
Ohio 45771:

· "P~ctJ ~ ~ f? ~$ ft; ~(/'
,

Crooo COuniry

Meigs, Eastern, Southem at TVC
~hamp ion~hips . 4 p.m.
•

steered the bus out of a
truck 's path and into a
bridge support. No one was
severely injured .
Weir was fined $600 on
Tuesday and put on 1probation for one year. His attorney could·not be reached for
comment.
Bus owner Aqua Limo of
Westlake and the charter
school pleaded no contest to
two counts of endangering
children. Each face up to
$10,000 in fines at a sentencing Nov. 13 ;

. . ' ~g Thursday in the Sentinel.., . .

Senior Night made its way :
to all of Meigs County on
Tuesday night, as the
. respective volleyball teams ·
al Eastern. Southern and ·
. Meigs high schools played :
their 2008 regular season
home finales.

Volloybllll

$outh Gallia at South Ftoint, 5:30 p.m.

Driver of runaway bus
gets probation in Ohio
CLEVELAND (AP) The driver of a runaway
school bus in Cleveland has
pleaded no conte st tl!l
endangering children and
failing to have a commercial driver's license.
'
Michael Weir was driving
children · to The Arts
Academy on April 7 when
he stopped for fuel at a
downtown gas ·station.
When he went into the
restroom, the bus rolled
down a hill. ·
· An
I I -year-old boy

Prep Volleyball Roundup

Wtct!Midev Octobar a

•

Ohio top court mulls Planned Parenthood files
Bv JuuE CARR SMVTH

I.

tPOMEAOY -A schedul e of upcoming high
~chool veral1y , por1ing events in11olvi ng
~ams from Meig• and Galli&amp; countias.

Bob Evans Farms holds benefit silent auction Donations needed for
playground equipment

GALLIPOLIS :... Area from the Bob Evans Craft
residents can find unique Barn, Bob Evans Farm
holiday gift and craft items Festival, as well as local
during the "Deck the Halls, artisans. The items will be
Walls and Tables" silent on dis!? lay and participants
auction to benefit Holzer are invJted to submit bids ·on
Hospice from 10)0 a.m. to paper ·throughout · the day,
5:30 p.m. on Nov. 8 at the with the highest bidder
Bob
Evans
Farms · receiving each item at the
Homestead Museum
close of the auction.
Holzer Hospice provides
Items for the auction have
been donated by artisans end of life care for patients

·.

•

OCC rep addresseS retired teachers
POMEROY ..,.. Andrew
Tinkham, outreach and education specialist with the
Office of the
Ohio
Consumer's Council, discussed the proposed AEP
plant when the Meigs
County Retired Teachers met
recently at Trinity Church.
The plant was proposed
three years ago, and AEP
requested recovery of construction costs prior to custurners receiving any benefit from it. He told of three
phases: Money for research ,
pre-construction costs . and
engineering fees: charges to

The Daily Sentinel

Weekly footbaU computer ratings, Page 82
•
~Scoreboard, Page '83

Homecoming queen

Sunshine Circle· makes donations
RACINE - Donati011s
"Back to School" was the Ball and Ann Zirkle. Edie
were made to the Meigs program presented by Lillian Hubbard, corresponding secCounty Council on Aging Hayman, Ruth Simpson, and retary. reported that she had
and to God's Net for school Bernice Theiss at the meet- mailed 13 cards out before
supplies
which
also ing. Theiss gave devotions the meeting and 6 I cards
received desserts for the and members repeated the were signed at the meeting.
~hildren at a recent meeting
Lord's Prayer. Simpson-read She read thank you notes
of the Sunshine 'Circle at "Sunday School Lesson" from Zana Middleswart, Jr.
Bethany Circle.. The dona- and 'Lay Great Errors to Neigler, and Don Hamilton .
tion to the Council on Aging Rest." Hayman read an arti- Donations were accepted
is a monthlv gift.
cle titled "Out of the Nest." from Jean Alkire and Lena
, A report was given on the Judy Gimore sang "The Hewitt. Hubbard also colnew pasta machines which September Song."
lected 7fl stuffed animals
will be used for noodle
Kathryl) Hart conducted from the ·members and will
making, a fund raising pro- the business
meeting. present them to local law
gram of the Circle during Secretary and treasurer enforcement to be given to
reports were ·given by Mary children.
September and November.

Inside

.
son series with the Lady
: 'By BRYAN WALTERS
)WALTERSeMYDIIILVTRIBUNE.COM Spartans ( 19- I , 11 -0) who won their fifth con: ROCKSPRINGS - So secutive TVC Ohio title.
AHS also won the first
much for a grand finale .
: Alexander
spoiled matchup in Albany by a
Senior Night for host 25-16, 25-15 , 25-12 count.
l\1eigs - and captured the
It was also the regular
2008
Tri-Valley season home finale for
Conference Ohio Division ·four-year MHS starter
in
the Catie Wolfe, the lone
championship
process
during a senior for the Maroon and
·$traight game 25- 12, 25- Gold. Meigs had' team tall! , 25-\2 road decision at lies of riine kills .- seven
Morrison assists and two blocks to
Larry · R.
Gy"!nasium.
go along with 35-of-36
The Lady Marauders serving for 97 percent.
(lS-5 , 8-3 TVC Ohio)
Wolfe and Tricia Smith
dropped· .tbeir second led the service attack with
straight overall contest and
Plnse see Melp, 11
~ere also s~ept in the sea'

Competitors in tbe cookie
division are asked to provide a
biter's dozen. Pleae altadt a
recipe with eacb Cllby ~they
.may he inlcuded in a COCJtbook
1bat will be crated after tbe
competition. ~pants ~re
lllowed to enter as many sweet
cr c. ts as tbcy wish. Sevenl forms
. Clll, be li!ed, ·if nee tied. All entries
in .the competitioo become lbc .
propaty ofPlwu Valley .
HospillliDCI will be sold •the
end of lbc dlallcnac· All tbe
pr&gt;.:ce elis ftcm this very special
event will go to s sist womat
who- heaJina t.CIIIl (8fUI' in
ourlocll-.

~-----------------------,

II £8okln'
Up
A
. :,. .
·

~ore:

I
I
I

le~

I

~ i

.

1

· eAdclJ t·

I
'
I
• Elllry II (PleMe cin:le):
Pie
Cootie
Cake I
·~ 'Naneofca~ry:
--~....• - - - - - - - II
·:,

:.

Tell~

_ _ ___._ __.____

..

Pic

Cookie

·C.U
'

:

I

.

I
" I ICI•••'*tuml.ddrlllltlldUmwilb ..ymemto
I
JILIA&amp;\NTVAU.IY BOSPITALCOOICIN'UP ACURl. I
Mia; ('c • lldit)'Rtl Iic-.2$20\~a~Wy Driw. PoilltPimmt, I
WV 2SSSO All•hit h sbould be nwh out to PVH FOI'•w•• I
FordM;dcniies}ll! m pick....,•o"t'eu
I
PYll ~· f:et 1c or Clll. (]04) 675-4340., .Eli:t. 1326. l1C

bm••

I

L-----------------------~
'

Proudly sponsored by:
PLEASANT VAU.m' HOSPITAL
&amp; PVH Auxiliary
•

•
•

�..

.

Page Ba • The Daily Senfulel

National Scoreboard

K-C makes fmru preparations for DTWC W~kly fool ball computer ratlnp
Bv Scon WOLFE . .

the winner of last year's SKYLINE SPEEDWAY JACK·
modified DTWC champio-lANTERN TWIN 30'S
onship. Chub Frank, Sugar
: CHILLICOTHE - Final Grove, PA led a parade of
STEWART
This
preparations are being made Rockets to the 2007 DTWC Satur\lay.
October
II
fur what looks to be one of late model crown. Close in Skyline Speedway will host
t!Je big~Jesl Dirt Track World tow was "Kid Rocket" Josh The Jack-o-Lantern Twin
ChampiOnship races in the Richards.
30's paying $2,500 to win in
event's· 28 year history. Jim
During the month of the Super Late Models and
Nier's K-C Raceway near ' October the track crew has 410 Outlaw SI,Jrints. Jcining
Chillicothe, Ohio will play been groominJ! thCj K-C facil- these two divtsions " ill be
)iost to the event for the ity for its btggest day in the Modified Lite, .. FWD
fburth consecutive year as 2008. First class facilities Four Cylinders. MiniP.fOmoter Carl Short's brain- will greet the fans, including Wed!JeS and Pure Stocks .
child continues to mature n~w camping. areas. great Origmally· Semi-Lates or
into a well-groomed national concessions, and most of all Steel Block late Models
icon. This year's race takes ·exciting three-wide racing _ were to run . however. the
place October 16-17-18 , Overall, it's the atmosphere Steel Block race has been
Thursday-Saturday.
. that makes the DTWG what postponed and Street Stocks
The 28th Annual Dtrt 11 ts.. The "Magtc of. have been added to the .raeTrack World Championship Pennsboro" has transformed ing·card.
presented by gottarace.com into the "Magic of K-C".
The
Jack-o-Lantern
kicks off on Thursday Don't miss out on the sur- October lith racing festivievening October 16th with prises that 2008 will bring .
ties serves as a precursor for
Qualifying, heat races and
The special reserved seat- · Jim Nier's K-C Raceway
consolation races to set the ing fot tire 28th Annual Dirt · Dirt
"~;rack
world
·s)a:rting grid for the Track World Champidnsh\P Championship on October
Modifieds. Lite Model qual- presented by gottarace,com 16-17-18. That event pays
ifying and heat races will be will be the top five rows of $50,000 to win and Skyline
held on Friday evening all spectator grandstands. A will be idle"to honor that hisOctober 17th with the conso- seating chart is available !Jn toric event (No racing Oct.
lanon races , The Jtm Dunn the KC Raceway webstle 18).
Last year, the Jack-oMemorial
non-qualifiers www.kc-raceway.com an l
race, The Modified 30 Lap race fans may pick their pre- Lantern races were run as the
Feature and the 100-lap Dirt ferred seats on a fust-come, Jack-o-Lantern 50 IRS
TriU:k World Championship first-served basis. _
fmale, however, owner Billy
to be held on Saturday
To J?UTChase presale tickets Jfuell has decided to share
evening October · 18th. and pit passes and/or lo pre- the wealth and has boosted
Sunday October 19th will enter a driver, money orders. the pay'off (or both the
serve as the rain date. .
cashier's checks and credit sprints and late models. Last
. Perhaps . the most pre'sti- cards max be used. The year Rick Aukland won the
gious racing event ever to DTWC wtll accept pie-sale JOL event with a total of 52
come to Southern Obi\). the cr~dit card orders with Late Models competing.
Dirt
Track
World Mastercard or Visa. To place Saturday's race is expcected
l::hampionship , commonly your credit card orders tele- to draw good fields in all
!Wown as the DTWC, once phone the KC Raceway divisions.
again ha5 made Jim Nier's K- office at: 740c289-4114. · Sr. Citizens will pay just
C Raceway its home. An Tickets are also available via $10 at the
General
ensemble of the nation's mail order by sending a Admission gate in presenting
greatest drivers will again money order or cashier's their Golden Buckeye card, a
come together to compete for ·check to: DTWC, 340 Bailey savings of $5 off the regular
!he $50,000 top prize, which Chapel Road, Piketon,. OH $15 admission. This di~­
IS part of an ever-growmg 45661.
. .·
.
count apphes to the mam
over-$200.000 purse.
. . For more inforntatien con- gate only. Children under 12
Not only will fans get to tact DTWC promoter Carl are free when accompanied
see the _nation's top late Short at: 865-945-3423, visit with a _pai~ adult parent. Pit
111odel drivers, but also the the DTWC webstte at admtsston ts $30.
very best open-wheel modi- www.dirttrackworldchampiFor- more information,
fied drivers. · Many drivers onship.net or visit the K.,C please visit www.skylineat speedway.net or· call 740compete in both classes like -Raceway . website
662-4111 or 304-539-4410.
Zanesville's Rick Aukland, www.kc-raceway.com
SPECIAL TO THE SENTlNEL

Meigs
from Page Bl

..·H.'·.
fuur points apiece, followed by Morgan Howard
w(th three arid Emalee

Glass with two. Shellie
Bailey
and
Chandra
Stanley also added one
point each in the setback.
Stanley led the net
attack with four kills and
Wolfe followeD with ·
three. Smith and Howard
also had one kill each.

Glass and Smith both had
three assists, and ·the duo
ofWolfe and Stanley each
added one block.
Meigs will conclude its
2008 rvc Ohio season on
Thursday · when it travels
to Belpre for a 6 p.m. JV
contest. '

COLUMBUS (AI')- H...,..-.lheJillod

weeld&gt;; foo11laa computer flltings from

-"'*

Kng&amp; Mills Kings (4-31 11.7357. 7. Ml
Orab Western BrOwn (7~ 10.2V~ . 8.
Day. Dunbar (6-1) 10.2098. 9, T"""""

lhe Ohoo High Sctooo1 Altllelic
Assooabon. Rafings are by diYislon and Edgewood !5-2)" 9.6071. 10.
region with •oc.ord and average bl-iew!f (4-3) 9.1214:
potnts pe-r game ,(top eight teams tn ·
each region advance to reOionaJ quar..
DIVISION Ill
rerfinals)·

Region 11-1, Chagrin Falls (8-1)
12.5500. 2. C&lt;JyL Fet1s ~- _,.. (42) 11.9163. 3. Young. Ube~~~
Region 1- 1. Glenville Academic 11.3142.
(5-2) 10.
• 5,
Campus (7.0) 21.4631 2. CiM. St. Hulltoarct (6-1)10.92,.. 6. Ravenna (5lgnalius (6-1) 18.0494. 3, Menlo• (5-2). 2) 1.0.371~. 7. Chaidon NIJ.Calflednil
110714. 4. Slrongs,;lle (6-1) 15.5928
, . 1.a11n j~) S.Qei)O. 8.'$\cof&amp;~ooo (54)
· ··c~-.
·-- &gt;""~M"~
.........~.. ~~
5. Lak......xxl St. EdYiarct (6-1) t • .71;!2. 8 .05C0. · 9.'
s. Eucl id (5-2) 13.2928. 1. W~&lt;i19lbl' 7.9357. 10. Corltan6
(4-3)
Soulh (5-2) 13.0572. 8. Solon•(4-3) 7.4817. .
'· •
11 .1285. 9. young. Boardman (5-2)
Region 1~1 . St.. lolllyS Memorial (710.7928. 10. !lre&lt;lksvikl-llmadvlew Hta 0) ,15.371~; 2. ~ (7~) 13.7571 . 3,
(4-3) 10.7357.
· ,
: Be!liMle. (6-1) 13.4142. ~ . Topp City
Region 2-1.- .Cant· GJonOak t~l T~ (7:oj ' 13,2428. 5. Defi81190
"16.57!4- 2, BrunsWiol&lt; (7~) 16.4785._3, (5-2) 12.7214.6, Clydo.(6-1) 12:4785.1,
•M&gt;herst Steele (7.0) 16.0714. •· Cant Tlffi~ Columbian (5-2) 1_Q.9428. $ ,
!dd&lt;Jniey (5·2} 15.2242. &amp;. N. Canl!&gt;n Uol&gt;ana. (6-1) 9.~ . .9. SunbuO)' 910,
Hoover (6-1 ) 14.8755. 6, Macedonia Walnut (5-2) 9.5394,. 10, ' Sa~QIIky
Nordooia (5·2) "13)'928. 7, ~ Por1dno (6-1) 92071
. . _,_
" ··
(5·2) 13.6714. 8, F"""""t R.._ (H) . Re~ion . 11.:_:1 ,
12.6928. 9, Akron Garfield (5-.2) H .4928. 2, Poland /. Seminary (&amp;-I)·
12 1;357 10, Twin lib()~ (5-2) 12.3928.
13.5285. 3. -oi&lt;,UCkil)g \!alley (6-1)
Region3-1 , PickelirlqtonHighSchool 13.1532:4, canal Futiori N.W. (6-1)
C(7~)19.8500.2.H111larctDovidson(7-. 13.1071 . 5, O!:lwlf (tl-1) 12.71.:!. 8,
Ol 17i4000. ,3.
&amp;OOktlaven (ll&lt;tt . -GranYjlle (5'2). u .40'TJ .
Rayland,
10.1l60. ' 4, UpPfr, ~jngiOil (8;1) ·, ~ t.pc{i1 (5-.2) 11.3120. a_. Now
1~.9928.
Coffnlii!J (7.,'!1) ~ ~7-0) .10.2()(!0. ~. Cadiz
13.4285. 6, Wot111Jng1on l&lt;llbO!line ~2) Halli*9&lt;\.Cilol!. (5-:2)9.2];1j/NO. vtncenl
12.41.:!. 7, BeaV,R:- .(&amp;'2) 9.4714: • WBITOi"1 ~)-8.8382, ·- • .
~~ , Delaware Hoyos (4-3) , ll.S!J28. 9, Rog;o,12-1, Thonw{lle: Slielldan (7Mary,slriiiO (5-2) 8.4928.
16.2357, 2. CIR:I.,...
Elrtl (7·.
Un&lt;:eln (4-3) 8.3857. l ' ;. • . ,
0) 14j5285.3 ; Gtornu1oj1own Valley View
Region 4-1 Con. Col""lfl ' (6-1) (6-1)13.5071'.4. ~W-(7·
19.07fC. 2. c;rl. El&amp;r (6-1) 18.9568. 3. O) J2.0QQO. 5, Ohii!JCOihO (SOl!) 11.9285.
Kollering Fairmont. (6•1} 17.0071. 4, •6. Co!8- Eaa1moot Aca&lt;l, (6-1) 9.8842. t;
Harrison (~-2) 16.4214. ~. ~ . ks: Fmnl!lif&gt;(4-3f,B.81.o:!. _8, Ndrwooq (6- t). ·
Wayne (5-2) 1.5.60!10- 6~ Oin. WQOdWlrCI: :8.685T.•ll; "E!!l'&gt;n (&amp;';t)'p~J:. t0.'011Y(7~)15 .5742.7.~on ·NoolhloiQ01((~ . ~am.Jlll~ .(~7.!1b7L' ... ·
1) 14.942B, 8.1J&lt;ontofirille.(W)'1.4.(18S~:
, ,,
·
3
0

DIVISION I

•.·Auro&lt;a

..-.ew

t"""

c·.lnt 59Uih' (S-2)

1;

GP!o.

,s:.oiJ!;ilhi.

,o. G$hanna o)

9.5428. 8, Cl!t~(&amp;-2)9.2llfll.l,
Ham. Badin (4-3) 7.1642. tO••
(~) 6.7071 .

a,ogan

'•,.·"1 ' ,,_., •· ·

·~'/:~l:;. 1&lt;~;?,J; t~•~;;~ · .en:. ;; ....... 9'VISIQ~ IY,\' · .,
·'·,.\ · o····1·v"1•8~1 ' ' .·~,,··. i •·:.·· '. f •.R8gton .,,,_I; ~st.u'~;i,. (7~)
., . •· : · '..': Rill
-~ · . -••· -l5.140$. ~.:"~- !lt. Vir&gt;C0~1-S1.Mary
· ;l,.,.r i''' ~ -(~1)·, l•;J'?8t,.31' ~· lllsl,w (7'!1)

PRo BASEBALL

P--

•

Region 17-1, ~ ~ (7&lt;!$
14.6491 . 2. KirUond (7~) 13.1714.
CreS1on Norwayne (6-1) 11JIOQO. 4.
Gates Mills Giln!ou&lt; Aoad. •
10.528S.5.Columblana~(8;-}
9.8974. 6. N. ~lt!W!· S. f1ongl (~
7.8785. 7. AAIIeC-W.,• ... (5-2)
7.7857. 8. SmitfNt!lo (4-:Ji. Ul'i_
4 . 9.
~odenca (3-1) M357.- 10.1l;.lnlli'

•

a.

' :

.

·

•

MORE LOCAL NEWS.!
MORE LOOAL FOLgS,.
.
t

1

1

r..a.a.n:,· [

pblld
hla1.
Philadelphia 3. M - - . 1
Philadelphia Mllwao1!4e 2
j,lilawukeo 4. PhiladelphJa 1
Philadelphia 6. Mllwaol&lt;4e 2
I

o

.lol!ruion. K.C. 93 417 ~ - 5 65 3
Johnson, Tan. 65 381 ~ . 5 51 2
Tomlin .• S.D. 89 331 3.7 . 411 4
Lynd1. fl&lt;ll.

330
286
265
272

92
BrOwn. Mia.
56
1 Slaton,-- 57
Mcfadc!.. Oak. 51
McClain. Bal. 83
'lOOng. Den. . 47
Parb&lt;, Pit
66

3.6
4.9
5.o
5.3
266 4.2
266 5.7
2!13 1.0 .

34

22 4
621 6
3
59 1
17 4
49 1
32 3

so

*"'

LEAGUE CHAJ..IONIHIP SERIES
: '
.
(--ol-1)
• .
Anwlgn 1 MO'W
Game 6 will be 8:07p.m. WNLCS an&lt;1a

.
-FrtdQ,Ocl.10

II
I

m

31

·351 11 .3 26 3
30 321 10.7 29 2
324 12.0 30
251 9.3 26
350 14.0 . 40
316 13.2 49
310 12.9 39
269 11 .7 33
261 12.4 35
237 11 .3 24
233 11 .1 32
193 9.2 23

2
0
3
4
1
1
0
0
1
2

.

Punt Returrter'l
No Yds Avg

I Parrish, Buf.
Faulk, N.E,

Royal. o.n.
, ·carr, Ten. ·

1

LG TO

11

167 15.2 63t 1

8

106 15.1 24
114 14.3 36

1
9

o
o

118 13.1 33 o

Okla~Cily
Portland

0 0
0 0

000
.000

U1ah

0 0

.000

-~
W L Pet

L.A. Clippeos

0 0

.000

LA. Lakefs
Phoenix

o. 0

0 0

·900

Sacramento
Golden State

GB

000
.000

0 0
0 1

.000

.-.,.·.-

AIIanta 118. O.lando 101
MiooBSOta 117,. Milwaukee 79

Toronto 104, Cleveland 84

Ho!IS1on 96. Memphis.93
Dallas 108, Washington 82
Utah vs. L.A. Lakers at Anaheim, Calif.,

lata

•

Sacramento at Portland, late
Wadnoaday'o

Gameo

Charlone at Orlando, 7 p.m.
New York at Toronto, 7 p.m.
Boston vs. Philadelphia at Amherst,
Mass., 7 p.m.
New Orleans at Indiana, 7 p.m,
Mftwaukee at Detroit. 7:30p.m.

Washington at.MemPflis. 8 p.m.
Oklahoma City vs. Minnesota at Billings,
Mont, 9 p.m.
Atlanta at Phoenht:. 10 p.m.
Golden Stare at Portland~ 10 p.m.
Tburadly'a Gameo
New Jersey at Miami, 2 p.m. ·
Dallas.at Chicagp, 8:30p.m.
San Antonio ;:~;t Houston, 8:00p.m.
Phoenix at Utah, 9 p.m.
.
L.A. Clippers vs. L.A. Lakers at Fresno,
Calif.. tO p.m:

Boston at Tampa 9ay, 8:37p.m.
Wash•• NY-J 6
73 12:2 20 0
'
~; Ocl. 11
Wllhors .. Jae. 8
95 t 1.9 29 o .
1
· .Jloston at Tampa Bey. 8:07p.m.
Besa, Mia.
5
56 . 11 .2 25 0
i
Monday, Oct. 13
i Chatman, Cln . 10 l01 10,.1 34 .0
Jampa Bay at Boston, ~:37 p.m.
Jones. Hoo.
8
73 9.1 33 o
~. Ocl. 14
Crilbs. Cia.
9
78 8 7 t2 o
rampa Bey 81 Boston. 8:07 p.m.
' .
1
Sporto
111.......,, Ocl.18
Kickoff Re1ume,.
BASEBALL
~ampa Bay at Boston, 8:Q,7 p.m., WneeNo Vds Avg LG TD
National League
ossary
· N.E . 13 444 34.2 81 0
COLORADO ROCKIES-Announcad
'
Slilunloy, Ocl.18
Waah .• NY-J 8
250 31 .3 94 0
hi~ng coach Alan Cockrell,, -38 c~
at Tampa Bay, 4'-17 p.m .• Wnee- St)ro1aa. S.D. t7 524 30.8 1031
Mike Gallego and bench coach Jamie
ossary
· carr, Ten. ·
11 320 29.1 52 0
Quirk will not be offered contracts for the
lkindiJ, Oc1.11
Wllhars.. Jac.. 17 · 487 28 51 0
• - •
2009 season, and bullpen coach 'Rick
poston Ill T11111pa Bay, 8:07p.m., tf nee: Savage, K.C. B 218 27.3 51 0
Ma1hews· wUI be reassigned within t~
~ssary
Ho11. Cln.
23 623 27.1 60 0
organiZation.
Higgins. Oak. 17 4S6 26.8 .69
'
BASKETBALL
McKelvln. Bul. 16· 410 25.6 58 0
. • . . Natlooefl - National Baaketball Association
'
Tburadly,,Ocl. I
Cribbs, Cle.
5 11 B 23.6 44 0
CHARLOTTE BOBCAT~Announc9d
Los Angeles · (Lowe 14-11) at
the . resignations ot chief ,administration
qhiladelphia (Harnois 14-10), 8:22p.m. ·
SCOI1ng
officer Jared ~rtie, and vice president of
I
Friday, Ocl. 10
Touchdown•
Angelea 11 Philadelphia, 4:35 p.m.
TO RushRec Ret Pts community relatiOns LeRita Barber. . 1
LOS
ANGELES
CLIPPERS. lkindiJ, Ocl. 12
8rQWn, Mia.
6
6· 0
0 36
Announced,!he resignation of vice presi~hiladelphla at Los Angeles, 8:22 p.m.
Cliamb., S.D. 5
0
5
6 .10 dent
of basketball operations Elgin
I
. _lolondoy, Ocl. 13
Whfta, Tan.
5
5
o 0 30
Baylor.
Named Mike Dunl~avy general
hiladelphla at Los Angelee. 8:22 p.m.
Addai, Ind.
4
4
0
0 24
manager.
- - . , , Ocl.15
Coles, NY-J
4
0 · 4
0 . 24
_l&gt;hiledolph10 at Los Angeles, 8:22p.m.,
0 24 . ORLANDO MAGIC-Exercised their
Lynch, Bul.
4
4 . ·0
option on G J.J. Redick.
. 0 24
,J necessary
.
.
McClain. Bel. 4
4
FOarBALL
.o
Friday, Ocl. 1l
0 24
Pillman. Den. 4
4
Nidlonel Football League
.Los Angel
. os at Phl-lphla. 8:22 p.m ..
Sll1on, H011. 4 • 3
1
0 24
NFL-$&lt;Jspendod Cincinnati LB Darryl
•I necessary
.
.
Tomlin .• S.D. 4
4
0
0 24
Black&amp;toct&lt; the next tour games for using
1
. SOIIurday, Ocl. 11
Ward, P~.
· 4 0
4
0 24
a.performance-enha,nclng substance.
!-&lt;&gt;• Angel
. ea at Philadelphia, 8:22 p.m.,
CINCINNATI BENGAL$-Re-signed
NFC lnclvldual Lodeto .
~~~ry .
.
RB Kenny Watson. Signed CB Simeon
Wltl&lt;S
.

TRANSACTIONS
Tlinclay"o
Tl"anoac:1Jona

107071 . 5, MariaSielort.foiioi1lccOI~. ·

1) 9.8571 . s, Waynosvil1015-2)
. )9.e,:illol',
7. Casstown Miam E..(6-1 8.9142~'!-­
N. Lewisbu'll Triad (5'2) 8.1642. 9. NIW
.
Lebanon Qboe (5-2) 8_.~,5. 10,
Henry(4-3)7.478!t
.. ·. · ·
;' •

.ll\-

J!oston

' -'!.&lt;"''

' DIVISION VI , . _i'

o.

5!·

J.o•

r

o
o

e,

·

. -noaday.Amer~ L~e,
~)~~anal
WORLD SERIES

1

Ocl. 22

League at

·,
. Tl1ui0day, Ocl. 23
NL 11 Al. (n)
'
. _
... _ Ocl. 25

·-··

· 'j\l al NL, tn)
•
!kindlly, Oct. :111"
Ill al NL, (n)
:
.
Monday, Del. 27
I'L a1 NL, If nacessary, (n) .
•
~nuday, Oct. 21
NL al AL, If n.......ry, (n)
•
. Thuraday, Oct, 30
fjL a1 AL, II neceaaary, (n)

:t,_ PRo FooTBALL

' ..
t

w~

I

w~

.

Castilte ~the praetce squad.

Quarttil'l*:ks
Atl Com
Warner, Ariz 183 127
Rome, Dal.
182 104
Manning. NY-G 132 .84
Brees, N.O.
194 133
camp., Was. 153 97 .
R~gers, G.B. 163 103
McNabb. Phi. 175 11.2
Delh .. Car.
142 86
onon,Chl.
155 96
O'SulllvBn, S.F. 140 82

Yds TO
1472 10
1388 11
1032 6
1673 9
1054 6
1274 9
1296 6 .
1096 5
11001
1092 7

lnl
4
5 .
1
6
0
4
2
2
4
6

Ruahere
.
AH Vds Avg L.G ~D
Turner, Atl.
103 543 5.3 66t 6
Portis, Was. , 115 51~ 4.6 31 4
Palefson,- Min. 104 452 4.3" 34 3
Gore, S.F.
68 423 4.8 411 3
QaJ.
93 · 395 4.2 25 4
Graham, T.B. 67 393 5.9 681 2
. Forie. Chi.
107 383 3.6 501 2
Jacobs; NY-G 85 380 5.8 443
J. Jonas, Sea. 78 373 4.8 32 2
Jame5, "rlz
92 334 3.6 16 3

.a...,..,.

ij Jfsttur•l Footbati -Lelgue ·
AMERICAN CONFERENCE

GREEN BAY PACKER5-Releasod LB
Tracy White. Signed LB Dan.ny Lansanah

from the practice 'squad.

'

.

SAN FRANCISCO 49ERS-Signed LB

Eric Baktltlari to the practice sqUad.
HOCKEY
,
National Hockey League
ANAHEIM
DUCKS-Claimed
lW
Joe.Kim Undstrom on waivers from
Chicago and assigned him to the Iowa
Chops (AHL).
BOSTON BRUINS-Released F Paler
Scheeler. Placed F Nate .Thdmpsqn and
F Jeremy Reich tin waivers for the pur-

pose ot

asslgni~g ·

them to Providence

(AHL). Assigned 0 Matt Hunwick to
ProVidence and F Carl Soderberg to
Malmo (Sweden) . .
CALGARY . Fl,AMES-,-Waivad D Rhett

o

.

PF
126
79
115
79

PA

TALLADEGA, Ala. (AP) '
The speech hasn't
changed in the seven years .
since NASCAR first delivered it during a 2001 driver's
meeting at Daytona.
"This is your warning,"
race director David Hoots
begins. "Do not.go below the
yellow line. If in NASCAR's
judgment you go below the
yellow line ro improve your
p&lt;&gt;sition, you will be blackflagged." . ·
· So why · the surpriSe that
Regan Smith was penalized
Sunday · for dipping below
the out-of-bounds line to
AP photo'
00
~sTony
Stewart the last Tony Stewart, fr.ont left, leads a pack of cars through.the trilap
at
Talladega
Superspeedway?
oval "On the final lap of the NASCAR Sprint Cups Series' ,
The debate over the frantic AMP Energy 500 auto race a! Talladega Superspeedway iri:
finish raged 00 Moriday and Talladega, Ala:• Sunday. AI nghlts ~egan .~milh (01) ~ho ,
Tuesday. with claims that the 'passed the !Jmsh line f1rst but was d1squahfted for pass1ng.
rookie driver was robbed of . below the yellow line.
his · first career victory tight, drivers, crew chiefs NASCO,R believes the inten(
because NASGAR used its !IDd any other . regular was obvious.
judgment to give a twe:-time . attendee knows the directive . Although Stewart admits ,
series champion a coveted by heart.
he was blocking , the two.·
Talladega victory. NASCAR
So when Smith passed cars were running bumper-;
defended its ruling late in the Stewart below the line, then to-bumper - not side-by-.;
day,then cleared ur any con- moved above it to cross the - side - when Smith made
fusion about what s allowed finish line first, Stewart the decision to ·slide below:
on the final lap of a restric- knew the move would be the line. And, Stewart gave'.
tor-plate race.
disallowed.
him room to return to the ,
NASC.&lt;\R put the yellow- "I've been a part of every racing surface. Had Smltli
line policy in place in its first one of the driver meetings come back behind Stewart,:
return to Daytona following since they implemented the no harm done . But Sl!lith.
Dale Earnhardt's fatal 2001 yellow line rule, and it had already completed the
accident. By outlawing a always starts with 'This is pass by' the time he moved
portion of· the asphalt at your warning. Po not back onto the surface. · :
Daytona and Talladega. tmprove your position below · NASCAR president Mike,
NASCAR shrunk the racing the yellow hoe,"' Stewart Helton said Monday thai,
surface and took control of said Mo!)day. "If you ar~ scoring officials did not ,
daredevil driving at the two passing another car and you believe Stewart forced Smith,
most dangerous tracks on the are below the yellow line, under the line. But ii was;
circuit.
back off, fall back behind the mostly irrelevant because it
Stewart broke the rule that car you are trying to pass and . wasn't even the ·defense anY: ·
very first race, dropping two you won't he penalized. · one was taking for Smith's:
tires below the line to avoid "The driver's meetings maneuver. .
running into Johnny Benson have been very clear about
Instead. drivers cited a.
after Benson tried to block · that from Day I. They've 2007 Truck Series race in.
·Stewart's attempted pass. never wavered in the termi- Daytona when Benson went
Stewart was immediately nology they've used or the below the yellow line to pass
black-flagged- a directive language they've used. It's - Travis Kvapil for· second·
he ignored - . and had a always been the same."
place in a three-wide finish:
heated exchange with
But Smith disagreed , and NASCAR said · at the time
NASCAR following the found a good deal of support that Benson's mcive was·
race.
across the garage.
legal because the rule had:
Hoots has yet to change It can be argued that wiggle roorn: If a driver can..
the language of his pre-race Stewart forced him• below see the checkered flag wav- .
warning in the 29 Cup the line to block Smith from ing. essentially anything
restrictor-plate races since. -passing, a maneuver that can goes over the final push to
Seriously. The script is so also be penalized if the finish line.
·

Warrener, D Anders Eriksson 1and F
Jemie Lundmark: \
.

CAROLINA HURRICANES-Assigned
F Joe Jensen, F TrS\IOr Gillies and D Tim
uffalo
4 1 0 .8011
104
Conboy to Albany (AHL).
aw Ehgloind 3 1 0 .750
79
CHICAGO 8LACKHAWKS-Asslgned
,Y. Jets
2 2
.500
116
D cam Barker, D Aaron Johnson and G
Recelvtro
M10mi .
220 .500
7~
.
,
No . Yds Avg LG TO · Anlti Niemi to Rockford (AHL).
'
DETROIT . RED WINGS--Aasignod D ·
BiJsh, N.O. .
38 321 U
421 2
Pet PF PA
WIUen, Dal.
35 442 12.6 42 2 · Jonathan Ericsson ·and F Villa Laino t9 ·
.....,...... . 5,
0 1.1100115 58
Grand Rapids (AHL),
Fitzgeratd, A.rlz31 487 15.1 75 4
rndtanapolfa 2 2 ' 0 .51lQ 83 94
MONTREAL CANADIEN$-Asslgnod D
Jennings, G.a 29 569 19.6 62 3
.400 100 111
~acl&lt;IOnvll10 . 2 , 3
Alex Henry \o Hamlllon (AHL).
Meso,
Waa.
27 421 15.8 87t 3
.1100 83 . 130
0 "4
NASHVILLE PREDATORs-Assigned
Boldin, Ariz
27 366 13.8 791 5
•
No1111
F Josh Gratton to Milwaukee (AHL).
26 454 17.5 701 2
While. All.
i
W L T Pet PF PA ·
NEW YORK ISLANDER5-Asalgnod G
Muham., Car. 25 358 ·14.3 47t 2
l'lttSbtJ'llh .
4 t 0 .800 103 79
Yann Danis. F Jar•my Colllton. F Mitch
Cooley, Wos- 25 288 11.5 27 t
~altimore
2 2 0 .500 75 S6
Fritz, FTim Jackman, F Kurtis McLean, f
A. Bryan!, T.B.. 24 278 11 .8 36 0
l:levsJand
.1 3
.250 4e 78
Trevor Smith and D Chri$ Lee to
Cincinnati . 0 ~ 0 .1100 7~ 118
B"dgeporl (AHL).
.
Punt Re1urnere
Wool
...No Yd!i Avg LG TO . OTIAWA SENATORS-Assigned G
W L T Pel PF PA
Brian Elliott and c Code Bass to
Bush, N.O.
9
261 29.0 711 3
benver
4 1 0 .800 1~9 130 Hixon, NY-G 9
· Blngllam!on.(AHL).
124 13.8 SO 0
6an Diogo
2 3 0 .400 14e 129 .-.on, Phi. 17 225. 13.2 681 I
SAN JOSE SHARKS-Waived 0 Kyle
1 3 0 .250 78 101
Oal&lt;fand
Mclaren, D Brad St8ubitz and. FIW Riley
BlaCk., G.B.
9
115 12.8 76t 1
~ansas Clly 1 4 0 ,200 65
Armstrong. Assigned RW Mike Morris
17 173 10.2 3t
Jonea, ~··
and 0 Mike Moore to Worcester (AHL).
Bump~. Sea. 1
66 9.4 30 0
NAnONAL CONFERENCE
TORONTO MAPLE LEAF8-Signod D
McQu., NY-G . 7
59 8.4 15 0
Eaot
luke Schenn to a three-year contra,ct.
D. Hall, SI.L
5 41 8.2 26 0
WLTPeiPFPA
Waived F Boyd Devereaux and 0 Stanan
Rand. EJ, was. 13 106 8.2 28 o
~.Y. Giants 4 0 0 1.1100127 49
Kr:onwaiL
Bre8610n, AriZ 7
48 6.9 17 0
WashingtOn · 4 I .0 .800 109 98
COLLEGE
4 1 0 ..800 151 111
Dallas
COLOAAOQ-Agr8ed tO terms with·
Klckon Rtlll,.,.
~hiladelphi&amp; 2 3 0 .4110 127 97
· No Yds Avg LG TO. Dan Hawkins, football coach, on a Con·•
South
tract extension through 2012.
Rossum, S.F. 17 491 28.9 ss o
· DAEW-Named Darryl Keckler merfs
F. Jones. Dal. t5 4t2 27 5 98t 1
'Carotina . WLTPc:tPFPA
4 I 0 .800 114 70 .
basketball coach.
Manning, Chi. 7
191 27.3 48 0
3 2 0 .800 114 94
~amPa Bay
Taylor. Min.
8 . 205 25.6 37 0
3 2 0 .600 117 107
i\!lenta
M. Hicf&lt;a, Min. 8
203 25.4 34 0
New Orleans 2 3 0 .4110 138 ' 130 Cartwr., was. 15 380 25.3 50 0
Nor1h
'
jac!O;on, T.B. 12 3(11 25. t 45 o
Major League SOCcer
W L T Pet PF PA
'
Thomas. N.D. 17 421 24.8 56 o
EASTERN CONFERENCE
3 2 0 .600 128 •87
~hlcago
Norwood, All. 13 315 24.2 54" 0
.
WLTPisGFGA
2 3 0 .400 133 128 Stewart, Car. 14 .329 ,23.5 38 0 ·
Green Bay
X-Coiumbus
16 6 5 53 46 31
Mlnneeota
2 3 0 .400 101 109
x-New England 12 8 7 43 38 37
0 4 0 .000 88 147
petrolt
Scoring
Chicago ·
~2 9 . S 42 35 26
W.at
Touchdown•·
NewYork
9 tO 8 35 36 41
,
WLTPeiPF . PA
TO RashRec Aet Pts
D.C. Unilad
10 14 3 33 41 49
"nzona
3 2 o . .600 1~7 120
3 36
Bush, N.D.
6
1
2
·Kansas City · 8 10 9 33 30 36
-llan Franclaeo 2 3 o .400 115 127 · Turner, AtL
0
36
6 6
o
Toronto FC
.. 8 12 7 . 31 29 37
:=;eattle
1 3 . 0 .250 83 124 West., Phi.
. 6 ·4 • 2
0 36
WESTEAI'I CONFERENCE
·St. Louts·
0 4 0 .000 43 147 Berl&gt;&lt;lf, Dal.
0 3(1
5
4
1
WLTPisGFGA
t
"! •
0 3(1
Boldin, AriZ
5. 0
5
1
x-Houston
11 5 10 43 38 30
• . Sunday'o Ge0 3(1
Hightower, Ariz 5
5 0
CD Chivas USA 11 10 6 39 37 37
.bhicago 34, Delroil 7
0 3(1
Owens. Dal.
5
0
5
Raal Sail Lake 9 10 8 35 35 36
Miami 17, San Diego 10
Gore. s :F.
4
3
1
0 26
Colorado
10 13 4 34 39 40
Atlanta 27, Green Bay 24
,
0 . 24
Sruca. S.F.
4
0
4
FCDallas
8 9 10344034 ·
. Y. GlaniS 44, Saatlle 8
Fllzgerald. Ariz~
0
~
0 24
San Jose
1 10 9 3(1 27 32
enneasee 13, Baltimore 10
Forts, Chi.
4· 2
2.
0 24
Los Angeles
7 12 8 29 50 55
dlanapoHs 31 , Houston 27
1 24.
F. Jones, Dal. 4
3· 0
rolna 34, Kaf1&amp;~ City
0 24
Portia, Was. 4 4
o
x.-cUnched playoff spot
ashington 23, Philadelphia 17 ,
0 24 •
Stewart, Car. 4 4 .
,NO!E: Three points for victory, ~ p9int
rwer ~6, Tampa Bay 13
.
for tie.
Dallas 31, Cincinnati 22
llrizona 41 . B"llalo 17
Thul'ldi!Y'• Oame
!-lew Englal1d 30. San Francltco. 21
Nev.t York at Real Salt lake, 10 p.m.
National Baa"-lt Aaaoclatton
('iltsbtJ'llh 28, Jacksonville 21
Saturday'• Gamea
PrHelton Glance
Opon: · N.Y. Jata, Dakland, St Lo"Js,
New England at Kansas·City, 8 p.m.
EASTERN CPNFERENCE
evelahd
•
Toronto FC 8.t FC O"allas,.8:JQ p.m.· •
·
Atiant!c blortoton
MondiJ'aCloine .
CD Chlvas USA at San Jose, 10 p.m.
WL
Pel
GB
inneeota'30, N~ oneans 27
·
, Sunday'a Gam~•
Toronto
1 0 . 1.000
1
Sunday, ocp2
Colurnbus ~t Chicago, 3 p.m.
Bolton
0 0
.000
·~
lcago at.AUanla; 1 p.m.
D.C. Unhed at Houston, 7. p,m.
New Jersev ·
0 o' .000
~
ami at Houston, 1 p.m.
Colorado at Los Angeles, 8'P.m.
. NBW York
0 0
.000
)\
lroilal Mln""""ta' 1-p.m.
Wednooday, 0Ct15
Philadelphia
0 0 .000
~. klan~ 11 New Orleans, 1 p.m.
San Jose at Houston, 9 p.m.
Southtut Olvltlon
LOuis at WUhlngton. 1 p.m. .
.
Thuraday, OcL 11 ..
WL
Pel
, GB
nclnnatl-·at N.Y. Jets. 1 p.m.
New-England at D.C. United, 7:30p.m.
Atianta
.1 o · 1.000
ltimora.at lndllnapolis, 1 p.m.
ChariOfte
· 0 0 . .000
y,
. arolna at Tampa ¥Y"· 1 p.m.
Miami
0 1 .000
1
lacksof!V(IIe a1 Denver, 4:05 p.m.
Orlando
0 1 .000
1
reen Bay al Soallle• .~:1S p.m .
Washington
0 '1 .000
1
alias at Arizona, 4:15p.m.
2008 Sprint Cup Slandlnp
Ce-1 Dlvlolon
hiladalphla at San Franetaco. 4:15p.m.
Allor Talladega
L
Pel.
GB
Now·England at San Diego, 8:15p.m.
~ 1 0
1.000
Dalro~
Buffalo, Plttsb!Jrgh
. , Kansas C!1y,
Wins Pts.
Nam&amp;'
Dhlcago
0 0 .000
ttnneasee
1. Jimmie Johnso-n
5
5718
Indiana
0
0
.000
Monday, Del- 13
1
:!.
Csrl
Edwards
·
6
-72
Cl811eland
0 1 .001)
N.Y. Giants at Cleveland, ·8:30p.m.
3. Greg Biffle
2
-~ 7
Mllw~ukee \
0
1
.000
.AFC Individual ~
1
-99
4. Jeff Burton.
1
1 . -152
5. Clln! Bowyer.
WESTERN CONFERENCE
6. 1\eYln·HarvlCk
0
-.171
9oulhwft1 Dlvfelon
cl18
7. Tony Stewart
'1
-~00
Att Com Y~a TO In!
W L
Pet
GB
I;J. Jaff Gordon
0
•232
Dallas
1 0 1 ."000
avre, NY-J
124 87 935 12· 4
9. Man KenSeth
0
-245
H()Uston
1 0
1.OQO
Ivers, S.D.
138 94 1183 11- 4
10. Dale Earnhardt Jr. 1 . ·249
New Orleans
1 o 1.000
C"ller, Den.
191 125 1502 10 4 ·
8.. -331
1 1. Kyle Bosch
San Antonio
0 o .000
Yt
!'loelh., P~.
124 79 947 7 3
12. Denny Hamlin
Memphis
0 1 .OOOr 1
,1
·335
~dwarcts,
122 81 948 ~ 2
Northweat Dlvltlbn
!&gt;enning., MIL 112 75 817 3 1
-2179
13. David Ragan
0
WL
Pel
flu~l, Oai&lt;. 99 54 688 4 1
GB
Minnesota
Cusel, N.E. 104 70 707 3 3
1 0
1.000
14. Kaoey Kahne
2
-2298
Donvor
-2537
banarct. Joe. 1~9 97 · 883 3 4
0 0 .000
15. Ryan Newman
1
jl .
Pet

The Daily Sentinel • Page B3 .

YeUow line alw~ys out of bounds:.

lUeaday'o -

423 12.4 351 3

27
27
25
24
Johnson. Hoo. 24
M. Jones. Jae. 23
, D. MillOn. Bal. 21
Aeod. But.
21
SIDkley. Den. 21
Gonz""'z. K.C. 21 ·

I

.Lilf8io\1!!

·All Y&lt;ls Avg LG TO

Marshall. Den.
Housh., Cin.
Royal. Den.
a-. K.C.
Welker, N.E.
Wayne. Ind.
Ward. Pit

s.

'1, m

Aushu:a

··

-....

1

•
1.a1 AI
OlcEM
Los Angeles 7, Chicago 2
Los Angeles 10, Chicago 3
l-os Angoleo 3, Chicago 1

Nelaorwllle-l\111(

1031 5 . 5

No Yds Avg LG

-......_..
a · a.

•

:Volleyball

Breanna Taylor, Ashley ball team can call itself a
Walker, Courtney Thomas, league champion after ·
Stephanie clinching the 2008 crown
Boso, and
Shamblin added strong sup· Tuesday during a straight
from PageBl
port efforts.
game 25- 16, 25-18, 25- I 7
Hand
had
the
upper
hand
victory over Rock Hill ori
'lees apiece. followed by
in
the
next
game
10 leading
Senior
Night,
·
Tresa Swatzel 'and Karissa
The Lady Raiders (13-7.
· Connolly ·. with fi.vc points Miller to the 25-12 win .
went
into
a
tail9-0
OVC) improved to 67-2 .
Southern
each.
·
spin,
but
responded
in
a
big
all,time
as a member of the .
:· Swatzel led the net attack
way
for
game
three.
Ohio
Valley
Conference,
i).irh 17 kills, followed by
Boso notched eleven dating back to the 2002
Burt with nine kills and
points
in the third game. campaign. The Silver and
Casto with · seven kills.
while
Hunter,
Walker and Black also won their final ·
y.'ilfong
and
Britney
·Morrison both had six kills Thomas. added great floor . regular season contest at the
in the triumph. · with games and solid front line current gymnasium
Connolly adding two kills play. Boso added eight which will be replaced next
and a team-high 40 assists. points to break the gaiJle year with· the addition of a
It was the final regular open frpm 13-11 to 21-11 in new high school.
Mackenzie Cluxton Jed
:ieason home · game for Southern's favor. Southern
went
on
to
win
25I
7.
RVHS
at the service line
~niors Swatzel. Burt, Casto
The last game was a dog with II points. followed by
l!Jid Wilfong. The Eastern
fight
and both entities want- ·· Carissa Gilmore with . 10
junior varsity team also won
ed
the
· winning bone. and !Iiana Corfias with
.i:n three games.
. Eastern returns to action Southern prevailed to claim nine. Kay! a Smith also had
on Thursday when it travels the 25-22 win and the eight points in the triumph.
.
Corfias led the net attack
to Glouster for the TVC match . ·
Hunter
went
17-18
overwith
five kills, followed by
Hocking
finale
with .
Trimble. The JV game will all in serving with two aces Smith with four. . Tara
and a block. Pape was 13- Workman and Linsey
!!'art at 6 p.m .. ·
13, Boso was 18-22 with six Stover were next with three
aces and two blocks. going points apiece, followed by
:SOUTHERN AVENGES MILLER
14-16 spiking. Bre Taylor Cluxton adn Jacqueline
: RACINE
In four was 9-9 serving with an ace Jacobs with two eac h.
games . the Southern Lady and 5:.6 spiking with three Cluxton also had a teamTornadoes defeated Miller blocks. Walker was illalJ,.. high 12 assists.
tp put .the finishing touches · servmg wtth an ace~ and \ Kassie Large led · the
60 seniornight Tuesday in
Thomas was 10-13 Wtlh an Redwomen (4-12) with
· Hayman ace.
seven service· points in the
Southern's
Gymnasium. 25-14, 12- 2~.
Shamblin was 19-2 1 spik- setback.
1
25-17 , and 25-22.
ing and Woods 2-5• while
It was the final regular
: Honored during Senior - Kelsey Holsinger was 16- 17 season home game for
~Jight festivities were spiking. Hunter had eight · seniors Cluxton , Gilmore ,
•outhern 's &lt;our se n,·or·s·. assists and Thomas had S . h S .
C rfi
d
.,
,,
five . Southern . was 77-86
mtl • lo\!er, o tas an
Emma Hunter, Chelsea
.·
.
Workman .
~ape, Rashell Boso, and servmg, 226 -241 passmg,
·. RVHS
claimeQ
an
57
66
Samantha
Patterson. · and
sptkmg. evening sweep with a 25$outhern 's ability to pull off . Southern had eleven aces , II , 21-25, 25-14 victory in
the win made the pight a 14 a~S!Sis ,and seven blocks. the junior varsity conteSt.
very s'pecial night.
Mtller won the v~ry close Chynna Mershon led the JV
• Southern boosted t"ts reserve g_ame 25-19 and 26- R "d
. h 16 .
c I
'ttcord to 8· 13 overall and 24 · Emt 1Y Humphrey had 1 a1 ers
Wtt
pomts,
d b T h 1 10
d "'-7 in the league.
17 for "'h.e winners and owe Y as a A exan er
.t.
KI
H kl h d I
with 14 points. .
: Rashell Boso took off in a
e sey 10 e a e even.
River Valley will try to
l)i~ way by putting 22 Hope Teaford had ten · for clinch its .fifth unbeMen
pomts on the board for the Southern, while Bobbi
.
. OVC championship on
Lady Tornadoes. Emma . Harris had ten.
Sou_thern goes to Federal Thursday when it travels to
Hunte r tallied 1.8 markers,
H k Th d
Proctorville
to
battle
fo'hile Chelsea Pape added
oc mg ur~ ay.
Fairland. The JV match will
13. Miller's Ashley· Hand
liad 21 for Miller.
RVHS WINB ANOTHER
begin at 5:30p.m.
: In the first game,
OVC TITL!
Southern nearly doubled
Miller's score in the 25-14 . CHESHIRE - For the
win. · Hunter put seven seventh time in as many
¢iatkers on the board to lead years since . joining the
Subscribe today.
the Tornadoes, while Katie O~io Valley Conference ,
992•2155
Woods, Kelsey Holsinger, the River Valley volley- li
.

~(P loU)
An•tcm u.gu.
, a '"AI

,._Bay 6, Chtcaga ~
tampa Bay 6, Chtcaga 2
l:hicago 5, T - Bay 3
t"alflll" Bay 6 , Chicago 2

·r,

F·

I
I

n

1

Jloston 3. Lao An1jOiea 2

Region 111-1. FlfKiily U:..OtylltliiOI.t
(7~) 11.612L2.1!oJciyrusW\or4&gt;nl(7.())
11.6000. 3, Arehbbld (7~ 1.1,15857, 4.
Hanller f'atr1d&lt; Henry (7-jl) 11.3857. S.
Delphos JelfeOSOfl, (7~) 10.~, ~'
Sherwood Fairvl$W (6'1) g_...,,_
CoUins western RISI!M (6-1) 9.8571.
8. Uberty Cfr. (8-1) 8.9214. 9, ,.., ....
(7~) 8.62t4. 10, ·Nor(hwo«&lt; (6'1)
8.5488.
•,
'
. ·. '·
Region 19-1, Wl!ioterollurli_ (7.0j,
1:i.3nO. 2.
{&amp;ol)·
12.9928. 3, MiniDid (6-i) t0.1111:18: i,
JoMS1own-MOnroe 15-2) 10.1501); .~
Ball. LlbOrty-UniQ01(6-1} 10;~ :·~
Froderick1own · (6-1 ) " 10,)7$5. • T,
Ponsmou1h West (7-0) 10, 1355. ,.8,
Hea\h (6-1) 9.1;357. 9,llllnl&gt;ridgo Pa)l1
valley (5-2) 8.8841!: 10. w ,
Ridgfowood (6-1) 8.5785. · ·, · • ,. ·"
Region 2D-1. Cln. -HHIJ; Ch~
Acad. (7-0) 12.Soo0. '2, ~na l&amp;-11
12.4858. 3. we~· Jelf811011 · t&amp;·~)
12.0811 . 4, West Llbertv:St!On\ .P.'.cll,

Region . 21-1. Mogadoie_ (7,q)
, 13.3402. 2, Bescom HopeweM-I..opdoo_
(7~)13.8$57, 3, Norwalk Paul (7~t
fle91on ·5.--1,
.qll'\l. ,Shaw . (IKl):· .{4.5;$:, 4, -~-"11•2- ~nay (6'1) 12.3357. 4, McDonald (7'!1).11.762&lt;!,,11;,
1M~. 2, ' ¥aylield (6-t)" 15.242)1: ~... ,IU210.!$, •AfO!' - Mal)di~sltr (6-1) Berlin Qenler Western ·R.eaeN!I (~11
AkrOO ljoban· (5-2f'12) !l:l$: 4. ~ . 12:12&amp;$), 6}'~; f'aiii.:.Cu!nbWallair. 10.6928. 8. Columbtana .(SO~) IO.fi$00;;
Padua (5'2) 11 .845!!:5. Maple H1a (SollY· Ghilotion (6-1) 12.0921!. '!': Coshocton : 7. Leetonia (6-l) 9,0428: 8, Net
11.0357. 6, Ken! Rooseve~ (5-2) · (6•1) f2.0765. 8, Wooster THwilv . (5·2) MlddleiOWn .Stj~ng11el'&lt;t '(~-3) 7.3142. 9';,
10.9928. 7. Warren Howland (4.·3) 11.8857, 9, Parry (6-l) 11.5590• 10, , Dahon (3-4) 6.6&amp;42.10.Tiffirt 9111Vert (ol,,
10.0100. 8, Rich!ield Revere (5·21 Ornlitle (5-2) 10.1642;
,
3)•6.2928.
·
, ., ·
9.6500. 9. Berea (4-3) 9.6071. 10. Akron
Region 14-1, FoS1oria (6·1) 16.8571.
~egion 22-'1. Carey (6·1) 10,23$7. 2,
Buchlel (4-3) 9.3928.
2, Loroin Ciearview {7~) 13.9214. 3, Ade (7·0) 10.0857, 3, O!llpitOo $t
f.legion 6-1 . Tol. Ceni. calh. (7~) Genoa Area (7~)"12.5642. 4, M~rlon John's (6·1) 9.9857. 4, ~ra-GIIbal;
17.9428. 2. Lexjnglon (7~) 16.6142. 3. Pieasan! (6-1) l1 .2428. 5, Quawa- (7.0) 8.8500. 5. Mi. Bloncharct,R)ytnl!olt.
Medina Highland (7-0) 15.3357. 4, - GlandoN (4-3) 7.2571. 6, Highlond t4-3) (5'2) 7.2428. Me Comb (&amp;-2) 8.1111011.
Lewio Centoo Olenlangy (5'2) 14.~214. 7.2W1. 7, llellvl118 .Clear Fork . (4·3) 7; Anlnglon (6-2) B.t18(10. 8;., W., l/niiY,
5, Olen!angy Liberty (5-2) 13.9142. 8, 7.0071. 8, · H~ron (5-2) 6.9142. 9, , " HUI1op(5'2)5.621~.9. Dei.'A~(+f
"SyiVI!nla Southview (7.0) 1 3.22,4. 7, Pemberville Eaotwdod .(S-2) 6.~. 8. 10, 3) 5.2214. 10, Edgottor) (tc3H·1!0001.':;1
-Avon Lake (5 -21 12.4428. B. Lodl Bucyrus (5-2!8.~5.
·· . .
_ _Region 23-1 . Hannibal River :irl!'l
Cloverleai (6-1) 11.4142. 9, G""'nvme
Region 15-',1 ," .Ma'!lno f.lfry (6-1) 1)J217, 2. Shedytlde (5-2)11.!J642[:l!;·,
(5-2) 10.7951 . 10, Maumee (6· 1) 12.3485. 2. Now Laxlnglort (7-0) Malvern (7-0) 8.9928. 4, Brldg"!'Qtl {So
1"0.0857.
·
12.t678, ' 3, lrilnton. (4.-3) 11;5410. 4, ·2) 8.4470. 5; Caldwell (5-2) 8.Q1'r.!.' fi:
-Region 7~1. Louisville (7~) 21 .8857 . . Belmonl Union ~otal (6-1) 11.0785.- 5• .Glouster Trimble (5·2) · 7.8t:oii., t'i
2. Cols_
. · QeSales (7·.0) 21.7714, 3. Sl 'Ciairsvl110 · (6·2) , 10.7950. . 6_, Newark ~alh. (5-2) 7.40011. · 8. . ~
Logan (7.0) 17.4071 . 4, Cola. Marion Wllllamapiitt .~sl(all (/!-2). 10.17.14. 7&gt;, G,rov_o Berne Un.lon {3-4) M71f"~
Franklin (7-0) 16.6642. 5, Allia""l' (6-1) GaiL !;ailla Acad._(4-3) '8,7751. 6, Cols. Zonee. Roseorans (4-3) 5.9714;•'1!);',
12:3071. 6. Cols. Beecheroft (6-1) Ha(Uiy (4-2).8.'109$. 9,._ Pemetoy Matgs Damiillet4-3) 5.6928. .
.
• !7··'
11.3765 . .7, Dublin .. Jerome (4-3) (5-:1)'8.~7. 10, Lkildr\(j ~ghh! (5-2) . ·.Region 24---1, MechaniCO!&gt;U'll (l'O)
10.8357. 8. Cola. Independence (6-1 ) 8.00011:
;
•
. ; "13.5000.2, SCiolovilleCommunlly(ll;l)'
!'legion 1~1, •Ooid\Yater (7:0) 8.85n ..3, S~ Lahman (!5-1) 8.28\f!;
10.8214 . 9. Colo. Wal!erson (4-3)
10.4642. 10. Wooste((S-2) 9.8785.
17.a785. 2, ClarksvHie · Cllmon'Ma..ie 4, Lockland (5-2) 8.1805. 5; Minster (IS'.
Region 11-1. Gill. WinlonWoods·(6-1) (7-0) i1).9214. 3, Pliin Ci1Y Jonathon .2) 8.1714, 6, Sprlng:.Ca!h. C~nl, (44)
16..1857 .2. New Carlisle Tec"mseh (7· Alder 17·P) 13.7851. 4, Qrookvl~ · (7'!1) ' 7.3357. 7i. Covington ,(5-2) 6.9142. -~, ·
0) 14.6357. 3. Cin. T"rpin (6-1) 13.9214. 13.4048. 5, . D'l)'l~n O.ii~Wiiod (5-2) Afrlcantrlc Early Collage (5-2) 6.1494. 9;
4. Cin. Ander0ori (5·2) 13.6642. 5, 12.2142. 6. · A~~:nbis~pp Alter (0.2) · An80111a (502) 6.1142. 10, TfO\' Chr~UIIh
Morrow little Mlemi (6-1) 12.0000. 6, 9.e285. 1; Cln . .N •. College Hill (502) (4-3) 6.09011.

,

Mannlog. Ind. 154 96

iloslon
•. Lao ~- t
Boston 7, ~ ,.,.... 5
!-OS,.,.... s , - ~ . i21nnlngo

1•11

·

u ,,

2001.-ct'

DIVISIONV .

(4-3) s.6628..

www.myclail~ntinel.com .

WOOnewJay, October 8, 2008

Wednesday, October 8, aooJJ

www.mydailysentinel.com

..

.o

o

J-loiiSion

o

..

o

131

o

'

'

PRo SoccER

~
~

.'

o·

o

PRo BASKETBALL

t

~
~

NASCAR

~

w

. _ppon:

'

•'

~

-~
ou..,ter,

a.n.

--·- ---· ·-"1· -----·· -······--

.,

~~~HUGETENT SALE
with all kinds of bargains for everyone! Children's books,
inspirational books, garden tools, bed skirts, bath towels,
kitchen items, rugs, games, gift Items and morel

THIS IS OUR BEST SALE EVER!
Sale lasts until October 311
Inside the store the Bargains keep on coming.
If you a~e worried about Christmas this year ·come and
see.what great things you can buy for under $5.00.
We have gifts.on closeout that sold for .
$10.00-$20.00 for $2.99, $3.99 and .$4.991
Lotion g'ift sets, expensive kitchen towel sets, greeting
card. ensembles, cookbooks and much morel ·

•
•
'

�..

.

Page Ba • The Daily Senfulel

National Scoreboard

K-C makes fmru preparations for DTWC W~kly fool ball computer ratlnp
Bv Scon WOLFE . .

the winner of last year's SKYLINE SPEEDWAY JACK·
modified DTWC champio-lANTERN TWIN 30'S
onship. Chub Frank, Sugar
: CHILLICOTHE - Final Grove, PA led a parade of
STEWART
This
preparations are being made Rockets to the 2007 DTWC Satur\lay.
October
II
fur what looks to be one of late model crown. Close in Skyline Speedway will host
t!Je big~Jesl Dirt Track World tow was "Kid Rocket" Josh The Jack-o-Lantern Twin
ChampiOnship races in the Richards.
30's paying $2,500 to win in
event's· 28 year history. Jim
During the month of the Super Late Models and
Nier's K-C Raceway near ' October the track crew has 410 Outlaw SI,Jrints. Jcining
Chillicothe, Ohio will play been groominJ! thCj K-C facil- these two divtsions " ill be
)iost to the event for the ity for its btggest day in the Modified Lite, .. FWD
fburth consecutive year as 2008. First class facilities Four Cylinders. MiniP.fOmoter Carl Short's brain- will greet the fans, including Wed!JeS and Pure Stocks .
child continues to mature n~w camping. areas. great Origmally· Semi-Lates or
into a well-groomed national concessions, and most of all Steel Block late Models
icon. This year's race takes ·exciting three-wide racing _ were to run . however. the
place October 16-17-18 , Overall, it's the atmosphere Steel Block race has been
Thursday-Saturday.
. that makes the DTWG what postponed and Street Stocks
The 28th Annual Dtrt 11 ts.. The "Magtc of. have been added to the .raeTrack World Championship Pennsboro" has transformed ing·card.
presented by gottarace.com into the "Magic of K-C".
The
Jack-o-Lantern
kicks off on Thursday Don't miss out on the sur- October lith racing festivievening October 16th with prises that 2008 will bring .
ties serves as a precursor for
Qualifying, heat races and
The special reserved seat- · Jim Nier's K-C Raceway
consolation races to set the ing fot tire 28th Annual Dirt · Dirt
"~;rack
world
·s)a:rting grid for the Track World Champidnsh\P Championship on October
Modifieds. Lite Model qual- presented by gottarace,com 16-17-18. That event pays
ifying and heat races will be will be the top five rows of $50,000 to win and Skyline
held on Friday evening all spectator grandstands. A will be idle"to honor that hisOctober 17th with the conso- seating chart is available !Jn toric event (No racing Oct.
lanon races , The Jtm Dunn the KC Raceway webstle 18).
Last year, the Jack-oMemorial
non-qualifiers www.kc-raceway.com an l
race, The Modified 30 Lap race fans may pick their pre- Lantern races were run as the
Feature and the 100-lap Dirt ferred seats on a fust-come, Jack-o-Lantern 50 IRS
TriU:k World Championship first-served basis. _
fmale, however, owner Billy
to be held on Saturday
To J?UTChase presale tickets Jfuell has decided to share
evening October · 18th. and pit passes and/or lo pre- the wealth and has boosted
Sunday October 19th will enter a driver, money orders. the pay'off (or both the
serve as the rain date. .
cashier's checks and credit sprints and late models. Last
. Perhaps . the most pre'sti- cards max be used. The year Rick Aukland won the
gious racing event ever to DTWC wtll accept pie-sale JOL event with a total of 52
come to Southern Obi\). the cr~dit card orders with Late Models competing.
Dirt
Track
World Mastercard or Visa. To place Saturday's race is expcected
l::hampionship , commonly your credit card orders tele- to draw good fields in all
!Wown as the DTWC, once phone the KC Raceway divisions.
again ha5 made Jim Nier's K- office at: 740c289-4114. · Sr. Citizens will pay just
C Raceway its home. An Tickets are also available via $10 at the
General
ensemble of the nation's mail order by sending a Admission gate in presenting
greatest drivers will again money order or cashier's their Golden Buckeye card, a
come together to compete for ·check to: DTWC, 340 Bailey savings of $5 off the regular
!he $50,000 top prize, which Chapel Road, Piketon,. OH $15 admission. This di~­
IS part of an ever-growmg 45661.
. .·
.
count apphes to the mam
over-$200.000 purse.
. . For more inforntatien con- gate only. Children under 12
Not only will fans get to tact DTWC promoter Carl are free when accompanied
see the _nation's top late Short at: 865-945-3423, visit with a _pai~ adult parent. Pit
111odel drivers, but also the the DTWC webstte at admtsston ts $30.
very best open-wheel modi- www.dirttrackworldchampiFor- more information,
fied drivers. · Many drivers onship.net or visit the K.,C please visit www.skylineat speedway.net or· call 740compete in both classes like -Raceway . website
662-4111 or 304-539-4410.
Zanesville's Rick Aukland, www.kc-raceway.com
SPECIAL TO THE SENTlNEL

Meigs
from Page Bl

..·H.'·.
fuur points apiece, followed by Morgan Howard
w(th three arid Emalee

Glass with two. Shellie
Bailey
and
Chandra
Stanley also added one
point each in the setback.
Stanley led the net
attack with four kills and
Wolfe followeD with ·
three. Smith and Howard
also had one kill each.

Glass and Smith both had
three assists, and ·the duo
ofWolfe and Stanley each
added one block.
Meigs will conclude its
2008 rvc Ohio season on
Thursday · when it travels
to Belpre for a 6 p.m. JV
contest. '

COLUMBUS (AI')- H...,..-.lheJillod

weeld&gt;; foo11laa computer flltings from

-"'*

Kng&amp; Mills Kings (4-31 11.7357. 7. Ml
Orab Western BrOwn (7~ 10.2V~ . 8.
Day. Dunbar (6-1) 10.2098. 9, T"""""

lhe Ohoo High Sctooo1 Altllelic
Assooabon. Rafings are by diYislon and Edgewood !5-2)" 9.6071. 10.
region with •oc.ord and average bl-iew!f (4-3) 9.1214:
potnts pe-r game ,(top eight teams tn ·
each region advance to reOionaJ quar..
DIVISION Ill
rerfinals)·

Region 11-1, Chagrin Falls (8-1)
12.5500. 2. C&lt;JyL Fet1s ~- _,.. (42) 11.9163. 3. Young. Ube~~~
Region 1- 1. Glenville Academic 11.3142.
(5-2) 10.
• 5,
Campus (7.0) 21.4631 2. CiM. St. Hulltoarct (6-1)10.92,.. 6. Ravenna (5lgnalius (6-1) 18.0494. 3, Menlo• (5-2). 2) 1.0.371~. 7. Chaidon NIJ.Calflednil
110714. 4. Slrongs,;lle (6-1) 15.5928
, . 1.a11n j~) S.Qei)O. 8.'$\cof&amp;~ooo (54)
· ··c~-.
·-- &gt;""~M"~
.........~.. ~~
5. Lak......xxl St. EdYiarct (6-1) t • .71;!2. 8 .05C0. · 9.'
s. Eucl id (5-2) 13.2928. 1. W~&lt;i19lbl' 7.9357. 10. Corltan6
(4-3)
Soulh (5-2) 13.0572. 8. Solon•(4-3) 7.4817. .
'· •
11 .1285. 9. young. Boardman (5-2)
Region 1~1 . St.. lolllyS Memorial (710.7928. 10. !lre&lt;lksvikl-llmadvlew Hta 0) ,15.371~; 2. ~ (7~) 13.7571 . 3,
(4-3) 10.7357.
· ,
: Be!liMle. (6-1) 13.4142. ~ . Topp City
Region 2-1.- .Cant· GJonOak t~l T~ (7:oj ' 13,2428. 5. Defi81190
"16.57!4- 2, BrunsWiol&lt; (7~) 16.4785._3, (5-2) 12.7214.6, Clydo.(6-1) 12:4785.1,
•M&gt;herst Steele (7.0) 16.0714. •· Cant Tlffi~ Columbian (5-2) 1_Q.9428. $ ,
!dd&lt;Jniey (5·2} 15.2242. &amp;. N. Canl!&gt;n Uol&gt;ana. (6-1) 9.~ . .9. SunbuO)' 910,
Hoover (6-1 ) 14.8755. 6, Macedonia Walnut (5-2) 9.5394,. 10, ' Sa~QIIky
Nordooia (5·2) "13)'928. 7, ~ Por1dno (6-1) 92071
. . _,_
" ··
(5·2) 13.6714. 8, F"""""t R.._ (H) . Re~ion . 11.:_:1 ,
12.6928. 9, Akron Garfield (5-.2) H .4928. 2, Poland /. Seminary (&amp;-I)·
12 1;357 10, Twin lib()~ (5-2) 12.3928.
13.5285. 3. -oi&lt;,UCkil)g \!alley (6-1)
Region3-1 , PickelirlqtonHighSchool 13.1532:4, canal Futiori N.W. (6-1)
C(7~)19.8500.2.H111larctDovidson(7-. 13.1071 . 5, O!:lwlf (tl-1) 12.71.:!. 8,
Ol 17i4000. ,3.
&amp;OOktlaven (ll&lt;tt . -GranYjlle (5'2). u .40'TJ .
Rayland,
10.1l60. ' 4, UpPfr, ~jngiOil (8;1) ·, ~ t.pc{i1 (5-.2) 11.3120. a_. Now
1~.9928.
Coffnlii!J (7.,'!1) ~ ~7-0) .10.2()(!0. ~. Cadiz
13.4285. 6, Wot111Jng1on l&lt;llbO!line ~2) Halli*9&lt;\.Cilol!. (5-:2)9.2];1j/NO. vtncenl
12.41.:!. 7, BeaV,R:- .(&amp;'2) 9.4714: • WBITOi"1 ~)-8.8382, ·- • .
~~ , Delaware Hoyos (4-3) , ll.S!J28. 9, Rog;o,12-1, Thonw{lle: Slielldan (7Mary,slriiiO (5-2) 8.4928.
16.2357, 2. CIR:I.,...
Elrtl (7·.
Un&lt;:eln (4-3) 8.3857. l ' ;. • . ,
0) 14j5285.3 ; Gtornu1oj1own Valley View
Region 4-1 Con. Col""lfl ' (6-1) (6-1)13.5071'.4. ~W-(7·
19.07fC. 2. c;rl. El&amp;r (6-1) 18.9568. 3. O) J2.0QQO. 5, Ohii!JCOihO (SOl!) 11.9285.
Kollering Fairmont. (6•1} 17.0071. 4, •6. Co!8- Eaa1moot Aca&lt;l, (6-1) 9.8842. t;
Harrison (~-2) 16.4214. ~. ~ . ks: Fmnl!lif&gt;(4-3f,B.81.o:!. _8, Ndrwooq (6- t). ·
Wayne (5-2) 1.5.60!10- 6~ Oin. WQOdWlrCI: :8.685T.•ll; "E!!l'&gt;n (&amp;';t)'p~J:. t0.'011Y(7~)15 .5742.7.~on ·NoolhloiQ01((~ . ~am.Jlll~ .(~7.!1b7L' ... ·
1) 14.942B, 8.1J&lt;ontofirille.(W)'1.4.(18S~:
, ,,
·
3
0

DIVISION I

•.·Auro&lt;a

..-.ew

t"""

c·.lnt 59Uih' (S-2)

1;

GP!o.

,s:.oiJ!;ilhi.

,o. G$hanna o)

9.5428. 8, Cl!t~(&amp;-2)9.2llfll.l,
Ham. Badin (4-3) 7.1642. tO••
(~) 6.7071 .

a,ogan

'•,.·"1 ' ,,_., •· ·

·~'/:~l:;. 1&lt;~;?,J; t~•~;;~ · .en:. ;; ....... 9'VISIQ~ IY,\' · .,
·'·,.\ · o····1·v"1•8~1 ' ' .·~,,··. i •·:.·· '. f •.R8gton .,,,_I; ~st.u'~;i,. (7~)
., . •· : · '..': Rill
-~ · . -••· -l5.140$. ~.:"~- !lt. Vir&gt;C0~1-S1.Mary
· ;l,.,.r i''' ~ -(~1)·, l•;J'?8t,.31' ~· lllsl,w (7'!1)

PRo BASEBALL

P--

•

Region 17-1, ~ ~ (7&lt;!$
14.6491 . 2. KirUond (7~) 13.1714.
CreS1on Norwayne (6-1) 11JIOQO. 4.
Gates Mills Giln!ou&lt; Aoad. •
10.528S.5.Columblana~(8;-}
9.8974. 6. N. ~lt!W!· S. f1ongl (~
7.8785. 7. AAIIeC-W.,• ... (5-2)
7.7857. 8. SmitfNt!lo (4-:Ji. Ul'i_
4 . 9.
~odenca (3-1) M357.- 10.1l;.lnlli'

•

a.

' :

.

·

•

MORE LOCAL NEWS.!
MORE LOOAL FOLgS,.
.
t

1

1

r..a.a.n:,· [

pblld
hla1.
Philadelphia 3. M - - . 1
Philadelphia Mllwao1!4e 2
j,lilawukeo 4. PhiladelphJa 1
Philadelphia 6. Mllwaol&lt;4e 2
I

o

.lol!ruion. K.C. 93 417 ~ - 5 65 3
Johnson, Tan. 65 381 ~ . 5 51 2
Tomlin .• S.D. 89 331 3.7 . 411 4
Lynd1. fl&lt;ll.

330
286
265
272

92
BrOwn. Mia.
56
1 Slaton,-- 57
Mcfadc!.. Oak. 51
McClain. Bal. 83
'lOOng. Den. . 47
Parb&lt;, Pit
66

3.6
4.9
5.o
5.3
266 4.2
266 5.7
2!13 1.0 .

34

22 4
621 6
3
59 1
17 4
49 1
32 3

so

*"'

LEAGUE CHAJ..IONIHIP SERIES
: '
.
(--ol-1)
• .
Anwlgn 1 MO'W
Game 6 will be 8:07p.m. WNLCS an&lt;1a

.
-FrtdQ,Ocl.10

II
I

m

31

·351 11 .3 26 3
30 321 10.7 29 2
324 12.0 30
251 9.3 26
350 14.0 . 40
316 13.2 49
310 12.9 39
269 11 .7 33
261 12.4 35
237 11 .3 24
233 11 .1 32
193 9.2 23

2
0
3
4
1
1
0
0
1
2

.

Punt Returrter'l
No Yds Avg

I Parrish, Buf.
Faulk, N.E,

Royal. o.n.
, ·carr, Ten. ·

1

LG TO

11

167 15.2 63t 1

8

106 15.1 24
114 14.3 36

1
9

o
o

118 13.1 33 o

Okla~Cily
Portland

0 0
0 0

000
.000

U1ah

0 0

.000

-~
W L Pet

L.A. Clippeos

0 0

.000

LA. Lakefs
Phoenix

o. 0

0 0

·900

Sacramento
Golden State

GB

000
.000

0 0
0 1

.000

.-.,.·.-

AIIanta 118. O.lando 101
MiooBSOta 117,. Milwaukee 79

Toronto 104, Cleveland 84

Ho!IS1on 96. Memphis.93
Dallas 108, Washington 82
Utah vs. L.A. Lakers at Anaheim, Calif.,

lata

•

Sacramento at Portland, late
Wadnoaday'o

Gameo

Charlone at Orlando, 7 p.m.
New York at Toronto, 7 p.m.
Boston vs. Philadelphia at Amherst,
Mass., 7 p.m.
New Orleans at Indiana, 7 p.m,
Mftwaukee at Detroit. 7:30p.m.

Washington at.MemPflis. 8 p.m.
Oklahoma City vs. Minnesota at Billings,
Mont, 9 p.m.
Atlanta at Phoenht:. 10 p.m.
Golden Stare at Portland~ 10 p.m.
Tburadly'a Gameo
New Jersey at Miami, 2 p.m. ·
Dallas.at Chicagp, 8:30p.m.
San Antonio ;:~;t Houston, 8:00p.m.
Phoenix at Utah, 9 p.m.
.
L.A. Clippers vs. L.A. Lakers at Fresno,
Calif.. tO p.m:

Boston at Tampa 9ay, 8:37p.m.
Wash•• NY-J 6
73 12:2 20 0
'
~; Ocl. 11
Wllhors .. Jae. 8
95 t 1.9 29 o .
1
· .Jloston at Tampa Bey. 8:07p.m.
Besa, Mia.
5
56 . 11 .2 25 0
i
Monday, Oct. 13
i Chatman, Cln . 10 l01 10,.1 34 .0
Jampa Bay at Boston, ~:37 p.m.
Jones. Hoo.
8
73 9.1 33 o
~. Ocl. 14
Crilbs. Cia.
9
78 8 7 t2 o
rampa Bey 81 Boston. 8:07 p.m.
' .
1
Sporto
111.......,, Ocl.18
Kickoff Re1ume,.
BASEBALL
~ampa Bay at Boston, 8:Q,7 p.m., WneeNo Vds Avg LG TD
National League
ossary
· N.E . 13 444 34.2 81 0
COLORADO ROCKIES-Announcad
'
Slilunloy, Ocl.18
Waah .• NY-J 8
250 31 .3 94 0
hi~ng coach Alan Cockrell,, -38 c~
at Tampa Bay, 4'-17 p.m .• Wnee- St)ro1aa. S.D. t7 524 30.8 1031
Mike Gallego and bench coach Jamie
ossary
· carr, Ten. ·
11 320 29.1 52 0
Quirk will not be offered contracts for the
lkindiJ, Oc1.11
Wllhars.. Jac.. 17 · 487 28 51 0
• - •
2009 season, and bullpen coach 'Rick
poston Ill T11111pa Bay, 8:07p.m., tf nee: Savage, K.C. B 218 27.3 51 0
Ma1hews· wUI be reassigned within t~
~ssary
Ho11. Cln.
23 623 27.1 60 0
organiZation.
Higgins. Oak. 17 4S6 26.8 .69
'
BASKETBALL
McKelvln. Bul. 16· 410 25.6 58 0
. • . . Natlooefl - National Baaketball Association
'
Tburadly,,Ocl. I
Cribbs, Cle.
5 11 B 23.6 44 0
CHARLOTTE BOBCAT~Announc9d
Los Angeles · (Lowe 14-11) at
the . resignations ot chief ,administration
qhiladelphia (Harnois 14-10), 8:22p.m. ·
SCOI1ng
officer Jared ~rtie, and vice president of
I
Friday, Ocl. 10
Touchdown•
Angelea 11 Philadelphia, 4:35 p.m.
TO RushRec Ret Pts community relatiOns LeRita Barber. . 1
LOS
ANGELES
CLIPPERS. lkindiJ, Ocl. 12
8rQWn, Mia.
6
6· 0
0 36
Announced,!he resignation of vice presi~hiladelphla at Los Angeles, 8:22 p.m.
Cliamb., S.D. 5
0
5
6 .10 dent
of basketball operations Elgin
I
. _lolondoy, Ocl. 13
Whfta, Tan.
5
5
o 0 30
Baylor.
Named Mike Dunl~avy general
hiladelphla at Los Angelee. 8:22 p.m.
Addai, Ind.
4
4
0
0 24
manager.
- - . , , Ocl.15
Coles, NY-J
4
0 · 4
0 . 24
_l&gt;hiledolph10 at Los Angeles, 8:22p.m.,
0 24 . ORLANDO MAGIC-Exercised their
Lynch, Bul.
4
4 . ·0
option on G J.J. Redick.
. 0 24
,J necessary
.
.
McClain. Bel. 4
4
FOarBALL
.o
Friday, Ocl. 1l
0 24
Pillman. Den. 4
4
Nidlonel Football League
.Los Angel
. os at Phl-lphla. 8:22 p.m ..
Sll1on, H011. 4 • 3
1
0 24
NFL-$&lt;Jspendod Cincinnati LB Darryl
•I necessary
.
.
Tomlin .• S.D. 4
4
0
0 24
Black&amp;toct&lt; the next tour games for using
1
. SOIIurday, Ocl. 11
Ward, P~.
· 4 0
4
0 24
a.performance-enha,nclng substance.
!-&lt;&gt;• Angel
. ea at Philadelphia, 8:22 p.m.,
CINCINNATI BENGAL$-Re-signed
NFC lnclvldual Lodeto .
~~~ry .
.
RB Kenny Watson. Signed CB Simeon
Wltl&lt;S
.

TRANSACTIONS
Tlinclay"o
Tl"anoac:1Jona

107071 . 5, MariaSielort.foiioi1lccOI~. ·

1) 9.8571 . s, Waynosvil1015-2)
. )9.e,:illol',
7. Casstown Miam E..(6-1 8.9142~'!-­
N. Lewisbu'll Triad (5'2) 8.1642. 9. NIW
.
Lebanon Qboe (5-2) 8_.~,5. 10,
Henry(4-3)7.478!t
.. ·. · ·
;' •

.ll\-

J!oston

' -'!.&lt;"''

' DIVISION VI , . _i'

o.

5!·

J.o•

r

o
o

e,

·

. -noaday.Amer~ L~e,
~)~~anal
WORLD SERIES

1

Ocl. 22

League at

·,
. Tl1ui0day, Ocl. 23
NL 11 Al. (n)
'
. _
... _ Ocl. 25

·-··

· 'j\l al NL, tn)
•
!kindlly, Oct. :111"
Ill al NL, (n)
:
.
Monday, Del. 27
I'L a1 NL, If nacessary, (n) .
•
~nuday, Oct. 21
NL al AL, If n.......ry, (n)
•
. Thuraday, Oct, 30
fjL a1 AL, II neceaaary, (n)

:t,_ PRo FooTBALL

' ..
t

w~

I

w~

.

Castilte ~the praetce squad.

Quarttil'l*:ks
Atl Com
Warner, Ariz 183 127
Rome, Dal.
182 104
Manning. NY-G 132 .84
Brees, N.O.
194 133
camp., Was. 153 97 .
R~gers, G.B. 163 103
McNabb. Phi. 175 11.2
Delh .. Car.
142 86
onon,Chl.
155 96
O'SulllvBn, S.F. 140 82

Yds TO
1472 10
1388 11
1032 6
1673 9
1054 6
1274 9
1296 6 .
1096 5
11001
1092 7

lnl
4
5 .
1
6
0
4
2
2
4
6

Ruahere
.
AH Vds Avg L.G ~D
Turner, Atl.
103 543 5.3 66t 6
Portis, Was. , 115 51~ 4.6 31 4
Palefson,- Min. 104 452 4.3" 34 3
Gore, S.F.
68 423 4.8 411 3
QaJ.
93 · 395 4.2 25 4
Graham, T.B. 67 393 5.9 681 2
. Forie. Chi.
107 383 3.6 501 2
Jacobs; NY-G 85 380 5.8 443
J. Jonas, Sea. 78 373 4.8 32 2
Jame5, "rlz
92 334 3.6 16 3

.a...,..,.

ij Jfsttur•l Footbati -Lelgue ·
AMERICAN CONFERENCE

GREEN BAY PACKER5-Releasod LB
Tracy White. Signed LB Dan.ny Lansanah

from the practice 'squad.

'

.

SAN FRANCISCO 49ERS-Signed LB

Eric Baktltlari to the practice sqUad.
HOCKEY
,
National Hockey League
ANAHEIM
DUCKS-Claimed
lW
Joe.Kim Undstrom on waivers from
Chicago and assigned him to the Iowa
Chops (AHL).
BOSTON BRUINS-Released F Paler
Scheeler. Placed F Nate .Thdmpsqn and
F Jeremy Reich tin waivers for the pur-

pose ot

asslgni~g ·

them to Providence

(AHL). Assigned 0 Matt Hunwick to
ProVidence and F Carl Soderberg to
Malmo (Sweden) . .
CALGARY . Fl,AMES-,-Waivad D Rhett

o

.

PF
126
79
115
79

PA

TALLADEGA, Ala. (AP) '
The speech hasn't
changed in the seven years .
since NASCAR first delivered it during a 2001 driver's
meeting at Daytona.
"This is your warning,"
race director David Hoots
begins. "Do not.go below the
yellow line. If in NASCAR's
judgment you go below the
yellow line ro improve your
p&lt;&gt;sition, you will be blackflagged." . ·
· So why · the surpriSe that
Regan Smith was penalized
Sunday · for dipping below
the out-of-bounds line to
AP photo'
00
~sTony
Stewart the last Tony Stewart, fr.ont left, leads a pack of cars through.the trilap
at
Talladega
Superspeedway?
oval "On the final lap of the NASCAR Sprint Cups Series' ,
The debate over the frantic AMP Energy 500 auto race a! Talladega Superspeedway iri:
finish raged 00 Moriday and Talladega, Ala:• Sunday. AI nghlts ~egan .~milh (01) ~ho ,
Tuesday. with claims that the 'passed the !Jmsh line f1rst but was d1squahfted for pass1ng.
rookie driver was robbed of . below the yellow line.
his · first career victory tight, drivers, crew chiefs NASCO,R believes the inten(
because NASGAR used its !IDd any other . regular was obvious.
judgment to give a twe:-time . attendee knows the directive . Although Stewart admits ,
series champion a coveted by heart.
he was blocking , the two.·
Talladega victory. NASCAR
So when Smith passed cars were running bumper-;
defended its ruling late in the Stewart below the line, then to-bumper - not side-by-.;
day,then cleared ur any con- moved above it to cross the - side - when Smith made
fusion about what s allowed finish line first, Stewart the decision to ·slide below:
on the final lap of a restric- knew the move would be the line. And, Stewart gave'.
tor-plate race.
disallowed.
him room to return to the ,
NASC.&lt;\R put the yellow- "I've been a part of every racing surface. Had Smltli
line policy in place in its first one of the driver meetings come back behind Stewart,:
return to Daytona following since they implemented the no harm done . But Sl!lith.
Dale Earnhardt's fatal 2001 yellow line rule, and it had already completed the
accident. By outlawing a always starts with 'This is pass by' the time he moved
portion of· the asphalt at your warning. Po not back onto the surface. · :
Daytona and Talladega. tmprove your position below · NASCAR president Mike,
NASCAR shrunk the racing the yellow hoe,"' Stewart Helton said Monday thai,
surface and took control of said Mo!)day. "If you ar~ scoring officials did not ,
daredevil driving at the two passing another car and you believe Stewart forced Smith,
most dangerous tracks on the are below the yellow line, under the line. But ii was;
circuit.
back off, fall back behind the mostly irrelevant because it
Stewart broke the rule that car you are trying to pass and . wasn't even the ·defense anY: ·
very first race, dropping two you won't he penalized. · one was taking for Smith's:
tires below the line to avoid "The driver's meetings maneuver. .
running into Johnny Benson have been very clear about
Instead. drivers cited a.
after Benson tried to block · that from Day I. They've 2007 Truck Series race in.
·Stewart's attempted pass. never wavered in the termi- Daytona when Benson went
Stewart was immediately nology they've used or the below the yellow line to pass
black-flagged- a directive language they've used. It's - Travis Kvapil for· second·
he ignored - . and had a always been the same."
place in a three-wide finish:
heated exchange with
But Smith disagreed , and NASCAR said · at the time
NASCAR following the found a good deal of support that Benson's mcive was·
race.
across the garage.
legal because the rule had:
Hoots has yet to change It can be argued that wiggle roorn: If a driver can..
the language of his pre-race Stewart forced him• below see the checkered flag wav- .
warning in the 29 Cup the line to block Smith from ing. essentially anything
restrictor-plate races since. -passing, a maneuver that can goes over the final push to
Seriously. The script is so also be penalized if the finish line.
·

Warrener, D Anders Eriksson 1and F
Jemie Lundmark: \
.

CAROLINA HURRICANES-Assigned
F Joe Jensen, F TrS\IOr Gillies and D Tim
uffalo
4 1 0 .8011
104
Conboy to Albany (AHL).
aw Ehgloind 3 1 0 .750
79
CHICAGO 8LACKHAWKS-Asslgned
,Y. Jets
2 2
.500
116
D cam Barker, D Aaron Johnson and G
Recelvtro
M10mi .
220 .500
7~
.
,
No . Yds Avg LG TO · Anlti Niemi to Rockford (AHL).
'
DETROIT . RED WINGS--Aasignod D ·
BiJsh, N.O. .
38 321 U
421 2
Pet PF PA
WIUen, Dal.
35 442 12.6 42 2 · Jonathan Ericsson ·and F Villa Laino t9 ·
.....,...... . 5,
0 1.1100115 58
Grand Rapids (AHL),
Fitzgeratd, A.rlz31 487 15.1 75 4
rndtanapolfa 2 2 ' 0 .51lQ 83 94
MONTREAL CANADIEN$-Asslgnod D
Jennings, G.a 29 569 19.6 62 3
.400 100 111
~acl&lt;IOnvll10 . 2 , 3
Alex Henry \o Hamlllon (AHL).
Meso,
Waa.
27 421 15.8 87t 3
.1100 83 . 130
0 "4
NASHVILLE PREDATORs-Assigned
Boldin, Ariz
27 366 13.8 791 5
•
No1111
F Josh Gratton to Milwaukee (AHL).
26 454 17.5 701 2
While. All.
i
W L T Pet PF PA ·
NEW YORK ISLANDER5-Asalgnod G
Muham., Car. 25 358 ·14.3 47t 2
l'lttSbtJ'llh .
4 t 0 .800 103 79
Yann Danis. F Jar•my Colllton. F Mitch
Cooley, Wos- 25 288 11.5 27 t
~altimore
2 2 0 .500 75 S6
Fritz, FTim Jackman, F Kurtis McLean, f
A. Bryan!, T.B.. 24 278 11 .8 36 0
l:levsJand
.1 3
.250 4e 78
Trevor Smith and D Chri$ Lee to
Cincinnati . 0 ~ 0 .1100 7~ 118
B"dgeporl (AHL).
.
Punt Re1urnere
Wool
...No Yd!i Avg LG TO . OTIAWA SENATORS-Assigned G
W L T Pel PF PA
Brian Elliott and c Code Bass to
Bush, N.O.
9
261 29.0 711 3
benver
4 1 0 .800 1~9 130 Hixon, NY-G 9
· Blngllam!on.(AHL).
124 13.8 SO 0
6an Diogo
2 3 0 .400 14e 129 .-.on, Phi. 17 225. 13.2 681 I
SAN JOSE SHARKS-Waived 0 Kyle
1 3 0 .250 78 101
Oal&lt;fand
Mclaren, D Brad St8ubitz and. FIW Riley
BlaCk., G.B.
9
115 12.8 76t 1
~ansas Clly 1 4 0 ,200 65
Armstrong. Assigned RW Mike Morris
17 173 10.2 3t
Jonea, ~··
and 0 Mike Moore to Worcester (AHL).
Bump~. Sea. 1
66 9.4 30 0
NAnONAL CONFERENCE
TORONTO MAPLE LEAF8-Signod D
McQu., NY-G . 7
59 8.4 15 0
Eaot
luke Schenn to a three-year contra,ct.
D. Hall, SI.L
5 41 8.2 26 0
WLTPeiPFPA
Waived F Boyd Devereaux and 0 Stanan
Rand. EJ, was. 13 106 8.2 28 o
~.Y. Giants 4 0 0 1.1100127 49
Kr:onwaiL
Bre8610n, AriZ 7
48 6.9 17 0
WashingtOn · 4 I .0 .800 109 98
COLLEGE
4 1 0 ..800 151 111
Dallas
COLOAAOQ-Agr8ed tO terms with·
Klckon Rtlll,.,.
~hiladelphi&amp; 2 3 0 .4110 127 97
· No Yds Avg LG TO. Dan Hawkins, football coach, on a Con·•
South
tract extension through 2012.
Rossum, S.F. 17 491 28.9 ss o
· DAEW-Named Darryl Keckler merfs
F. Jones. Dal. t5 4t2 27 5 98t 1
'Carotina . WLTPc:tPFPA
4 I 0 .800 114 70 .
basketball coach.
Manning, Chi. 7
191 27.3 48 0
3 2 0 .800 114 94
~amPa Bay
Taylor. Min.
8 . 205 25.6 37 0
3 2 0 .600 117 107
i\!lenta
M. Hicf&lt;a, Min. 8
203 25.4 34 0
New Orleans 2 3 0 .4110 138 ' 130 Cartwr., was. 15 380 25.3 50 0
Nor1h
'
jac!O;on, T.B. 12 3(11 25. t 45 o
Major League SOCcer
W L T Pet PF PA
'
Thomas. N.D. 17 421 24.8 56 o
EASTERN CONFERENCE
3 2 0 .600 128 •87
~hlcago
Norwood, All. 13 315 24.2 54" 0
.
WLTPisGFGA
2 3 0 .400 133 128 Stewart, Car. 14 .329 ,23.5 38 0 ·
Green Bay
X-Coiumbus
16 6 5 53 46 31
Mlnneeota
2 3 0 .400 101 109
x-New England 12 8 7 43 38 37
0 4 0 .000 88 147
petrolt
Scoring
Chicago ·
~2 9 . S 42 35 26
W.at
Touchdown•·
NewYork
9 tO 8 35 36 41
,
WLTPeiPF . PA
TO RashRec Aet Pts
D.C. Unilad
10 14 3 33 41 49
"nzona
3 2 o . .600 1~7 120
3 36
Bush, N.D.
6
1
2
·Kansas City · 8 10 9 33 30 36
-llan Franclaeo 2 3 o .400 115 127 · Turner, AtL
0
36
6 6
o
Toronto FC
.. 8 12 7 . 31 29 37
:=;eattle
1 3 . 0 .250 83 124 West., Phi.
. 6 ·4 • 2
0 36
WESTEAI'I CONFERENCE
·St. Louts·
0 4 0 .000 43 147 Berl&gt;&lt;lf, Dal.
0 3(1
5
4
1
WLTPisGFGA
t
"! •
0 3(1
Boldin, AriZ
5. 0
5
1
x-Houston
11 5 10 43 38 30
• . Sunday'o Ge0 3(1
Hightower, Ariz 5
5 0
CD Chivas USA 11 10 6 39 37 37
.bhicago 34, Delroil 7
0 3(1
Owens. Dal.
5
0
5
Raal Sail Lake 9 10 8 35 35 36
Miami 17, San Diego 10
Gore. s :F.
4
3
1
0 26
Colorado
10 13 4 34 39 40
Atlanta 27, Green Bay 24
,
0 . 24
Sruca. S.F.
4
0
4
FCDallas
8 9 10344034 ·
. Y. GlaniS 44, Saatlle 8
Fllzgerald. Ariz~
0
~
0 24
San Jose
1 10 9 3(1 27 32
enneasee 13, Baltimore 10
Forts, Chi.
4· 2
2.
0 24
Los Angeles
7 12 8 29 50 55
dlanapoHs 31 , Houston 27
1 24.
F. Jones, Dal. 4
3· 0
rolna 34, Kaf1&amp;~ City
0 24
Portia, Was. 4 4
o
x.-cUnched playoff spot
ashington 23, Philadelphia 17 ,
0 24 •
Stewart, Car. 4 4 .
,NO!E: Three points for victory, ~ p9int
rwer ~6, Tampa Bay 13
.
for tie.
Dallas 31, Cincinnati 22
llrizona 41 . B"llalo 17
Thul'ldi!Y'• Oame
!-lew Englal1d 30. San Francltco. 21
Nev.t York at Real Salt lake, 10 p.m.
National Baa"-lt Aaaoclatton
('iltsbtJ'llh 28, Jacksonville 21
Saturday'• Gamea
PrHelton Glance
Opon: · N.Y. Jata, Dakland, St Lo"Js,
New England at Kansas·City, 8 p.m.
EASTERN CPNFERENCE
evelahd
•
Toronto FC 8.t FC O"allas,.8:JQ p.m.· •
·
Atiant!c blortoton
MondiJ'aCloine .
CD Chlvas USA at San Jose, 10 p.m.
WL
Pel
GB
inneeota'30, N~ oneans 27
·
, Sunday'a Gam~•
Toronto
1 0 . 1.000
1
Sunday, ocp2
Colurnbus ~t Chicago, 3 p.m.
Bolton
0 0
.000
·~
lcago at.AUanla; 1 p.m.
D.C. Unhed at Houston, 7. p,m.
New Jersev ·
0 o' .000
~
ami at Houston, 1 p.m.
Colorado at Los Angeles, 8'P.m.
. NBW York
0 0
.000
)\
lroilal Mln""""ta' 1-p.m.
Wednooday, 0Ct15
Philadelphia
0 0 .000
~. klan~ 11 New Orleans, 1 p.m.
San Jose at Houston, 9 p.m.
Southtut Olvltlon
LOuis at WUhlngton. 1 p.m. .
.
Thuraday, OcL 11 ..
WL
Pel
, GB
nclnnatl-·at N.Y. Jets. 1 p.m.
New-England at D.C. United, 7:30p.m.
Atianta
.1 o · 1.000
ltimora.at lndllnapolis, 1 p.m.
ChariOfte
· 0 0 . .000
y,
. arolna at Tampa ¥Y"· 1 p.m.
Miami
0 1 .000
1
lacksof!V(IIe a1 Denver, 4:05 p.m.
Orlando
0 1 .000
1
reen Bay al Soallle• .~:1S p.m .
Washington
0 '1 .000
1
alias at Arizona, 4:15p.m.
2008 Sprint Cup Slandlnp
Ce-1 Dlvlolon
hiladalphla at San Franetaco. 4:15p.m.
Allor Talladega
L
Pel.
GB
Now·England at San Diego, 8:15p.m.
~ 1 0
1.000
Dalro~
Buffalo, Plttsb!Jrgh
. , Kansas C!1y,
Wins Pts.
Nam&amp;'
Dhlcago
0 0 .000
ttnneasee
1. Jimmie Johnso-n
5
5718
Indiana
0
0
.000
Monday, Del- 13
1
:!.
Csrl
Edwards
·
6
-72
Cl811eland
0 1 .001)
N.Y. Giants at Cleveland, ·8:30p.m.
3. Greg Biffle
2
-~ 7
Mllw~ukee \
0
1
.000
.AFC Individual ~
1
-99
4. Jeff Burton.
1
1 . -152
5. Clln! Bowyer.
WESTERN CONFERENCE
6. 1\eYln·HarvlCk
0
-.171
9oulhwft1 Dlvfelon
cl18
7. Tony Stewart
'1
-~00
Att Com Y~a TO In!
W L
Pet
GB
I;J. Jaff Gordon
0
•232
Dallas
1 0 1 ."000
avre, NY-J
124 87 935 12· 4
9. Man KenSeth
0
-245
H()Uston
1 0
1.OQO
Ivers, S.D.
138 94 1183 11- 4
10. Dale Earnhardt Jr. 1 . ·249
New Orleans
1 o 1.000
C"ller, Den.
191 125 1502 10 4 ·
8.. -331
1 1. Kyle Bosch
San Antonio
0 o .000
Yt
!'loelh., P~.
124 79 947 7 3
12. Denny Hamlin
Memphis
0 1 .OOOr 1
,1
·335
~dwarcts,
122 81 948 ~ 2
Northweat Dlvltlbn
!&gt;enning., MIL 112 75 817 3 1
-2179
13. David Ragan
0
WL
Pel
flu~l, Oai&lt;. 99 54 688 4 1
GB
Minnesota
Cusel, N.E. 104 70 707 3 3
1 0
1.000
14. Kaoey Kahne
2
-2298
Donvor
-2537
banarct. Joe. 1~9 97 · 883 3 4
0 0 .000
15. Ryan Newman
1
jl .
Pet

The Daily Sentinel • Page B3 .

YeUow line alw~ys out of bounds:.

lUeaday'o -

423 12.4 351 3

27
27
25
24
Johnson. Hoo. 24
M. Jones. Jae. 23
, D. MillOn. Bal. 21
Aeod. But.
21
SIDkley. Den. 21
Gonz""'z. K.C. 21 ·

I

.Lilf8io\1!!

·All Y&lt;ls Avg LG TO

Marshall. Den.
Housh., Cin.
Royal. Den.
a-. K.C.
Welker, N.E.
Wayne. Ind.
Ward. Pit

s.

'1, m

Aushu:a

··

-....

1

•
1.a1 AI
OlcEM
Los Angeles 7, Chicago 2
Los Angeles 10, Chicago 3
l-os Angoleo 3, Chicago 1

Nelaorwllle-l\111(

1031 5 . 5

No Yds Avg LG

-......_..
a · a.

•

:Volleyball

Breanna Taylor, Ashley ball team can call itself a
Walker, Courtney Thomas, league champion after ·
Stephanie clinching the 2008 crown
Boso, and
Shamblin added strong sup· Tuesday during a straight
from PageBl
port efforts.
game 25- 16, 25-18, 25- I 7
Hand
had
the
upper
hand
victory over Rock Hill ori
'lees apiece. followed by
in
the
next
game
10 leading
Senior
Night,
·
Tresa Swatzel 'and Karissa
The Lady Raiders (13-7.
· Connolly ·. with fi.vc points Miller to the 25-12 win .
went
into
a
tail9-0
OVC) improved to 67-2 .
Southern
each.
·
spin,
but
responded
in
a
big
all,time
as a member of the .
:· Swatzel led the net attack
way
for
game
three.
Ohio
Valley
Conference,
i).irh 17 kills, followed by
Boso notched eleven dating back to the 2002
Burt with nine kills and
points
in the third game. campaign. The Silver and
Casto with · seven kills.
while
Hunter,
Walker and Black also won their final ·
y.'ilfong
and
Britney
·Morrison both had six kills Thomas. added great floor . regular season contest at the
in the triumph. · with games and solid front line current gymnasium
Connolly adding two kills play. Boso added eight which will be replaced next
and a team-high 40 assists. points to break the gaiJle year with· the addition of a
It was the final regular open frpm 13-11 to 21-11 in new high school.
Mackenzie Cluxton Jed
:ieason home · game for Southern's favor. Southern
went
on
to
win
25I
7.
RVHS
at the service line
~niors Swatzel. Burt, Casto
The last game was a dog with II points. followed by
l!Jid Wilfong. The Eastern
fight
and both entities want- ·· Carissa Gilmore with . 10
junior varsity team also won
ed
the
· winning bone. and !Iiana Corfias with
.i:n three games.
. Eastern returns to action Southern prevailed to claim nine. Kay! a Smith also had
on Thursday when it travels the 25-22 win and the eight points in the triumph.
.
Corfias led the net attack
to Glouster for the TVC match . ·
Hunter
went
17-18
overwith
five kills, followed by
Hocking
finale
with .
Trimble. The JV game will all in serving with two aces Smith with four. . Tara
and a block. Pape was 13- Workman and Linsey
!!'art at 6 p.m .. ·
13, Boso was 18-22 with six Stover were next with three
aces and two blocks. going points apiece, followed by
:SOUTHERN AVENGES MILLER
14-16 spiking. Bre Taylor Cluxton adn Jacqueline
: RACINE
In four was 9-9 serving with an ace Jacobs with two eac h.
games . the Southern Lady and 5:.6 spiking with three Cluxton also had a teamTornadoes defeated Miller blocks. Walker was illalJ,.. high 12 assists.
tp put .the finishing touches · servmg wtth an ace~ and \ Kassie Large led · the
60 seniornight Tuesday in
Thomas was 10-13 Wtlh an Redwomen (4-12) with
· Hayman ace.
seven service· points in the
Southern's
Gymnasium. 25-14, 12- 2~.
Shamblin was 19-2 1 spik- setback.
1
25-17 , and 25-22.
ing and Woods 2-5• while
It was the final regular
: Honored during Senior - Kelsey Holsinger was 16- 17 season home game for
~Jight festivities were spiking. Hunter had eight · seniors Cluxton , Gilmore ,
•outhern 's &lt;our se n,·or·s·. assists and Thomas had S . h S .
C rfi
d
.,
,,
five . Southern . was 77-86
mtl • lo\!er, o tas an
Emma Hunter, Chelsea
.·
.
Workman .
~ape, Rashell Boso, and servmg, 226 -241 passmg,
·. RVHS
claimeQ
an
57
66
Samantha
Patterson. · and
sptkmg. evening sweep with a 25$outhern 's ability to pull off . Southern had eleven aces , II , 21-25, 25-14 victory in
the win made the pight a 14 a~S!Sis ,and seven blocks. the junior varsity conteSt.
very s'pecial night.
Mtller won the v~ry close Chynna Mershon led the JV
• Southern boosted t"ts reserve g_ame 25-19 and 26- R "d
. h 16 .
c I
'ttcord to 8· 13 overall and 24 · Emt 1Y Humphrey had 1 a1 ers
Wtt
pomts,
d b T h 1 10
d "'-7 in the league.
17 for "'h.e winners and owe Y as a A exan er
.t.
KI
H kl h d I
with 14 points. .
: Rashell Boso took off in a
e sey 10 e a e even.
River Valley will try to
l)i~ way by putting 22 Hope Teaford had ten · for clinch its .fifth unbeMen
pomts on the board for the Southern, while Bobbi
.
. OVC championship on
Lady Tornadoes. Emma . Harris had ten.
Sou_thern goes to Federal Thursday when it travels to
Hunte r tallied 1.8 markers,
H k Th d
Proctorville
to
battle
fo'hile Chelsea Pape added
oc mg ur~ ay.
Fairland. The JV match will
13. Miller's Ashley· Hand
liad 21 for Miller.
RVHS WINB ANOTHER
begin at 5:30p.m.
: In the first game,
OVC TITL!
Southern nearly doubled
Miller's score in the 25-14 . CHESHIRE - For the
win. · Hunter put seven seventh time in as many
¢iatkers on the board to lead years since . joining the
Subscribe today.
the Tornadoes, while Katie O~io Valley Conference ,
992•2155
Woods, Kelsey Holsinger, the River Valley volley- li
.

~(P loU)
An•tcm u.gu.
, a '"AI

,._Bay 6, Chtcaga ~
tampa Bay 6, Chtcaga 2
l:hicago 5, T - Bay 3
t"alflll" Bay 6 , Chicago 2

·r,

F·

I
I

n

1

Jloston 3. Lao An1jOiea 2

Region 111-1. FlfKiily U:..OtylltliiOI.t
(7~) 11.612L2.1!oJciyrusW\or4&gt;nl(7.())
11.6000. 3, Arehbbld (7~ 1.1,15857, 4.
Hanller f'atr1d&lt; Henry (7-jl) 11.3857. S.
Delphos JelfeOSOfl, (7~) 10.~, ~'
Sherwood Fairvl$W (6'1) g_...,,_
CoUins western RISI!M (6-1) 9.8571.
8. Uberty Cfr. (8-1) 8.9214. 9, ,.., ....
(7~) 8.62t4. 10, ·Nor(hwo«&lt; (6'1)
8.5488.
•,
'
. ·. '·
Region 19-1, Wl!ioterollurli_ (7.0j,
1:i.3nO. 2.
{&amp;ol)·
12.9928. 3, MiniDid (6-i) t0.1111:18: i,
JoMS1own-MOnroe 15-2) 10.1501); .~
Ball. LlbOrty-UniQ01(6-1} 10;~ :·~
Froderick1own · (6-1 ) " 10,)7$5. • T,
Ponsmou1h West (7-0) 10, 1355. ,.8,
Hea\h (6-1) 9.1;357. 9,llllnl&gt;ridgo Pa)l1
valley (5-2) 8.8841!: 10. w ,
Ridgfowood (6-1) 8.5785. · ·, · • ,. ·"
Region 2D-1. Cln. -HHIJ; Ch~
Acad. (7-0) 12.Soo0. '2, ~na l&amp;-11
12.4858. 3. we~· Jelf811011 · t&amp;·~)
12.0811 . 4, West Llbertv:St!On\ .P.'.cll,

Region . 21-1. Mogadoie_ (7,q)
, 13.3402. 2, Bescom HopeweM-I..opdoo_
(7~)13.8$57, 3, Norwalk Paul (7~t
fle91on ·5.--1,
.qll'\l. ,Shaw . (IKl):· .{4.5;$:, 4, -~-"11•2- ~nay (6'1) 12.3357. 4, McDonald (7'!1).11.762&lt;!,,11;,
1M~. 2, ' ¥aylield (6-t)" 15.242)1: ~... ,IU210.!$, •AfO!' - Mal)di~sltr (6-1) Berlin Qenler Western ·R.eaeN!I (~11
AkrOO ljoban· (5-2f'12) !l:l$: 4. ~ . 12:12&amp;$), 6}'~; f'aiii.:.Cu!nbWallair. 10.6928. 8. Columbtana .(SO~) IO.fi$00;;
Padua (5'2) 11 .845!!:5. Maple H1a (SollY· Ghilotion (6-1) 12.0921!. '!': Coshocton : 7. Leetonia (6-l) 9,0428: 8, Net
11.0357. 6, Ken! Rooseve~ (5-2) · (6•1) f2.0765. 8, Wooster THwilv . (5·2) MlddleiOWn .Stj~ng11el'&lt;t '(~-3) 7.3142. 9';,
10.9928. 7. Warren Howland (4.·3) 11.8857, 9, Parry (6-l) 11.5590• 10, , Dahon (3-4) 6.6&amp;42.10.Tiffirt 9111Vert (ol,,
10.0100. 8, Rich!ield Revere (5·21 Ornlitle (5-2) 10.1642;
,
3)•6.2928.
·
, ., ·
9.6500. 9. Berea (4-3) 9.6071. 10. Akron
Region 14-1, FoS1oria (6·1) 16.8571.
~egion 22-'1. Carey (6·1) 10,23$7. 2,
Buchlel (4-3) 9.3928.
2, Loroin Ciearview {7~) 13.9214. 3, Ade (7·0) 10.0857, 3, O!llpitOo $t
f.legion 6-1 . Tol. Ceni. calh. (7~) Genoa Area (7~)"12.5642. 4, M~rlon John's (6·1) 9.9857. 4, ~ra-GIIbal;
17.9428. 2. Lexjnglon (7~) 16.6142. 3. Pieasan! (6-1) l1 .2428. 5, Quawa- (7.0) 8.8500. 5. Mi. Bloncharct,R)ytnl!olt.
Medina Highland (7-0) 15.3357. 4, - GlandoN (4-3) 7.2571. 6, Highlond t4-3) (5'2) 7.2428. Me Comb (&amp;-2) 8.1111011.
Lewio Centoo Olenlangy (5'2) 14.~214. 7.2W1. 7, llellvl118 .Clear Fork . (4·3) 7; Anlnglon (6-2) B.t18(10. 8;., W., l/niiY,
5, Olen!angy Liberty (5-2) 13.9142. 8, 7.0071. 8, · H~ron (5-2) 6.9142. 9, , " HUI1op(5'2)5.621~.9. Dei.'A~(+f
"SyiVI!nla Southview (7.0) 1 3.22,4. 7, Pemberville Eaotwdod .(S-2) 6.~. 8. 10, 3) 5.2214. 10, Edgottor) (tc3H·1!0001.':;1
-Avon Lake (5 -21 12.4428. B. Lodl Bucyrus (5-2!8.~5.
·· . .
_ _Region 23-1 . Hannibal River :irl!'l
Cloverleai (6-1) 11.4142. 9, G""'nvme
Region 15-',1 ," .Ma'!lno f.lfry (6-1) 1)J217, 2. Shedytlde (5-2)11.!J642[:l!;·,
(5-2) 10.7951 . 10, Maumee (6· 1) 12.3485. 2. Now Laxlnglort (7-0) Malvern (7-0) 8.9928. 4, Brldg"!'Qtl {So
1"0.0857.
·
12.t678, ' 3, lrilnton. (4.-3) 11;5410. 4, ·2) 8.4470. 5; Caldwell (5-2) 8.Q1'r.!.' fi:
-Region 7~1. Louisville (7~) 21 .8857 . . Belmonl Union ~otal (6-1) 11.0785.- 5• .Glouster Trimble (5·2) · 7.8t:oii., t'i
2. Cols_
. · QeSales (7·.0) 21.7714, 3. Sl 'Ciairsvl110 · (6·2) , 10.7950. . 6_, Newark ~alh. (5-2) 7.40011. · 8. . ~
Logan (7.0) 17.4071 . 4, Cola. Marion Wllllamapiitt .~sl(all (/!-2). 10.17.14. 7&gt;, G,rov_o Berne Un.lon {3-4) M71f"~
Franklin (7-0) 16.6642. 5, Allia""l' (6-1) GaiL !;ailla Acad._(4-3) '8,7751. 6, Cols. Zonee. Roseorans (4-3) 5.9714;•'1!);',
12:3071. 6. Cols. Beecheroft (6-1) Ha(Uiy (4-2).8.'109$. 9,._ Pemetoy Matgs Damiillet4-3) 5.6928. .
.
• !7··'
11.3765 . .7, Dublin .. Jerome (4-3) (5-:1)'8.~7. 10, Lkildr\(j ~ghh! (5-2) . ·.Region 24---1, MechaniCO!&gt;U'll (l'O)
10.8357. 8. Cola. Independence (6-1 ) 8.00011:
;
•
. ; "13.5000.2, SCiolovilleCommunlly(ll;l)'
!'legion 1~1, •Ooid\Yater (7:0) 8.85n ..3, S~ Lahman (!5-1) 8.28\f!;
10.8214 . 9. Colo. Wal!erson (4-3)
10.4642. 10. Wooste((S-2) 9.8785.
17.a785. 2, ClarksvHie · Cllmon'Ma..ie 4, Lockland (5-2) 8.1805. 5; Minster (IS'.
Region 11-1. Gill. WinlonWoods·(6-1) (7-0) i1).9214. 3, Pliin Ci1Y Jonathon .2) 8.1714, 6, Sprlng:.Ca!h. C~nl, (44)
16..1857 .2. New Carlisle Tec"mseh (7· Alder 17·P) 13.7851. 4, Qrookvl~ · (7'!1) ' 7.3357. 7i. Covington ,(5-2) 6.9142. -~, ·
0) 14.6357. 3. Cin. T"rpin (6-1) 13.9214. 13.4048. 5, . D'l)'l~n O.ii~Wiiod (5-2) Afrlcantrlc Early Collage (5-2) 6.1494. 9;
4. Cin. Ander0ori (5·2) 13.6642. 5, 12.2142. 6. · A~~:nbis~pp Alter (0.2) · An80111a (502) 6.1142. 10, TfO\' Chr~UIIh
Morrow little Mlemi (6-1) 12.0000. 6, 9.e285. 1; Cln . .N •. College Hill (502) (4-3) 6.09011.

,

Mannlog. Ind. 154 96

iloslon
•. Lao ~- t
Boston 7, ~ ,.,.... 5
!-OS,.,.... s , - ~ . i21nnlngo

1•11

·

u ,,

2001.-ct'

DIVISIONV .

(4-3) s.6628..

www.myclail~ntinel.com .

WOOnewJay, October 8, 2008

Wednesday, October 8, aooJJ

www.mydailysentinel.com

..

.o

o

J-loiiSion

o

..

o

131

o

'

'

PRo SoccER

~
~

.'

o·

o

PRo BASKETBALL

t

~
~

NASCAR

~

w

. _ppon:

'

•'

~

-~
ou..,ter,

a.n.

--·- ---· ·-"1· -----·· -······--

.,

~~~HUGETENT SALE
with all kinds of bargains for everyone! Children's books,
inspirational books, garden tools, bed skirts, bath towels,
kitchen items, rugs, games, gift Items and morel

THIS IS OUR BEST SALE EVER!
Sale lasts until October 311
Inside the store the Bargains keep on coming.
If you a~e worried about Christmas this year ·come and
see.what great things you can buy for under $5.00.
We have gifts.on closeout that sold for .
$10.00-$20.00 for $2.99, $3.99 and .$4.991
Lotion g'ift sets, expensive kitchen towel sets, greeting
card. ensembles, cookbooks and much morel ·

•
•
'

�'

www.mydailysentinel.com

Page B4 • The Daily Sentinel

I

\Vednesday,~ober8,2oo8

www.mydallysenUnel.com

~rtbune

Raptors down Cavaliers, 104-84

,

AP photo

:Phio State quarterback Terrell Pryor (2) runs ofUhe field after Ohio State beat Wisconsin
~0-17 in a NCAA college football game Saturday in Madison, Wis. ·

_Jluckeyes adapting to ·season of change
. COLUMBUS (AP)
:The regular season is half
'Over for Ohio State, yet it
~eels as if the Buckeyes are
tust finding themselves.
:- The
· 12th-ranked
Buckeyes (5- I , 2-0 Big Ten)
,ttave inched their way up the
:rankings a bit since that ugly
-35-3 loss at Southern
talifornia
in
midSeptember.
·· "We can't lose," fullback
Brandon
Smith
said
,
Tuesdaye "W.e ' ve be en saying this is a playoff for us, at
thts point in the season. The
way things shake out in college football, we've just got
to keep winning ."
, Since the loss, the
Buckeyes have won three in
a row, including their first
two Big Ten ~ames. They 've
gotten Chris 'Beanie" Wells
back from a foot injury, and
freshman Tefl'\!lle Pryor has
taken over at quarterback.
Even though they have not
won convmcingly, they at
least believe they're building some momentum for a
stretch run.
.· Punter AJ . Trapasso considers last Saturday night's
20-17 victory at Wisconsin a
stepping stone to bigger and
better things.
.
"We had a lot of confidence coming into this sea~on, maybe (we were) a little
bit overconfident thinking
we were just going to run

CLEVELAND (AP) LeBron James spent a ·rare
night relaxing on !he bench,
Mo Williams showed why
Cleveland traded for him this
summer, ·and the Cavaliers
opened their exhibition season with a 104-84 loss to the
Toronto Raptors .on Tuesday
night.
James played just 8 minutes
in the first quarter before he
raised his hand for a substitute
and coach Mike Brown pulled
his superstar for !he remainder o( Cleveland's preseason
debut.
James, who won an
Olympic gold ·medal . this
summerattheBeijingGames,
missed his only three shots
from the field, made one free
throw and · added two
rebound~ and two assists.
The wear and tear on James
is a major concern for .the
Cavaliers. He has had liitle
time away from the floor
since last season ended
because of his commitment to

over teams," Trapasso said. midway through and we 're
"We were exposed a linle bit doing something· that seems
(at USC) but we've bounced to me completely different."
back pretty well, and hanThe Buckeyes are adaptdied some rough games - ing. They're also growing in
especially this (past) week- confidence.
end."
"We are movin~ in the
Going into the season, the right direction at th 1s peint,"
Buckeyes had 17 starters Smith said.
back and more than 40
This week's challenge will
fourth •. or fifth-year seniors be provided by Purdue (2-3;
on the roster. No one expect- 0-1 ), which has lost ~hree of
ed much upheaval from one its last four while giving up
week to the next.
Instead. there has been lots of yards and not showing much consistency on
almost continual change.
offense.
Two or three fresh faces
·
have been blended in on the
But the ·Boilennakers preoffensive line , three backs sent a change of pace from
filled in for Wells at tailback Wisconsin . Where the
while he ·was sidelined, and Badgers ran the ball right at
· the defense does not-have set the Buckeyes and didn't
starters on the line o'r at one stretch the field much,
of the cornerback spots. Purdue is the epitome of a
Nothing was more radical spread offense.
than changing· from secondCoach Jim Tressel repeatyear starter Todd Boeckman, edly referred to the problem
a big pocket passer. to Pryor, of "shi'fting gears."
a 6-foot-6 sprinter.
"We have to kind of get
~o rather than fine-tuning, ready for a different mode,"
the Buckeyes have' been he said.
revamping. It may take q_uite
Getting ready for a spread
a whife longer until thmgs t~am after playing a tradisettle down.
.
t10nal runnmg team wears
"I would attribute some of - pn the coachmg staff, perthat to just figuring out our haps more so than the playoffense, getting people used ers. Like hitters facing a
to ~laying_new positions and har~-throwing reliever after
tryu'Ig dtfferent . thmgs," facmg a knucklebalhng
Trapasso said. "We went starter, the Buckeyes need to ·
into the season with the .prepare for the change of
mind;set of doing one thing speed from what they saw at
offensively and now we're Camp Randall Stadium.

USA . Basketball. Brown
intends to reduce James· playing time - the 23-year-old
has been among the league
leaders in minutes played
throughout his career - with
the idea of keeping him as
fresh as possible for the grinding, 82-game schedule and
playoffs.
Toronto's Jennaine O'Neal,
acquired from Indiana in a
July trade, scored II JXlints in
· his Raptors debut. O'Neal
missed 40 'game5 last season
because of lingering knee
problems and dropped weight
over the summer to ease the
pressure on his joints.
. Will Solomon scored 17
points, Andrea Bargnani 15
and Kris Humphries 14 for
the Raptors . who didn't
attempt a 3-pointer in the first
half but dropped six from
long range after halftime.
Toronto's reserves outplayed Cleveland's during the
second half, when the Raptt!TS
ou;scored the Cavs 57-37.

Zydrunas Ilgauskas scored
16 points and Williams,
acqmred in an August trade
from Milwaukee, added 12
points, four assists and three
rebounds in 26 minutes. The
Cavs have craved a point
guard for years and feel
Williams can fill that void
while giving James someone
to share the scoring load.
. When he had the chance,
Williams pushed the ball up
the floor and he wasn't shy
about directino. his team-.
mates.
Brown has tried to cut
James' minutes before.
Hqwever, it's been tough to
get him rest in games the '
Cavs needed 'to win. James
averaged ·40 .4 minutes per
game last season, nearly a
half-minute less than in 200607. His minutes-per-~ame
average has droppe&lt;l the past
three years, butexcept for his
rookie year (39.5), James has
averaged more than 40 minutes per game each season .

DIICI.IGN

zoos

Gallla
County

OH

In One Week With Us
dassniect@!~:~nbune.com REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS ::.::::~~~:iC:~ .
~----------------~J)~~~~~~
~~E~______www
___._m_yd_~_·l-yr_eg_i_&amp;_er_.oo
__m----------------~
To Place
l\egtster
~rtbune
Sentinel
·Your Ad, (740) 446-2342 .(740) 992-2156 (304) 675-1333
:Call .Today•• .;
webs;tes;

Or Fax To

~eaatlldatM

'

'

I

I

Now you can have borden and graphics
~
addedtoyourclassifledads
(.~
.1m
Borders $3.00/per ad
~
Graphics SOC for small
S1.00 for large

m WRliE 6tj 6Q
!Uc:c:iiiliirl"ds

Should Include These Hems
To Help Get Response ...

COm,._

• Shrt Your Adl With • Keyword • Jnducle
Delcriptlon • Include A Price • Avokl Abbrevlatlonl
• Include phone Number· And Addi'UI When N_.
• Adl Shoukl Run 7 O.ye

1'1

Robert E.
Beagle,
rhlga County Shariff
Attorney for the PlalnIIIIa
Frank R. Wooldridge C.
600 South Paarl Street
Columbus, OH 43206
6t4-221-t662 ·
(9110, 17, 24, (10) I, 8

Pet
Cremations.
740-446-374S

Pleas, Meigs CoUnty, tract, deeded to Mark
Ohio
·
In pursuance of an
: order of sale to me dl· reeled from said court
: In . the above entitled
. action, I will expose to
· sale at public auction
on the front steps of
!he Meigs County
Court House on Friday,
Oct t7, 2008 altO a.m.,
·of said day, the follow: lng described real as·tate:
' EXHIBIT A
Situated In the Township
ot
Rutland,
County of Meigs, and In
the State of Ohio, to
wit:
:PARCEL No. One: Be:ginning at lhe North·
east corner of Lot
·deeded to Marla Ruo:sell; thence South 3 de· grHS West 25 rilda and
· 2t llnka to Thomaa
Scott's tine; thence
.South 87-t/2 degraea
East 23 rode and t8
·links to Jo~n Slovan~ oon's · tine;
thence
. North 2-t/2 degreeo
•Eaat 78 rods and 18
~ tlnkl to Peter Wrlghta
tina; thence North 8t
degreea ,Weot74 roda
to Wooley Smith's tine;
thence South 3t de11roea Ealt 24 rodaond
It llnko; thence South
' 62 clegraeo Weal 36

Clint by deed recordad - - - - - - In Votume.43, Page t49
Public Notice
of. the Melga County
Original Records.
PUBLIC NOTICE
PARCEL No. Two: The NOTICE: Ia hereby
following
described given that on Saturday,
real eatote lltuated In October It, 2008 at
the Townahlp of Rut- 10:00 a.m., a public
land, County of Meigs · sele wilt be held at2tt
and In the State of W
Second
St.,
Ohio, beginning at the Pomeroy, Ohio. Tho
Southeast corner ot Farmera Bank and Sav- ·
Catherine Scott's land lnga Company Ia sell·
In said above do- lng for cash In hand or
scribed Section No. 6 cer!ltled check tho fo~
thence North 20 do- lowing collateral:
grees West 22 rods; 2007 Chovrolat Cobalt
thence North 87·112 do- 20
Vln
grees East 52,roda and ftGtAKt5F4n154433
24 Iinke to s stake; The Farmars Bank ond
thence South 3 do- Savings
Company,
grees West 25 rods and Pomeroy, Ohio, , .
2t links to T.J. Scotia serves tho ·right to btd
Nortl\ line; thenca Wast at lhla 18lo, and to withalong T.J. Scoltlllne to draw the above colla!·
tho place of Qlglnnlng, oral prior to 1811.
containing 6-t/2 OCI'tl, Further; The Farmera
more or 1111. SAVE Bank and Savlngo
AND EXCEPT .234 acre company reaervoa tho
out of sold tract, right to reject any or all
deeded to Mark Cline btda oubmlttod.
by deed recorded In The above deacrlbed
Volume 43, pagot49 of collateral will be sold
the Malga County Ortg- "~I !a-whore tt", with
lnat Records.
no oxpreaaed or 1mCurrent Owner: Jerome plied warranty given. .
K. Howard ot at
For further lntormatlon,
Property At: 37676 St. or for an appointment
Rl 143
·
to l. .pect colletaral,
Pomeroy, OH 45789
prior to 18le dale conPARCEL NUMBER: 11· tact Cyndle or Kon at
00464
7&lt;10-Wol-2t36.

OJ:

Identify. 740-245-92t8
Nclicoo ·

:~~~~5~~
Prof nianal S. tic:a

(Car..
,. Ctose
To Home)
·Call
Today!
740-4464367
HID0-214-o452

lulon

M-N-S ' ·

Of

ConstructiOn,

ir.g GOilncil'tor,lndepenc:tenl
Collegu and SchoOls 12748

or ~

~

• ,"

.....

"""!::::!~

call JA 740256-8160 or

304-£.118'12
Older Lady. of Good
iiiiiiiiii Registered Block Angus
Characler available for
Money To lAnd
he~e"
and
bred
Elder Car~ in your Home ~~~~;;;;;;~iiii;;; heJfers/cows.
A.l. sire's
. 304--675-2969 ·NOTICE Borrow Smart. GAR Plime Design, GAR
Contact . the Ohio Divi· Retail Products, Boyd on
sion of Ananelal lnst~u- Target,
Travelor
004.
·
Office 1 Co
••·v n-·rty' Gar New
tions
o
nsurner . , utn~ ,
Affairs BEFORE you · refl- Design 5050 and others.
nance your · home or ob· Grand
View
Fann,
Watorpoooftng
lain a loan. BEWARE ol SOuthside,
WV
Unconditional lifetime
guarantee. Local refer·
requests for any largo 304:675-2096
9llCeS furrished .-Estabadvance
payments of !!!!!!i!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!'"""'
lishod t975. Call24 Hrs.
fees or insuraConce. Call
Pill
740-446-o870, A~rs
the Office of . nsumar
Basement Waterproofing. AtfWs
totl
free
at Rat
Terrtar
Pu,PS
.
t-ll66-278-0003 to leam 304-458-16t2
Superior Heme Malnte- if the mortgage broker or
Corpentry, lender is PfOilOrly li· Lost.F.ehlhuohua
blacl&lt;
Plumbing,
Electrical, censecl. (This Is a public and
tan
White
Hill
Rentals, No Job to Small service
announcement Ad.al'98,need&amp;
medical
Reasonable
Prices. from the Ohio Valley ananllon,Reward,740339·3442 or 446·2805
Publishing Company)
742-3115

a.-

rodo; t'*&gt;ce
_clegl'lll
EastSouth
and 37
t6
rodl and t8 llnka;
lhence South 20 degi'MI Eallt4 rodllnd
'4 llnka; thence North
81·tl2 deg,_ Eaat 52
roda and 2411nklto thl
·place of beginning,
.containing 28 ecr. .,
I'IOre or leu. SAVE
AND EXCEPT throe '(3)
acrea out of tho SouthAll It corner of llld

Prtor
- 241,relerenceo:
Volume
Pege 8t7
AppraiHd at $100,000
Torma of Sate: Cannot
be aold fbr 1 - thin
2/Jrds of the appr~~laad
VIIUI. tO% down 011
dey of aalt, caoh or
c;ertlfled check, balonce duo on conllnnelion of aale.
The appraisal did not
Include an Interior IX·
amlnatl6n ot tho house.

J

If so, you qualify for a

Senior Discount*

'

.

ANew Home?
TrY the
Classifieds!!-

~1~0)~8~·;.9,~1~0~-~~~~~~~~=~~~~~~~

•allipolh1 Dailp

' • Travel/Entertainment ..................................352

tlt-rtbun~

~oint ~l~a-ant B.~gt-ter

The Daily Sentinel
_,6unba!' Qttme- -6entinel
p- -

---- ---

-

--

I

-

---- -- -

·-

-

--- -- •

;•

-

-

'

: Subscriber's Name .....:._ ___:_______
I
I

I

1
1
I
I
I

Address - - - - - - - - - - - - - - City/State/Zip - - - - - - - - - - -

Phone•---------------------h ,:C' ~

Mall or drop off this coupon along

with I( cqpy of your· ph~to ID tQ
Ohio Valley Publishing , P.O. Box 489, Gallipolis, OH 46631

~--------~--------------------I

ATV .................................:.......................:... t005

Automotive .....................: .......,.................... 304
Building Matorlola .. :.................................... 306
Bualne18 ...............................................; ..... :3D8
Colerlng ...........:............................................3t0
Chitii/Etdolrly Care .....................:................. 3t2
Computaro ................................................... 3t4
Contractoro...... :...........................................3t&amp;
Domeallco/JanHonat ................................... 3t8
Etoctrfcal ......................................................320
Ftnanclat.. .....................................................322
HNHh ........................................................... 326
HNtlng &amp; Coollng ....................................... 328
-lmprovomenll 330
lnaurance ..................................................... 332
• Llwn Servlca ............................................... 334
Muatc:IDanc.n&gt;rama ............................... :.... 33&amp;
Other Servlcn ............................................. 33&amp;
Plumblng/Eieclrlcel ..................................... 340 .
Proteaalonat Servtcea ................................. 342
Repalra ...:.............................................,....... 344
Rooflng .........................................................346
. • Securtty .................... ;;......................~ ........... 348 ·
Tu/Accoun~ng ............. c............................. 350

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.
.

For

Recreallonol V$hlclel ............................... 1000

Announcemento .......·.................................. ,2CII
Blrthdoly/Annlveroary ................................. 205
Happy Adol ........................... ; ........................210
Loll&amp; Found ............................................... 215
Memory/Thank You ..................................... 220
Notlcn ......................................................... 225
Peraonelo ..................................................... 230
Wanted ......................................; ................. 235
Apptlanct~ Servlte ........ ; .............................. 302

when you pay for a 6 or 12
month subscription on your
home delivered subscription!

(Practice 4:30 pm)
304-882-2884
304-675-5463

Leg1la ...........................................................100

S..VIceli .....................................;................ :300

Ftnanct.l ...............................................; .......•oo
'Financllll Sarvlcaa ...................................... 405
.• lnauranc8 .....................................................410
Money to Lond .....;.......................................4t5
Educ.llon .......................................:.............!IOO
aualneaa &amp; Trade School ........................... 605
lnotructton &amp; Tralnlng ................................. 510
Leasona ........................................................515
Peroonol .........................:.........................1... 520
Anlmata .......................:................................ 600
Animal Supptlea .......................................... 605
H.............................................................. 610
Llvoetock. .....................................................615
....................................................................620
Want to .buy·............ ,.....................................625
Agrlcunure ...................................................700
Farm Equlpment ..........................................705
Garden &amp; Procjuee .......................................7tO
Hay, Feed, Seed, Grain ............................... 71 s··

. ~ Hunting A LIJ;Id ............ -............................. 720
. : Wont to-buy .................................- ..............725

Morchendlu ................................................900
: Antlquaa .........,.............................................905
; Appltance .....................................................9t0

• AucUona .......................................................915
Bargain BaMmont.. ..................................... 920
.. Collltctlbtea .................................................. 925
CompUt.ro ................................................... 930
l!qulpment/Supplleo ...........................c........ 935
Filla Morkoll ................................................ 940
Fuel 011 Coat/Wood/Oao ............................. 945

-' Fumlture ...................................................... eso

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

·• Kld'l Corner............ , ..................................... 860
.. Mllleellaii'WOU1..............................................915
Wont to bUy ..................................................970
Yotrd Sale .................... :................................ 975

•

Alllorno111. n

Aulo1

sin heifers $700 e8ch

octlonl will
In tho ft
llllbltldltlon.

740-992-2156 .
or 992-2155 · ·

20UO

Blacl&lt; pure bread Umou·

ortfHIIIII1t.

Deadline 5 pm - October 24
. Contact Brenda Davis or Dave Harris
for ~dverti~ing information &amp; assistance

•

..,,..,,. ..,._, ..,,..,.

until you have invastigat- new construction, 15+yrs
experlenai call MattO

on Friday- October 31st

full baths, 2 staircases, ·

Ofllllpcliscareereollege.edu

know. and NOT to send All types home remodel· GOO
money through the mall lng ·from leaky raucats to

The Daily Sentinel

Mason Co. Fairgrounds
At. 62N Pt. Pleasant, WV

~!nary
Property':
250 under 1500
Spoctoc:ut.r view of tho
red helmel and ~nk bag Ohio Rhor
S2.800 740.e45·t9t2
Private drive off Uncolo
Hill.
Pomeroy.
Ohto,
2007
KawasaJo;• Ninja woods on 111 ree sideS
2t)O under 1500 miles (4+)acres, to a historical
red helmet and tank bag home. Circa 1900, 5
$2,800. 74o-645·t9t2
bedrooms, 2 fireplaces, 2

C811

TURNED.DOWN ON
NOTICE OHIO • VALLEY · SOCIAL SECURITY SSI
PUBLISHING. CO. recNo Fee.Unless We Win!
om.mends that yoU do
1-888-582-3345
business with people you ':'::~~~~~~-..

To be inserted in the

Sat. f 0/11 /08
6:00pm

.

GOO!ge's Portable Saw·
Found: Small dog near mm, dof11 haul your Logs =~~~~==
SR 325 &amp; My. Ca1amel. to 1he Mill just call
Golllpoll1 Conoor
Can alter · 5:30 pm to 304-675-t957
Collogo

V(JTERS (;lJIDE

MOTOCROSS
RACE

Mr kiM or axp~n~e that NIUII from tt. p.ll :Honor omlltkln of an Mwrti",.,..t, Conwction wiD be meet. In lhe flrtl .vai181M .ctltlon. • Boa Nlrnber ....
. . llhrJep COOillc*lt'-1. • C&amp;lnwrt r.w Ant appiiN. • AA rMI ....._ ldverUNmentt n au~ to 1M ~ Fair Moualnt "" or 1VII. •Thla MWIJ'Ipel'
~ ontr Mlp nntlld .ca ntMtlng EOE tt.nct.rda; W• will not knawln;ty KCIIfll•ny adwrttalng In vtollltlan ot 1M 1. .. Will na1 be ruponattH fOr ..y

KIT &amp; CARLYLE

I

CENERAI.~ EI.J~C1'1(J/V

PO:'JCIES: Ohio~ Publlt*tg,........ the~ to .cllt, ~ 01" ClltiC*I....,. ~at any time. Erron mu.t bl ..,ortM on
Tri:MJneo~ wll be-~ tor no more'*' U. cost of tM spec.~ by thlllrfOf lAd only the flrslln.-tion.

MOnln., ad t.Utl ~ u. phDne.

CLASSIFIED INDEX

tract, deeded to. John
Stevenaon by Charles
White
by
deed
recorded In Volume 58,
t 04, of the
Page
Recorda of Dteda of
Melga County, Ohio.
S,AVE AND EXCEPT
1,114 acrea out of satd

Or Fax To (304) 675-5234 ..

YOUR CLASSIFIED LINE AD NOTICED

"POLICIES«
I

992·2157

Offee !lord'~
HOW

NOTICES

&gt;

CLASSIFIED

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

For fast results, advertise in The Daily Sentinel classifieds!

Sheriff Sates
· 'Case Number 08CV046
: American General fl·
nonte Sarvlte Inc.
Plaintiff
va
Jerome K. Howard et ol
Defendants
Court of · Common

- Sentinel - l\e

Blcyctas ......................................................101D
lloalaiACCIIIOrllo ....................:............... t0t5
Campar/RYo &amp; Trallera ............................. t020

Mot01Cycleo ............................................... t025
Olhor ....... ................................................... 1030
Wont to buy ............................................... t035
Automotive ................................................ 2000

Aulo Rentllll..uae ..................·................... 2005
Autos ............: .......... ~ .................................. 2010
ClaoalcfAntlqueo ....................................... 201 &amp;
Commorclatllnduatrial .............................. 2020
Parto &amp; Acceaaorleo.................................. 2025 .
Sporto Utlltty.............................................. 203CI
Trucks .. :.............................,........................ 2035
utHity Trailers ............................................ 2040
V.ns ............................................................ 2045
Wont to buy ............................................... 2050
Real Estell Saloe ...................................... 30110

Cemollfy Ptoll .......................................... 3005
Commorct.l ................................................30t0
Condomlnt~m• .......................................... 301 &amp;
For Sale'by Owner.....................................3020
Houuo for Salo ......................................... 3025
Land (Acraogo) ..........................................3030
Loll ..:.........................................................3035
Want.to buy ....;...........................................3040
RNI Elllle Rantola........... " ...................... 3500
Aportmentalt'ownhou- ......................... 3505
eommorclot ................................................ 3510
Condomtntumo .......................:..............:.... s5t5
Hou- for Rent .......................,;............... 3520
Land (A.,...go) .......................,..............:... 3525
Storage.......................................................3535
Want to Ront .............................................. 311'10
Monutocturod Houatng .............................4000
L011.............................................................400&amp;
Mowira.....: ...............................................~ .. 40t0
Renllta ....................................................... 4015
Saloa ...........................................................4020
Supptlol ................................~.................... 4025
Want to Buy ............................................... 4030

sooo

Property ...........:.............................
Reaort Property for ulo ........................... 5025
Retort Property for rent ........................... 5050

Emptoyment......: ........................................IOOO .
Accounttng/Finonctal ................................soo2
Admlnlotrollvo/Profesalonal .....................5004
Coahlor/Ciork ............................................. II006
Chllftldor!Y Oont ............. ...:.................... 6008
Clertcal ...................................., .................. 60t0
Conotructlon ..............................................6012
Drivers &amp; Dellvery ..................................... 6014
Educatlon ...................................................IIOI6
Etect~eotl Plumblng ...................................IIOtl
·Employment Aganclei ..............................II020
Ent..tolnment............................................II022
Food Sanllcn ............................................6024
Government &amp; F-.ott Jobo .................... 6028
Help onted- GOI\enl ..................................6028
Law Enforcemont ...................................... 6030
Mllnlenancolllomeatlc ............................. 6032
Manegameni/Supervlsory ........................ 6034
· Mochanlcs ..................................................6036
-leal ............. :......................................... 6036
Muolcol ....................................................... 11040
Part·Time-Temporerles ............................. 6042
Reiotauronta ............................................... 6044
Salea ....................: ........................, .............8048
Technical Trodoe ....................................... 6050
Toxtllei/Factory ......................................... 8812

/9·"1

* 1111\~(N,l

~
·

.

~' Clf J21;l't1Z$'D 1\116'kA'fS

'-"

www.comics.com

::;::~:::;~;;-;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;&lt;li&gt;~20D8;;;;b;y~;;l;n;•;,·

!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!0

p,....

~--'--

CKC A,egistered 8ichon
Frlse puppies B wks old.
Great with children and
non
shedding.
Male
$460,
females
$500.
Marriett,
OH.
740·376-os&amp;l
or
740-52S-4143.

&amp; Pra*oca

,.~W~ani~T;;;o~luy-"'~

..,.,._,
"'
Kiwi just E.. of Syracuse Buying tools sell or trade
on
St.
Rt.
124, mechanic-carpenter lawn
(740)992-7449
&amp; garden power IDOls.
~---~-.-- Call 740-388·1515 or cell
Pumpkins and Fall deeD- l40:20B-0320
rations for sale at the ':':"'~~~"!:"::--~
Melon Patch on SR 14t , Absolute Top Dollar · sil·
9 .miles from Gallipolis. ver/gold
coins,
any
Open Thur. sat.
10K/14K/18K gold jew;e;;;,;,.,,;,;;;;;;,.!!!!!!,.,.. elry, dental gold, pre
Want To luy
1935 . us
cuf"{ency,
W ed
proof/mint
sets,
dla10 Buy- Paw monds, MTS Coin Shop.
ant
Paws. Black Walnuts, t5t 2nd Avenue, Galli·
II
polls. 446·2842

2 AKC female Boston
Terrier · puppies beautiful
markings black &amp; v.tilte
$125 ea. 740-388-8743

beautiful original wood·
worlf;, many pictu•a windows. mosUy new wtndows, large knchan and
breakfast room, beautt·

2007 Honda VTX t300R fully landscaped with iO
1800 miles black $7800. ground pool. Sit on the
wrap around porch and
366·6360
enjoy
the
spectacular
02 Honda Accord EX, 4 view of -tne Ohio River. 2
door,
auto,
loaded, car detached garage and
92,000 miles. 245-5526
2 . out buildings. Would
make a wonde,rtul family
93 Ford Tempo . 4oyl ..
home or bed &amp; breakfast.
2dr.. blue, good wor11.
Privat~ and Picturesque
car,
$650.
SPECTACULAR VIEW
(740)59t ·8936
Serious
inquires· onlY,
947 Grand Prix GT, 965 please ·Call 740-992-3678

good ~-"!--~~C~
House for sale in hes·
ter, 3 br., separate gaWe have quality SUV1s rage,
contact
w1·th warranty. p nc
to
(
85-4
74019
131
· ed
Sell. Blazer, Satum Vue, !!·.!!{,. ...,;;;,;;;,;,!!!!!!!!!!!!.;,
Bu~k Rendezvous Visit
Land 1~-1
us
• at .............-...........
(gocootunotors.com).
Approx. 25 acres mil re·
Stop
or
call mote ,
rough
access_.
740-446·0t03. 326 Jack· $40K, Buyer must Sur·
son Pike.
V6Y , Call after 5pm
~C;;,OOK;;;,;;;;M;;,O;,;TO;;R;;;S!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! :::30!!4!!·6,;;;95!!·33
;;;;;;;;90;,!!!!!!!!!!!!!!0
Grand Pn&gt;, runs
304·593-2604

=~;;1;

~

$poi1. Ulillly

=

--==;i;lohi;
. ;...~;;;;;;;

~~~~~...."!"'!" ""

97 Ford Expedition, 4)(4,
runs great, looks good,
tow pkg , 3rd seat. S2700.
!7;;;40;;;·3;,;7;9·,;2t;,;7;9!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!"'

Campers
&amp;
Motor
Homes lotS tor Ren1 year
round
hook
up
304-675-6908

=

~--=T~n~JCbiii;~;;;;;;;

Lot on Rt 588 where aU
Mouses are being buil~,
•
97 Ford F250 4WD, 8)(· Sewage/electric. $35,000
landed
cab,
power 740-256-1664
Yard Salo
lock/windows tinted win· ;,;:::;;::;~""'==,......
3 family yard &amp; bake sale dows 5 speed. 645-5357

AKC reg. Lab puppies
vet/cheeked
wonnedlshots, 2 blk &amp; 1
yellow, all females. Only
3 left. St 75 to good

homas. 740·256-6882

Antiquoo

4 Full Blooded Australian
Shepherd
pups, . Red
Merkt,
10 wks
old.
304-6'1'5·6535

;;;;;=..;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
GIBBS
ANTIQUES·
AlSQ. restore fumlture, 10·
catod on Tomado Ad. off
Rt.
33,
Racine
AKC · German Shepherd (Part&lt;&amp;Ride~
' e•lt
Pups, 8 left hom liH!!r of 740-949·2246 ,
'
11 , only 3 mares. Dam
and Sire are family pets.
Fuel/ 01/ CocA/
9 wl&lt;s old. reduced to
Wood I Goa
$350.J04-773&lt;S062
~;;,;.;~;.;,;;..;.;;;;;
_ - - Saasoned · Firewood deBeautllul whna kmens to livered Call446-9204
give away, approx. 8
·
·
w~ .
old,
call
MltciNan• au•
(740)992·7546
Free male kitten , 1o 2 Fire Place Inserts,
weeks old litter-trained, Buck, 1 Kindel Wood
304·206·7517
or 304·675·3818
~· 862 ·~·
~~;,;,.:·~·;;;~;,;;;;""·~--~ Jet Aeration Motors ,..
Poodle fo~ sale~ reg., red, paired, new &amp; rebuilt In
female, 3 yrs. old, great ·stock. · Calt Ron Evans,
w!klds,
on all shots, 1-800-537-9528.

al Long Bottom Comm. 85 Ford F·250. tlalbed
~~!Jiis_ ~ !HO, 9' 7• Truck call ahar 7 PM
~-~~:"'"~~ 304-456·t727
Several Families Oct. 10, ;;;;,;;,;;;;;;,;;,...!!!!!!!!!!!!!!....
tt, 12 t mile wast Rod·
Wan1To Buy
ney. old 588. Fall decor, ;;;;;=;;;;;;;;;;;;;.,;.;;..~
C
Mill d 'ed llo
Wsnl to buy Junk Cars,
· ora
• n
wers, call740-388·0884
wrealhs·baskets '
etc. =~======
Pure Breed French An- .lOOC
RP I h 11l1
gora Aebblts mlf 6 mlhs
S .1 1('S
old. Plus ~ze clothing.
;;:;:;:;:;:;:;;

3

Gallipolis. Thursday 9th
&amp; Friday t0tl1, 47 West·
wood
Drive.
Joanne
"Sheets"
Fillinger, 9-4
both days.

~Ton~!~58
E10-:&amp;-:::Ya~rd~S~ale

Oct. 9, 10, 11 from 9·6
West of Rodney on SA

566 . Fabric 90 Inch wide
$2.00 per yard, quilt
tops, wan hangers, quilt
box and lace, quilting
supplies.· t/2 off ragular
. Hot Tub, 6 peraon. Like prices. ~M size clothes.
New with cover. Must Lots _ofj~~
Sail·
Mo~ng.
$t600,
740-845-3333.

~

~=~~;;;;;~~ House Shutters. various
sizes

$80,

Whlnpool

EBY,
INTEGRITY,
KIEFER BUILT,
VALLEY.
HORSEII.IVE·
STOCK
TRAILERS,
LOAD
MAX
EQUIP·
MENT
TRAILERS,
CARGO EXPRESS
&amp;
HOMESTEADER
CAAGO/CONCESSION
TRAILERS.
B+W
GOOSENECK FLATBED
$3999. VIEW OUR EN·
TIRE TRAILER INVEN·
TOAY AT
'vWVW.CAAMICHAEL·
TAAILEAS.COM

Washer
$75
;304;;::-li::_;75-;:;;SO;:;,:;t5;,...,,...NEW ANO USED STI:EL
Steel Beams, Pipe Rebar
•- 1
for
Concrate
~·o•.
Chan.nel, Flat ,Bar, Steel
n
t
1 0 In 0"'
..... ra lng or r.a I. "\le·
ways &amp; Walkways. L&amp;L
Scrap Metals Open Mon.
Tue,
Wed
&amp; C F~,
1
Bam·4:30pm.
~
Thurs. ' Sat
&amp;
un.
740-446-7300
Pole Bam 30x40K10 only
$6,995, oth&amp;r sizes, Free
Dellv&lt;lry BTI·77~

74Q-446.3825

Scag

Have you priced a John
· 1a1ely? voOu 'II be
0 eere
surprised! Check out our
used
Inventor;
at
www.CAAEO.com.
Car·

Zero-tum
mower, eK.
con.,
low
hours,
$3,000,
740-742 .2373

michael ·
Equipment
740-446·2412
Two row new Idea cam

STEEL ARCH
BUILDiNGS
Made In USA. Three
cancelled orOers • will
sell for balance owe&lt;l.
16:.:24 &amp; 25)(36. Cal!
today lo save thQusandsi B00-352·0469

picker/sheUer;
lntema-,
tiona! t066 Tractor/Cab;
8'1120' Goosanecl&lt; cattle
trailer.
Call
740-446-4432

Tiger

Cub

Stand-up tanning
bed
$1200 740·367·n62

·-~I~
.
:~;.~~~~~
CCIIIQiltl
IIUURI

"r

t969 Stratos Bass boat
wiHlOhp. Evinrude outboard
good
shape
$37s0
OBO',
(740)992·2892
• •
Camptt~/ RVs &amp;
Trailws .

=;;:;::;:;:;;;:
~

Clip tt1ls AD and take it
with you when you visit
our community to get
this special discount.
Move-in in Oct and get
StOO.OO off your 2BR
Apt. in Nov. Currently
Collllliii'Ciol
renting 1 &amp; 2 BA units
~=#!""';;;;~:;;;;;;;;;
Spacious floor plat'ls .
F.or
Sale
or
lease
ranch &amp; townhome style
office/Warehouse/storage
living, playground &amp;
great location in Gal!!po- .
lis.
1800
sq.
h. t&gt;asketball court, on-site
laundry facility, 24 hr
$400/montn. Call Wayne
emergency malnte·
404-456·3802
,;;;,;l!!i!!;;,;;;;;;;;,,..!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
naf"IC6, quiet countfy 10·
HouiU for
cation ctose to major
~~""'~=~"""'!
medical
facilities,
186 North Park Dr. call
pharmacies, grocery
304-li75·5640
or
' store ... just minutes
304·593-1204 will sell on 1 away from other major
land Contract or Out
shopping in the area.
Rigt1t. Also a Wellington
Honeyaucklo Hills
Piano call for appoint·
Apartments
266 Colonial Drive •113
,moot to see them bath .
Bidwell, Ohio 456 t 4
740-446·3344
4 bed 2 bath &amp; office In
town , hw &amp; tile floors,
Olfieo Hours M. W, F
9AM • 5PM
updated kitChen &amp; baths.
privacy fence &amp; above
ground
pool,
security

Saa.

•

system, muct1 more. 130
Bastlani . Or. $129,000.

•44;;,6;;,·2;;.92;;3~~~--

t Yr old SR 566 lor more'
into and pictures go to
~~~~;;;;;;;'::-;;;;;- W\'W.Orvtl.com .
I.D,
1995 24' Terry Camf)er, Browning 740-448-7204
lee
6 $6 000
tBR Apl, W/0 hooktJilS,
s pe '
' ' good N 2BA 2 balh
3
shape &amp; dean, call ew
on ac . satellite TV incl. w/rent,
(740)949-2816,
new relrig, range &amp; . dish- dose to hospital. Call
401-6
washer inctooed $75.0007. ·4:;;G-:;:33:;:9;;;.0;:;3e:;::;,2""'!"~7 59 522
"!::':"'"""::"~~-:::740-446·7029
:
. ~tbr,
Apartment.
200t
Coleman Chey· 3BR,2BA. 2 car gar. $300/monlh
$300/de·
enne
pop-up camper, patio, DR/FR. Relocating
posit.
AelerenceS, No
eleelric brakes • /&gt;JC • 3 $tts_..OOO. 740-44~
"08 t7 Pots 304·675·2749
way refrig., sleeps 6·8, 2 leave msg
stoves
plus
screened .;.;...;.,.;,;;._~-- 2 bedroom Apartment &amp;.
porch,
call House in Clifton tor 2 bedroom House on 5th
'740'-7 7559
rent.4
bedrooms, 51 . 304·812·4350 ask tor
'
r~ .
·
Kitchen, basemen!, living Don
RV
room . t bath , gas heat, ~:-~:-~-~
Service at Carmichael city water, unfemished, 2BA APT. ·. CIA. (740)
Trailers
$500 monlh + utllitles 44Hl194
740·4Ml·3625
and · deposit.
possible ·3'"r'"
oo
·ms;..._a_nd_ba_lh_u_p·
RV service at Carml- sale . on land conrract,or stairs. Comptllel~ fur·
chael
•• Trailers sell tor 35,000 304 593 nished with
No
740-446·3625
Bt87 or 593 8t07
pots. Rei. Aeq. 44t.0245

1...-----_,i

wro.

I

•

�'

www.mydailysentinel.com

Page B4 • The Daily Sentinel

I

\Vednesday,~ober8,2oo8

www.mydallysenUnel.com

~rtbune

Raptors down Cavaliers, 104-84

,

AP photo

:Phio State quarterback Terrell Pryor (2) runs ofUhe field after Ohio State beat Wisconsin
~0-17 in a NCAA college football game Saturday in Madison, Wis. ·

_Jluckeyes adapting to ·season of change
. COLUMBUS (AP)
:The regular season is half
'Over for Ohio State, yet it
~eels as if the Buckeyes are
tust finding themselves.
:- The
· 12th-ranked
Buckeyes (5- I , 2-0 Big Ten)
,ttave inched their way up the
:rankings a bit since that ugly
-35-3 loss at Southern
talifornia
in
midSeptember.
·· "We can't lose," fullback
Brandon
Smith
said
,
Tuesdaye "W.e ' ve be en saying this is a playoff for us, at
thts point in the season. The
way things shake out in college football, we've just got
to keep winning ."
, Since the loss, the
Buckeyes have won three in
a row, including their first
two Big Ten ~ames. They 've
gotten Chris 'Beanie" Wells
back from a foot injury, and
freshman Tefl'\!lle Pryor has
taken over at quarterback.
Even though they have not
won convmcingly, they at
least believe they're building some momentum for a
stretch run.
.· Punter AJ . Trapasso considers last Saturday night's
20-17 victory at Wisconsin a
stepping stone to bigger and
better things.
.
"We had a lot of confidence coming into this sea~on, maybe (we were) a little
bit overconfident thinking
we were just going to run

CLEVELAND (AP) LeBron James spent a ·rare
night relaxing on !he bench,
Mo Williams showed why
Cleveland traded for him this
summer, ·and the Cavaliers
opened their exhibition season with a 104-84 loss to the
Toronto Raptors .on Tuesday
night.
James played just 8 minutes
in the first quarter before he
raised his hand for a substitute
and coach Mike Brown pulled
his superstar for !he remainder o( Cleveland's preseason
debut.
James, who won an
Olympic gold ·medal . this
summerattheBeijingGames,
missed his only three shots
from the field, made one free
throw and · added two
rebound~ and two assists.
The wear and tear on James
is a major concern for .the
Cavaliers. He has had liitle
time away from the floor
since last season ended
because of his commitment to

over teams," Trapasso said. midway through and we 're
"We were exposed a linle bit doing something· that seems
(at USC) but we've bounced to me completely different."
back pretty well, and hanThe Buckeyes are adaptdied some rough games - ing. They're also growing in
especially this (past) week- confidence.
end."
"We are movin~ in the
Going into the season, the right direction at th 1s peint,"
Buckeyes had 17 starters Smith said.
back and more than 40
This week's challenge will
fourth •. or fifth-year seniors be provided by Purdue (2-3;
on the roster. No one expect- 0-1 ), which has lost ~hree of
ed much upheaval from one its last four while giving up
week to the next.
Instead. there has been lots of yards and not showing much consistency on
almost continual change.
offense.
Two or three fresh faces
·
have been blended in on the
But the ·Boilennakers preoffensive line , three backs sent a change of pace from
filled in for Wells at tailback Wisconsin . Where the
while he ·was sidelined, and Badgers ran the ball right at
· the defense does not-have set the Buckeyes and didn't
starters on the line o'r at one stretch the field much,
of the cornerback spots. Purdue is the epitome of a
Nothing was more radical spread offense.
than changing· from secondCoach Jim Tressel repeatyear starter Todd Boeckman, edly referred to the problem
a big pocket passer. to Pryor, of "shi'fting gears."
a 6-foot-6 sprinter.
"We have to kind of get
~o rather than fine-tuning, ready for a different mode,"
the Buckeyes have' been he said.
revamping. It may take q_uite
Getting ready for a spread
a whife longer until thmgs t~am after playing a tradisettle down.
.
t10nal runnmg team wears
"I would attribute some of - pn the coachmg staff, perthat to just figuring out our haps more so than the playoffense, getting people used ers. Like hitters facing a
to ~laying_new positions and har~-throwing reliever after
tryu'Ig dtfferent . thmgs," facmg a knucklebalhng
Trapasso said. "We went starter, the Buckeyes need to ·
into the season with the .prepare for the change of
mind;set of doing one thing speed from what they saw at
offensively and now we're Camp Randall Stadium.

USA . Basketball. Brown
intends to reduce James· playing time - the 23-year-old
has been among the league
leaders in minutes played
throughout his career - with
the idea of keeping him as
fresh as possible for the grinding, 82-game schedule and
playoffs.
Toronto's Jennaine O'Neal,
acquired from Indiana in a
July trade, scored II JXlints in
· his Raptors debut. O'Neal
missed 40 'game5 last season
because of lingering knee
problems and dropped weight
over the summer to ease the
pressure on his joints.
. Will Solomon scored 17
points, Andrea Bargnani 15
and Kris Humphries 14 for
the Raptors . who didn't
attempt a 3-pointer in the first
half but dropped six from
long range after halftime.
Toronto's reserves outplayed Cleveland's during the
second half, when the Raptt!TS
ou;scored the Cavs 57-37.

Zydrunas Ilgauskas scored
16 points and Williams,
acqmred in an August trade
from Milwaukee, added 12
points, four assists and three
rebounds in 26 minutes. The
Cavs have craved a point
guard for years and feel
Williams can fill that void
while giving James someone
to share the scoring load.
. When he had the chance,
Williams pushed the ball up
the floor and he wasn't shy
about directino. his team-.
mates.
Brown has tried to cut
James' minutes before.
Hqwever, it's been tough to
get him rest in games the '
Cavs needed 'to win. James
averaged ·40 .4 minutes per
game last season, nearly a
half-minute less than in 200607. His minutes-per-~ame
average has droppe&lt;l the past
three years, butexcept for his
rookie year (39.5), James has
averaged more than 40 minutes per game each season .

DIICI.IGN

zoos

Gallla
County

OH

In One Week With Us
dassniect@!~:~nbune.com REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS ::.::::~~~:iC:~ .
~----------------~J)~~~~~~
~~E~______www
___._m_yd_~_·l-yr_eg_i_&amp;_er_.oo
__m----------------~
To Place
l\egtster
~rtbune
Sentinel
·Your Ad, (740) 446-2342 .(740) 992-2156 (304) 675-1333
:Call .Today•• .;
webs;tes;

Or Fax To

~eaatlldatM

'

'

I

I

Now you can have borden and graphics
~
addedtoyourclassifledads
(.~
.1m
Borders $3.00/per ad
~
Graphics SOC for small
S1.00 for large

m WRliE 6tj 6Q
!Uc:c:iiiliirl"ds

Should Include These Hems
To Help Get Response ...

COm,._

• Shrt Your Adl With • Keyword • Jnducle
Delcriptlon • Include A Price • Avokl Abbrevlatlonl
• Include phone Number· And Addi'UI When N_.
• Adl Shoukl Run 7 O.ye

1'1

Robert E.
Beagle,
rhlga County Shariff
Attorney for the PlalnIIIIa
Frank R. Wooldridge C.
600 South Paarl Street
Columbus, OH 43206
6t4-221-t662 ·
(9110, 17, 24, (10) I, 8

Pet
Cremations.
740-446-374S

Pleas, Meigs CoUnty, tract, deeded to Mark
Ohio
·
In pursuance of an
: order of sale to me dl· reeled from said court
: In . the above entitled
. action, I will expose to
· sale at public auction
on the front steps of
!he Meigs County
Court House on Friday,
Oct t7, 2008 altO a.m.,
·of said day, the follow: lng described real as·tate:
' EXHIBIT A
Situated In the Township
ot
Rutland,
County of Meigs, and In
the State of Ohio, to
wit:
:PARCEL No. One: Be:ginning at lhe North·
east corner of Lot
·deeded to Marla Ruo:sell; thence South 3 de· grHS West 25 rilda and
· 2t llnka to Thomaa
Scott's tine; thence
.South 87-t/2 degraea
East 23 rode and t8
·links to Jo~n Slovan~ oon's · tine;
thence
. North 2-t/2 degreeo
•Eaat 78 rods and 18
~ tlnkl to Peter Wrlghta
tina; thence North 8t
degreea ,Weot74 roda
to Wooley Smith's tine;
thence South 3t de11roea Ealt 24 rodaond
It llnko; thence South
' 62 clegraeo Weal 36

Clint by deed recordad - - - - - - In Votume.43, Page t49
Public Notice
of. the Melga County
Original Records.
PUBLIC NOTICE
PARCEL No. Two: The NOTICE: Ia hereby
following
described given that on Saturday,
real eatote lltuated In October It, 2008 at
the Townahlp of Rut- 10:00 a.m., a public
land, County of Meigs · sele wilt be held at2tt
and In the State of W
Second
St.,
Ohio, beginning at the Pomeroy, Ohio. Tho
Southeast corner ot Farmera Bank and Sav- ·
Catherine Scott's land lnga Company Ia sell·
In said above do- lng for cash In hand or
scribed Section No. 6 cer!ltled check tho fo~
thence North 20 do- lowing collateral:
grees West 22 rods; 2007 Chovrolat Cobalt
thence North 87·112 do- 20
Vln
grees East 52,roda and ftGtAKt5F4n154433
24 Iinke to s stake; The Farmars Bank ond
thence South 3 do- Savings
Company,
grees West 25 rods and Pomeroy, Ohio, , .
2t links to T.J. Scotia serves tho ·right to btd
Nortl\ line; thenca Wast at lhla 18lo, and to withalong T.J. Scoltlllne to draw the above colla!·
tho place of Qlglnnlng, oral prior to 1811.
containing 6-t/2 OCI'tl, Further; The Farmera
more or 1111. SAVE Bank and Savlngo
AND EXCEPT .234 acre company reaervoa tho
out of sold tract, right to reject any or all
deeded to Mark Cline btda oubmlttod.
by deed recorded In The above deacrlbed
Volume 43, pagot49 of collateral will be sold
the Malga County Ortg- "~I !a-whore tt", with
lnat Records.
no oxpreaaed or 1mCurrent Owner: Jerome plied warranty given. .
K. Howard ot at
For further lntormatlon,
Property At: 37676 St. or for an appointment
Rl 143
·
to l. .pect colletaral,
Pomeroy, OH 45789
prior to 18le dale conPARCEL NUMBER: 11· tact Cyndle or Kon at
00464
7&lt;10-Wol-2t36.

OJ:

Identify. 740-245-92t8
Nclicoo ·

:~~~~5~~
Prof nianal S. tic:a

(Car..
,. Ctose
To Home)
·Call
Today!
740-4464367
HID0-214-o452

lulon

M-N-S ' ·

Of

ConstructiOn,

ir.g GOilncil'tor,lndepenc:tenl
Collegu and SchoOls 12748

or ~

~

• ,"

.....

"""!::::!~

call JA 740256-8160 or

304-£.118'12
Older Lady. of Good
iiiiiiiiii Registered Block Angus
Characler available for
Money To lAnd
he~e"
and
bred
Elder Car~ in your Home ~~~~;;;;;;~iiii;;; heJfers/cows.
A.l. sire's
. 304--675-2969 ·NOTICE Borrow Smart. GAR Plime Design, GAR
Contact . the Ohio Divi· Retail Products, Boyd on
sion of Ananelal lnst~u- Target,
Travelor
004.
·
Office 1 Co
••·v n-·rty' Gar New
tions
o
nsurner . , utn~ ,
Affairs BEFORE you · refl- Design 5050 and others.
nance your · home or ob· Grand
View
Fann,
Watorpoooftng
lain a loan. BEWARE ol SOuthside,
WV
Unconditional lifetime
guarantee. Local refer·
requests for any largo 304:675-2096
9llCeS furrished .-Estabadvance
payments of !!!!!!i!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!'"""'
lishod t975. Call24 Hrs.
fees or insuraConce. Call
Pill
740-446-o870, A~rs
the Office of . nsumar
Basement Waterproofing. AtfWs
totl
free
at Rat
Terrtar
Pu,PS
.
t-ll66-278-0003 to leam 304-458-16t2
Superior Heme Malnte- if the mortgage broker or
Corpentry, lender is PfOilOrly li· Lost.F.ehlhuohua
blacl&lt;
Plumbing,
Electrical, censecl. (This Is a public and
tan
White
Hill
Rentals, No Job to Small service
announcement Ad.al'98,need&amp;
medical
Reasonable
Prices. from the Ohio Valley ananllon,Reward,740339·3442 or 446·2805
Publishing Company)
742-3115

a.-

rodo; t'*&gt;ce
_clegl'lll
EastSouth
and 37
t6
rodl and t8 llnka;
lhence South 20 degi'MI Eallt4 rodllnd
'4 llnka; thence North
81·tl2 deg,_ Eaat 52
roda and 2411nklto thl
·place of beginning,
.containing 28 ecr. .,
I'IOre or leu. SAVE
AND EXCEPT throe '(3)
acrea out of tho SouthAll It corner of llld

Prtor
- 241,relerenceo:
Volume
Pege 8t7
AppraiHd at $100,000
Torma of Sate: Cannot
be aold fbr 1 - thin
2/Jrds of the appr~~laad
VIIUI. tO% down 011
dey of aalt, caoh or
c;ertlfled check, balonce duo on conllnnelion of aale.
The appraisal did not
Include an Interior IX·
amlnatl6n ot tho house.

J

If so, you qualify for a

Senior Discount*

'

.

ANew Home?
TrY the
Classifieds!!-

~1~0)~8~·;.9,~1~0~-~~~~~~~~=~~~~~~~

•allipolh1 Dailp

' • Travel/Entertainment ..................................352

tlt-rtbun~

~oint ~l~a-ant B.~gt-ter

The Daily Sentinel
_,6unba!' Qttme- -6entinel
p- -

---- ---

-

--

I

-

---- -- -

·-

-

--- -- •

;•

-

-

'

: Subscriber's Name .....:._ ___:_______
I
I

I

1
1
I
I
I

Address - - - - - - - - - - - - - - City/State/Zip - - - - - - - - - - -

Phone•---------------------h ,:C' ~

Mall or drop off this coupon along

with I( cqpy of your· ph~to ID tQ
Ohio Valley Publishing , P.O. Box 489, Gallipolis, OH 46631

~--------~--------------------I

ATV .................................:.......................:... t005

Automotive .....................: .......,.................... 304
Building Matorlola .. :.................................... 306
Bualne18 ...............................................; ..... :3D8
Colerlng ...........:............................................3t0
Chitii/Etdolrly Care .....................:................. 3t2
Computaro ................................................... 3t4
Contractoro...... :...........................................3t&amp;
Domeallco/JanHonat ................................... 3t8
Etoctrfcal ......................................................320
Ftnanclat.. .....................................................322
HNHh ........................................................... 326
HNtlng &amp; Coollng ....................................... 328
-lmprovomenll 330
lnaurance ..................................................... 332
• Llwn Servlca ............................................... 334
Muatc:IDanc.n&gt;rama ............................... :.... 33&amp;
Other Servlcn ............................................. 33&amp;
Plumblng/Eieclrlcel ..................................... 340 .
Proteaalonat Servtcea ................................. 342
Repalra ...:.............................................,....... 344
Rooflng .........................................................346
. • Securtty .................... ;;......................~ ........... 348 ·
Tu/Accoun~ng ............. c............................. 350

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.
.

For

Recreallonol V$hlclel ............................... 1000

Announcemento .......·.................................. ,2CII
Blrthdoly/Annlveroary ................................. 205
Happy Adol ........................... ; ........................210
Loll&amp; Found ............................................... 215
Memory/Thank You ..................................... 220
Notlcn ......................................................... 225
Peraonelo ..................................................... 230
Wanted ......................................; ................. 235
Apptlanct~ Servlte ........ ; .............................. 302

when you pay for a 6 or 12
month subscription on your
home delivered subscription!

(Practice 4:30 pm)
304-882-2884
304-675-5463

Leg1la ...........................................................100

S..VIceli .....................................;................ :300

Ftnanct.l ...............................................; .......•oo
'Financllll Sarvlcaa ...................................... 405
.• lnauranc8 .....................................................410
Money to Lond .....;.......................................4t5
Educ.llon .......................................:.............!IOO
aualneaa &amp; Trade School ........................... 605
lnotructton &amp; Tralnlng ................................. 510
Leasona ........................................................515
Peroonol .........................:.........................1... 520
Anlmata .......................:................................ 600
Animal Supptlea .......................................... 605
H.............................................................. 610
Llvoetock. .....................................................615
....................................................................620
Want to .buy·............ ,.....................................625
Agrlcunure ...................................................700
Farm Equlpment ..........................................705
Garden &amp; Procjuee .......................................7tO
Hay, Feed, Seed, Grain ............................... 71 s··

. ~ Hunting A LIJ;Id ............ -............................. 720
. : Wont to-buy .................................- ..............725

Morchendlu ................................................900
: Antlquaa .........,.............................................905
; Appltance .....................................................9t0

• AucUona .......................................................915
Bargain BaMmont.. ..................................... 920
.. Collltctlbtea .................................................. 925
CompUt.ro ................................................... 930
l!qulpment/Supplleo ...........................c........ 935
Filla Morkoll ................................................ 940
Fuel 011 Coat/Wood/Oao ............................. 945

-' Fumlture ...................................................... eso

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

·• Kld'l Corner............ , ..................................... 860
.. Mllleellaii'WOU1..............................................915
Wont to bUy ..................................................970
Yotrd Sale .................... :................................ 975

•

Alllorno111. n

Aulo1

sin heifers $700 e8ch

octlonl will
In tho ft
llllbltldltlon.

740-992-2156 .
or 992-2155 · ·

20UO

Blacl&lt; pure bread Umou·

ortfHIIIII1t.

Deadline 5 pm - October 24
. Contact Brenda Davis or Dave Harris
for ~dverti~ing information &amp; assistance

•

..,,..,,. ..,._, ..,,..,.

until you have invastigat- new construction, 15+yrs
experlenai call MattO

on Friday- October 31st

full baths, 2 staircases, ·

Ofllllpcliscareereollege.edu

know. and NOT to send All types home remodel· GOO
money through the mall lng ·from leaky raucats to

The Daily Sentinel

Mason Co. Fairgrounds
At. 62N Pt. Pleasant, WV

~!nary
Property':
250 under 1500
Spoctoc:ut.r view of tho
red helmel and ~nk bag Ohio Rhor
S2.800 740.e45·t9t2
Private drive off Uncolo
Hill.
Pomeroy.
Ohto,
2007
KawasaJo;• Ninja woods on 111 ree sideS
2t)O under 1500 miles (4+)acres, to a historical
red helmet and tank bag home. Circa 1900, 5
$2,800. 74o-645·t9t2
bedrooms, 2 fireplaces, 2

C811

TURNED.DOWN ON
NOTICE OHIO • VALLEY · SOCIAL SECURITY SSI
PUBLISHING. CO. recNo Fee.Unless We Win!
om.mends that yoU do
1-888-582-3345
business with people you ':'::~~~~~~-..

To be inserted in the

Sat. f 0/11 /08
6:00pm

.

GOO!ge's Portable Saw·
Found: Small dog near mm, dof11 haul your Logs =~~~~==
SR 325 &amp; My. Ca1amel. to 1he Mill just call
Golllpoll1 Conoor
Can alter · 5:30 pm to 304-675-t957
Collogo

V(JTERS (;lJIDE

MOTOCROSS
RACE

Mr kiM or axp~n~e that NIUII from tt. p.ll :Honor omlltkln of an Mwrti",.,..t, Conwction wiD be meet. In lhe flrtl .vai181M .ctltlon. • Boa Nlrnber ....
. . llhrJep COOillc*lt'-1. • C&amp;lnwrt r.w Ant appiiN. • AA rMI ....._ ldverUNmentt n au~ to 1M ~ Fair Moualnt "" or 1VII. •Thla MWIJ'Ipel'
~ ontr Mlp nntlld .ca ntMtlng EOE tt.nct.rda; W• will not knawln;ty KCIIfll•ny adwrttalng In vtollltlan ot 1M 1. .. Will na1 be ruponattH fOr ..y

KIT &amp; CARLYLE

I

CENERAI.~ EI.J~C1'1(J/V

PO:'JCIES: Ohio~ Publlt*tg,........ the~ to .cllt, ~ 01" ClltiC*I....,. ~at any time. Erron mu.t bl ..,ortM on
Tri:MJneo~ wll be-~ tor no more'*' U. cost of tM spec.~ by thlllrfOf lAd only the flrslln.-tion.

MOnln., ad t.Utl ~ u. phDne.

CLASSIFIED INDEX

tract, deeded to. John
Stevenaon by Charles
White
by
deed
recorded In Volume 58,
t 04, of the
Page
Recorda of Dteda of
Melga County, Ohio.
S,AVE AND EXCEPT
1,114 acrea out of satd

Or Fax To (304) 675-5234 ..

YOUR CLASSIFIED LINE AD NOTICED

"POLICIES«
I

992·2157

Offee !lord'~
HOW

NOTICES

&gt;

CLASSIFIED

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

For fast results, advertise in The Daily Sentinel classifieds!

Sheriff Sates
· 'Case Number 08CV046
: American General fl·
nonte Sarvlte Inc.
Plaintiff
va
Jerome K. Howard et ol
Defendants
Court of · Common

- Sentinel - l\e

Blcyctas ......................................................101D
lloalaiACCIIIOrllo ....................:............... t0t5
Campar/RYo &amp; Trallera ............................. t020

Mot01Cycleo ............................................... t025
Olhor ....... ................................................... 1030
Wont to buy ............................................... t035
Automotive ................................................ 2000

Aulo Rentllll..uae ..................·................... 2005
Autos ............: .......... ~ .................................. 2010
ClaoalcfAntlqueo ....................................... 201 &amp;
Commorclatllnduatrial .............................. 2020
Parto &amp; Acceaaorleo.................................. 2025 .
Sporto Utlltty.............................................. 203CI
Trucks .. :.............................,........................ 2035
utHity Trailers ............................................ 2040
V.ns ............................................................ 2045
Wont to buy ............................................... 2050
Real Estell Saloe ...................................... 30110

Cemollfy Ptoll .......................................... 3005
Commorct.l ................................................30t0
Condomlnt~m• .......................................... 301 &amp;
For Sale'by Owner.....................................3020
Houuo for Salo ......................................... 3025
Land (Acraogo) ..........................................3030
Loll ..:.........................................................3035
Want.to buy ....;...........................................3040
RNI Elllle Rantola........... " ...................... 3500
Aportmentalt'ownhou- ......................... 3505
eommorclot ................................................ 3510
Condomtntumo .......................:..............:.... s5t5
Hou- for Rent .......................,;............... 3520
Land (A.,...go) .......................,..............:... 3525
Storage.......................................................3535
Want to Ront .............................................. 311'10
Monutocturod Houatng .............................4000
L011.............................................................400&amp;
Mowira.....: ...............................................~ .. 40t0
Renllta ....................................................... 4015
Saloa ...........................................................4020
Supptlol ................................~.................... 4025
Want to Buy ............................................... 4030

sooo

Property ...........:.............................
Reaort Property for ulo ........................... 5025
Retort Property for rent ........................... 5050

Emptoyment......: ........................................IOOO .
Accounttng/Finonctal ................................soo2
Admlnlotrollvo/Profesalonal .....................5004
Coahlor/Ciork ............................................. II006
Chllftldor!Y Oont ............. ...:.................... 6008
Clertcal ...................................., .................. 60t0
Conotructlon ..............................................6012
Drivers &amp; Dellvery ..................................... 6014
Educatlon ...................................................IIOI6
Etect~eotl Plumblng ...................................IIOtl
·Employment Aganclei ..............................II020
Ent..tolnment............................................II022
Food Sanllcn ............................................6024
Government &amp; F-.ott Jobo .................... 6028
Help onted- GOI\enl ..................................6028
Law Enforcemont ...................................... 6030
Mllnlenancolllomeatlc ............................. 6032
Manegameni/Supervlsory ........................ 6034
· Mochanlcs ..................................................6036
-leal ............. :......................................... 6036
Muolcol ....................................................... 11040
Part·Time-Temporerles ............................. 6042
Reiotauronta ............................................... 6044
Salea ....................: ........................, .............8048
Technical Trodoe ....................................... 6050
Toxtllei/Factory ......................................... 8812

/9·"1

* 1111\~(N,l

~
·

.

~' Clf J21;l't1Z$'D 1\116'kA'fS

'-"

www.comics.com

::;::~:::;~;;-;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;&lt;li&gt;~20D8;;;;b;y~;;l;n;•;,·

!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!0

p,....

~--'--

CKC A,egistered 8ichon
Frlse puppies B wks old.
Great with children and
non
shedding.
Male
$460,
females
$500.
Marriett,
OH.
740·376-os&amp;l
or
740-52S-4143.

&amp; Pra*oca

,.~W~ani~T;;;o~luy-"'~

..,.,._,
"'
Kiwi just E.. of Syracuse Buying tools sell or trade
on
St.
Rt.
124, mechanic-carpenter lawn
(740)992-7449
&amp; garden power IDOls.
~---~-.-- Call 740-388·1515 or cell
Pumpkins and Fall deeD- l40:20B-0320
rations for sale at the ':':"'~~~"!:"::--~
Melon Patch on SR 14t , Absolute Top Dollar · sil·
9 .miles from Gallipolis. ver/gold
coins,
any
Open Thur. sat.
10K/14K/18K gold jew;e;;;,;,.,,;,;;;;;;,.!!!!!!,.,.. elry, dental gold, pre
Want To luy
1935 . us
cuf"{ency,
W ed
proof/mint
sets,
dla10 Buy- Paw monds, MTS Coin Shop.
ant
Paws. Black Walnuts, t5t 2nd Avenue, Galli·
II
polls. 446·2842

2 AKC female Boston
Terrier · puppies beautiful
markings black &amp; v.tilte
$125 ea. 740-388-8743

beautiful original wood·
worlf;, many pictu•a windows. mosUy new wtndows, large knchan and
breakfast room, beautt·

2007 Honda VTX t300R fully landscaped with iO
1800 miles black $7800. ground pool. Sit on the
wrap around porch and
366·6360
enjoy
the
spectacular
02 Honda Accord EX, 4 view of -tne Ohio River. 2
door,
auto,
loaded, car detached garage and
92,000 miles. 245-5526
2 . out buildings. Would
make a wonde,rtul family
93 Ford Tempo . 4oyl ..
home or bed &amp; breakfast.
2dr.. blue, good wor11.
Privat~ and Picturesque
car,
$650.
SPECTACULAR VIEW
(740)59t ·8936
Serious
inquires· onlY,
947 Grand Prix GT, 965 please ·Call 740-992-3678

good ~-"!--~~C~
House for sale in hes·
ter, 3 br., separate gaWe have quality SUV1s rage,
contact
w1·th warranty. p nc
to
(
85-4
74019
131
· ed
Sell. Blazer, Satum Vue, !!·.!!{,. ...,;;;,;;;,;,!!!!!!!!!!!!.;,
Bu~k Rendezvous Visit
Land 1~-1
us
• at .............-...........
(gocootunotors.com).
Approx. 25 acres mil re·
Stop
or
call mote ,
rough
access_.
740-446·0t03. 326 Jack· $40K, Buyer must Sur·
son Pike.
V6Y , Call after 5pm
~C;;,OOK;;;,;;;;M;;,O;,;TO;;R;;;S!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! :::30!!4!!·6,;;;95!!·33
;;;;;;;;90;,!!!!!!!!!!!!!!0
Grand Pn&gt;, runs
304·593-2604

=~;;1;

~

$poi1. Ulillly

=

--==;i;lohi;
. ;...~;;;;;;;

~~~~~...."!"'!" ""

97 Ford Expedition, 4)(4,
runs great, looks good,
tow pkg , 3rd seat. S2700.
!7;;;40;;;·3;,;7;9·,;2t;,;7;9!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!"'

Campers
&amp;
Motor
Homes lotS tor Ren1 year
round
hook
up
304-675-6908

=

~--=T~n~JCbiii;~;;;;;;;

Lot on Rt 588 where aU
Mouses are being buil~,
•
97 Ford F250 4WD, 8)(· Sewage/electric. $35,000
landed
cab,
power 740-256-1664
Yard Salo
lock/windows tinted win· ;,;:::;;::;~""'==,......
3 family yard &amp; bake sale dows 5 speed. 645-5357

AKC reg. Lab puppies
vet/cheeked
wonnedlshots, 2 blk &amp; 1
yellow, all females. Only
3 left. St 75 to good

homas. 740·256-6882

Antiquoo

4 Full Blooded Australian
Shepherd
pups, . Red
Merkt,
10 wks
old.
304-6'1'5·6535

;;;;;=..;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
GIBBS
ANTIQUES·
AlSQ. restore fumlture, 10·
catod on Tomado Ad. off
Rt.
33,
Racine
AKC · German Shepherd (Part&lt;&amp;Ride~
' e•lt
Pups, 8 left hom liH!!r of 740-949·2246 ,
'
11 , only 3 mares. Dam
and Sire are family pets.
Fuel/ 01/ CocA/
9 wl&lt;s old. reduced to
Wood I Goa
$350.J04-773&lt;S062
~;;,;.;~;.;,;;..;.;;;;;
_ - - Saasoned · Firewood deBeautllul whna kmens to livered Call446-9204
give away, approx. 8
·
·
w~ .
old,
call
MltciNan• au•
(740)992·7546
Free male kitten , 1o 2 Fire Place Inserts,
weeks old litter-trained, Buck, 1 Kindel Wood
304·206·7517
or 304·675·3818
~· 862 ·~·
~~;,;,.:·~·;;;~;,;;;;""·~--~ Jet Aeration Motors ,..
Poodle fo~ sale~ reg., red, paired, new &amp; rebuilt In
female, 3 yrs. old, great ·stock. · Calt Ron Evans,
w!klds,
on all shots, 1-800-537-9528.

al Long Bottom Comm. 85 Ford F·250. tlalbed
~~!Jiis_ ~ !HO, 9' 7• Truck call ahar 7 PM
~-~~:"'"~~ 304-456·t727
Several Families Oct. 10, ;;;;,;;,;;;;;;,;;,...!!!!!!!!!!!!!!....
tt, 12 t mile wast Rod·
Wan1To Buy
ney. old 588. Fall decor, ;;;;;=;;;;;;;;;;;;;.,;.;;..~
C
Mill d 'ed llo
Wsnl to buy Junk Cars,
· ora
• n
wers, call740-388·0884
wrealhs·baskets '
etc. =~======
Pure Breed French An- .lOOC
RP I h 11l1
gora Aebblts mlf 6 mlhs
S .1 1('S
old. Plus ~ze clothing.
;;:;:;:;:;:;:;;

3

Gallipolis. Thursday 9th
&amp; Friday t0tl1, 47 West·
wood
Drive.
Joanne
"Sheets"
Fillinger, 9-4
both days.

~Ton~!~58
E10-:&amp;-:::Ya~rd~S~ale

Oct. 9, 10, 11 from 9·6
West of Rodney on SA

566 . Fabric 90 Inch wide
$2.00 per yard, quilt
tops, wan hangers, quilt
box and lace, quilting
supplies.· t/2 off ragular
. Hot Tub, 6 peraon. Like prices. ~M size clothes.
New with cover. Must Lots _ofj~~
Sail·
Mo~ng.
$t600,
740-845-3333.

~

~=~~;;;;;~~ House Shutters. various
sizes

$80,

Whlnpool

EBY,
INTEGRITY,
KIEFER BUILT,
VALLEY.
HORSEII.IVE·
STOCK
TRAILERS,
LOAD
MAX
EQUIP·
MENT
TRAILERS,
CARGO EXPRESS
&amp;
HOMESTEADER
CAAGO/CONCESSION
TRAILERS.
B+W
GOOSENECK FLATBED
$3999. VIEW OUR EN·
TIRE TRAILER INVEN·
TOAY AT
'vWVW.CAAMICHAEL·
TAAILEAS.COM

Washer
$75
;304;;::-li::_;75-;:;;SO;:;,:;t5;,...,,...NEW ANO USED STI:EL
Steel Beams, Pipe Rebar
•- 1
for
Concrate
~·o•.
Chan.nel, Flat ,Bar, Steel
n
t
1 0 In 0"'
..... ra lng or r.a I. "\le·
ways &amp; Walkways. L&amp;L
Scrap Metals Open Mon.
Tue,
Wed
&amp; C F~,
1
Bam·4:30pm.
~
Thurs. ' Sat
&amp;
un.
740-446-7300
Pole Bam 30x40K10 only
$6,995, oth&amp;r sizes, Free
Dellv&lt;lry BTI·77~

74Q-446.3825

Scag

Have you priced a John
· 1a1ely? voOu 'II be
0 eere
surprised! Check out our
used
Inventor;
at
www.CAAEO.com.
Car·

Zero-tum
mower, eK.
con.,
low
hours,
$3,000,
740-742 .2373

michael ·
Equipment
740-446·2412
Two row new Idea cam

STEEL ARCH
BUILDiNGS
Made In USA. Three
cancelled orOers • will
sell for balance owe&lt;l.
16:.:24 &amp; 25)(36. Cal!
today lo save thQusandsi B00-352·0469

picker/sheUer;
lntema-,
tiona! t066 Tractor/Cab;
8'1120' Goosanecl&lt; cattle
trailer.
Call
740-446-4432

Tiger

Cub

Stand-up tanning
bed
$1200 740·367·n62

·-~I~
.
:~;.~~~~~
CCIIIQiltl
IIUURI

"r

t969 Stratos Bass boat
wiHlOhp. Evinrude outboard
good
shape
$37s0
OBO',
(740)992·2892
• •
Camptt~/ RVs &amp;
Trailws .

=;;:;::;:;:;;;:
~

Clip tt1ls AD and take it
with you when you visit
our community to get
this special discount.
Move-in in Oct and get
StOO.OO off your 2BR
Apt. in Nov. Currently
Collllliii'Ciol
renting 1 &amp; 2 BA units
~=#!""';;;;~:;;;;;;;;;
Spacious floor plat'ls .
F.or
Sale
or
lease
ranch &amp; townhome style
office/Warehouse/storage
living, playground &amp;
great location in Gal!!po- .
lis.
1800
sq.
h. t&gt;asketball court, on-site
laundry facility, 24 hr
$400/montn. Call Wayne
emergency malnte·
404-456·3802
,;;;,;l!!i!!;;,;;;;;;;;,,..!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
naf"IC6, quiet countfy 10·
HouiU for
cation ctose to major
~~""'~=~"""'!
medical
facilities,
186 North Park Dr. call
pharmacies, grocery
304-li75·5640
or
' store ... just minutes
304·593-1204 will sell on 1 away from other major
land Contract or Out
shopping in the area.
Rigt1t. Also a Wellington
Honeyaucklo Hills
Piano call for appoint·
Apartments
266 Colonial Drive •113
,moot to see them bath .
Bidwell, Ohio 456 t 4
740-446·3344
4 bed 2 bath &amp; office In
town , hw &amp; tile floors,
Olfieo Hours M. W, F
9AM • 5PM
updated kitChen &amp; baths.
privacy fence &amp; above
ground
pool,
security

Saa.

•

system, muct1 more. 130
Bastlani . Or. $129,000.

•44;;,6;;,·2;;.92;;3~~~--

t Yr old SR 566 lor more'
into and pictures go to
~~~~;;;;;;;'::-;;;;;- W\'W.Orvtl.com .
I.D,
1995 24' Terry Camf)er, Browning 740-448-7204
lee
6 $6 000
tBR Apl, W/0 hooktJilS,
s pe '
' ' good N 2BA 2 balh
3
shape &amp; dean, call ew
on ac . satellite TV incl. w/rent,
(740)949-2816,
new relrig, range &amp; . dish- dose to hospital. Call
401-6
washer inctooed $75.0007. ·4:;;G-:;:33:;:9;;;.0;:;3e:;::;,2""'!"~7 59 522
"!::':"'"""::"~~-:::740-446·7029
:
. ~tbr,
Apartment.
200t
Coleman Chey· 3BR,2BA. 2 car gar. $300/monlh
$300/de·
enne
pop-up camper, patio, DR/FR. Relocating
posit.
AelerenceS, No
eleelric brakes • /&gt;JC • 3 $tts_..OOO. 740-44~
"08 t7 Pots 304·675·2749
way refrig., sleeps 6·8, 2 leave msg
stoves
plus
screened .;.;...;.,.;,;;._~-- 2 bedroom Apartment &amp;.
porch,
call House in Clifton tor 2 bedroom House on 5th
'740'-7 7559
rent.4
bedrooms, 51 . 304·812·4350 ask tor
'
r~ .
·
Kitchen, basemen!, living Don
RV
room . t bath , gas heat, ~:-~:-~-~
Service at Carmichael city water, unfemished, 2BA APT. ·. CIA. (740)
Trailers
$500 monlh + utllitles 44Hl194
740·4Ml·3625
and · deposit.
possible ·3'"r'"
oo
·ms;..._a_nd_ba_lh_u_p·
RV service at Carml- sale . on land conrract,or stairs. Comptllel~ fur·
chael
•• Trailers sell tor 35,000 304 593 nished with
No
740-446·3625
Bt87 or 593 8t07
pots. Rei. Aeq. 44t.0245

1...-----_,i

wro.

I

•

�"

I~ VEtRCLES FOR SALE I

USEDCAll WIIH
YO

~ &amp; ~-~ .
~· ' "~"-·~·

FREE

RENT

SPECIAl

Joldln LM1ding 2br, 3br
&amp; olbr A v - Nc Pe1s,
Tenant. Res;• MISibla for
Rent
&amp;
Elecbic

~74-002.3

qr

JO.HI11Hl776

f ree
Rent
'Specialt!!
2&amp;3BR and up, Celltnal
Air, WID hookup, tenant
pays elecbic. EHO ·elm
V~ew
6nn, _
""'-

• ., fo

!-(304~)882"="-30--1":7:-..,.-Twin Rivers Tower

ts

acooPting_ appHcations fOr
waiti1g l~t lor HUO subs.icF-.,. 1 BA apartment
OLO:OU ,
•
lor the elcler1y/diSablad
·
call675-6679

-.utul Ap1L II Joel&lt;•
eon eat.te.. 52 West -

wooa

Ptoone cans
bed 2 ba!h, 200 16x7 0
Flee1woocl 2 bed 1 ba111 .....- - - - - - - - valley
Home
1999 Fonune 3 bed 2 ()lio
bath. we deliver bloci&lt; Heahh, Inc. hiring Home
level ..., anchor. We Heahh
STNA,
can do the footers also. CNA, CHHA, PCA may
Daytime
740-388-0DOO opply at 1480n JacksOn
or 740-388-8513 Eve- Pike. Gal ipoli&amp;. Ohio 04'"
nings 740-388-8017 or phone 7~1-1393 tor
7..0.245--9213.
more info. Competitive
wages, mileage. relm·
Dooblewlde
.,
new
·
bursement.
and benefits
2004
..
'nclud'
he-~
.
1
conditl0f1. 4 bedroom, " 2
tng
CI.I UI
lnsurbath, all appliances In· ance &amp; muq. more. .
eluded, S37.ooo iocetec
at 176 Zuspan Lane Ma- Pollleroy Bu!;iness need
son City 00..-675-2117
&amp;xperienced
wek:Ser.
Hours between 8-4 .. call
Brand new 3bed 2tJalh 740-992·3020
on , -ha"11 ....
- , ..,. 1·n Pt. Super 8 now- hirinA for
Pleasant. OWNER Fl' "'till
pan time e-~~nt
NANCE
AVAILABLE. QUalified per=r·;ust
(74()) .WS-;l570
be 25 years of age, pos•9•1•,·,x~70:-mobi-.l·e•hc•me-.~3 sess strong
customer
service skills and be able
br., 2 bath, ready to be t wcrk fkl . · shift moved,
$10,500, ~......~.. .
attng ,. Ns
O.
(740)591-8936
,.,.., m person,
PHONE C~L,L

Apts. in

M

ACROSS

PhiUip

Clerical

-;;;;;;;;~;;;;;o.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
~
Clerical &amp; otrioe positions
~~ Ha"en
~ ~
,..,....
c• ' ..... .., "'"""'" available. . paid training
room apa
· rtment, ............,it
.....,~..

&amp;

.~40-992-0165
Nice

no

immediately,

needed,

sales,

no
call

Ground ~1,;;888;;;;,;6;,;1;;,0-j!69!!53ili=!!!!!!!!!!.,
..

Floor. 2br, WID hookup,
Reterences/Oeposit!No
PelS ~75-5162
Tara
1
Townhouse
Apartmen1s · 2BR, 1.5
batll , back patio, pool,
playground, (trash, sewage,
water
pd.)
$425/rent,
$425/sec.
dep. Call740-367-o547
Two tBR new apts. in
town wl off street park·
ing. Fully loaded Wt
stainless
steel
appli-

~~:cto~~ct~~.g c!:~

·

starts

references, BKPSrience

Clean

Go¥emment l F.denJI
Jobs

FEDERAL
POSTAL JOBS
$17.89-$28.27/HA.,
now
hinng. For applicatio.n
and free government JOb
info, can American As·
soc.
of
Labor
1-913-599-8226,
24/hrs .
emp. serv.
.,_..___....,____
PoST
OFFICE
NOW

HIRING avg. P'ay . $20/hr
b "It cab' 1 wic 1 . or
$57K!yr,
includes
5
Ul
lne •
a 80 Fed .Ben, OT. PI ace by
included
Umited ·to 1 persoo . per adSource, not affiliated
USPS who h.Ires.
ap t $700/rent (utilities in- w,\,.
'0'2582
1-866
cluded). Call after Spm.
.... ..r

Holp Warnd. Gtoneral

7404464t27

Jackson
Pike.
Lease
required. Call 446·3644
for more info.

Vottd TOP FIVE-~
PI-• to Work In Ohio/
ComoS..Whyl

H..,,..

2BR house for rani $400
rent
$400
deposit.
256-6408 .or 441-0583 in
Eureka.
New 2BA 2 bath your
choice of renting completely fumished &amp; aU
utilities paid or you providing fumiture &amp; utilities.
NO LEASE 446-7029
•

3BA brick ranch quiet
neighborhooa. near new
tligh &amp;&amp;:hool, no pets
$650 month &amp; $650 deposit. 614-575-1813 · or
6t4-9t5-7624
2BA, 1 bath in Gallipolis, ·
no smokers or pets, ref.
&amp;. depOsit required. $450
per
mo.
Inc.
wa/sewltrash.
740.256-9190
In Pomeroy, 2br, 1 bath,
stove &amp; frig ., no pets, no
smoking, quiet, $475 a
mo. plus dep.. pick-up
appiK:alions at DO 'Mid·
dlepon
4000

1,1anL',lclured
l-'011~1 (j

, Rentals
2 br. mobile home 1n
Racine, $325 per mo.,
$325 clap:,
yrs. lea~.
$60 non-refundable water dep .. no pels, Oo calls
after
9pm ,
(740)992-5097
Federal Funds t. just re·
leased lor Land Owners.
No closing cost and
ZERO DOWN! Will do
land

improvements.
Bankruptcy &amp; Bad Credit
OK. ~. 3, 4 and 5 bed·

rooms
740-446-3384

available.

3BA located on Butav-iile
·Pike.·
· $475/rent
740.367-7762
3br, 2ba. Pt. Pleasant
area ' 304-273--6622 or
304-674-6204

Mobile Home for Rent Pt.
Pleasant area HUD accepled, Deposit required
Call 304-675-3423
Scenic location, conven. 1ent to loWn and afford...
able, 2 &amp; 3 bedrooms
available
call.
(740)992-5639

:.·
~e. ,ec,,_ , pes......
available. H&amp;alttl care &amp;
Retrrement plans. avaiable. Please sel1d resume
10
LLCOCAAEO.COM
or
t to 740-446·9~ 04
.

T

1--l-:--

r

~a::,x.::;.;~~;:;,:;;;.,-.

St&gt;ortowriter

H11

YOUNG'S

CARPENTER
SERVI CE

--....

•£llctrtcal I ........."1

·-.oe•-

' Vln,t Siding I Ptllndng
• Pdo •nd Pord1 Docks
Y/11036725

V.C . YOUNG Ill
..
~

7'

Storage

•

'f ' ':. '
' - '
I ';1'

f.,, •

45771
.
740-94~2217
1_

-

-

'

·Complete

to 10'113Q'
ll-'

'

!0,.

•

Hours
7:00AM· 8:00PM

•

J4H92·1m

An Excellent way 1o aam
money. The New AVon.

.,;.,.,;,.,;,.,!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!.,

Shills
PrOfessional Work
Environment!
Medical, Dental,
EAP, 401KI
On·slte Doctor
Weekly Pay and
Bonus Incentives!

,.,..,,.w

Ce"TODAYI
TOMORROW II
WOrlc NEXT WEEKI/I
\'oyr future career In

WJ!t!ng tor vpull!
t-888-IMC·PAYU
Ed. 1901
hHp:ll)oba.lntodllon.c:om

SjgnOn
Bonus!!
No experience
required'
No Credir Card
Sales/
No Collections!

Marilyn

llbl.

••
•

.c--•• ,-,·- 9'" M~

'/'10

#5548

AT C:tf~Sf,

MATG.f'i

rvr IT'S

Commercial C~ners
Immediate Openlnga
Buffalo. FuiHlme, Must
have driver's lie. &amp; pas's
background
304-768-6309

check.
EOE

Direcl care staff in resi·
oential youth program.
Must be 21 years of age.
Pay based on eKperi·
ence.
Call
(740)379·9083
Mon·Fri
9am-3pm.

HardWood Ca.lneiry And Flii'IIHurt

alignments, li ght

www.-umt aa 'ae~a~.oo•

mechanic work .
complete service oil
changes. small engine
, repa~r.
We service and
winterize boats and

'

,\

IN MIY.~l&gt;

RV's

(740) 992-5344
Mon-Fri.
·s:OO am- 4:30pm
Sa1.-8:00 am - '12

We apprecillte your
. business

~'"~o~e:. E.I&gt;.TS Rf&gt;.W Fl~, Bl&gt;T ~
11-i':&gt;ISTS 1\IS &amp;.E.l' l':&gt; WE.LL-

RE.~T"'URAAT 'l'E.~TE.IZJ&gt;/1,.Y !

t&gt;O~E.!

Cell; 740-416-5047

Owners:
Jon Van .Meter &amp;

P.auiRowe

•

email:

jrshadfrm@aol.com

28 y • .,.~::;;;:t;:~

TREE WORK

Topped, Take Down
&amp; Removal
Affordable,
Reasonable Pri&lt;e
740--444,5152

Stanley TreeTrimming
&amp; Removal

TO BE POLITE

*Prompt and Quality

.

"'In sured
"'Experienced
Call Gary Stanley @
740-591 -8044

Please leave messa e
Ser I'll r

Bu~

D1reLtcry

SHOP
CLASSIFIEDS

PSI CONSTRUCTION

IN AFUTUf2E OF CHAOS,
FAMILIAIIS WILL BE QUITE
USEFUL. AfA/NUJR IS
AN ANIMAL ()JLV LOYAL
TO YOU. SEE. MINE'S
ACOW.

RICK PRICE
New Homes, Room

Roo~~~·~.~~~

MegJ&amp;

__j
• Replacement

·Roofing
·Decks
• Garages

mm.;

Owner:

Weekly Pay and
Bonus Incentives/
Full and
Part-time
Positions!
Professional
Work
£nvironmentl
Medical, Dental,
EAP, 401K!
On-site Docror!

Of(, MAYBE MAN, AGAIN
WE SHOULDA WITH THE
W£NT WITH . FI10THINGf
THE KITTY.
.

'SUI2VIVING THE FUTUI2E,
TODAY' REClJII1ES THAT
YOU TIIAitl AFAMILIAR.
SO LEfS WArG/WlJ1
ANIMAL EXPERT Tt2AIN
ONE THAT WILL HELP
HIM 'SLITHER'
OUT OF ANY
-SITUATfON.
_.,~ ---..]

L

....

Roofing, Siding, I'
Soffit, Decks,
Doors, Windows,
Electric, Plumbing,
Drywall,
Remodeling, Room
Additions
Local Contractor

'.

Windows

James Keesee II
4742-2332

740.367..()544
Free Eatlmatea

740·367..()536

•
&amp;HOUL.P t Wf-M MY

' '

1.11TLI! et.K.K 17R:I!&amp;&amp;?

.

@

'For Remodeling and New House Building

Call: MARCUM' CONSTRUCTION

·• Room Additions ! Gamges • Vin¥1
and WoocfSiding • Roofing • Pole
Barns • Patio's, Porches and Decks

.MIKE W. MARCUM, OWNER
4 7239 Riebel

Road . Long Bottom , OH

740-985-4141
Ce ll ; 740-4 16-1 ~34
25+ years experiem:e Fret Estimolts

,, t,

't

- ~tinei
'1

I
/

•

Advertise
..in this space for
•
$64 per month

out

c.. .

5--

fonnotlon •

20 Narrow and 45 You, once :

3 TY't Tarzan
elongated 46 Happy
4 tt.vlng the 22 Wide street
sight
;aclll •

6 S uliiiilng
hOIN

7 HJtiUnd

eC,,
vehicle

23 "Forgot"

.
'
•. i\1~ A4ll~~ )bU 11U~It&gt; 'ill:l-.1&lt; 1 'lbU 1\t..'JE~'T
. ~It' Al-1'1"1\l\~ tot.\~~i\M 11-1 MoH'Jt!~ .'.--...-

e

·

·47 London IIY

• Jetter

48 Cry of

24 Mono frilly
25 Flairs

50 Unit ol

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

28 Monastic

,...;.- :

title

30 Dynamite
kin
34 Not roundtrip (hyph.)

51 Be a thief
52 Selene's

•

sitter

35 Wisconsin

spade

..

b-l--4----

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
Celebrily Ci~tr Cf}'l)logratns are createel lrom qt.eliii1Dns by famous people, pasl and " 15111"

Eacn lener 1nthe Cipher !llands l9r anolher
T0day's clue: J eQuals L

"KLI

TMY'F

KLI

WTLYLNK,
GWMJFGK

GMAW

MYKFGDYC

RWCZMRWR
•

OWFWZ

M

TMY'F

•

GWMJFGK
GMAW
DY

M

M

WYADZLYNWYF. "

TLKLFW

PREVIO~S SOLUT ION - ' Ameri ca has laced much more difficult lim.,,
including potenlial nalional eX1inction, wlthcut fl inching.' -Nick Clooney

Rearrange letters · of
0 four
Krambl«l word1

l!OID .
UMI ·

.

the ·
b..

low to farm four ~mplo -&amp;.

I

1

HUTCOY

I I I I' I
0 .R E R 0

IJ

8
€)

I I. I. I

PRINl NUMS!REO
I
L'WtRS IN SOUARf S

~~;;;::,MBIE FORI I I

way.

References Available!

9000

buyer
t8 Fuel rating 41 lllolown
19 Man!
nti0!1MIIr •
bleached 43 Llrrieotone :

•

Thurodoy, Oct. 9, 2008
By Bornlco BooM Oool
The year ahead might be one of the
more exciting ones you'w had in a long
time. You coUfd.~engaged Jn
mOre activities arid si1uations where
gooa things will heppen. 11 yoo now with
the tide, It'll take you to sunny-places.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) - Although
you never realized it, you recently threw
a l ifesaver to a colleague. This individual
will surprise you by doing somotlllng nice
to even the accounts.
SCOFPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) -11 you ere
presently unattached, Dan Cupid might
set his sights on you, re~&lt;:ly to strike your
heart with one ot Ns arrows. It will be an
unexpected, happy encounter.
·
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) Etttler you will run Into 9omeone wno has
,_ important information to share or this
person ml~t unexpectedly drop In on
you. in either Case, it'll be a welcome get·
· togethe r.
CAPRICORN (~. 22-Jan. 19) -· Focus
your !)ttentlon on something that will
bring personal happiness, because you
are .ln. a cycle where your greateSt
desires can be realized In a surprising

P~NUTS

*Reasonable Rates

~the

2

37 lh. Merltel 9 All dido
38 Maule alert 10 Congeal

.

Insured &amp; Bonded
740-663-9657

'

"""'*"''•

hCH·

pi

capital
40 Voung
chleQn

U~11ek

lol1to~

Seamless Guners
Roofing, Siding, Gutters

Work

DQWN .

13

r:mt~~' S©\\4\\N\-~~~'~/
.
b7 CLAY R. I'OILAN

Guttering

Construction

•

33

There is an excetlent guideline in oom- .
pe- auctioos: When the opponents
have found a lit, a low-level doutJie Is lor
tatoeout, not lor penalties. Sooth has
made a responsive double. Invented by
a FIOfidian, Or. F. Fielding-Reid, i1 &amp;haws
tile values to call b&lt;J1 wit11 nc n&gt;ore
descnptive bid available.
In this auction, Sooth would usually have
no four-card major and be unable to bid
no--trump. but' he might have two fourcard majors.
When West raises defenl!lvely to three ·
diai)loods, North mighl make his own
respoosive double, b&lt;J1 hoping partner
has the majors, he cue-bids lour dramonds. (Note that whel'l . North and
Sooth have nc diamond stopper, four ot
a major in a 4-3 fit might be the oilty
makable game. Also, the curious can
confirm thai lour spades Is unmakallte ff
"West ducks ihe first noorid of heart~)
Affor West leads the dlamcnd ace, how
can the defensa defeat lour hearts?
H declarer CO\Ikl draw trumps, he would
have 10 tricks: tour spades, three hearts
arid three clubs. BOJt ~~ trick one, East
plays ttis diamond queeO, promising the
jack as well. Then WeS1 shifts to his slnglet0/1 spade. An&lt;l when Was! gels 01
with his hai!J'I ace, he leads a low diamond to his partner's jack and receives
the killn&lt;;j
ruff. .
Woody Allen said, "The gov9rnment is
unresponsive to the needs of the little
. man. Under 5'7", ft Is lmpcsslble to get,
your congressman on the phone." Don't
be u!Yespooslve to the responsive double.
.

BIG NATE

WVM21112 Free

.. vinyl Siding

1--888-IMC·PAYU,

Pus

32

740.992·6971

cat&amp;d In Gallipolis, Ot'lk&gt;.
Ideal candidate will have
previous eKperience in
property management at
a Aural Development
property, eKcellent com·
munication and organizational skills and be de·
pendable. Health_insur1
ance &amp; 401k ava1lable:
Salary dependent upon
experience. Submit resume &amp; salary requirements to: ·Gallipolis C.M.,
Gorsuch Mgt. , P.O. BoK
190, Lancaster OH
43130-Q190 or email to:

I need to find (2) people
needing .a full time job .
You need to be honest. a
person of integrity, with
good people skills . You
also need to be able to
follow instructions and
have an' ability to hS1en
and lead people In the
right di'reclion. I need
people who want to work
!"nO will show up for
work. If you are a recenl
college QrBd and cannot
find employment and feel
that you are qualified,
give us a chance until a
job in your career path
becomes available. Call
Pat Hill, New Car Manager for an interview at
446-9800.

Call TODAY/
Interview
TOMORROW/I
· Work NEXT
WEEKI!/

t•

.

. , . . - , 12 Dozing

. 1 c.JI phane

31~
~

l!all
It .
Pass
Pass

David Lewis

• Pole Buildings
• Room Additions

hUp :J-1obl.lnfocltlon.com

THE BORN LOSER
P"~'( POP f&gt;.T~ M ,.,_ ~USI\1 ""'q

. Racine, Ohio 740.247-2019

Here's what ypu
Im;
Raise funds and
renew
memberships for
the National Rifle
Association

Ext. 2311
Apply online;

II

ALGEBRA !!

Medical

8·"··· . .......

MASTA MA'VE

GOI\I\IA USE

Help Wanted- Now accepting applications from
9am-noon ,
Mon.
thr(J 'kdasbury@embarqmaU.com
Fri'.. Roadside Hotspot,
EOE
Portland , Ohio

~

..

MISS PRUNELLY,
I'M NEVER

2459 St Rt. 160 • Ga!Upols
R

Obi.

• 1"1)1 ,,..

Look at the start ot Ieday's~on. What.

..•

IT AIN'T FAIR, ·

740.446.9200

1•

55 l'tliMr;

.• .._

~

27 Gun
tho engloe
21 Cromo
cawnlll
29 Antique

oo yoo'liuike o1 ~·...clQtjlllll.?

MAitTIAt. AttTSI..

L&amp; L Tire Bam

!!WYS·

wing

"""'loet

- -

With values, ·
get responsive

I __;:--..\~ IT I'E~PS IMTIN6

'
'
I

44087 Wipple Rd.
Pomeroy, OR
(5 Points)
New &amp; Used Tire s.
We buy used tires ,
computer wheel

Nonb

Pass

17

26 Tllic:l1'uan

Opening 1~, + A

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

E-mail: c::~ptbill65@yahoo.com
www.auctlonzlp.com

WHI

3t

t"..tli.cr.

Q J 74

Dealer. West
Vulnerable: Both
Soutb

KW1

53
5C Hoy .....,
(hnlh.)

21 WHd duckt .
23 North Woadt

• A 7S

:~~Su~p~o~n-~~wy~~=-

Property Management
AVONI All Areas!
To P.T. Community ManBuy
or Sell
Shirley · ager needed for local
Spears 304 "6751429 '
apartment .community to-

r=:l
,r ,.. _

ehoal

• 8.

111..n mo. pd

148-416-1164

~=::::

Managemont/

a-u

11

11 "

• K 10 9 8

srop &amp; Compare

.Auctioneer:
BillY liable Jr.

knowledge of desktop

•• 3
• Q J 53
• ' .. 2

Sout~

Remodeling

~

-

•un

• A 52
•AKt'14
• J }(I 8 6

• Garages

iaiMS'Xio· ·-

Eat

• s

AUCTIONS/ANTIQUES

publishing are sought
The position iS full rime
40 hours a week , with
b9net'
ltS. Interested par-

Community
Services,
P.O. Box 604, Jackson,
OH 45640 or · e-mail to
beyeeservOyahQo.oom .
Deadline for · applicants:
10/15100. Equal Opportunity Employer.

40 Llltoooe

15 . . , •
......

• 10 I
• K Qs

•New Homes

ri'IOW

I

13 b:.7
44
14 w. &gt;tiNt . . . .
....
48 On dry t.nd

1&gt; A X lt t
• QJ

Racine, Ohio

J "•

•. '&lt;

sSe'

29670 Bashan Road

. flocn Aci!MiDM '

C.'&lt;2-( I

The Ohio Valley Publish·
ing Co. is seeking moti·
vated, peopie-orienlod
individual ti fill a vacancy
in the news dept. as a
Sportswriter. The successful candidate win
co'JSr high school athletics in the area tor rhe
daily edi1ion of the newspaper, as~~ as assist
wnh the production of
sports I'QQ$5. EKcellent
wrrt ing and Englsh skills,
photography skills and

via' the internet. Send resume to Gallia Jobs and
Family
Services,
848
Third Avenue, Gallipolis,
OH 4563~ -or falC to
740-446-8942.
_,..._ _ _ _ _ _

304-882-2645
Call

No 5ale91 NO
Commerical Space for
Collections! Recruit
Rent, Main St. Pt. Pleas.
$4001mo.
2000
sq/ft · volunteers for non-profit
organizations that help
703-50 I -4808
save lives and prevent
For Ron!
diseases such as cancer,
lung and heart disea&amp;el
2 ·sA house in Gallipotis,
Get paid to m'ake f
WtrJ
conn.
$415/mc
·difference!
$150/dep. You pay all
utilities. No section 8 or
Full and Pan.ume
HUO.
Call
l\llyne
Positions
404-456'J802
Day and Evening

3408 Mossman Ave. 3br,
$400 month, $200 Damage
Deposit
304-634-5825
or
304-567-2247

Bervlce Manage &amp; Serv-

ties can send IBSumers to
Kevin Kellv, Managing
ilion . openng.
Halle Editgr, Ohio Va!le~ Publishir19 Co., 1125 Thif!l
'
knowledge
of . engineerlng pra--s In natural
Av~ .• Gallipolis, Ohio
. . ,......,.
45631
kk 11 @
resou·
,
.
lor
.
estry
rs
'
.
.
or e V my,....,...
da'lvt
'b
No
1
suee: natural resource
,.n une .com.
phone calls please.
education
programs. ~~~.;;;::~~~...
Pref~r associate/ techni- WANTED: Pan-time pocal degree in· forestry, si1ion available to assist
wildlife,
natural
· re'· Individuals · with mental
sources, education·. . 911- retardation at a QrOUJJ
sic oomputer skills re- home In Bidwell:
quired.
Excellent
oral t) 35 hro: 10:30a-7;30p
and written communica- ·SUn; 2-tOp Mrru'W;
lion skiHs required. Stan- 2) 27.5 hrs: 3:30-ttp Frt;
ing salary depends upon 9a-7p Sat; 1·9p Sun;
education and experi- Must have high schOol
ence with benefit pack- diplomafGED. valid drivage included. A valid er's license and · three
driver's
license
along years good driving eKpewith
federal · security rience.
$8.4~/llr
after
clearance required. For training. EKCellent benefit
more information on , this package.
Pre-employposition ~heck on the ment Drug Testing. Se11d
SCOTt labor exchange resume
to :
Buckeye

$250 SlgrH&gt;n Bonutl
2 bay service station I

80().,462.9365

39Malce
lho-.g

~

nailer remal. Opormoos
hould have newer """""

ment For more inlcnna1100 • contact Dennis a1

I

'

u=... ..u:,.

eluding 1ue1 surcharge &amp;

~~~~-,---

740-446-0390

1 [ us
• CUohr

Alder

A.gr;cuttural Engineer po-

apt. Call

1BR

A LOCAL MANUFAC·
TURER ts taking applica·
tions for eXpERIENCED
Mig WelcJers. Please apply in person at 2150

Eastern A~enue, GaJiipo1~. OH

iddleport, from
to
$592&lt;
740-992-5064.
Equal
Housing Opportunity.

5327

Modem

~~~~~~~~

NEA Crossword Pu-z zle

BRIDGE

080, ha11e good driv:•ng re- portun1ties available for
cord. Appty-Lifes1yle Fur- Owner Operators within

Or., from 5365 to
$580E .
740-..s-02568.
qual Housing
ppcrtunity. This Institution iS an.
Equal Opportunity Pni- ~Ne~w~3:"":Bed=-:"r•
oo•m"":'h•omesvider and ~Ioyer:
from $214 .36 per month,
GfliCk&gt;ul Uvlng ~. 1 and 2 includes many upgrades.
Bedrootn Apts . at Village deCivery
&amp;
set-up.
Manor
and
Aiveriide 740-385-2434

wfan! r- SElllllt7:11A ..

The Daily Sentinel • Page 87 ·

---~
- ~ 9:30-5:00
~~
h ~ ~7~1-1111 for appli- !'2~2006~~,6~x~SO~C~Ia~yt"'on~J Gallip&lt;&gt;is,
No weekly se111ement5, n-

......

IJI MazdalS1!61MWA""IO"" ..........~~~'"
IJI Mazda MZ6 IT IIIIMIII.\11&lt;\llolo ... ~"'•"'
wford oso c"l' YOillf61511• ~~- .
IJIIJG Spollogo Ulf617llll.t. ..,,m• ,..
07 Cf.,y lopcjclllf617li.U'- m• ..
IJI Cf.,y lrolb~ 1\\'D IK11201,.,,111.;.
IJI Chi¥) ~IJ, IS IKIIOIIII, p;.ll'"' ....1,,,. ::
IJI ~ Ccld 111!6111W.I. "-l~ ... .. .
071'onlioc G61!1tll0l.ll.. . ............., .•,...
IJI ford focu1 !Xl s1161 now. ....n; •

www.mydlilysentlnel.com

ALLEYOOP

llolp W..-1 - Gon.al llolp W..-1 -Gon.al

ABLEI TCJ'WI'lhouse apart- $3000
nwtlls,
W"Mi'Of
smaH 7.0.5Qie.ot64

.,
..
,,.
.,.,
,.,.,
.,.. ..

01 ttt. X1m IE 116111111&lt; """' ........
02 Dodge Dttblo $lT 116111911.." ' .. .
02 fonlloals 111111 .... .... ......... .
03 Jelti Latty IN1117Jt, ... .......... .
OHit.y lrf1Cio lllilll..,.•• .. .
OA iloly !,.._ ~MIIft1741l ,.,,•• ..~,, "'
osllywldci s. h' •mill. ..,"' .... '" ~ll,,m
Ol fan! FllO Xll lllllllll.lOi)loWo."" .,.. .
06 S.!lli Alrio lfll"ll,lllolo .. .. .. .. ..
IJI Chi¥) Ti011biaur IS 1161177M1. M 3i •

Wallnullly, October 8, 2008

1996. 16x80 Cillj110n mo- Delivery/Warehoose pe&lt;· Owne! Oil&lt;lra10r OpporCONVENlENTlY
LO- bile home, totS.! alec .. son needed. full time. im· tunittes R&amp;J TI'IJCI(ing -r
CATED
&amp;
AFFORO. needs
minor
repa ir, mediate opening, must Marietta, Ohio i'las op-

DONWOOD"'CAUTOMOJJVE

1M ftlf It .... IS
42355

Wednesday, October 8, 2008

www.mydailysentinel.com

Plge B6 • The Oaily Sentinel

' AQUARIUS (Jan . . 20-Feb. 191 Conditions are extremely unusual and
unique In· ways that could contribute to
yoUr material welfai'e. It might not be anything you sEiek, but whate-ver It is could
just laM In your lap.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) - You've
planted plenty of seeds of friendship In
the past, and the harvest-may shoW just
how much you mean to them . Whatlhey
do for you will be of their own volition.
ARIES {March 21-April 19) -Approval
·for something you're wortlng on may
come from an UneKpecled source.
Gaining this person's. cooperation will
give you a bener chance to realize your
g&lt;&gt;Ot.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) - Somoone
yo~ meel has great potential to becOme
more than a mere acquaintance. You'll
quicklY discover ihat you and this Individual share a great deal In common, ,
GEMINI (May 21 -June 20) Imaginative melhod9 or ideas could·yield
some handsome dividends, but only if
you implement them. If you gel a clever
thought, don't sit on it; carry ~ out Immediately. and see what happe~s .
CANCER (June 2t-July 22) - Even
though you weren't searching, you might
gain a neW insight about better ways to
deal with an elusive indivlduiti..Don'tlel it
go untested; it could be your answer.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) - Do something
.nice for the people who mean the most
to you. Ydur love h61ds great· power to
Inspire others to be all thai they can be
- and it will. take them to new heights.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) -An opportunity will present Itself that could enable
you to reaeh a better underetanding with
aomeone clou to you . It will improve the
reladonlhlp greatly.

SOUP TO NUTZ

I, I

I

II!

SCRAMLETSANSWERS ton '08
Unhurt - Quest - Hurry - Wealth - TRUTH
"The reason people can't accept criticism;' the dad lectur~
"is because it's usually the TIUJll-1."

ARLO &amp;JANIS"
t SE£,MO/o\ ... l 5EE;,..
l UUOO&lt;~fAI.lD...

~IJD 'I'OU

WE.RE. GE.liiU(l(

r&lt;E.AD'!' ro &amp;o our... WE.&lt;-!,,

l H~D ro CAU..

I G~Hi-l l!iPICTu~n~Aii.&amp; :
Of YOU IIJ 'I'DUI1 UIJ~! .

)

I

�"

I~ VEtRCLES FOR SALE I

USEDCAll WIIH
YO

~ &amp; ~-~ .
~· ' "~"-·~·

FREE

RENT

SPECIAl

Joldln LM1ding 2br, 3br
&amp; olbr A v - Nc Pe1s,
Tenant. Res;• MISibla for
Rent
&amp;
Elecbic

~74-002.3

qr

JO.HI11Hl776

f ree
Rent
'Specialt!!
2&amp;3BR and up, Celltnal
Air, WID hookup, tenant
pays elecbic. EHO ·elm
V~ew
6nn, _
""'-

• ., fo

!-(304~)882"="-30--1":7:-..,.-Twin Rivers Tower

ts

acooPting_ appHcations fOr
waiti1g l~t lor HUO subs.icF-.,. 1 BA apartment
OLO:OU ,
•
lor the elcler1y/diSablad
·
call675-6679

-.utul Ap1L II Joel&lt;•
eon eat.te.. 52 West -

wooa

Ptoone cans
bed 2 ba!h, 200 16x7 0
Flee1woocl 2 bed 1 ba111 .....- - - - - - - - valley
Home
1999 Fonune 3 bed 2 ()lio
bath. we deliver bloci&lt; Heahh, Inc. hiring Home
level ..., anchor. We Heahh
STNA,
can do the footers also. CNA, CHHA, PCA may
Daytime
740-388-0DOO opply at 1480n JacksOn
or 740-388-8513 Eve- Pike. Gal ipoli&amp;. Ohio 04'"
nings 740-388-8017 or phone 7~1-1393 tor
7..0.245--9213.
more info. Competitive
wages, mileage. relm·
Dooblewlde
.,
new
·
bursement.
and benefits
2004
..
'nclud'
he-~
.
1
conditl0f1. 4 bedroom, " 2
tng
CI.I UI
lnsurbath, all appliances In· ance &amp; muq. more. .
eluded, S37.ooo iocetec
at 176 Zuspan Lane Ma- Pollleroy Bu!;iness need
son City 00..-675-2117
&amp;xperienced
wek:Ser.
Hours between 8-4 .. call
Brand new 3bed 2tJalh 740-992·3020
on , -ha"11 ....
- , ..,. 1·n Pt. Super 8 now- hirinA for
Pleasant. OWNER Fl' "'till
pan time e-~~nt
NANCE
AVAILABLE. QUalified per=r·;ust
(74()) .WS-;l570
be 25 years of age, pos•9•1•,·,x~70:-mobi-.l·e•hc•me-.~3 sess strong
customer
service skills and be able
br., 2 bath, ready to be t wcrk fkl . · shift moved,
$10,500, ~......~.. .
attng ,. Ns
O.
(740)591-8936
,.,.., m person,
PHONE C~L,L

Apts. in

M

ACROSS

PhiUip

Clerical

-;;;;;;;;~;;;;;o.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
~
Clerical &amp; otrioe positions
~~ Ha"en
~ ~
,..,....
c• ' ..... .., "'"""'" available. . paid training
room apa
· rtment, ............,it
.....,~..

&amp;

.~40-992-0165
Nice

no

immediately,

needed,

sales,

no
call

Ground ~1,;;888;;;;,;6;,;1;;,0-j!69!!53ili=!!!!!!!!!!.,
..

Floor. 2br, WID hookup,
Reterences/Oeposit!No
PelS ~75-5162
Tara
1
Townhouse
Apartmen1s · 2BR, 1.5
batll , back patio, pool,
playground, (trash, sewage,
water
pd.)
$425/rent,
$425/sec.
dep. Call740-367-o547
Two tBR new apts. in
town wl off street park·
ing. Fully loaded Wt
stainless
steel
appli-

~~:cto~~ct~~.g c!:~

·

starts

references, BKPSrience

Clean

Go¥emment l F.denJI
Jobs

FEDERAL
POSTAL JOBS
$17.89-$28.27/HA.,
now
hinng. For applicatio.n
and free government JOb
info, can American As·
soc.
of
Labor
1-913-599-8226,
24/hrs .
emp. serv.
.,_..___....,____
PoST
OFFICE
NOW

HIRING avg. P'ay . $20/hr
b "It cab' 1 wic 1 . or
$57K!yr,
includes
5
Ul
lne •
a 80 Fed .Ben, OT. PI ace by
included
Umited ·to 1 persoo . per adSource, not affiliated
USPS who h.Ires.
ap t $700/rent (utilities in- w,\,.
'0'2582
1-866
cluded). Call after Spm.
.... ..r

Holp Warnd. Gtoneral

7404464t27

Jackson
Pike.
Lease
required. Call 446·3644
for more info.

Vottd TOP FIVE-~
PI-• to Work In Ohio/
ComoS..Whyl

H..,,..

2BR house for rani $400
rent
$400
deposit.
256-6408 .or 441-0583 in
Eureka.
New 2BA 2 bath your
choice of renting completely fumished &amp; aU
utilities paid or you providing fumiture &amp; utilities.
NO LEASE 446-7029
•

3BA brick ranch quiet
neighborhooa. near new
tligh &amp;&amp;:hool, no pets
$650 month &amp; $650 deposit. 614-575-1813 · or
6t4-9t5-7624
2BA, 1 bath in Gallipolis, ·
no smokers or pets, ref.
&amp;. depOsit required. $450
per
mo.
Inc.
wa/sewltrash.
740.256-9190
In Pomeroy, 2br, 1 bath,
stove &amp; frig ., no pets, no
smoking, quiet, $475 a
mo. plus dep.. pick-up
appiK:alions at DO 'Mid·
dlepon
4000

1,1anL',lclured
l-'011~1 (j

, Rentals
2 br. mobile home 1n
Racine, $325 per mo.,
$325 clap:,
yrs. lea~.
$60 non-refundable water dep .. no pels, Oo calls
after
9pm ,
(740)992-5097
Federal Funds t. just re·
leased lor Land Owners.
No closing cost and
ZERO DOWN! Will do
land

improvements.
Bankruptcy &amp; Bad Credit
OK. ~. 3, 4 and 5 bed·

rooms
740-446-3384

available.

3BA located on Butav-iile
·Pike.·
· $475/rent
740.367-7762
3br, 2ba. Pt. Pleasant
area ' 304-273--6622 or
304-674-6204

Mobile Home for Rent Pt.
Pleasant area HUD accepled, Deposit required
Call 304-675-3423
Scenic location, conven. 1ent to loWn and afford...
able, 2 &amp; 3 bedrooms
available
call.
(740)992-5639

:.·
~e. ,ec,,_ , pes......
available. H&amp;alttl care &amp;
Retrrement plans. avaiable. Please sel1d resume
10
LLCOCAAEO.COM
or
t to 740-446·9~ 04
.

T

1--l-:--

r

~a::,x.::;.;~~;:;,:;;;.,-.

St&gt;ortowriter

H11

YOUNG'S

CARPENTER
SERVI CE

--....

•£llctrtcal I ........."1

·-.oe•-

' Vln,t Siding I Ptllndng
• Pdo •nd Pord1 Docks
Y/11036725

V.C . YOUNG Ill
..
~

7'

Storage

•

'f ' ':. '
' - '
I ';1'

f.,, •

45771
.
740-94~2217
1_

-

-

'

·Complete

to 10'113Q'
ll-'

'

!0,.

•

Hours
7:00AM· 8:00PM

•

J4H92·1m

An Excellent way 1o aam
money. The New AVon.

.,;.,.,;,.,;,.,!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!.,

Shills
PrOfessional Work
Environment!
Medical, Dental,
EAP, 401KI
On·slte Doctor
Weekly Pay and
Bonus Incentives!

,.,..,,.w

Ce"TODAYI
TOMORROW II
WOrlc NEXT WEEKI/I
\'oyr future career In

WJ!t!ng tor vpull!
t-888-IMC·PAYU
Ed. 1901
hHp:ll)oba.lntodllon.c:om

SjgnOn
Bonus!!
No experience
required'
No Credir Card
Sales/
No Collections!

Marilyn

llbl.

••
•

.c--•• ,-,·- 9'" M~

'/'10

#5548

AT C:tf~Sf,

MATG.f'i

rvr IT'S

Commercial C~ners
Immediate Openlnga
Buffalo. FuiHlme, Must
have driver's lie. &amp; pas's
background
304-768-6309

check.
EOE

Direcl care staff in resi·
oential youth program.
Must be 21 years of age.
Pay based on eKperi·
ence.
Call
(740)379·9083
Mon·Fri
9am-3pm.

HardWood Ca.lneiry And Flii'IIHurt

alignments, li ght

www.-umt aa 'ae~a~.oo•

mechanic work .
complete service oil
changes. small engine
, repa~r.
We service and
winterize boats and

'

,\

IN MIY.~l&gt;

RV's

(740) 992-5344
Mon-Fri.
·s:OO am- 4:30pm
Sa1.-8:00 am - '12

We apprecillte your
. business

~'"~o~e:. E.I&gt;.TS Rf&gt;.W Fl~, Bl&gt;T ~
11-i':&gt;ISTS 1\IS &amp;.E.l' l':&gt; WE.LL-

RE.~T"'URAAT 'l'E.~TE.IZJ&gt;/1,.Y !

t&gt;O~E.!

Cell; 740-416-5047

Owners:
Jon Van .Meter &amp;

P.auiRowe

•

email:

jrshadfrm@aol.com

28 y • .,.~::;;;:t;:~

TREE WORK

Topped, Take Down
&amp; Removal
Affordable,
Reasonable Pri&lt;e
740--444,5152

Stanley TreeTrimming
&amp; Removal

TO BE POLITE

*Prompt and Quality

.

"'In sured
"'Experienced
Call Gary Stanley @
740-591 -8044

Please leave messa e
Ser I'll r

Bu~

D1reLtcry

SHOP
CLASSIFIEDS

PSI CONSTRUCTION

IN AFUTUf2E OF CHAOS,
FAMILIAIIS WILL BE QUITE
USEFUL. AfA/NUJR IS
AN ANIMAL ()JLV LOYAL
TO YOU. SEE. MINE'S
ACOW.

RICK PRICE
New Homes, Room

Roo~~~·~.~~~

MegJ&amp;

__j
• Replacement

·Roofing
·Decks
• Garages

mm.;

Owner:

Weekly Pay and
Bonus Incentives/
Full and
Part-time
Positions!
Professional
Work
£nvironmentl
Medical, Dental,
EAP, 401K!
On-site Docror!

Of(, MAYBE MAN, AGAIN
WE SHOULDA WITH THE
W£NT WITH . FI10THINGf
THE KITTY.
.

'SUI2VIVING THE FUTUI2E,
TODAY' REClJII1ES THAT
YOU TIIAitl AFAMILIAR.
SO LEfS WArG/WlJ1
ANIMAL EXPERT Tt2AIN
ONE THAT WILL HELP
HIM 'SLITHER'
OUT OF ANY
-SITUATfON.
_.,~ ---..]

L

....

Roofing, Siding, I'
Soffit, Decks,
Doors, Windows,
Electric, Plumbing,
Drywall,
Remodeling, Room
Additions
Local Contractor

'.

Windows

James Keesee II
4742-2332

740.367..()544
Free Eatlmatea

740·367..()536

•
&amp;HOUL.P t Wf-M MY

' '

1.11TLI! et.K.K 17R:I!&amp;&amp;?

.

@

'For Remodeling and New House Building

Call: MARCUM' CONSTRUCTION

·• Room Additions ! Gamges • Vin¥1
and WoocfSiding • Roofing • Pole
Barns • Patio's, Porches and Decks

.MIKE W. MARCUM, OWNER
4 7239 Riebel

Road . Long Bottom , OH

740-985-4141
Ce ll ; 740-4 16-1 ~34
25+ years experiem:e Fret Estimolts

,, t,

't

- ~tinei
'1

I
/

•

Advertise
..in this space for
•
$64 per month

out

c.. .

5--

fonnotlon •

20 Narrow and 45 You, once :

3 TY't Tarzan
elongated 46 Happy
4 tt.vlng the 22 Wide street
sight
;aclll •

6 S uliiiilng
hOIN

7 HJtiUnd

eC,,
vehicle

23 "Forgot"

.
'
•. i\1~ A4ll~~ )bU 11U~It&gt; 'ill:l-.1&lt; 1 'lbU 1\t..'JE~'T
. ~It' Al-1'1"1\l\~ tot.\~~i\M 11-1 MoH'Jt!~ .'.--...-

e

·

·47 London IIY

• Jetter

48 Cry of

24 Mono frilly
25 Flairs

50 Unit ol

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

28 Monastic

,...;.- :

title

30 Dynamite
kin
34 Not roundtrip (hyph.)

51 Be a thief
52 Selene's

•

sitter

35 Wisconsin

spade

..

b-l--4----

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
Celebrily Ci~tr Cf}'l)logratns are createel lrom qt.eliii1Dns by famous people, pasl and " 15111"

Eacn lener 1nthe Cipher !llands l9r anolher
T0day's clue: J eQuals L

"KLI

TMY'F

KLI

WTLYLNK,
GWMJFGK

GMAW

MYKFGDYC

RWCZMRWR
•

OWFWZ

M

TMY'F

•

GWMJFGK
GMAW
DY

M

M

WYADZLYNWYF. "

TLKLFW

PREVIO~S SOLUT ION - ' Ameri ca has laced much more difficult lim.,,
including potenlial nalional eX1inction, wlthcut fl inching.' -Nick Clooney

Rearrange letters · of
0 four
Krambl«l word1

l!OID .
UMI ·

.

the ·
b..

low to farm four ~mplo -&amp;.

I

1

HUTCOY

I I I I' I
0 .R E R 0

IJ

8
€)

I I. I. I

PRINl NUMS!REO
I
L'WtRS IN SOUARf S

~~;;;::,MBIE FORI I I

way.

References Available!

9000

buyer
t8 Fuel rating 41 lllolown
19 Man!
nti0!1MIIr •
bleached 43 Llrrieotone :

•

Thurodoy, Oct. 9, 2008
By Bornlco BooM Oool
The year ahead might be one of the
more exciting ones you'w had in a long
time. You coUfd.~engaged Jn
mOre activities arid si1uations where
gooa things will heppen. 11 yoo now with
the tide, It'll take you to sunny-places.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) - Although
you never realized it, you recently threw
a l ifesaver to a colleague. This individual
will surprise you by doing somotlllng nice
to even the accounts.
SCOFPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) -11 you ere
presently unattached, Dan Cupid might
set his sights on you, re~&lt;:ly to strike your
heart with one ot Ns arrows. It will be an
unexpected, happy encounter.
·
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) Etttler you will run Into 9omeone wno has
,_ important information to share or this
person ml~t unexpectedly drop In on
you. in either Case, it'll be a welcome get·
· togethe r.
CAPRICORN (~. 22-Jan. 19) -· Focus
your !)ttentlon on something that will
bring personal happiness, because you
are .ln. a cycle where your greateSt
desires can be realized In a surprising

P~NUTS

*Reasonable Rates

~the

2

37 lh. Merltel 9 All dido
38 Maule alert 10 Congeal

.

Insured &amp; Bonded
740-663-9657

'

"""'*"''•

hCH·

pi

capital
40 Voung
chleQn

U~11ek

lol1to~

Seamless Guners
Roofing, Siding, Gutters

Work

DQWN .

13

r:mt~~' S©\\4\\N\-~~~'~/
.
b7 CLAY R. I'OILAN

Guttering

Construction

•

33

There is an excetlent guideline in oom- .
pe- auctioos: When the opponents
have found a lit, a low-level doutJie Is lor
tatoeout, not lor penalties. Sooth has
made a responsive double. Invented by
a FIOfidian, Or. F. Fielding-Reid, i1 &amp;haws
tile values to call b&lt;J1 wit11 nc n&gt;ore
descnptive bid available.
In this auction, Sooth would usually have
no four-card major and be unable to bid
no--trump. but' he might have two fourcard majors.
When West raises defenl!lvely to three ·
diai)loods, North mighl make his own
respoosive double, b&lt;J1 hoping partner
has the majors, he cue-bids lour dramonds. (Note that whel'l . North and
Sooth have nc diamond stopper, four ot
a major in a 4-3 fit might be the oilty
makable game. Also, the curious can
confirm thai lour spades Is unmakallte ff
"West ducks ihe first noorid of heart~)
Affor West leads the dlamcnd ace, how
can the defensa defeat lour hearts?
H declarer CO\Ikl draw trumps, he would
have 10 tricks: tour spades, three hearts
arid three clubs. BOJt ~~ trick one, East
plays ttis diamond queeO, promising the
jack as well. Then WeS1 shifts to his slnglet0/1 spade. An&lt;l when Was! gels 01
with his hai!J'I ace, he leads a low diamond to his partner's jack and receives
the killn&lt;;j
ruff. .
Woody Allen said, "The gov9rnment is
unresponsive to the needs of the little
. man. Under 5'7", ft Is lmpcsslble to get,
your congressman on the phone." Don't
be u!Yespooslve to the responsive double.
.

BIG NATE

WVM21112 Free

.. vinyl Siding

1--888-IMC·PAYU,

Pus

32

740.992·6971

cat&amp;d In Gallipolis, Ot'lk&gt;.
Ideal candidate will have
previous eKperience in
property management at
a Aural Development
property, eKcellent com·
munication and organizational skills and be de·
pendable. Health_insur1
ance &amp; 401k ava1lable:
Salary dependent upon
experience. Submit resume &amp; salary requirements to: ·Gallipolis C.M.,
Gorsuch Mgt. , P.O. BoK
190, Lancaster OH
43130-Q190 or email to:

I need to find (2) people
needing .a full time job .
You need to be honest. a
person of integrity, with
good people skills . You
also need to be able to
follow instructions and
have an' ability to hS1en
and lead people In the
right di'reclion. I need
people who want to work
!"nO will show up for
work. If you are a recenl
college QrBd and cannot
find employment and feel
that you are qualified,
give us a chance until a
job in your career path
becomes available. Call
Pat Hill, New Car Manager for an interview at
446-9800.

Call TODAY/
Interview
TOMORROW/I
· Work NEXT
WEEKI!/

t•

.

. , . . - , 12 Dozing

. 1 c.JI phane

31~
~

l!all
It .
Pass
Pass

David Lewis

• Pole Buildings
• Room Additions

hUp :J-1obl.lnfocltlon.com

THE BORN LOSER
P"~'( POP f&gt;.T~ M ,.,_ ~USI\1 ""'q

. Racine, Ohio 740.247-2019

Here's what ypu
Im;
Raise funds and
renew
memberships for
the National Rifle
Association

Ext. 2311
Apply online;

II

ALGEBRA !!

Medical

8·"··· . .......

MASTA MA'VE

GOI\I\IA USE

Help Wanted- Now accepting applications from
9am-noon ,
Mon.
thr(J 'kdasbury@embarqmaU.com
Fri'.. Roadside Hotspot,
EOE
Portland , Ohio

~

..

MISS PRUNELLY,
I'M NEVER

2459 St Rt. 160 • Ga!Upols
R

Obi.

• 1"1)1 ,,..

Look at the start ot Ieday's~on. What.

..•

IT AIN'T FAIR, ·

740.446.9200

1•

55 l'tliMr;

.• .._

~

27 Gun
tho engloe
21 Cromo
cawnlll
29 Antique

oo yoo'liuike o1 ~·...clQtjlllll.?

MAitTIAt. AttTSI..

L&amp; L Tire Bam

!!WYS·

wing

"""'loet

- -

With values, ·
get responsive

I __;:--..\~ IT I'E~PS IMTIN6

'
'
I

44087 Wipple Rd.
Pomeroy, OR
(5 Points)
New &amp; Used Tire s.
We buy used tires ,
computer wheel

Nonb

Pass

17

26 Tllic:l1'uan

Opening 1~, + A

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

E-mail: c::~ptbill65@yahoo.com
www.auctlonzlp.com

WHI

3t

t"..tli.cr.

Q J 74

Dealer. West
Vulnerable: Both
Soutb

KW1

53
5C Hoy .....,
(hnlh.)

21 WHd duckt .
23 North Woadt

• A 7S

:~~Su~p~o~n-~~wy~~=-

Property Management
AVONI All Areas!
To P.T. Community ManBuy
or Sell
Shirley · ager needed for local
Spears 304 "6751429 '
apartment .community to-

r=:l
,r ,.. _

ehoal

• 8.

111..n mo. pd

148-416-1164

~=::::

Managemont/

a-u

11

11 "

• K 10 9 8

srop &amp; Compare

.Auctioneer:
BillY liable Jr.

knowledge of desktop

•• 3
• Q J 53
• ' .. 2

Sout~

Remodeling

~

-

•un

• A 52
•AKt'14
• J }(I 8 6

• Garages

iaiMS'Xio· ·-

Eat

• s

AUCTIONS/ANTIQUES

publishing are sought
The position iS full rime
40 hours a week , with
b9net'
ltS. Interested par-

Community
Services,
P.O. Box 604, Jackson,
OH 45640 or · e-mail to
beyeeservOyahQo.oom .
Deadline for · applicants:
10/15100. Equal Opportunity Employer.

40 Llltoooe

15 . . , •
......

• 10 I
• K Qs

•New Homes

ri'IOW

I

13 b:.7
44
14 w. &gt;tiNt . . . .
....
48 On dry t.nd

1&gt; A X lt t
• QJ

Racine, Ohio

J "•

•. '&lt;

sSe'

29670 Bashan Road

. flocn Aci!MiDM '

C.'&lt;2-( I

The Ohio Valley Publish·
ing Co. is seeking moti·
vated, peopie-orienlod
individual ti fill a vacancy
in the news dept. as a
Sportswriter. The successful candidate win
co'JSr high school athletics in the area tor rhe
daily edi1ion of the newspaper, as~~ as assist
wnh the production of
sports I'QQ$5. EKcellent
wrrt ing and Englsh skills,
photography skills and

via' the internet. Send resume to Gallia Jobs and
Family
Services,
848
Third Avenue, Gallipolis,
OH 4563~ -or falC to
740-446-8942.
_,..._ _ _ _ _ _

304-882-2645
Call

No 5ale91 NO
Commerical Space for
Collections! Recruit
Rent, Main St. Pt. Pleas.
$4001mo.
2000
sq/ft · volunteers for non-profit
organizations that help
703-50 I -4808
save lives and prevent
For Ron!
diseases such as cancer,
lung and heart disea&amp;el
2 ·sA house in Gallipotis,
Get paid to m'ake f
WtrJ
conn.
$415/mc
·difference!
$150/dep. You pay all
utilities. No section 8 or
Full and Pan.ume
HUO.
Call
l\llyne
Positions
404-456'J802
Day and Evening

3408 Mossman Ave. 3br,
$400 month, $200 Damage
Deposit
304-634-5825
or
304-567-2247

Bervlce Manage &amp; Serv-

ties can send IBSumers to
Kevin Kellv, Managing
ilion . openng.
Halle Editgr, Ohio Va!le~ Publishir19 Co., 1125 Thif!l
'
knowledge
of . engineerlng pra--s In natural
Av~ .• Gallipolis, Ohio
. . ,......,.
45631
kk 11 @
resou·
,
.
lor
.
estry
rs
'
.
.
or e V my,....,...
da'lvt
'b
No
1
suee: natural resource
,.n une .com.
phone calls please.
education
programs. ~~~.;;;::~~~...
Pref~r associate/ techni- WANTED: Pan-time pocal degree in· forestry, si1ion available to assist
wildlife,
natural
· re'· Individuals · with mental
sources, education·. . 911- retardation at a QrOUJJ
sic oomputer skills re- home In Bidwell:
quired.
Excellent
oral t) 35 hro: 10:30a-7;30p
and written communica- ·SUn; 2-tOp Mrru'W;
lion skiHs required. Stan- 2) 27.5 hrs: 3:30-ttp Frt;
ing salary depends upon 9a-7p Sat; 1·9p Sun;
education and experi- Must have high schOol
ence with benefit pack- diplomafGED. valid drivage included. A valid er's license and · three
driver's
license
along years good driving eKpewith
federal · security rience.
$8.4~/llr
after
clearance required. For training. EKCellent benefit
more information on , this package.
Pre-employposition ~heck on the ment Drug Testing. Se11d
SCOTt labor exchange resume
to :
Buckeye

$250 SlgrH&gt;n Bonutl
2 bay service station I

80().,462.9365

39Malce
lho-.g

~

nailer remal. Opormoos
hould have newer """""

ment For more inlcnna1100 • contact Dennis a1

I

'

u=... ..u:,.

eluding 1ue1 surcharge &amp;

~~~~-,---

740-446-0390

1 [ us
• CUohr

Alder

A.gr;cuttural Engineer po-

apt. Call

1BR

A LOCAL MANUFAC·
TURER ts taking applica·
tions for eXpERIENCED
Mig WelcJers. Please apply in person at 2150

Eastern A~enue, GaJiipo1~. OH

iddleport, from
to
$592&lt;
740-992-5064.
Equal
Housing Opportunity.

5327

Modem

~~~~~~~~

NEA Crossword Pu-z zle

BRIDGE

080, ha11e good driv:•ng re- portun1ties available for
cord. Appty-Lifes1yle Fur- Owner Operators within

Or., from 5365 to
$580E .
740-..s-02568.
qual Housing
ppcrtunity. This Institution iS an.
Equal Opportunity Pni- ~Ne~w~3:"":Bed=-:"r•
oo•m"":'h•omesvider and ~Ioyer:
from $214 .36 per month,
GfliCk&gt;ul Uvlng ~. 1 and 2 includes many upgrades.
Bedrootn Apts . at Village deCivery
&amp;
set-up.
Manor
and
Aiveriide 740-385-2434

wfan! r- SElllllt7:11A ..

The Daily Sentinel • Page 87 ·

---~
- ~ 9:30-5:00
~~
h ~ ~7~1-1111 for appli- !'2~2006~~,6~x~SO~C~Ia~yt"'on~J Gallip&lt;&gt;is,
No weekly se111ement5, n-

......

IJI MazdalS1!61MWA""IO"" ..........~~~'"
IJI Mazda MZ6 IT IIIIMIII.\11&lt;\llolo ... ~"'•"'
wford oso c"l' YOillf61511• ~~- .
IJIIJG Spollogo Ulf617llll.t. ..,,m• ,..
07 Cf.,y lopcjclllf617li.U'- m• ..
IJI Cf.,y lrolb~ 1\\'D IK11201,.,,111.;.
IJI Chi¥) ~IJ, IS IKIIOIIII, p;.ll'"' ....1,,,. ::
IJI ~ Ccld 111!6111W.I. "-l~ ... .. .
071'onlioc G61!1tll0l.ll.. . ............., .•,...
IJI ford focu1 !Xl s1161 now. ....n; •

www.mydlilysentlnel.com

ALLEYOOP

llolp W..-1 - Gon.al llolp W..-1 -Gon.al

ABLEI TCJ'WI'lhouse apart- $3000
nwtlls,
W"Mi'Of
smaH 7.0.5Qie.ot64

.,
..
,,.
.,.,
,.,.,
.,.. ..

01 ttt. X1m IE 116111111&lt; """' ........
02 Dodge Dttblo $lT 116111911.." ' .. .
02 fonlloals 111111 .... .... ......... .
03 Jelti Latty IN1117Jt, ... .......... .
OHit.y lrf1Cio lllilll..,.•• .. .
OA iloly !,.._ ~MIIft1741l ,.,,•• ..~,, "'
osllywldci s. h' •mill. ..,"' .... '" ~ll,,m
Ol fan! FllO Xll lllllllll.lOi)loWo."" .,.. .
06 S.!lli Alrio lfll"ll,lllolo .. .. .. .. ..
IJI Chi¥) Ti011biaur IS 1161177M1. M 3i •

Wallnullly, October 8, 2008

1996. 16x80 Cillj110n mo- Delivery/Warehoose pe&lt;· Owne! Oil&lt;lra10r OpporCONVENlENTlY
LO- bile home, totS.! alec .. son needed. full time. im· tunittes R&amp;J TI'IJCI(ing -r
CATED
&amp;
AFFORO. needs
minor
repa ir, mediate opening, must Marietta, Ohio i'las op-

DONWOOD"'CAUTOMOJJVE

1M ftlf It .... IS
42355

Wednesday, October 8, 2008

www.mydailysentinel.com

Plge B6 • The Oaily Sentinel

' AQUARIUS (Jan . . 20-Feb. 191 Conditions are extremely unusual and
unique In· ways that could contribute to
yoUr material welfai'e. It might not be anything you sEiek, but whate-ver It is could
just laM In your lap.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) - You've
planted plenty of seeds of friendship In
the past, and the harvest-may shoW just
how much you mean to them . Whatlhey
do for you will be of their own volition.
ARIES {March 21-April 19) -Approval
·for something you're wortlng on may
come from an UneKpecled source.
Gaining this person's. cooperation will
give you a bener chance to realize your
g&lt;&gt;Ot.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) - Somoone
yo~ meel has great potential to becOme
more than a mere acquaintance. You'll
quicklY discover ihat you and this Individual share a great deal In common, ,
GEMINI (May 21 -June 20) Imaginative melhod9 or ideas could·yield
some handsome dividends, but only if
you implement them. If you gel a clever
thought, don't sit on it; carry ~ out Immediately. and see what happe~s .
CANCER (June 2t-July 22) - Even
though you weren't searching, you might
gain a neW insight about better ways to
deal with an elusive indivlduiti..Don'tlel it
go untested; it could be your answer.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) - Do something
.nice for the people who mean the most
to you. Ydur love h61ds great· power to
Inspire others to be all thai they can be
- and it will. take them to new heights.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) -An opportunity will present Itself that could enable
you to reaeh a better underetanding with
aomeone clou to you . It will improve the
reladonlhlp greatly.

SOUP TO NUTZ

I, I

I

II!

SCRAMLETSANSWERS ton '08
Unhurt - Quest - Hurry - Wealth - TRUTH
"The reason people can't accept criticism;' the dad lectur~
"is because it's usually the TIUJll-1."

ARLO &amp;JANIS"
t SE£,MO/o\ ... l 5EE;,..
l UUOO&lt;~fAI.lD...

~IJD 'I'OU

WE.RE. GE.liiU(l(

r&lt;E.AD'!' ro &amp;o our... WE.&lt;-!,,

l H~D ro CAU..

I G~Hi-l l!iPICTu~n~Aii.&amp; :
Of YOU IIJ 'I'DUI1 UIJ~! .

)

I

�'

..

'

''

•

Pase 88 • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

Wednesday, October 8 , 2008

Bosox-Rays renew rivalry, Manny in middle of NLCS

Coach

savshe's.

Bob Evans
Farm Festival this
weekend,A6

Mei~SWCD

receives donation, As

BY BEN WALKER
ASSOCIATED F'RESS

· Exactly why the Boston
CINCINNATI (AP) - bigger role in decision makRed Sox and Tampa Bay Rays
Marvin
Lewis doesn 't plan ing .
tangle so much is hard to tell.
to ·leave one of the NFL's
Th·eir differences came to
Blame it on a high-and-tight
safest
co~ching
jobs.
a
head at their annual endpitch here, a hard slide there.
The
Cincinnati
Ben
gals
of-the-season
meeting, ·
Whatever, this much is true:
coac~ said Monday the where they parted ways.
The teams playin~ in the AL
team
s worst start m SIX ·.Brown, who functions as the
championship senes sure get
years
hasn 't diminished his de facto general manager.
into a lot of scraps.
commitment
to getting it said he had no intention of
''There's no hatred," injured
turned around. A 31 -22. Joss firing Wyche; who had two
Red Sox pitcher Curt
at Dallas left Lewis ' team at years left on his . contract.
·Schilling insisted Thesday in
the bottom of the league, the Brown said that Wyche .
an e-mail to The Associated
Press.
only one with an 0-5 record. resigned during the meeting.
'.'It's more a combination of
Three other teams are 0-4.
Wyche insisted he was fired.
talent/personalities and place
It's a major sl ip from
Three months later, they
than anything, I think. For
2005, when Lewis ·led the reached an agreement over
years Tampa Bay was looked
Bengals to their only win- the final $1 million owed
down on and the Sox were
ning record and playoff Wyche on his contract.
orie of the powerhouSe teams.
Brown hired Dave Shula
appearance since 1991,
The start to respectability is as
when
owner
Mike
Brown
and
later gave him a twomuch an attitude as it is talent
took
over
for
his
father.
year
co·ntract extension
. and a few years ago the Rays,
"Yes. I am very commit- · while he was in the process
I think. got tired of bemg
ted
to doing the right thi~g of losing 50 games faster
pushed around," he wrote ..
here,"
Lewis sa id , when than any coach in NFL hisThat's kind of how Sarah
.
asked
if
he planned to stay tory. Bruce Cos let replaced
AP photo
Palin sees it, too.
"I know that earlier some of In this June 5 file photo, Tampa Bay Rays pitcher James Shields, right, takes a 5Wing at as head coach. "I honestly Shula seven games into the
the experts this year were kind Boston Red Sox's Coco Crisp after Crisp was hit by a pitch and charged the mound in the don 't think anything has I 996 season - the last year
of tough on the Rays. I've second inning of a baseball game in Boston. The Rays have scuffled with the Red Sox at ever changed here . , The on Shula's contract - and
been there," the Republican .least a hall-dozen times this decade, punctuated by the wild brawl in June that resulted in commitment that I made stuck around until 2000,
vice presidential candidate eight players getting suspended.
five years ago here and when he resigned after an 0said Monday durin¥, a speech
(again) three years ago, two 3 start, saving the team
in Clearwater, Aa. 'But what Bank Park.
manager Joe Maddon hardly dustups we've had since I years ago, whenever. is that some money.
a difference a season can · Traded from Boston to Los backed down.
have been here have mostly we'd, see this thing all the
Brown let Dick LeBeau
make, and now the Rays , in Angeles on July 31, Ramirez
"I want to be very clear: I Q!:en due to the competitive way through and get us back complete the final year on
the playoffs for the flrnt time reprised his role as a one-man defend' everythin~ our guys nature of the games more than to where We were."
his contract in 2002 , when
ever."
October wrecking crew in !be did," he said then. 'I feel actu- anything," he wrote. "There .
No matter how bad it gets, the· Bengals went a fran· Eve11 before their rise to. first-round sweep of the ally proud of the way we han- are a lot of players involved
Lewis'
job is one of the chise-worst 2-14. Lewis was
prominence. the Rays were Chicago Cubs. The 2004 dled the · situation · that was ·that know each otlwr and are
safest
around.
Two years hired . led ,the team to that
plenty feisty. They've scuffled World Series MVP went 5- presented."
. good friends, so much like the
with the Red Sox at least a for-10 with two home runs
Before the season began, · Yankees and us." ·
· a~o.. he got a contract exten-. playoff .appearance in 2005,
half-dozen times this decade, and four walks.
Maddon's team showed it
Schilling doesn't · foresee stan through 20 !01 virtually and got a contract extension
punctuated by a wild brawl at
"He could fight a bear with would not be intimidated. any brawls in the next week or a guarantee that he .will be through 20 I0, providing
Fen way Park in June that · a stick and win," praised 'TWice it got into scrapes with so. He'll sit this one out fol- around that long unless he long-term job security.
challenges the front office.
Lewis has publicly disresulted in eight players get- Phillies broadcaster Gary the Yankees in spring training lowing shoulder surgery.
ting suspended.
Matthews, MVP of the 1983 . - back when they-were 200'The game results are far That's how things work in agreed with Brown this sea"You know, we've had NLCS when Philadelphia I underdogs to wm the World more important than any egos Cincinnati.
son over the owner's decisome good battles with them beat the Dodgers.
. Series.
involved, so no," he said.
Brown took'control of the sion to bring back troubled
all year," Boston pitcher Jon
Coming off their ·victory
The trouble between Tampa "I've already seen the team after his father, Paul , receiver Chris Henry. If
Lester said.
over wild-card Milwaukee in Bay and Boston dates to 2000, Coco/Shields match . three died before the start of the Lewis follows Wyche's.
Other matchups · in the the opening round, tl)e when Pedro Martinez hit times today. This series, these I991 season. The Bengals · example an(j presses the
majors get more l\ttention, be Phillies are aiming for their Genild Williams with his fu'st teams, are bigger than that."
have been one of the NFL's owner for more control at
it Yankees-Red Sox or Cubs- first championship since pitch of the game. Williams The ALCS matchup was set worst franchises over that the end of the season' the
Cardinals or Dodgers-Giants. 1980. Torre, no stranger to !be rushed the mound, a brouhaha Monday after the Rays beat span, managing only one dynamic of their relationBut there is no baseball rival- postseason, is hoping to lead ensued and a slew of playen; the Chicago White Sox in winning season. Even when ship could change.
. ry that's more spirited than Los Angeles to Its first title were suspended.
four games and Boston elimi- things have been very bad,
For• now , Lewis is
Tampa Bay-Boston .
since 1988.
In 2002, 2oo4 and ' 2005, nated the Los Angeles Angels the head coach has felt immersed in changing
Funny, know who was
The defending champion Tampa Bay and the Red Sox in four.
things under the system in
often in the middle - some- Red Sox and the Rays begin tangled after pitches either hit
While Boston will !Jr to . secure.
It
takes
more
than
a
bad
place.
how -of those slugfests?
Friday night at Tropicana or were thrown near Ramirez. win its third championship in
"We've taken some lumps
· Manny Ramirez.
Field. James Shields is ·likely After the last of those three five years, the 100-win record to get a Bengals
coach
fired.
this
year, and that doesn't
Yep, the s(lme slugger to start Game I for Tampa scraJ?S. Schilling said tben- Angels can put away their
Sam
Wyche
led
the
change
howl approach what
who's now the main man in Bay- hehitCocoCrispw1th D~1l Rays manager Lou postseason bunting. In fact,
the NL championship series a pitch on June 5, triggering Piniella was trying to tum his that's what doomed them - a Bengals to their second I do," Lewis said. "I'm
between the Los Angeles the bench-clearing fracas in team into "a bunch of tough botched suicide squeeze by Super Bow.! appearance in excited about our football
Dodgers and Philadelphia Boston.
guys." .
. .
. !'!rick Aybar in the ninth the ·1988 season, losing to team. I . actually like
Philhes.
Shields and four other Rays · These·days, Schilhll@ '!lll!.d·, . IJIIIlllg:
·. ·
,.. San Francisco. Then .the fo()tball. team, ·:Qt!!.jf
Ramirez, manager Joe were suspended, while Lester the clubs are not bitter ene"I thought it was a good sit- Bengals slipped to 3-13 in being 0-5.llike·
Torre and the Dodgers open and two oilier Red Sox play- mies.
uation for us,". manager Mike I991, and Wyche began like what we're
the
best-of-seven
set ers were penaliied. A day
"There are very few players Sciascia said. "It didn't work questioning Brown's roster We're working very.
Thursday night at Citizens after the fight,' Tampa Bay left from the earher times. The out."
meves and lobbying for a hard."

Sports Shorts
OJ. Mayo case goes before West Virginia Supreme Court
CHARLESTON, W.Va. (AP)- The Secondary School
· Activities Commission asked the state Supreme Court ·on
Tuesday to reinstate t.wo administrative rules struck down
last year in a case involving former Huntington High bas- .
ketball star 0 J . Mayo.
Cabell County Circuit Judge Dan O'Hanlon overturned
rules that automatically imposed multi-game suspensions
on ejected players and al lowed the SSAC to force teams
with ineligible players to forfeit victories, even if the players win their cases on appeaL
Mayo was ejected from a game against Capital in January
2007 in which he came into contact with a referee after
receiving a second technical fouL O'Hanlon 's injunction
postponed sanctions on Mayo, allowing him to play in a
high-profile game against another nationally ranked team.
Huntington High Principai .Greg Webb eventually sus: _
pended Mayo for three games, which he served concur- ·
rently with the SSAC's two-game suspension. In rum, the
SSAC dropped its inquiry.
,
Mayo's attorney, Mike Woelfel , said athletes must be
allowed to have their say before punishment is invoked,
"especially when ·you have an ejection and a multiple-game ·
suspension."
In a telephone interview with The Associated Press after
the hearing, Woelfel suggested that after the game official
who ejects the athlete files a· report with the SSAC within
24 hours, the athlete and his guardians should appear nt the
SSAC's offices in Parkersburg, the referee's game report
wo~ld be read, and any available video of the game be
revtewed .
.
"That's what we want," Woelfel said.
SSAC lawyer Bill Wooton told the justices the forfeiture
rule was actually a ·moot point in the Mayo case, since
Huntington never forfeited any games:
"That rule had no absolutely no impac;,t on the case,"
Wooton said. "The forfeiture rule has always been inter· ·
·
preted consistently."
O'Hanlon also ,declared. in his injunction that the SSAC
is a state agency, but Wooton referred to Supreme Court
case law that indicated it is not. WOoton contends the SSAC
is a voluntary organization and Woelfel predicted the justices wouldn't go along with the lower court contention.

•

Your money Is safe, and growing at the
Horne National Bank.

We'ft all helt'd the M'ft: Some blg-ttme lendlnt lnatltutlona areln trouble.
but the Home Nattonal a.ntt- your community &amp;.nk- Ia thrivtnv. we•,.
·not buying a_ub-prime mortgage 1o1M. We l*lfte In lendlni money to •
local entrepNneur to .mt a bulln111, to 1 neighbor to buy 1 home or to put
children through college. Buslneaa Ia good .t the Home National Bank.
a.tnv your d1po11ta home and support your IOCid eConomy Mel your community•.

We have money to lend.

to

SPORTS
·• High school football
previews. See Page 81

surer/CFO, reported to the
board that the collection
rate for the current tax year
POMEROY
2007, collected in 2008,
Del.inquent real estate taxes was 84 percent versus a hisdue the Meigs Local School torical collection rate of
District and how to proceed approximately 95 percent
with collections is under rate resulting in an approxidiscussion by the Meigs mate $289,000 decrease in
Local Board of Education . . real estate taxes to the
Mark E. Rhonemus, trea- District. He said that is
Bv CHARLENE HOEFLICH

HOEFLICHOMYOAILYSENTINEL.COM

'Next Gen'
911 now in
research
phase
. BY BRIAN

Colors c

a

SYRACUSE

We've Got·lt·l
••

'

•

•

_

receive bookmarks, clown noses
and color sheets. The Ringling
Bros. and Barnum &amp; Bailey circus will perform Oct. 17-19 at
Big Sandy Superstore Arena in
Huntington, W.Va.
For adults, Ann Pancake,
author of "Strange as this
,Weather Has Been ," will visi~
the Pomeroy Library at 2 p.m.
this Sunday for a discussion
about her novel. Pancake is a
native of West Virginia and
"Strange as · this Weather Has
Been" was picked as. the
MCDPL's "one book, one community" read selection. The
novel features a southern West
Viginia family devastated by

Please see Ubrary, AS

Please see Flu shot. AS

Brlan J. Reedfphoto

·•

Leaves are really just beginning to change this week, with maple and ash trees adding
their traditional reds and golds to the ·landscape, according to the Ohio Department of
Natural Resources. The recent onset of cool nights hl!s helped bring out the vibrancy of
color. Maples with their reds are becoming noticeable, as are the bright yellows and golds
of green ash: Southern Ohio woodlands are just in the early stages of change, but are
expected to be more vibrant than last year.

2 SECrrONS -12 PAGES

The circus, the writer, the pumpkins

Annie's Mailbox . A3
Calendars
A3
Classifieds
83-4

BY ' BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT 0 MYDAILYSEN.TINEL.COM

Bs

Places to go

A6
B Section
Beth S.rgent/photo

4

. Pleilse see Taxes, AS .

POMEROY
- The
announcement of annual flu
shot clinics is a sure sign
autumn has arrived.
The Meigs County Health
Department will administer.
flu shot&gt; to Meigs County
residents aged 65 years or
older or those with high risk
medical conditions from 9
a.m.- II .m. and 1-3 -p.m. ,
Friday, Oct. 17 at the health
department. Hi\lh r.isk medical conditions mclude asth·
rna, diabetes, blood disorders, heart disease , kidney
disease, eic.
Clinics .for th~ general
public will be held from 9
a.m. - noon. Saturday. Oct.
18 at Powell's Food Fair
and from 9-11 a.m. and 1-7
p.m. on Tuesday, Oct. 21 at
the health department. .
Sherry Wilcox , RN ,
director of nursing for the
MCHD , said the department has 850 doses for
adults and I00 for children
· this flu season.
Peoplo who· possess
Medicare B, Railroad
Medicare or Medicaid coverage must present the
appropriate healthcare cards
before receiving the flu vaccine. There will be a $15.00
fee for people who do not .
have Medicare B, Railroad
Medicare or Medicaid coverage. Commercial healthcare ·insurance(s) cannot be
accepted, but residents are
encouraged to submit
claims to their respective
companies for possible
reimbursemel)t.
.
Influenza is a serious (but
preventable) disease, whicli
1s caused by a virus that is
transmitted from infected
persons to the nose or throat
of others. Proper handwashing techniques should
be utilized. The "flu season''
in the United States extends
from November through
April each year.
The flu vaccine can prevent influenza but the
viruses tliat cause the dis-.
·ease
often
change .
Therefore, influenza vac'Cine is revised each year by
replacing at least one component of the immunization with a newer version
in an effort to ensure that
the current flu shot is
effective. Protection devel•
ops about two weeks ·after

October library events

Obituaries

When earlier forecasts
indicated that the District
would move into a· deficit
positions. the Board took,
action in an effort to bring
the district into financial
balance through a reduction
in force by eliminating several positions, not filling

BY BETH SERGENT

.-~ ·

A4
As

·"'"lait"•·nlin•·l.mm

Health
department
schedules flu
shot clinics

0BITUAlUFS

Comics
. Editorials

c

BSERGENT@MVDAILVSENTINELCOM

Nathania! Hysell , 4, Pomeroy, caught a ride with
grandmother Patty to the Pomeroy Library y.esterday to participate in fall storytime going on now
through Nov. 20. Several otl1er free events for children as well as adults ·are planned for October by
the Meigs County District Public Library.

er.to
.RACIN' E

equivalent to tbe salary and
"The plan for the District
benefits of seven aides.
is to request q detailed
"Because of the low col- . delinquent tax list. Then as
lection rate, an additional requested by Scott Walton,
$421,695 of real estate Board president, obtain a
t~xes are now delinquent,
'to:,&gt; ten list' of delinquent
which brings the total taxpayers of the School
delinquent real estate taxes District, and hold a meeting
due the District to approxi- with the Meigs County
mately $1 ,523 ,000," said prosecuting attorney to seek
Rhonemus. ·
action toward collection.

J. REED

POMEROY - Meigs
County is implementing its
911 system at a time when a
new internet-based 911 service is being developed.
Meigs County Emergency
Medical Services Director
Doug Lavender said the
new service, designed to
keep up with technological
advances, will likely be
replacing E-9U service
:page AS
across the country by the
time Meigs County's sys:• Carol Johnson, 69
tem is paid for.
Next Generation 911 will
ro\11S..~!'Il~ t!J!9l!&amp;h ~e inlet"
net,.mcreasmg the,nformation that can be sent. It will
allow
those in need of emer• TOPS members
gency assistance to contact
taking exercise
the call center by text meschallenge. See Page A3 sage, or even send photos of
crimes in pro~ss. ·
·
• O'BI8ness offers
"Next Gen' would also
CO!ll!l'Unity CPR training . . accept emergency calls
See Page.AS
directly through in-vehicle
systems such as OnStar. It
is now the subject of
research by the U.S.
WEAmER
Department .
of
Transportation,
the
Federal Communications
Commission and other
agencies.
Meigs County's new 911
system, to be be implemented in January, will be E-911
com{latible. E-911, now
cons1dered · the
most
advanced 911 system available, allows the system to
locate callers usmg GIS
Debtlll on PllQI A3
Pleese see ttl, AS

illl!879
, NATIONAL BANK

1"1"

BREEDOMYDAILYSENTINELCOM

@:) aoo8 Ohio V.Oey Publlohlna Co.

TOLEDO (AP) - A Toledo high school football team is
being forced tb sit out its next game after an on-field fight
last Friday night.
'. Toledo Rogers will forfeit this week's game against
Toledo Whitmer.
Toledo City League officials say they made the decision
after reviewing what happened when Rogers played Toledo
Central Catholic last week. ·
· Officials say nearly 'all of the Rogers players came off the
bem:h dunng a shoving match between the teams.
Coaches ;md game officials stopped the fight from esca·
1ating and no one was seriously injured.

'

Tilt ' I{Sil \\ , 0( ' r&lt; II\ I 1{ 'I · :! ooH

. ;, o ( 'I·: NTS • \'ol. ;; K, Nu. 6 .1

Sports
Weather

.

Printed on tOO %
RE-c:yclrd Newsprint

Middleport • Pomeroy, O~io

INDEX

Ohio football team to sit out 1 game after fight

.

•

PbMEROY - Several free
events are planned for October
by the Meigs County District
Public Library including tickets
to Ringling Bros .. &amp; Barnum
Bailey Circus, a visit from
author Ann Pancake and the
annual pumpkin painting event
This year the MCDPL. is participating in tbe "Reading with
Ringling Bros" program which
allows kids to earn a free
Ringling Bros. circus ticke.t simply by doing their library reading . Children ages two-12 enroll
in the free progral!l witb their
local librarian and will even

•
•

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="548">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="9999">
                <text>10. October</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="14381">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="14380">
              <text>October 8, 2008</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
</item>
