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: Pqe B6 • 11-e Daily Sentinel

Monday, October 13, 2008

www.mydailysentinel.com

••

Jones' 3 TDs.Iead Jets past Bengals, 26-14
:·EAST RUTHERFORD, the drawing board and fig-

.

.

.

N" J. (AP) - Brett Favre and ure it out."

'

back Into

Mondav

CLEVELAND (AP) were far
Despite their struggles ,
Braylon Edwards left his first
fiom flashy on offense, and the Bengals were still in It
Monday night game angry at
they didn't · need to be late. The Jets had a thirdthe world.
against
the
winless and-~ from the Bengals 7
He had gone to the Pontiac
~innati Bengals.
when Favre hit Chris Baker
Silverdome in 1995 as an
: Thomas Jones ran for two for 6 yards. Jones followed
excitable seventh grader with
U&gt;uchdowns, including a 1- with a !-yard rumble into
· dreams of playing in the
$afder late in the. game, and the end zone with 2:22 left
NFL. He sat in the stands
caught a pass from Favre for and the 2-point try fell
with his dad expecting to see
a ·score to. lead the Jets to a incomplete to make it a 12a rout.
A huge fan of the San
26-14 win Sunday.
point game.
Francisco 49ers, he was sure
. "It wasn't our best peiforFavre, coming off a sixSteve
Young and Jerry Rice
mance on offense. but it was . touchdown performance in
would
hook up for several
:twin," Favre said. "We did · a 56-35 victory over
touchdown
passes and the
spme good things.
Arizona, wasn't nearly as
defending Super Bow! chamThomas Jones, he had one explosive in this one. He
pions would demolish hts
of those days."
finished 25-for-33 for 189
hometown
Detroit Lions.
·The Jets (3-2) improved to yards - throwing mostly
"1 was thinking, no waY in
3~ in ,games immediately . short passes - ' a touchd01yn
heck they lose to the Lions."
f!)llowing a bye under coach . and two mtercepllons. .
Cleveland's wide receiver
Eric Mangini . but this one
''I'm not here for stars."
said.
was far from easy. With· Favre said. " I'm here for
Heck happened.
Jllew York holding a tenta- wins."
"What do you know ?"
live 20-14 lead, the Jets
Jones finished with 17
Edwards said. ·"(Detroit's)
needed ,a ·JO-play, 41 -yard carries for 65 yards and had
Helinan Moore · and Brei!
drive by Favre that ate up his first career three-TD
Perriman had outstanding
games and Barry Sanders
the clock to seal the victory game for the Jets, wearing
went crazy. rushed for about
over the Bengals (0-6).
their navy and gold throw180 yards. Tl)ey beat the
: "I don't believe in ugly back New York Titans uni49ers up and there I was,
wins," Favre said. "I believe forms for the second
AP photo mad." ·
a win's win. That one felt as straight game.
New York Jets linebacker Bryan Thomas, top, sacks
Edwards can only hope his
good as any win I've been a
"Last (game), we threw Cincinnati
Bengals
quarterback
Ryan
Fitzpatrick
(
11) in the Monday night debut as a
part of in recent memory." · the ball really well and . fourth quarter of tile Bengals' 26-14 loss to the Jets at
player $oes better. He and the
Ryan Fitzpatrick couldn't scored a iot of points and .Giants Stadium in East Rutherford, N.J., on Sunday.
disappointing
Browns ·(1 -3)
get much going for the today · wasn't ' that exact
will
take
the
field
as enorto be able to win games like mous underdogs against
~en gals in place of an ailing sam_e situatio~,'' Jones said. tQ the team winning ."
the
· unbeaten New York Giants,
The score capped . a that."
earson Palmer. He was 20- "We had to kmd of gnnd 11
of-33 for . 152 yards as 'out a little more. The good sirange drive during which
After Jay Feely gave the who will carry an 11 -game
CinCinnati dropped to 0-6 thing is we' re able to dq Favre had thrown two oth~r Jets a 10-7 lead with a 38- road winning streak ( 12
for the third time since both."
touchdown passes that were yard field goal early in the counting the neutral site
2000.
Cincinnati took a 7-0 lead called back by penalties.
second quarter, New ·York Super Bowl) into the
- "0-and-anything stings," on the third play from
Favre tossed a pass to took advantage of a costly matchup and who embarfinebacker Dhani Jones said. scrimmage, when Antwan Dustin Keller in the end mistake by Fitzpatrick. The rassed Cleveland during tl1e
"We just want to get the b·ad Odom sacked Favre and zone on third-and-goal from Bengals quarterback fum- exhibition season.
taste out of our mouths. 0- forced a fumble. Chinedum the 4, but right guard bled when he was sacked by , "This is :a dream for me to
and-6 is not a position any- Ndukwe picked it up and Brandon Moore was called Hank Poteat, and Calvin play on ·Monday Ni~ht
body wants to be in."
ran 15 yards Into the end for being an ineligible man Pace recovered the ball. Football,' " Edwards satd.
The Bengals gained just zone to give the Bengals.the down field. On the next play Two plays late~. Jones ran it "Back to when you were a
43 yards rushing on 21 car- lead I :24 mto the game .
from the 9, Favre hit 'into the end zone from 7 kid, everybody wants to have
three or four touchdowns on
ries, with Fitzpatrick's 23
It didn't last long as New Jerricho Cotchery in the end yards . ·
it and be player of the game.
leading the way.
Y9rk tied it with a 2-yard zone, but the play was
Fitzpatrick 's !-yard · run We're
to be so pumped
. "Everyone will say that touchdown reception by called_ back · because of made. it 17- 14 with 8 sec- up, thegoing
first two series we ' ll
with a backup in there, we Jones. ·
, offensive . pass · mterference onds left before halftime. just work on getting rid of the
Feely added a 43-yarder in buuerfl ies and try to get
need to run the ball better.
"The whole point is to be . by Chanst Stuckey.
We will ," said Fitzpatrick, out there with the ball in . "We're not going to throw the third quarter to put the everyone going."
·making his second start in your hands," said Jones , SIX touchdown passes every Jets ahead 20-14.
Going forward would be
t,hree games with Palmer who had two TDs all last week," Favre said with a _ "We've got to do. better," preferred. To this point, the
resting a sore right elbow: season. "It always feel good smile. "We might throw Bengals coach Marvin Browns are crawling "It was a struggle out there to get touchdowns, get into three on one drive, which Lewis said, "It's not good backward.
today. We have to go back to the end zone and contribute was different, but we've got enough."
Bitten savagely by the

.J.e New York Jets

Bush to announce
eX}landed bank
bailout details, A2

injlll)' bug. they exrected to '

be their heahhtest thiS season

going into the matchup. They
were off last week and used
the bye to heal various bumps
and brui ses. Agamst th~
Giants. wide recetver Dome
Stallworth.
one
of
Cleveland's top free agent
signings. will likely make_hts
season debut. as wtll nght
tackle Ryan Tucker, w~o
underwent hip surgery, .m
May.
.
But their · return . to
Cleveland's
sputtermg
offense. ·which has .scored
just four touchdowns 1~ four
games, could be offset tf Pro
Bowl tight end Kellen
Winslow can't play. He was
released Sunday after spending three nights in the hoSP.Ital with an undisclosed Illness, and was downgraded
from questionable to doubtful.
"1 · hope that he plays,
because we need to wm and
we need our best players
there to win," backup Darnell
Dinkins said.
It 's been 15 years since the
Rrowns won on Monday
night and five years since
they appeared there. That's a
long drougl)t in this footballoLsessed city where MNF
made its debut on Sept. 21,
I 970, with a game between
Cleveland and the New York
·Jets.
"Five year.i?'' Browns safety Mike Adams said.

Printed on tOO%
Recycled Newsprint

Council to address new downtown school zone

• Browns hand Giants
first loss of season.
See Page Bl

Bv BRIAN

MIDDLEPORT .
Middleport Village Council
will consider traffic control
at the comer of Mill Street
and South Third Avenue, to
address safety of children
with autism.
The school, is a joint effon
between local school .systems, offering a new
method of educating children with · the learning disability. The parents' prgani"
zation at the school has

"

0BITUARIFS
Page AS
·• Rodney Gaul, 66
• James Taylor, 72
• Brownie Vujaklija, 85
'

.

•

Ex2900 COMPACT TRACTOR
• 28.7 HP' 3-cylinder dirO&lt;:I

fue1 injection diesel en;ne
• Hydrost,tic lransmiuioil with Hted1bkt 4WO
~ Fully hydraulic power ttHrins

· • Llrs• flywhett for omoothtr,
more sustllntd hnrsepower

$209/MONTH"
AS LOW AS

• Lepi joins staff
of Holzer Clinic.
See Page A3
• Wildfires force frantic
evacuations near LA.
See Page .AS

Attachments 1okl Mplfalaly.

• Curved boom loader with excellent

•isibitlly and modern design

·····~···························~·································
3 YEAR/2000 HOUR

"

·"

"' "

"

Sc2400 SUB-COMPACT TRACTOR
• 24 HP' diesel ••tine
• HydrQttalic 1/'lntmission WAh Nlet:tablt 4WD
• Shift-On-Tht·Go• ronp eonlrOI!olo ycu ohifl from
tow to hish without sloppiOJ
• Hilhtst tooder tift capacity in ils ctaos'"
• Dual hydraulic pumps to 1111ximiza anichmonl porformanco
• Comfortable and opon oporltOr station
• Er..,nomicatty dtsiiJIO&lt;Israb hand\11 aUow the operator
to p1 on and off lite .1/'aciOr Hsity

WEATHER
LOW MONTH LY PAYMENTS

$151 /MONTH* ·
ASLOWAS

AttacluMnts •old Mparately.
3 VEAR/2000 HOUR
, t.o!'l

NEW
EAGLE
Patrick Tyler Carey
of Shade became an
Eagle Scout Sunday,
at the Eagle Court of
Honor held at his
parish church,
Sacred Heart of
Pomeroy. Carey
completed an exterior repair and landscaping project al ·
the church as part of
his Eagle Seoul
requirements. Here,
Carey's grandmother, Diana, pins the
SCout medal,
"v~1 ~~;·~m~graodlalher,... ,.
·
and other
members of his famIly gather around.
Members of the
Meigs County Boy
Scout organization,
also pictured, participated in the ceremony, which was fOI'
lowed by a reception
in the church hall.

. Bv BETH SERGENT

3 YEAR 2000 HOUR
~

with the request. .
on Satf1rday at Downing
• Approved the mayor's
. During the council's dis- House .. The marker will report of fees and fines col~
cussion period, Councilman - commemorate
Mark lectcd in September, in the
Craig Wehrung suggested Twain's visit to the house. amount of $8,192.
that council consider an The owners of the bed and
• Approved report~ from
ordinance limiting the breakfast inn will conduct the thcome tax. public
placement of rumma~e and tours of the historic home works , refuse and finance
yard sale merchandise on and a reception will fol- departments .
low at 2:30 p.m. in the
• Approved
Peoples
residential properties.
In
other
business, freight depot.
Bank, N.A ., as the depositoGerlach announced an
Coun~il also:
ry of public funds.
open house at the new
• Approved Steve Koebel,
Also
present . were
Family Health Care from part-time patrolman, as a Council members Rae
1-4 p.m .-on Thursday.
full-time patrolman.
Moore, Sandy Brown,Cr~ig
Moore s~id an -Ohio · • Approved payment of Wehrung, Shawn Rice and
Historical Society marker bills 111 the · amount of . Julia Houston , and Fiscal
will be dedicated at 2 p.m. $47,761 .13.
Officer Susan Baker.

BSERGENTCMYOAILYSENTINELCOM

.

'

aske~ . that street markin(ls
or signs be provtded m
order to protect students
when school starts in the
· morning and at afternoon
dismissaL
Mayor Michael Gerlach
and council members
agreed that the school is an
asset to the community
· and that the students' safety must be protected .
Gerlach said he would discuss possible traffic signs
with the school's administrators and the rarents and
the village wil . cooperate

Pomeroy
changes
.speed limit

"Wow,'' said kick return
specialist Joshua Cribbs, also
unaware of -Cleveland's dry
spell. "Five years? Wow."
Unless · the Browns get
themselves together quickly.
it could be another five .years
before they get back on
national TV.Their reward for
a I0-6 season in 2007 was
tive prime-time appearances
- three on Monday night,
one on Sunday and one on
Thursday - this season. It's
their most since three· during
the 1989 season.
··~ we have a lot to prove to
the outside world," Edwards
said. "and to ourselves."

J t

J. REED

BREEDOMYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

"Whew."

"

Therapy improves
chances of kidney
transplants, A6

POMEROY
Last
night Pomeroy Village
Council
unanimously
approved changing the
speed limit through sections of downtown and
established -a new business
district, effective Nov. I.
According to the new ordinance, from Fisher Funeral
Home on East Main Sireet to
the Middlepon corpof3tion
limit on West Main Street,
the speed limit will be 25 .
miles per hour. Currently, ·
there are places along this ·
stretch of road where the
speed limit is 35 mJ?h as well
as places whC!C it ts alrejldy
25 mph. Thts new speed
limit will place ~ uniform
speed limit along the stretch
of road from Fisher F1111eral
Horne to the corporation
limit on West Main Street.
The new speed limit will
be phased in by Nov. ·I,
complete with signs to
establish the new downtown
business district. This new
· speed limit I downtown
business district will not
extend along the entire
length of Main Street. For
example, from the intersection of Nye Avenue and
Ohio 833 to Fisher Funeral
Home, the speed limit will
remain 35 mph.
Council also approved the
third and final reading of an
ordinance which will raise
costs for mayor's court from
$65 to $75. Similar to the
· last meeting, Councilwoman
Mary McAn~u~· was the
lone vote agamst the raise.
The motion will allow $10
to go into a computer f11nd.
In other business:
.
Council set trick or treat
from. 6, 7 p.m., Thursd'ly,
Oct. 30.
PIMse see Spud l•lt. A5

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0·
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-~
;;;;.-.,

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Brion J. Reed/photos

~f.
,,

! 'MRI--1~ "-"~&gt;~!• '

Shriver
unveils 'job
creation' plan
in Pomeroy
BY BRIAN

J . REED

BREEO@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY - Morgan
County Commissioner Rick
Shriver, the Democratic
candidate for the Ohio
Senate, visited Pomeroy
Monday to discuss a plan
for job creation.
"Places like Meigs County
are hit particularly hard by
changes in the global economy and we need to find ways
to bring new jobs and opportunity ~ere,' __,S.IJ!j,ver sajp.
"There IS no stfver bullet to
fixing the economy, but I
believe this plan will move
our region forward in a positive direction ."
Shriver's plan includes:
• Updating Ohio's tax
code to ensure they are
competitive with those of
other states.
• lmprovi ng access to
higher education through
support of learning centers.
such as the Rio Meigs
Center, which bring college
educations closer to rural ·
residents.
· • Investment in renewable
energy and clean coal technology ; allowing Ohio to
participate in an "emerging
industry."
• Streamlining state efforts
to attract new industry.
September data from the
Ohio Department of Job and
Family Services show a
I 0.8 perceni unemploymeni
rate in Meigs County Ohio's highest.
"Too many of our friends.
relatives and neighbors
canol find work worthy of
their talents ," Shriver said.
"Meigs County has felt this
burden perhaps more than
· any other place in the state."
• Shriver said the plan he
outlined in Pomeroy.Athens,
Please see Shriver, A5 ·

Ex3200 COMPACT TRACTOR
• 32 HP' 3-cyllnder diroel

fuot injocllon dilseltnlint
• Hydroolotic tronvnlnion w\111 ultclobte 4WO
• Fully hydraulic pa'Hir olflriOJ
• urae flywhttt for arnoothtr,
more SUitlintd hocupow.r ·

• Curvod boom taodtr with oxcottoni
vioibitKy and modom llnil"

S'2·19:!MONTH*

Delatts on "-ge AS

Atttchmantt. •old ltptrttaly.

'

FAMILY OWNED SINCE 1996
1830 OLD LOGAN RD SE • RT. 33 JUST SOUTH OF LANCASTER
8880 UNITED LANE • ONE MILE WEST OF ATHCNS ON RT. 50/32
LANCASTER
OH 43130 • (740&gt; 653-2827
.
ATHENS. OH 45701 • &lt;740&gt; 593-3279
.
STORE HOURS MONDAY-FRIDAY 9:00-6:00, SATL!RDAY 9:00-5:00

Horse show seiies wrapping up Fonner Mason councilman .
Bv BETH SERGENT

AS LOW AS

ALLPOWER
EQUIPMENT
.
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BSEAGENTOMYt».llYSENTINELCOM

•
PORTLAND - Though
it will return next year, the
2 SOCnONS -12 PAGES
Ohio - River Producer)
Horse Fun Show series will
Annie's Mailbox
A3 wrap up ·this year on
ft.
Saturday at the Portland
_Calepdars
A3 Community Center with a
B _ , special Halloween-inspired
3 4 category.
Warms ups begin at 10
Bs a.m.
CoPl~ ·
and the show starts at
II
a.m
. Saturday in the
Editorl!s
A4 horse show
ring behind the
Portland
Community
Obituaries
As Center. Like last
year, folB Section lowing the horse show will
Sports
be a Halloween costume
As
show
with prizes for horse
Weather
and rider as well as dog and
© 2;,.,8 Ohio Volley PubUohlns Co. owner.
Bruce McKelvey, ORP
member, said · the shows
average i:I'Ound ,40 horses
and continues to expand,
, · taking on more events as
I

INDEX

~-

'Wli.\.5 lill M / &lt;mi I~~~ \ICPfl""~'II Or-/ ~ 0

C..---

Of!.. ·t s-..a •a..t.~ .,.ro..i ~ lil~1 ~

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IWM~· III~Qo~!-1-t.,..rllrflll•.,... ~-~.........,.~· ..~ t&gt;llnl~•·lflt /.Mo\i'!loM•oli'A •~·!III!f'll~-fl t?l,...,r:r """' '"'"~'~~" ...,11, ~~,,...,,, htr -~ ...;o o'l"'llo•'!on,..~ ' '' ' "'\ .,., o:l1"""' """ ~ ......... - u ..~ kl2~'oo4tl':l.il\

~orll ~':(&lt;1, " " ' - - M&lt;~-' tff'"»t1f·!JI ~ t
"!IHrulo&lt;.t'~"*tHtt• 1~• 1 .,.""'...,, :lf$1 leo
AF'Ii i),i

•fl•l"'t• r""

•"NIIiol'l '""'""''li':IM&gt;hifi'!
M~~ tUff~ a.ohowl&lt;i .ti'Mi N

...

I:.X..,": 1 ~1

~(I , .. ~illi!Qilf\t. '""

........ 11!' ....,.. ...... ~.:~ ....

I IJ.o.IFIW'f, ,_-...,...,1 ~1 .,.,.,.· ~·"'*"•~il*l"''n

M'&gt;toA.tt. tu~.()

.... ~..,.....JtJ

.fkl""' ,.,..,. .. &gt;~•10'1

I

..

•

well as entries. McKelvey donate $50 towards the puralso said the shows are chase of a riding helmet (as
attracting more people from well as educational materiout of the county, including als) now required by 4-H
Gallia and Wood and Mason for those participating in
Counties, W.Va .
horse shows at the Meigs
Any money raised from County F&lt;Ur.
the horse shows goes into
McKelvey guessed the
ORP programs which go secret to the series' sucback mto the community. cess is that "we keep our
For example, . the group shows entry level and laid
(which is comprjsed of back ." This means the
·RaCine-Southern FFA alum- shows allow particularly
ni) are donating $1 ,400 to younger riders an opportu· help fund a trip to the .nity to exp.erience cri· National FFA Convention tiques from judges and
for current Southern FFA how to get their horse to
members. Funds from the resJlPnd in the show ring:
shows also help provide Categories are also open to
scholatships for ~raduating, teen and adult riders.
Southern seniors m FFA and
Categories for the show
help purchase the blue FFA · include (but are not limited
jackets for those · students ro) exhibition, cones and
who can 't afford it
~arrels . pee-wee barrels ,
McKelvey said the orga- open bairels, etc.
nization recent~ ~gan
Call McKelvey ar 590working with the Meigs 9936 or 843-5216 for more
County Horse Committee to information.
.

.•

injured in motorcycle accident
BY DIANE POTlORFF
LK&gt;IIORFFOMVIliLYREGtSTER.COM

. POINT
PLEASANT,
W.Va. - A former Mason
council member is in a
Huntington hospital 'for
injuries he received in a
motorcycle
accident
Saturday aftemoon.
Ralph Richard Ross of
Mason, W.Va., was riding his
Harley Davidson motorcy~ le
east on Success Road near
Tuppers Plains, when he
failed to negotiate a left
curve, according to the Ohio
State Highway Patrol. The
motorcycle then slid in the
loose gravel several feet , with
Ross striking a guardraiL
Emergency
personnel
with the Ohio State
Highway Patrol , Meigs
County Emergency Medical,
Services and Tuppers Plains

. Volunteer

Fire Department
responded to the scene.
Ross was wearing his helmet at the time of the accident , a law enforcement
official said. Ohio does not
require motorcycle riders to
wear helmets. whereas West
Virginia does require helmets on all motorcycle
operators and passengers.
He was taken to Cabell
Huntington Hospital by a
MedFiight heiicopter and
was listed in good condition , hospital spokesman
Charles Shumaker said.
Trooper Chenoah · Harris
investigated the 4:15 p.m.
accident.
Ross is a fom1er council
member in the Town of
Mason. where he served for
almost two years. He
PIMa see.Auldent, A5

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NATION

The Daily Sentinel

WORLD
The Capitol Dome
is seen near sunset in Washington,
Monday, Sept. 29.
In a stunning vote
that Shocked the ,
capital and world·
· wide markets, the '
House on Monday
. defeated a $700
billion emergency
rescue for the
rtation's financial
system, ignoring
urgent warnings
from President
.Bush and congres·
sional leaders of
both parties that
the economy could
nosedive without it.

MARTIN CRUTSINGER
AP ECONOMICS WAITER

: WASHINGTON - Tile
jlush admini.mation plans
'to spend un initial $250 bil~ion of til~ $700 billion
bailout buying stm:k in pri vate ban ks. great ly cxpandiilg prot~c ti ons for the U.S.
financial system out of d,•cp
:Concern f&lt; ir the fa ltering
':t:conomy. industry and gm::.
·crnmcnt olficiu ls said
:Mund,ly nigh t. President
Bush planned to announ&lt;.:e
the detail_, th i.\ murnin':!.
Agreement . on the ' plan
came after a 1 cm arkable
;rreasury Department meet·
_ing between top gnvern ment economic offi cials ami
executi Ves of ·the nation's
largest banks to revmi1p the
rl}0~1 costl y financial rescue
'in the nat ion's historv. ·
· The plan also wnuld pro·vide ·a w'av for the, ~ovenl­
'ment to Insure loa~1 s that
·banks ma ke to each other, a
critical ·part of the credit
system that has become
froLen and put many busi ness~s in peril.
· Earlier Monday, stocks
'soared around the world in
.response to dramatic government econom ic relief
efforts in the U.S. and over·
seas - and the possibility
of the even bolder American
action .
' Monday
night.
the
Treasury Department said
·the administra tion had
decided on "comprehensive ac tions" to bol ster
·public confidence in the
nation 's financial &gt;ystem,
Bush was to be briefed
early Tuesday by economic
'advisers
and
then
announce the plan. which
Treasury said was designed
to "restore functioning of
our credit market s."
Whil e the ad mini stration
refused to provide detail s
.in advance , industry and
government officia ls with
knowledge llf the pl an said
.it would 1nclude bil linn s of
· dollars in spend ing by the
government to purcha se
stock in b&lt;lllks as a way of
pro,·idint! them

d~.o·~pcralt.&gt;

ly needed nwne) so the y
CCm ld resume more normal

lend in~. The industrv and
.govcn1ment
nff'icials
:spoke on condi ti on of
:anon) mit~

b~(:au~e

Tue8day, October 14,2008

IAEA: NKorea renews
UN access to nuclear site

stay on site. A diplomat who
demanded anonymity for
divulgi.ng · confidential
VIENNA, . Austria
information told the AP that
North . Korea detlured Pyongyang approved visas
Monday that it will resume late last week for members
.shuning down its n.uclear of a new team once the tour
program and allow U.N. of those on location is over
experts to monitor the - even as it appeared to be
process, including making making moves to restart its
&gt;ure th~ plant that produced atomic activities .
·
plutonium for its test bomb
That suggested that the
North 's threat to stop disremains disabled .
The moves, revealed by mantling its nuclear prothe International Atomic ~ ram and restart it was a
Energy Agency, were a ~egotiating ploy meant to
stron_g
indication
that wrest concessions from the
Pyongyang was making five countries engaging the
good on its pledge to retum reclusive communist regime
to a deal 'with the U.S., on the issue ,
AP photo
Russia. China. South Korea
North Korea stopped
• and Japan ·meant to strip it of scrapping it s nuclear proits weapons-enabling nuckar gram in mid -AUj:USt in
program ,
anger over Washmgton's
Pyongyang announced failure to remove it from the
Sunday it would resume terror list and began moves
dismantlement in line with toward restarting its plutothe deal offering political nium-producing facility.
businesses that create new and energy rewards in The U.S. had · said Nonh
jobs. Republican John exchange, aft&amp;r the U.S , Korea first had to aUow verMonday, Oct 13,2008
McCain promised a change removed North Korea from · ification of the declaration
in
direetion from the Bush its list of states sponsoring of its '. nuclear programs it
CLOSE
CLOSE/ CHANGE FROM
admin istration's economic terrorism.
PAST 14 DAYS · SETILE PREVIOUS DAY
submitted in June'. ,
policies.
agency
inspectors
In deiisiing Nonh Korea
"The.
Dow Jones
~ 9,387.61 :* .11.1%
, A ~ for the Europeans, were ,, informed today that on Saturday,· Washington
governments there said they as of 14 October 2008, core said Prongyang had agreed
Eurotodollar ··~ ... $1.35
1.4%
' . . .. . ' . .
. ... .. .' '
were putting $2J trillion on discharge activities at, the to all 1ts nuclear inspectiqn
'·
the
line, based on pledges (nuclear) reactor would be demands.
Goldperounce ~ $838.90 . . · 1:9%
.,
,
.. ...... , .. ....... ... . . . ,... ... ,...... .................................. ..... ...... .
from Britain, Germany, resumed," said a restricted
The delisting - and the
Ollperbarr~l :.________ $81~19 •
4.1%
France, Spain , Austria and IAEA document to the North 's return to disabling
Portugal in recent days. To agency's 35 board members its nuclear facilities - will
LIBOR 3-month.:__ . - - - - 4.75% . . ·0.07
assist
the European banks, obtained by The Associated likely lead to a resumption
.,
.,.
..r.
.. ..; . .
··:;· ,.
the Federal Reserve here Press. It said "monitoring and of the stalled six-party talks
·• r-bllla-mon!h . ~ o.46% •
0.22
announced
Monday that it verification arrangements" of between North Korea, U&lt;S ,,
,,
was taking actions to assure the UN. nuclear agency also Russia , China, South Korea
• Lopdon Interbank Offered Rata for the dollar
enough U.S, dollars were would be restarted .
and Japan.
·
AP , available to meet demand.
Separately, IAEA spokesU .N, Secretary-General
SOURCE: Thornson Reuters
"The gove rnme~t cannot woman Melissa ·Fleming Ban Ki -moon welcomed tile
just leave people on ·their said IAEA inspectors "will resolution of the di~pute.
purchaseo. the . Federal day mark of 499 points. set own to be buffeted about," also' now. be permitted to His .
spoiCeswoman,
Deposit Insurance Corp. · in the waning days of the sa id British Priine Minister · reapply the containment and Michelle Mantas, said Ban
wi ll te mporarily provide dot-com boom in 2000. But Gordon Brown.
surveillance measures at the considered it "another step
insuranc:e for loans b~tween the surge carrie after the
The Bush administration reprocessing facility." That towards a verifiable nonhanks, charging the banks a. staggering ~asses of the also announced the selec- meant agency seals taken nuclear Korean Peninsula,"
premium ror doing so. . ·,· worst week ever, and econ- tion of a team of interim off the plant and monitoring
China also hailed' the
Thi s FDIC program omi sts sai d more rough managers, picked an outside cameras recently removed · North' s
decision
and
Wllllld take the form of pro- days can be expected . firm to he,lp run the program at the North's orders would pledged to move the process
vi ding in surance for new European markets ralli ed lind . selected a prominent be restored ,
forward as host of the
"senior prefciTed" debt that following Asia's lead in New York law firm to draw
Yongbyon , about 60 miles nuclear disarmament talks
one bank would knd 'to response to the widespread up guidelines for how the north of , Pyongyang, has tllat also involve Japan, the
stock purchase program will three main facilities: a 5- two Koreas, the United
another. This debt would be government initiatives.
Offidals
also megawatt reactor, a plutoni- States and Russia.
insured by the FDIC ·for
"These are tougl'l tin1es work.
t111'ee · years, helping . to for our economies, yet we announced that Bernanke um reprocessing plant and a
·"Promoting the six~pany
unlock bank-to-bank lend- can be confident that we can had agreed to serve as chair- fuel fabrication complex,
talks process serves the coming, which has fallen dra- work t)ur way through these man of the oversight board
The reactor is the center- man mteresrs of the involved
matically because of fears challenges and America will Co11gress mandated,
piece of the complex, with the parties," Foreign Ministry
Assis1ant
about repa,xmenl in .the face continue to work :closely
Treasur;r facility stretching more than a spokesman Qin Gang said in
of billions of,dollars of bank with the other nations to Secretary Neel Kashkan, mile along the, Churyong a statement issued late
losses because of bad loans, coordinate our response to · who was taJ?ped by Paulson River, satellite images show.
Monday. "China appreciates
primarily in mortgages,
thi's global financial' crtsis," to be intenm head of .the
The reprocessing center the.constructive effons nuu:le
The officials said that the Bush said followiu~ a meet- program B• week, ago; saic;l to the smfth of the reactor is by tile concerned parties."
FDIC would remove for· a ing with Italian .Premier that tl'i~ firm of Simpsop capable
of extracting
NQnb Korea afarn'led the
period the current $250.,000' .Silvio Berlusconi" at . the Thatcher &amp; Bartlett LLP weapot, ,-grade plutonium world in 2006 by setting of '
had been chosen to· work on from spent fuel rods.
limit on FDIC insurance on . White House.
.· .
test. nuclear blast. It then
bank deposits for non-interOver
the ,weekend, · guidelines on stock .putc
Up to late ' last week, the · agree~ to dismantle its
es! bearing accounts. This P~uls u n had called· the chases while ' the Invest• Nonh had threatened to reac- nuclear · ,program ·
in
would . primarily benefit heads of the five biggest ment Consultancy of Ennis tivate the plutoni'um repro- exchange for energy aid imd
businesses who use non- U.S. banks to come to Knupp &amp; Associates had cessing plant. · It told other concessions.
interest bearing accounts to Washington for face-to-face been picked to he\p super- International Atomic Energy
The regime began disabling
run ·their businesses. That talks about the rescue plan , vise the selection of the Agency .inspectors to remove its nuclear J?rocessing plant in
money would now · be according to people briefed' program's private · asset the organization's seals and · Yongbyon m November, and
insun;d , removing the need on the matter.
managers., .
subsequently banned them blew up a cooling tower in
"We are moving quickly from monitoring first the June in a dramatic display of
fot these businesses to jugGoldman Sachs CEO
gle funds among multiple Lloyd Blankfein. Morgan - but methqdically - and plant .and then all the facili- its determination to cany out
bank accounts to stay under Stanley CEO Joh n Mack , I am confident we are build- ·ties at the) complex. It also the process.
the $250.000 limit.
Citigroup CEO Vikram ing the foundation for a stopped deactrvating the
Just steps away from
strong,
decisive
and
effecCongress as paFt of the PandiL JPMtlrgan Chase &amp;
nuclear reactor at Yongbyon. completing the Second
bailout bi ll temporarily Co. CEO Jamie Dimon. and tive program," Kashkari
The North rescinded all phase of the three-part
boosted the deposit insur- Bank of 1\m~rica Corp. said in a speech to the inspection rights Thursday. process, Pyongyang abruptance cap from $100.000 to CEO Kenneth Lewis were Institute of International but the three-member IAEA ly reversed course and
flankers.
$250.000,
all asked to atle nd.
team had been allo,wed to stopped disabling the plant.
The administration's proDem ocrats in Congress,
posals were. explained dur- while
supp t\rtivc
of
ing a meeting at the . Paul so11·s des ire to expand
Treasury Department that the program': complained
had been called by Treasury earlier Monday . that not
Secretary Henry Paulson enough strings were being
and included the top execu- attached, such as restricting
tives of·the largest banks in excessive compensation for
country,
Federal Wall Street executives who
the
Reserve Chairman Ben raked in millions of dollars
., .
Bemanke also participated in bonuses by pursuing
in the discussions. ·
risky investment strategies
The new approach by the that have now helped push
•
OPENHOUSE
U.S. govemment is mod- , the U.S, fina ncial system to
THURSDAY, OCTOBEiU 6, 2008
c l~ tl after parts of the &gt;trong the brink. . '
.
1:00PM•• 4:00P.M.
initiati ves in Europe. where
The govern11,1ent should
govCmmems put $2 .3 tril - purchase only stock in
.
,
. It ualily luolth ·tar&lt; without discriminalion .
lion on the lin~ Monday . in financ ial firms that agree to
'di
tss to -«ordabl&lt;, hrg 9
Pnm· ng ace
""' 306 North Second Avenue
guara ntee&gt; and other emer. cur di vi&lt;iends puid to share.
,
gency measures to save holders. adhere to strict limMiddleport, Ohio ~760
banks there.
its on executive compcnsa740-992-0540
The $700 billion rescue tion and curb their use of
program th at Congress exoti c inv;;stment' strate'
. I ased and proud to invite you to join us as we
passed on Oct. 3 will con- ~ie&gt;. SJid Sen. Charles
1
Family Healthcare, Inc . 5 Pe
st location in Middleport .
tmue to fe&lt;lture·the pun.:ha&gt;e Schumer. D-.'I.Y., chainnan
celebrate
our
newe
bv the col'ernmcnt of of the .Joint Economic
008 we will have a very informal
On Thursday, October t6H, 2 r"rom 1·00 p.m. to 4:00pm.
h;mk'' bact' a&gt;Sch but wi ll Comm ittee,
•
now devote , a s i~ni.ficant
Separately,
House
.
"meet and greet" Open
, : ouse nd·introduction
of our sta ff
There will be a facthty tour a ·nbe rovided
and
pan of th,• etfort to direct Republicans
•
, Light refreshments wt . p 40 992-0540 or
gO\ ernmcnl purchases . of Democrats pu,hc&lt;l for fresh
V p· 0 Wanda Edwards at 7 stock in banks. an idea that action to stimu late the faiplease
R.S.
· ·~
h rtigerrose@yahoo.com
Pauhon brought up only te ring e&lt;:onomy.
via e-matl at c ee
:
Democrat&gt;
scheduled
last week.
Major stock markets hearings to consider a postaround th e world 'umed ,election stimulus package
'a?e ~
,_'ft .
higher - after plunging that could CO&gt;t as much as
ever lower l4~1 week -,a, S151l hillion. Republicans .
leJk~k~~
traders henan 10 hear of ca ll ed for more tax cuts and
~~Uf·
Europ~ ·, , ~·tions and the energy exploration.
In a campaign speech in
l?''"ihility of further ,ICp&lt;
in the United States.
Ohio. Democrat Barack
On Wall Str• d, a record Obam.~ propched a 90-day
'1.'6-point in,rca&gt;e in the moratorium on honw tore Dow lone' industrial&gt; far closure&gt; :u ,omc bank&gt; and
surpassed
the prev1ou'
one- ' a two-:. car ta' bre-ak for
l
..
BY GEORGE JAHN

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

bank

Bush to
: Bv

P~ge .A2

th~

.&lt;fetaib v.cre vet to be for:mall y rele;bed.
· Th e admi nistration wi ll
use 5250 bill ion of the
bail out progr~un r~cently
:passed by Congrc" to huy
·into U.S .'bank&gt;, the ofllciaL'
~a id , The govemmcn t ini -tially will pur&lt;.:ha&gt;e stock of
:nine · l arg~ bank,, but the
program is expected lu be
expanded to many ' others.
. Am o n ~ the initial banb
:participating will be all nf
3he country"s largest in,titu ·
1ions, including Cit igroup
1nc.. Wells Fargo &amp; Co ..
JPMorcan Cha'c &amp; Co .
Bank o-f America Cnrp , unci
Morgan S!anle), '':Jid nne
:Official. who added thut
;)ldministration hrid'er, did
'101 provide any amounts
{hat would be receil'ed by
·indi' idual ban b.
. The
admini&gt;tratlon
e'pects to spend the S~50
:billion bu)ing bank &gt;toe~
:before the end of this year.
~hi, offi cial said . Bush "ill
;certif) nn Tuc,da) th;ll
-another ) 100 billion is ,
needed from the $700 billion re,cue IJrogram. That
would bne the final $350
billion to be 'IJent.
In addition to the stock

Market wrap

.

"

1.,

,,

,

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

_

,,_

,_

*

'

_

•

. ...

_ _._,_

•..

-··

.

..

... .

·····-~---.'

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•

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•

,'

The Daily Sentinel

BY THE BEND.

PageA3
Tuesday, October 14, 2008

Community Calendar
No say in adontion decision --.--.----.-------;----------;ANNIE· s M A It Box

r'roo harsh to do the same to PubliC llleetiJJp

regular meettng 7':l0 p m
installation of offi- Valley Tabernacle Churcli,
· for mstallauon
· ' . · , of., annual
7:30 p.m ., members f ur- Bar·1ey Run Road . Se rvrce
. ~
pracnce
cers,
M
AND ARCV &lt;&gt;UUAA
him and promise to help Out
officers following .
nish pot luck, refreshments,
continue through Oct. 19.
and then not show up- just
Tuesday, Oct. 14
POMEROY _ Meigs
· Thursday, Oct. 16
Sunday. Oct. I~
Dear Amiie: My husband so he knows how it feels?
POMEROY - Salisbury County
Chamber
of
POMEROY
RACINE
'and I hav~ two wonderful
Is it OK to not buy him ~~.;:'.n,s:m~s~fsM~n~;~g Commerce business-mind- Pomeroy/Racine Masonic Homecoming at Moming
,daughters, ages 5 and 6 . We Christmas presents this ¥ear? Roush .
ed
luncheon ,
n()()n . Lodge #164 regular meet- Star United Methodi st
,hav~ always wanted to adopt I gave him a .home when his
Wed
. nesclay', Oct. IS
Pomeroy L_.tbrary, Melf?S ing, 7:30 p.m., at the lodge Church , 10 a.m .. with dina chtld and have decided it's place burned down. I put
·
C
Ec
in Racine. Taking donations ner at 12:30 p.m. Afternoon
'time . We are Well inio the' · tires on his car when he didRUTLAND - Leading ' ounty
onomtc for Operation . Christmas si ng at 1:JO p.m.
~process of adopting through n't have the money, - Tired Creek
Conservancy Development
Di!ector Child, Bring dish towel for
5
. District,
·p.OL Perry Varnadoe speakmg.
pantry project Call Randy
,o ur local foster care system, of Being Che Giving Tree
22
and our girls are thrilled to
Dear Tired: It's OK not Re5che'duled from Oct ·
Wednesday Oct. IS
Smith at 508-0816,
·
POMEROY ~ Middleport
.be getting a brother.
to buy him Christmas pre(Ubs and
Literary Club will meet at the
Frida\•, Oct. 17
'Y'!e are open to adopt a sents, if that 's what Y9U
Po~roy Library: Leah 0rc1
POMEROY
- Emma
.child of any race. Everyone is want to do. But please dori't
will review "Hope's Boy'' by
will
tum
97 on
Broderick
suppontve of our decision, stoop to his level and make '
·
H
·n
Thursday, Oct. 16
Oct&lt; 17, Cards may be sent
with the exception of my hus- promises you don't keep.
Andrew Bndge. ostess wt
POMEROY - Rev ival to The Maples . 100
,band's stepfather. "'Bruce" has That is spiteful and will.only
Tuesday, Oct. 14
be Olita Heighton .
·
v
HARRISONVILLE
HARRISONVILLE
with Evangeli;t Jerry Memorial
Dr. . #21 0.
,been manied to my mother- escalate the animosity, .our #255 Order of Eastern Star, ln55 Order of Eastern Star• Cottrell, 7 p.m., Fa ith Pomeroy. Ohio 45769 .
in-law for four years. He told son may have a problem
her thar he if we adopt an remembering plans he made
:African-American child, he months in advance and f OU
will not allow the boy into his might need to remind him.
;home. He says .he can't llelp
Also;enlist his girlfriend in
By THOMAS J. SHEERAN
the way he feels , He also went the process so she doesn't
ASSOCIATED PRESS
.on to tell .her that if we do pre-empt you with plans of
.adopt a child of another race, her own, If he still flakes out '
CLEVELAND - Election
it will be the last stake driven on you, stop inviting him an&lt;!
officials
in swing state Ohio's
into their maniage,
make other arrangements.
· Annie, my husband and I
Dear Annie: 1 read the most populous county asked.
are furious about his atti· letter from "Tired of Being a prosecutor M~y to
,tude. My mother-in-law is Tired." 1 just want to let her investigate alleged voter-regsupportiv,e of our decision . know that I also have the istration fraud, ineluding at
.How do we handle his igno- Epstein-Barr virus: I've had least' four dozen registrations
obtained from one man by an
,ranee? - Colorblind
it for 14 years. .
Dear Colorblind: You
I used to feel tired all the ·advocacy group under fire in
,ignore it Bruce has no say time, too. I was discouraged other states,
The bipartisan Cuyahoga
.in your ·decision to adopt because my doctor gave me
.He also should not interfere ' the same advice he gave her County Board of Elections
.,in your mother-in-law's - all you can do is eat voted unanimously to ask
desire to have a rehttionship healthy, exercise and rest cou"nty Prosecutor Bill
.with her new grandchild . If But I want her to know there Mason to investigate multi.his marriage means so little is hope, I staned doing all ple registrations by four
,to him that he would use the the things the doct(lr recom- people who signed forms at
,adoption as a- reason to mended . I exercise, eat the behest of a community
throw it away,, it was healthy and go to b5.early organizing group , the
already on shaky ground.
in order to get at least eight Association of Community
, In some cases , over time hours of sleep every night. I Organizations for Reform
·Now, known as ACORN.
and with encouragement, a don't drink or smoke.
One of the new voters,
Amazingly, I feel b,etter
·baby can overcome such a
AP photofThe Plain Dealer, Marvin Fang
Freddie
Johnson , 19, of Freddie Johnson, is Interviewed by media outside the Board of Elections, in Cleveland on
-resistant grandpareilt'.s atti-. now than when I was
.tude. We hope that's the younger. My epstein-Barr Cleveland, said he signed 73 Monday, Johnson, 19, of Cleveland, said he signed 73 voter registration forms over a five·
,case, but either way, please virus is still there, but I ·voter registration fonns over month period and sa!d he was trying to help paid ACORN solicitors collect signed regis·
·let Mom handle her racist have learned how to man- a five-month·· period. In trations buf he didn't intend to vote more than once . .
return, ACORN · canvassers
·husband.
age.it. - C.
.Dear Annie: I have a
Dear C.: Thanks for the gave him cigarettes or cash, iting duplicate registrations. seven ACORN voter-regis- . sider presenting it to a grand
wonderful 21-year-old sop suggestions. We ho~ your about $20 in all, he told She said the organization tration solicitors while wait- jury, which could return
·who is handsome and smart. letter will help others stay WEWS-TV in Cleveland, was proud of its work regis- ing for a bus. Other can- charges in an indictment.
·He has a stable job and a healthy and strong,
'
The BOOrd of Elections pre- tering new. voters .
vassers stood 10 feet away said his &gt;pokesman, Ryan
Annie's Mailbox is writren sented documents showing
.good relationship with his
The group says it has while a solicitor approached · Miday, There is no time
.live-in girlfriend. Yet on byKathyMiJcheUandMarcy Johnson's name on48 forms. signed up I J million poor him, Johnson said.
frame for a grund jury prethree holidays this yea,r, I Sugar, longtime ediJors of
Johnson said he was trying and working-class voters in
'They never told me I sentati on. he said.
; ·made plans with him the Ann Landers column. to help paid ACORN solici- a mass registration drive in couldn't stop signing them,"
Gall said ACORN can. ;months m advance, and all Please e-moil your questions tors collect signed regi'stra- 18 states this year. Some of said Johnson, who works vassers arc paid hourly , not
three times he never showed to · anniesmailbox@com- tions but he didn't intend to those registration cards selling cell phones. Johnson for each signed registration
·or called. I found out later cast.net, or write to: Annie's . vote more than once.
have become the focus of said he 'was surprised by the they obtain. If canvassers
·he went t&lt;i his girlfriend's Mailbox, PO. Box 118190, · Tw,o s~bpoenaed witness- , fraud · investigations , in attention his multiple regis- kept going back to the same
:parents or his dad's instead. · Chicago, IL 60611. To find es dtdn t sjlow up at the Nevada, · Connecttcut, trations had attracted,
person to sign a registration
I told him it hun to be out more. about Annie's elections board hearing.
Missouri and other states.
Members of the board , card, "It sounds like people
·treated this way. I also said I Mailbox; and read fe~s
Johnson, who said he didn't split 2-2 by law between were beiilg lazy.'' she said ..
The founh~ Christopher
"''1} am tired of being founh pri- by ,other Creators SfndiC~ · Barkley of Cleveland, said understand voter-registration Democrat's
and
Any ACORN canvas,ser
·ority when it comes to such wrtters and Ml1oomsts, visit he was bad~ered into sign- procedures, was one of four Republicans , sent the matter who fails to meet the orgathings and I will not allow it . the Creators Syndicate Web ing reeistratlons, even when people who were subpoenaed to Mason for investigation . nization's training standards
to happen again. Am I being page at www.creators.com ..
he told canvassers that he to ,testify over duplicate regis- One member, Democrat · is fired, she said .
had done so. He said some trations. Johnson said afterthe lnajo Davis Chappell, said
Nevadit state investigators
of the 13 registrations in his board meeting that he had the board's referral should- last week raided ACORN\
name had been signed by been assured by the ~heriff's n't be limited to the four Las Vegas headquarters.
!tim, but not alL
department that the investiga- new voters in question ,,
seizing document s rind
ACORN's state director, tion was aimed at ACORi"
Mason, a Democrat run- computer data as pm1 of a
RACINE
Lily
Katy Gall, watched the solicitors and he wouldn't ning for re-election in the prob~ into scores of fabri Nov, 4 election in heavily cated registration forms ,
board's discussion and said face criminal charges.
Angelina Dugan cel~brated
'her founh binhday recently
later that ACO:RN had coopJohnson told the board Democratic Cleveland and including those signed in
erated with the investigation that he sometimes would Cuyahoga County, will the .names· of Dallas profes·
:at the home her great grand- ,
·parents, David and Ann
and would fire anyone solic' get approached by six or review the matter and con- sional football players.
' Zirk~e. Racine.
' Lily enjoyed playing and
·watching her favorite
movies on videos. She also
:enjoyed dinner and a binhcompany's customers and 24 brands with :mimal sales
CINCINNATI (AP) . .:_ to $63.29.
:day cake and ice cream. She
Procter &amp; Gamble Co . leadA.G. Lalley. P&amp;G"s chief suppliers _o,yere feeling the of $1 billion or more - and
·was joined by her father,
ers are gearing up .tp face executive , said recently that effects of the credit crunch, everyday usage t)f its hou seArnie Dugan of Zanesville ,
some une\ISY shareholders P&amp;G sales had been largely He and other P&amp;G officials · hold items help it during a
'and her grandmother,
· at this year's annu~l' meet- unaffected by the nation ·s have said that the company's ti111e when many c:onDebbie Qui vey, Pomeroy,
ing today.
.
· economic crisis, but the brand strength - including sumers' budgets are tight.
, Sending gifts were her
Many in the audience are
Lily Angelina Dugan
;great grandmother, Robert
often retirees, including for.swisher of New Haven,
mer P&amp;G employees who
Dick
and
Barb
Dugan
and
:W.Va ., Brenda and Mike
(===:==~
have substantial investments
;Seagraves and Kyrie Swann Jerry, Dixie, Hannah, Becky in the company, whose
'Of Middleport; grandparents, and Grace Wolfe of Racine. products include Crest
toothpaste, Gillette shavers
::--~--------------------------------~-and Pampers diapers.
Long a stable growth stock,
P&amp;G's shares - which are
: ATHENS - Mark S.
still a component of the Dow
'Lepi, MD , has joined
Jones industrial average I'
:Holzer Clinic's team of
haven't been immune from
:skilled professionals.
recent Wall Street gyrations. ·
I
: Dr. Lepi is cenified by the
''We'd like to hear that it's
1;
of
going to go up," said Mary
:American
Board
I
I
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'
I
'
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I
'Pediatrics as well as the
Ossman, planning to attend
'
:American Board of Internal
Tuesday morning's m,eeting
i
:Medicine and cares for
with her husband Jim . She
CI~N/~1-ttt 1~1-~f;CTifJIV
I'
said P&amp;G · is one of the
:patients of all ages: .
• Formerly practJcm~ at
major holdin~s among the
iI I
retired couple s investments.
:Buckeye Internal Medtcine
'
"None of it's very good at
:and Pediatrics in Lancaster,
I'
the moment, but up until
:Lepi joins Holzer Clinic to
tI
recently, P&amp;G has been
'practtce pediatrics and
doing OK ,'.' she said . "To be
:mternal medicine, ·at the
To be inserted in·the ,
honest
with
you,
it's
very
:racilitr located in Athens.
Mark Lapl
difficult to feel entirelr, con: Lep1 received his doct?r
'
'of medicine from the Ohto lions throughout southeast- fident about anything. '
:State University College of em Ohio and western West · A year ago, f!&amp;G stock was
:Medicine in Columbus, and Vrrginia, Holzer .Ciinic pro- on a hot streak that included
on Friday- October 31st ·
:COmpleted his residency at vides medical excellence 12 straight days of record
Deadline 5 p,m - October 24
closes just before the share'Ohio State University coupled with local caring,
:Hospital as well . as the.,. Holzer Clinic is accredit- holders meeting. It moved on
THIS INFORMATIVE Gil/DE
Contact· Brenda Davis or Dave Harris
:Children's Hospital in ed by the Accreditation to a split,ad)usted record high
IS A WINNING WAY TO
for advertising information &amp; ~ssistance
I!
Association of Ambulatory of $75.18 'm December, but
:columbus.
COMMIJNICATl
¥0/m
• Holzer Clinic is a multi- Health Care.
feU in recent weeks to close
740-992-2156
MESSAGE TO VOTERS!
for a complete list of ser- last Friday at $5956.
:ple discipline health care
or992-2155
Shares bounced back
:system of more than 130 vices or to schedule an
:physicians providing care in appointmelll with Dr. Lepi, Monday amid a broad
,I
'more than 30 areas of call 740-589-3100 or visit upswing in the market,
~---- .:::::..:...,..-~
gaining $3.73 or 6J percent
:expertise. With nine loca· WWIV.holzerclinic .com.
BY KATHY MITCHEU
.,.,_

Birthdays

c'

Church events

organi7.:ations

Ohio county seeks fraud investigation of ACORN

Dugan birthday

Procter &amp; ·Gamble to face uneasy shareholders

a.c•••aN

.

~Lepi joins

"!"J!P

'

staff of Holzer Clinic

zoos ~ •:1

'

.&amp;ueadea Candidates
~fl

Atl•ertiserl

; I

08

"I

V01ERS Gl!IDE

II

The Daily Sentinel

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NATION

The Daily Sentinel

WORLD
The Capitol Dome
is seen near sunset in Washington,
Monday, Sept. 29.
In a stunning vote
that Shocked the ,
capital and world·
· wide markets, the '
House on Monday
. defeated a $700
billion emergency
rescue for the
rtation's financial
system, ignoring
urgent warnings
from President
.Bush and congres·
sional leaders of
both parties that
the economy could
nosedive without it.

MARTIN CRUTSINGER
AP ECONOMICS WAITER

: WASHINGTON - Tile
jlush admini.mation plans
'to spend un initial $250 bil~ion of til~ $700 billion
bailout buying stm:k in pri vate ban ks. great ly cxpandiilg prot~c ti ons for the U.S.
financial system out of d,•cp
:Concern f&lt; ir the fa ltering
':t:conomy. industry and gm::.
·crnmcnt olficiu ls said
:Mund,ly nigh t. President
Bush planned to announ&lt;.:e
the detail_, th i.\ murnin':!.
Agreement . on the ' plan
came after a 1 cm arkable
;rreasury Department meet·
_ing between top gnvern ment economic offi cials ami
executi Ves of ·the nation's
largest banks to revmi1p the
rl}0~1 costl y financial rescue
'in the nat ion's historv. ·
· The plan also wnuld pro·vide ·a w'av for the, ~ovenl­
'ment to Insure loa~1 s that
·banks ma ke to each other, a
critical ·part of the credit
system that has become
froLen and put many busi ness~s in peril.
· Earlier Monday, stocks
'soared around the world in
.response to dramatic government econom ic relief
efforts in the U.S. and over·
seas - and the possibility
of the even bolder American
action .
' Monday
night.
the
Treasury Department said
·the administra tion had
decided on "comprehensive ac tions" to bol ster
·public confidence in the
nation 's financial &gt;ystem,
Bush was to be briefed
early Tuesday by economic
'advisers
and
then
announce the plan. which
Treasury said was designed
to "restore functioning of
our credit market s."
Whil e the ad mini stration
refused to provide detail s
.in advance , industry and
government officia ls with
knowledge llf the pl an said
.it would 1nclude bil linn s of
· dollars in spend ing by the
government to purcha se
stock in b&lt;lllks as a way of
pro,·idint! them

d~.o·~pcralt.&gt;

ly needed nwne) so the y
CCm ld resume more normal

lend in~. The industrv and
.govcn1ment
nff'icials
:spoke on condi ti on of
:anon) mit~

b~(:au~e

Tue8day, October 14,2008

IAEA: NKorea renews
UN access to nuclear site

stay on site. A diplomat who
demanded anonymity for
divulgi.ng · confidential
VIENNA, . Austria
information told the AP that
North . Korea detlured Pyongyang approved visas
Monday that it will resume late last week for members
.shuning down its n.uclear of a new team once the tour
program and allow U.N. of those on location is over
experts to monitor the - even as it appeared to be
process, including making making moves to restart its
&gt;ure th~ plant that produced atomic activities .
·
plutonium for its test bomb
That suggested that the
North 's threat to stop disremains disabled .
The moves, revealed by mantling its nuclear prothe International Atomic ~ ram and restart it was a
Energy Agency, were a ~egotiating ploy meant to
stron_g
indication
that wrest concessions from the
Pyongyang was making five countries engaging the
good on its pledge to retum reclusive communist regime
to a deal 'with the U.S., on the issue ,
AP photo
Russia. China. South Korea
North Korea stopped
• and Japan ·meant to strip it of scrapping it s nuclear proits weapons-enabling nuckar gram in mid -AUj:USt in
program ,
anger over Washmgton's
Pyongyang announced failure to remove it from the
Sunday it would resume terror list and began moves
dismantlement in line with toward restarting its plutothe deal offering political nium-producing facility.
businesses that create new and energy rewards in The U.S. had · said Nonh
jobs. Republican John exchange, aft&amp;r the U.S , Korea first had to aUow verMonday, Oct 13,2008
McCain promised a change removed North Korea from · ification of the declaration
in
direetion from the Bush its list of states sponsoring of its '. nuclear programs it
CLOSE
CLOSE/ CHANGE FROM
admin istration's economic terrorism.
PAST 14 DAYS · SETILE PREVIOUS DAY
submitted in June'. ,
policies.
agency
inspectors
In deiisiing Nonh Korea
"The.
Dow Jones
~ 9,387.61 :* .11.1%
, A ~ for the Europeans, were ,, informed today that on Saturday,· Washington
governments there said they as of 14 October 2008, core said Prongyang had agreed
Eurotodollar ··~ ... $1.35
1.4%
' . . .. . ' . .
. ... .. .' '
were putting $2J trillion on discharge activities at, the to all 1ts nuclear inspectiqn
'·
the
line, based on pledges (nuclear) reactor would be demands.
Goldperounce ~ $838.90 . . · 1:9%
.,
,
.. ...... , .. ....... ... . . . ,... ... ,...... .................................. ..... ...... .
from Britain, Germany, resumed," said a restricted
The delisting - and the
Ollperbarr~l :.________ $81~19 •
4.1%
France, Spain , Austria and IAEA document to the North 's return to disabling
Portugal in recent days. To agency's 35 board members its nuclear facilities - will
LIBOR 3-month.:__ . - - - - 4.75% . . ·0.07
assist
the European banks, obtained by The Associated likely lead to a resumption
.,
.,.
..r.
.. ..; . .
··:;· ,.
the Federal Reserve here Press. It said "monitoring and of the stalled six-party talks
·• r-bllla-mon!h . ~ o.46% •
0.22
announced
Monday that it verification arrangements" of between North Korea, U&lt;S ,,
,,
was taking actions to assure the UN. nuclear agency also Russia , China, South Korea
• Lopdon Interbank Offered Rata for the dollar
enough U.S, dollars were would be restarted .
and Japan.
·
AP , available to meet demand.
Separately, IAEA spokesU .N, Secretary-General
SOURCE: Thornson Reuters
"The gove rnme~t cannot woman Melissa ·Fleming Ban Ki -moon welcomed tile
just leave people on ·their said IAEA inspectors "will resolution of the di~pute.
purchaseo. the . Federal day mark of 499 points. set own to be buffeted about," also' now. be permitted to His .
spoiCeswoman,
Deposit Insurance Corp. · in the waning days of the sa id British Priine Minister · reapply the containment and Michelle Mantas, said Ban
wi ll te mporarily provide dot-com boom in 2000. But Gordon Brown.
surveillance measures at the considered it "another step
insuranc:e for loans b~tween the surge carrie after the
The Bush administration reprocessing facility." That towards a verifiable nonhanks, charging the banks a. staggering ~asses of the also announced the selec- meant agency seals taken nuclear Korean Peninsula,"
premium ror doing so. . ·,· worst week ever, and econ- tion of a team of interim off the plant and monitoring
China also hailed' the
Thi s FDIC program omi sts sai d more rough managers, picked an outside cameras recently removed · North' s
decision
and
Wllllld take the form of pro- days can be expected . firm to he,lp run the program at the North's orders would pledged to move the process
vi ding in surance for new European markets ralli ed lind . selected a prominent be restored ,
forward as host of the
"senior prefciTed" debt that following Asia's lead in New York law firm to draw
Yongbyon , about 60 miles nuclear disarmament talks
one bank would knd 'to response to the widespread up guidelines for how the north of , Pyongyang, has tllat also involve Japan, the
stock purchase program will three main facilities: a 5- two Koreas, the United
another. This debt would be government initiatives.
Offidals
also megawatt reactor, a plutoni- States and Russia.
insured by the FDIC ·for
"These are tougl'l tin1es work.
t111'ee · years, helping . to for our economies, yet we announced that Bernanke um reprocessing plant and a
·"Promoting the six~pany
unlock bank-to-bank lend- can be confident that we can had agreed to serve as chair- fuel fabrication complex,
talks process serves the coming, which has fallen dra- work t)ur way through these man of the oversight board
The reactor is the center- man mteresrs of the involved
matically because of fears challenges and America will Co11gress mandated,
piece of the complex, with the parties," Foreign Ministry
Assis1ant
about repa,xmenl in .the face continue to work :closely
Treasur;r facility stretching more than a spokesman Qin Gang said in
of billions of,dollars of bank with the other nations to Secretary Neel Kashkan, mile along the, Churyong a statement issued late
losses because of bad loans, coordinate our response to · who was taJ?ped by Paulson River, satellite images show.
Monday. "China appreciates
primarily in mortgages,
thi's global financial' crtsis," to be intenm head of .the
The reprocessing center the.constructive effons nuu:le
The officials said that the Bush said followiu~ a meet- program B• week, ago; saic;l to the smfth of the reactor is by tile concerned parties."
FDIC would remove for· a ing with Italian .Premier that tl'i~ firm of Simpsop capable
of extracting
NQnb Korea afarn'led the
period the current $250.,000' .Silvio Berlusconi" at . the Thatcher &amp; Bartlett LLP weapot, ,-grade plutonium world in 2006 by setting of '
had been chosen to· work on from spent fuel rods.
limit on FDIC insurance on . White House.
.· .
test. nuclear blast. It then
bank deposits for non-interOver
the ,weekend, · guidelines on stock .putc
Up to late ' last week, the · agree~ to dismantle its
es! bearing accounts. This P~uls u n had called· the chases while ' the Invest• Nonh had threatened to reac- nuclear · ,program ·
in
would . primarily benefit heads of the five biggest ment Consultancy of Ennis tivate the plutoni'um repro- exchange for energy aid imd
businesses who use non- U.S. banks to come to Knupp &amp; Associates had cessing plant. · It told other concessions.
interest bearing accounts to Washington for face-to-face been picked to he\p super- International Atomic Energy
The regime began disabling
run ·their businesses. That talks about the rescue plan , vise the selection of the Agency .inspectors to remove its nuclear J?rocessing plant in
money would now · be according to people briefed' program's private · asset the organization's seals and · Yongbyon m November, and
insun;d , removing the need on the matter.
managers., .
subsequently banned them blew up a cooling tower in
"We are moving quickly from monitoring first the June in a dramatic display of
fot these businesses to jugGoldman Sachs CEO
gle funds among multiple Lloyd Blankfein. Morgan - but methqdically - and plant .and then all the facili- its determination to cany out
bank accounts to stay under Stanley CEO Joh n Mack , I am confident we are build- ·ties at the) complex. It also the process.
the $250.000 limit.
Citigroup CEO Vikram ing the foundation for a stopped deactrvating the
Just steps away from
strong,
decisive
and
effecCongress as paFt of the PandiL JPMtlrgan Chase &amp;
nuclear reactor at Yongbyon. completing the Second
bailout bi ll temporarily Co. CEO Jamie Dimon. and tive program," Kashkari
The North rescinded all phase of the three-part
boosted the deposit insur- Bank of 1\m~rica Corp. said in a speech to the inspection rights Thursday. process, Pyongyang abruptance cap from $100.000 to CEO Kenneth Lewis were Institute of International but the three-member IAEA ly reversed course and
flankers.
$250.000,
all asked to atle nd.
team had been allo,wed to stopped disabling the plant.
The administration's proDem ocrats in Congress,
posals were. explained dur- while
supp t\rtivc
of
ing a meeting at the . Paul so11·s des ire to expand
Treasury Department that the program': complained
had been called by Treasury earlier Monday . that not
Secretary Henry Paulson enough strings were being
and included the top execu- attached, such as restricting
tives of·the largest banks in excessive compensation for
country,
Federal Wall Street executives who
the
Reserve Chairman Ben raked in millions of dollars
., .
Bemanke also participated in bonuses by pursuing
in the discussions. ·
risky investment strategies
The new approach by the that have now helped push
•
OPENHOUSE
U.S. govemment is mod- , the U.S, fina ncial system to
THURSDAY, OCTOBEiU 6, 2008
c l~ tl after parts of the &gt;trong the brink. . '
.
1:00PM•• 4:00P.M.
initiati ves in Europe. where
The govern11,1ent should
govCmmems put $2 .3 tril - purchase only stock in
.
,
. It ualily luolth ·tar&lt; without discriminalion .
lion on the lin~ Monday . in financ ial firms that agree to
'di
tss to -«ordabl&lt;, hrg 9
Pnm· ng ace
""' 306 North Second Avenue
guara ntee&gt; and other emer. cur di vi&lt;iends puid to share.
,
gency measures to save holders. adhere to strict limMiddleport, Ohio ~760
banks there.
its on executive compcnsa740-992-0540
The $700 billion rescue tion and curb their use of
program th at Congress exoti c inv;;stment' strate'
. I ased and proud to invite you to join us as we
passed on Oct. 3 will con- ~ie&gt;. SJid Sen. Charles
1
Family Healthcare, Inc . 5 Pe
st location in Middleport .
tmue to fe&lt;lture·the pun.:ha&gt;e Schumer. D-.'I.Y., chainnan
celebrate
our
newe
bv the col'ernmcnt of of the .Joint Economic
008 we will have a very informal
On Thursday, October t6H, 2 r"rom 1·00 p.m. to 4:00pm.
h;mk'' bact' a&gt;Sch but wi ll Comm ittee,
•
now devote , a s i~ni.ficant
Separately,
House
.
"meet and greet" Open
, : ouse nd·introduction
of our sta ff
There will be a facthty tour a ·nbe rovided
and
pan of th,• etfort to direct Republicans
•
, Light refreshments wt . p 40 992-0540 or
gO\ ernmcnl purchases . of Democrats pu,hc&lt;l for fresh
V p· 0 Wanda Edwards at 7 stock in banks. an idea that action to stimu late the faiplease
R.S.
· ·~
h rtigerrose@yahoo.com
Pauhon brought up only te ring e&lt;:onomy.
via e-matl at c ee
:
Democrat&gt;
scheduled
last week.
Major stock markets hearings to consider a postaround th e world 'umed ,election stimulus package
'a?e ~
,_'ft .
higher - after plunging that could CO&gt;t as much as
ever lower l4~1 week -,a, S151l hillion. Republicans .
leJk~k~~
traders henan 10 hear of ca ll ed for more tax cuts and
~~Uf·
Europ~ ·, , ~·tions and the energy exploration.
In a campaign speech in
l?''"ihility of further ,ICp&lt;
in the United States.
Ohio. Democrat Barack
On Wall Str• d, a record Obam.~ propched a 90-day
'1.'6-point in,rca&gt;e in the moratorium on honw tore Dow lone' industrial&gt; far closure&gt; :u ,omc bank&gt; and
surpassed
the prev1ou'
one- ' a two-:. car ta' bre-ak for
l
..
BY GEORGE JAHN

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

bank

Bush to
: Bv

P~ge .A2

th~

.&lt;fetaib v.cre vet to be for:mall y rele;bed.
· Th e admi nistration wi ll
use 5250 bill ion of the
bail out progr~un r~cently
:passed by Congrc" to huy
·into U.S .'bank&gt;, the ofllciaL'
~a id , The govemmcn t ini -tially will pur&lt;.:ha&gt;e stock of
:nine · l arg~ bank,, but the
program is expected lu be
expanded to many ' others.
. Am o n ~ the initial banb
:participating will be all nf
3he country"s largest in,titu ·
1ions, including Cit igroup
1nc.. Wells Fargo &amp; Co ..
JPMorcan Cha'c &amp; Co .
Bank o-f America Cnrp , unci
Morgan S!anle), '':Jid nne
:Official. who added thut
;)ldministration hrid'er, did
'101 provide any amounts
{hat would be receil'ed by
·indi' idual ban b.
. The
admini&gt;tratlon
e'pects to spend the S~50
:billion bu)ing bank &gt;toe~
:before the end of this year.
~hi, offi cial said . Bush "ill
;certif) nn Tuc,da) th;ll
-another ) 100 billion is ,
needed from the $700 billion re,cue IJrogram. That
would bne the final $350
billion to be 'IJent.
In addition to the stock

Market wrap

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The Daily Sentinel

BY THE BEND.

PageA3
Tuesday, October 14, 2008

Community Calendar
No say in adontion decision --.--.----.-------;----------;ANNIE· s M A It Box

r'roo harsh to do the same to PubliC llleetiJJp

regular meettng 7':l0 p m
installation of offi- Valley Tabernacle Churcli,
· for mstallauon
· ' . · , of., annual
7:30 p.m ., members f ur- Bar·1ey Run Road . Se rvrce
. ~
pracnce
cers,
M
AND ARCV &lt;&gt;UUAA
him and promise to help Out
officers following .
nish pot luck, refreshments,
continue through Oct. 19.
and then not show up- just
Tuesday, Oct. 14
POMEROY _ Meigs
· Thursday, Oct. 16
Sunday. Oct. I~
Dear Amiie: My husband so he knows how it feels?
POMEROY - Salisbury County
Chamber
of
POMEROY
RACINE
'and I hav~ two wonderful
Is it OK to not buy him ~~.;:'.n,s:m~s~fsM~n~;~g Commerce business-mind- Pomeroy/Racine Masonic Homecoming at Moming
,daughters, ages 5 and 6 . We Christmas presents this ¥ear? Roush .
ed
luncheon ,
n()()n . Lodge #164 regular meet- Star United Methodi st
,hav~ always wanted to adopt I gave him a .home when his
Wed
. nesclay', Oct. IS
Pomeroy L_.tbrary, Melf?S ing, 7:30 p.m., at the lodge Church , 10 a.m .. with dina chtld and have decided it's place burned down. I put
·
C
Ec
in Racine. Taking donations ner at 12:30 p.m. Afternoon
'time . We are Well inio the' · tires on his car when he didRUTLAND - Leading ' ounty
onomtc for Operation . Christmas si ng at 1:JO p.m.
~process of adopting through n't have the money, - Tired Creek
Conservancy Development
Di!ector Child, Bring dish towel for
5
. District,
·p.OL Perry Varnadoe speakmg.
pantry project Call Randy
,o ur local foster care system, of Being Che Giving Tree
22
and our girls are thrilled to
Dear Tired: It's OK not Re5che'duled from Oct ·
Wednesday Oct. IS
Smith at 508-0816,
·
POMEROY ~ Middleport
.be getting a brother.
to buy him Christmas pre(Ubs and
Literary Club will meet at the
Frida\•, Oct. 17
'Y'!e are open to adopt a sents, if that 's what Y9U
Po~roy Library: Leah 0rc1
POMEROY
- Emma
.child of any race. Everyone is want to do. But please dori't
will review "Hope's Boy'' by
will
tum
97 on
Broderick
suppontve of our decision, stoop to his level and make '
·
H
·n
Thursday, Oct. 16
Oct&lt; 17, Cards may be sent
with the exception of my hus- promises you don't keep.
Andrew Bndge. ostess wt
POMEROY - Rev ival to The Maples . 100
,band's stepfather. "'Bruce" has That is spiteful and will.only
Tuesday, Oct. 14
be Olita Heighton .
·
v
HARRISONVILLE
HARRISONVILLE
with Evangeli;t Jerry Memorial
Dr. . #21 0.
,been manied to my mother- escalate the animosity, .our #255 Order of Eastern Star, ln55 Order of Eastern Star• Cottrell, 7 p.m., Fa ith Pomeroy. Ohio 45769 .
in-law for four years. He told son may have a problem
her thar he if we adopt an remembering plans he made
:African-American child, he months in advance and f OU
will not allow the boy into his might need to remind him.
;home. He says .he can't llelp
Also;enlist his girlfriend in
By THOMAS J. SHEERAN
the way he feels , He also went the process so she doesn't
ASSOCIATED PRESS
.on to tell .her that if we do pre-empt you with plans of
.adopt a child of another race, her own, If he still flakes out '
CLEVELAND - Election
it will be the last stake driven on you, stop inviting him an&lt;!
officials
in swing state Ohio's
into their maniage,
make other arrangements.
· Annie, my husband and I
Dear Annie: 1 read the most populous county asked.
are furious about his atti· letter from "Tired of Being a prosecutor M~y to
,tude. My mother-in-law is Tired." 1 just want to let her investigate alleged voter-regsupportiv,e of our decision . know that I also have the istration fraud, ineluding at
.How do we handle his igno- Epstein-Barr virus: I've had least' four dozen registrations
obtained from one man by an
,ranee? - Colorblind
it for 14 years. .
Dear Colorblind: You
I used to feel tired all the ·advocacy group under fire in
,ignore it Bruce has no say time, too. I was discouraged other states,
The bipartisan Cuyahoga
.in your ·decision to adopt because my doctor gave me
.He also should not interfere ' the same advice he gave her County Board of Elections
.,in your mother-in-law's - all you can do is eat voted unanimously to ask
desire to have a rehttionship healthy, exercise and rest cou"nty Prosecutor Bill
.with her new grandchild . If But I want her to know there Mason to investigate multi.his marriage means so little is hope, I staned doing all ple registrations by four
,to him that he would use the the things the doct(lr recom- people who signed forms at
,adoption as a- reason to mended . I exercise, eat the behest of a community
throw it away,, it was healthy and go to b5.early organizing group , the
already on shaky ground.
in order to get at least eight Association of Community
, In some cases , over time hours of sleep every night. I Organizations for Reform
·Now, known as ACORN.
and with encouragement, a don't drink or smoke.
One of the new voters,
Amazingly, I feel b,etter
·baby can overcome such a
AP photofThe Plain Dealer, Marvin Fang
Freddie
Johnson , 19, of Freddie Johnson, is Interviewed by media outside the Board of Elections, in Cleveland on
-resistant grandpareilt'.s atti-. now than when I was
.tude. We hope that's the younger. My epstein-Barr Cleveland, said he signed 73 Monday, Johnson, 19, of Cleveland, said he signed 73 voter registration forms over a five·
,case, but either way, please virus is still there, but I ·voter registration fonns over month period and sa!d he was trying to help paid ACORN solicitors collect signed regis·
·let Mom handle her racist have learned how to man- a five-month·· period. In trations buf he didn't intend to vote more than once . .
return, ACORN · canvassers
·husband.
age.it. - C.
.Dear Annie: I have a
Dear C.: Thanks for the gave him cigarettes or cash, iting duplicate registrations. seven ACORN voter-regis- . sider presenting it to a grand
wonderful 21-year-old sop suggestions. We ho~ your about $20 in all, he told She said the organization tration solicitors while wait- jury, which could return
·who is handsome and smart. letter will help others stay WEWS-TV in Cleveland, was proud of its work regis- ing for a bus. Other can- charges in an indictment.
·He has a stable job and a healthy and strong,
'
The BOOrd of Elections pre- tering new. voters .
vassers stood 10 feet away said his &gt;pokesman, Ryan
Annie's Mailbox is writren sented documents showing
.good relationship with his
The group says it has while a solicitor approached · Miday, There is no time
.live-in girlfriend. Yet on byKathyMiJcheUandMarcy Johnson's name on48 forms. signed up I J million poor him, Johnson said.
frame for a grund jury prethree holidays this yea,r, I Sugar, longtime ediJors of
Johnson said he was trying and working-class voters in
'They never told me I sentati on. he said.
; ·made plans with him the Ann Landers column. to help paid ACORN solici- a mass registration drive in couldn't stop signing them,"
Gall said ACORN can. ;months m advance, and all Please e-moil your questions tors collect signed regi'stra- 18 states this year. Some of said Johnson, who works vassers arc paid hourly , not
three times he never showed to · anniesmailbox@com- tions but he didn't intend to those registration cards selling cell phones. Johnson for each signed registration
·or called. I found out later cast.net, or write to: Annie's . vote more than once.
have become the focus of said he 'was surprised by the they obtain. If canvassers
·he went t&lt;i his girlfriend's Mailbox, PO. Box 118190, · Tw,o s~bpoenaed witness- , fraud · investigations , in attention his multiple regis- kept going back to the same
:parents or his dad's instead. · Chicago, IL 60611. To find es dtdn t sjlow up at the Nevada, · Connecttcut, trations had attracted,
person to sign a registration
I told him it hun to be out more. about Annie's elections board hearing.
Missouri and other states.
Members of the board , card, "It sounds like people
·treated this way. I also said I Mailbox; and read fe~s
Johnson, who said he didn't split 2-2 by law between were beiilg lazy.'' she said ..
The founh~ Christopher
"''1} am tired of being founh pri- by ,other Creators SfndiC~ · Barkley of Cleveland, said understand voter-registration Democrat's
and
Any ACORN canvas,ser
·ority when it comes to such wrtters and Ml1oomsts, visit he was bad~ered into sign- procedures, was one of four Republicans , sent the matter who fails to meet the orgathings and I will not allow it . the Creators Syndicate Web ing reeistratlons, even when people who were subpoenaed to Mason for investigation . nization's training standards
to happen again. Am I being page at www.creators.com ..
he told canvassers that he to ,testify over duplicate regis- One member, Democrat · is fired, she said .
had done so. He said some trations. Johnson said afterthe lnajo Davis Chappell, said
Nevadit state investigators
of the 13 registrations in his board meeting that he had the board's referral should- last week raided ACORN\
name had been signed by been assured by the ~heriff's n't be limited to the four Las Vegas headquarters.
!tim, but not alL
department that the investiga- new voters in question ,,
seizing document s rind
ACORN's state director, tion was aimed at ACORi"
Mason, a Democrat run- computer data as pm1 of a
RACINE
Lily
Katy Gall, watched the solicitors and he wouldn't ning for re-election in the prob~ into scores of fabri Nov, 4 election in heavily cated registration forms ,
board's discussion and said face criminal charges.
Angelina Dugan cel~brated
'her founh binhday recently
later that ACO:RN had coopJohnson told the board Democratic Cleveland and including those signed in
erated with the investigation that he sometimes would Cuyahoga County, will the .names· of Dallas profes·
:at the home her great grand- ,
·parents, David and Ann
and would fire anyone solic' get approached by six or review the matter and con- sional football players.
' Zirk~e. Racine.
' Lily enjoyed playing and
·watching her favorite
movies on videos. She also
:enjoyed dinner and a binhcompany's customers and 24 brands with :mimal sales
CINCINNATI (AP) . .:_ to $63.29.
:day cake and ice cream. She
Procter &amp; Gamble Co . leadA.G. Lalley. P&amp;G"s chief suppliers _o,yere feeling the of $1 billion or more - and
·was joined by her father,
ers are gearing up .tp face executive , said recently that effects of the credit crunch, everyday usage t)f its hou seArnie Dugan of Zanesville ,
some une\ISY shareholders P&amp;G sales had been largely He and other P&amp;G officials · hold items help it during a
'and her grandmother,
· at this year's annu~l' meet- unaffected by the nation ·s have said that the company's ti111e when many c:onDebbie Qui vey, Pomeroy,
ing today.
.
· economic crisis, but the brand strength - including sumers' budgets are tight.
, Sending gifts were her
Many in the audience are
Lily Angelina Dugan
;great grandmother, Robert
often retirees, including for.swisher of New Haven,
mer P&amp;G employees who
Dick
and
Barb
Dugan
and
:W.Va ., Brenda and Mike
(===:==~
have substantial investments
;Seagraves and Kyrie Swann Jerry, Dixie, Hannah, Becky in the company, whose
'Of Middleport; grandparents, and Grace Wolfe of Racine. products include Crest
toothpaste, Gillette shavers
::--~--------------------------------~-and Pampers diapers.
Long a stable growth stock,
P&amp;G's shares - which are
: ATHENS - Mark S.
still a component of the Dow
'Lepi, MD , has joined
Jones industrial average I'
:Holzer Clinic's team of
haven't been immune from
:skilled professionals.
recent Wall Street gyrations. ·
I
: Dr. Lepi is cenified by the
''We'd like to hear that it's
1;
of
going to go up," said Mary
:American
Board
I
I
'
'
I
'
'
I
'Pediatrics as well as the
Ossman, planning to attend
'
:American Board of Internal
Tuesday morning's m,eeting
i
:Medicine and cares for
with her husband Jim . She
CI~N/~1-ttt 1~1-~f;CTifJIV
I'
said P&amp;G · is one of the
:patients of all ages: .
• Formerly practJcm~ at
major holdin~s among the
iI I
retired couple s investments.
:Buckeye Internal Medtcine
'
"None of it's very good at
:and Pediatrics in Lancaster,
I'
the moment, but up until
:Lepi joins Holzer Clinic to
tI
recently, P&amp;G has been
'practtce pediatrics and
doing OK ,'.' she said . "To be
:mternal medicine, ·at the
To be inserted in·the ,
honest
with
you,
it's
very
:racilitr located in Athens.
Mark Lapl
difficult to feel entirelr, con: Lep1 received his doct?r
'
'of medicine from the Ohto lions throughout southeast- fident about anything. '
:State University College of em Ohio and western West · A year ago, f!&amp;G stock was
:Medicine in Columbus, and Vrrginia, Holzer .Ciinic pro- on a hot streak that included
on Friday- October 31st ·
:COmpleted his residency at vides medical excellence 12 straight days of record
Deadline 5 p,m - October 24
closes just before the share'Ohio State University coupled with local caring,
:Hospital as well . as the.,. Holzer Clinic is accredit- holders meeting. It moved on
THIS INFORMATIVE Gil/DE
Contact· Brenda Davis or Dave Harris
:Children's Hospital in ed by the Accreditation to a split,ad)usted record high
IS A WINNING WAY TO
for advertising information &amp; ~ssistance
I!
Association of Ambulatory of $75.18 'm December, but
:columbus.
COMMIJNICATl
¥0/m
• Holzer Clinic is a multi- Health Care.
feU in recent weeks to close
740-992-2156
MESSAGE TO VOTERS!
for a complete list of ser- last Friday at $5956.
:ple discipline health care
or992-2155
Shares bounced back
:system of more than 130 vices or to schedule an
:physicians providing care in appointmelll with Dr. Lepi, Monday amid a broad
,I
'more than 30 areas of call 740-589-3100 or visit upswing in the market,
~---- .:::::..:...,..-~
gaining $3.73 or 6J percent
:expertise. With nine loca· WWIV.holzerclinic .com.
BY KATHY MITCHEU
.,.,_

Birthdays

c'

Church events

organi7.:ations

Ohio county seeks fraud investigation of ACORN

Dugan birthday

Procter &amp; ·Gamble to face uneasy shareholders

a.c•••aN

.

~Lepi joins

"!"J!P

'

staff of Holzer Clinic

zoos ~ •:1

'

.&amp;ueadea Candidates
~fl

Atl•ertiserl

; I

08

"I

V01ERS Gl!IDE

II

The Daily Sentinel

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P~geA4

OPINION

The Daily Sentinel

'IUaday' October 14, zooS

Tuesday, October 14, 2008

Obituaries

·McCain,
'Obama
again
dodged
priority
questions
: The Daily Sentinel
•

..

111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio
(740). 992-2156 ·FAX (740) 992-~157

www.mydailysentinel.com

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Dan GOodrich
Publisher
Charlene Hoeflict"t
General Manager-News Editor
•

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Co11gress slra/1 IIJake 110 lawrespectiiiJ! atr
. establislrrrimt of rel(f[ion, or prolribiting tilt'
:Jru c·xercise tlrereoj; or abrid)!iiiJ: tlu fi'eedorrr ·
: of speech, or of the prc·ss; or the ri.f!hl of the
: people peaceably to assemblr,.arrd to petitio11
~- tire Gor•errrmrrrt for a re.dress o.f.flrier•ances.
- The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

·•

:TODAY IN HISTORY
· Today is Tuesday. Ocl. 14 . the 28Xth day or 200X . There
are 78 days lefl in th ~ year.
Today"s Highlight in l-li""'Y On.: hundred years ago, on
Ocl. 14. 1908.the Chicago Cuh won the World Series as they
defeated the Detroit Tigers in liame 5. 2·0. at Benne!! Park .
On "this date : in 1066. Normans under William the
Conqueror deJCatcd the Engli sh at the Bank of Hastings .
. In I 1)90. Dwight D. Eise nhower. 34th president or the
United Stales. was horn in Dcnistm. Texas.
. In 19()!\, the E.M. Forster no vel ··A Room With a View··
was first published .
.
In 1912. Theodore Roosevelt. ~:amp ai g nin.g for the pre~i ­
dcncy. was shot in the chest in Milwaukee .. Despilc the
wounJ . he went ahead with a scheduled speech.
- In I933. Nazi Germany tmnoUJKed it '"" withdrawing
!"rom tl1e League.of Nations.
·
In 1944. German Field Marshal Erwin Rommel committed suicide rather tl1an face execution for ai legedl y conspir·
ing again st Adolf Hitler.
.
In 1947 . Air Force test pilot Charles E. (""Chuck") Yeager
.\&gt;rokc the sound barrier'" he !lew the experimental Bell XS·
I (later X- 1) rncket plane over Murnc Dl)' Lake in California .
In 1%0. the idea of a·Peace Corps was first suggested hy
Democratic" presidential c;JJididatc John F Kennedy to an
&lt;iudicncc of students at the University nf Michigan.
.
In I!J6X. thc first suc-cessful live tdccast from a manned
·u.S . spacecraft was. tr:msmincd from Apollo 7.
: In llJK7. a rea l-l ik drama began in Midland , TexlJs , as
·I X- moJJth-old Jessica McC iui·c slid 22 feet down an ab:m ·
doned we ll at a pri vate day care' centc , Hundreds of res· ·
·
( uers worked 5K l1ours to free her. )
'I!Jday"s llirthdays : Actor Roger Moore is XI. Movie
director Carroll Ball;1rd is 71. Country singe r Me lb;J
Montgomery is 70. Fashion designer Ral ph Lauren is 69.
Singer CliiT Richard is 6K. Actor Udn Kicr is 64. s·inger·
musician Justin Hayward (The Moody Blues) is 62. Actor
l-lanyA nderson is 56. Ac·tor Greg Evigan is' 55 . TV personulity Arleen So r~in is 52. Golf Hall-of-Famer Beth Daniel is
52. Singc r-musi&lt;:ian Thomas Dolby is 50. Singer Karyn
While is 43. Actor Jon Scda is 38. Country musician Doug
Virden is 38. Country singer Nallllic Maines (The Dixie
Chick,) is 34. Actress-singer Sh&lt;JWay Lewis (All Saints) is
~3. Singer Usher is 30. Actor Jordan Brower is 27.
· Thought for Today : " Nincly·.ninc percent of failure s
lome rrom pco ~le who have the habit of makin g exc u,.
cs." ' - Gcmgc Wasl1ing1on Ca rver, Amcrium botanist
(I HM- 194.-, ).

.Elections letters advisory
L~ · tters

dea ling u·ith 1hc• No 1·. .J. election an'

ll 'dcomC'

am/

ll ·i/1 be acn·pred 11(1 mllii 5 (J.I PI . o11 Friday, Ocr. 24 , Lctrd".&lt;
n•cei•·n l alia rhar deadline ,. ·ill no/ he p111&gt;/ished. Letters
.l ltolfld l1e 301! H'ords i11 /en grh or le.u and 11111.11 addre.u
is.we.\·, notfUT.wmalities. Lclfl'r.\ t'ndorsing local ornation ol candidatt .\', or , ·rmtohn'ng fJtT .w mal aum·ks. ~rill not he
1/f ·c 'l!fJTfd.

'

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR
•

l.frten ro 'thi! editor art·· H'elcom e. Titer should he lr:ss

ilwn 300 1\'ords. A!/ letrers urc .ml~ir..'c' l to . Nliting, masr he
signed. and i"fldude ruldres,\ wul teleplww.' wuuher. No
1111sig 11&lt;'d !t' lll'l"s 1ril/ he l" 'hlished . L&lt;'ll•' rs .\1/l&gt;llld be i11
g(wd hl.\'te , addrt,\".\iug is.\'lu's. 1101 pa.wmalities. Lerters r~j'
tlumk.\ lo orgcmi.-mhms a lid indil'iduuls u·ilf IWI hi' accep t-

ed.fi,. pul&gt;licmio11 .

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Ohio Valley Publishing
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Even though questions
about spending and tax priorities and "too much debt"
were "'ked again at
Tue&gt;day night\ presidential
debate. John McCain and
Barack Obama once again
failed lu answer them .
In faC"t.they both perpetuated the fanta'y that theY'
can keep all their policy proposals intact ~ and add new
ones . - and pay for them
with fuzzy 'pending cuts.
""We obviously have to stop
thi s s'pcnding spree that's
going on in Washington,"
M('Cain said. ""Do you know
that we've laid a $10 trillion
debt on these young
Americans who are here with
us tonight , $100 billion of it
we owe to China?"
A sentence or two later, he
proposed a new $300 bill ion
program to buy up di stressed home mongages. "Is
it expen'sive? Yes," he·said ,
but it"s necessary to stabili ze home values . ··
He did not even hint at how
he'd pay for the program or his tax· cuts that may co~t
$450 billion a year - except
to say he'd freeze some
domestic spending for one
year and eliminate earmarks,
which cost $18 r.illion a year.
Then Obama attacked
President Bush for increasing the national debt from $5
trillion to $10 trillion, but he
assened that he would be
able to cut taxes for 95 percent of Americans, expand
health care and make college
atfordable - "but !' ni actually cutting more than I'm
spending , so that it will be a
net spending cut," he said.
Yet no budget watchdog
g r0~1p in town estimates that
either McCain or Obama was
going I(&gt; contain the deficit
even before the cunent ecunoniic crisis - which is creating revenue losses and
increased outlays that could
add $1 trillion to the national

undoubtedly would add a
new economic stimu lu'
package to this fiscal yea.r\
eltminating fraud .
Meantime . the National ;,pending agenda and "aft~r
Committee for a Responsible la&gt;l night. I have a smkwg
Federal Budget estimated in feeling in the pit of 111,1
Sep~mber that Obama's stomach"" about the na11on '· ·
mid3le-class tax breaks and fiscal situation .
Another paneJ i,t, forme r
new spending programs
Comptroller
General David
. would · cost $635 billion in
2013. while, he'd ·recover Walker: now president ut
$414 billion in tax increases ihc Peter G. Petcrsun
and spending cuts, for a net Foundation. said that curre nt defici ts and the $ LU tril'deficit of $22 1 billion.
But $156 billion of the lion national debt were f:1r
savings was from Iraq with- from ·the full burden facing
·
drawal , $67 billion · from the next generation.
Entitlement promises "unspecified"
cuts or
"spending reforms'' and $75 chietly Soc ial Security.
. billion from '"closing tax Medicure and Metlicaid bene·
fits - amount to $55 trillion .
loopholes and shellers" constituting
"massive tmw·.
all fuzzy estimates.
tion
without
representation
...
·
The Tax Po li cy Center
"The low-tux. · hi gh·
calculated that Obama ·s tax
policies of the cur·
spending
proposals - cuts for the
middle class. increases for rent generation is pulling a
the rich - would net out at burden on the next genera·
· $332.5 · billion in lost rev· tion that is not onl y Jiscally.
enues in 2013 and increase irresponsible . hut morall y
the deficit by $2.9 trillion reprehensible ;• Walker said ,
adding that, "I was disap:
.
over I0 years.
The center estimated that pointed in both l&gt;f the presi·
Obama's health plan would dential candidates" for not
cost $1.6 trillion . not the addressing the problem.
So far. debate moderators
$650 billion hi s campaign
estimates. though it would Jim Lehrer. Gwen Ifill and
"cover virtually all children . Tom Brokaw all have .tried
and many currently . unin- to get the presidential and
sured adults." ·
vice-presidential candidates
At a recent post-debate io .say._in view of the ecopanel spOnsored -by the New nomic crisis, what programs
America Foundation. fonner they 'd forgo or postpone .
The only concrete answer,
-Rep. Bill Frenzel. R-Minn ..
a budget expert now with from Sen . Joseph B.iden. DBrookings. said thaf all pre- . Del.. was a slowing down of
crisis estimates have become Obama's proposed doubling
"obsolete" - meaning. the of foreign aid. a $25 billionnew reality is much worse.
a-year item.
During the debate. he said.
Granted that the next presithe candidates "were specif- dent's fir.;! job will be ecoically asked about how their nomic recovery - which
priorities might change and will cost money - it's up to
what sacrifices they were · CBS's Bob Schieffer lo wresasking for. 11 's in the nature tle out answers about what
. of political candidates to be has to go. Good luck to him .
cunningly evasive and they
(Morton Koi1dracke is
offered no clues to the execuriJ·e editor of Roll
answers to theSl! questions ." Call. ril e newspaper of
He noted that Congress Capiro/ Hill.)
$1.3 trillion. but he didn 'I
sa)' how. except to mention

·
debt this year alune. ·
Prior to the crisis. McCain
was promising to balance the
.federal budget by W 13. but
the nonpanisan Committee
for a Responsib)e Federal
Budget estimated that , at
hesl. he'd rack up a deficit of
.
$147 billion.
The committee estimated
McCain's proposed tax cuts
to (.'OS! $417 billion to $485
billion that year ....: based on
· his campaign's own estimates
- but another group. the
Brookings Institution-Urban
Institute Tax Policy Center,
said they .could coSt $700 bil-·
lion, based on McCain's statements in slump speeches.
Meantime , while McCain
claims that his health care
reforms would be "budgetneutral ," the Tax Policy
Center estimates that they'd
cost $1.3 trillion over 10 years
and only ''modestly trim the
· nu·mber of the uninsured."
To offset these outlays, ihe
Commiltee
for
a
Responsible Federal Budget
· calculated that McCain was
proposing to cut spending by
$291 billion to $304 billion
in 20 13 - but $159 billion
or that came from "unspeci·
fied cuts," $35 billion from
eliminating .earmarks and
$103 billion by reducing
forces in Iraq - not exactly
guaranteed savings.
· Earlier this week, McCain
domestiC adviser Douglas
Holtz-Eakin told the Wall
Street Journal that McCain
might pay for his health
plan by slashing Medicare
and Medicaid outlays by

Rodney Eupne Gaul
VINCENT - Rodney
Eugene Gaul, 66 of. 4
Lewis Pointe Dr., Vincent
di~ Friday; Oct. 10, 2008:
at hts home .
He ~as born on Dec. 25,
194I, tn Sumner, to Barbara
Weber Gaul Sargent and the
late L. Cecil Gaul. He
retired from DuPont after 42
years, serving the bulk of
his career as a central maintenance supervisor.
He also served as presi .
dent · of the Dupont
Washington .works 25-year
Club. Rod was a member of
St. Ambrose Catholic
~un:h . He was an active member of the community, serv~
mg '?n the Warren Local School Board for eight years and
servmg as pres1dent "of the Barlow-Vincent PTA and as a
Cub Scout Master of Barlow Pack 217.
He often volunteered his time supporting various youth .
sports and recreational activities rn the Barlow-Vincent
~mmun!ty. He was a strong supporter of the Relay for Life
m Washmgton County, an avtd fisherman, outdoorsman
and basketball player. Rod also held a .black belt in the
Fugak.ukai International Aikido Association . .
He is survived by his wife ·of almost 45 years, Sharon
Moore Gaul. They were married on November 22, 1963.
Also surviving: a daughter, Sara E.. Mills (Brian) of West
Chester, Ohio; sons, Michael R. Gaul (Barbara) of
Winchester, Va., and Jeremy Gaul (Samantha) of Guysville;
five grandsons: Jacob and Timothy Gaul, Mitchell and
Evan Gaul and Alexander Mills; his mother Barbara Gaul
Sargent of Sumner; a sister, Lorett~ Murphy (Edward) of
Tuppers Plains; a brother, Roger Gaul (Paula) of Sumner;
hi~ mother-in"Jaw, H11pe Moore, and the godparents of his
chtldren, Charles Jeffrey and Joyce Ramsey of Torch.
A funeral liturgy, with Mass will be held at II a.m. on .
Tuesday, Oct. 14, 2008, at St. Ambrose Catholic Church,
with'the Rev. Robert Gallagher as celebrant. ·
Burial will follow at St. Mary's Cemetery in Little
Hocking. Cawley &amp; Peoples offers online condolences by ·
visiting their website , www.cawley\llldpeoples.com. .

Brownie Viljakllja
~UTLAND

- Brownie Vujaklija, 85, of Rutland, passed
away on Oct. 12, 2008, at Holzer Medical Center.
He was born on Oct. 22. 1922in Elizabeth, Pa., son of the
late Nicholas and Vicilia Vujaklija.
··
.
He is survived by his wife, Margaret Vujaklija; three children: David and Barbara Vujaldija, Vicki Carpenter, and Kay
and Brynn Sutphin; three stepchildren: Sharon and Tom
Atkins, Lawrence Vance, and Dreama and Kim Devincent;
four wandchildren: David Vujaklija, k, Tanya Allen, Mandi
Jo Givens and Breana Hemsley; three step grandchildren:
Tanya George, Brynn Sutphin and Craig Devincent; seven
great grandchildren; and severa nieces and .nephews.
Funeral will be held at 7 r.m. on Wednesday, Oct. IS ,
2008 at Anderson McDanie ·Funeral Home in Pomeroy
with Pastor Teresa Davis officiating.
.
Visiting hours will be-from 5-7 p.m. on Wednesday at the
funeral home. A registry is availa~le online at www.andersonmcdaniel.com.

THEGOOO

NEWS IS THAT
IT'S OlolTHE
TOP OFTHE
CHARTS..

'

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• .. ·•· i'

'

Deaths
Janaes Taylor ·

Obama doesn't get McCain on torture
During the widely seen
and analyzed premier presidential debate, Barack
Obama was grossly mistaken
when. lownnl the ·end. he
said : "I give Senator McCain
great c:n;dil on the ronure
issue. t(,. having identified
that as something that undermines our long-term security
- because of those things.
we. I think. are going to have
a lot of work to do i~ the next
administrution to restore that
sense that . America is that
shining beacon on a hill."
Our torture has shamed us .
In fact , although McCain
i11 tire past has spoken eloquently against torture during interrogations of terrorism suspects, his actual
vutcs in CO'ngrcss tell a different , shameful story.
·
He voted for the Detainees
Treatment Act of 2005 thai
stripped Guantanamo Bay
prisoners of their habeas corpus rights (until the Supreme .
Court tried to intervene) .
That law added an "appeal"
procedure ihat prevented
prisoners from appealing
their conditions of confine1.nent ~ where .the "cQI!rcive
int ~;rrogation s" and brutal
lorce-feeding happened with
no objection from McCain .
In 2006, McCain voted for
the Military Commissions
Act aft~r the Supreme Coun
(Hamdan v. RumsleiJ) temporarily restmed habeas
rights at Guantanamo. Thai
new law essentially 'overruled
the Supreme Court &amp;&gt;r a time
and gave George W. Bush the
right. by himself. to interpret
the Geneva Conventions,
which expressly forbid
"cruel. inhuman and degrading treatment'" of prisoners.
When . the president then ,
by executive orde"r, continued
the "special powers" he had
· given th ~ CIA in their secret
prisons (""black sites") wholly .

'

the Senate tlool' as both the tion will confirm Poland ·
House and Senate passed an hosted. illegal CIA prisons.
amendment that mandated The crucial step will be
the CIA adhere to the Army gathering evidence of prac- .
Field Manual - which all tieing torture." (Reponed on
our other services .follow - . the Web site Juris Doctor, of
Nat
. that forl;&gt;ids torture.
the University of Pittsburgh
Hentoff
John McCain voted School of Law, Sept. 27 .)
against that . antitorture
.In recent years, all Polish
amendment, which George govemments have denied any
.W. Bush - again excepting CIA secret p~isons were per:
beyond u .s . and international the CIA from our rule of milled there, but already there
laws . McCain did not object. law - vetoed. Is this , , is evidence that Polish ol'fi·
11 was in one of those prisons, Obama, part of "the great cials were complicit in CIA
we now know, that the CIA credit" you gi"ve . McCain renditions and thereby viola!·
ed Polish law. Poland has
pmcticed. waterboarding , a "on the torture issues'!"
criminal act, according to our
I did not hear or see any long been a very pro·
(and international) Jaws.
of the stores of commenta·. American nation in the
Among the unrebutted · tors, partisan or objective, European Union; but as many
books documenting some of after that first Obama· ofits citizens were finding out
the war cri"mes commilled McCain debate refer to the about CIA black sites there ,
by CIA personnel (who tribute Obama gave to his ·more Poles have become.cril·
were exculpated from any rival concerning torture. ical of American policy.
Back in December 2002.
future punishment in our Indeed, I don 't recall any
courts ·by the Military focu s, or even ~ention, when Dana Priest and B~non
CommissionsAct), 1strong- throughout the _entire pres1· Gellman broke the first
ly recommend the personal · denttal campatgns on . the American stories on not only
accounts in thi s year's :'My _&lt;;:lA's damage to our reputa· ihe secret prisons but also the
.CIA renditions of suspects to
Guantan&lt;rmo Diary: The ,liOn amo_ng our alhes.
One of a growrng numi1er be tortured in other countries
Detainees and the Stories
They Told Me" by Mahvish of exa!llples of the col_l~ter· known tor that form of espe·
Khan (PublicAffairs, 2008). al harm that CIA rend1ttons cially ·"aggressive" intenoThe author, an American and· tonures have done to gation. they quoted a Bush
lawyer born of immigrant ou~ relationships with our administration official: " If
Afghan parents, .who has alltes (Italy, Germany, we're not there in the room.
been · published in the WaU England and . Canada, who's to sayT"
McCain , who was in such
Street Journal , became an among others) is this repon
interpreter for Afghan by_ Agnieszka Bien~zyk­ a room as a victim .tor five
delainees at Guantanamo Mt ssala of the Umverstty of awful years in Vietnam , used
Bay and was able to commu- Warsaw's Institute of to say a lot about torture; but
nicale with them in their own lnternaltonal Relattons that: he exempts the CIA from the
"In August 2008 , the Army Field Manual banning
Pashto language .. Among
ot~ers, one among them, ~ublic Prosecutor's. Offic.e what Gen.· David Petraeus
held in a CIA "ghost prison" m Polan·d staned an mveslt- ordered hi s Army his troops
in Kabul , before being trans- galion on the (;!Xislence of in Iraq never to do.
ferred to Guantanamo, tells secret CIA detelitioQ faciliIf McCain becomes presof what Americans "with ties in Poland. It happened ident. which McCain will
black masks" did to him . lt is three years after the reveal- he be?
hard to.read.
ing information published
(Nat Hetirojf is a nationAbout thi s sort Qf treat- by the Washington Post and ally renowned autlwrirv ·on
ment, McCain used to say, Human Righ\s Watch . So the. !'"irs/ Amenilment .,and
with regard to tonure. "it's far. all consecutive Polish the Bill of Rig/us and anthor
not about who they (I he governments have neglected of many books, including
jihadist enemy) are; it's who the issue. denying the CIA · " The War 011 rile Bill · oj
we . are." Yet, after tHe operated a secret prison in R1glus and lhe Garhering
Military Commissions Act Poland : Yet it is hi ghly prob- Resistance" (Seve/) Stories .
was passed , McCain was on a.ble that the slate investiga- Press. 2004).

'·
\

' The Daily Sentinel • Page As

www.mydailysentinel.com

.
PoiNT PLEASANT, W.Va. - James "Jim" Taylor, 72,

Grantsville, W.Va., fonnerly of Charleston, W.Va. and
POint Pleasant, W.Va., died Friday, Oct. 10, 2008. .
Arrangements lli:e incomplete and will be announced by
Crow-Hussell Funeral Home in Point Pleasant. An online
guest registry is available at www.crowhussellfh.com.

Locai Briefs
Card party
POMEROY- A-Euchre card party will be held from 710 p.m., ·Sunday, at St. Bernard Catholic Church social

AP photollqo Angetes·Times, Mel Melcoh
The Oat Mountain fire burns above Porter Ranch in Los Angeles on Monday. Two huge wildfires driven by strong Santa
Ana winds burned into neighborhoods near Los Angeles on Monday, forCing frantic evacuations on smoke· and trafficchoked highways, destroying homes and causing at least two deaths.

Wildftres force frantic evacuations near LA·
.

BY SHAYA TAYEFE MOHAJER
ASSOCIATEO PRESS WRITER

LOS ANGELES - Two
huge wildfires driven by
strong Santa Ana winds
burned into neigh~orhoods
near Los Angeles on
Monday, forcing frantic
evacuations on smoke- and
traffic-choked · highways ,
destroying homes and c.ausing at least two deaths.
Atound sunset, residents
were warned to stay on
alert during the night and
winds more than 60 mph
were forecast.
More than I ,000 firefighters and nine water-dropping
aircraft battled the 4,700acre Marek Fire at the
northeast end of the San
Fernando Valley, and the
5,000-acre Sesnon Fire at
the west end.
·
Winds blew up to 45 mph
with gusts reaching 70 mpl)
at middar.'fhey were forecast to diminish in the
evening before roW:ing over
60 mph after 11 p.m.
"This fire has the real.
potential ' of moving ·from
where it is now ... as far as
Pacific Coast (Highway),"
said Los Angeles County Fire
Chief P. Michael Freeman.
Residents
downwind
were warned to remain alert
into the night. "It can go
from here to the ocean in a
matter of two 10 three
hours," said Los Angeles
County Supervisor Zev
Yaroslavskr. ·
Authorities confirmed
more than three-dozen
mobile· homes burned at the
Marek Fire, and .19 struc.tures - - some of them

a

with 20 percent chance of
sHowers. Highs in the upper
70s.
Wednesday night · and
Thursday ...Mostly cloudy
with a 40 percent chance of
showers. Lows in the upper
50s. Highs around 70.

Local Stocks

, Beekeepers meeting

Accidentrrom

·This is what we feared
the most... Los Angeles ·
County fire Capt. Mark
·savage said. "The winds
that were expected -. they
have arrived."'
Flames jumped
the
Foothill Freeway, which
was ·closed in both direc:
tions for about a three- mile
·stretch in northern Los
Angeles between the 118
Freeway and Interstate ~
amid the 'morning rush hour,
officials said.
"That was quite a jump,
That's an eight-lane fire
break," said tire spokesman
Inspector Paul Hartwell. .
The . South Coast Air
Quality
Management
Di strict advised Monday
· that· air quality . may be
unhealthfu I due to the fires
and urged people to avoid
outdoor activities.
The Red Cross said about
500 people registered at an
evacuation center at San
Fernando High School.
Agency spokesman Nick
Samanrego said some evac. uees had seen news footage
of their homes burning.
.
"You can imagine, it's ·a
devastating situation," he
said. "A lot of people on
pins and needles waiting to
hear news about their com·
munities."

· Most schools in the area
were closed Monday.
In San Diego County, a
wildfire that began on an
explosives irainirig range at
Camp Pendleton had grown
to more than 1,500 acres by
nightfall and was burning
southwest on the military
base toward the city of ·
Oceanside.

Speed limitrrom Page Al

Local Weather

. room, lleverly. It is sponsored by Modem Woodmen of
Americafi"to benefit·Hervida 4-H Camp. The cost is $1 to
Tuesday...Mostly sunny.
play. Refi!:shments will be served.
,,
Highs in the lower 80s.
Southwest winds around 5
mph.
Tuesday night ...Partly
POMEROY - Information is available about a course of cloudy. Lows in the upper
instruction for those who wish to receive ·an Ohio Hi!!h
School Athletic Association bask!)tball officiating pernut. 50s.
\lVednesday .. .Partly sunny
Applicant must be enrolled in high school or older to earn
an OHSAA permit.
· The class will begin on Nov. 1. The class fee is $110 per·
son, including ren:nit~ee and materi.als. New students will
be eligible to offic1ate-m the upcommg season.
Information is available at www .mak.eyourcall.i:om or AEP (NYSE)- 31.70
from John Derrow, 71Q-5069,jsderrow@aoLcom..
·
Akzo (NASDAQ) - 35.70
Alhland Inc. (NYSE)- 28.13
Big Lots (NYSE) - 25.58
·I
- Evan1 (NASDAQ) - 26.38
llorgWarnttr (NYSE) - 25.82
MARIETIA - Mid-Ohio Valley Beekeeper's Association CentUry Aluminum (NASDAQ)
will hold its regular monthly meetmg a~ 7 p.m. on ~1 . 28 at -16.07
Champion (NASDAQ) - 3.46
Washington County Career Center, Oh10 676, Manetta.
Charming Shops (NASDJ.IQ) :I Robert L. Fi~t, E.C&amp;D coordinato~ with USP~'s Marietta 3.11 .
. .
office, will talk about fonning an ap_JCulture pro~ec.t for ~ew . City Holding (NASDAQ) - 42.88
beekeepers living in southeastern Ohio. The public ts mv1ted. Colllna (NYS~) - 38.33
Information is available by calling H. Sam Hammett, Jr., DuPont (NYSE) - 37.23
US Bank (NYSE) - 31.25
678-1312 . .
Ginnett
(NYSE) - 12.76
.'
General Electric (NYSE) - 21
Harley·O.vldoon (NYSE) - 30,37
J.P Morgan (NYSI') - 41.99
Kroger (NYSE) - 25.37
Page At
Limited Brondo (NYSE) - 13.05
-Southam (NYSE) - 57.79
resigned earlier this year· another ·vehicle. The accifollowing a disagreement of . dent happened ·near Keister ·
·
closing some streets and Road in Ashton.
Members
of
Mason
railroad crossings .
'
Another motorcycle rider ·Counly EMS and the Valley
also was taken to th~ hospi- VFD responded to the-scene,
'tal following an accident as did the Mason Counry·
Sheriff's Department.
·Sunday.
Hinkle was taken to Cabell
Kenneth Justin Hinkle,
32 of Fraziers Bottom, was Huntington Hospital by
riding his 1988 Harley Mason County EMS, where
Davidson motorcycle- east he was tteated and released ,
on Ashton Upland Road according to Shumaker.
Cpl. Andy Varian investiwhen he had to lay his bike
down when he went to pass gated the 5:20 p.m. accident.

Officiating course

.,

.
.
homes -. were either dam-· an ·area where neighboraged or . destroyed by the . hood s abut rugged canyonSesnon Fire. Commercial lands below the mountainous Angeles National forsites burned in both fires.
"It is a blowtorch we can't est. The man appeared to
get in front of," said Los have been a transient living
Angeles
County
fire in a makeshift shelter, officials said.
Inspector Frank Garrido.
About I ,200 people evacFire officials alerted
other · communities to the . uated due to the Marek Fire ,
west in the Ventura County which was just 5 percent
·
city of Simi Valley and contained.
"We could have had an
south to Malibu, 20 miles
away, as an ominous plume army there and it would not
streamed over . neighbor- have . stopped it," Los
Angeles F1re Department
hoods and far out to sea.
Residents were
not Battalion Chief Mario
allowed to drive into one of Rueda said , "Wind is king
Porter Ranch's gated com- here, it's dictating everymunities because officials thing we are doing."
wanted to keep roads clear
Mobile. home rark resifor emergency vehicles . dent Glenn Bel said he
Instead they parked their a\)d another park resident
cars. ran to their homes and broke a padlock on an
carried out whatever they emergency exit gate to
could carry in pillow cases, esc"ape at daybreak.. " If we
in their arms.. sacks and S\lit- hadn ''t broke open that
.cases. Some ran out clutch- gate, there.would be people
dead up there," he. said.
ing 'paintings.
Olive
View-UCLA
Freeman warned people
not to stay home after evac- Medical Center moved five
uation orders had been of its most fragile patients to
hospitals.
given. "You may not be other
able to even outrun this Spokeswoman Carla Nino
said the four newborns and
fire," he said.
A man was killed in four· the fifth patient were on venvehicle crash on the nearby tilator§ and were the most
LIS Freeway. California difficult to transport. Some
Highway Patrol Officer other patients were disLeland Tang said traffic had charged but the hospital
stopped because firefighters decided it was not necessary
were going by as fire neared 10 evacuate about ISO others.
The dry and warm Santa
the route. At some point,
Ana
winds typically blow
motorists stopped on the
. freeway because of the between · October and
names and CHP officers February. As they whistle
turned them around to use through Southern California
an on-ramp as an exit, said canyons and valleys, they
accelerate, drying out vegeCHP Capt. J.D. Goodwin .
Earlier, a fatality was dis- tation and hastening the
covered at the Marek Fire , spread of any fires that erupt.

Approved a transfer of
$8,000 from the general to
the street fund.
Approved $3,000 for
repairing a truck. for the
street department aqd purchasing two snow blades,.
limestone to treat gravel
roads and $1 ,187 for repairs ·
to Union Avenue .
"
Approved $1 00 for

Jessica Theiss and Heather
Wise to· allend mandatory
training fm:. the Pomero y
Police Depanment.
Approv~d

Pomeroy ~s

annual $1.7 million budget
to the Mei gs County
Auditor.
Approved $ f.. I50 for an
extra mowing of Beech
Grove Cemetery. ·

,, SbriverrromPageAl

Ohio V•lley Bene Carp. (NAs-18.75
BBT (NYSE) ~ 31.65
Peopleo (NASDAQ) ,.- 22.46
Marietta, and ·caldwell yes- cost the state Jliore than
Pepotco (NYSE)- 6t.n
terday,
is a "positive step to 20,000 jobs since he took
Premier (NASDAQ) - 7.22
move our economy in the office."'
Flockwall (NYSE) - 29.95
Rocky Boot~ (NASDAQ) - 2.n
Stewart , R-Aibany. the
right direction."
Ftoya11liJtch Shell - 52.31
Republican
Senate candi·
"It
will
absolutely
stand
SealS Holding (NASDAQ) - fi1.87
date,
is
now
completing
his
as
an
improvement
over
the
Wai·Mart (NVSE) - 54.sq
third
term
as
stale
represenpolicies Jimmy Stewart supWendy'a (NYSE) - 4.15
WeoBanco (NY6E) - 26.80
·
ported in Columbus thai tative.
Worthington (NYSE)- 12.73
oaHy 11ock reporta are the 4
p.m. ET cloolnv quoteo of tranoactlano fur Ocl13, 2008, provld·
ad by Edward Jontta Hnenclal
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advlaoiS Isaac Milia In Gelllpotla
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OPINION

The Daily Sentinel

'IUaday' October 14, zooS

Tuesday, October 14, 2008

Obituaries

·McCain,
'Obama
again
dodged
priority
questions
: The Daily Sentinel
•

..

111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio
(740). 992-2156 ·FAX (740) 992-~157

www.mydailysentinel.com

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Dan GOodrich
Publisher
Charlene Hoeflict"t
General Manager-News Editor
•

•
•
•

Co11gress slra/1 IIJake 110 lawrespectiiiJ! atr
. establislrrrimt of rel(f[ion, or prolribiting tilt'
:Jru c·xercise tlrereoj; or abrid)!iiiJ: tlu fi'eedorrr ·
: of speech, or of the prc·ss; or the ri.f!hl of the
: people peaceably to assemblr,.arrd to petitio11
~- tire Gor•errrmrrrt for a re.dress o.f.flrier•ances.
- The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

·•

:TODAY IN HISTORY
· Today is Tuesday. Ocl. 14 . the 28Xth day or 200X . There
are 78 days lefl in th ~ year.
Today"s Highlight in l-li""'Y On.: hundred years ago, on
Ocl. 14. 1908.the Chicago Cuh won the World Series as they
defeated the Detroit Tigers in liame 5. 2·0. at Benne!! Park .
On "this date : in 1066. Normans under William the
Conqueror deJCatcd the Engli sh at the Bank of Hastings .
. In I 1)90. Dwight D. Eise nhower. 34th president or the
United Stales. was horn in Dcnistm. Texas.
. In 19()!\, the E.M. Forster no vel ··A Room With a View··
was first published .
.
In 1912. Theodore Roosevelt. ~:amp ai g nin.g for the pre~i ­
dcncy. was shot in the chest in Milwaukee .. Despilc the
wounJ . he went ahead with a scheduled speech.
- In I933. Nazi Germany tmnoUJKed it '"" withdrawing
!"rom tl1e League.of Nations.
·
In 1944. German Field Marshal Erwin Rommel committed suicide rather tl1an face execution for ai legedl y conspir·
ing again st Adolf Hitler.
.
In 1947 . Air Force test pilot Charles E. (""Chuck") Yeager
.\&gt;rokc the sound barrier'" he !lew the experimental Bell XS·
I (later X- 1) rncket plane over Murnc Dl)' Lake in California .
In 1%0. the idea of a·Peace Corps was first suggested hy
Democratic" presidential c;JJididatc John F Kennedy to an
&lt;iudicncc of students at the University nf Michigan.
.
In I!J6X. thc first suc-cessful live tdccast from a manned
·u.S . spacecraft was. tr:msmincd from Apollo 7.
: In llJK7. a rea l-l ik drama began in Midland , TexlJs , as
·I X- moJJth-old Jessica McC iui·c slid 22 feet down an ab:m ·
doned we ll at a pri vate day care' centc , Hundreds of res· ·
·
( uers worked 5K l1ours to free her. )
'I!Jday"s llirthdays : Actor Roger Moore is XI. Movie
director Carroll Ball;1rd is 71. Country singe r Me lb;J
Montgomery is 70. Fashion designer Ral ph Lauren is 69.
Singer CliiT Richard is 6K. Actor Udn Kicr is 64. s·inger·
musician Justin Hayward (The Moody Blues) is 62. Actor
l-lanyA nderson is 56. Ac·tor Greg Evigan is' 55 . TV personulity Arleen So r~in is 52. Golf Hall-of-Famer Beth Daniel is
52. Singc r-musi&lt;:ian Thomas Dolby is 50. Singer Karyn
While is 43. Actor Jon Scda is 38. Country musician Doug
Virden is 38. Country singer Nallllic Maines (The Dixie
Chick,) is 34. Actress-singer Sh&lt;JWay Lewis (All Saints) is
~3. Singer Usher is 30. Actor Jordan Brower is 27.
· Thought for Today : " Nincly·.ninc percent of failure s
lome rrom pco ~le who have the habit of makin g exc u,.
cs." ' - Gcmgc Wasl1ing1on Ca rver, Amcrium botanist
(I HM- 194.-, ).

.Elections letters advisory
L~ · tters

dea ling u·ith 1hc• No 1·. .J. election an'

ll 'dcomC'

am/

ll ·i/1 be acn·pred 11(1 mllii 5 (J.I PI . o11 Friday, Ocr. 24 , Lctrd".&lt;
n•cei•·n l alia rhar deadline ,. ·ill no/ he p111&gt;/ished. Letters
.l ltolfld l1e 301! H'ords i11 /en grh or le.u and 11111.11 addre.u
is.we.\·, notfUT.wmalities. Lclfl'r.\ t'ndorsing local ornation ol candidatt .\', or , ·rmtohn'ng fJtT .w mal aum·ks. ~rill not he
1/f ·c 'l!fJTfd.

'

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR
•

l.frten ro 'thi! editor art·· H'elcom e. Titer should he lr:ss

ilwn 300 1\'ords. A!/ letrers urc .ml~ir..'c' l to . Nliting, masr he
signed. and i"fldude ruldres,\ wul teleplww.' wuuher. No
1111sig 11&lt;'d !t' lll'l"s 1ril/ he l" 'hlished . L&lt;'ll•' rs .\1/l&gt;llld be i11
g(wd hl.\'te , addrt,\".\iug is.\'lu's. 1101 pa.wmalities. Lerters r~j'
tlumk.\ lo orgcmi.-mhms a lid indil'iduuls u·ilf IWI hi' accep t-

ed.fi,. pul&gt;licmio11 .

Rea der Services
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Ohio Valley Publishing
Co.

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Even though questions
about spending and tax priorities and "too much debt"
were "'ked again at
Tue&gt;day night\ presidential
debate. John McCain and
Barack Obama once again
failed lu answer them .
In faC"t.they both perpetuated the fanta'y that theY'
can keep all their policy proposals intact ~ and add new
ones . - and pay for them
with fuzzy 'pending cuts.
""We obviously have to stop
thi s s'pcnding spree that's
going on in Washington,"
M('Cain said. ""Do you know
that we've laid a $10 trillion
debt on these young
Americans who are here with
us tonight , $100 billion of it
we owe to China?"
A sentence or two later, he
proposed a new $300 bill ion
program to buy up di stressed home mongages. "Is
it expen'sive? Yes," he·said ,
but it"s necessary to stabili ze home values . ··
He did not even hint at how
he'd pay for the program or his tax· cuts that may co~t
$450 billion a year - except
to say he'd freeze some
domestic spending for one
year and eliminate earmarks,
which cost $18 r.illion a year.
Then Obama attacked
President Bush for increasing the national debt from $5
trillion to $10 trillion, but he
assened that he would be
able to cut taxes for 95 percent of Americans, expand
health care and make college
atfordable - "but !' ni actually cutting more than I'm
spending , so that it will be a
net spending cut," he said.
Yet no budget watchdog
g r0~1p in town estimates that
either McCain or Obama was
going I(&gt; contain the deficit
even before the cunent ecunoniic crisis - which is creating revenue losses and
increased outlays that could
add $1 trillion to the national

undoubtedly would add a
new economic stimu lu'
package to this fiscal yea.r\
eltminating fraud .
Meantime . the National ;,pending agenda and "aft~r
Committee for a Responsible la&gt;l night. I have a smkwg
Federal Budget estimated in feeling in the pit of 111,1
Sep~mber that Obama's stomach"" about the na11on '· ·
mid3le-class tax breaks and fiscal situation .
Another paneJ i,t, forme r
new spending programs
Comptroller
General David
. would · cost $635 billion in
2013. while, he'd ·recover Walker: now president ut
$414 billion in tax increases ihc Peter G. Petcrsun
and spending cuts, for a net Foundation. said that curre nt defici ts and the $ LU tril'deficit of $22 1 billion.
But $156 billion of the lion national debt were f:1r
savings was from Iraq with- from ·the full burden facing
·
drawal , $67 billion · from the next generation.
Entitlement promises "unspecified"
cuts or
"spending reforms'' and $75 chietly Soc ial Security.
. billion from '"closing tax Medicure and Metlicaid bene·
fits - amount to $55 trillion .
loopholes and shellers" constituting
"massive tmw·.
all fuzzy estimates.
tion
without
representation
...
·
The Tax Po li cy Center
"The low-tux. · hi gh·
calculated that Obama ·s tax
policies of the cur·
spending
proposals - cuts for the
middle class. increases for rent generation is pulling a
the rich - would net out at burden on the next genera·
· $332.5 · billion in lost rev· tion that is not onl y Jiscally.
enues in 2013 and increase irresponsible . hut morall y
the deficit by $2.9 trillion reprehensible ;• Walker said ,
adding that, "I was disap:
.
over I0 years.
The center estimated that pointed in both l&gt;f the presi·
Obama's health plan would dential candidates" for not
cost $1.6 trillion . not the addressing the problem.
So far. debate moderators
$650 billion hi s campaign
estimates. though it would Jim Lehrer. Gwen Ifill and
"cover virtually all children . Tom Brokaw all have .tried
and many currently . unin- to get the presidential and
sured adults." ·
vice-presidential candidates
At a recent post-debate io .say._in view of the ecopanel spOnsored -by the New nomic crisis, what programs
America Foundation. fonner they 'd forgo or postpone .
The only concrete answer,
-Rep. Bill Frenzel. R-Minn ..
a budget expert now with from Sen . Joseph B.iden. DBrookings. said thaf all pre- . Del.. was a slowing down of
crisis estimates have become Obama's proposed doubling
"obsolete" - meaning. the of foreign aid. a $25 billionnew reality is much worse.
a-year item.
During the debate. he said.
Granted that the next presithe candidates "were specif- dent's fir.;! job will be ecoically asked about how their nomic recovery - which
priorities might change and will cost money - it's up to
what sacrifices they were · CBS's Bob Schieffer lo wresasking for. 11 's in the nature tle out answers about what
. of political candidates to be has to go. Good luck to him .
cunningly evasive and they
(Morton Koi1dracke is
offered no clues to the execuriJ·e editor of Roll
answers to theSl! questions ." Call. ril e newspaper of
He noted that Congress Capiro/ Hill.)
$1.3 trillion. but he didn 'I
sa)' how. except to mention

·
debt this year alune. ·
Prior to the crisis. McCain
was promising to balance the
.federal budget by W 13. but
the nonpanisan Committee
for a Responsib)e Federal
Budget estimated that , at
hesl. he'd rack up a deficit of
.
$147 billion.
The committee estimated
McCain's proposed tax cuts
to (.'OS! $417 billion to $485
billion that year ....: based on
· his campaign's own estimates
- but another group. the
Brookings Institution-Urban
Institute Tax Policy Center,
said they .could coSt $700 bil-·
lion, based on McCain's statements in slump speeches.
Meantime , while McCain
claims that his health care
reforms would be "budgetneutral ," the Tax Policy
Center estimates that they'd
cost $1.3 trillion over 10 years
and only ''modestly trim the
· nu·mber of the uninsured."
To offset these outlays, ihe
Commiltee
for
a
Responsible Federal Budget
· calculated that McCain was
proposing to cut spending by
$291 billion to $304 billion
in 20 13 - but $159 billion
or that came from "unspeci·
fied cuts," $35 billion from
eliminating .earmarks and
$103 billion by reducing
forces in Iraq - not exactly
guaranteed savings.
· Earlier this week, McCain
domestiC adviser Douglas
Holtz-Eakin told the Wall
Street Journal that McCain
might pay for his health
plan by slashing Medicare
and Medicaid outlays by

Rodney Eupne Gaul
VINCENT - Rodney
Eugene Gaul, 66 of. 4
Lewis Pointe Dr., Vincent
di~ Friday; Oct. 10, 2008:
at hts home .
He ~as born on Dec. 25,
194I, tn Sumner, to Barbara
Weber Gaul Sargent and the
late L. Cecil Gaul. He
retired from DuPont after 42
years, serving the bulk of
his career as a central maintenance supervisor.
He also served as presi .
dent · of the Dupont
Washington .works 25-year
Club. Rod was a member of
St. Ambrose Catholic
~un:h . He was an active member of the community, serv~
mg '?n the Warren Local School Board for eight years and
servmg as pres1dent "of the Barlow-Vincent PTA and as a
Cub Scout Master of Barlow Pack 217.
He often volunteered his time supporting various youth .
sports and recreational activities rn the Barlow-Vincent
~mmun!ty. He was a strong supporter of the Relay for Life
m Washmgton County, an avtd fisherman, outdoorsman
and basketball player. Rod also held a .black belt in the
Fugak.ukai International Aikido Association . .
He is survived by his wife ·of almost 45 years, Sharon
Moore Gaul. They were married on November 22, 1963.
Also surviving: a daughter, Sara E.. Mills (Brian) of West
Chester, Ohio; sons, Michael R. Gaul (Barbara) of
Winchester, Va., and Jeremy Gaul (Samantha) of Guysville;
five grandsons: Jacob and Timothy Gaul, Mitchell and
Evan Gaul and Alexander Mills; his mother Barbara Gaul
Sargent of Sumner; a sister, Lorett~ Murphy (Edward) of
Tuppers Plains; a brother, Roger Gaul (Paula) of Sumner;
hi~ mother-in"Jaw, H11pe Moore, and the godparents of his
chtldren, Charles Jeffrey and Joyce Ramsey of Torch.
A funeral liturgy, with Mass will be held at II a.m. on .
Tuesday, Oct. 14, 2008, at St. Ambrose Catholic Church,
with'the Rev. Robert Gallagher as celebrant. ·
Burial will follow at St. Mary's Cemetery in Little
Hocking. Cawley &amp; Peoples offers online condolences by ·
visiting their website , www.cawley\llldpeoples.com. .

Brownie Viljakllja
~UTLAND

- Brownie Vujaklija, 85, of Rutland, passed
away on Oct. 12, 2008, at Holzer Medical Center.
He was born on Oct. 22. 1922in Elizabeth, Pa., son of the
late Nicholas and Vicilia Vujaklija.
··
.
He is survived by his wife, Margaret Vujaklija; three children: David and Barbara Vujaldija, Vicki Carpenter, and Kay
and Brynn Sutphin; three stepchildren: Sharon and Tom
Atkins, Lawrence Vance, and Dreama and Kim Devincent;
four wandchildren: David Vujaklija, k, Tanya Allen, Mandi
Jo Givens and Breana Hemsley; three step grandchildren:
Tanya George, Brynn Sutphin and Craig Devincent; seven
great grandchildren; and severa nieces and .nephews.
Funeral will be held at 7 r.m. on Wednesday, Oct. IS ,
2008 at Anderson McDanie ·Funeral Home in Pomeroy
with Pastor Teresa Davis officiating.
.
Visiting hours will be-from 5-7 p.m. on Wednesday at the
funeral home. A registry is availa~le online at www.andersonmcdaniel.com.

THEGOOO

NEWS IS THAT
IT'S OlolTHE
TOP OFTHE
CHARTS..

'

.. '

• .. ·•· i'

'

Deaths
Janaes Taylor ·

Obama doesn't get McCain on torture
During the widely seen
and analyzed premier presidential debate, Barack
Obama was grossly mistaken
when. lownnl the ·end. he
said : "I give Senator McCain
great c:n;dil on the ronure
issue. t(,. having identified
that as something that undermines our long-term security
- because of those things.
we. I think. are going to have
a lot of work to do i~ the next
administrution to restore that
sense that . America is that
shining beacon on a hill."
Our torture has shamed us .
In fact , although McCain
i11 tire past has spoken eloquently against torture during interrogations of terrorism suspects, his actual
vutcs in CO'ngrcss tell a different , shameful story.
·
He voted for the Detainees
Treatment Act of 2005 thai
stripped Guantanamo Bay
prisoners of their habeas corpus rights (until the Supreme .
Court tried to intervene) .
That law added an "appeal"
procedure ihat prevented
prisoners from appealing
their conditions of confine1.nent ~ where .the "cQI!rcive
int ~;rrogation s" and brutal
lorce-feeding happened with
no objection from McCain .
In 2006, McCain voted for
the Military Commissions
Act aft~r the Supreme Coun
(Hamdan v. RumsleiJ) temporarily restmed habeas
rights at Guantanamo. Thai
new law essentially 'overruled
the Supreme Court &amp;&gt;r a time
and gave George W. Bush the
right. by himself. to interpret
the Geneva Conventions,
which expressly forbid
"cruel. inhuman and degrading treatment'" of prisoners.
When . the president then ,
by executive orde"r, continued
the "special powers" he had
· given th ~ CIA in their secret
prisons (""black sites") wholly .

'

the Senate tlool' as both the tion will confirm Poland ·
House and Senate passed an hosted. illegal CIA prisons.
amendment that mandated The crucial step will be
the CIA adhere to the Army gathering evidence of prac- .
Field Manual - which all tieing torture." (Reponed on
our other services .follow - . the Web site Juris Doctor, of
Nat
. that forl;&gt;ids torture.
the University of Pittsburgh
Hentoff
John McCain voted School of Law, Sept. 27 .)
against that . antitorture
.In recent years, all Polish
amendment, which George govemments have denied any
.W. Bush - again excepting CIA secret p~isons were per:
beyond u .s . and international the CIA from our rule of milled there, but already there
laws . McCain did not object. law - vetoed. Is this , , is evidence that Polish ol'fi·
11 was in one of those prisons, Obama, part of "the great cials were complicit in CIA
we now know, that the CIA credit" you gi"ve . McCain renditions and thereby viola!·
ed Polish law. Poland has
pmcticed. waterboarding , a "on the torture issues'!"
criminal act, according to our
I did not hear or see any long been a very pro·
(and international) Jaws.
of the stores of commenta·. American nation in the
Among the unrebutted · tors, partisan or objective, European Union; but as many
books documenting some of after that first Obama· ofits citizens were finding out
the war cri"mes commilled McCain debate refer to the about CIA black sites there ,
by CIA personnel (who tribute Obama gave to his ·more Poles have become.cril·
were exculpated from any rival concerning torture. ical of American policy.
Back in December 2002.
future punishment in our Indeed, I don 't recall any
courts ·by the Military focu s, or even ~ention, when Dana Priest and B~non
CommissionsAct), 1strong- throughout the _entire pres1· Gellman broke the first
ly recommend the personal · denttal campatgns on . the American stories on not only
accounts in thi s year's :'My _&lt;;:lA's damage to our reputa· ihe secret prisons but also the
.CIA renditions of suspects to
Guantan&lt;rmo Diary: The ,liOn amo_ng our alhes.
One of a growrng numi1er be tortured in other countries
Detainees and the Stories
They Told Me" by Mahvish of exa!llples of the col_l~ter· known tor that form of espe·
Khan (PublicAffairs, 2008). al harm that CIA rend1ttons cially ·"aggressive" intenoThe author, an American and· tonures have done to gation. they quoted a Bush
lawyer born of immigrant ou~ relationships with our administration official: " If
Afghan parents, .who has alltes (Italy, Germany, we're not there in the room.
been · published in the WaU England and . Canada, who's to sayT"
McCain , who was in such
Street Journal , became an among others) is this repon
interpreter for Afghan by_ Agnieszka Bien~zyk­ a room as a victim .tor five
delainees at Guantanamo Mt ssala of the Umverstty of awful years in Vietnam , used
Bay and was able to commu- Warsaw's Institute of to say a lot about torture; but
nicale with them in their own lnternaltonal Relattons that: he exempts the CIA from the
"In August 2008 , the Army Field Manual banning
Pashto language .. Among
ot~ers, one among them, ~ublic Prosecutor's. Offic.e what Gen.· David Petraeus
held in a CIA "ghost prison" m Polan·d staned an mveslt- ordered hi s Army his troops
in Kabul , before being trans- galion on the (;!Xislence of in Iraq never to do.
ferred to Guantanamo, tells secret CIA detelitioQ faciliIf McCain becomes presof what Americans "with ties in Poland. It happened ident. which McCain will
black masks" did to him . lt is three years after the reveal- he be?
hard to.read.
ing information published
(Nat Hetirojf is a nationAbout thi s sort Qf treat- by the Washington Post and ally renowned autlwrirv ·on
ment, McCain used to say, Human Righ\s Watch . So the. !'"irs/ Amenilment .,and
with regard to tonure. "it's far. all consecutive Polish the Bill of Rig/us and anthor
not about who they (I he governments have neglected of many books, including
jihadist enemy) are; it's who the issue. denying the CIA · " The War 011 rile Bill · oj
we . are." Yet, after tHe operated a secret prison in R1glus and lhe Garhering
Military Commissions Act Poland : Yet it is hi ghly prob- Resistance" (Seve/) Stories .
was passed , McCain was on a.ble that the slate investiga- Press. 2004).

'·
\

' The Daily Sentinel • Page As

www.mydailysentinel.com

.
PoiNT PLEASANT, W.Va. - James "Jim" Taylor, 72,

Grantsville, W.Va., fonnerly of Charleston, W.Va. and
POint Pleasant, W.Va., died Friday, Oct. 10, 2008. .
Arrangements lli:e incomplete and will be announced by
Crow-Hussell Funeral Home in Point Pleasant. An online
guest registry is available at www.crowhussellfh.com.

Locai Briefs
Card party
POMEROY- A-Euchre card party will be held from 710 p.m., ·Sunday, at St. Bernard Catholic Church social

AP photollqo Angetes·Times, Mel Melcoh
The Oat Mountain fire burns above Porter Ranch in Los Angeles on Monday. Two huge wildfires driven by strong Santa
Ana winds burned into neighborhoods near Los Angeles on Monday, forCing frantic evacuations on smoke· and trafficchoked highways, destroying homes and causing at least two deaths.

Wildftres force frantic evacuations near LA·
.

BY SHAYA TAYEFE MOHAJER
ASSOCIATEO PRESS WRITER

LOS ANGELES - Two
huge wildfires driven by
strong Santa Ana winds
burned into neigh~orhoods
near Los Angeles on
Monday, forcing frantic
evacuations on smoke- and
traffic-choked · highways ,
destroying homes and c.ausing at least two deaths.
Atound sunset, residents
were warned to stay on
alert during the night and
winds more than 60 mph
were forecast.
More than I ,000 firefighters and nine water-dropping
aircraft battled the 4,700acre Marek Fire at the
northeast end of the San
Fernando Valley, and the
5,000-acre Sesnon Fire at
the west end.
·
Winds blew up to 45 mph
with gusts reaching 70 mpl)
at middar.'fhey were forecast to diminish in the
evening before roW:ing over
60 mph after 11 p.m.
"This fire has the real.
potential ' of moving ·from
where it is now ... as far as
Pacific Coast (Highway),"
said Los Angeles County Fire
Chief P. Michael Freeman.
Residents
downwind
were warned to remain alert
into the night. "It can go
from here to the ocean in a
matter of two 10 three
hours," said Los Angeles
County Supervisor Zev
Yaroslavskr. ·
Authorities confirmed
more than three-dozen
mobile· homes burned at the
Marek Fire, and .19 struc.tures - - some of them

a

with 20 percent chance of
sHowers. Highs in the upper
70s.
Wednesday night · and
Thursday ...Mostly cloudy
with a 40 percent chance of
showers. Lows in the upper
50s. Highs around 70.

Local Stocks

, Beekeepers meeting

Accidentrrom

·This is what we feared
the most... Los Angeles ·
County fire Capt. Mark
·savage said. "The winds
that were expected -. they
have arrived."'
Flames jumped
the
Foothill Freeway, which
was ·closed in both direc:
tions for about a three- mile
·stretch in northern Los
Angeles between the 118
Freeway and Interstate ~
amid the 'morning rush hour,
officials said.
"That was quite a jump,
That's an eight-lane fire
break," said tire spokesman
Inspector Paul Hartwell. .
The . South Coast Air
Quality
Management
Di strict advised Monday
· that· air quality . may be
unhealthfu I due to the fires
and urged people to avoid
outdoor activities.
The Red Cross said about
500 people registered at an
evacuation center at San
Fernando High School.
Agency spokesman Nick
Samanrego said some evac. uees had seen news footage
of their homes burning.
.
"You can imagine, it's ·a
devastating situation," he
said. "A lot of people on
pins and needles waiting to
hear news about their com·
munities."

· Most schools in the area
were closed Monday.
In San Diego County, a
wildfire that began on an
explosives irainirig range at
Camp Pendleton had grown
to more than 1,500 acres by
nightfall and was burning
southwest on the military
base toward the city of ·
Oceanside.

Speed limitrrom Page Al

Local Weather

. room, lleverly. It is sponsored by Modem Woodmen of
Americafi"to benefit·Hervida 4-H Camp. The cost is $1 to
Tuesday...Mostly sunny.
play. Refi!:shments will be served.
,,
Highs in the lower 80s.
Southwest winds around 5
mph.
Tuesday night ...Partly
POMEROY - Information is available about a course of cloudy. Lows in the upper
instruction for those who wish to receive ·an Ohio Hi!!h
School Athletic Association bask!)tball officiating pernut. 50s.
\lVednesday .. .Partly sunny
Applicant must be enrolled in high school or older to earn
an OHSAA permit.
· The class will begin on Nov. 1. The class fee is $110 per·
son, including ren:nit~ee and materi.als. New students will
be eligible to offic1ate-m the upcommg season.
Information is available at www .mak.eyourcall.i:om or AEP (NYSE)- 31.70
from John Derrow, 71Q-5069,jsderrow@aoLcom..
·
Akzo (NASDAQ) - 35.70
Alhland Inc. (NYSE)- 28.13
Big Lots (NYSE) - 25.58
·I
- Evan1 (NASDAQ) - 26.38
llorgWarnttr (NYSE) - 25.82
MARIETIA - Mid-Ohio Valley Beekeeper's Association CentUry Aluminum (NASDAQ)
will hold its regular monthly meetmg a~ 7 p.m. on ~1 . 28 at -16.07
Champion (NASDAQ) - 3.46
Washington County Career Center, Oh10 676, Manetta.
Charming Shops (NASDJ.IQ) :I Robert L. Fi~t, E.C&amp;D coordinato~ with USP~'s Marietta 3.11 .
. .
office, will talk about fonning an ap_JCulture pro~ec.t for ~ew . City Holding (NASDAQ) - 42.88
beekeepers living in southeastern Ohio. The public ts mv1ted. Colllna (NYS~) - 38.33
Information is available by calling H. Sam Hammett, Jr., DuPont (NYSE) - 37.23
US Bank (NYSE) - 31.25
678-1312 . .
Ginnett
(NYSE) - 12.76
.'
General Electric (NYSE) - 21
Harley·O.vldoon (NYSE) - 30,37
J.P Morgan (NYSI') - 41.99
Kroger (NYSE) - 25.37
Page At
Limited Brondo (NYSE) - 13.05
-Southam (NYSE) - 57.79
resigned earlier this year· another ·vehicle. The accifollowing a disagreement of . dent happened ·near Keister ·
·
closing some streets and Road in Ashton.
Members
of
Mason
railroad crossings .
'
Another motorcycle rider ·Counly EMS and the Valley
also was taken to th~ hospi- VFD responded to the-scene,
'tal following an accident as did the Mason Counry·
Sheriff's Department.
·Sunday.
Hinkle was taken to Cabell
Kenneth Justin Hinkle,
32 of Fraziers Bottom, was Huntington Hospital by
riding his 1988 Harley Mason County EMS, where
Davidson motorcycle- east he was tteated and released ,
on Ashton Upland Road according to Shumaker.
Cpl. Andy Varian investiwhen he had to lay his bike
down when he went to pass gated the 5:20 p.m. accident.

Officiating course

.,

.
.
homes -. were either dam-· an ·area where neighboraged or . destroyed by the . hood s abut rugged canyonSesnon Fire. Commercial lands below the mountainous Angeles National forsites burned in both fires.
"It is a blowtorch we can't est. The man appeared to
get in front of," said Los have been a transient living
Angeles
County
fire in a makeshift shelter, officials said.
Inspector Frank Garrido.
About I ,200 people evacFire officials alerted
other · communities to the . uated due to the Marek Fire ,
west in the Ventura County which was just 5 percent
·
city of Simi Valley and contained.
"We could have had an
south to Malibu, 20 miles
away, as an ominous plume army there and it would not
streamed over . neighbor- have . stopped it," Los
Angeles F1re Department
hoods and far out to sea.
Residents were
not Battalion Chief Mario
allowed to drive into one of Rueda said , "Wind is king
Porter Ranch's gated com- here, it's dictating everymunities because officials thing we are doing."
wanted to keep roads clear
Mobile. home rark resifor emergency vehicles . dent Glenn Bel said he
Instead they parked their a\)d another park resident
cars. ran to their homes and broke a padlock on an
carried out whatever they emergency exit gate to
could carry in pillow cases, esc"ape at daybreak.. " If we
in their arms.. sacks and S\lit- hadn ''t broke open that
.cases. Some ran out clutch- gate, there.would be people
dead up there," he. said.
ing 'paintings.
Olive
View-UCLA
Freeman warned people
not to stay home after evac- Medical Center moved five
uation orders had been of its most fragile patients to
hospitals.
given. "You may not be other
able to even outrun this Spokeswoman Carla Nino
said the four newborns and
fire," he said.
A man was killed in four· the fifth patient were on venvehicle crash on the nearby tilator§ and were the most
LIS Freeway. California difficult to transport. Some
Highway Patrol Officer other patients were disLeland Tang said traffic had charged but the hospital
stopped because firefighters decided it was not necessary
were going by as fire neared 10 evacuate about ISO others.
The dry and warm Santa
the route. At some point,
Ana
winds typically blow
motorists stopped on the
. freeway because of the between · October and
names and CHP officers February. As they whistle
turned them around to use through Southern California
an on-ramp as an exit, said canyons and valleys, they
accelerate, drying out vegeCHP Capt. J.D. Goodwin .
Earlier, a fatality was dis- tation and hastening the
covered at the Marek Fire , spread of any fires that erupt.

Approved a transfer of
$8,000 from the general to
the street fund.
Approved $3,000 for
repairing a truck. for the
street department aqd purchasing two snow blades,.
limestone to treat gravel
roads and $1 ,187 for repairs ·
to Union Avenue .
"
Approved $1 00 for

Jessica Theiss and Heather
Wise to· allend mandatory
training fm:. the Pomero y
Police Depanment.
Approv~d

Pomeroy ~s

annual $1.7 million budget
to the Mei gs County
Auditor.
Approved $ f.. I50 for an
extra mowing of Beech
Grove Cemetery. ·

,, SbriverrromPageAl

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HEAT,TH

The.Daily Sentinel

Pediatricians
double vita1t1in D
.reconrmendations

-

Bl

•

1L R:oUDdup, Page Bl

BY LAURAN .NEERGAARD

AP MEDICAL WRITER

' .

-- - -

....... ~- ·--

Tuesday, October 14,2008
'

POMI,AOY- A schedule or Upcoming high

'lairtlly lpofling evant&amp; involving
!rom Meigs and Gilllia counties .

'Dmdev Octobtr 14·
DZ Boy• Socc.r

Blue IDU,IS IIIQI WaveriJ,
face No.1

The Blue and White BY BRYAN WALTERS
BWAlTERSOMYDAllYTRIBUNE.COM who also won their first
Bop Soccer
postseason contest for sec,~;iotla~;:-; Christian at Cross Lanes
..,.,;
p.m.
GALLIPOLIS - One ond-year head coach Amy
down, two to go.
Shriver - now advance to
Wtcl1118dq Or:mber 15
Gallia Academy volley- Wednesday's • sectional
D2 Volltyball
ball started its chase for a Semifinal against top-.seeded
MarlelUI at (2) Meigs, 6p.m.
Gallla Aclldemy at (1) Unloto, 6 p.m.
Division II sectional cham' Unioto at Unioto Hi~h
pionship
Monday night on a School. The match Will
JbundiV Oc:IQber 18
good
.note,
fending off a begin at 6 p.m:
D4 Volleyball - Sectional finale
(7) Miller at (2) Eastern, 6 p.m.
opponent in visiting . WHS jumped out to an ·
(5) Pike Eastern al (4) South Galiia, 6 stingy
Waverly
during a three-. early 4-2 edge in Game I,
p.m.
.
(6) Southern at (3) Waterford, 6p.m.
gaine 25-20, 25-17, 25-21 but the hosts countered with
•
victory in a D2 sectional three straight points to take a
Saturdey Octpbor 11
quarterfinal
in the Old 5-4 h:ad. After trading
03 Volltyball - Socttonel flnill
(6) Nelsonville-York at River Valley, 4
French City.
points to get to 8-7, the
p.m.
The
Blue
Angels
(14-8)Angels ran off seven straight
cro.. Country
an eight-seed - never points for a 15-7 cushion.
Divisions 11·111 District meets at
University of Rio Grande, 10 a.m.
trailed by more than two . GAHS would lead by as
lloyo Socc;or - ACSJ TQUm.
points at any time during many as 10 ( 19-9) in Game
Ohio Valley Chrtst~n at Granv!!le, TBA
their contest with the ninth- 1 and eventually took the
seeded Lady Tigers (II-II), opener by five p&lt;iints.
and that one single twoIn Game 2, both squads
point deficit came early in traded points to .five-all
.
.
.
Bryan Walteralphoto
Game I at 4-2. GAHS also before the hosts established
trailed by only one point in an early 7-5 lead. The Members of the Gallla Acad,emy volley\)all team, '!eel by Megan Foster (12) and Brea Close
(3), shake hands with Waverly after the Blue Angels' won their Division II sectional quar·
the second game and never
trailed
in
the
Game
3
finale.
Please SH Ancels, B:Z
tertinal match Monday in Gallipolis.
·
COLUMBUS (AP) - How a sh1.ta
Gallla Academy at · (2) ·Mariana, 6

:

e. .

·~··

1.

. '(' ;r;: ..

AP photo

Cynthia Preloh, with her husband Brian Preloh , rests in her hosprtal room after a kidney
transplant at Georgetown University Hospital in Washington, Wednesday, Oct. B. Preloh
underwent an unusual procedure that allowed her to receive a kidney from her son , a kidney that she would otherwise have rejected. Preloh wasn't expected to survive the wait for
a standard cadaver kidney.
. .
·
.
·
ing sensitization, a vicious ~niversity · - and now
cycle.
·
saowly spreading.
The more antibodies, the
But that's not strong
harder it is to find a compat- enough for many SIIJler-senible kidney. So the quest is sitized patients, so a new
to rid patie!lls of antibodies experiment is testing the
targeted to a specific donal- lymphoma drug Rituxan.
ed kidney, and keep them which fights the immunefrom making more.
system cancer by killing
One method: Filtering a certain antibody-producing
patient's blm'ld, called plas- cells.
Cedars-Sinai
rna ·pheresis, before tPBns- researchers reported- the
plant. Another is intra- first
preliminary
but
venous immune globulin, or promising evidence in the
IVIG, a mix of infection-. New England Journal of
fighting antibodies that Medicine this summer:
basically crowd out the bad Rituxan helped slash antikidney kind with run-of- body levels enough that I 6
the-mill types. They're of 20 patients could be
treatments pioneered at a transplanted, and all but one
few hospitals - including . of the new kidneys was
Los Angeles' Cedars-Sinai working a year later.
Medical , &lt;:;enter
and
Back at . Georgetown,
Baltimore s Johns Hopkins Cynthia Preloh, 50, had
• 'I' •

+

, ..

~

.•

"

.-

been told to expect a sevenyear wait for a·donated kidney
when
diabetes
destroyed
her
own.
Diabetics have particularly
poor survival on dialysis
and her son offered a faster
living donation. bu( Preloh
had too many antibodies
that would attack his tissue.
' Melancon - who moved
from
Hopkin s · to
Georgetown in the nation's
capital to spread 'this work
.:_ boped Rituxan would
give Preloh enough extra
desensitization to try the
tnmsplant. Her new kidney
started working on the
operating table, "which
was the best thing you
could hope to hear." she
said last week as s!Je-;
recovered .

.

.,.

Fifth weekly 2008
. AP High School
Football Poll List

panel Of sports writers and broadcasters
rates Ohio high school football teams in ,
the fifth of seven weekly Associated
Press poll of 2007, by OHSAA divisions,
with won -lost record and total points
(first-place votes in parentheses):

3, Hilliard Oavldson (1) 7·0
4, Oubtin Coffman 7-0 ·

5, Cin. Elder (3) li·1
'Brunswick (2) 7-0
· 7, Cln. Colerain 6-1
B. Cle. St. Ignatius (1) 6·1

•'t'"

DIVISION II
1,Cols.De5ales(19)7-0
2, LoulsviUe (9) 7-0

• 3 , Tol. Ceht. Cath. 1-o

159

.152
52
147
127

289

had

191
5, LoQan (1) 7.()
186
6,.Sytvanla SouthvieW (2) 7-Q 144
?, New Carlisle Tecumsell7..0 1:21

s 'trea ·k
snapped by

85
.51
37

Others.receiving 12 or more points: 11.
Cols. Marion-Franklin 32. 12, Cln. Turpin
17. 13, Dresden Tri-Valley 14.

DIVISION IV
1, Coldwater (l!S) 7.0
2, Steubenville (5) 7·0

mqe ~alltpoltslailp ~rtbune

3, Yourtgs. Mooney 6-1
4, Massillon Tuslaw 7-Q
5, New lexington 7..0
6, Plain Clly Jon Alder (1) 7-0 121
7, f(etterlng Alter 5·2
1 tS
8, Ctinton·Masste 7.0
104
9. GenOa Area 7.0
79
10, Akr. SVSM 6-1
73
Othara receiving 12 Or more polniS: 11.
Fostoria ~2 . 12, ~otaln Cloarvlaw ~. 13,

~oint ~lea~ant l\egister
. &amp;The Daily Senti.nel

Marlon Pleasan1 23. 14, Brool&lt;vlllo 17.
t5. Martins Farry 15..

presents

DIVISIONV
1, '~bungs. Ursuline (l!3) 7.0

290

•2, An:hbold (2) 7.0
. 221
• 3, Hamler Patrtck Homy (1) 7.() 216

THE WOMEN OF
THE TRI- COUNTY

MS Marlon Local (3) 6-1 176
Ul&gt;er1y·Benton 7-0 176
a. WhHlarsburv (2) 1.0
158
' 7, Klrtl~ 7-o
11B
B. Anna 6-1
95
9,'Cin.Hllll7.0 .
.70
11), Bucyrut wYnlonl 7-9
38
. Othm ..,.lvlng 12 or mote polnla: 11,
CloJphol Jtlleroon .l it. 12, w. Uborty8oltm 22. 1~. FQrllmouth w. 21. 14.
Naloonvlllo·York 18. 15, Columbiana
e.-~ew 13. 16, w.Jtrr.roon 12.
4,
~. Andlay

I

This special section, publishing October 31st, is an exce.Hent opportunity
for local businesswomen to tell their story, promote their business and
give their tips for success.
Not just for women wh~ own their own business, but for all the women 1
who are the back bone of local successful businesses.
opportr~nity to

S02
262
209
1-48
131

rei/ their story.)

DIVISION VI
: 1, Hopowoii-Loudon (15) 7.() 286
• 2, Mogadoro (5) 7.0
2~
' 3.~(5)7.()
234
: 4, Nolwolk St. "-ul (4) 7-Cl
207
• 5, Ado 7.()
. 175
!8', M'Jvom (1) 7.()
134
, 7, MCDonald (1) 7.0
119
•e. Ha.....l Rlvar 7.()
113
: 9, Otlt&gt;ho4 St. John'a 6-1
78
• 10, Carey 6-1 .
41
• Others receiving 12 or more points; 1 1.,
F&gt;anoo,.-GIIboa 31 . 12. Berlin CenJar
Western ReserYB 16. •

.contact your
Representative Today!
Gallipolis Daily Tribune 446-2342
·Point Pleas;mt Register 675-1333
The Daily Sentinel 992-2155

CoNTAcr Us _,
t-740-446-2~ ext.

33

!'u - 1 -7~

E-moll - sports0rrlydal1ysentinol.com

. ,pcirt.s!Afl
Bryan Walters, Sports Writer
(740) 448-2342, ""'· 33

bwal1ers0mydallytrioone.oom
l.llrry Crum, Sports Writer
(740) 4-46-2342. OICI. 33 ,
Ierum OmydaiJyntglsJar.com

their

tw.o-g~me
wo~ n n 1 n g

h

17. 13, Dresden Tri-Yalley 14.

WOMEN'S

•

Raider ~~·

· 235

Others receiving 12 or more points: 11 ,
Cols. Marton-FrankUn 32. 12, Cin. Turpin

ATIONAL

. .
(Each ad·will have the same layout to give everyone equal

JACKSON
River
Valley volleyball concluded
its regular season on somewhat of a down note
Monday
night , as·
the L:1 dy

258

DIVISION Ill
1, Sl. Marys Memorial (18)7·0 272
2. Thornville Sheridan (3) 7·0 258
3, Tlpp Cily Tippecanoe (3) 7-0 200
4, Youngs. Liber1y (2) 7-0
176 .
5, Circleville Logan Elm (1) 7-0 157
6, Poland Samlnary t1) 6·1
125
7, Canal Winchester (1) 7-0
114
6, Avon (2) 7-0
95
9, Canal Fulton NW 6-1
82
10, New Philadelphia 1-o
40

.

STAFF REPORT

SPORTS@MYDAllYSENTINEl.COM

4, LeiCiflgton 7-Q

10, Cln. Wln1on Woods 6·1

\t\ 0 ''

216

9, Amherst Steele 7-o
73
- 10, ·Lakewood St. Edward 6·1 26
Others receiving 12 or more points: 11 ,
Middletown 20. 1.2, Can. GlonOak 17.

9, Medina Highland 7.0
'4• ·1+'

Jackson
downsRV
in three

DIVISION I
1, Cia.Glenville (21)1-0
285
.• 2, Pickerington Cent. (3} 7-o
267

8, E. Cit. ShoW 7.()

of Women in Business .

Chinese dairy blames
subcontractors for tainting

- -· ----

Tuesday, October 14, 2008

The Daily Sentinel.
boWl s1n!ak in jeopardy, Page'Bl

WASHINGTON
Nearly one in three patients
who need a kidney transBY LINDSEY TANNER
The recommendations plant may never get one
AP MEDICAL WRITER
were prepared for release because their bodies are
Monday at an academy con- abnonnally primed to attack
CHICAGO- The nation's ference in Boston. They are a donated organ.
leading pediatricians group to be published in the
Now doctors are trying
~ys children from newborns . November issue of the acadnew ways to outwit the
to teens should get double the emy 's journal, Pediatrics.
immune system and save
usually
recommended . Besides milk and some more of those so-called
ilmount of vitamin D because other fortified foods like "highly
sensitized"
of evidence that it may help cereal, vitamin Dis found in patients - often with kidprevent serious diseases.
oily fish including tuna, neys donated by living
To meet the new recom- mackerel and sardines.
donors, considered the
mendation of 400 units daily,
Bul it's hard to get enough optimal
kind.
millions of children will through diet; the best source
"I
feel
lucky. Our
need to take daily vitamin D is sunlight because the body son savedvery
my life," ·said
GUpplements, 'the American makes vitamin D when sun- Cyn'thia
Preloh
of
Academy ot'Pediatrics said. shine hits the skin.
Va.,
after
an
Arlington,
.
That includes breast-fed
While it is believed that unusual combinati,llll of
infants - even those who I 0 to 15 minutes in the sun blood' cleansing and a canget some formula, too, and without sunscreen a few cer drug allowed her to
many teens who drink little times weekly is sufficient receive a kidney from her
or no mill&lt;.
for many, people with dark
that her body otherwise
· Baby fonnula contains vit- skin and those in northern, son
would
have destroyed:
amin D, so infants on formu- less sunny climates need
It's
promising
work that
Ia only generally don 't need more. Because of sunlight's comes as the nation's
kidsupplements. However, the link with skin cancer. "vitadistribution system is
academy
recommends min D supplements during ney
beginning
major overhaul.
breast-feeding for at least the infancy, childhood and ado- ;r'ogether, a.the
two efforts
first ~ear of life and breast lescence are necessary," the aim to make a long-needed
milk 1s sometimes deficient. academy's report says.
· · Most commercially availRecent studies have dent in the years of waiting
can take to get a kidney
able milk is fortified with shown that many children it
transplant.
•
vitamin D. but most chit" don'tgetenough vitamin D.
That's crucial, because
dren and teens don 't drink and cases of rickets , a bone
chance of getting suc"your
enough of it - four cups disorder often associated
cessfully
· transplanted
daily would be needed - to with malnourishment in the
with
time," says
decreases
meet the new requirement, 1800s, continue to occur.
said Dr. Frank Greer. the
Greer, a University of Dr. Keith Melancon of
University
report's co-author.
Wisconsin
pediatrician, Geor~etown
Preloh
's
surgeon
Hospttal,
The new advice is based acknowledged that most
on mounting research about studies suggesting vitamin and a leader in the small but
potential benefits from vita- D may play a much broader growing field of incompatimin D besides keeping role in disease prevention ble kidney transplants. ·
bones strong, including sug- have been observational, . , More than 77,000 people
gestions that it might reduce . not the .most rigorous kind are on the national waiting
list to receive. a kidney
risks for cancer, diabetes of medical evidence.
from
a deceased donor. Yet
and heart disease. But the
Nonetheless, many docevidence isn't conclusi.ve tors consider the research fewer than 17,000 trans- .
and there 's no consensus on compelling and many have plants a year are perhow much of the vitamin · begun to offer patients roo- formed, about 10,500 of
them from deceased donors
would be needed for disease tine vitamin D testing.
prevention. ·
Adrian Gombart, a vita- and just over 6,000 from
The new advice replaces a min D researcher at Oregon living donors, relatives or
2003 academy recommen- State University, said the friends ~ho offer to help a
dation for 200 units daily.
new recommendations are specific patient. The wait
That's the amount the gov- safe and conservative but can stretch four · to fi ve
·. ernment recommends for that 400 units "is probably years, and more than 4,000
patients die on the waiting
children and adults up to age not enough."
list
each year.
50; 400 units is recommendGombart's lab work in
·
The
United Network lor .·
ed for adults ·aged 51 to 70 · -human tissue has-shOWitthat
Organ
Sharing is considerand 600 units for those aged vitamin D helps iqcrease
71 and up. Vitamin Dis sold- levels of a protein that kills ing some big changes to
in drops for young children, bacteria. He said many the system. There's no forcapsules and tablets.
experts believe that between mal proposal yet, but there
The Institute of Medicine, 800 and 1,000 units daily are opttons under discusa government advisory would be more effective at sion:
• Wait times might be
group that sets dietary stan- ·helping fight disease.
dards, is discussing with fedSeveral members of an defined by . kidney funcera! agencies whether those academy committee that tion deterioration rather
recommendations should be helped write the guidelines than how ·early someone
changed based on emerging have current or fonner ties gets on the transplant list,
research, said spokeswoman to makers of infant formula to level the field for
patients . who don't see a
Christine Stencel.
or vitamin supplements . .
specialist right away.
• In addition to wait time,
matches may weigh recipient and kidney age and
medical conditions to maximize what's "life years from
transplant." One kidney
BY CHRISTOPHER BODEEN
tdn 'levels. Melamine, used might last longer in an older
ASSOCIATED PRESS WAITER
. main!~ in l;'ias~CS and fettiiizj person without diabetes
er, ts·htgh m mtrogen and can than in a younger diabetic,
BEIJING - A dairy make milk appear to contain explains Dr.
Kenneth
ensnared in China's chemi- more protein, which is what Andreoni of Ohio State
cal-tainting scandal says it quality tests measure.
Medical Center and vice .
~as a victim ·of unscrupuThe pr~ctice has been chair qf. the UNOS kidney
.lous behavior by the inde- blamed for causing the committee.
pendent providers from deaths of four infants and
"It's trying to get the balwhom it buys raw milk.
sickening 54,000 others, with ance between having a perSpeaking on a television 10,000 still hospitalized.
son live longer because
talk show late Sunday, the
Large dairy companies typ - they have the transplant
· president of Bright Dairy ically buy raw milk gathered over dialysis, and also
said his company, one of ihe from small fanners at milking looking at how many years
largest in the Chinese dairy stations and collection cen- in total they would live,"
industry. had been · "too ters, often by subcontractors · he says.
nice" toward milk collec- responsible for safety testing.
• Ranking the quality of
tion stat ions that bought Safeguards were often lax.and donated kidneys in a way
milk from farmers.
major milk producers have that would let patients
The comments appeared been criti~ized for not carry- choose one of lesser quality
aimed .at restoring consumer ing out adequate testing.
if it means a shorter wait, or
confidence in the wake of the
Chinese milk powder and try to hold out longer for a
scandal that has dinged the other food prpducts have been better one.
reputation of some of China's banned from more than a
Such changes wouldn't
best-known food companies. dozen countries, worsening increase available I&lt;;idneys.
''We thought they were an increasingly painful dowri- Hence the need for the ne·w
operatin g_ in good con- ~m in China's crucial export kidney
match-making
science." Guo Benheng said sector and threatening house- called
desensitization
on state television 's eco- hold incqmes in the vast, aimed at patients like
nomics channeL
mostly poor counttyside. . Preloh .who otherwise
''I'd say we made an innoThe scandal has struck a might not get a chance at a
~ent mistake, although an
blow to . China's efforts to new organ.
mnocent mistake 1s still a build global brand names
A transplant starts by
mistake. We are definitely and establish healthy busi- matching patient and donor
making corrections " Guo ness practices .
kidney according to blood
said , according tO a tr~script
Newspapers on ·Monday and tissue type . Today 's
of his remarks posted on offi - reported Chinese beverage- anti-rejection drugs are so .
cial Web sites Monday.
maker Hangzhou Wahaha good that tissue-typing can
Appearing on the same Group was considering buy- be far from perfect.
show, the vice president of ing dairy assets from Sanlu
A different threat is
Mengniu Dairy, one of the Group, the milk-maker what's called antijlodycountry 's largest, said the accused . of attempting to mediated rejection, where
scandal had affected the cover up melamine tainting . patients increasingly are
company profoundly.
S3J1lu is 43 percent owned "sensitized" - their bod"This sort of thing just by New Zealand dairy giant ies produce antibodies that
tears your heart apan ,'' FonteJT;I Group, which has are
super-vigilant at
Zhao Yuanhua said.
already slashed the value of attacking most available
Milk collection stations its investment. China's gov- kidneys. What causes that? '
and individual fanners are ernment took over and sus- Pregnancy, blood transfuaccused of watenng down pended Sanlu 's operations sions, a previous trans milk to increase 'volume, then last month , and company plant, increased time on
adding the industrial cbemi- ·heads have been detained dialysis. So longer transcal melamine to increase pro- for investigation .
plant wait times are fuel ·•
•.

•

. Page.A6

AP photo

Cleveland Browns wide receiver Braylon Edwards runs with a pass reception for 49 yards in the first quarter of an NFL
football game against the New York Giants on Monday in Cleveland. Among the Giants defenders are Aaron Ross (31)
and Antonio Pierce (58).
·
·
·

0

s

t

Jackson
Smith
during
a
25-12. 2515, 25-17 setback during a
non-conference matchup in
the Apple City.
The Lady Raiders (14-8)
- fresh off capturing their
seventh consecutive Ohio
Valley Conference championship last Thursday never found a good rhythm
against the lronladies ,
although the scores got
closer as the night progressed.
Kayla Smith. led the
Silver and Black service
attack with, nine points.
Aubrie Rice led the ner
attack with three kills. while
the trio of !Iiana Corfias,
Jacqueline Jacobs and
. Linsey Stover each added
two kills.
Mackenzie
Cluxton and Tara Workman
also had a I.cill apiece.
Kelsey Martin led JHS
with IS points, followed by
Danielle Miller with 13.
RVHS did claim victories
in the junior varsity and
freshmen matches. wtth the
JV winning by a 25- I8, 25- ,
I 7 decision . Denise Madriz
led the JV Raiders - who
finished the year'20-2 ~JVer­
all - with 14 poi)lts. The
freshmen also won in two
~~6.es a~d finishe~ the year

Giant Killers: Browns nand New York 1st loss .
CLEVELAND (AP) The Cleveland Browns may
have flipped around theu
season.
Led by tumbling wide
receiver Braylon .Edwards,
who announced his team's
return to Monday night after
five years by sticking an
Olympic-caliber cartwheel
and · ba~k flip during
pregame
introductions,
Cleveland ended · New
York's 11-game road win.
ning streak with a 35-14 win
over the defending Super
Bo"~~&lt;l champions. .
Cleveland ' quarterback
Derek Anderson, whose job
was in serious jeopardy JUSt
a few weeks ago, threw one
'Of his two touchdown pas
. se,s
to Edwards, comeJ;I.laclc Eric
interceJ:\l)d Eli
·
and returned it 94
yards
a touchdown and
the Browns (2-3) finally
looked worthy o.f a primetime TV 'siOt.
Anderson fmished 18-for29 for 310 yards, Edwards
caught five passes for a

career-high 154 yards and
Jamal Lewis scored on a 4yard run for the Browns,
who won a Monday night
game for·the first time since
1993 and handed the Giants
(4-1) their first loss,leaving
the Tennessee Titans as the
NFL's only unbeaten ieam.
Manning was picked off
three times and the Giants,
so dominant through their
first four games, were
roughed up by a Cleveland
team runmng out of time to
make good on lofty preseason expectations.
In the closing minutes.
Browns fans chanted "Over· rated" at the New Yorkers.
Aside from some more
silly penalties, the Browns
were superior to the Giants,
who had reeled off 11
.straight wins - 12 counting
the Super Bowl - outside
of New Jersey since Week I
last season. But Manning
was not himself and New
York, which embarrassed
Cleveland during the exhibi·.
tion season; missed an

opportunity to open a twogame lead in the brutal NFC
East.
Edwards' 11-yard TD
reception on the first play of
the fourth quarter. gave the
Browns a 27-14 lead, and he
punctuated it with a reverse
dunk over the goal post. The
score capped an 87-yard
drive which was bogged
down by five Cleveland
penalties.
The Giants then drove to
the Cleveland 9, but on second-and-4, Manning locked
onto wide . receiver Amani
Toomer, allowing Wright
time to dart in front, make
the interception and tiptoe
down the stdeline to the end
zone. It was a.satisfying tum
for Wright, who was burned
twice by the ·Giants during
the Aug. · IS ' match up
between the teams .
While
Browns
fJns
danced · in the aittes,
Anderson hit Edwards for
the 2-point conversion to put
the Browns ahead br 21.
Cleveland had 1ts best

game this season despite
playing without Pro Bow I
tight end Kellen Winslow,
who was · hospitalized last
week with an undisclosed
illne$s.
Manning went 18-of-28
for 196 yards and threw a
22-yard TD pass to Plaxico
Burress, who was back after
serving a one-game suspension for violating team rules.
Moments after New York
went up 7-3 on Brandon
Jacobs' ?·yard run, Edwards
turned cornerback Aaron
Ross around with a nice outside fake and hauled in a 70yard pass from Anderson to
set up Cleveland's fi'rsr TD.
a 4-yard run by Lewis.
On the Browns •· next possession, Andetson · p.ut
to¥ether his best-lookmg
dnve of the season. Given
time to throw, he made all
the correct reads and went 5for-5 for 74 yards, threading
a 22-yard TD pass over the
middle to backup tight end

RVHS - a three-seed will return to action
Saturday when it hosts
sixth-seeded NelsonvilleYork in a Division Ill sec"
tiona! final. The match will
begin at4 p.m .

. . . . -·-···2

Rio Grande men's cross country
. fmishes 32nd at All-Ohio
.

. time of 28:01.4. Freshman
Bryce Wilson was next in
!59th place, registering a
DELAWARE
'rhe time of 28:42.
Other Rio results: freshUniversity of Rio Grande
RedStorm men's cross coun- man Brandon Crislip, !76th
try team finished 32nd, out (29:05 .7); freshman Justi~
42 teams, at the 2008 ·All-_ Hartley, !97th '(29:28 .6);
Ohio Championships on freshman Chad McCarty,
Friday at Ohio Wesleyan 214th (30:00 .8); freshman
University. The women's Lucas· Murphy, 22lst
teams fielded only runners (30: 13 .8) and freshman
and did not have a team Andrew Edmunds, 233rd
(30:46.4).
score.
Sophomore
Matlhew There were 280 runners in
Spencer '\VaS the top runner the men's race.
Nik Schweikert of Malone
for the RedStonn men . He
was
the overall men's winfinished I 18th overall with a
Bv MARK WILLIAMS
SPECIAL TO THE SENTINEl

.ner with' a time of 25:18.2.
NAIANo.l Malone won the
men's even! with 68 points,
outdistancing .Cincinnati
(84) , Ohio State ( 10 I), Kent
State (121 ) and Ohio (185).
On the women 's side,
junior Stacey Arnett was the
top Rio runner to finish ,
crossing the line in I 44th
r,

plac~ with a time of 2 1:03.3.

Freshman Kayla Renner
was !79th with a time of
2 I : 39.2' and freshman
Danielle Stockham finished
255th, ~vering the 3 .1-mile
course m 24:48.3.
There were 41 teams in the
women's race and a total of
288 runners .

.

Lilian Jelimo of the
University of Cincinnati was
the individual champion·
with a time.of 17:45 .7.
NAIA No. I Cedarville
he women 's meet with
ints. finishing ahead of
Cincinnati 's 96 points .
Rounding out the top five
were Bowling Green (128).
Ohio (132) and Dayton
(152) .
Rio Grande will next run ,
Friday, October 17 at the
Wilmington College Fall
Classic. The women will
start at 4:30 with the men 's
race set to begin at 5:15p.m.

�.

'
\

HEAT,TH

The.Daily Sentinel

Pediatricians
double vita1t1in D
.reconrmendations

-

Bl

•

1L R:oUDdup, Page Bl

BY LAURAN .NEERGAARD

AP MEDICAL WRITER

' .

-- - -

....... ~- ·--

Tuesday, October 14,2008
'

POMI,AOY- A schedule or Upcoming high

'lairtlly lpofling evant&amp; involving
!rom Meigs and Gilllia counties .

'Dmdev Octobtr 14·
DZ Boy• Socc.r

Blue IDU,IS IIIQI WaveriJ,
face No.1

The Blue and White BY BRYAN WALTERS
BWAlTERSOMYDAllYTRIBUNE.COM who also won their first
Bop Soccer
postseason contest for sec,~;iotla~;:-; Christian at Cross Lanes
..,.,;
p.m.
GALLIPOLIS - One ond-year head coach Amy
down, two to go.
Shriver - now advance to
Wtcl1118dq Or:mber 15
Gallia Academy volley- Wednesday's • sectional
D2 Volltyball
ball started its chase for a Semifinal against top-.seeded
MarlelUI at (2) Meigs, 6p.m.
Gallla Aclldemy at (1) Unloto, 6 p.m.
Division II sectional cham' Unioto at Unioto Hi~h
pionship
Monday night on a School. The match Will
JbundiV Oc:IQber 18
good
.note,
fending off a begin at 6 p.m:
D4 Volleyball - Sectional finale
(7) Miller at (2) Eastern, 6 p.m.
opponent in visiting . WHS jumped out to an ·
(5) Pike Eastern al (4) South Galiia, 6 stingy
Waverly
during a three-. early 4-2 edge in Game I,
p.m.
.
(6) Southern at (3) Waterford, 6p.m.
gaine 25-20, 25-17, 25-21 but the hosts countered with
•
victory in a D2 sectional three straight points to take a
Saturdey Octpbor 11
quarterfinal
in the Old 5-4 h:ad. After trading
03 Volltyball - Socttonel flnill
(6) Nelsonville-York at River Valley, 4
French City.
points to get to 8-7, the
p.m.
The
Blue
Angels
(14-8)Angels ran off seven straight
cro.. Country
an eight-seed - never points for a 15-7 cushion.
Divisions 11·111 District meets at
University of Rio Grande, 10 a.m.
trailed by more than two . GAHS would lead by as
lloyo Socc;or - ACSJ TQUm.
points at any time during many as 10 ( 19-9) in Game
Ohio Valley Chrtst~n at Granv!!le, TBA
their contest with the ninth- 1 and eventually took the
seeded Lady Tigers (II-II), opener by five p&lt;iints.
and that one single twoIn Game 2, both squads
point deficit came early in traded points to .five-all
.
.
.
Bryan Walteralphoto
Game I at 4-2. GAHS also before the hosts established
trailed by only one point in an early 7-5 lead. The Members of the Gallla Acad,emy volley\)all team, '!eel by Megan Foster (12) and Brea Close
(3), shake hands with Waverly after the Blue Angels' won their Division II sectional quar·
the second game and never
trailed
in
the
Game
3
finale.
Please SH Ancels, B:Z
tertinal match Monday in Gallipolis.
·
COLUMBUS (AP) - How a sh1.ta
Gallla Academy at · (2) ·Mariana, 6

:

e. .

·~··

1.

. '(' ;r;: ..

AP photo

Cynthia Preloh, with her husband Brian Preloh , rests in her hosprtal room after a kidney
transplant at Georgetown University Hospital in Washington, Wednesday, Oct. B. Preloh
underwent an unusual procedure that allowed her to receive a kidney from her son , a kidney that she would otherwise have rejected. Preloh wasn't expected to survive the wait for
a standard cadaver kidney.
. .
·
.
·
ing sensitization, a vicious ~niversity · - and now
cycle.
·
saowly spreading.
The more antibodies, the
But that's not strong
harder it is to find a compat- enough for many SIIJler-senible kidney. So the quest is sitized patients, so a new
to rid patie!lls of antibodies experiment is testing the
targeted to a specific donal- lymphoma drug Rituxan.
ed kidney, and keep them which fights the immunefrom making more.
system cancer by killing
One method: Filtering a certain antibody-producing
patient's blm'ld, called plas- cells.
Cedars-Sinai
rna ·pheresis, before tPBns- researchers reported- the
plant. Another is intra- first
preliminary
but
venous immune globulin, or promising evidence in the
IVIG, a mix of infection-. New England Journal of
fighting antibodies that Medicine this summer:
basically crowd out the bad Rituxan helped slash antikidney kind with run-of- body levels enough that I 6
the-mill types. They're of 20 patients could be
treatments pioneered at a transplanted, and all but one
few hospitals - including . of the new kidneys was
Los Angeles' Cedars-Sinai working a year later.
Medical , &lt;:;enter
and
Back at . Georgetown,
Baltimore s Johns Hopkins Cynthia Preloh, 50, had
• 'I' •

+

, ..

~

.•

"

.-

been told to expect a sevenyear wait for a·donated kidney
when
diabetes
destroyed
her
own.
Diabetics have particularly
poor survival on dialysis
and her son offered a faster
living donation. bu( Preloh
had too many antibodies
that would attack his tissue.
' Melancon - who moved
from
Hopkin s · to
Georgetown in the nation's
capital to spread 'this work
.:_ boped Rituxan would
give Preloh enough extra
desensitization to try the
tnmsplant. Her new kidney
started working on the
operating table, "which
was the best thing you
could hope to hear." she
said last week as s!Je-;
recovered .

.

.,.

Fifth weekly 2008
. AP High School
Football Poll List

panel Of sports writers and broadcasters
rates Ohio high school football teams in ,
the fifth of seven weekly Associated
Press poll of 2007, by OHSAA divisions,
with won -lost record and total points
(first-place votes in parentheses):

3, Hilliard Oavldson (1) 7·0
4, Oubtin Coffman 7-0 ·

5, Cin. Elder (3) li·1
'Brunswick (2) 7-0
· 7, Cln. Colerain 6-1
B. Cle. St. Ignatius (1) 6·1

•'t'"

DIVISION II
1,Cols.De5ales(19)7-0
2, LoulsviUe (9) 7-0

• 3 , Tol. Ceht. Cath. 1-o

159

.152
52
147
127

289

had

191
5, LoQan (1) 7.()
186
6,.Sytvanla SouthvieW (2) 7-Q 144
?, New Carlisle Tecumsell7..0 1:21

s 'trea ·k
snapped by

85
.51
37

Others.receiving 12 or more points: 11.
Cols. Marion-Franklin 32. 12, Cln. Turpin
17. 13, Dresden Tri-Valley 14.

DIVISION IV
1, Coldwater (l!S) 7.0
2, Steubenville (5) 7·0

mqe ~alltpoltslailp ~rtbune

3, Yourtgs. Mooney 6-1
4, Massillon Tuslaw 7-Q
5, New lexington 7..0
6, Plain Clly Jon Alder (1) 7-0 121
7, f(etterlng Alter 5·2
1 tS
8, Ctinton·Masste 7.0
104
9. GenOa Area 7.0
79
10, Akr. SVSM 6-1
73
Othara receiving 12 Or more polniS: 11.
Fostoria ~2 . 12, ~otaln Cloarvlaw ~. 13,

~oint ~lea~ant l\egister
. &amp;The Daily Senti.nel

Marlon Pleasan1 23. 14, Brool&lt;vlllo 17.
t5. Martins Farry 15..

presents

DIVISIONV
1, '~bungs. Ursuline (l!3) 7.0

290

•2, An:hbold (2) 7.0
. 221
• 3, Hamler Patrtck Homy (1) 7.() 216

THE WOMEN OF
THE TRI- COUNTY

MS Marlon Local (3) 6-1 176
Ul&gt;er1y·Benton 7-0 176
a. WhHlarsburv (2) 1.0
158
' 7, Klrtl~ 7-o
11B
B. Anna 6-1
95
9,'Cin.Hllll7.0 .
.70
11), Bucyrut wYnlonl 7-9
38
. Othm ..,.lvlng 12 or mote polnla: 11,
CloJphol Jtlleroon .l it. 12, w. Uborty8oltm 22. 1~. FQrllmouth w. 21. 14.
Naloonvlllo·York 18. 15, Columbiana
e.-~ew 13. 16, w.Jtrr.roon 12.
4,
~. Andlay

I

This special section, publishing October 31st, is an exce.Hent opportunity
for local businesswomen to tell their story, promote their business and
give their tips for success.
Not just for women wh~ own their own business, but for all the women 1
who are the back bone of local successful businesses.
opportr~nity to

S02
262
209
1-48
131

rei/ their story.)

DIVISION VI
: 1, Hopowoii-Loudon (15) 7.() 286
• 2, Mogadoro (5) 7.0
2~
' 3.~(5)7.()
234
: 4, Nolwolk St. "-ul (4) 7-Cl
207
• 5, Ado 7.()
. 175
!8', M'Jvom (1) 7.()
134
, 7, MCDonald (1) 7.0
119
•e. Ha.....l Rlvar 7.()
113
: 9, Otlt&gt;ho4 St. John'a 6-1
78
• 10, Carey 6-1 .
41
• Others receiving 12 or more points; 1 1.,
F&gt;anoo,.-GIIboa 31 . 12. Berlin CenJar
Western ReserYB 16. •

.contact your
Representative Today!
Gallipolis Daily Tribune 446-2342
·Point Pleas;mt Register 675-1333
The Daily Sentinel 992-2155

CoNTAcr Us _,
t-740-446-2~ ext.

33

!'u - 1 -7~

E-moll - sports0rrlydal1ysentinol.com

. ,pcirt.s!Afl
Bryan Walters, Sports Writer
(740) 448-2342, ""'· 33

bwal1ers0mydallytrioone.oom
l.llrry Crum, Sports Writer
(740) 4-46-2342. OICI. 33 ,
Ierum OmydaiJyntglsJar.com

their

tw.o-g~me
wo~ n n 1 n g

h

17. 13, Dresden Tri-Yalley 14.

WOMEN'S

•

Raider ~~·

· 235

Others receiving 12 or more points: 11 ,
Cols. Marton-FrankUn 32. 12, Cin. Turpin

ATIONAL

. .
(Each ad·will have the same layout to give everyone equal

JACKSON
River
Valley volleyball concluded
its regular season on somewhat of a down note
Monday
night , as·
the L:1 dy

258

DIVISION Ill
1, Sl. Marys Memorial (18)7·0 272
2. Thornville Sheridan (3) 7·0 258
3, Tlpp Cily Tippecanoe (3) 7-0 200
4, Youngs. Liber1y (2) 7-0
176 .
5, Circleville Logan Elm (1) 7-0 157
6, Poland Samlnary t1) 6·1
125
7, Canal Winchester (1) 7-0
114
6, Avon (2) 7-0
95
9, Canal Fulton NW 6-1
82
10, New Philadelphia 1-o
40

.

STAFF REPORT

SPORTS@MYDAllYSENTINEl.COM

4, LeiCiflgton 7-Q

10, Cln. Wln1on Woods 6·1

\t\ 0 ''

216

9, Amherst Steele 7-o
73
- 10, ·Lakewood St. Edward 6·1 26
Others receiving 12 or more points: 11 ,
Middletown 20. 1.2, Can. GlonOak 17.

9, Medina Highland 7.0
'4• ·1+'

Jackson
downsRV
in three

DIVISION I
1, Cia.Glenville (21)1-0
285
.• 2, Pickerington Cent. (3} 7-o
267

8, E. Cit. ShoW 7.()

of Women in Business .

Chinese dairy blames
subcontractors for tainting

- -· ----

Tuesday, October 14, 2008

The Daily Sentinel.
boWl s1n!ak in jeopardy, Page'Bl

WASHINGTON
Nearly one in three patients
who need a kidney transBY LINDSEY TANNER
The recommendations plant may never get one
AP MEDICAL WRITER
were prepared for release because their bodies are
Monday at an academy con- abnonnally primed to attack
CHICAGO- The nation's ference in Boston. They are a donated organ.
leading pediatricians group to be published in the
Now doctors are trying
~ys children from newborns . November issue of the acadnew ways to outwit the
to teens should get double the emy 's journal, Pediatrics.
immune system and save
usually
recommended . Besides milk and some more of those so-called
ilmount of vitamin D because other fortified foods like "highly
sensitized"
of evidence that it may help cereal, vitamin Dis found in patients - often with kidprevent serious diseases.
oily fish including tuna, neys donated by living
To meet the new recom- mackerel and sardines.
donors, considered the
mendation of 400 units daily,
Bul it's hard to get enough optimal
kind.
millions of children will through diet; the best source
"I
feel
lucky. Our
need to take daily vitamin D is sunlight because the body son savedvery
my life," ·said
GUpplements, 'the American makes vitamin D when sun- Cyn'thia
Preloh
of
Academy ot'Pediatrics said. shine hits the skin.
Va.,
after
an
Arlington,
.
That includes breast-fed
While it is believed that unusual combinati,llll of
infants - even those who I 0 to 15 minutes in the sun blood' cleansing and a canget some formula, too, and without sunscreen a few cer drug allowed her to
many teens who drink little times weekly is sufficient receive a kidney from her
or no mill&lt;.
for many, people with dark
that her body otherwise
· Baby fonnula contains vit- skin and those in northern, son
would
have destroyed:
amin D, so infants on formu- less sunny climates need
It's
promising
work that
Ia only generally don 't need more. Because of sunlight's comes as the nation's
kidsupplements. However, the link with skin cancer. "vitadistribution system is
academy
recommends min D supplements during ney
beginning
major overhaul.
breast-feeding for at least the infancy, childhood and ado- ;r'ogether, a.the
two efforts
first ~ear of life and breast lescence are necessary," the aim to make a long-needed
milk 1s sometimes deficient. academy's report says.
· · Most commercially availRecent studies have dent in the years of waiting
can take to get a kidney
able milk is fortified with shown that many children it
transplant.
•
vitamin D. but most chit" don'tgetenough vitamin D.
That's crucial, because
dren and teens don 't drink and cases of rickets , a bone
chance of getting suc"your
enough of it - four cups disorder often associated
cessfully
· transplanted
daily would be needed - to with malnourishment in the
with
time," says
decreases
meet the new requirement, 1800s, continue to occur.
said Dr. Frank Greer. the
Greer, a University of Dr. Keith Melancon of
University
report's co-author.
Wisconsin
pediatrician, Geor~etown
Preloh
's
surgeon
Hospttal,
The new advice is based acknowledged that most
on mounting research about studies suggesting vitamin and a leader in the small but
potential benefits from vita- D may play a much broader growing field of incompatimin D besides keeping role in disease prevention ble kidney transplants. ·
bones strong, including sug- have been observational, . , More than 77,000 people
gestions that it might reduce . not the .most rigorous kind are on the national waiting
list to receive. a kidney
risks for cancer, diabetes of medical evidence.
from
a deceased donor. Yet
and heart disease. But the
Nonetheless, many docevidence isn't conclusi.ve tors consider the research fewer than 17,000 trans- .
and there 's no consensus on compelling and many have plants a year are perhow much of the vitamin · begun to offer patients roo- formed, about 10,500 of
them from deceased donors
would be needed for disease tine vitamin D testing.
prevention. ·
Adrian Gombart, a vita- and just over 6,000 from
The new advice replaces a min D researcher at Oregon living donors, relatives or
2003 academy recommen- State University, said the friends ~ho offer to help a
dation for 200 units daily.
new recommendations are specific patient. The wait
That's the amount the gov- safe and conservative but can stretch four · to fi ve
·. ernment recommends for that 400 units "is probably years, and more than 4,000
patients die on the waiting
children and adults up to age not enough."
list
each year.
50; 400 units is recommendGombart's lab work in
·
The
United Network lor .·
ed for adults ·aged 51 to 70 · -human tissue has-shOWitthat
Organ
Sharing is considerand 600 units for those aged vitamin D helps iqcrease
71 and up. Vitamin Dis sold- levels of a protein that kills ing some big changes to
in drops for young children, bacteria. He said many the system. There's no forcapsules and tablets.
experts believe that between mal proposal yet, but there
The Institute of Medicine, 800 and 1,000 units daily are opttons under discusa government advisory would be more effective at sion:
• Wait times might be
group that sets dietary stan- ·helping fight disease.
dards, is discussing with fedSeveral members of an defined by . kidney funcera! agencies whether those academy committee that tion deterioration rather
recommendations should be helped write the guidelines than how ·early someone
changed based on emerging have current or fonner ties gets on the transplant list,
research, said spokeswoman to makers of infant formula to level the field for
patients . who don't see a
Christine Stencel.
or vitamin supplements . .
specialist right away.
• In addition to wait time,
matches may weigh recipient and kidney age and
medical conditions to maximize what's "life years from
transplant." One kidney
BY CHRISTOPHER BODEEN
tdn 'levels. Melamine, used might last longer in an older
ASSOCIATED PRESS WAITER
. main!~ in l;'ias~CS and fettiiizj person without diabetes
er, ts·htgh m mtrogen and can than in a younger diabetic,
BEIJING - A dairy make milk appear to contain explains Dr.
Kenneth
ensnared in China's chemi- more protein, which is what Andreoni of Ohio State
cal-tainting scandal says it quality tests measure.
Medical Center and vice .
~as a victim ·of unscrupuThe pr~ctice has been chair qf. the UNOS kidney
.lous behavior by the inde- blamed for causing the committee.
pendent providers from deaths of four infants and
"It's trying to get the balwhom it buys raw milk.
sickening 54,000 others, with ance between having a perSpeaking on a television 10,000 still hospitalized.
son live longer because
talk show late Sunday, the
Large dairy companies typ - they have the transplant
· president of Bright Dairy ically buy raw milk gathered over dialysis, and also
said his company, one of ihe from small fanners at milking looking at how many years
largest in the Chinese dairy stations and collection cen- in total they would live,"
industry. had been · "too ters, often by subcontractors · he says.
nice" toward milk collec- responsible for safety testing.
• Ranking the quality of
tion stat ions that bought Safeguards were often lax.and donated kidneys in a way
milk from farmers.
major milk producers have that would let patients
The comments appeared been criti~ized for not carry- choose one of lesser quality
aimed .at restoring consumer ing out adequate testing.
if it means a shorter wait, or
confidence in the wake of the
Chinese milk powder and try to hold out longer for a
scandal that has dinged the other food prpducts have been better one.
reputation of some of China's banned from more than a
Such changes wouldn't
best-known food companies. dozen countries, worsening increase available I&lt;;idneys.
''We thought they were an increasingly painful dowri- Hence the need for the ne·w
operatin g_ in good con- ~m in China's crucial export kidney
match-making
science." Guo Benheng said sector and threatening house- called
desensitization
on state television 's eco- hold incqmes in the vast, aimed at patients like
nomics channeL
mostly poor counttyside. . Preloh .who otherwise
''I'd say we made an innoThe scandal has struck a might not get a chance at a
~ent mistake, although an
blow to . China's efforts to new organ.
mnocent mistake 1s still a build global brand names
A transplant starts by
mistake. We are definitely and establish healthy busi- matching patient and donor
making corrections " Guo ness practices .
kidney according to blood
said , according tO a tr~script
Newspapers on ·Monday and tissue type . Today 's
of his remarks posted on offi - reported Chinese beverage- anti-rejection drugs are so .
cial Web sites Monday.
maker Hangzhou Wahaha good that tissue-typing can
Appearing on the same Group was considering buy- be far from perfect.
show, the vice president of ing dairy assets from Sanlu
A different threat is
Mengniu Dairy, one of the Group, the milk-maker what's called antijlodycountry 's largest, said the accused . of attempting to mediated rejection, where
scandal had affected the cover up melamine tainting . patients increasingly are
company profoundly.
S3J1lu is 43 percent owned "sensitized" - their bod"This sort of thing just by New Zealand dairy giant ies produce antibodies that
tears your heart apan ,'' FonteJT;I Group, which has are
super-vigilant at
Zhao Yuanhua said.
already slashed the value of attacking most available
Milk collection stations its investment. China's gov- kidneys. What causes that? '
and individual fanners are ernment took over and sus- Pregnancy, blood transfuaccused of watenng down pended Sanlu 's operations sions, a previous trans milk to increase 'volume, then last month , and company plant, increased time on
adding the industrial cbemi- ·heads have been detained dialysis. So longer transcal melamine to increase pro- for investigation .
plant wait times are fuel ·•
•.

•

. Page.A6

AP photo

Cleveland Browns wide receiver Braylon Edwards runs with a pass reception for 49 yards in the first quarter of an NFL
football game against the New York Giants on Monday in Cleveland. Among the Giants defenders are Aaron Ross (31)
and Antonio Pierce (58).
·
·
·

0

s

t

Jackson
Smith
during
a
25-12. 2515, 25-17 setback during a
non-conference matchup in
the Apple City.
The Lady Raiders (14-8)
- fresh off capturing their
seventh consecutive Ohio
Valley Conference championship last Thursday never found a good rhythm
against the lronladies ,
although the scores got
closer as the night progressed.
Kayla Smith. led the
Silver and Black service
attack with, nine points.
Aubrie Rice led the ner
attack with three kills. while
the trio of !Iiana Corfias,
Jacqueline Jacobs and
. Linsey Stover each added
two kills.
Mackenzie
Cluxton and Tara Workman
also had a I.cill apiece.
Kelsey Martin led JHS
with IS points, followed by
Danielle Miller with 13.
RVHS did claim victories
in the junior varsity and
freshmen matches. wtth the
JV winning by a 25- I8, 25- ,
I 7 decision . Denise Madriz
led the JV Raiders - who
finished the year'20-2 ~JVer­
all - with 14 poi)lts. The
freshmen also won in two
~~6.es a~d finishe~ the year

Giant Killers: Browns nand New York 1st loss .
CLEVELAND (AP) The Cleveland Browns may
have flipped around theu
season.
Led by tumbling wide
receiver Braylon .Edwards,
who announced his team's
return to Monday night after
five years by sticking an
Olympic-caliber cartwheel
and · ba~k flip during
pregame
introductions,
Cleveland ended · New
York's 11-game road win.
ning streak with a 35-14 win
over the defending Super
Bo"~~&lt;l champions. .
Cleveland ' quarterback
Derek Anderson, whose job
was in serious jeopardy JUSt
a few weeks ago, threw one
'Of his two touchdown pas
. se,s
to Edwards, comeJ;I.laclc Eric
interceJ:\l)d Eli
·
and returned it 94
yards
a touchdown and
the Browns (2-3) finally
looked worthy o.f a primetime TV 'siOt.
Anderson fmished 18-for29 for 310 yards, Edwards
caught five passes for a

career-high 154 yards and
Jamal Lewis scored on a 4yard run for the Browns,
who won a Monday night
game for·the first time since
1993 and handed the Giants
(4-1) their first loss,leaving
the Tennessee Titans as the
NFL's only unbeaten ieam.
Manning was picked off
three times and the Giants,
so dominant through their
first four games, were
roughed up by a Cleveland
team runmng out of time to
make good on lofty preseason expectations.
In the closing minutes.
Browns fans chanted "Over· rated" at the New Yorkers.
Aside from some more
silly penalties, the Browns
were superior to the Giants,
who had reeled off 11
.straight wins - 12 counting
the Super Bowl - outside
of New Jersey since Week I
last season. But Manning
was not himself and New
York, which embarrassed
Cleveland during the exhibi·.
tion season; missed an

opportunity to open a twogame lead in the brutal NFC
East.
Edwards' 11-yard TD
reception on the first play of
the fourth quarter. gave the
Browns a 27-14 lead, and he
punctuated it with a reverse
dunk over the goal post. The
score capped an 87-yard
drive which was bogged
down by five Cleveland
penalties.
The Giants then drove to
the Cleveland 9, but on second-and-4, Manning locked
onto wide . receiver Amani
Toomer, allowing Wright
time to dart in front, make
the interception and tiptoe
down the stdeline to the end
zone. It was a.satisfying tum
for Wright, who was burned
twice by the ·Giants during
the Aug. · IS ' match up
between the teams .
While
Browns
fJns
danced · in the aittes,
Anderson hit Edwards for
the 2-point conversion to put
the Browns ahead br 21.
Cleveland had 1ts best

game this season despite
playing without Pro Bow I
tight end Kellen Winslow,
who was · hospitalized last
week with an undisclosed
illne$s.
Manning went 18-of-28
for 196 yards and threw a
22-yard TD pass to Plaxico
Burress, who was back after
serving a one-game suspension for violating team rules.
Moments after New York
went up 7-3 on Brandon
Jacobs' ?·yard run, Edwards
turned cornerback Aaron
Ross around with a nice outside fake and hauled in a 70yard pass from Anderson to
set up Cleveland's fi'rsr TD.
a 4-yard run by Lewis.
On the Browns •· next possession, Andetson · p.ut
to¥ether his best-lookmg
dnve of the season. Given
time to throw, he made all
the correct reads and went 5for-5 for 74 yards, threading
a 22-yard TD pass over the
middle to backup tight end

RVHS - a three-seed will return to action
Saturday when it hosts
sixth-seeded NelsonvilleYork in a Division Ill sec"
tiona! final. The match will
begin at4 p.m .

. . . . -·-···2

Rio Grande men's cross country
. fmishes 32nd at All-Ohio
.

. time of 28:01.4. Freshman
Bryce Wilson was next in
!59th place, registering a
DELAWARE
'rhe time of 28:42.
Other Rio results: freshUniversity of Rio Grande
RedStorm men's cross coun- man Brandon Crislip, !76th
try team finished 32nd, out (29:05 .7); freshman Justi~
42 teams, at the 2008 ·All-_ Hartley, !97th '(29:28 .6);
Ohio Championships on freshman Chad McCarty,
Friday at Ohio Wesleyan 214th (30:00 .8); freshman
University. The women's Lucas· Murphy, 22lst
teams fielded only runners (30: 13 .8) and freshman
and did not have a team Andrew Edmunds, 233rd
(30:46.4).
score.
Sophomore
Matlhew There were 280 runners in
Spencer '\VaS the top runner the men's race.
Nik Schweikert of Malone
for the RedStonn men . He
was
the overall men's winfinished I 18th overall with a
Bv MARK WILLIAMS
SPECIAL TO THE SENTINEl

.ner with' a time of 25:18.2.
NAIANo.l Malone won the
men's even! with 68 points,
outdistancing .Cincinnati
(84) , Ohio State ( 10 I), Kent
State (121 ) and Ohio (185).
On the women 's side,
junior Stacey Arnett was the
top Rio runner to finish ,
crossing the line in I 44th
r,

plac~ with a time of 2 1:03.3.

Freshman Kayla Renner
was !79th with a time of
2 I : 39.2' and freshman
Danielle Stockham finished
255th, ~vering the 3 .1-mile
course m 24:48.3.
There were 41 teams in the
women's race and a total of
288 runners .

.

Lilian Jelimo of the
University of Cincinnati was
the individual champion·
with a time.of 17:45 .7.
NAIA No. I Cedarville
he women 's meet with
ints. finishing ahead of
Cincinnati 's 96 points .
Rounding out the top five
were Bowling Green (128).
Ohio (132) and Dayton
(152) .
Rio Grande will next run ,
Friday, October 17 at the
Wilmington College Fall
Classic. The women will
start at 4:30 with the men 's
race set to begin at 5:15p.m.

�Tuaaday, October 14,·2008
P~ge B2 • The Daily Sentinel

~

www. mydailysentinel.com

The Daily Sentinel · Page B3

wwvi.mydallysentinel.com

Tuesday, October 14, 2oo8

QCribune - Sentinel - l\egister
CLASSIFIED

NFL ga_mes go down to the wire

•

:BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Ryan Long\\ ell m"de a
field goal ""ilh nine

'ccond~

jeft to gi'e M111n~'"'" a
-comeback win over Detroit.
: Nine ~cl:nnLb'.' Bllf- in~!
: Four other gumcs \\·ere
oecidcd even later on a wild
Sunday, mcluding &lt;111 NFL
first for AriLona: a blocked
punt for " touchdown in
nvertimc.
: "I can't remember one that
~as this crazy." Cardinals
:Quarterback Kurt Warner
~aid, "especially toward the

•
•

•
•
•

••

E·mal!
• classified@mydailytribune.com

; He could have been talkAP photo
1ng about the whole .day.
:Houston beat Miamt when San Otego Chargers runmng back LaOatnian Tomlinson,
~an Schaub ran for a TD left , stratght arms New England Patnots Jerod Mayo, right,
-:With 3 seconds left. and as he ftghts for yardage on a pass recept1on dunng the firs\
::Atlanta and St Louts both quarter of an NFL football game Sunday 1n San Otego.
won on lield goals as time
;:xpired It I' as the first tunc
In Minnesota. the Vikmgs' of 2.' passes for just 83 yards
~ince 1970 that four teams relallvely comfortable win wtth two touchdowns and
:got the wmning points witll was aided by a dubiou' pass- two int~rceptions for the
~·ewer than 10 second&lt;- left in 111terkrencc call on Letgh Seahawks. Pro BowL quarterback Matt Ha sselb~ck
1'egulation.
Bodden of Dctrt11t (0-5 1.
: Anzonas game also had a
Tnnling 10-9 with 2:22 to was out With a sore knee and
f.ield goal . with the clock play. the Vtktngs (J-3! had a backup Seneca Wallace out
reaching zeros N1ck Folk sccond-a nd-2U from the1r with a calf mjury.
:made a 52-yarder to tie ir for 32. Gu~ Frerotte threw Jeep
:Oallas at 24 Then Sean down the stdeline • for JAGUARS 24, BRONCOS 17
Morey . blocked
Mat Aund rae Alltson. and the
In Denver. the Jaguars 'got
:McBriar's punt. Mont y . ball fell mcomplete . But superb perforn)ances from
:Beisel scoope(l up the ball llcld JUdge Mlk~ Weir whiS- 4uarterhack Davtd Ual'rard
and scored from 3 yards l&lt;&gt; tied Bodden lor mterlercnce and t'u tming hllck Maunce
give the Cardmals (4-2) a &lt;ie.'pHe what appeared to be Jone ~- Drew, prus three take. a~~&lt;ays by thetr defense.
30-24 victory over tile m~~ mm l contact.
,Cowboys.
1he . 42-) md penalty gave
Garrard completed 25 of
The game ""' wtld Irom ~he Viktngs the ball at the 34 passes for 276 yards. one
start to finiSh - Anwna's -6. Longwell converted the TD and no interceptions,
}.J. Arrington took the open- kick five plays later to avotd and Jones-Drew rumbled for
tng ktck 93 ya n.h for a what would have been a 125 yards and two TDs on
touchdown.
damagmg loss for a te~m 22 carries.
. Dallas (4-2) scored 10 that has de_s•gns on makmg
The Jaguars (3-JJ wasted
poults 111 the I mal 2 1111nutes the playoffs.
no time in sending the
:o r regulatiOn ro redcll overBroncos (4-2) to thetr fi rst
rtme,
CHARGERS 30, PATRIOTS 10 home Joss since last Oct. 29
"It was ,tlmo.,t a nm;Jcle
In San Diego, Phi lip against Green Bay.
D
11
1
Rivers
threl' three IOllch·
"
[j n1s h Ior us.
,, as code 1
Wade Phillips "ud.
down passes and San
8UCS 27, PANTHERS 3
In Sunday's other ga mes. Diego' s defense stuffed
In Tumpa. Fla.. Jeff
it was s,m D1ego ~0. New Qltnrlefback Matt Cassel on Garcia, !ilartmg for the first
EngL1nd 10: Philadelphia fourt h-and-goal from the 1- time since the season opcnl'r
40. San F1anctsco 26: Green yard line.
becau'se Hrwn Gnesc IS
Bay
27,
Seattle
17;
It was a measure of pay- inJured, threw for 173 yards
Jacksonvilte 24, Denver 17; back against a team that had and a touchdown . Warrick
ln(hanopolis J 1, Ba ltimore beaten the Chargers tl1ree Dunn had hi s most produc3: New Orleans 34, Oakland straight times , including in ti ve day running the ball
3: Tampa Bay 27. Caroli na the pla yoffs the last two sea- since rejoining the Rues
,
· with 11 5 y.trds on 22 carries.
_,;
anu. I N .y . Jets 16
_ . sons.
;!:i ncinnat 1 14.
Rivers threw touchdown
The victory, Tampa Bay's
• Atl an ta 's Jason Elam passes of 49 yards to first at home against the
ittoned for a late t'o11rt h-q uar- Malcom Floyd. 4 yards to division rival Panthers since
re"r mis. bv boot1n g a 4~- Vincent Jackson and I yard 2002, gave the Bucs (4-2) a
yard lield 'gnat' to give the to Antonio Gates. It was the shme of f1rst place in the
Falcons a 22-20 w 111 over fourth time tllis season th at NFC South w1th Carol ina
Chtca§!&lt;&gt;
Rtvers threw three TD pass- (4-2).
ln the last 8 mlntltcs. tllere es. He completed 18 of 27
'was a goal-li ne stand by the passes for 306 yards.
COLTS 31, RAVENS 3
Falcons. an H5-ya rd kidoff
In lndtanapolis. Peyton
EAGLES 40, 49ERS 26
return by the f,dcons'
Manning
threw two touchIn
San
Franc isco ,
Jerious Norwood. Elam's
down
passes
to Marvin
lirsl missed field ~o,d in 31 Donovan McNabb pa ,sed Hdrrison and a thlfd to
attempb. a d1 i1e by the for 280 yards and two touch- Reggie Wayn~.
Be:~rs th ,tt cLdmitwtcd with downs without his top two
The Colts (3-2) deli vered
Kyle Orton ·s touchdown rcccivcts and his best run- the ir best overall ·perfot 'paS' to Kash1~d Davts wi th nmg bm:k. ami the Eagles'
munct! in months. ~1anning~
II SL'c:ond" tt.:mainmg and. ag.gres:.tve dekndcts fon:cd
final II. El;nn \ wmnin-g kick lhrec turnovers durmg .a 23- was 19-of-27 for 27 1 yards
with three touchdowns. cast·
al tcr · rook 1e quarte~·back point lourth quarter. "
Donald
Strickland ly hts best game of the sea"-hill Ryan hooked up with
Michael ~cnkms on a 26- returned a blocked field goal son
B,tlumore (2-3) rookie Joe
41 yards for a touchdown on
.)ard completion
Fiacco
had three intei·cep"This ts ~mng to do great the fmal play of the first half
tions, hlst a fumb le and was
thm ,g~ lot our coni 1dcn..:c for the 4\lers (2-4l. who
sacked
lo u1 times.
and chen11st ry." Elam sa1d. went ahead 26-17 111 the
"Hopefully we can do some- third quarter.
SAINTS 34, RAIDERS 3
San Franci.&lt;co got 'past
tilin g pretty specia l down
In New Orleans. Drc\v
midfield with one last drive,
the stretch.''
Brees
connected on ~ 7 per• In Landover. Mtl.. M.trc hut J T O'Sullivan threw a
Bulger led the wmnmg dnvc pass directly to Juqua cent of .his throws. passing
to se.t up Jr"h Brown·, 49- Parker. who teturned it 55 for 320 yards and three
ya rd field grMI that gave St yards for a sc01e with 3~ touchdowns.
Oakland's Tom Cable
Loub 11-4) ,, stu nnmg upset seconds left
The
Eagles'
Correll
spent
hi s NFL head coach of the Redskins
Clinton Portis scored to Buckhalter rushed for \13 ing debut watching in frusgive the Rcdskins (.J-2 ) a 17- ya1ds and a touchdown tmtion as JaMarcus Russell
16 lead with 3 -17 to play 111 wl1il~ filling in f01 injured complekd only 13 of 35
pa"c~ fm 159 yards.
a ~lll!.!C i ~h gam'e in which All -Pro Brian Wcstbt(lllk
Reggie Bush scored TDs
they, "t[trncu" the ball over
PACKERS 27, SEAHAWKS 17 on a 3-yard run and 15-yard
three Iimcs.
In Seattle. Aaron Rodgcts reception for the Saints (3Housron ( 1'-4) beat the
.
ran
for a touchdown earl v. 3).
Dolpl.1111s when Schaub ran
Oak land ( J,4J, l'hich fin lm a TD on lourth down then the ailing quartet ba.:'k
ished
with 226 tot.tl y,u-ds .
threw
~wo
scoring
passes
in
from the. .l to give the
had
a
tough
time 1unning as
Tex;ms a 29-2~ win. An ear· the second half to perhaps
wei'!
After
holding
Iter fourth -down conversion save the Packers' season.
Minnesota's
Adrmn
Rodgers.
again
startin
g
nn an .1eroh.11 ic 23-yard
recept ion hy Andre JohnsQn despite a sprained throwing• Pete'rson lo f .5 yards per
shoulder, was 21-for-30 with carry a week ago, the Stunts
kept the drive ali1·e .
Ronnie Brown's 6-yard 208 yards as Green Bay (3- were able to contain Darren
nm v.ith \e-.,-. than 2 minute~ 3) won (or the lOth time 111 McFadden. Juslm Furgas
and Michael Bush. who
~emainm g ga1e Mi am i (2-JJ I 3 road games.
combmed
only 74 yards.
the lead .
Charlie Frye completed ,12
~

Browns
from Page 81
Darnell Dinkins to give
Cleveland a 17-7 halftime
lead.
Manning countered with
an 80-yard scoring drive :helped by a critical
:Cleveland penalty - to pull
the G1ants withm 17-14.
From the 3. he lof!Cd a perfect 3-yard TD pa» to
-Burre~s. who ea&gt;i ly ran past
defensive
b.tck
Terry
Cousm. Three plays earlier,

In One Week With Us
REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS
Y

end."

)

'

Manning had been sacked "their ain't nothing physiand f11mbled on third down, cal" about the GiljlltS' otTenbut Browns safety Mike sive line.
Ad~ms wns called for ille•
Williams also said he was
gal contact, giving · New golng to try to k·nock
York a first down.
Jacobs' head off, remarks
Browns defensive end that were prominently disCorey Williams had provid- played on the back pages of
ed the Giants with some New York's tabloid newspa·
bulletin-board
material pers.
leading into the game.
After Jacobs barreled
Wtll1ams. who was with through several Cleveland
Green Bay last season and defenders for his TD early
lost to New York in the NFC in the second quaner, he ·
title game, ·had said pwed with Williams.
Cleveland's
dG(~nse
lt was the Browns,
planned to "hit hun (Jacobs) though. who got the last
tn the mouth'' and that word.
I

R AD

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iin..-- - - - - - -·- -..:Or
::,.;,;
F•;x To
APp.._
Mtchigan head football coach Rich Rodriguez looks from the Sidelines during the during
the flfst quarter of ar NCAA college football game against· Tole~o in Arin Arbor, Mich.,
Saturday. Michigan doesn't look much like college football's all-time winningestteam these
days and the schedule gets a whole lot tougher starting this week at No. 3 Penn State,
where the Wolverines find themselves 24-point underdogs.

Monday thru ·Friday

8:00 a.m. to 5:00

to handle that and ~tay ·
together."
Michigan was likely going
to struggle th1s season even
if Lloyd Carr didn't retire
because it lost Jake Long,
Chad Henne , M1ke Hart and
others to the NFL. .
l!ut no one pred~cted college football s wmnmgest
team. would .slump so mu.ch
that 1t.'would lose to a M1dAmencan Co;&gt;nference te;)m
for the first ttme.
Rodriguez acknowledged
being embarrassed , but he
also sounded confident
about how hts players · and
coaching
staff
would
respond .
"''ve been through this
before , but that's in the
past,'! .said Rodriguez, who
previously turned West
Virginia's:. program around.
"Players aren't going to lay
down . Coaches aren't going
to !~y down,
"·W~;Il· get tight back to
worl\'. .
Michigan's _players insist
they have. a_ glass-half-full
view of the 'rest of the season.
"We lost, but we still have
a chance to win the Big
Ten," defensive end Ti{ll
Jami sor insisted. "We are
still 1-1 in the Big Ten , so
my job and this team's job is
to keep our level and straight
and keep pressing on."
After pla}ing at Penn
State and against Michigan
State, thq Wolverines will
have three road games left
- including .the finale at
No. 12 Ohio State - and
only one more home game.
To be eligible for a bowl
with six victories , Michigan
!)as to fix a lot of problems
on both sides of the ball.

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.KIT &amp; CARLYLE

Quarterbacks
Steven
Threet and Nick Sheridan
have fa tled to play a consistent game, contributing to a
lackluster offense .
"'Everybody goes through
adversity in life ," Sheridan
said. "Obviously, we've had
our fair share this year."
A week after Illinois quarterback Juice Williams had a
Michigan Stadium-record
43 1 yards 0 f 0 ff nse
, .
e •
Toledo s Ntck Moore caught
20 passes to break another
mark . agamst
the ·
:W~lverm~ s.
.
If you re watchmg us on
film, we've been ,hurt ·when
people have spre.ad us o~~
and Isolated us 111 space,
Rodriguez said. "We tried to
adjust to it and just didn't
get a handle on it."
It didn't take the Rockets
long to adjust to playing in a
storied stadium.
. "We talk a lot about keepmg our focus mentally
between the Jines," Toledo
coach Tom Amstutz said.
"We talked about , there's
110,000 fan s, but they're
unarmed and they can't
shoot at us and they can't
come on the field so you're
· M' · ' d k
P1aymg JChJgan a~ _eep
your focus on them.
Safety Tyrrell Herbert,
~ho returned one of two
mterct;pttons 100 ya~ds for
the ftrst score, satd the
Rockets adopted Amstutz's
mmd-set.
. ,"Once _YOU hit that fi~ld
It s JUSt football and you ve
been playmg football all
your life," Herbert said. "It's
a big stadium, but after the
third play, you don't hear the
crowd no more."

Autos

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kltncarlylef;:comcast net

PuiiHohtng,_,oo
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Lost &amp; Found

rojlct ... ClncelllftY

oclounytlrno.

Errors

Must

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of

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FOUND Keys at Parrish
Ave &amp; Comer of 29th St
pt PI claim at pt PI C1ty
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992

, .~~~~
CLASSIFIED INDEX

Legale,,,,, ,.""""""" ......., .......................100

'

Angels
froin Page Bl
Orange and Black, however. rallied back to lte things
at scvetl and eventually
traded pomts to leave things
tied at 10.
Gallia Acade my ran off
the next four pomts for a
14- l 0 advantage, and the
ho.s ts eventuall y outscored
Waverly J J. 7 the rest of the
way ro take a two-games-tonone advantage.
GAHS JUmped out to a 7l lead in Game 3, but t~e
Tigers rallied back to tie
things at nine-all . The B'lue
Angels took the next two
points to lead tl -9 and
never tra1 led agai n. The
hosts led by as many as four
points (15- 11) midway
through before finishing the
contest with a four-poin t
decision.
Bryan Wlttel'l/phOio
Brittany Hively and Amy Th3 G~llla Acal!emy duo of Morgan Daniela (5) and Alexia
Noe led the service attack
with u dozen points apiece. Gaiger, right, make a block on a spike attempt by a Waverly
Hively added a team-high player during Monday night's Division II sectional quarter!!·
·
five aces and Noe chipped nal match In Gallipolis.
in another four. Hannah Megan Foster had six kills, final ·volleyball match
Cunningham . and Alexis Noe added another five and played at th.e old gymnasiGeiger also contributed Brea Close had four kills.
um, with a new high school
re&amp;pecttve point totals of
Daniels alao had a team- scheduled to be in place
seven and five. Moqlan high five blocks, followed next fall. If Gallia Academy
Daniels also had two pomts by Blake with four and the defeats
U niota
on
and Amanda McGhee duo of Noe and Foster with Wednesday, however, the
chipped in one point.
two each. Kaci Shoemaker Angels wo uld have another
Mollie Blake led the net had a team-high 24 digs and home match in the sectional
attack with nine kills, fol- Geiger added a team-best final on Saturday - against
lowed by Daniels with eight 15 assists.
·
or
either
Athens
kills and Geiger with seven.
It might have bee~ the Chillicothe.

Oeatl/1ir~

D•lly In-Column: 9 :00 a.m.
Mond•y-Frlday for Jn-rt:lon
In Next oay•s Paper
,.

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Wprd Ads

Michigan's 33 straight bow~
game bids in jeopardy
ANN ARBOR, Mich.
(AP) - Motor City Bowl
ol'fictals were at the Btg
to
scout
the
House
Wolverines.
·
The lower-tiered bo;&gt;wl
would l o~e to fill Ford Fteld
~1th maJze-and-bl_ue. cia~ .
fans, ~ut. even M1C~1gao s
opllm JstJc .tans aren .t sure
the Wolvennes can wu~ four
more .games lo be ehg1ble
tor ~he postse~on .
.
'R1ch Rodnguez's·. debut
season ln Ann Arbor stafted
shaky wit~ .a ' loss to Utah,
looked worse after blowout
losses at Notre Dame and .to
llhnois before sinking to
new lows on Saturday
because of a 13- 10 loss to
l itt le-re~arded Toledo (2-4).
Mich1gan (2-4) has its
worst six -game record since
191i7 - two seasons before
Bo Schet11bechler era began
:- and its streak of playing
m 33 stratght bowls ts m
je~~pardy. ,
il
We can I go anywhere
but up - obviously;' cornerback Morgan Trent srud.
Well, Ihe Wolverines
could co.nlinu.e to' tp mble..
Mtchtgan plays at No. 3
Penn State on Sat':lrday and
hosts No. 20 M1ch•gan State
next, hopmg to avo1d a
fourth loss this season at
home
"People said we didn't
have. a shot
against
Wtsconsin, so you can't give
11p on us" said lmebacker
Ob1 Ezeh: referring to a 19point comeback win over
the Badgers. "We're. going
ro start figuring out some
things. we·v~j ust go to hang
tough .
" We know some people
are going to say some things
ahout lts, but we've just go

446-3008

•
•
:
,
•
,
•
•
•
•

AMouncementa,,,,""""'"" ...................... 200
Blrthdly/AMiverury.................................. 205
Hoppy Ado ................................................ ,, .21 0
LOll &amp; Found ............................................... 215
Memory/Thank You ..................................... 220
Notion ......................................................... 225
Peroonato ..................................................... 230
Wonlocl ....:................................................... 235
Servlcn ,...... ,................. ,................ ,,, ....., 300
Appliance Service ...., ... ,,,,, ............ "'""" 302
Automollvo ............ ,, ..........., ...................... 304
Building Mlterlati .............. ................ ,,,., .306
8UIIMU """" ....... '""" .................. .,, ... '"" ..,306
Catering ................. ,.,,, ................................31 0
Chltd/Etderty core,, ................................. ,, 312
computers .................................................. 314
ContriiCIOro ..................................................316
Domutlco/Janhortal ......-........................... 311
Ellc:lrlcal ...................................................... 320
l'lnonctat.......................................................322
ltelhh ........................................................... 321
Helling a Cooling .......................................328
Homo tmprovtmento330
lnou111nce ..................................................... 332
LltWn Servlco....... ,..._..,.,............................ 334
Mllll~ma .................................... 338
Other S.rvtCM ............................................. 338
Plumblng/EIIc1rlcal..................................... 340
Prvleoelonol Servlcn ................................. 342
Repet111 .............. ,.......................................,.. 344
Roofing .................... , ............................. ,,, 348
SoiuriiY ........................................................ ~
Tlx/Accountlng ......,.................................... 350
Travei/Enlertatnmenl .................................. 352
FIIIIUICial ......, ,.................... ,,,.,, .............,..... 400
Flnonclat Slrvtceo.......... ,, ........................ 405

• •• lneurence .................................................... 410

• Monty to Land ............................... ,,,,_,,., 415
Educatloi1 .:.................................................. 500
BualnMt &amp; Trode Schoot .....-.................... 505
lnettuc:tton &amp; 1\'lllntng ................................. 51 0
' LHoono......................................... ,"""" ......515
, Perional.................................... :........:......... 520
Anlmoto ....................................................... IOO
: Antmll SuppiiN .......................................... Ii05
• Hor~~~ .......................................................... l10
·u-oc:k .................. ,_ ................... ,, '""" .. :615
i · Pato......................... ,...................................620
Want to buy ........... L ...................................625
• Agricuflu,.,. ...r............................................. 700
Form Equipment.......................................... 705
• Qerdln &amp; Produce....................................... 71 0
·' Hily,'FIId, s.,d, Grlln ............................... 715
Hun~ng &amp; Land .............................. ,............ 720
Wonl to bUy,, .........................;....................~1!5
Mereh8n&lt;IIH ................................................ IOO
Antlquea ,;...........................................,.........905
Apptlonce ...:.......................................:........ 11 0
Auction• ........................................-............015
lllrgltn BoHinlnt.......................................920
Cotllc:llbteo .................................................. 925
Computer~ .................................-............... 930
EqutprnontiSUppt-......................... _.......935

Recreational Vehtctos , .................... ,, ,,... 1000
ATY ,,,,,.,,, ...... ,,,,,,.,,,,,.,,,,,,, ,, 1005
l;ltcyclea...................................................... 1010
Bcmo/Acceooortea .................................... 1015
Camper/RVo &amp; T111ttoro ............................. 1020
Motorcycle• ....... ,,, .....,, .......:......... ,......... 1025
Other ,, , , ,, ,,,, .... , ,,, .. , .......................... 1030
Want to buy ............................................... 1035
Automotive ............................................ ,, 2000
Aulo RanllliLNH ......................... ,..... ,.....2005
Autoo .......................................................... 201 0
Ctaootc/Antlqueo .................................:..... 2015
Commen:latnnduotrtal ............................,. 2020
Patti &amp; Acceaoorlea.............. :................... 2025
Sporto UUthy ..............................,............... 21130
Trucka.................................. ,...................... 2035
Utility Trtlltra ............................................ 2040
V.no ................. ,.......................................... 2045
Wont to buy,;.............................................. 2050
Rnl Eolate.Saleo ...................................... 3000
Cemetery Ploto .......................................... 3005
Commercial......................................;.........301 o
Condomtntumo .............: ...................... ,,, ,3015
For Site by Owner.....................................3020
Hou- lor Safe ......................................... 3025
Land {ACIIIQa) .............,............................ 3030
Loto ............................................................3035
Want to buy................................................3040
Ani Eollle Rontalo ...................................3500
Apertmento/Townhoultl ......................... 3505
Common:tot................................................351 o
Condomlntumo ........................................ , 3515
HouHo lor Rtnt ........................................ 3520
Land {Acreage) ......... :................................3525
Storogo ......... ,,, ,,., ......................................3535
Want to Rant ....................... ,.. ,_,., ............. 3540
Manufactured Houoln•• ,,, ......... ,, ..... ,...... 4000
Lota ............., ......•·............... .........................4005

Movero ...................,,,,,, ...................:..... 401 0
Aontata ..............................,.. ...................... 4015
Sollo...........................................................4020
Suppt tea ........ ,........................................... 4025
Wont to Buy""""'"""""" "" ...................... 4030
R11ort Property ... , .................... ,...............5000
Raoort Ploporty lor Nlo .......................... li025
Rnort l'roperty lor ront ........................,.. SOiiO
Emptoymonl........-.....................................8000
Accounllng/Finonctal ....... ,..... ,....... ,,,... ,....6002
Admtnta1ratlve/Prolautonat.....................6004
Caohtor1Ciork .............................................6006
Chlld/Eidlrl~ COre ... ,......... ,...... ,................ 6008
Ctertcal .......................................................li010
.Conotructlon,......................... ,............. ,..... 6012
Drlvaro &amp; Delivery .....................................6014
Educotton................................................... 6016
Eloc1rlcal Plumbing .............. ,.................... 6018
Employment Agonctao .............................. 6020
Enttltllnment....................................... ,,, 6022
Food Slrvlcn...................................... ,.....6024
Government AF-rat Jobo .................... 6026
Help antocl· Ganorot .................................. 6028
Low Enforcement ................... ,...... ,,, ... ,..... 6030
Malntenonoolllomeotlc ............................. 6032
Manogemeni/Supervloory , ...................... 6034
1'111 Mo&gt;rklt1l ,............................................... MD Mtchonlca ................................................. ,6036
Fuot Oil Cool/Wood/Gil ....-....................... 945 -lcat ....................................................... 6038
Furniture ...................................................... 950 Muotcel ...... ,..........................................,..... 6040
Hobby/Hun! I Sport................... """"""',,.955 Pert·n.,..Tomporarlao ...................... ,...... 11042
Kld'1 Corner.........................................l •••••••960

Aeataurlnti ............................................... IS044

MIICIItlntOUI...................................,_........165 Sa tea""'"'""""""""'""""""';_.. ,....,, ........11041
Wont to buy ..................................................070 tochnleot Tradea ....................................... 6050
Yon! - ...,.,,,,,,.,,...................................976 TtltlleaiFICIOry "'""" ................................ 11052
•

Stud
$275 00 Call ~6-1233

08

Home Improvement~
BaHmenl
w1 terprooflng

Uncond~ IOnalliletlme
g~erantee Local refer·

•==-'Pols"""===
iii

.

AKC Min, Dachshunds 7
wk Olu. 1 Dapple long
hair mate 1 shor1 hair
740 · 446•2751 or
male
740• 645· 2340·

beautiful
cab1net
with great location 1n GalhpoForm Equipmlnl
sw1ve1 base, works well hs
; BOO
sq
$100. 740-256·6278
S400/month. Call Wayne
"584 International farm
404 . 456 •3802
tractor w1tt1 loader. can· ~--~-.,-:-~
G1veaway SacK' lull ot
opy, new rear 1ras · and
Hauaes for Sale
'
2600
Ask1ng leftover
clothin g . Call --"'~~;;.;~:...
$10500 00
Also selling 740-388-82 17
186 North Park Dr call
~~=~~~,.- 304-675-5640
or
a 2001 Econotine 12ton
fl at-bed trailer With el~c- NEW AND USED STEE L
304·593-1204 w1H sell on
tnc brakes and p1ntle Steel Beams P1pe Reba r Land Contract or ou1
hitch for $4000.00.
for
Concrete
Angle. R1ght
Also a Wellington
(304)440·0111'
Channel, · Flat Bar, Steel Plano call for appo1nt·
I Graflng tor Drams Drive· ment to see them both
• ways &amp; Walkways L&amp;L
EBY,
INTEGRITY, Scrap Metals Open Mon. 2 'or 1 b , lull basement.
KIEFER BUILT,
Tue,
Wed
&amp;
Frl, abo\le ground pool. de·
VALLEY
HORSE/LIVE· Sam-4:30pm
Closed !ached
double gar.age.
STOCK
TRAILERS, Thurs.
sat
&amp;
Sun. fenced·ln back yard mce
LOAD
MAX
EQUIP· 740·446·7300
neighborhood 1n Rac1ne.
MENT
TRAILERS,
&lt;; 1
(740)992· 1424
CARGO
EXPRESS &amp;
"ant To luy
New 2BA 2 bath on 3 ac: .
HOMESTEADER
CARGO!CONCESSION
Buying tools sell or trade new refng, range &amp; dish·
TRAILERS.
B+W mechanic-carpenter lawn washer included $79,000

n

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

1'1ours

ences furnished. Estab·
llshed1975.Caii24Hrs. .
740·446·0870, Rogers
Basement WatBrJ)!OOfing. ~ Lab puppies for sale
each.
100
740·64 5.4941
Supenor Home Maille· ---~""'!'.,...nance.
Carpentry, ~
Plumbing,
Electrical, CKC RegiSte red Blchon
Rentals, No Job to Small Fnse puppies 8 wks old.
Reasonable
Plices. Great ·Vtlth children and
MaIe
339-3442 or 446·2805
non
shadd lng
$450 ,
females
ssoo.
0 H.
Olher S.l"'iau
Marrlett,
~--~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; 740·376·0664
or GOOSENECK FLATBED
Pet
Cremations.
Call 740·525·4143
$3999 . VIEW OUA EN·
740•446 .3745
TIRE TRAILER INVEN·
Give away 4 kittens 8 TORY AT
mths old, 7· 2 mths old WWW.CARMICHAEL·
(3eorge's Portable Saw- 446. 9582 or 645- 0029 .
TRAILEAS.COM
mill, don't haul your Logs "''""!'=~~--­ 740·44 6·3825
to· th e M1ll just call
3&lt;*675•1957
2 AKC female Boston
;;!~'""""""""'""'"""" Tamer .pupp1es beautiful ~--~~-~
· Profauional Services mark1ngs black &amp; white Have you pnced a John
Deere lately? You'll be
$125 aa 740-388-8743
surprised! Check out our
TURN!D DOWN ON
used
Inventory
at
AKC
reg.
Lab
puppies
SOCIAL SECURITY SSI
www
CAAEO.com.
Car·
vel/checked
No Fee Unless We Winl
michael
Equtpmsnt
1-888·582·3345
wormed/shots, 2 blk &amp; 1 740·446·2412
ellow,
all
females.
Only
Y
3 left. $175 to good --~~~~~~
homes 740·256-6882
Two row new tdea com
picker/sheller
lnterna·
Mlmature Plncher pups tiona! i066 Tractor!Cab,
nd
M · ~y;;;T;;o;;Lo~;;;;;;;;
;;;;;;~~-ii;
CKC reg. black &amp; rust 8'x20' Gooseneck cattle
NOTICE Borrow Smart. color,
Talis
docked , traHer.
Call
Contact 1he Ohio Olvl· shots , and wormed. F 740·446-4432
ston of. F)nanc.aI Ins11tu- $300.·
M
$250
Garden &amp; "- ~.. -

s

tions Office of Consumer
Affairs BEFORE you ref1·
nance your home or obtaln a lOan. BEWARE Of
requestS for any large
advance
payments
of
tees or 1nsurance Call
the Office of Consum8f
'Affiars
toll
free
lit
1·800·278·0003 to team
1t the mor1gage broker ' or
is properly 11.
le 'der
~·
nsad
(This
is 8 ,public
ce
serv1ce
announcement
the OhiO Valley
1,.....

""""""

740-367-0210 tf no . an· ~~~~~~~;;;;;;
swer leave a message .
Kl 1 st &lt; ol Syr
W JU 1-1
',
51
At acuse
124
on
·
·
FOUND Young medium (740)992·7449
sized Golden Retnover
Female. Bidwell
area
388•8655
4 Fun Blooded Australian
Sh h rd
Red
ep e "' pups,
MarJe,
10
wks
old.
304 675 7608
•
•
·
,.,,--~~.,..."!
CKC Reg. M1n i Dachs·
hund!J, 1 long ha1red fe·
male,
$350,
1 short

male, $300
shots and wormed
740-388-8445

Fi~&gt;t

740·645·2396.

May

haired

lklslntu &amp; Trado

School
GeUipolla Career
College
(Careers Close To Home)
Cell Tad8yt 740·446·4367
1·800·2 14·0452
galllpohtcareercolleg&amp; .edu
AocredHed M~bef Accredit·
log COuncillor Independent
eon.gu •nd SchOols 1274B •

leave a message.

Call

or

A...:~....,uet

;;;:;;=;;;;;;;;;;;i;;;;;;==
Anttque
gas
stove
green/cream ln. color &amp;
an antiQUe baby bed
white wlbfass accents.
mattress &amp; spnngs, botll
for $500 f1rm , call after

Spm, (740)949'3059

&amp;

garden

power

tools _:7::;40:;:-4:;:4::;6-.;,:70~2;:,9=,--

Cell 740·388·15 15 or cell 1 Yr old SA 588 tor more
740-208-0320
InI0 an d PIGIures go t0
www Ol\lb com
I.D
Abso lute- Top Dollar · Sll· Brown1ng 740·446· 7204
\l&amp;rlgold '
coins.
any Extraordinary Property:
10Klt4K/18K gold 1ew· Spectacular view of the
elry, dental gold. pre Ohio River
1935
US
currency, Pnvate dnve off Lmcoln
prooflm1nt
sets,
dla· H1ll
Pomeroy.
Oh1o.
monds, MTS Coin Shop. woods on th.ree s1des
151 2nd Avenue Galli· {4+)acres. to a h!Stoncal
h
~
1900
5
pot1s 44 6·2842
ome
y!Tca
,
:;,;;;,.,;,;,;;;;,;;,,,..
bedrooms. 2 hreplaces. 2
Yord Sol
1
h
2
~~=~~§·~~ ull bat s,
sta1rcases.
beautiful ong1nal wood·
Odd's &amp; End's Sale,
k
1
wor . many p1c ure Win·
Monday
·
Fnday, dows. mostly new w1n·
8· 4P m ,Sat 8· 12·600
dows. large k1tchen and "
E Ma1n Sl.,Pomeroy,Oh
breakfast room . beaut1
fully landscaped w'lth 1n
ground pool S1t on the
;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; wrap around porch and
enJOY
the
spectacular
AJV
v1ew ol the Oh10 A1ver 2
I
~~~===-- car detached garage and
~
650 Pralne 4x4 looks 2 out bu1ld1ngs Woula
good &amp; runs good S1800 make a wonderful !amlly
home or bed &amp; breaklast
256 • 1618
Pnvale and Picturesque
Camnan./ RVa &amp;
SPECTACULAR VIEW
,.Trailen
senous
Inquires
only
please call 740-992-3678
RV Service at Carmi·

Land (Acreago)

Tra1lers •=;;;;;;;~=;;_'-~
Approx. 25 acres 1'n'l re·

chael
740-446·3825

~~------ mote.

rough
access
RV
$40K Buyer must SurC
at
arrn1chae1 vey . Call attar 5pm
Serv1ce
Trailers
304 895 . 3390
740 .446- 3625

~======

loll

fuol/ on I Coal I

:-=;;;;;;;~~"!";;;;;;;;
Lot on AI 586 \\(hare all

~~~::-'=-~~

houses are being built
Sewage tetectrtc $35,000
740-256-1004

Wood/ Gas ·

FIREWOOD FOR SALE
Autos
For sale Dalmalion Pups U PICK UP S451LOAO ;;;;;;;;;;;;~==.~-- .--====-~
AKC reg 1st shots &amp; ;;446~·8832;;;,;;,,.,,.,,.,,., 1992 Camaro. V6 needs
1991
work $1.000
wormed
5325.00
M
---•p
750
304·675-6767
i~W~tuMOUS
VW
assan
call
304·812 ·4444

s

�Tuaaday, October 14,·2008
P~ge B2 • The Daily Sentinel

~

www. mydailysentinel.com

The Daily Sentinel · Page B3

wwvi.mydallysentinel.com

Tuesday, October 14, 2oo8

QCribune - Sentinel - l\egister
CLASSIFIED

NFL ga_mes go down to the wire

•

:BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Ryan Long\\ ell m"de a
field goal ""ilh nine

'ccond~

jeft to gi'e M111n~'"'" a
-comeback win over Detroit.
: Nine ~cl:nnLb'.' Bllf- in~!
: Four other gumcs \\·ere
oecidcd even later on a wild
Sunday, mcluding &lt;111 NFL
first for AriLona: a blocked
punt for " touchdown in
nvertimc.
: "I can't remember one that
~as this crazy." Cardinals
:Quarterback Kurt Warner
~aid, "especially toward the

•
•

•
•
•

••

E·mal!
• classified@mydailytribune.com

; He could have been talkAP photo
1ng about the whole .day.
:Houston beat Miamt when San Otego Chargers runmng back LaOatnian Tomlinson,
~an Schaub ran for a TD left , stratght arms New England Patnots Jerod Mayo, right,
-:With 3 seconds left. and as he ftghts for yardage on a pass recept1on dunng the firs\
::Atlanta and St Louts both quarter of an NFL football game Sunday 1n San Otego.
won on lield goals as time
;:xpired It I' as the first tunc
In Minnesota. the Vikmgs' of 2.' passes for just 83 yards
~ince 1970 that four teams relallvely comfortable win wtth two touchdowns and
:got the wmning points witll was aided by a dubiou' pass- two int~rceptions for the
~·ewer than 10 second&lt;- left in 111terkrencc call on Letgh Seahawks. Pro BowL quarterback Matt Ha sselb~ck
1'egulation.
Bodden of Dctrt11t (0-5 1.
: Anzonas game also had a
Tnnling 10-9 with 2:22 to was out With a sore knee and
f.ield goal . with the clock play. the Vtktngs (J-3! had a backup Seneca Wallace out
reaching zeros N1ck Folk sccond-a nd-2U from the1r with a calf mjury.
:made a 52-yarder to tie ir for 32. Gu~ Frerotte threw Jeep
:Oallas at 24 Then Sean down the stdeline • for JAGUARS 24, BRONCOS 17
Morey . blocked
Mat Aund rae Alltson. and the
In Denver. the Jaguars 'got
:McBriar's punt. Mont y . ball fell mcomplete . But superb perforn)ances from
:Beisel scoope(l up the ball llcld JUdge Mlk~ Weir whiS- 4uarterhack Davtd Ual'rard
and scored from 3 yards l&lt;&gt; tied Bodden lor mterlercnce and t'u tming hllck Maunce
give the Cardmals (4-2) a &lt;ie.'pHe what appeared to be Jone ~- Drew, prus three take. a~~&lt;ays by thetr defense.
30-24 victory over tile m~~ mm l contact.
,Cowboys.
1he . 42-) md penalty gave
Garrard completed 25 of
The game ""' wtld Irom ~he Viktngs the ball at the 34 passes for 276 yards. one
start to finiSh - Anwna's -6. Longwell converted the TD and no interceptions,
}.J. Arrington took the open- kick five plays later to avotd and Jones-Drew rumbled for
tng ktck 93 ya n.h for a what would have been a 125 yards and two TDs on
touchdown.
damagmg loss for a te~m 22 carries.
. Dallas (4-2) scored 10 that has de_s•gns on makmg
The Jaguars (3-JJ wasted
poults 111 the I mal 2 1111nutes the playoffs.
no time in sending the
:o r regulatiOn ro redcll overBroncos (4-2) to thetr fi rst
rtme,
CHARGERS 30, PATRIOTS 10 home Joss since last Oct. 29
"It was ,tlmo.,t a nm;Jcle
In San Diego, Phi lip against Green Bay.
D
11
1
Rivers
threl' three IOllch·
"
[j n1s h Ior us.
,, as code 1
Wade Phillips "ud.
down passes and San
8UCS 27, PANTHERS 3
In Sunday's other ga mes. Diego' s defense stuffed
In Tumpa. Fla.. Jeff
it was s,m D1ego ~0. New Qltnrlefback Matt Cassel on Garcia, !ilartmg for the first
EngL1nd 10: Philadelphia fourt h-and-goal from the 1- time since the season opcnl'r
40. San F1anctsco 26: Green yard line.
becau'se Hrwn Gnesc IS
Bay
27,
Seattle
17;
It was a measure of pay- inJured, threw for 173 yards
Jacksonvilte 24, Denver 17; back against a team that had and a touchdown . Warrick
ln(hanopolis J 1, Ba ltimore beaten the Chargers tl1ree Dunn had hi s most produc3: New Orleans 34, Oakland straight times , including in ti ve day running the ball
3: Tampa Bay 27. Caroli na the pla yoffs the last two sea- since rejoining the Rues
,
· with 11 5 y.trds on 22 carries.
_,;
anu. I N .y . Jets 16
_ . sons.
;!:i ncinnat 1 14.
Rivers threw touchdown
The victory, Tampa Bay's
• Atl an ta 's Jason Elam passes of 49 yards to first at home against the
ittoned for a late t'o11rt h-q uar- Malcom Floyd. 4 yards to division rival Panthers since
re"r mis. bv boot1n g a 4~- Vincent Jackson and I yard 2002, gave the Bucs (4-2) a
yard lield 'gnat' to give the to Antonio Gates. It was the shme of f1rst place in the
Falcons a 22-20 w 111 over fourth time tllis season th at NFC South w1th Carol ina
Chtca§!&lt;&gt;
Rtvers threw three TD pass- (4-2).
ln the last 8 mlntltcs. tllere es. He completed 18 of 27
'was a goal-li ne stand by the passes for 306 yards.
COLTS 31, RAVENS 3
Falcons. an H5-ya rd kidoff
In lndtanapolis. Peyton
EAGLES 40, 49ERS 26
return by the f,dcons'
Manning
threw two touchIn
San
Franc isco ,
Jerious Norwood. Elam's
down
passes
to Marvin
lirsl missed field ~o,d in 31 Donovan McNabb pa ,sed Hdrrison and a thlfd to
attempb. a d1 i1e by the for 280 yards and two touch- Reggie Wayn~.
Be:~rs th ,tt cLdmitwtcd with downs without his top two
The Colts (3-2) deli vered
Kyle Orton ·s touchdown rcccivcts and his best run- the ir best overall ·perfot 'paS' to Kash1~d Davts wi th nmg bm:k. ami the Eagles'
munct! in months. ~1anning~
II SL'c:ond" tt.:mainmg and. ag.gres:.tve dekndcts fon:cd
final II. El;nn \ wmnin-g kick lhrec turnovers durmg .a 23- was 19-of-27 for 27 1 yards
with three touchdowns. cast·
al tcr · rook 1e quarte~·back point lourth quarter. "
Donald
Strickland ly hts best game of the sea"-hill Ryan hooked up with
Michael ~cnkms on a 26- returned a blocked field goal son
B,tlumore (2-3) rookie Joe
41 yards for a touchdown on
.)ard completion
Fiacco
had three intei·cep"This ts ~mng to do great the fmal play of the first half
tions, hlst a fumb le and was
thm ,g~ lot our coni 1dcn..:c for the 4\lers (2-4l. who
sacked
lo u1 times.
and chen11st ry." Elam sa1d. went ahead 26-17 111 the
"Hopefully we can do some- third quarter.
SAINTS 34, RAIDERS 3
San Franci.&lt;co got 'past
tilin g pretty specia l down
In New Orleans. Drc\v
midfield with one last drive,
the stretch.''
Brees
connected on ~ 7 per• In Landover. Mtl.. M.trc hut J T O'Sullivan threw a
Bulger led the wmnmg dnvc pass directly to Juqua cent of .his throws. passing
to se.t up Jr"h Brown·, 49- Parker. who teturned it 55 for 320 yards and three
ya rd field grMI that gave St yards for a sc01e with 3~ touchdowns.
Oakland's Tom Cable
Loub 11-4) ,, stu nnmg upset seconds left
The
Eagles'
Correll
spent
hi s NFL head coach of the Redskins
Clinton Portis scored to Buckhalter rushed for \13 ing debut watching in frusgive the Rcdskins (.J-2 ) a 17- ya1ds and a touchdown tmtion as JaMarcus Russell
16 lead with 3 -17 to play 111 wl1il~ filling in f01 injured complekd only 13 of 35
pa"c~ fm 159 yards.
a ~lll!.!C i ~h gam'e in which All -Pro Brian Wcstbt(lllk
Reggie Bush scored TDs
they, "t[trncu" the ball over
PACKERS 27, SEAHAWKS 17 on a 3-yard run and 15-yard
three Iimcs.
In Seattle. Aaron Rodgcts reception for the Saints (3Housron ( 1'-4) beat the
.
ran
for a touchdown earl v. 3).
Dolpl.1111s when Schaub ran
Oak land ( J,4J, l'hich fin lm a TD on lourth down then the ailing quartet ba.:'k
ished
with 226 tot.tl y,u-ds .
threw
~wo
scoring
passes
in
from the. .l to give the
had
a
tough
time 1unning as
Tex;ms a 29-2~ win. An ear· the second half to perhaps
wei'!
After
holding
Iter fourth -down conversion save the Packers' season.
Minnesota's
Adrmn
Rodgers.
again
startin
g
nn an .1eroh.11 ic 23-yard
recept ion hy Andre JohnsQn despite a sprained throwing• Pete'rson lo f .5 yards per
shoulder, was 21-for-30 with carry a week ago, the Stunts
kept the drive ali1·e .
Ronnie Brown's 6-yard 208 yards as Green Bay (3- were able to contain Darren
nm v.ith \e-.,-. than 2 minute~ 3) won (or the lOth time 111 McFadden. Juslm Furgas
and Michael Bush. who
~emainm g ga1e Mi am i (2-JJ I 3 road games.
combmed
only 74 yards.
the lead .
Charlie Frye completed ,12
~

Browns
from Page 81
Darnell Dinkins to give
Cleveland a 17-7 halftime
lead.
Manning countered with
an 80-yard scoring drive :helped by a critical
:Cleveland penalty - to pull
the G1ants withm 17-14.
From the 3. he lof!Cd a perfect 3-yard TD pa» to
-Burre~s. who ea&gt;i ly ran past
defensive
b.tck
Terry
Cousm. Three plays earlier,

In One Week With Us
REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS
Y

end."

)

'

Manning had been sacked "their ain't nothing physiand f11mbled on third down, cal" about the GiljlltS' otTenbut Browns safety Mike sive line.
Ad~ms wns called for ille•
Williams also said he was
gal contact, giving · New golng to try to k·nock
York a first down.
Jacobs' head off, remarks
Browns defensive end that were prominently disCorey Williams had provid- played on the back pages of
ed the Giants with some New York's tabloid newspa·
bulletin-board
material pers.
leading into the game.
After Jacobs barreled
Wtll1ams. who was with through several Cleveland
Green Bay last season and defenders for his TD early
lost to New York in the NFC in the second quaner, he ·
title game, ·had said pwed with Williams.
Cleveland's
dG(~nse
lt was the Browns,
planned to "hit hun (Jacobs) though. who got the last
tn the mouth'' and that word.
I

R AD

Websjtes·
www.mydailytribune.com
www.mydailysentinel.com
www.mydailyregisler.com

NLINE

Place
l\egister
~ribune
Sentinel
ca~r;:,::v... (740) 446-2342 (740) 992;.2156 (304) 675-1333
To

iin..-- - - - - - -·- -..:Or
::,.;,;
F•;x To
APp.._
Mtchigan head football coach Rich Rodriguez looks from the Sidelines during the during
the flfst quarter of ar NCAA college football game against· Tole~o in Arin Arbor, Mich.,
Saturday. Michigan doesn't look much like college football's all-time winningestteam these
days and the schedule gets a whole lot tougher starting this week at No. 3 Penn State,
where the Wolverines find themselves 24-point underdogs.

Monday thru ·Friday

8:00 a.m. to 5:00

to handle that and ~tay ·
together."
Michigan was likely going
to struggle th1s season even
if Lloyd Carr didn't retire
because it lost Jake Long,
Chad Henne , M1ke Hart and
others to the NFL. .
l!ut no one pred~cted college football s wmnmgest
team. would .slump so mu.ch
that 1t.'would lose to a M1dAmencan Co;&gt;nference te;)m
for the first ttme.
Rodriguez acknowledged
being embarrassed , but he
also sounded confident
about how hts players · and
coaching
staff
would
respond .
"''ve been through this
before , but that's in the
past,'! .said Rodriguez, who
previously turned West
Virginia's:. program around.
"Players aren't going to lay
down . Coaches aren't going
to !~y down,
"·W~;Il· get tight back to
worl\'. .
Michigan's _players insist
they have. a_ glass-half-full
view of the 'rest of the season.
"We lost, but we still have
a chance to win the Big
Ten," defensive end Ti{ll
Jami sor insisted. "We are
still 1-1 in the Big Ten , so
my job and this team's job is
to keep our level and straight
and keep pressing on."
After pla}ing at Penn
State and against Michigan
State, thq Wolverines will
have three road games left
- including .the finale at
No. 12 Ohio State - and
only one more home game.
To be eligible for a bowl
with six victories , Michigan
!)as to fix a lot of problems
on both sides of the ball.

Should Include These Items
To Help Get Response ...

S~~=::vF:In""Column :

YOUR CLASSIFIED LINE AD NOTICED
How you can have borders and graphics
~
added to your classified ads
~
1m
Borders$3.00/perad
~
Graphics 50¢ for small
$1.00 for large

s,

Bu•ln . .s

9:00 a .m.

sundays Paper

Publication
Sunday Dlspl•y: 1 :00 p . m .

Thursday for sundays P•••••

• All ads must be prepaid'

• Shirt Your Adt Wtth A Keyword • Include Complete
o.utptlon • Include A Prkt • Avokt Abbrevl•tlont
• lncfu... Phon• Number And AddNu When NMded
• Ads Slloukl Run 7

o.y,

~ES: Ohkt V.ley Publllhlng retefVN the right to edit. relet. or c.nc.leny td at any time Errors mui:t be reported on tt.e llrtt day of publication and ti-e
Trletu,._Sintlntt-ReglsW will be retponllbtt for no mor11 tt.n the coal of the apace occupied bV the error and only !hell rat lnnrtlon We shall not be liab~ for
my 1M• or 81pllnM that ruults from the publlc1tlon or aml1110n of an advertlaement Corrtcllon will be made In the llrtt aye liable edition. • Bo~~; "umbon•d•l
. . alw.ys confidential. • Currenl rate e~~rd epptln. · All realeltll'- advertisements are aub]ect to the Fede ral Fair Houelng Act of 1968. • 'l'llie newspaf*
~· tmly twlp wanted aM mHtlng EOE 1tandard1. We will not knowingly accept any advertlalng In violation of the law. Will not be reaponatble for •nv
trf'OI'IIn an lid hiM.,. o11•r 1ht phOne

.KIT &amp; CARLYLE

Quarterbacks
Steven
Threet and Nick Sheridan
have fa tled to play a consistent game, contributing to a
lackluster offense .
"'Everybody goes through
adversity in life ," Sheridan
said. "Obviously, we've had
our fair share this year."
A week after Illinois quarterback Juice Williams had a
Michigan Stadium-record
43 1 yards 0 f 0 ff nse
, .
e •
Toledo s Ntck Moore caught
20 passes to break another
mark . agamst
the ·
:W~lverm~ s.
.
If you re watchmg us on
film, we've been ,hurt ·when
people have spre.ad us o~~
and Isolated us 111 space,
Rodriguez said. "We tried to
adjust to it and just didn't
get a handle on it."
It didn't take the Rockets
long to adjust to playing in a
storied stadium.
. "We talk a lot about keepmg our focus mentally
between the Jines," Toledo
coach Tom Amstutz said.
"We talked about , there's
110,000 fan s, but they're
unarmed and they can't
shoot at us and they can't
come on the field so you're
· M' · ' d k
P1aymg JChJgan a~ _eep
your focus on them.
Safety Tyrrell Herbert,
~ho returned one of two
mterct;pttons 100 ya~ds for
the ftrst score, satd the
Rockets adopted Amstutz's
mmd-set.
. ,"Once _YOU hit that fi~ld
It s JUSt football and you ve
been playmg football all
your life," Herbert said. "It's
a big stadium, but after the
third play, you don't hear the
crowd no more."

Autos

Ohio V.tloy

kltncarlylef;:comcast net

PuiiHohtng,_,oo
tho ~ght to 'ocllt,

Lost &amp; Found

rojlct ... ClncelllftY

oclounytlrno.

Errors

Must

~-an

of

tho

FOUND Keys at Parrish
Ave &amp; Comer of 29th St
pt PI claim at pt PI C1ty
Police Dept.

·-

than ths

kit

~u1f~ ~. t*~

c01~

the error and
flfll lnHnlon.

liable
looo or oxpon14

t&lt;ol Go~ AI
f(j.)j\)c.lNC::! ,

Found · Rio Grande area
Small
pek1ngese
type •
dog, Tan, very lnendly.
(740)245-5770

not be

-,..ult. from

NGITICE

OHIO

PUBLISHING

CO

LaSabre
m1les.
runs
good. 31MPG. $3,200
080 740-2b8·1221
99

rae·

Sports UHiity
1993 S10 Blazer.4 door.
131.000 m11es. Good gas
mileage. 4x4 . 6cyl 4 3
engme, Air, All Power.
Red &amp; Cream color.
Great condition , S3000
Nag 'Call 740·256·1332
or 304·638·0485

0

ommends that you do
bUSiness With people you
know, and NOT to send
money through the mail
unt!l you ha11e ir:westigat·
ing tho offering.

BUi ck

112 000

D

VALLEY

2006 Durango 4 wheel
dnve leather sun roof. &amp;
avo player. $10,000
256·1618
93 Ford Tempo, 4cyl .
2dr, blue
good work
car.
S650
(740)591·8936

Ac:.'TuAl,.l..Y, ~·~&lt;!!:;

tho

0

WoniTo Buy

hnonals
70 yr old "Country Boy"
seeks
Romance
wl
woman 65-72 · PO Box

Want to buy Junk Cars.
call 740·388·0884

ID·I'f

~
2008 liy NEA, Inc.
600

Sales

www comica.c om

?00

A'"''nls

Real Estnle

3000

@

Commercial

Mlscollanoous

Agncultu-e

For

sale

or

lease

RCA TV 27" Floor model, otllce/warehouse/storage

Down flow furnaces l en·
nox 80 thsBTU$200 also •=;;;;;;;H;;ono~;'
45thsBTU$150 Call Lee •
-44
Mlmaturo
F'ainl

==•

992

, .~~~~
CLASSIFIED INDEX

Legale,,,,, ,.""""""" ......., .......................100

'

Angels
froin Page Bl
Orange and Black, however. rallied back to lte things
at scvetl and eventually
traded pomts to leave things
tied at 10.
Gallia Acade my ran off
the next four pomts for a
14- l 0 advantage, and the
ho.s ts eventuall y outscored
Waverly J J. 7 the rest of the
way ro take a two-games-tonone advantage.
GAHS JUmped out to a 7l lead in Game 3, but t~e
Tigers rallied back to tie
things at nine-all . The B'lue
Angels took the next two
points to lead tl -9 and
never tra1 led agai n. The
hosts led by as many as four
points (15- 11) midway
through before finishing the
contest with a four-poin t
decision.
Bryan Wlttel'l/phOio
Brittany Hively and Amy Th3 G~llla Acal!emy duo of Morgan Daniela (5) and Alexia
Noe led the service attack
with u dozen points apiece. Gaiger, right, make a block on a spike attempt by a Waverly
Hively added a team-high player during Monday night's Division II sectional quarter!!·
·
five aces and Noe chipped nal match In Gallipolis.
in another four. Hannah Megan Foster had six kills, final ·volleyball match
Cunningham . and Alexis Noe added another five and played at th.e old gymnasiGeiger also contributed Brea Close had four kills.
um, with a new high school
re&amp;pecttve point totals of
Daniels alao had a team- scheduled to be in place
seven and five. Moqlan high five blocks, followed next fall. If Gallia Academy
Daniels also had two pomts by Blake with four and the defeats
U niota
on
and Amanda McGhee duo of Noe and Foster with Wednesday, however, the
chipped in one point.
two each. Kaci Shoemaker Angels wo uld have another
Mollie Blake led the net had a team-high 24 digs and home match in the sectional
attack with nine kills, fol- Geiger added a team-best final on Saturday - against
lowed by Daniels with eight 15 assists.
·
or
either
Athens
kills and Geiger with seven.
It might have bee~ the Chillicothe.

Oeatl/1ir~

D•lly In-Column: 9 :00 a.m.
Mond•y-Frlday for Jn-rt:lon
In Next oay•s Paper
,.

Or Fax To (304) 675-5234

Or Fax To (740) 992·2157

Wprd Ads

Michigan's 33 straight bow~
game bids in jeopardy
ANN ARBOR, Mich.
(AP) - Motor City Bowl
ol'fictals were at the Btg
to
scout
the
House
Wolverines.
·
The lower-tiered bo;&gt;wl
would l o~e to fill Ford Fteld
~1th maJze-and-bl_ue. cia~ .
fans, ~ut. even M1C~1gao s
opllm JstJc .tans aren .t sure
the Wolvennes can wu~ four
more .games lo be ehg1ble
tor ~he postse~on .
.
'R1ch Rodnguez's·. debut
season ln Ann Arbor stafted
shaky wit~ .a ' loss to Utah,
looked worse after blowout
losses at Notre Dame and .to
llhnois before sinking to
new lows on Saturday
because of a 13- 10 loss to
l itt le-re~arded Toledo (2-4).
Mich1gan (2-4) has its
worst six -game record since
191i7 - two seasons before
Bo Schet11bechler era began
:- and its streak of playing
m 33 stratght bowls ts m
je~~pardy. ,
il
We can I go anywhere
but up - obviously;' cornerback Morgan Trent srud.
Well, Ihe Wolverines
could co.nlinu.e to' tp mble..
Mtchtgan plays at No. 3
Penn State on Sat':lrday and
hosts No. 20 M1ch•gan State
next, hopmg to avo1d a
fourth loss this season at
home
"People said we didn't
have. a shot
against
Wtsconsin, so you can't give
11p on us" said lmebacker
Ob1 Ezeh: referring to a 19point comeback win over
the Badgers. "We're. going
ro start figuring out some
things. we·v~j ust go to hang
tough .
" We know some people
are going to say some things
ahout lts, but we've just go

446-3008

•
•
:
,
•
,
•
•
•
•

AMouncementa,,,,""""'"" ...................... 200
Blrthdly/AMiverury.................................. 205
Hoppy Ado ................................................ ,, .21 0
LOll &amp; Found ............................................... 215
Memory/Thank You ..................................... 220
Notion ......................................................... 225
Peroonato ..................................................... 230
Wonlocl ....:................................................... 235
Servlcn ,...... ,................. ,................ ,,, ....., 300
Appliance Service ...., ... ,,,,, ............ "'""" 302
Automollvo ............ ,, ..........., ...................... 304
Building Mlterlati .............. ................ ,,,., .306
8UIIMU """" ....... '""" .................. .,, ... '"" ..,306
Catering ................. ,.,,, ................................31 0
Chltd/Etderty core,, ................................. ,, 312
computers .................................................. 314
ContriiCIOro ..................................................316
Domutlco/Janhortal ......-........................... 311
Ellc:lrlcal ...................................................... 320
l'lnonctat.......................................................322
ltelhh ........................................................... 321
Helling a Cooling .......................................328
Homo tmprovtmento330
lnou111nce ..................................................... 332
LltWn Servlco....... ,..._..,.,............................ 334
Mllll~ma .................................... 338
Other S.rvtCM ............................................. 338
Plumblng/EIIc1rlcal..................................... 340
Prvleoelonol Servlcn ................................. 342
Repet111 .............. ,.......................................,.. 344
Roofing .................... , ............................. ,,, 348
SoiuriiY ........................................................ ~
Tlx/Accountlng ......,.................................... 350
Travei/Enlertatnmenl .................................. 352
FIIIIUICial ......, ,.................... ,,,.,, .............,..... 400
Flnonclat Slrvtceo.......... ,, ........................ 405

• •• lneurence .................................................... 410

• Monty to Land ............................... ,,,,_,,., 415
Educatloi1 .:.................................................. 500
BualnMt &amp; Trode Schoot .....-.................... 505
lnettuc:tton &amp; 1\'lllntng ................................. 51 0
' LHoono......................................... ,"""" ......515
, Perional.................................... :........:......... 520
Anlmoto ....................................................... IOO
: Antmll SuppiiN .......................................... Ii05
• Hor~~~ .......................................................... l10
·u-oc:k .................. ,_ ................... ,, '""" .. :615
i · Pato......................... ,...................................620
Want to buy ........... L ...................................625
• Agricuflu,.,. ...r............................................. 700
Form Equipment.......................................... 705
• Qerdln &amp; Produce....................................... 71 0
·' Hily,'FIId, s.,d, Grlln ............................... 715
Hun~ng &amp; Land .............................. ,............ 720
Wonl to bUy,, .........................;....................~1!5
Mereh8n&lt;IIH ................................................ IOO
Antlquea ,;...........................................,.........905
Apptlonce ...:.......................................:........ 11 0
Auction• ........................................-............015
lllrgltn BoHinlnt.......................................920
Cotllc:llbteo .................................................. 925
Computer~ .................................-............... 930
EqutprnontiSUppt-......................... _.......935

Recreational Vehtctos , .................... ,, ,,... 1000
ATY ,,,,,.,,, ...... ,,,,,,.,,,,,.,,,,,,, ,, 1005
l;ltcyclea...................................................... 1010
Bcmo/Acceooortea .................................... 1015
Camper/RVo &amp; T111ttoro ............................. 1020
Motorcycle• ....... ,,, .....,, .......:......... ,......... 1025
Other ,, , , ,, ,,,, .... , ,,, .. , .......................... 1030
Want to buy ............................................... 1035
Automotive ............................................ ,, 2000
Aulo RanllliLNH ......................... ,..... ,.....2005
Autoo .......................................................... 201 0
Ctaootc/Antlqueo .................................:..... 2015
Commen:latnnduotrtal ............................,. 2020
Patti &amp; Acceaoorlea.............. :................... 2025
Sporto UUthy ..............................,............... 21130
Trucka.................................. ,...................... 2035
Utility Trtlltra ............................................ 2040
V.no ................. ,.......................................... 2045
Wont to buy,;.............................................. 2050
Rnl Eolate.Saleo ...................................... 3000
Cemetery Ploto .......................................... 3005
Commercial......................................;.........301 o
Condomtntumo .............: ...................... ,,, ,3015
For Site by Owner.....................................3020
Hou- lor Safe ......................................... 3025
Land {ACIIIQa) .............,............................ 3030
Loto ............................................................3035
Want to buy................................................3040
Ani Eollle Rontalo ...................................3500
Apertmento/Townhoultl ......................... 3505
Common:tot................................................351 o
Condomlntumo ........................................ , 3515
HouHo lor Rtnt ........................................ 3520
Land {Acreage) ......... :................................3525
Storogo ......... ,,, ,,., ......................................3535
Want to Rant ....................... ,.. ,_,., ............. 3540
Manufactured Houoln•• ,,, ......... ,, ..... ,...... 4000
Lota ............., ......•·............... .........................4005

Movero ...................,,,,,, ...................:..... 401 0
Aontata ..............................,.. ...................... 4015
Sollo...........................................................4020
Suppt tea ........ ,........................................... 4025
Wont to Buy""""'"""""" "" ...................... 4030
R11ort Property ... , .................... ,...............5000
Raoort Ploporty lor Nlo .......................... li025
Rnort l'roperty lor ront ........................,.. SOiiO
Emptoymonl........-.....................................8000
Accounllng/Finonctal ....... ,..... ,....... ,,,... ,....6002
Admtnta1ratlve/Prolautonat.....................6004
Caohtor1Ciork .............................................6006
Chlld/Eidlrl~ COre ... ,......... ,...... ,................ 6008
Ctertcal .......................................................li010
.Conotructlon,......................... ,............. ,..... 6012
Drlvaro &amp; Delivery .....................................6014
Educotton................................................... 6016
Eloc1rlcal Plumbing .............. ,.................... 6018
Employment Agonctao .............................. 6020
Enttltllnment....................................... ,,, 6022
Food Slrvlcn...................................... ,.....6024
Government AF-rat Jobo .................... 6026
Help antocl· Ganorot .................................. 6028
Low Enforcement ................... ,...... ,,, ... ,..... 6030
Malntenonoolllomeotlc ............................. 6032
Manogemeni/Supervloory , ...................... 6034
1'111 Mo&gt;rklt1l ,............................................... MD Mtchonlca ................................................. ,6036
Fuot Oil Cool/Wood/Gil ....-....................... 945 -lcat ....................................................... 6038
Furniture ...................................................... 950 Muotcel ...... ,..........................................,..... 6040
Hobby/Hun! I Sport................... """"""',,.955 Pert·n.,..Tomporarlao ...................... ,...... 11042
Kld'1 Corner.........................................l •••••••960

Aeataurlnti ............................................... IS044

MIICIItlntOUI...................................,_........165 Sa tea""'"'""""""""'""""""';_.. ,....,, ........11041
Wont to buy ..................................................070 tochnleot Tradea ....................................... 6050
Yon! - ...,.,,,,,,.,,...................................976 TtltlleaiFICIOry "'""" ................................ 11052
•

Stud
$275 00 Call ~6-1233

08

Home Improvement~
BaHmenl
w1 terprooflng

Uncond~ IOnalliletlme
g~erantee Local refer·

•==-'Pols"""===
iii

.

AKC Min, Dachshunds 7
wk Olu. 1 Dapple long
hair mate 1 shor1 hair
740 · 446•2751 or
male
740• 645· 2340·

beautiful
cab1net
with great location 1n GalhpoForm Equipmlnl
sw1ve1 base, works well hs
; BOO
sq
$100. 740-256·6278
S400/month. Call Wayne
"584 International farm
404 . 456 •3802
tractor w1tt1 loader. can· ~--~-.,-:-~
G1veaway SacK' lull ot
opy, new rear 1ras · and
Hauaes for Sale
'
2600
Ask1ng leftover
clothin g . Call --"'~~;;.;~:...
$10500 00
Also selling 740-388-82 17
186 North Park Dr call
~~=~~~,.- 304-675-5640
or
a 2001 Econotine 12ton
fl at-bed trailer With el~c- NEW AND USED STEE L
304·593-1204 w1H sell on
tnc brakes and p1ntle Steel Beams P1pe Reba r Land Contract or ou1
hitch for $4000.00.
for
Concrete
Angle. R1ght
Also a Wellington
(304)440·0111'
Channel, · Flat Bar, Steel Plano call for appo1nt·
I Graflng tor Drams Drive· ment to see them both
• ways &amp; Walkways L&amp;L
EBY,
INTEGRITY, Scrap Metals Open Mon. 2 'or 1 b , lull basement.
KIEFER BUILT,
Tue,
Wed
&amp;
Frl, abo\le ground pool. de·
VALLEY
HORSE/LIVE· Sam-4:30pm
Closed !ached
double gar.age.
STOCK
TRAILERS, Thurs.
sat
&amp;
Sun. fenced·ln back yard mce
LOAD
MAX
EQUIP· 740·446·7300
neighborhood 1n Rac1ne.
MENT
TRAILERS,
&lt;; 1
(740)992· 1424
CARGO
EXPRESS &amp;
"ant To luy
New 2BA 2 bath on 3 ac: .
HOMESTEADER
CARGO!CONCESSION
Buying tools sell or trade new refng, range &amp; dish·
TRAILERS.
B+W mechanic-carpenter lawn washer included $79,000

n

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

1'1ours

ences furnished. Estab·
llshed1975.Caii24Hrs. .
740·446·0870, Rogers
Basement WatBrJ)!OOfing. ~ Lab puppies for sale
each.
100
740·64 5.4941
Supenor Home Maille· ---~""'!'.,...nance.
Carpentry, ~
Plumbing,
Electrical, CKC RegiSte red Blchon
Rentals, No Job to Small Fnse puppies 8 wks old.
Reasonable
Plices. Great ·Vtlth children and
MaIe
339-3442 or 446·2805
non
shadd lng
$450 ,
females
ssoo.
0 H.
Olher S.l"'iau
Marrlett,
~--~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; 740·376·0664
or GOOSENECK FLATBED
Pet
Cremations.
Call 740·525·4143
$3999 . VIEW OUA EN·
740•446 .3745
TIRE TRAILER INVEN·
Give away 4 kittens 8 TORY AT
mths old, 7· 2 mths old WWW.CARMICHAEL·
(3eorge's Portable Saw- 446. 9582 or 645- 0029 .
TRAILEAS.COM
mill, don't haul your Logs "''""!'=~~--­ 740·44 6·3825
to· th e M1ll just call
3&lt;*675•1957
2 AKC female Boston
;;!~'""""""""'""'"""" Tamer .pupp1es beautiful ~--~~-~
· Profauional Services mark1ngs black &amp; white Have you pnced a John
Deere lately? You'll be
$125 aa 740-388-8743
surprised! Check out our
TURN!D DOWN ON
used
Inventory
at
AKC
reg.
Lab
puppies
SOCIAL SECURITY SSI
www
CAAEO.com.
Car·
vel/checked
No Fee Unless We Winl
michael
Equtpmsnt
1-888·582·3345
wormed/shots, 2 blk &amp; 1 740·446·2412
ellow,
all
females.
Only
Y
3 left. $175 to good --~~~~~~
homes 740·256-6882
Two row new tdea com
picker/sheller
lnterna·
Mlmature Plncher pups tiona! i066 Tractor!Cab,
nd
M · ~y;;;T;;o;;Lo~;;;;;;;;
;;;;;;~~-ii;
CKC reg. black &amp; rust 8'x20' Gooseneck cattle
NOTICE Borrow Smart. color,
Talis
docked , traHer.
Call
Contact 1he Ohio Olvl· shots , and wormed. F 740·446-4432
ston of. F)nanc.aI Ins11tu- $300.·
M
$250
Garden &amp; "- ~.. -

s

tions Office of Consumer
Affairs BEFORE you ref1·
nance your home or obtaln a lOan. BEWARE Of
requestS for any large
advance
payments
of
tees or 1nsurance Call
the Office of Consum8f
'Affiars
toll
free
lit
1·800·278·0003 to team
1t the mor1gage broker ' or
is properly 11.
le 'der
~·
nsad
(This
is 8 ,public
ce
serv1ce
announcement
the OhiO Valley
1,.....

""""""

740-367-0210 tf no . an· ~~~~~~~;;;;;;
swer leave a message .
Kl 1 st &lt; ol Syr
W JU 1-1
',
51
At acuse
124
on
·
·
FOUND Young medium (740)992·7449
sized Golden Retnover
Female. Bidwell
area
388•8655
4 Fun Blooded Australian
Sh h rd
Red
ep e "' pups,
MarJe,
10
wks
old.
304 675 7608
•
•
·
,.,,--~~.,..."!
CKC Reg. M1n i Dachs·
hund!J, 1 long ha1red fe·
male,
$350,
1 short

male, $300
shots and wormed
740-388-8445

Fi~&gt;t

740·645·2396.

May

haired

lklslntu &amp; Trado

School
GeUipolla Career
College
(Careers Close To Home)
Cell Tad8yt 740·446·4367
1·800·2 14·0452
galllpohtcareercolleg&amp; .edu
AocredHed M~bef Accredit·
log COuncillor Independent
eon.gu •nd SchOols 1274B •

leave a message.

Call

or

A...:~....,uet

;;;:;;=;;;;;;;;;;;i;;;;;;==
Anttque
gas
stove
green/cream ln. color &amp;
an antiQUe baby bed
white wlbfass accents.
mattress &amp; spnngs, botll
for $500 f1rm , call after

Spm, (740)949'3059

&amp;

garden

power

tools _:7::;40:;:-4:;:4::;6-.;,:70~2;:,9=,--

Cell 740·388·15 15 or cell 1 Yr old SA 588 tor more
740-208-0320
InI0 an d PIGIures go t0
www Ol\lb com
I.D
Abso lute- Top Dollar · Sll· Brown1ng 740·446· 7204
\l&amp;rlgold '
coins.
any Extraordinary Property:
10Klt4K/18K gold 1ew· Spectacular view of the
elry, dental gold. pre Ohio River
1935
US
currency, Pnvate dnve off Lmcoln
prooflm1nt
sets,
dla· H1ll
Pomeroy.
Oh1o.
monds, MTS Coin Shop. woods on th.ree s1des
151 2nd Avenue Galli· {4+)acres. to a h!Stoncal
h
~
1900
5
pot1s 44 6·2842
ome
y!Tca
,
:;,;;;,.,;,;,;;;;,;;,,,..
bedrooms. 2 hreplaces. 2
Yord Sol
1
h
2
~~=~~§·~~ ull bat s,
sta1rcases.
beautiful ong1nal wood·
Odd's &amp; End's Sale,
k
1
wor . many p1c ure Win·
Monday
·
Fnday, dows. mostly new w1n·
8· 4P m ,Sat 8· 12·600
dows. large k1tchen and "
E Ma1n Sl.,Pomeroy,Oh
breakfast room . beaut1
fully landscaped w'lth 1n
ground pool S1t on the
;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; wrap around porch and
enJOY
the
spectacular
AJV
v1ew ol the Oh10 A1ver 2
I
~~~===-- car detached garage and
~
650 Pralne 4x4 looks 2 out bu1ld1ngs Woula
good &amp; runs good S1800 make a wonderful !amlly
home or bed &amp; breaklast
256 • 1618
Pnvale and Picturesque
Camnan./ RVa &amp;
SPECTACULAR VIEW
,.Trailen
senous
Inquires
only
please call 740-992-3678
RV Service at Carmi·

Land (Acreago)

Tra1lers •=;;;;;;;~=;;_'-~
Approx. 25 acres 1'n'l re·

chael
740-446·3825

~~------ mote.

rough
access
RV
$40K Buyer must SurC
at
arrn1chae1 vey . Call attar 5pm
Serv1ce
Trailers
304 895 . 3390
740 .446- 3625

~======

loll

fuol/ on I Coal I

:-=;;;;;;;~~"!";;;;;;;;
Lot on AI 586 \\(hare all

~~~::-'=-~~

houses are being built
Sewage tetectrtc $35,000
740-256-1004

Wood/ Gas ·

FIREWOOD FOR SALE
Autos
For sale Dalmalion Pups U PICK UP S451LOAO ;;;;;;;;;;;;~==.~-- .--====-~
AKC reg 1st shots &amp; ;;446~·8832;;;,;;,,.,,.,,.,,., 1992 Camaro. V6 needs
1991
work $1.000
wormed
5325.00
M
---•p
750
304·675-6767
i~W~tuMOUS
VW
assan
call
304·812 ·4444

s

�~P l t:5t~·e

,
'

4000

'i·''l 'il ~

Apanmonts/
Townhauaet

Ma r. ufac ~ ed
Hous11q

Holp Wanlwd.• G.nwal ·

Te11 positions need tilled
by ne:d week!
No.expe rience required!

.tunities RS.J Trucking · !ants
Marie tta. Ohio has op· lnleJView Are Now Being
ponunitles available for Conducted For CNA &amp;

sid 1zed. 1-BR apa!'tment ~ br. mobile home in
tor. the eh.lerty.dtsabled, Racine. $325 per mo.,
r::all 675-6679
$325 dep..
~rs . lease.

No Sales!

$60 non-refundable waBeautiful Apts. at Jackson Estates. 52 Wostwood Dr.. lru11 $365 1o
$560.
/40-446-2568.
Equal Hou:;1ng 1 Opporlunil ~ Tn1~ ms111ution 1S an
Equt~l Oppo t1 unily Provider &lt;md Employer.

Recruit volunteers for
non-profit organizations
sud'l as St Jude
Children's Resea rch
Hospital.
Gel pai d to mak€' a
dlllerence!

Tuesday, October 14, 2008
A..LEYOOP

~C~NA~'s~&amp;'-=Ri;;es"ide
':"'ni-:'Ass..,.-is-

Twin Rivers Tower is accepllng applica tions tor
Rentals
wa t1n9 hst tor HUD sub· ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;

No Colleclrons!

Oppor-

BRIDGE

within Resident Assistant Postthe region . We feature lions If You Are A. Ca r·

weekly settlements, ineluding fuel surcharge &amp;
tr.ailer rental. Operatprs
hould haYe newer &amp;Quipment. For more 1nforma·
tlon - contact Dennis at
800-462-9365

i11g, Enthusiastic, Depeodable Person, Then
We Want You To Join
Our Team, Come On
OYer &amp; Check Us Out!
You 'll Be Glad You Did! •

CARPENTER
SERVICE

BDBEIIYSIUS
11••111

l br

service depanment. No retardation at a group
expenence required per- home in Bidwell·
~
$295 a mo. plus dep ., manent
position
com- 1) 35 h
0 30 7 30
2 ....
uuy servtce stallon I utilities &amp; referenc.es. 3rd
rs: 1 : a- : p
Jackson
Ptke
.
Lease
pany
traimng
provided
Sun·
,
2·10p
MffufW·
.
1 BR Apt, WID hookups.
Sl
Racine
11 446 3644
·•
· must be a High Sctlool 2 )
F·
5
satellite TV 1ncl. wlrent. reqwreu .
a
.
(7 40)247-4292
27. hrs: 3:30· 11p n:
for
more
ml
o.
;,;.;;;.::;~~:.,____
graduate_
Full
time
po9a7p
Sat;
1·9p
Sun;
close to hosp1tat. Call
Scenic location, conven- lions $580 per week, Must haYe high school
740-339-0362
Houses For Rent
1ent to town and aHord· rapid advancements and diptoma/GED, valid driv2 bedroom Apar1ment &amp;.
able. 2 &amp; 3 bedmoms benefits. For an interview er's license and Jhree
2 bedroom House on 5th $ 400/mo + cleposIt. 1BR . available
call call 740-446-7798.
years gooo dr1·v·,·ng exp e·
St. 304-8 12-4350 ask for Rg&amp;Ref
tum.
W&amp;D (740)992-5639
~O~h~--,.~,,.-y-'""':'H:"'om
-e rience. $8.40/hr af1er
hookup . No stops. Very
"'
b on
.
clean. 11 4 State
51.
SoleS
Health. Inc. hiring Home training . Excellent benefit
2 room lurniShorl ap t lor . 740 -441-0r-96
-..;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; Health
Aides.
STNA, package.
Pre-employtent 7 rhiles below Galli:.~ ,
'jggo Clayton 14 1( 70 , Jbr. CNA , CHHA PCA may n;aent Drug Testing. Send
polls. Parking for one car 2 · BR house 1n Gall ipolis. 1b. : new carpet. new NC apply al 14800 Jackson resume
to: Buckeye
only. $ 275 tnO r,th • elec · WI D
conn
$415/mo w/lurnilure &amp; metal car- P1ke. Gallipolis, Ohio .or Community
Services,
tric.
Deposit
requ ired . $150/dcp
Yotr pay all port, porct1es. eK. coo .. ph0 ne 7404411 393 · tor P.O. Box 604 · Jackson,
Stop in office at 1403 utilities No section B of• must be moved, $12,900 more inlo.
-" Yr
•;
•
CompetlliY
e OH 45640 or e-mail to
Eastern Ave for rontal HUD.
wa
ges,
m•
'
leage
'
l
e,
·
m·
beyeeseN @yahoo.com .
Cull·
Wayne (740)992-f.lB49
apptica t1on
01
ca ll 404 -4 56 _3802
bursement and benefits Deadline lor applicants:
~46-5 14
_ _ _ _ _ _ _;... 2004 Ooublewide in new including
health il1sur- 10115/08. Equal Opportu 2BR house located in c ondition. 4 bedroom. 2 &lt;lnce &amp; much more
~n;;!
ily;,;E;;m,;;~;;;o;!;ye;;r;,
,
2BR APT CIA
town,
Gallipol is
OH · ~. all _appliances in· ;;.;;;;.;;.;;;;;;;;,;.;;;;;;;...,-- .;.:
.:141-0 194
$500/mo plus ut1llf1 es. No cludeo;--13?,000 loca ted Gallrpotis Career College
Management/
Pet
s.
740-441
-01
10
or
at
zuspan
Lane
Ma·
is
seeking
·
pan-time
inSupervisory
3 rooms and b r~t h up176
structors who · po sses s a ~y;;~~~;;:"
~ta 1 rs
Completely
fur - 740· 59 1· 5 174
son City 304-675-211 7
master's degro o in genPropertY Management
nished With WID. No
2br on lho R1vcr in M.3- Bmnd new 3bed 2bath era! education subject ar- P.T. Community Manpets . Ref. Req. 441 ·0245
son. HUD Approved Ref· qn + ·half , acre in Pt. eas such as: English; ager needed for local
Apartment ava 1lable now eronc:es 304·88~·35 1 2 " or Pleasant
OWNER
Fl- Math , and Social Sci· apartment community lo·
Riverbend
A.pl s.
New 304-400· 794 6 ·
NANCE .
AVAILABLE. ences. E·mail · resumes cated in Gallipolis, Ohio.
Haven WV. · Now accept- 3 !;Jd. spac'ious ho 1ne (740) 446-3570
to jdanicki @galllpollsca- Ideal candidate will ha11e
cil}p l ica 1i on~
lor $750 M. JJIU S utilities, · 91 14x70 mobile home, 3 reercollege.com or r::all previous experience in
ing
HUO-subsldized.
one
availa ble
mid
Nov br.. 2 bath , ready to be 800;;;;.;;
-2;;.14;.,-0;.~!:;5;.
2 ....,-....- property managemental
Bedroom Ap ls. Utlli l1es Pomeroy, 740-992 -75 11.
moved.
$10,500, 60-hr. EMt Miner Class a Aural Development
Jncluded. Oased on 30 °~
2 BA $400 month $400 (740)59 1·8936
&amp; Aetresl'lers 40-hr: Sur- property, excellent com·
of adjlisled income. ·Call
fa ce Apprentice
SO-hr. munication and Qrg'anlzadeposi
t
plus
utih11es.
88
New
3
Be1room
homes
304 -882·3 ! 2 1,
avarlable
tionat ski1ts and be deApprenli~
Av. Gallipolis. !rom $2 14.36 per month. Underground
lor Senior and DisabtetJ Garfield
Tree
, Clearing pendable. Health insur16-hr.
people.
~
74-0~
-64
~5--~'6_4_
6 _.,..,,_,.. in_cludes many upgrades, Mine Undergro-und FOr- ance &amp; 40tk available.
2 BR house Gallipolis. delivery
&amp;
scl ~up man Class. Minor Safety Salary dependent upon
Oh. $375 per mth. plus 740·385·2434
Equipment Store.
For experience. Submit re·
utilities . $3 75 deposi t, no
call sume &amp; salary requiremore . information
CAT ED
&amp;
Whit-Co
Training menls to: Gallipolis C.M.,
AFFORD- ~
pe;;;t;;;
s·.;2;;;
56~·6;;;6:;;6:1 ~~-­ 6 000
Employment 304 ·372-8346
GOfSUCh Mgt., P.O. BoK
ABh£ 1 TownhouSe apa rt - New 2BR 2 bath you r
190, Lancaster OH
menls,
and!or
small choice of renting ~:om A LOCAL MANUFAC- 43130·0190 or email to:
. houses lor rent
Call pletely turnished g· all
TURER is taking applica- kdasbUry@ embarqmaltcom
740-44 1-1111 for appli- . ·utilities paid 0 1 you pm ·
Clerical
cation &amp; inforrnalion.
vidlng furnitu re 8 utilities.
Mig Welders. Please ap-

·" c

===-

Free

2&amp;3BA and up, Central
Air. WID hookup. tenant
pays electric. EHO· Elm
View
Apl s ·
(304)682-3017

Church parsonage. 3BR ,
2 bath, lull b&lt;rsement. 2
car
garage. . Includes
WID . new fridge and
rang e. S1ts on nearly 2

Takir1 g
applic~:~tions
acres $700 ·plu s sec.
Gallipolis area near Wat- dep For info or inspecmart . 1 BR Apt. Uti litieS ,
tio~n_c_a_ll2.,.4_5--0-03_1_ __
Pd. 24 5·5093

Th roe

Bedroom

house

lions in.lorperson at 2150
Clerical &amp; office positions ply
available. paid tra ining Ea s.tern A¥enue, Galllpo·
starts
immeQiatety, no
experience needed, no
sales.
call
J.BBa-6' o-6953

~~~~;cell~~~ w~~~:~~~y~
304·882-2645

~~,:.~i~:;~~~;~~~:~ ~~~·' ::~::~: ~t!~~ ·

Nice
Clean
Ground At# 2 North. Two Bed· lion Mon·Fri, 30 hrs per
Previous experiMobile
Home week.
Floor. 2br. WID hookup, roorn
e.r1ce .is a plus.
Please
c;amp
Conlt'y
RelcrcncesiDeposit/No
ma
il/email
resume
to:
Pets 30&lt;1 -675-5 162
304-895·3 129
P recisi ~
Fabricators.
7181 Ohio River Road.

r;,..;.;;;.;;..,.,,____,

BULLETIN BOARD
' 12"column lnoh weekdays

'20" column inch Smd.ly
CALL OUR off1CEAT992-2155

B:JARO DEAD

lr' E

; 1J All :AY BEF:JRE PU3LICATIOr,

..
It has been voted by the
members present at the
May 28, 2008 regular meeling
of Feeney·Bennelt Post #1 28,
Amenca n Legion, Middleport,
OH. to selllhe Post's farm
located on Bailey Run Road. A
purchase agreement has been
accepted lrom a bid closeslto ·
the appraisl3d valu e. This
. pending sale will impact those
with hunting rights on this farm.

IN
THE
COMMON
PLEAS COURT, PRO·
BATE DIVISION MEIGS
COUNTY, OHIO
IN THE MATTER OF
SETTLEMENT OF AC·
COUNTS, PROBATE
COURT
MEIGS
COUNTY, OHIO

flied thereto, said ic·
count will be set tor
hearing belore said
Court on the 14th day

of November, 2008, at

which time said

ac~

count will be conoid·
ered and continued
lrom day to day until II·
:Accounts and vouch - nally disposed of.
ers of the following Any person interested
:named fiduciary has may lila written excepbeen flied In the Pro· tion to oold account or

bate

Court,

package 304-67 5-4 545.
Direct Care Staff In resl·

dential youth program.
Must be 21 years ·ot age.
·
Pay based · on experi·
ence.
Call
Point
Pleasant,
.WV (74 0)379·9063
Mon-Fri
25550
or
sales@pre- 9am-3pm .
fab llc.com
No ptlone
calls please
MOS
COORDINATOR
'Edgewood Manor
Government &amp; Federal
ot Wellston
Jobs
50 ski lled bed Facility
' AN
*2 yr s MOS
FEDERAL
Expe rience
POSTAL JOBS
' Exceptional
$17.89-$20.271HR., now
communication &amp;
hiring
For
application
people skills
and free go11ernment job
'Interpersonal &amp;
info, call American As·
organizational skills
:soc.
of
.Labqr
To apply, 11fstt:
1· 913-599-8226,
24/hrs
www.consulalemgtcaemp. serv.
reers.com
405 North Park ,Ave
POST
OFFI CE
NOW
Wellston. OH 45692
HIRI NG avg . Pay $201hr
740-384·561 1
or
$571&lt;Jyr,
includes
EOE/SFIDF
Fed.Ben. OT Place by .__ _;;;;;,;;;.,;;;__.,I
Bu s
Drivers
adSourcc, not affiliyled Sub.
. wit h USPS who hiros. Needed lor MeigS Local
School District.$55 for all
1-866 -403-2582
day.Must attend driver
Help Wanted· Generol traimng cla ss.Ctass to be
held Oct.20,08 lhrough
AVON! An Areas !
To Ocl .24108.1nterested
or Sell Shirley please call Paul McElroy
Buy
Spears 304-6751429
at 740-742·2 990

GefVour Messalio AciOas Wllh A'Oaii~.Senllnal

ALII LE~IN

Salet
;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;i;;;~;;;;;;;
Appalachian

Tire

Complete Tree Care
k11urW • F..- E•t""-tn

Prod-

ucts, Inc._.. is currently
seek'1ng a sa 1esperson

7~1).4~1-t31 7

20~...a••pen.t~c•

29670 Bashan Road

' Racine, Ohio

'=======:::

Meigs to maHers p8rtalnlng to

County, Ohio lor ap- the 'eucutlon of the
proval and oettlement. trust, not less than five
ESTATE NO. 20072007· days prior to 1he date
The llrst current ac- set for harlng ,
count flied by Patricia J . S. Powell
j., Harris, guardian of Judge
the person and estate Common Pleas Court
of Elizabeth M . Hawley, Probate Division
Meigs County, Ohio
. an Incompetent.
Unless exceptions are (10) 14

n•m•cnn
Horres ..

~·
. slm&amp;'aW
. ."'
"
;

• 6 52
Q 9 3

•

;. to10'dOW
Hours

8:00 PM

Wes~

• Complete

.L

cation are also aYailable.
Please apply in pe~son .
Located @ 426 Viand
Street in downtown Point
Pleasaht.

•

'"

=========
SeiVICl' Bu~
Directory

9000

;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;

.. 6 5 4 2

740-992-1811

•

Stop &amp; Compare

Concrolo
~~~~~~~~
All types Masonry, brick,
block. stone, Free Esti·
male,
740·416-7305,
304 -593-6421

111411 mo. pd

AUCTIONS/ANTIQUES

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

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

fi'J. Tt-fAT

Hardwood Cabinetry And FurnHure

·BARNEY

. W'W"W'.tirubere:reeik..cablnwtry.eodl

740.446.9200

YO'RE MAMA'S

FAV'RITe

St. Rt. 160 • Gallipolis

YOUNG-UN,
SNUFf'1' !!·

F RF

AW, SHUCKS,
MAMA, YOU
SAY THAT TO
AL.L. YORE
KIDS~!

'

(740) Q92-S344
•

on

8:00 am ·4:30pm
Sat . 6:00am · 12

SAVI'NGS

We aPprt&lt;iate your
busii1ess

owners:

· cen: 740-416·5047
&amp;

THE BORN LOSER
';ou lOOK
t bOt-~i \:1
bOWKit-1

email:

28 Years Experience

David Lewis
740-.992-6971

Guttering

.i

I

Insured &amp; &amp;nded

Qualily Seamlttss
Gutters
Maintenance Plus

Stanley TreeTrimming
&amp; Removal
*Prompt and Quality

Vinyl

Siding/Replacement
Wimlbws/Remodcling
BOnded &amp; Insured '

·City/State/Zip - - - - : - - - - - -

740-9'12-1493 Olfice
740-416-8339 Cell
Free Estimated
Pomeroy. Ohio ·

Work

It goes redouble, .
penalty double

44

Laug~

syllable
47 Train

alternative

· gas

Gee

28 Gullible

heroine

29 Nov, and

52 Command
to Rover
55 Ref's

Feb.

tournamenl

31 Mexican
Mrs.
34 Trails

cousin

alte
8 Road map
behind
Info
35 Cup edges
8 Weird
36 Per diem
10 Pat'o . .
(2 wds.)
co-hoat
· 41 Diamond

stat

14 In case

56

57
58

..

ON

Call Gary S1anley

@

740-591 · 8044

Pl ea..~e

lcUve mcss.P. c

RICK PRICE ·
New

Homes, Room Additions, Remodeling,
Metal &amp;
Derks,
Insured

'
Construction
• Replacement
Windows
• Roofing

• Declls
·Garages
; Pole Buildings
• Room Additions
Owner:
Jameo Keelee II
742-2332

or

Re!\':rcnces Avajlablc!

PSI CONSTRUCTION

• VInyl Siding .

NO, NH DOG ISN'T llOh~E ..1
WE WENT ON A !liKE
WITH HIS TROOPS ..

Roofing, Siding,
Soffit, Decks,
Doors, Windows,
EJectric, Plumbing,

IHem~~~~g~!Room
Local Contr~~e\Or

74o-367-0544
Free Eotlmatea

74o-367-0536

For Remodeling and New House Building

MARCUM COf'jSTRlJCTION
• Room Additioi1s • Garages • Vinyl
and Wood Siding • Roafing • Pole _
Barn.s • Patio's, Porches and Decks:

liKE W. MIICUM, OWNER ·
472,39 R ~c bel Road. L o ng B ollm n , OH

Cell: 74041 6· 1R34
25+ yearS t,Xperienct FTee E,flitnatrs

COW~md BOY

lfS IIN'ORTANT

TO IIEMEMBER LIFE'S
liTTLE MOMENTS,
Uf&lt;E WI\TCI41NG THE
LEAVES CI4ANGE ON
t.CRISP fi\LL DAY.

ll

11E.\\IND tiC TO
DUSTBUSTEII MY
POCI&lt;ET WHEN
WE GET HOftl£

J(
liND YOU WILL
LOOK Bi1.CK AND
DUSTSUSTE~

FONDLY.

"Watching the clock aod
counting time;" the employer
told his workers, " is not as
imporlllnt as making sure our

~--.1-r-s.c-r.IA..:.s,..:.lc,..;:ol,,..;r..._l.-~1 -~~:~

lht chudl• quot..t
by IIIRng In ine milling ""'do
L-I.L..-..1.-.L.--1.-.;J..--1. you develop
m shop No. 3 botow'. ,

8 PRINT
NUMBERED LEITEAS
THESE

IN

SQUARES

6 UN1~R:ra~N~~E LETTERS I

I

j

with a copy

of

your photo

10 to

Ohio Valley Publishing P.O. Box 469, Gallipolis,

OH 45631

··---··········-----------------•

j

J

ARL9&amp;JANIS

upon wflleh many&lt;1thers are dlpetdiO.

or

ARIES (MaiCh 21-Ap.l19) - I speaking up and letting ~ knOw
that somethlllQ Is too e~ fo1: your
6reslyle, you might unwloely go ~
with them and later be blamed for poor
money management.
•-~
TAURUS (Ap.l 20·MaY 20) - A1111ough
. you prefer tope a loner, take painS to go
along witrl others. II you fail to )Oin In and
help hold up a mutual goal, It couttl
arouse the arnmosity ot associates. .
GEMINI (May 21-.June 20) - 8e honest
about your shortcornirtgs and limitations.
If you pretencl to' be able to'do eomethlflQ
and fail,
could be judged _qulte harah~
If and blamed for letting people down .
CANCER (June 21·July 22) - Do not

vou

impose yoorsett upon anyone Of'

anv·

place where you feel unwelcome. If you
are right, you wilt end up feeling quite
uncomfQrtable and made to feel like an
intruder.
LED (Ju~ 23-Auo. 22) - Tly not lo mako
being the.hud honcho your ~r objec·
tlve, beCI.uH If lhll II ~r pnmary ~~­
.an (ratn.r than trylilg to do aome good),
your IICtlcl wKI prove 10 bt ooumerpro-

dUollvo.

'

YtAGO (Aug . 23·9tpt 22) -

I

j

SCRAMLETS ANSWERS 10113/08
Versits - Swept - Hatch - Island,_ USED IT
Teacher to disobedient boy, "The straight and narrow path
would DOl be 10 1181'!0W if lllllll: people USED IT."

JUI1

becauH an aoqualntanoe wu luaky at
tomolhlng, R 110011\'1 -n~ 1011ow
d'lat you will be, too. The 11m1 pi'DDI·
""'" lhll Old wonrllro lor Nm or nor
ooutd bo 101&amp;1~ wrong for you,

SOUP TO NUll
(ji lfl"&gt;&lt;~tl

w i'H
Mall or drop off this coupon along

Narrow
shoe
Lit out
Wind \JP

WOlD

wnen Important changes begin to come
into play In the year ahead, go with the
flow of events instead of fight ih~ them.
Even if you •dOn't sM anything in it for
yourself, 8\'Eints wUI prove that these
shifts are beneficiaL
UBRA (Sept 23-0ct 23) - II you need
some important advic::e, be sure to seek
oul only those wl'lO are e~~:perts in the
field , or at least ha\18 lots of experience.
F'oor counsel could prove costly.
SCORPIO (Oct . 24·Nov. 221 Someone upon whom you can usually
rely might take the opposite side and be
an adVersary. Be careful how you handle
the situation so that you don't lose his or '
her supporl forever.
SAGITIARIUS (Nov. a3-0ec. 21) - II .
your purpoSe for offering to help another
is solely to feather your nest. thlnga
could baokflre. Events will reveal y,our
intent and penali ze sett-servlng tactics or
insirH?Srity.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. I 9) - Do
not get invol\18d In Intrigues with friends.
What unfolds will haYe a way
identify·
ing you as ihe perpetrator, and vou will
have to bear the cost of the achema. ·
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) - Unleas
you can pledge to follow through on
promises.made to others, be certain lhal
you can etrectl~~ely follow through on your
commitmeflt&amp;. A failure to honor )'Our
WCKd will tamlsh your reputation.
PISCES (Feb. 20-Morch 20) - Dcn'l
take on something you haven't done
before, ._;ally II " """"- o ~

* E ro: pcrienced

740-985-4141
Phone,______________________

"- Beso"

ALKEil!&gt;'

*Reasonabl e Rates
"' Insured

Call:

Address -----~-~~--

Pass

All pass

Wednoodoy, OCt. 15, 2008
By Berni.,_ 8ede 01101

WHY NOT
OPEN LJf' A

740-653 -9657 .

'

.· The Daily Sentinel
6unba!' tltime• -&amp;entittd
p•·---------------------········
·Subscriber's Name·_ ______

Pass

Dbl.

OF THE

T~H

"' ~

•alltpolh1 Jlail!' otrthune
·Joint Jlea•ant ltegi•te,;

Dbl.

22 Humdinger

23 Disney CEO 49
24 Purple
follower
flowers
51 Jean Auel

'CELEBRITY CIPHER

If so, you qualify for a

'

I NT
2•

Come later
21 Storage bin 46 Knockout

YOUtt KI'N6

Seamless Gutters
Roofing, Siding, Gutt6r5

.~·or.·. :o·1-d.e·r··. 9.

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.

Pass

clucks
Aim toward

-

HIM'?

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

Redbl. Pass

20 Police-brut- 44
ter info
45

OAMl

CAN

Senior Discount*

Obi.

East

vestments

minus 800.

-

. .
"':", ~.;!iJ

WHIP,
TOO !!

~~~~~~~J~~

Paul Rowe

•· '\,~'
, ·•

I

I

•

Jon lian Meter

"'!&gt;

SMART
1 AN'ASA

~~
c;:::;:::;:1l

'
Racine, Ohio 740-247-2019

.Are :y· o\1•.66

~OAP
~AGE

/ {,0MING 8A{,IC
t-t~~E AGAIN!

RV's

Get AJump

Q

39 Recited
40 Zealous
43 College stat

West

42 Fleproving

16 Linen

Joumafist and humorist Kin Hu!Jtlard
said, "The safe way to double your
L~AI'
money is to told it over once and put It in
your pocket."
You can increase the number ol bills
lolded in yom pocke1 by playing bridge
lor money and knowing when to double
your opponents lor penally.
Partner opens one of a !lUi!, the nell!
player makes a takeout double, and you
redouble. What does your call mean?
First. you promise ar leasr 10 high -card
~Is Nex1, 'you heve ·lower than lour
. - - - - - - - - - ' - " - - - - , cards in partner's suit if he bid a major.··
a~ probably not lour if 11e opened in a
YOU ALWAYS COULD
minor.
And if yoU are shor1 in partner's
A
L.IE
!!
SPOT
suit. you should have "penally' llrmly In
mind. Atter this redouble, either the
opening side wins the auction or the
opponents play in a contract doubled for
penally.
In taQay's deal, South makes a lextbook
rakeoul double, but gars killed. Affer
WeS1 redoubles, North has nowhere to
go, and neilher does South. One spade
by Luis campos
redou~ed would make three {plus 920)
Celebfity Cipher cryp;ogams are cr$Bted lrom qwtat10ns ay larr{lJS pwp:e &lt;~ast and present
or four (plus 1, 120). One no-bump douE!acn leiter in thfl c:p'let stana_s 1manatrer
bled would probatlly go down four, minus
Today's clue: Vequals R
800. With carefUl defense, declarer gets
only the spade king and his two aces,
" J F N W.B B X V N X 0 R H C 0 N V X G E N
Two di~monds dou~ed Is no beHer, West
UEVBW JC HC WZWRXJEC XOHC
leads 1ha spade queen. East wins with
H A E N X H C G X D J C F X D H X R .H C
his ace and returns the ei{llt, the lowest
card being a surt-preterence signal for OHYYWC XE GEN. " · UJZZ VEFWVB
clubs, West ruffs and slliffs ro a club,
East wirming cheaply and leading the
spade nine. South does best to pitch a PREVIOUS SOLliTION - ' Do just once what olhers say you can1 do, and
club loser, but ff East shlfrs.to a red suit, , you will never pay aHontion to their linirarions again: · James Cook
the contract would still go down four,

I~Fo~e

winterize bouls and

Mon-Fri .

Shop
ClQSSifiedS!

ANI&gt;

\ I

01/,.

2A~

. repair.

••

South

- Opening lead: •

address

32 Unburdenad 5 Sweet
33 Earthen ~~
potatoes
37 Laird's
6 El Dorado
accent
· loot
38 Paul Anlca'a 7 Tennis

Vulnerable : Neither
Nqrth

Brosh
Call lor

1 ' 1mpend
52 Zaam
on runntrtr
5 ZJw~sI Gun 1 motor 53 Wan
11 Field
54 Not look
olotudy
away
12 "Exodus"
59 Do oome
hero
fencing
13 Duckarhuo 80 lb.
15 Aromatic
Thurman
seed
61 "SIIIIter"
17 0CeMI bird
actor
18 Unser and 62 Period
Gore
63 007
19 Sinks
64 Glove filler.
21 Go up ·
24 Kind
DOWN
25 Dine
26 Floor
1 Fond du covering
2 Mouths
27 Groupie
3 Above,
welcome
In verse
30 Monsleur'o 4 Polite

Islands

Dealer: East

Auclioneer:
BiiiV R. Goble Jr.
.740-416-1164

We serv ice and

K5

A Q 10 B
t A Q9 4
.. 10 8 7
•

(~Poi nts )

small engine

.. A K J
South

· Pomero)',OH

.changes.

• 6 3 2
• 7 3

K J 9 5
J 10 8

+K

L Tire Barn

New &amp;,_Used Tires,
We buy used tires.
· compt,ller wheel .
· alignnlents, lighi
mechanic work.
complete service oil

East
.AJI09B

• Q

Remod~ling

IO.If..QII

.,.

• chwcn Dllcout~l
Ou r Point Pleasant.
location . Experience
1
is preferred. Job bene·
&amp;
fits Include 401 K, Health
44087
Wlpple Rd.
Insurance, and Paid va -

lor
WV

"

·

North
..76432

• Garages

740·949-2217

7 :00AM •

BISSElL

· - New

4~77t

' '

ROIERT

J.niG,cw,.,

EXPERIENCED ·-o;:=E;O=E==·=~===~==::.=====F:reo=~~,

SpeGialH! NO LE AS E 446-7029

Aent

H1il's Self
Sto rage

HI-F
..12111.

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

50

Phillip
Alder

741-112-56112

a mo ,

48

ACROSS

wv

$425

The Daily Sentinel • Page 85

Owner Operat ors

wv

3br.

www.mydallysentlnel.com

NEA Crossword Puzzle

ter dep., no pets, no calls
al!er
9pm.
(740)992-5097
YOUNG'S
~~~~~-~2BR 1 bath on farm
Competitive
CNA
$500 per mpnth includes
~.;...~~---~- Wages, Paid VacatiOns.
ut11it1es . 540-752-0826 or
Service Manager &amp; Serv- Paid Meals. Many Other • ROQfn Addltlona I
54Q-729- 1331
Full and Part-time
tee Technician positions B9neti ts,
Ravenswood
RemocWing
I F d
.
Positions
available. Health care &amp; Care Center,1113 Wasn - ·fHWGI!."•tet
F
d
un s JUSl reR .
I
"
Graclous Living 1 ;:md 2 e era
teased tm Land Owners.
Day and Evening
ellrement pans ava~- ington St., Ravenswood, • El«:trfclll I Plumbing
Bedroom Ap!s fll Vitlage
, Shitts
· able. Please send reReferences
Re- •Rooting I Gutters
• VInyl Siding I Painting
Manm · CliHI
Rivorsido NQ closrng cost and
to
Prolessionai'Work
sume
quired, E.O.E.
·PatiO and Porth Oecka·
ZERO DOWN ' w ·,11 "o
Ap!s. · 111 Ma.ldlepor1. from
u
EQ COM
036725
land
improvements.
Environment!
LL,C @C AR
·
or ~....~~....~....~
$327
to
$59?
tax to 740·446·9104
Home Health care of
, "qu"l Bankruplcy &amp; Bad Credit
Medical, Dental, F ,~ P.
:,;:;;.;;;.;.;;;;...;;;;;:,.;;.:;;;;.._~ S lh
Ohl 1
.
V.C. YOUNG Ill
740 _992 _5064
0 nc., 15
-..
u
OK 2 3 4
d 5 b9 d
401K!
Taylor
m11de
counter ou eas1
IJ92 -b215
Housinq Oppor\UJ)Ity.
· ' ·
un
11
' h' ·
home
·
rooms
aYmlable.
On-site Doctor
lops. Looking "lor solid curran Y
mng
f' o rnrrn1, Otuu
Tara
Townhouse 740-44.6-3384
VV kl P
d
surface fabrica tors . Ex· heallh aides. Certified or
] 'j \'!'.1r &lt;1. I nc·, f ~prnr r1cr
Oonuees lncyena!• v?e"sl
Bonuses
Aparl!nenls . 2BR. 1 5 - - - - - - - - perience in cabinet shop experience.
bath, back oa!IO. pool . Mob1la home for rent 2
wilt be helpful bU1 wilt Available.
Call r-::::::":=::l:-1
1
plojgrcund . l llash. sew· BA
1
balh.
new
C•ll TODAY!
lrain righl people. Musl ~
666-;.;.;,:-368---1":'1:"'00_._':':""_
age.
water
pU .) tumace/ca.
new appli·
Interview
pa ss
pre-employment· ResCare Home Care ~ new
' -$425/renl
$425/sec ances: new balh ,I 1""'
TOMORROW/!
testing,
drUg
screen, Provider
ot
Support
dep. Call : 40-367 -U:J4/
hOme, no pets. 367 5 BuWork NEXT WEEK !If
criminal
background Services to Individuals
It It 1MP 11'11. II
IaVIIIe Pike 740-446-4234
che&lt;:k. 6 month trai ning wllh MRIOO. OlreCI c are
Very nice 1 BA home In ~
"' 7_4.;.
0-.;.
2.;.
0a;..-7..;a.;.
6_1 _ _ _
1-888-IMC-PAYU
program
·staf1. Contact Rhonda
Pomeroy,
gren! ne1gh· 38R located on Butaville
Ext. 1921
Call 740-379 2267 tiJr in- Harrison
Monda~
....
horhoor.t.targo
yard,ideal Pike.
. $ 4?S/ront
httj:l:ll]obs.inloc:lslon.com
terview. An Equal oppor- lhrouQh
Friday
9a-5p.
tor I or 2 poople. new 740·367- 7762..
ATIENTION:
tunlly Employer.
740-446·4814 eKI. 26 or r~~~~~~":""'"
apphu nces . C C~II
~;,.;;;~;,.;;~~-mall r sume to· rharri
9
. @ res~re. com ·
•
Johnson's Tree .
992 .5094 anP leave u 3br, 2ba. Pt. Pleasant Local company with full WANTED: Part·tl me po- 5on
message .
area
304-273-6622 or time and part time po· sition available to assist
Service
30 4-674-6204
lions in our customer Individuals with mental ;:;•

Commercial

'

'

Medical

Owner Operator

with you when you lltSit

our commumty to get
thi s Sj)C!!;Ii.ll diSCO!Jnl
MoYe·in 111 Oct and gel
$100.00 oH your 2BR
Apt. 1n New. Curre nll ~
renting 1 &amp; 2 BR un11s
Spac10us floor plans.
ranch &amp; townh orne style
flv1ng, playground &amp;
baskotboll cvurt . on -s,te
laundry facility. 24 hr '
emergency ,_~n al n(e·
nance. quiet country IQcatiun dose tu mujor
tactlities.
medical
pllarmacies. grocery
store... just mnl ul~ s
away from other maj or
shopp1ng in the ,Jfen
Honevsuckle Hills
Apartments
·266 Colonial Dnve ll l 13
Bidwell, Oh1o 45614
740-446-3344
Office Hours M. W. F
9AM - SPM

Holp Wa~ · General
$250 Sign on Bonus·

1

Clip this AD and take 11

Tuesday, October 14, 2008

www.mydailysen.tlnel.com

Page B4 • The Daily Sentinel

Advertise
in this space for
$64 per month

I

~-- ---

)"

u.r

tr ~ · D~e

.

12 P~ &lt; k

�~P l t:5t~·e

,
'

4000

'i·''l 'il ~

Apanmonts/
Townhauaet

Ma r. ufac ~ ed
Hous11q

Holp Wanlwd.• G.nwal ·

Te11 positions need tilled
by ne:d week!
No.expe rience required!

.tunities RS.J Trucking · !ants
Marie tta. Ohio has op· lnleJView Are Now Being
ponunitles available for Conducted For CNA &amp;

sid 1zed. 1-BR apa!'tment ~ br. mobile home in
tor. the eh.lerty.dtsabled, Racine. $325 per mo.,
r::all 675-6679
$325 dep..
~rs . lease.

No Sales!

$60 non-refundable waBeautiful Apts. at Jackson Estates. 52 Wostwood Dr.. lru11 $365 1o
$560.
/40-446-2568.
Equal Hou:;1ng 1 Opporlunil ~ Tn1~ ms111ution 1S an
Equt~l Oppo t1 unily Provider &lt;md Employer.

Recruit volunteers for
non-profit organizations
sud'l as St Jude
Children's Resea rch
Hospital.
Gel pai d to mak€' a
dlllerence!

Tuesday, October 14, 2008
A..LEYOOP

~C~NA~'s~&amp;'-=Ri;;es"ide
':"'ni-:'Ass..,.-is-

Twin Rivers Tower is accepllng applica tions tor
Rentals
wa t1n9 hst tor HUD sub· ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;

No Colleclrons!

Oppor-

BRIDGE

within Resident Assistant Postthe region . We feature lions If You Are A. Ca r·

weekly settlements, ineluding fuel surcharge &amp;
tr.ailer rental. Operatprs
hould haYe newer &amp;Quipment. For more 1nforma·
tlon - contact Dennis at
800-462-9365

i11g, Enthusiastic, Depeodable Person, Then
We Want You To Join
Our Team, Come On
OYer &amp; Check Us Out!
You 'll Be Glad You Did! •

CARPENTER
SERVICE

BDBEIIYSIUS
11••111

l br

service depanment. No retardation at a group
expenence required per- home in Bidwell·
~
$295 a mo. plus dep ., manent
position
com- 1) 35 h
0 30 7 30
2 ....
uuy servtce stallon I utilities &amp; referenc.es. 3rd
rs: 1 : a- : p
Jackson
Ptke
.
Lease
pany
traimng
provided
Sun·
,
2·10p
MffufW·
.
1 BR Apt, WID hookups.
Sl
Racine
11 446 3644
·•
· must be a High Sctlool 2 )
F·
5
satellite TV 1ncl. wlrent. reqwreu .
a
.
(7 40)247-4292
27. hrs: 3:30· 11p n:
for
more
ml
o.
;,;.;;;.::;~~:.,____
graduate_
Full
time
po9a7p
Sat;
1·9p
Sun;
close to hosp1tat. Call
Scenic location, conven- lions $580 per week, Must haYe high school
740-339-0362
Houses For Rent
1ent to town and aHord· rapid advancements and diptoma/GED, valid driv2 bedroom Apar1ment &amp;.
able. 2 &amp; 3 bedmoms benefits. For an interview er's license and Jhree
2 bedroom House on 5th $ 400/mo + cleposIt. 1BR . available
call call 740-446-7798.
years gooo dr1·v·,·ng exp e·
St. 304-8 12-4350 ask for Rg&amp;Ref
tum.
W&amp;D (740)992-5639
~O~h~--,.~,,.-y-'""':'H:"'om
-e rience. $8.40/hr af1er
hookup . No stops. Very
"'
b on
.
clean. 11 4 State
51.
SoleS
Health. Inc. hiring Home training . Excellent benefit
2 room lurniShorl ap t lor . 740 -441-0r-96
-..;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; Health
Aides.
STNA, package.
Pre-employtent 7 rhiles below Galli:.~ ,
'jggo Clayton 14 1( 70 , Jbr. CNA , CHHA PCA may n;aent Drug Testing. Send
polls. Parking for one car 2 · BR house 1n Gall ipolis. 1b. : new carpet. new NC apply al 14800 Jackson resume
to: Buckeye
only. $ 275 tnO r,th • elec · WI D
conn
$415/mo w/lurnilure &amp; metal car- P1ke. Gallipolis, Ohio .or Community
Services,
tric.
Deposit
requ ired . $150/dcp
Yotr pay all port, porct1es. eK. coo .. ph0 ne 7404411 393 · tor P.O. Box 604 · Jackson,
Stop in office at 1403 utilities No section B of• must be moved, $12,900 more inlo.
-" Yr
•;
•
CompetlliY
e OH 45640 or e-mail to
Eastern Ave for rontal HUD.
wa
ges,
m•
'
leage
'
l
e,
·
m·
beyeeseN @yahoo.com .
Cull·
Wayne (740)992-f.lB49
apptica t1on
01
ca ll 404 -4 56 _3802
bursement and benefits Deadline lor applicants:
~46-5 14
_ _ _ _ _ _ _;... 2004 Ooublewide in new including
health il1sur- 10115/08. Equal Opportu 2BR house located in c ondition. 4 bedroom. 2 &lt;lnce &amp; much more
~n;;!
ily;,;E;;m,;;~;;;o;!;ye;;r;,
,
2BR APT CIA
town,
Gallipol is
OH · ~. all _appliances in· ;;.;;;;.;;.;;;;;;;;,;.;;;;;;;...,-- .;.:
.:141-0 194
$500/mo plus ut1llf1 es. No cludeo;--13?,000 loca ted Gallrpotis Career College
Management/
Pet
s.
740-441
-01
10
or
at
zuspan
Lane
Ma·
is
seeking
·
pan-time
inSupervisory
3 rooms and b r~t h up176
structors who · po sses s a ~y;;~~~;;:"
~ta 1 rs
Completely
fur - 740· 59 1· 5 174
son City 304-675-211 7
master's degro o in genPropertY Management
nished With WID. No
2br on lho R1vcr in M.3- Bmnd new 3bed 2bath era! education subject ar- P.T. Community Manpets . Ref. Req. 441 ·0245
son. HUD Approved Ref· qn + ·half , acre in Pt. eas such as: English; ager needed for local
Apartment ava 1lable now eronc:es 304·88~·35 1 2 " or Pleasant
OWNER
Fl- Math , and Social Sci· apartment community lo·
Riverbend
A.pl s.
New 304-400· 794 6 ·
NANCE .
AVAILABLE. ences. E·mail · resumes cated in Gallipolis, Ohio.
Haven WV. · Now accept- 3 !;Jd. spac'ious ho 1ne (740) 446-3570
to jdanicki @galllpollsca- Ideal candidate will ha11e
cil}p l ica 1i on~
lor $750 M. JJIU S utilities, · 91 14x70 mobile home, 3 reercollege.com or r::all previous experience in
ing
HUO-subsldized.
one
availa ble
mid
Nov br.. 2 bath , ready to be 800;;;;.;;
-2;;.14;.,-0;.~!:;5;.
2 ....,-....- property managemental
Bedroom Ap ls. Utlli l1es Pomeroy, 740-992 -75 11.
moved.
$10,500, 60-hr. EMt Miner Class a Aural Development
Jncluded. Oased on 30 °~
2 BA $400 month $400 (740)59 1·8936
&amp; Aetresl'lers 40-hr: Sur- property, excellent com·
of adjlisled income. ·Call
fa ce Apprentice
SO-hr. munication and Qrg'anlzadeposi
t
plus
utih11es.
88
New
3
Be1room
homes
304 -882·3 ! 2 1,
avarlable
tionat ski1ts and be deApprenli~
Av. Gallipolis. !rom $2 14.36 per month. Underground
lor Senior and DisabtetJ Garfield
Tree
, Clearing pendable. Health insur16-hr.
people.
~
74-0~
-64
~5--~'6_4_
6 _.,..,,_,.. in_cludes many upgrades, Mine Undergro-und FOr- ance &amp; 40tk available.
2 BR house Gallipolis. delivery
&amp;
scl ~up man Class. Minor Safety Salary dependent upon
Oh. $375 per mth. plus 740·385·2434
Equipment Store.
For experience. Submit re·
utilities . $3 75 deposi t, no
call sume &amp; salary requiremore . information
CAT ED
&amp;
Whit-Co
Training menls to: Gallipolis C.M.,
AFFORD- ~
pe;;;t;;;
s·.;2;;;
56~·6;;;6:;;6:1 ~~-­ 6 000
Employment 304 ·372-8346
GOfSUCh Mgt., P.O. BoK
ABh£ 1 TownhouSe apa rt - New 2BR 2 bath you r
190, Lancaster OH
menls,
and!or
small choice of renting ~:om A LOCAL MANUFAC- 43130·0190 or email to:
. houses lor rent
Call pletely turnished g· all
TURER is taking applica- kdasbUry@ embarqmaltcom
740-44 1-1111 for appli- . ·utilities paid 0 1 you pm ·
Clerical
cation &amp; inforrnalion.
vidlng furnitu re 8 utilities.
Mig Welders. Please ap-

·" c

===-

Free

2&amp;3BA and up, Central
Air. WID hookup. tenant
pays electric. EHO· Elm
View
Apl s ·
(304)682-3017

Church parsonage. 3BR ,
2 bath, lull b&lt;rsement. 2
car
garage. . Includes
WID . new fridge and
rang e. S1ts on nearly 2

Takir1 g
applic~:~tions
acres $700 ·plu s sec.
Gallipolis area near Wat- dep For info or inspecmart . 1 BR Apt. Uti litieS ,
tio~n_c_a_ll2.,.4_5--0-03_1_ __
Pd. 24 5·5093

Th roe

Bedroom

house

lions in.lorperson at 2150
Clerical &amp; office positions ply
available. paid tra ining Ea s.tern A¥enue, Galllpo·
starts
immeQiatety, no
experience needed, no
sales.
call
J.BBa-6' o-6953

~~~~;cell~~~ w~~~:~~~y~
304·882-2645

~~,:.~i~:;~~~;~~~:~ ~~~·' ::~::~: ~t!~~ ·

Nice
Clean
Ground At# 2 North. Two Bed· lion Mon·Fri, 30 hrs per
Previous experiMobile
Home week.
Floor. 2br. WID hookup, roorn
e.r1ce .is a plus.
Please
c;amp
Conlt'y
RelcrcncesiDeposit/No
ma
il/email
resume
to:
Pets 30&lt;1 -675-5 162
304-895·3 129
P recisi ~
Fabricators.
7181 Ohio River Road.

r;,..;.;;;.;;..,.,,____,

BULLETIN BOARD
' 12"column lnoh weekdays

'20" column inch Smd.ly
CALL OUR off1CEAT992-2155

B:JARO DEAD

lr' E

; 1J All :AY BEF:JRE PU3LICATIOr,

..
It has been voted by the
members present at the
May 28, 2008 regular meeling
of Feeney·Bennelt Post #1 28,
Amenca n Legion, Middleport,
OH. to selllhe Post's farm
located on Bailey Run Road. A
purchase agreement has been
accepted lrom a bid closeslto ·
the appraisl3d valu e. This
. pending sale will impact those
with hunting rights on this farm.

IN
THE
COMMON
PLEAS COURT, PRO·
BATE DIVISION MEIGS
COUNTY, OHIO
IN THE MATTER OF
SETTLEMENT OF AC·
COUNTS, PROBATE
COURT
MEIGS
COUNTY, OHIO

flied thereto, said ic·
count will be set tor
hearing belore said
Court on the 14th day

of November, 2008, at

which time said

ac~

count will be conoid·
ered and continued
lrom day to day until II·
:Accounts and vouch - nally disposed of.
ers of the following Any person interested
:named fiduciary has may lila written excepbeen flied In the Pro· tion to oold account or

bate

Court,

package 304-67 5-4 545.
Direct Care Staff In resl·

dential youth program.
Must be 21 years ·ot age.
·
Pay based · on experi·
ence.
Call
Point
Pleasant,
.WV (74 0)379·9063
Mon-Fri
25550
or
sales@pre- 9am-3pm .
fab llc.com
No ptlone
calls please
MOS
COORDINATOR
'Edgewood Manor
Government &amp; Federal
ot Wellston
Jobs
50 ski lled bed Facility
' AN
*2 yr s MOS
FEDERAL
Expe rience
POSTAL JOBS
' Exceptional
$17.89-$20.271HR., now
communication &amp;
hiring
For
application
people skills
and free go11ernment job
'Interpersonal &amp;
info, call American As·
organizational skills
:soc.
of
.Labqr
To apply, 11fstt:
1· 913-599-8226,
24/hrs
www.consulalemgtcaemp. serv.
reers.com
405 North Park ,Ave
POST
OFFI CE
NOW
Wellston. OH 45692
HIRI NG avg . Pay $201hr
740-384·561 1
or
$571&lt;Jyr,
includes
EOE/SFIDF
Fed.Ben. OT Place by .__ _;;;;;,;;;.,;;;__.,I
Bu s
Drivers
adSourcc, not affiliyled Sub.
. wit h USPS who hiros. Needed lor MeigS Local
School District.$55 for all
1-866 -403-2582
day.Must attend driver
Help Wanted· Generol traimng cla ss.Ctass to be
held Oct.20,08 lhrough
AVON! An Areas !
To Ocl .24108.1nterested
or Sell Shirley please call Paul McElroy
Buy
Spears 304-6751429
at 740-742·2 990

GefVour Messalio AciOas Wllh A'Oaii~.Senllnal

ALII LE~IN

Salet
;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;i;;;~;;;;;;;
Appalachian

Tire

Complete Tree Care
k11urW • F..- E•t""-tn

Prod-

ucts, Inc._.. is currently
seek'1ng a sa 1esperson

7~1).4~1-t31 7

20~...a••pen.t~c•

29670 Bashan Road

' Racine, Ohio

'=======:::

Meigs to maHers p8rtalnlng to

County, Ohio lor ap- the 'eucutlon of the
proval and oettlement. trust, not less than five
ESTATE NO. 20072007· days prior to 1he date
The llrst current ac- set for harlng ,
count flied by Patricia J . S. Powell
j., Harris, guardian of Judge
the person and estate Common Pleas Court
of Elizabeth M . Hawley, Probate Division
Meigs County, Ohio
. an Incompetent.
Unless exceptions are (10) 14

n•m•cnn
Horres ..

~·
. slm&amp;'aW
. ."'
"
;

• 6 52
Q 9 3

•

;. to10'dOW
Hours

8:00 PM

Wes~

• Complete

.L

cation are also aYailable.
Please apply in pe~son .
Located @ 426 Viand
Street in downtown Point
Pleasaht.

•

'"

=========
SeiVICl' Bu~
Directory

9000

;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;

.. 6 5 4 2

740-992-1811

•

Stop &amp; Compare

Concrolo
~~~~~~~~
All types Masonry, brick,
block. stone, Free Esti·
male,
740·416-7305,
304 -593-6421

111411 mo. pd

AUCTIONS/ANTIQUES

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

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

fi'J. Tt-fAT

Hardwood Cabinetry And FurnHure

·BARNEY

. W'W"W'.tirubere:reeik..cablnwtry.eodl

740.446.9200

YO'RE MAMA'S

FAV'RITe

St. Rt. 160 • Gallipolis

YOUNG-UN,
SNUFf'1' !!·

F RF

AW, SHUCKS,
MAMA, YOU
SAY THAT TO
AL.L. YORE
KIDS~!

'

(740) Q92-S344
•

on

8:00 am ·4:30pm
Sat . 6:00am · 12

SAVI'NGS

We aPprt&lt;iate your
busii1ess

owners:

· cen: 740-416·5047
&amp;

THE BORN LOSER
';ou lOOK
t bOt-~i \:1
bOWKit-1

email:

28 Years Experience

David Lewis
740-.992-6971

Guttering

.i

I

Insured &amp; &amp;nded

Qualily Seamlttss
Gutters
Maintenance Plus

Stanley TreeTrimming
&amp; Removal
*Prompt and Quality

Vinyl

Siding/Replacement
Wimlbws/Remodcling
BOnded &amp; Insured '

·City/State/Zip - - - - : - - - - - -

740-9'12-1493 Olfice
740-416-8339 Cell
Free Estimated
Pomeroy. Ohio ·

Work

It goes redouble, .
penalty double

44

Laug~

syllable
47 Train

alternative

· gas

Gee

28 Gullible

heroine

29 Nov, and

52 Command
to Rover
55 Ref's

Feb.

tournamenl

31 Mexican
Mrs.
34 Trails

cousin

alte
8 Road map
behind
Info
35 Cup edges
8 Weird
36 Per diem
10 Pat'o . .
(2 wds.)
co-hoat
· 41 Diamond

stat

14 In case

56

57
58

..

ON

Call Gary S1anley

@

740-591 · 8044

Pl ea..~e

lcUve mcss.P. c

RICK PRICE ·
New

Homes, Room Additions, Remodeling,
Metal &amp;
Derks,
Insured

'
Construction
• Replacement
Windows
• Roofing

• Declls
·Garages
; Pole Buildings
• Room Additions
Owner:
Jameo Keelee II
742-2332

or

Re!\':rcnces Avajlablc!

PSI CONSTRUCTION

• VInyl Siding .

NO, NH DOG ISN'T llOh~E ..1
WE WENT ON A !liKE
WITH HIS TROOPS ..

Roofing, Siding,
Soffit, Decks,
Doors, Windows,
EJectric, Plumbing,

IHem~~~~g~!Room
Local Contr~~e\Or

74o-367-0544
Free Eotlmatea

74o-367-0536

For Remodeling and New House Building

MARCUM COf'jSTRlJCTION
• Room Additioi1s • Garages • Vinyl
and Wood Siding • Roafing • Pole _
Barn.s • Patio's, Porches and Decks:

liKE W. MIICUM, OWNER ·
472,39 R ~c bel Road. L o ng B ollm n , OH

Cell: 74041 6· 1R34
25+ yearS t,Xperienct FTee E,flitnatrs

COW~md BOY

lfS IIN'ORTANT

TO IIEMEMBER LIFE'S
liTTLE MOMENTS,
Uf&lt;E WI\TCI41NG THE
LEAVES CI4ANGE ON
t.CRISP fi\LL DAY.

ll

11E.\\IND tiC TO
DUSTBUSTEII MY
POCI&lt;ET WHEN
WE GET HOftl£

J(
liND YOU WILL
LOOK Bi1.CK AND
DUSTSUSTE~

FONDLY.

"Watching the clock aod
counting time;" the employer
told his workers, " is not as
imporlllnt as making sure our

~--.1-r-s.c-r.IA..:.s,..:.lc,..;:ol,,..;r..._l.-~1 -~~:~

lht chudl• quot..t
by IIIRng In ine milling ""'do
L-I.L..-..1.-.L.--1.-.;J..--1. you develop
m shop No. 3 botow'. ,

8 PRINT
NUMBERED LEITEAS
THESE

IN

SQUARES

6 UN1~R:ra~N~~E LETTERS I

I

j

with a copy

of

your photo

10 to

Ohio Valley Publishing P.O. Box 469, Gallipolis,

OH 45631

··---··········-----------------•

j

J

ARL9&amp;JANIS

upon wflleh many&lt;1thers are dlpetdiO.

or

ARIES (MaiCh 21-Ap.l19) - I speaking up and letting ~ knOw
that somethlllQ Is too e~ fo1: your
6reslyle, you might unwloely go ~
with them and later be blamed for poor
money management.
•-~
TAURUS (Ap.l 20·MaY 20) - A1111ough
. you prefer tope a loner, take painS to go
along witrl others. II you fail to )Oin In and
help hold up a mutual goal, It couttl
arouse the arnmosity ot associates. .
GEMINI (May 21-.June 20) - 8e honest
about your shortcornirtgs and limitations.
If you pretencl to' be able to'do eomethlflQ
and fail,
could be judged _qulte harah~
If and blamed for letting people down .
CANCER (June 21·July 22) - Do not

vou

impose yoorsett upon anyone Of'

anv·

place where you feel unwelcome. If you
are right, you wilt end up feeling quite
uncomfQrtable and made to feel like an
intruder.
LED (Ju~ 23-Auo. 22) - Tly not lo mako
being the.hud honcho your ~r objec·
tlve, beCI.uH If lhll II ~r pnmary ~~­
.an (ratn.r than trylilg to do aome good),
your IICtlcl wKI prove 10 bt ooumerpro-

dUollvo.

'

YtAGO (Aug . 23·9tpt 22) -

I

j

SCRAMLETS ANSWERS 10113/08
Versits - Swept - Hatch - Island,_ USED IT
Teacher to disobedient boy, "The straight and narrow path
would DOl be 10 1181'!0W if lllllll: people USED IT."

JUI1

becauH an aoqualntanoe wu luaky at
tomolhlng, R 110011\'1 -n~ 1011ow
d'lat you will be, too. The 11m1 pi'DDI·
""'" lhll Old wonrllro lor Nm or nor
ooutd bo 101&amp;1~ wrong for you,

SOUP TO NUll
(ji lfl"&gt;&lt;~tl

w i'H
Mall or drop off this coupon along

Narrow
shoe
Lit out
Wind \JP

WOlD

wnen Important changes begin to come
into play In the year ahead, go with the
flow of events instead of fight ih~ them.
Even if you •dOn't sM anything in it for
yourself, 8\'Eints wUI prove that these
shifts are beneficiaL
UBRA (Sept 23-0ct 23) - II you need
some important advic::e, be sure to seek
oul only those wl'lO are e~~:perts in the
field , or at least ha\18 lots of experience.
F'oor counsel could prove costly.
SCORPIO (Oct . 24·Nov. 221 Someone upon whom you can usually
rely might take the opposite side and be
an adVersary. Be careful how you handle
the situation so that you don't lose his or '
her supporl forever.
SAGITIARIUS (Nov. a3-0ec. 21) - II .
your purpoSe for offering to help another
is solely to feather your nest. thlnga
could baokflre. Events will reveal y,our
intent and penali ze sett-servlng tactics or
insirH?Srity.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. I 9) - Do
not get invol\18d In Intrigues with friends.
What unfolds will haYe a way
identify·
ing you as ihe perpetrator, and vou will
have to bear the cost of the achema. ·
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) - Unleas
you can pledge to follow through on
promises.made to others, be certain lhal
you can etrectl~~ely follow through on your
commitmeflt&amp;. A failure to honor )'Our
WCKd will tamlsh your reputation.
PISCES (Feb. 20-Morch 20) - Dcn'l
take on something you haven't done
before, ._;ally II " """"- o ~

* E ro: pcrienced

740-985-4141
Phone,______________________

"- Beso"

ALKEil!&gt;'

*Reasonabl e Rates
"' Insured

Call:

Address -----~-~~--

Pass

All pass

Wednoodoy, OCt. 15, 2008
By Berni.,_ 8ede 01101

WHY NOT
OPEN LJf' A

740-653 -9657 .

'

.· The Daily Sentinel
6unba!' tltime• -&amp;entittd
p•·---------------------········
·Subscriber's Name·_ ______

Pass

Dbl.

OF THE

T~H

"' ~

•alltpolh1 Jlail!' otrthune
·Joint Jlea•ant ltegi•te,;

Dbl.

22 Humdinger

23 Disney CEO 49
24 Purple
follower
flowers
51 Jean Auel

'CELEBRITY CIPHER

If so, you qualify for a

'

I NT
2•

Come later
21 Storage bin 46 Knockout

YOUtt KI'N6

Seamless Gutters
Roofing, Siding, Gutt6r5

.~·or.·. :o·1-d.e·r··. 9.

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.

Pass

clucks
Aim toward

-

HIM'?

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

Redbl. Pass

20 Police-brut- 44
ter info
45

OAMl

CAN

Senior Discount*

Obi.

East

vestments

minus 800.

-

. .
"':", ~.;!iJ

WHIP,
TOO !!

~~~~~~~J~~

Paul Rowe

•· '\,~'
, ·•

I

I

•

Jon lian Meter

"'!&gt;

SMART
1 AN'ASA

~~
c;:::;:::;:1l

'
Racine, Ohio 740-247-2019

.Are :y· o\1•.66

~OAP
~AGE

/ {,0MING 8A{,IC
t-t~~E AGAIN!

RV's

Get AJump

Q

39 Recited
40 Zealous
43 College stat

West

42 Fleproving

16 Linen

Joumafist and humorist Kin Hu!Jtlard
said, "The safe way to double your
L~AI'
money is to told it over once and put It in
your pocket."
You can increase the number ol bills
lolded in yom pocke1 by playing bridge
lor money and knowing when to double
your opponents lor penally.
Partner opens one of a !lUi!, the nell!
player makes a takeout double, and you
redouble. What does your call mean?
First. you promise ar leasr 10 high -card
~Is Nex1, 'you heve ·lower than lour
. - - - - - - - - - ' - " - - - - , cards in partner's suit if he bid a major.··
a~ probably not lour if 11e opened in a
YOU ALWAYS COULD
minor.
And if yoU are shor1 in partner's
A
L.IE
!!
SPOT
suit. you should have "penally' llrmly In
mind. Atter this redouble, either the
opening side wins the auction or the
opponents play in a contract doubled for
penally.
In taQay's deal, South makes a lextbook
rakeoul double, but gars killed. Affer
WeS1 redoubles, North has nowhere to
go, and neilher does South. One spade
by Luis campos
redou~ed would make three {plus 920)
Celebfity Cipher cryp;ogams are cr$Bted lrom qwtat10ns ay larr{lJS pwp:e &lt;~ast and present
or four (plus 1, 120). One no-bump douE!acn leiter in thfl c:p'let stana_s 1manatrer
bled would probatlly go down four, minus
Today's clue: Vequals R
800. With carefUl defense, declarer gets
only the spade king and his two aces,
" J F N W.B B X V N X 0 R H C 0 N V X G E N
Two di~monds dou~ed Is no beHer, West
UEVBW JC HC WZWRXJEC XOHC
leads 1ha spade queen. East wins with
H A E N X H C G X D J C F X D H X R .H C
his ace and returns the ei{llt, the lowest
card being a surt-preterence signal for OHYYWC XE GEN. " · UJZZ VEFWVB
clubs, West ruffs and slliffs ro a club,
East wirming cheaply and leading the
spade nine. South does best to pitch a PREVIOUS SOLliTION - ' Do just once what olhers say you can1 do, and
club loser, but ff East shlfrs.to a red suit, , you will never pay aHontion to their linirarions again: · James Cook
the contract would still go down four,

I~Fo~e

winterize bouls and

Mon-Fri .

Shop
ClQSSifiedS!

ANI&gt;

\ I

01/,.

2A~

. repair.

••

South

- Opening lead: •

address

32 Unburdenad 5 Sweet
33 Earthen ~~
potatoes
37 Laird's
6 El Dorado
accent
· loot
38 Paul Anlca'a 7 Tennis

Vulnerable : Neither
Nqrth

Brosh
Call lor

1 ' 1mpend
52 Zaam
on runntrtr
5 ZJw~sI Gun 1 motor 53 Wan
11 Field
54 Not look
olotudy
away
12 "Exodus"
59 Do oome
hero
fencing
13 Duckarhuo 80 lb.
15 Aromatic
Thurman
seed
61 "SIIIIter"
17 0CeMI bird
actor
18 Unser and 62 Period
Gore
63 007
19 Sinks
64 Glove filler.
21 Go up ·
24 Kind
DOWN
25 Dine
26 Floor
1 Fond du covering
2 Mouths
27 Groupie
3 Above,
welcome
In verse
30 Monsleur'o 4 Polite

Islands

Dealer: East

Auclioneer:
BiiiV R. Goble Jr.
.740-416-1164

We serv ice and

K5

A Q 10 B
t A Q9 4
.. 10 8 7
•

(~Poi nts )

small engine

.. A K J
South

· Pomero)',OH

.changes.

• 6 3 2
• 7 3

K J 9 5
J 10 8

+K

L Tire Barn

New &amp;,_Used Tires,
We buy used tires.
· compt,ller wheel .
· alignnlents, lighi
mechanic work.
complete service oil

East
.AJI09B

• Q

Remod~ling

IO.If..QII

.,.

• chwcn Dllcout~l
Ou r Point Pleasant.
location . Experience
1
is preferred. Job bene·
&amp;
fits Include 401 K, Health
44087
Wlpple Rd.
Insurance, and Paid va -

lor
WV

"

·

North
..76432

• Garages

740·949-2217

7 :00AM •

BISSElL

· - New

4~77t

' '

ROIERT

J.niG,cw,.,

EXPERIENCED ·-o;:=E;O=E==·=~===~==::.=====F:reo=~~,

SpeGialH! NO LE AS E 446-7029

Aent

H1il's Self
Sto rage

HI-F
..12111.

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

50

Phillip
Alder

741-112-56112

a mo ,

48

ACROSS

wv

$425

The Daily Sentinel • Page 85

Owner Operat ors

wv

3br.

www.mydallysentlnel.com

NEA Crossword Puzzle

ter dep., no pets, no calls
al!er
9pm.
(740)992-5097
YOUNG'S
~~~~~-~2BR 1 bath on farm
Competitive
CNA
$500 per mpnth includes
~.;...~~---~- Wages, Paid VacatiOns.
ut11it1es . 540-752-0826 or
Service Manager &amp; Serv- Paid Meals. Many Other • ROQfn Addltlona I
54Q-729- 1331
Full and Part-time
tee Technician positions B9neti ts,
Ravenswood
RemocWing
I F d
.
Positions
available. Health care &amp; Care Center,1113 Wasn - ·fHWGI!."•tet
F
d
un s JUSl reR .
I
"
Graclous Living 1 ;:md 2 e era
teased tm Land Owners.
Day and Evening
ellrement pans ava~- ington St., Ravenswood, • El«:trfclll I Plumbing
Bedroom Ap!s fll Vitlage
, Shitts
· able. Please send reReferences
Re- •Rooting I Gutters
• VInyl Siding I Painting
Manm · CliHI
Rivorsido NQ closrng cost and
to
Prolessionai'Work
sume
quired, E.O.E.
·PatiO and Porth Oecka·
ZERO DOWN ' w ·,11 "o
Ap!s. · 111 Ma.ldlepor1. from
u
EQ COM
036725
land
improvements.
Environment!
LL,C @C AR
·
or ~....~~....~....~
$327
to
$59?
tax to 740·446·9104
Home Health care of
, "qu"l Bankruplcy &amp; Bad Credit
Medical, Dental, F ,~ P.
:,;:;;.;;;.;.;;;;...;;;;;:,.;;.:;;;;.._~ S lh
Ohl 1
.
V.C. YOUNG Ill
740 _992 _5064
0 nc., 15
-..
u
OK 2 3 4
d 5 b9 d
401K!
Taylor
m11de
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Bidwell, Oh1o 45614
740-446-3344
Office Hours M. W. F
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1

Clip this AD and take 11

Tuesday, October 14, 2008

www.mydailysen.tlnel.com

Page B4 • The Daily Sentinel

Advertise
in this space for
$64 per month

I

~-- ---

)"

u.r

tr ~ · D~e

.

12 P~ &lt; k

�Page 86 .. The Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, October 14, 2008

www.mydailysentinel.com

.Ohio executes first
inmate in more ·
than a year, A2 .

Rays homer 4· times, rout Boston
12 Buckeyes seeking
inore offense·against Spartans
~o.

COLUMBUS (AP) This was supposed to be
' Ohio Statc;_'s foray into a
liigh-tech spread offense
and away from it's stakedto-the-ground past.
· so far, it's .been a dud .
· ''Offensively ' we didn't.
get near as much done as
we're going to need to ge t
done ," coach Jim Tressel
sai'd
after
Saturday's
punchless 16-3 victory
over Purdue :
The combination · of
s printer-quarterb ac k
Terrelle Pryor and burly,
shifty
tailback
Chris
'' Beanie" Wells has had
trouble getting off the
ground in the three game~
they've been together.
The
still -No. . .12
Buckeyes have won all
three , but not so much
because of anything 'theoffense is doing.
In the Purdue game, specia! teams blocked a punt
resulting in the only touchdown. The ledger proved
how
ineffective
the
J;liickeyes ' attack was.
~ Pryor looked tentative at
~imes and made bad decir"':~ i·ons at others. He . completed 10 of 14 passes for
just 97 yards. He missed
oile wide-open receiver at
t-he goal line when he
threw a pass behind him.
Another time he overthrew
open wide receiver Brian
Robiskie in the end zone .
He was sacked three
times for 19 yards in losses

and ended
up adding
only
27
yards on
14 carries
with
hi s
legs. ·
NOTEBOOK
" We 've
really got
to
execute," Pryor said later.
" It 's frustrating for us that
we didn't click today. We
just looked bad . That's the
only way to put it."
Well s inissed practice
with the flu but still mustered 94 yards on 22
attempts.
· Still. with both in the
lin~up the Buckeyes twice
failed to score a touchdown after getting a first
down inside the Purdue 10.
"It's frustrating in the
red zone," Wells said. ''It's
been frustrating all year.
It's about not executing.''
The Buckeyes punted six
times in their II possessions. They also missed a
field goal.
. Tight end Jake Ballard
and . Wells both think the
Buckeyes need to throw
the ball more - and more
effectively.
"Ten;elle needs to have
more confidence," Ballard
said. " He's doing well on
his feet, but he has to
believe in his arm."
Wells frequently jokes
that he 'd like to carry the
ball 40' times a game. He
wasn't joking when he said

the passing game needed
to get a lot better before
next .week's game at No .
20 Michigan State .
" We have to pass the ball
better," Well s said. "That
might be surprising coming· from ,a running back,
·but we have to get the ball
downfield . We have to use
our receivers better."
Tressel was asked if had
contemplated
putting
sixth-year senior Todd
Boeckman - a much better passer - into the game
to replace Pryor.
"There weren't any huge
disc ussions about that," he
said.
.· The main goal for the
Buckeyes - particularly
after the 35-3 black eye
they took
Southern
California in their third
game - is to capture a
fourth consecutive Big Ten
title, including an unprecedented
third
outright
championship in a row.
They survived a big test
at WisconsiN despite not
playing · terribly well on
offense other than their
first and last drives . Now
they're faced with the
prospect of going · to
Michigan State, which will
certainly stack the line
unless Pryor proves the
can deliver the ball to his
rece1 vers.
"All in all, the guys have
to step up ," Wells said.
"It's' the Big Ten. We .have
to play better."

at

BOSTON (AP) - B.J.
Upton, Evan Longoria and
the rest of the Tampa Bay
Rays are bashing their way
through their frrst trip to the
playoffs.
Upton
and
Longoria
homered off a suddenly
shaky Jon I.:ester, and the
power-packed Rays cleared
the Green Monster four
times to beat the. Boston Red
Sox 9-1 Monday for a 2-1
lead in the AL championship
series.
Rocco Baldelli and-Carlos
Pena also sent shots over
Fenway Park's 'famous leftfield wall as Tampa Bay tied
the ALCS home run record.
Behind Matt ·Garza's pitching , the Rays pui the defending World Series champions
in a JX&gt;Siseason hole for the
first time since · they overcame a 3-1 deficit against
Cleveland last year to win
the pennant.
"Three-run homers are
nice to get. We were very
fortunate," Rays manager
Joe Maddon said:
The Rays also hit hard on
the basepaths. Carl Crawford
bowled over Boston catcher
Jason Varitek on a play ill the
plate - there was no immediate reprisal in a matchup
between reams that have tangled in the past.
Garza, the · only Tampa
Bay pitcher to lose in the
· first-round series against the
Chicago White Sox,made an
early 5-0 lead stand up. He
held the Red Sox scoreless
through six innings before
they scored in the seventh.
Boston knuokleballer Tim
Wakefield
faces
Andy
Sonnanstine in Game 4 of

.')0 ( '1-:'\!' J'S • \ ol. ;,H. '-o. hH

.
.
.Ap photo
Tampa Bay Rays pitcher Matt Garza pumps his fist after the
third out in the sixth inning against the Boston Red Sox In
Game 3 of the American Leagtle baseball championship
series in Boston on Monday.
.
.
the best-of-seven senes on a three-run driv e. ·in the
Tuesday night.
eighth and Pena hit a solo
Upton, whose shallow sac- homer in the ninth. ·
rifice fly in the lith inning
After Garza left , J .P.
won Game 2, hit a three-.run Howell escaped a jam and
homer m the th1rd that sa1led pitched
two
sco reless
comp\etely out of the park . lt innings . .Edwin Jackso n
was h1s fifth home run of the closed out the victory.
playoffs - he hit only nine
Lester,
who · hadn ' t
during the regular season.
allowed an earned run in
"He did the same thing to four previous postseason
the White Sox," Boston -outings - including last
manager Terry Francona year's Wofld Series clincher
said. "We didn't locate, and against Colorado -:-- gave up
he hit it a long way. Plays four earned runs on eight hits
center field . steals bases , and .. ii1 5 2-3 innings . He gave up
he has a lhc'"ce to get better, an unearned run on Varitek 's
which is kind of scary."
passed ball in the second,
Longoria added a solo shot then caused hi s own prob- ·
later in the third. Baldelli had !ems in the third:

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70 Pine Street • 740~446-0007

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rri~ Pobirs:m.theMonCtay Ni~
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FOotbaii·Game! .

Denver @

·

· EngJaild ·
.
'

·'

·

NAME:, ____.........__ __

Bv· BRIAN

• Charles Searles
• James Dean Taylor

TuESDAY

• Federal court:
Ohio must check
' "~ter r~tions.
SeePageA2
• Ohio chooses
new schools chief.
See Page· A2
• Middleport Job's
Daughters turns 50.
· See Page A3
• Local color guard
to join Saturday
dedication event.
See Page A3
• CEO offers P&amp;G
shareholders confidence.
See Page A3
• Local Briefs.
.See Page AS
.• Study shows CS
· 1~vels linked to
high cholesterol.

PLEASANT
-VALLEY
HOSPITAL

2Sl0 Volley Dri•• • Point Ptra.•onl, WV •201 -hed rudlill'

.304-67 5-4340
The Family of Professionals

J. REED

POMEROY - The Meigs
County Health Department
has advised .Sheriff Robert
Beegle on treatment of an
inmate with Methicill-inresistant
Staphylococcus
aureus, a bacterial infection
re~tistent to many antibiotics.
S~rry .Wikox.,.dire.oJQI' o(. ·
nursing at the health department, said family members
of inmates in the jail have
· contacted the health department about a patient with
blisters believed to be
'caused by MRSA, and possible signs of infection in
other inmates.
Beegle said the 'inmate
diagnosed with MRSA has
· had past outbreaks prior to
his incarceration on an
indictment from Common
Pleas Co •i . and was seen
by a loc.tl physici.an while
incarcerated.
Wilcox said the infection
is not airborne . and is spread
only through skin-to-skin
contact. She said she advised
Beegle to· be on the lookout
for open blisters caused by
the infection, which cause 1.1
to spread to others.
Because inmates are in
close proximity · to one
another, there is some risk
of the infection spreading,
Wilcox said. She advised
Beegle to keep the inmate's
sores covered, and to discourage inmates from sharing personal items.
Beegle said at least one
inmate has complained of a
dental infection, which
would not be the result of
MRSA exposure, but that ·
no other signs of the condition have been seen in any
otherinmates.
·
·

BY CHARLENE HOEFUCH . at I p.m. on Sunday, Nov. 2.

PHONE: _ ___.__ _ __

·,

HOLZER CLINIC
We're Everywhere You Are/

Each Tui'Sday through Dec. 9, a numbered game will
appear In each participating merchant's ad.
Indicate your pick of winners and write It beside the
corresponding number.
·
Entries must be dropped ofl' at the:
Gallipolis Daily Tribune or mailed to:
Football Smackdown
clo Gallipolis Dally Tribune
825 3rd Avenue
Gallipolis, OH 45631
Entries must be postmarked by Thursday to qualify
for that week's contest. The prize will be awarded
weekly on the basis of most winners selected correctly
and In case or ties, winner will be determined by blind
draw, You must be '16 years of age or older to enter.
Only one entry per
per week.

The ·decorations. will- be
delivered to the Court Street
POMEROY .
mini park by village
Decorating for the holiday employees. ·for easy access
season highlighted the dis- by the workers.
.l
cussion at the Pomeroy
At the same time church'
Merchants
Association es are invited to put lighted
meeting Tuesday morning holiday scenes in the two
at Farmers Bank .
gazebos and on the stage as
Since the merchants they have in. previous years
kick-off for Christmas to make for a festive day of
takes place on Nov. 3, it decorating .
.
was decided decorations
Plans are moving forward
should be in place by then . for the traditional Saturday ·
Susan Dingess of Clark's after Thanksgiving rarade .
Jewelry was named chair- featuring the arrival o Santa
man and will work with to the Bend area at 2 p .m. on
' other members of the asso- Nov . 3. ·Again this year
ciation to solicit help· from Toney Dingess will be in
the community.
charge of the parade which
of will form on r.he empty lor·
Lighted
garlands
greenery and ,w reaths as beside the ball field,
·
well as .the holiday banners
The Peoples Bank will
will be put in place on the again this year host Santa
period lamp posts beginning after the parade and invites
•
•
HOEFLICHOMVDAILVSENTINELCOM

12 PAGES

Annie's Mailbox

$

Calendars

A3

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B3-4

. 1......,..aeu

J11.Upper River Rd. Gllllpolla, Ohio ·
111 milt touttJ of tht lllver lrldge
UoenM co 700071.000 .and 001
· Llcti'IM Cl710041o000 1nd 001

Bs

eomics
Editorials

441;2404

. A3

Obituaries
Sports
Weather

•

A4

As
B Section

A3

© :aoo11 Ohio Volley Publishing Co.

Jierson

4

children to have their piclures taken with him, free if
charge. Plans also include a
style show by the 4-H fashion board on the stage dUling
the afternoon . Downtown
stores will open at noon to
accommodate shoppers.
The glass tree ornaments
featuring etchings of the old
bridge built in 1928 in
green and black and the
new bridge which is expected to open in the next few
months in burnished gold
and black are still for sale
by
the
Merchants
Association. Funds from
the bulb sale go into the
downtown beau tification.
They sell for $8 each or
three for $20 and are available at the Meigs .County
Chamber of Commerce,
The Daily Sentinel office,
Farmers and Peoples Bank,

pletion
of the
new
Pomeroy/Masm) Bridge, the
opening of the Fultz Center.
which houses the University
of Rio Grande's Meigs
branch, and th e planned
construction of Gatling
Coal's new mine and the
American Municipal Power
generating plant are all positive developments.
Gatling Coal, for example. is expected to hire 200
with an average · annual
·income of $50.000 per year
· - $10 million in annual
payroll costs alone.

Pomeroy
•
rru.ses pay
rates in water
department

Although Friday
• nights belong to
varsity football,
Tuesdays are
often reserved lor
junior high school
football in the
BY BET"! SERGENT .
Meigs, Eastern
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINELCOM
and Southern
Local School
POMEROY - At its
Districts. Last
most recent
meeting.
night was
Pomeroy
Village
Council
no exception
passed an amendment to
when the Meigs
an ordinance which will
Marauder
rai se the pay rate for
Seventh Grade
employees in the village
Football Team
water department.
took on Gallia
· Mayor John Musser sugAcademy, win. gested the amendment be
ning 42-22 at
passed in emergency meaBob Roberts
sure which meant the three
Field. Before the
readings required for the .
game begins, the ordinance were voted on dur- ·
team huddles
ing
one
meeting .
Councilwoman
Mary
up to get fired
McAngus was the lone no
up and 'after- ·
vote on all the readings while
wards Coach
Carson Crow and Councilwoman Ruth Spaun
abstained from voting.
players (pictured
Employees in the •water
at left) wail along
department
wi.ll
now
the sidelines,
receive
a
$1
per
hour
across
hoping for six
the board raise. Pay rates for
points.
employees
in the water
Beth Sergantlphotoa
department are determined
by experience and years on
the · job. Before voting for
the raise, Councilman Pete
Barnhart asked why the
raises were necessary and
Musser said they would
bring the villa~e water
department "in hne" with
pay rates in the Middleport
water department.
· McAngus said she voted
against the raises because
she felt it was not fair to
employees in other village
departments who did not
receive a raise.
Council approved the hirin~ of James Morrison and
Mtke Lavender in th e water
department for what was
estimated by council to be
$9.03 per hour. Council
. tabled the hires at its last
meeting because it felt it
didn't have enough information about what they'd
be doing or thei r" rare of pay.
· Some members also took
· issue. nqt with the men per- ·
sonally·, but the men being
hired before it was brought
to council for approval. ·
Both Spaun and Me Angus
felt this type of hiring pracand 6everal merchants.
tice happened too often in
Michelle Donavan of the different village departMeigs County Chamber of ments with council "in the
Commerce announced plans dark" until after the fact.
for a Christmas ~all t~ be Spaun said she believed vilheld at the nullennmm lage s~peivisors know what
building on ·East State Street their departments need but
for Dec. 13 . The ball will she 'd appreciate them comfeature a 9ecorated wreath ing to council as a cout1 ~sy
contest and sale.
.
to discuss the new hires wilh
It was noted that the duck specific derails , Musser 'said
derby held at. Sternwheel he didn't disagree with
Riverfest · raised
about Spaun or McAngus and " it·
$1,000tobeusedforpromo- won't haP.pen again."
tiona! activiqes and downCounc1l approved ust;, of
town improvements. Several !he upper parking lot f~1&gt;n.1
derby prizes have not yet · 10 a.m. - 3 ·p.m., Nov. J 5
been claimed. They can be for the Meigs County
pick~d up at the Chamber of
on
Aging's
Council
Commerce office.
"Turkey Trot" event.
How to get more merCouncil adorned into
chants involved in the asso- executive session to discuss
ciation's meetings and vari- a legal nialter. Spaun said it
ous activities was discussed was specifically to di scuss
at the meeting conducted by
Please see Raises, AS
John Musser, president.

Pomeroy Merchants ·plan holiday activiti~s

Details cin Page A3

, \$JK.TIONS -

locally, Varnadoe said.
Unlike . many counties in
southeastern Ohio and elsewhere, Meigs County .' s
sales tax incoine is at a fouryear . high , an indication
Meigs County consumers
are spending more of their
money in their home community. That , Varnadoe
said, is partly due to the
high cost of gasoline·, biJ! it
is also a sigQ that incon~
industries have contributed
to the local retail economy.
Varnadoe said the construction and pending com-

NIGHT LIGHTS

BREEDCMYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

See Page AS

ADDRESS: _ _ _ _ __

REED

Infection
.believed
isolated in
one county
·inmate

·W EAmER

''TIE BREAKER" ,

J.

bright spots in terms of the merchants in the upcoming
local economic impact.
hoi iday season. While
"Our banks are solid and · November and December
POMEROY - Economic our merchants are okay," make up only 18 percent of
Development
Director Varnadoe said. "Local the calendar year, they
Perry Varnadoe d,iscussed banks have always main- account for 33 to 60 per~ent
"the good, the bad and the tained sound financial prac- of a local merchant's sales,
pretty" of the' local econo- tices, and the folks who Varnadoe said .
my at Tuesday's meeting of could secure a loan yester"We have to. do our best to
the Meigs County Chamber day ·can probably get one buy locally at the holiday
of Commerce.
tomorrow, although the · season," Varnadoe said.
In light of concerns about interest rates may not be the "We all have our own definition of :local ,' but we must
a disastrous national eco- same."
nomic picture, the bailout of · How can the local re si- support the local retail
financ1al institutions and dent help maintaih a secure economy."
low consumer confidence, local· economy? They can
Discretionary spending is
Varnadoe said there are starl fly buying from local down nationwide, but . not
BY BRIAN

BREEDCMYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

INSIDE

a.n

• Single sWitch hand control for euy operation

""" ·""'l.oih "'nlio ... t.o·nm

of

·• Not every Buckeye
thinks Pryor should ·
be lone quarterbacl&lt;.
See PageBI

Page AS

CHAIII8'

__

\\ EHI\i ESI&gt;A \ . OC'I OBEI{ t:;, :tooH

SPORTS

ol Mason

.__

Prin~ on 100'* ~

RHyrled Newsprinl

·

.KEVIN NEWEll

your life .

•

· Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

·wa·ak 4Winner

enhancing

-

•

OBITUARIEs

that wUI accent your home whlle

Bailout becomes
buy-in as feds move
into banking, As

I

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