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                  <text>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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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
•
•
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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

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ol Mason

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· Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

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Bailout becomes
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into banking, As

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IO

The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, O~tober 15; 2008

Federal court: Ohio must
check voter registrations

BY MAn REED
ASSOCIATED PRESS WAITER

BY PHILIP ELLIOTI
ASSOCIATEO PRESS WRITER

a way 10 verify vuter registration information and
make it available to local
election board.,.
The federal appeals co~rt
ruled Tuesday that ,the current system "is esse nti ~lly
useless - uot urthke askmg
for a drin~ of water and
bein),: gi·ven access to a fire
hose at full volume - and
will do nothing to address·
the anti · fraud obje~ tive ." ·
Brunner had argued that it
wotlld take lwo to three
days to create the necessary
computer programs, · and
'aid nothin~ in the federal
Help Amerin1 Vote Act
required her to do what the
district ~:ourl ordered.
Tue sJ uy\ order directs
Brunner to verify new regis!rations by comparing that ·
ii\formation with data from
the Ohio Bureatl of Motor
Vehicles or the Social
Security Administration.
"As far as we can tell, the
problem with the current
s1srem i ~ not that it is insufhcientl y user-friendly but
that it is effec tively useless." the majority wrote in
i.ts ruling.
Ohio
Republican
Chairman Bob Bennett
accused Brunner of pursu- ·
in$ a parti san agenda and
smd "her delay. in .pro"iding
this matching ,systemleaves
Iittle time for election omdais to act on questionable
registrations ."
Bennett said Brunner was
destroying the public's trust
in Ohio·s elections system.
''Her shameful actions to
disenfranchise Republican
absentee voters. block the
transparency of earlv voting
and refuse the proper verification of new ly registered
voters have ri ohtfully damaged her cret. ,• ility as a
nonpartisan election administraror:· he said.
A Mari st Po'll released
Monday shows Obama,
now the Democratic presidential nominee. ahead .of
Republican challenger ,John
McCain, 48 percent to 40
percent. The margin of sarilplin.g . erroi· was plus or
minu s 3.5
percentage .
points. Both campaigns
have worked hard in the
state , which has 20 electoral
votes and gave President
Bush a second tenn in 2004.

LUCASVILLE - Ohio
executed a 5-foot-7. 267COLUMBUS - A fellerpound double murderer
al
appeals co~u·t on Tue~day
.Tuesday who .argued ilis
orderedOhto
s tpp decttons
obesit&gt;' made death by
official.to set up a system by
lethalmjection inhumane. It
Friday to verify the eligibil was the state's first execuity
of new voters and make
tion since the end of an ·
the
infonnation avai lable to
·unofficial national moratothe state 's 88 county elec.rium on the procedu re.
tion boards .
Richard Coney. 41 , had
The full 6th U.S. Circuit
·argued in numerous legal
Court. of Appeals in
·challenges that his weight
Cincinnati upheld a lower
·problem would make it dif.•
court ruling thai Secretary
·ficult for prison staff to find
of State Jennifer Brunner
suitable veins to deliver the
J
must use other government
deadly chemicals, a probrecords to check thousands ·
lem that delayed previous
of
new voters for regiwaj:xecutions in the state.
''
tion fraud.
· No
such
problems
A three-judge panel of the
I'
,occurred,
said
Larry
6th
Circuit had disagreed
·Greene, a spokesman for the
last
week, but the full
'Southern Ohio Correctional
AP photo
"Facility.
A group of protesters gather outside Southern Ohio Correctional Facility in Lucasville com1's ruling overturns that
· During
preparations. Tuesday morning for the execution of Richard Gooey. Gooey, 41, died at 10:28 a.m., sa1d decision .
Ohio Republicans had
though; Cooey shouted for Jim Gravelle, a spokesperson with state atlorney general's office.
sued Brunner. a Democrrrr.
one of his attorneys as
.
Her spokesman had no
prison staff tried to insert a and let out a sigh when
Cooey lost a final appeal Newton - who was similar immediate
comment
-shunt in his left arm. He was Coney's
death
was , earlier Tuesday when th e in sile to Cooey - in May
Tuesday.
. .
·worried the staff would announced at IQ:28 a.m. ~ U.S. Supreme Court turned 2007 . The execution team
666,000
Ohioans
About
'botch the execution. said
St1mmit
County down without comment his had trouble putting IVs in
have
registered
to
vote
since
Greg Meyers. an attorney Prosecutor Sherri Bevan complilinl that the slate's his arm. delaying his execuJanuary,
with
many
doing
wiih the Ohio Public Walsh said the family was protocol for lethal injection tion n~urly two hours. There
Defender 's Office.
disappointed that Coo~y could cau:-.e a1i agonizing were similar problems in so .before the contested
Cooey, who killed two was vulgar ··and hateful to and pain ftil death . Cooey the execution of artother Democratic presidential primary election last March
:University of Akron stu - the end.
wanted the stale to use a siH· inmate in 2006.
·dents in 1986. walked into
"He still would not apolo- gle drug rather than a threeCooey made an earlier between U.S. Sens. Bamck
:the death chamber wearing gize and still would not 'ctrug comb in ation. and trip to the death house. But. Obama and Hillary Rodham
gray pants and a black accept re sponsibility for asked for a stay of execu- a' U.S. District Court judge Clinton . The presidential
short-sleeve shit1 and was what he did,'" she said.
tion pend ing a hearing on intervened hours before his election is Nov. 4.
Since the primary, Ohio
Three of Cooey's lawyers that motion.
strapped onto the gurney.
scheduled exec ution in July
Republicans
have filed . a
"For what? You (ex ple- served as his witnesses.
The court o.n Monday 2003 when the Ohio Public
series
of
challenges
to the
tive) haven"t paid any allen'"The government has no denied a separate appeal Defender's office said it
tion to anything l"ve said in conscience, only policy. · based on Cooey 's claim that needed more time lo assess registrations and Brunne·r·s
;the last .22 l/2 ,. ycars. why Today the policy was state~ his obesity was a bar to the case after an appeals administration of election
·would anyone pay any. sa nctioned · murdef of human e lethal · inje&gt;tion. cotu1 dismissed his previous rules. They have helped vatattention to anything I've · Richard Cooey;· said one of The argument :~lso·had been attorneys for inadequate ers file lawsuits · against
local boards of election o&gt;~er
had to say now." Cooey said the lawyers, Eric Allen.
·
rejected by a federal representation.
registration
rules, absentee
·looking at the . ceiling. He
Cooey was the first appeals court in Cincinnati
Cooey. and a co-defendant
and a Weekballot
requests
inmate executed in Ohio in tmd the Ohio Supreme were convicted in the .sexu- .
made no other comment.
' . Cooey tapped the fingers more than a year, and the Court. with both cQurts rul- al assaults and slayings of long period that allowed
·of his left hand several · stale's first since the end of in~ that he mis sed a dead- McCreery · and Wen\ly registration and voting on
times before he died and his the ·unofficial moratorium lille for filing appeals.
Offredo , 21, in September the same day.
Brunner previously. said
·face took on a purple shade. on executions that began
Coney was 75 pounds 1986. His co-defendant was
· Six family members of last year while the U.S. heav ier than when he went 17 and was sentenced to life . there are sufficient systems
one of his victims .quietly Supreme Court reviewed to death row - the result of in prison because of his age . in place to verify new-voter.
·watched the execution. Kentucky 's ·lethal injection pri son. food and 23-hour-aThe state has now execut- registration and there was
· Mary Ann Hackenberg. the procedure.
day
confinement,
his ed 27 . inmates since 1999, no way to set up the system
"mother of Dawn McCreery.
Before the moratorium , lawyers said.
when Ohio 1'enewed execu- ordered by the court with
.
.
·who was 20 when she was Ohio had one of the nation 's
The last Ohio inmate to be tions after more than three such speed.
Last
week
,
the
three·killed, looked to the ceiling busiest death chambers.
exec[1ted was Christopher decades.
judge panel of the 6th
Circuit had sided with
Brunner, but after hearing
an appeal the full panel
sided with the GOP and
with U.S. District Judge ·
served as academic services described herself as a natur- vice president for education George C. ·Smith in
BY JULIE CARR SMYTH
AP STATEHOUSE CORRESPONDENT director for the West al at building relationships. and children's content at the
Columbus . Smith had
Geauga schools. She has
"What I view is the gover- Corporation for. Public · ordered Brunner to develop
COLUMBUS
taught graduate-level edu- nor obviously is the head of Broadcasting
in
Following a national search, cation courses and is the co- the entire state of Ohio, and Washington , D.C..
'the state Board of Education author, with her husband, of so I obviously have an
Delisle said she is slated
. on Tuesday voted unani- the Parent Choice Award- obligation to serve him to begin her job on Dec: I,
mously to hire a schools winning book "Growing in addition to the state but expects to · be traveling
"
·superintendent from north· Good Kids."
Board of Education ~nd the · between Cleveland and
,•.
east Ohio over a deputy
She was hired as the state 600 plus school districts in Columbus and communicateducation secretary from superintendent with input the state," she said. "It's ing with the department freout of state.
from Gov.' Ted Strickland. really a balancing act of, quently by phone during
Subscrlbe 'today • 992-2155 • www.mydailysentinel.com
Deborah Delisle . super- who expressed his intent 'How do you always keep November.
intendent of the Cleveland ea~lier thjs year to strip the kids at the heart of every
Heights-University ·Heights position of Its power and deci,sion that you make?'""
City School District, will bring the massive Ohio she said.
.
replace
Susan
Tave Department of Educal ion
Delisle said she is looking
Zelman, who departs Oct. under his watch.
forward to reviewing input
31. Delisle will be paid a
During Tuesday 's meet- that the administration gathsalary of $194.500 a year ing, however, Strickland ered during its community
")l
-and get an annual car chief of staff John Haseley conversations on . education
. allowance . .
praised the board's selection this summer. She "said she is
: "After that search , lo and and pledged the office's on board with Strickland's
. We Invite You To Join Us In Celebrating Our 20th Anniversary
behold, the best person for intent to work with Delisle vision for making educathe position was in our and the board.
tion,
from
preschool
midst," said board member
"We feel very good abOut through college. the center
Virgil Brown.
our work with you on this of the state's economic
a~m.The other finalist was process, and I'm personally recovery.
·catherine Maple Cross, a looking forward to working
"I know that Ohio's at a
'·
·deputy education secretary with all of you in the turning point economically.
• Hog Roast
• Musical Entertainment
in New Mexico .'
future,'" Haseley said.
and I reall y believe' that a
Truly Saved Trio
·'Hayrides
·: Board president Jennifer
The sentiment marked a well-informed and intelli • Holzer Wellness Wagon
Forgiven Four
Sheets said Delisle . 55. was departure from Strickland's ge nt citizenry is really )&lt;ey
•
selected for her combina- statements .eight · months 10 turning around the eco- ·
•Craft Show
Eye 2 Eye :--.... . , , 1
tion of educational expertise ago. •In his State of the" nomic de ve lopment ·of
• lnllatables &amp; Games
~'
· and enthusiasm .
State speech in February, Ohio,'" she said.
.......,;:
·· "She just oozes energy he proposed a system in
'She praised the progress
·and enthusia.,in and pa-sion which the stale superinten- Ohio's public schools have
for this work,'' Sheets said . dent would be an appointed made since Zelman took the
"We feel comfonable that member of his cabinet helm in 1999 , ami said she
she's going to bring thi s rather than servin g at the wan ts to build on her sucpassion to this job - and P.leasure of the 19-member cess. Zelman was honored
:that's what we"ve been s'chool board, which .has for her service at a luncheon
:tqoking for is someone who members that are both earlier Tuesday.
·would umte all the vanous appo inted and elected. ·
Throughout the months ,
=stakeholder groups and help
The change would have Zelman has persi sted in her
:us all cooperate in moving relegated the ' board 10 an work
despite
the
Ohio forward."
advisory role.
Democratic governor"s crit Before iaking the helm of
Delisle , given a standing .. icism of her as overseein g
~ her CleYeland-area di ~ tri c t
ovation when she arrived at "an unwieldy department
:in March 2004 , Deli&gt;k the mccti ng. told reporters · with spl intered accc;lllntabil :served as its a ssoc i ~tte afterward that . she is · neil ity." But she also began
SoeClbtizing in fhe FoUoiring Services For 20 Years·:
: superintendent for educa- intimidated by the politics looking for work - eventu • ShOrt and Long Term Care Provided
·tion services. She also of her new po st. She ally accepting a po,ition as
• Offering Skilled and Intermediate
Levels of Nursing Care
• Rehabilitation: Physical Therapy. Occuputional Therapy. Speech Thcmpy
· • Payment ~ccepted •hrough: .Medicare , Medicaid. Workers Competbalion.
Private Insurance and Private Pay

'~·~chad l,{r

.Ohio chooses new schools chief

PROUD TO BEA PART OF YOUR LIFE.
'

.

I

'

-Th(r Daily,Senttnel.·

Over6root!l(ffia6ifitation Center
Cefe6ration ofLife" ·

Saturday, October 18,2008
10:00
2:00pm

--

.
Ret1i-emen1 should.be one or the most en;oyab/e times ·oryour life. yet many
.

people a1e finanoally unprepared fOr it I can create a plan des1gned to help
you en;oy 1e11rement Contact me to d1scuss IRAs and other available optiOns.

'

PW~~sRnancs/A~

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St 'e(fC'f" (0 PIS/( A,'VI,! ~~ l i 05f IIA.'UI

For more information or to reserve booth s'pace for the event
contact Michelle Kennedy.or Emily Casto

Otfn,J Throo..o,Jh

RAYMOND.JAMFS
~lf'i AN CI M H~V I CU, IN( ,

••••.. •,••

, ~,·t

333 Page Street • Middlcpor!, OH
(740) 992-6472
www .nverbrookrehabilitationcenter.com

BY THE .BEND

ANNIE'S MAILBOX

Hope she will
do the right thing

Public meetings

'

Wednesday, October 15, 2008

Homecoming at Morning Charles Withee will be held
Star United Methodist at 2 p.m. · Sunday at his
Church, 10 a.m., with din- church.414 Lake Drive. Rio
ner at 12:30 p.m. Afternoon Grande. Withee, a World
sing at 1:30 p.m. ·
War II veteran is a lifelong
resident of Pomeroy. For
more infonnation contact
his son. Charles Withee at
74-245-5477.
Fl'iday, ()ct. 17
POMEROY
- Emma
Broderick will turn 97 on
Oct. 17. Cards m:.; be sent
to The Maples , 100
Memorial
Dr. ;
#216,
VVednesday ()ct. I5
"Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.
POMEROY
Sunday, Oct. 19
POMEROY - A family Middleport Literary Club·
and friends party in celebra· will meet at the Pomeroy
tion of the 90th birthday of Library. Leah Ord will

Birthdays

Church events

Clubs.and
organizati&lt;ms

review '·Hope's Boy•· by
Andrew Bridge . Hostess
will be Olita Heighton .
HARRISONVILLE
#255 Order of Eastern Star,
annual installation of officers. 7:30 p.m .. members
furnish pol luck , refresh•
ments.
Thursday, Oct. 16
POMEROY
Pomeroy/Racine Masonic
Lodge . # 164 regular meeting. 7:30 p.m .. at the lodge
in Racine . Taking donations
for. Operation Christmas
Child. Bring dish rowel for
pantry project. Call Randy
Smith at 508-0816.

.

Middleport.J ob's Daughte~ turns 5Q

with the younger genera~ day." Davis added. "I'll
tion. We hope to see folks never forget the Grand
turn out with artifacts and Session where )NC drov.e
mementos that could truly around in a van with water
enhance this celebration guns and fired at other
for everyone."
Bethe'!s. We started a water
The council hopes to gun war that year. That"s tl\e
have an event where past year that the entire state
honored queens. majority referred to us as those crazy
members, past council girls with the accents from
·
members. current members down south.'"
and current council . can
Anyone interested in
join together for an after- assisting in the planning
noon to share in sisterhood stages of this event or have
about
their
Job"s memorabilia to share, a~e
Daughters· experiences.
asked to contact Bethel
"Everyone' has thOse Guardian Greta Davis at
"Job's Daughters Moments' gretadavisesq@aol.com or
to share from back in the 304-625-1516.

Local color guard to join Saturday dedication event

·LOcal Weather
Wednesday •.. Partly ·
:sunny. Highs in the lower
80s. Southwest winds
:around 5 mph.
· Wednes_day . night ...
Mostly cloudy. A slight
chance of showers after
midnight. Lows in the upper
·s os. Southwest winds
.around 5 mph . Chance of
·rain 20 percent.
·
: Thursday...Showers like"ly. Cooler with highs in the
.upper 60s. Southwest winds
5 to J0 mph . Chance of ram
·60 percent.
: Thursday night ...Mostly
:cloudy with a 50 percent

Local Stocks
AEP (NYSE) - 32.1 0 ·
·AkZo (NASDAQ) - 41.48
'Ashland Inc. (NYSE) - 27'.27
Big l.ots (NYSE) - 23.11
Bob Evans (NASDAQ) 24.49
.
.BorgWarner (NYSE) - 24.74
Century Aluminum (NASDAQ)
- 15.33
Champion (NASDAQ) - 3.58
Charming Shops (NASDAQ)
-2.93
City Holding (NASDAQ) 42.10
Collins (NYSE) - 38.54
DuPont (NYSE) - 3&amp;.19
US Bank (NYSE) - 31.46
Gannett (NYSE)- 13.16,
:General Electric (NYSE) •20.85

.Harley-Davidson (NYSE) '

JP Morgan (NYSE) - 40.71
Kroger (NYSE) - 25.67
Limited Branda (NYSE) 12.92
'
Norfolk Southern (NYSE) -

eastern Ohio," Denbow said. Congress Street the tonner
Denbow said the marker Afncan Methodtst Episcopal
will commemorate . an Church on Pratt Street and the
important aspect of Afncan- former home .of the fir~t
Amencan htstory 111 Athens Afncan-Amem;an attorney m
County.
Athens. AJ .pavtson. .
Tom O'Grady. chair of
In . ad\lrtron, Afncan
the
Athens
County Amencan Studies will .drsHistorical Society and play a poster exh1b1t at .the
Museum board, agrees ,
Athens County Hrstoncal
"In such a rapidly chang- Society and Museum that
ing time, there's a lot of his- chromcles 19th centur~
tory that's disappearing ," Afncan-Amencan life 111
O'Grady said. "(This mark- Athens C~unt~.
.
er) w1ll educate people to
The . hr~toncal ma~ker
who Booker .r. Washm~ton ded1c~tton rs part of :"-fncan
is and what kmd of contnbu- Amencan . Stud res ~Oth
tion he made to(lursociety." · anmversary . celebration,
The marker wilHOQS ~ wh1ch wrll run through fall
ilar to the one that sits in 2009 .
front of the Court Street
In another event planned
Diner at 18 N. Court St., the as. part of that observan~e .
former site of the Hotel Pnnceton
Umversrty
Berry. That hotel wa.s owned Professor Cornel West wrll
byEdwardandMattreBerry, speakat7p.m.Sunday,Jan.
an African-American courle 18. 111 the Baker Umversrty
who .became . mdustry p1o- Center Ballroom:.
neers by placmg Btbles and
Hrs talk, trtled 100 Years
sewing kits in every room.
of Progressrve
Islam:
Representatives of African Honoring the Life . of
American Studies will lead Mahmoud Mohamed Taha.•
tours of other historical sites 1909-2009 ," ts part of . a
in the . W. Washington St. Center for lnternatronql
neighborhood starting at noon Studies
, conference
Saturday. · The srtes mclude (httr:t/www.rnternatronalthe former Berry tlome on studifs.ohm.edu/).

CEO Lafley· offers P&amp;G shareholders co~~dence .
BY DAN SEWELL
APBUSINESSWRITER

chance of showers. Cooler
with lows in the upper 40s.
North winds around 5 mph.
Friday . ·
through
Satul'(lay... Mostly cloudy.
Highs in the lower 60s.
Lows in the ·mid 40s. ·
Saturday night and
Sunday.. .Partly cloudy. Lows
around 40. Highs around 60 .
Sunday
night
and
Monday...Mostly
clear.
Lows in the lower 40s.
Highs in the upper 60s .
Monday night and
'1\iesday...Partly cloudy.
Lows in the mid 40s. Highs
in the lower 60s.

CINCINNATI
The
chief executive of the
Procter &amp; Gamble Co. reassured shareholders Tuesday
that the company is well:
positioned to weather the
nation's econpmic storm.
A,G. Lalley, chairman
and CEO of the consumer
products maker, cited
.P&amp;G's record of years of
steady earnings and sales
growth and said, even with
the current market turmoil ,
they can 'count on P&amp;G for
·the long haul because of its
strong·fundamentals.
.
"While the economic
environment
remains
volatile and uncertain, I am
confident that P&amp;G can and
will continue to prosper
over the long term,' Lalley
said, adding: "P&amp;G should
55.33
Ohio Valley Bane Corp. (NAS. continue to grow reliably
DAQ) .._ 21
over the long term ."
BBT (NYSE) - 34.40
He said P&amp;G has been
Peoples (NASDAQ)- 21.19
increasing
· productivity,
Papaleo (NYSE) - 54.40
control.ling
costs
and adding
Premier (NASDAQ) - 8.53
innovations to a product
Rockwell (NYSE) - 29.51
ROCky Boots (NASDAQ) portfolio that iocludes 2,4
2.71
brands with annual sales of
Royal Dutch Shell - 51.61 .
$1 billion or more and 20
Seare Holding (NASDAQ) others with sales between
83.47
.
. $500 million and $1 billion.
Wai-Mart (NYSE) - 54.44
Wendy's (NYSE) - 3.89
"They are built to grow
WesBanco (NYSE) - 27.09
through any· economic
Worthington (!\lYSE) .:.. 11.27
Dally stock reports are the 4 cycle," he said.
Lafley said the company
p.m. ET closing quotes of
has ··a laser focus" .on offertrMIMcllona for Oct. 14,
20011, provided by l!dwanl
ing value to budgetJones financial advisors
strapped consumers. P&amp;G
laaac Milia tn Galltpolla at
played a commercial that ·
(740) 441·944t and Lesley
said Tide laundry detergents
Marrero In Point Pleasant at
clean
more with less water
(304) 67~174. Membet
than competitors and 'anothSIPC.

..

•

PageA3

Community Calendar

VVedneSday,Clct. 15
RUTLAND - Leading
Creek
Conservancy
BY KATHY MITCHELL
5
p.m.
decorum (his harangues District,
AND MARCY ·SUGAR
should· not be audible out- ·Rescheduled from Oct. 22.
side his office), but also to
l)ear Annie: Five . years bring up the possibility of a
ago, I had a mortgage of personal problem that needs
$15.000 left on . my home. to be addressed.
Thursday, ()ct. 16
My daughter, "Jacey."
If your company has an
POMEROY - Revival
wanted to buy a house , but E\llployee
'Assistance with
Evangelist Jerry
her husband's credi t was Program, that would be Cottrell, 7 p.m.. Faith
bad and she couldn't get a extremely usefuL
Valley Tabernacle Church·,
bank loan, so she asked me
Dear Annie: This is for Bailey Run Road . Services
to take out a second mort- "Bitter Ex-Wife,'' who feels continue through Oct. 19.
gage and give her the her hatred toward her ex - ·
Sunday, ()ct. 19
money.
.
husband is healthy . I
RACINE
Jacey was to pay $400 a thought so. too , when my ex
•
.month and I'd pay the rest , left me for another woman.
A few months ago. we had a Animosity was my friend. ·
fight and now she refuses to
My ex began his affair
pay anything. Needless to two months after my father
say, this has left me in a dire was diagnosed with .fermiCurrent Bethel Guardian
MIDDLEPORT
'. position because '[ cannot nal cancer. Not only did I Bethel #62, Middleport, Greta Davis and her council
make ends meet. Do I have spend eight months dealing Ohio, International Order are seeking past honored
any legal options? - Lost with the shock and pain of of Jab's Daughters will eel- queens, majority members,
and Barely Making It
his affair and our divorce, . ebrate its golden anniver- and fonner council memDear Lost: We wish we but my 7-year-old son and sary on May 2, 2009, and bers to assist in pla\ming a
.had better news . Since you I had to watch my loving plans are moving forward celebration that will be held
·weren't coerced into .tak- father wither away and die. for an observance.
on that date in conjunction
ing out that mortgage , you To have his last months
The Bethel held its first with the Bethel's official
.are legally responsible for marred by the callous meeting on that day in the visitation ..
it. If the interest rates are behavior of my ex was Pomeroy Masonic Temple
"We would really love to
·substantially lower now unbearable. Counseling with Sandra Potts serving as have th'e assistance and inthan five . years ago, you was the only thing that its first honored queen. Since . put of those who have been
might want to refinance. . kept both of us going. I that time, the Bethel moved a part of this Bethel's his. You also can sell the house was also lucky to work in its charter to Middleport tory," Davis · said. "Job's
if you can make enough an office full of wonderful where the daughters current- Daughters has changed so
from the sale to pay off the people who let me cry, ly meet at 2 p.m. on the sec- much over the years. We
. mortgage.
yell. cuss and spit until I ond and fourth Sundays of s.eldom have the opportuniOtherwise, your only felt better.
ty to get together and share
every month.
recourse is to sue Jacey and
It bas been seven years
see if a judge will agree'that and my ex and I can finally
there was a verbal contract have a civil conversation. I
and she needs to pony up. can also speak to his wife,
·We hope Jacey does the and· although we will never
STAFF REPORT
·
American doctor, lived . in
right thing before you have be friends , I don't wish for
NEWSCMYDAILYSENTINEL.COM
the home .
to take her to court.
either of them to be hit by a
The dedication ceremony
Dear Annie: My office is ·bus anymore. My son now
ATHENS - Renowned · . will include ~emarks . by
in close proximity to that of loves his stepmother and African-American author Ohio ·university President
a co-worker who seems to· has gained some wonderful and educator Booker T. ·Roderick J. McDavis and
:have no regard for his wile .. new relatives.
. Washington was married on representatives of the
:Even if I sh4t my door, I
I hope "Bitter" finds Athens' west side in 1886. Athens County Historical
· often hear him arguing with someone to help . her And after Oct. 18, more Society. The list of sched·
her through the waiL
.through this. The pain does people will know the histo- uleO participants includes
. He yells. threatens and lessen, the anger does dull, ry of the house at 193 W. Athens Mayor Paul Wiehl;
talks down to her. often and . you finally realize it Washington St., where the Gary Cording ley, a physi·
·using phrases that make it takes more of'your.energy ceremony occurred.
cian and Ohio University
clear he thinks she's an to hate than to forgrve and
To bring the site out of its associate professor of neu.idiot. I have lived in a house · move on. - Been There relative obscurity, the Ohio rology; and descendents of
with verbal abuse and rec- and Survived
University Department of Booker T. Washington and
:ognize . how . painful .his
Dear Bee" There: YOIJ African American Studies the Ruffner fa1nily. for
. behavior must be for her. J. were fortunate to have sucli and the Athens County whom Washington worked
.am ·also concerned because a • supportive group of Historical Society and after he was emancipated.
. people who speak to their friends, and smart 'to seek Museum will place a historiCarl Denbow a member of
·loved ones in · such nasty counseling for you and your cal marker in front of the the Athens Cou~ty Historical
.ways often may be doing son. Thanks for the backup: home at 10:30 a.m. Saturday. Society and Museum boand
more at home .
, Annie's Mailbox is writCadot-Blessing
Camp and Ohio University adminisl do not like being entan- ten by Kathy Mitchelt and 126 of the Sons of Union trator, can1e up with the idea
:gled in other peopfe;s per; Marcy Srtgar, longtime edi· Veterans of the Civil War, toplaceamarkeratthehouse.
sonal business, but I am tors of the Ann Landers based in Gallipolis, will His inspiration was the histostarting to feel like I should colum_f!. Please e·m.ail YO'fr serve as the color guard for ry of the West Washington
'say something. Should I, questrons to anmesma!l· the dedication.
Stre et area and the Africanand if so. to whom?
box@comcast.nef, or wnte
Washington, who founded Americans .who lived there in
Hearing Too Much in to: Annie's Mail~ox, P.O. Alabama's
Tuskegee the 19th century.
Indiana
Box 118190, Chrcago, IL University in 1881, never · "The period of time from
Dear Indiana: Bring up 6061 I. ro find put more Hved in Ohio. But his future the end of the Civil War until
the subject to the Human about Amtie'.f Mailbox, wife, Olivia Davidson, was the first few decades of the
Resources department, or if and read features by other a teacher in Albany, and her 20th century marked the
your company 'doesn't have Creators Syndicate writers brother-in-law Noah Elliott, zenith of the Africanone , to the head supervisor. and cartoonists1 visit the Athens' first
African- American presence in southDiscuss the issue not only Creators Syndicate Web
.as a matter of professional page at www.creators.com.

•28.73

!itl:lli'IIM &amp; ln~~tttmenl Adlll!o!y Serw:n

'

The Daily SentiJ1el

er touting Channio toilet
paper for ·savings because
it's more absorbent than
other bathroom tissues.
The stock was· on a run of
record highs this time. last
year that took it to $75.. 18 in
December. It had fallen last
week as low as $59.56, but
has partially bounced back
this week with the broader
market rally. Shares closed
Tuesday at $64.10, up 81
cents or 1.3 percent.
"Yes, 1 am as confident
today as 1 was a year ago,"
Lalley told shareholders at a
downtown performing arts
theater who gave him a
round of applause at the end
. of his remarks .

A consumer analyst for
Toronto-based MFC Global
Investment Management
said Lalley gave a "relatively . bullish" commentary
that's important for shareholders to hear now.
.
"I think they are really
sticking to their knitting
here and they ha~e a very
clear road map, analyst
Sarah Henry said of.P&amp;G's
management . . She sa1d·
P&amp;G's recent good results
and success m overcommg
. cost increases. and being
able to rarse pnces support
Lalley:s c(:mfi~ence.
"I thmk tt wrll come back ,
but it will take .some time,"
satd mvestor Bttl Mast. 75.

a relrred Cmcmna!l research
executiVe. whose _m.~J~r
: holdmg ts P&amp;G stock. Its
a ver~ -stable company .. no
question abo.~l that.l ' mJU~I
ndmg 11 out.
.
·Robert Wallace .. 72. ol
Wrlhamsbur~ . Ohro . also
to~k. a long v1ew.
.
I ve been , th~?ugh . It
before, back 111 87. he smd.
"I held ?n to ever,ythr~F
then, and It all came back ..
P&amp;G leaders. who .wrll
report quarterly. earnmgs
Oct. 29, had sard. recen~ly
that sales were h~ldmg up for
the company s popular
household rtems such as
Crest ' · tooth~aste. G~llett~
shavers and Pampers drapers .

[

I

Selling 85 Show Heifer Prospects

32 Productive Cows- Many "ith Cnlvcs
18 Bred Heirers

October 20th, I lam, At the farm in Bidwell

2008 Fall Sale
Catalog
...r Online @
w~ w.championhillangus.com

�PageA2

IO

The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, O~tober 15; 2008

Federal court: Ohio must
check voter registrations

BY MAn REED
ASSOCIATED PRESS WAITER

BY PHILIP ELLIOTI
ASSOCIATEO PRESS WRITER

a way 10 verify vuter registration information and
make it available to local
election board.,.
The federal appeals co~rt
ruled Tuesday that ,the current system "is esse nti ~lly
useless - uot urthke askmg
for a drin~ of water and
bein),: gi·ven access to a fire
hose at full volume - and
will do nothing to address·
the anti · fraud obje~ tive ." ·
Brunner had argued that it
wotlld take lwo to three
days to create the necessary
computer programs, · and
'aid nothin~ in the federal
Help Amerin1 Vote Act
required her to do what the
district ~:ourl ordered.
Tue sJ uy\ order directs
Brunner to verify new regis!rations by comparing that ·
ii\formation with data from
the Ohio Bureatl of Motor
Vehicles or the Social
Security Administration.
"As far as we can tell, the
problem with the current
s1srem i ~ not that it is insufhcientl y user-friendly but
that it is effec tively useless." the majority wrote in
i.ts ruling.
Ohio
Republican
Chairman Bob Bennett
accused Brunner of pursu- ·
in$ a parti san agenda and
smd "her delay. in .pro"iding
this matching ,systemleaves
Iittle time for election omdais to act on questionable
registrations ."
Bennett said Brunner was
destroying the public's trust
in Ohio·s elections system.
''Her shameful actions to
disenfranchise Republican
absentee voters. block the
transparency of earlv voting
and refuse the proper verification of new ly registered
voters have ri ohtfully damaged her cret. ,• ility as a
nonpartisan election administraror:· he said.
A Mari st Po'll released
Monday shows Obama,
now the Democratic presidential nominee. ahead .of
Republican challenger ,John
McCain, 48 percent to 40
percent. The margin of sarilplin.g . erroi· was plus or
minu s 3.5
percentage .
points. Both campaigns
have worked hard in the
state , which has 20 electoral
votes and gave President
Bush a second tenn in 2004.

LUCASVILLE - Ohio
executed a 5-foot-7. 267COLUMBUS - A fellerpound double murderer
al
appeals co~u·t on Tue~day
.Tuesday who .argued ilis
orderedOhto
s tpp decttons
obesit&gt;' made death by
official.to set up a system by
lethalmjection inhumane. It
Friday to verify the eligibil was the state's first execuity
of new voters and make
tion since the end of an ·
the
infonnation avai lable to
·unofficial national moratothe state 's 88 county elec.rium on the procedu re.
tion boards .
Richard Coney. 41 , had
The full 6th U.S. Circuit
·argued in numerous legal
Court. of Appeals in
·challenges that his weight
Cincinnati upheld a lower
·problem would make it dif.•
court ruling thai Secretary
·ficult for prison staff to find
of State Jennifer Brunner
suitable veins to deliver the
J
must use other government
deadly chemicals, a probrecords to check thousands ·
lem that delayed previous
of
new voters for regiwaj:xecutions in the state.
''
tion fraud.
· No
such
problems
A three-judge panel of the
I'
,occurred,
said
Larry
6th
Circuit had disagreed
·Greene, a spokesman for the
last
week, but the full
'Southern Ohio Correctional
AP photo
"Facility.
A group of protesters gather outside Southern Ohio Correctional Facility in Lucasville com1's ruling overturns that
· During
preparations. Tuesday morning for the execution of Richard Gooey. Gooey, 41, died at 10:28 a.m., sa1d decision .
Ohio Republicans had
though; Cooey shouted for Jim Gravelle, a spokesperson with state atlorney general's office.
sued Brunner. a Democrrrr.
one of his attorneys as
.
Her spokesman had no
prison staff tried to insert a and let out a sigh when
Cooey lost a final appeal Newton - who was similar immediate
comment
-shunt in his left arm. He was Coney's
death
was , earlier Tuesday when th e in sile to Cooey - in May
Tuesday.
. .
·worried the staff would announced at IQ:28 a.m. ~ U.S. Supreme Court turned 2007 . The execution team
666,000
Ohioans
About
'botch the execution. said
St1mmit
County down without comment his had trouble putting IVs in
have
registered
to
vote
since
Greg Meyers. an attorney Prosecutor Sherri Bevan complilinl that the slate's his arm. delaying his execuJanuary,
with
many
doing
wiih the Ohio Public Walsh said the family was protocol for lethal injection tion n~urly two hours. There
Defender 's Office.
disappointed that Coo~y could cau:-.e a1i agonizing were similar problems in so .before the contested
Cooey, who killed two was vulgar ··and hateful to and pain ftil death . Cooey the execution of artother Democratic presidential primary election last March
:University of Akron stu - the end.
wanted the stale to use a siH· inmate in 2006.
·dents in 1986. walked into
"He still would not apolo- gle drug rather than a threeCooey made an earlier between U.S. Sens. Bamck
:the death chamber wearing gize and still would not 'ctrug comb in ation. and trip to the death house. But. Obama and Hillary Rodham
gray pants and a black accept re sponsibility for asked for a stay of execu- a' U.S. District Court judge Clinton . The presidential
short-sleeve shit1 and was what he did,'" she said.
tion pend ing a hearing on intervened hours before his election is Nov. 4.
Since the primary, Ohio
Three of Cooey's lawyers that motion.
strapped onto the gurney.
scheduled exec ution in July
Republicans
have filed . a
"For what? You (ex ple- served as his witnesses.
The court o.n Monday 2003 when the Ohio Public
series
of
challenges
to the
tive) haven"t paid any allen'"The government has no denied a separate appeal Defender's office said it
tion to anything l"ve said in conscience, only policy. · based on Cooey 's claim that needed more time lo assess registrations and Brunne·r·s
;the last .22 l/2 ,. ycars. why Today the policy was state~ his obesity was a bar to the case after an appeals administration of election
·would anyone pay any. sa nctioned · murdef of human e lethal · inje&gt;tion. cotu1 dismissed his previous rules. They have helped vatattention to anything I've · Richard Cooey;· said one of The argument :~lso·had been attorneys for inadequate ers file lawsuits · against
local boards of election o&gt;~er
had to say now." Cooey said the lawyers, Eric Allen.
·
rejected by a federal representation.
registration
rules, absentee
·looking at the . ceiling. He
Cooey was the first appeals court in Cincinnati
Cooey. and a co-defendant
and a Weekballot
requests
inmate executed in Ohio in tmd the Ohio Supreme were convicted in the .sexu- .
made no other comment.
' . Cooey tapped the fingers more than a year, and the Court. with both cQurts rul- al assaults and slayings of long period that allowed
·of his left hand several · stale's first since the end of in~ that he mis sed a dead- McCreery · and Wen\ly registration and voting on
times before he died and his the ·unofficial moratorium lille for filing appeals.
Offredo , 21, in September the same day.
Brunner previously. said
·face took on a purple shade. on executions that began
Coney was 75 pounds 1986. His co-defendant was
· Six family members of last year while the U.S. heav ier than when he went 17 and was sentenced to life . there are sufficient systems
one of his victims .quietly Supreme Court reviewed to death row - the result of in prison because of his age . in place to verify new-voter.
·watched the execution. Kentucky 's ·lethal injection pri son. food and 23-hour-aThe state has now execut- registration and there was
· Mary Ann Hackenberg. the procedure.
day
confinement,
his ed 27 . inmates since 1999, no way to set up the system
"mother of Dawn McCreery.
Before the moratorium , lawyers said.
when Ohio 1'enewed execu- ordered by the court with
.
.
·who was 20 when she was Ohio had one of the nation 's
The last Ohio inmate to be tions after more than three such speed.
Last
week
,
the
three·killed, looked to the ceiling busiest death chambers.
exec[1ted was Christopher decades.
judge panel of the 6th
Circuit had sided with
Brunner, but after hearing
an appeal the full panel
sided with the GOP and
with U.S. District Judge ·
served as academic services described herself as a natur- vice president for education George C. ·Smith in
BY JULIE CARR SMYTH
AP STATEHOUSE CORRESPONDENT director for the West al at building relationships. and children's content at the
Columbus . Smith had
Geauga schools. She has
"What I view is the gover- Corporation for. Public · ordered Brunner to develop
COLUMBUS
taught graduate-level edu- nor obviously is the head of Broadcasting
in
Following a national search, cation courses and is the co- the entire state of Ohio, and Washington , D.C..
'the state Board of Education author, with her husband, of so I obviously have an
Delisle said she is slated
. on Tuesday voted unani- the Parent Choice Award- obligation to serve him to begin her job on Dec: I,
mously to hire a schools winning book "Growing in addition to the state but expects to · be traveling
"
·superintendent from north· Good Kids."
Board of Education ~nd the · between Cleveland and
,•.
east Ohio over a deputy
She was hired as the state 600 plus school districts in Columbus and communicateducation secretary from superintendent with input the state," she said. "It's ing with the department freout of state.
from Gov.' Ted Strickland. really a balancing act of, quently by phone during
Subscrlbe 'today • 992-2155 • www.mydailysentinel.com
Deborah Delisle . super- who expressed his intent 'How do you always keep November.
intendent of the Cleveland ea~lier thjs year to strip the kids at the heart of every
Heights-University ·Heights position of Its power and deci,sion that you make?'""
City School District, will bring the massive Ohio she said.
.
replace
Susan
Tave Department of Educal ion
Delisle said she is looking
Zelman, who departs Oct. under his watch.
forward to reviewing input
31. Delisle will be paid a
During Tuesday 's meet- that the administration gathsalary of $194.500 a year ing, however, Strickland ered during its community
")l
-and get an annual car chief of staff John Haseley conversations on . education
. allowance . .
praised the board's selection this summer. She "said she is
: "After that search , lo and and pledged the office's on board with Strickland's
. We Invite You To Join Us In Celebrating Our 20th Anniversary
behold, the best person for intent to work with Delisle vision for making educathe position was in our and the board.
tion,
from
preschool
midst," said board member
"We feel very good abOut through college. the center
Virgil Brown.
our work with you on this of the state's economic
a~m.The other finalist was process, and I'm personally recovery.
·catherine Maple Cross, a looking forward to working
"I know that Ohio's at a
'·
·deputy education secretary with all of you in the turning point economically.
• Hog Roast
• Musical Entertainment
in New Mexico .'
future,'" Haseley said.
and I reall y believe' that a
Truly Saved Trio
·'Hayrides
·: Board president Jennifer
The sentiment marked a well-informed and intelli • Holzer Wellness Wagon
Forgiven Four
Sheets said Delisle . 55. was departure from Strickland's ge nt citizenry is really )&lt;ey
•
selected for her combina- statements .eight · months 10 turning around the eco- ·
•Craft Show
Eye 2 Eye :--.... . , , 1
tion of educational expertise ago. •In his State of the" nomic de ve lopment ·of
• lnllatables &amp; Games
~'
· and enthusiasm .
State speech in February, Ohio,'" she said.
.......,;:
·· "She just oozes energy he proposed a system in
'She praised the progress
·and enthusia.,in and pa-sion which the stale superinten- Ohio's public schools have
for this work,'' Sheets said . dent would be an appointed made since Zelman took the
"We feel comfonable that member of his cabinet helm in 1999 , ami said she
she's going to bring thi s rather than servin g at the wan ts to build on her sucpassion to this job - and P.leasure of the 19-member cess. Zelman was honored
:that's what we"ve been s'chool board, which .has for her service at a luncheon
:tqoking for is someone who members that are both earlier Tuesday.
·would umte all the vanous appo inted and elected. ·
Throughout the months ,
=stakeholder groups and help
The change would have Zelman has persi sted in her
:us all cooperate in moving relegated the ' board 10 an work
despite
the
Ohio forward."
advisory role.
Democratic governor"s crit Before iaking the helm of
Delisle , given a standing .. icism of her as overseein g
~ her CleYeland-area di ~ tri c t
ovation when she arrived at "an unwieldy department
:in March 2004 , Deli&gt;k the mccti ng. told reporters · with spl intered accc;lllntabil :served as its a ssoc i ~tte afterward that . she is · neil ity." But she also began
SoeClbtizing in fhe FoUoiring Services For 20 Years·:
: superintendent for educa- intimidated by the politics looking for work - eventu • ShOrt and Long Term Care Provided
·tion services. She also of her new po st. She ally accepting a po,ition as
• Offering Skilled and Intermediate
Levels of Nursing Care
• Rehabilitation: Physical Therapy. Occuputional Therapy. Speech Thcmpy
· • Payment ~ccepted •hrough: .Medicare , Medicaid. Workers Competbalion.
Private Insurance and Private Pay

'~·~chad l,{r

.Ohio chooses new schools chief

PROUD TO BEA PART OF YOUR LIFE.
'

.

I

'

-Th(r Daily,Senttnel.·

Over6root!l(ffia6ifitation Center
Cefe6ration ofLife" ·

Saturday, October 18,2008
10:00
2:00pm

--

.
Ret1i-emen1 should.be one or the most en;oyab/e times ·oryour life. yet many
.

people a1e finanoally unprepared fOr it I can create a plan des1gned to help
you en;oy 1e11rement Contact me to d1scuss IRAs and other available optiOns.

'

PW~~sRnancs/A~

("'""

Loct:trtd 11 Ptopln 8t11trk

"'Qr fOC IMURi'D "'Ul :J..JA.IV\NTU?:Jr!r'•YOI'lh liMo/A.

St 'e(fC'f" (0 PIS/( A,'VI,! ~~ l i 05f IIA.'UI

For more information or to reserve booth s'pace for the event
contact Michelle Kennedy.or Emily Casto

Otfn,J Throo..o,Jh

RAYMOND.JAMFS
~lf'i AN CI M H~V I CU, IN( ,

••••.. •,••

, ~,·t

333 Page Street • Middlcpor!, OH
(740) 992-6472
www .nverbrookrehabilitationcenter.com

BY THE .BEND

ANNIE'S MAILBOX

Hope she will
do the right thing

Public meetings

'

Wednesday, October 15, 2008

Homecoming at Morning Charles Withee will be held
Star United Methodist at 2 p.m. · Sunday at his
Church, 10 a.m., with din- church.414 Lake Drive. Rio
ner at 12:30 p.m. Afternoon Grande. Withee, a World
sing at 1:30 p.m. ·
War II veteran is a lifelong
resident of Pomeroy. For
more infonnation contact
his son. Charles Withee at
74-245-5477.
Fl'iday, ()ct. 17
POMEROY
- Emma
Broderick will turn 97 on
Oct. 17. Cards m:.; be sent
to The Maples , 100
Memorial
Dr. ;
#216,
VVednesday ()ct. I5
"Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.
POMEROY
Sunday, Oct. 19
POMEROY - A family Middleport Literary Club·
and friends party in celebra· will meet at the Pomeroy
tion of the 90th birthday of Library. Leah Ord will

Birthdays

Church events

Clubs.and
organizati&lt;ms

review '·Hope's Boy•· by
Andrew Bridge . Hostess
will be Olita Heighton .
HARRISONVILLE
#255 Order of Eastern Star,
annual installation of officers. 7:30 p.m .. members
furnish pol luck , refresh•
ments.
Thursday, Oct. 16
POMEROY
Pomeroy/Racine Masonic
Lodge . # 164 regular meeting. 7:30 p.m .. at the lodge
in Racine . Taking donations
for. Operation Christmas
Child. Bring dish rowel for
pantry project. Call Randy
Smith at 508-0816.

.

Middleport.J ob's Daughte~ turns 5Q

with the younger genera~ day." Davis added. "I'll
tion. We hope to see folks never forget the Grand
turn out with artifacts and Session where )NC drov.e
mementos that could truly around in a van with water
enhance this celebration guns and fired at other
for everyone."
Bethe'!s. We started a water
The council hopes to gun war that year. That"s tl\e
have an event where past year that the entire state
honored queens. majority referred to us as those crazy
members, past council girls with the accents from
·
members. current members down south.'"
and current council . can
Anyone interested in
join together for an after- assisting in the planning
noon to share in sisterhood stages of this event or have
about
their
Job"s memorabilia to share, a~e
Daughters· experiences.
asked to contact Bethel
"Everyone' has thOse Guardian Greta Davis at
"Job's Daughters Moments' gretadavisesq@aol.com or
to share from back in the 304-625-1516.

Local color guard to join Saturday dedication event

·LOcal Weather
Wednesday •.. Partly ·
:sunny. Highs in the lower
80s. Southwest winds
:around 5 mph.
· Wednes_day . night ...
Mostly cloudy. A slight
chance of showers after
midnight. Lows in the upper
·s os. Southwest winds
.around 5 mph . Chance of
·rain 20 percent.
·
: Thursday...Showers like"ly. Cooler with highs in the
.upper 60s. Southwest winds
5 to J0 mph . Chance of ram
·60 percent.
: Thursday night ...Mostly
:cloudy with a 50 percent

Local Stocks
AEP (NYSE) - 32.1 0 ·
·AkZo (NASDAQ) - 41.48
'Ashland Inc. (NYSE) - 27'.27
Big l.ots (NYSE) - 23.11
Bob Evans (NASDAQ) 24.49
.
.BorgWarner (NYSE) - 24.74
Century Aluminum (NASDAQ)
- 15.33
Champion (NASDAQ) - 3.58
Charming Shops (NASDAQ)
-2.93
City Holding (NASDAQ) 42.10
Collins (NYSE) - 38.54
DuPont (NYSE) - 3&amp;.19
US Bank (NYSE) - 31.46
Gannett (NYSE)- 13.16,
:General Electric (NYSE) •20.85

.Harley-Davidson (NYSE) '

JP Morgan (NYSE) - 40.71
Kroger (NYSE) - 25.67
Limited Branda (NYSE) 12.92
'
Norfolk Southern (NYSE) -

eastern Ohio," Denbow said. Congress Street the tonner
Denbow said the marker Afncan Methodtst Episcopal
will commemorate . an Church on Pratt Street and the
important aspect of Afncan- former home .of the fir~t
Amencan htstory 111 Athens Afncan-Amem;an attorney m
County.
Athens. AJ .pavtson. .
Tom O'Grady. chair of
In . ad\lrtron, Afncan
the
Athens
County Amencan Studies will .drsHistorical Society and play a poster exh1b1t at .the
Museum board, agrees ,
Athens County Hrstoncal
"In such a rapidly chang- Society and Museum that
ing time, there's a lot of his- chromcles 19th centur~
tory that's disappearing ," Afncan-Amencan life 111
O'Grady said. "(This mark- Athens C~unt~.
.
er) w1ll educate people to
The . hr~toncal ma~ker
who Booker .r. Washm~ton ded1c~tton rs part of :"-fncan
is and what kmd of contnbu- Amencan . Stud res ~Oth
tion he made to(lursociety." · anmversary . celebration,
The marker wilHOQS ~ wh1ch wrll run through fall
ilar to the one that sits in 2009 .
front of the Court Street
In another event planned
Diner at 18 N. Court St., the as. part of that observan~e .
former site of the Hotel Pnnceton
Umversrty
Berry. That hotel wa.s owned Professor Cornel West wrll
byEdwardandMattreBerry, speakat7p.m.Sunday,Jan.
an African-American courle 18. 111 the Baker Umversrty
who .became . mdustry p1o- Center Ballroom:.
neers by placmg Btbles and
Hrs talk, trtled 100 Years
sewing kits in every room.
of Progressrve
Islam:
Representatives of African Honoring the Life . of
American Studies will lead Mahmoud Mohamed Taha.•
tours of other historical sites 1909-2009 ," ts part of . a
in the . W. Washington St. Center for lnternatronql
neighborhood starting at noon Studies
, conference
Saturday. · The srtes mclude (httr:t/www.rnternatronalthe former Berry tlome on studifs.ohm.edu/).

CEO Lafley· offers P&amp;G shareholders co~~dence .
BY DAN SEWELL
APBUSINESSWRITER

chance of showers. Cooler
with lows in the upper 40s.
North winds around 5 mph.
Friday . ·
through
Satul'(lay... Mostly cloudy.
Highs in the lower 60s.
Lows in the ·mid 40s. ·
Saturday night and
Sunday.. .Partly cloudy. Lows
around 40. Highs around 60 .
Sunday
night
and
Monday...Mostly
clear.
Lows in the lower 40s.
Highs in the upper 60s .
Monday night and
'1\iesday...Partly cloudy.
Lows in the mid 40s. Highs
in the lower 60s.

CINCINNATI
The
chief executive of the
Procter &amp; Gamble Co. reassured shareholders Tuesday
that the company is well:
positioned to weather the
nation's econpmic storm.
A,G. Lalley, chairman
and CEO of the consumer
products maker, cited
.P&amp;G's record of years of
steady earnings and sales
growth and said, even with
the current market turmoil ,
they can 'count on P&amp;G for
·the long haul because of its
strong·fundamentals.
.
"While the economic
environment
remains
volatile and uncertain, I am
confident that P&amp;G can and
will continue to prosper
over the long term,' Lalley
said, adding: "P&amp;G should
55.33
Ohio Valley Bane Corp. (NAS. continue to grow reliably
DAQ) .._ 21
over the long term ."
BBT (NYSE) - 34.40
He said P&amp;G has been
Peoples (NASDAQ)- 21.19
increasing
· productivity,
Papaleo (NYSE) - 54.40
control.ling
costs
and adding
Premier (NASDAQ) - 8.53
innovations to a product
Rockwell (NYSE) - 29.51
ROCky Boots (NASDAQ) portfolio that iocludes 2,4
2.71
brands with annual sales of
Royal Dutch Shell - 51.61 .
$1 billion or more and 20
Seare Holding (NASDAQ) others with sales between
83.47
.
. $500 million and $1 billion.
Wai-Mart (NYSE) - 54.44
Wendy's (NYSE) - 3.89
"They are built to grow
WesBanco (NYSE) - 27.09
through any· economic
Worthington (!\lYSE) .:.. 11.27
Dally stock reports are the 4 cycle," he said.
Lafley said the company
p.m. ET closing quotes of
has ··a laser focus" .on offertrMIMcllona for Oct. 14,
20011, provided by l!dwanl
ing value to budgetJones financial advisors
strapped consumers. P&amp;G
laaac Milia tn Galltpolla at
played a commercial that ·
(740) 441·944t and Lesley
said Tide laundry detergents
Marrero In Point Pleasant at
clean
more with less water
(304) 67~174. Membet
than competitors and 'anothSIPC.

..

•

PageA3

Community Calendar

VVedneSday,Clct. 15
RUTLAND - Leading
Creek
Conservancy
BY KATHY MITCHELL
5
p.m.
decorum (his harangues District,
AND MARCY ·SUGAR
should· not be audible out- ·Rescheduled from Oct. 22.
side his office), but also to
l)ear Annie: Five . years bring up the possibility of a
ago, I had a mortgage of personal problem that needs
$15.000 left on . my home. to be addressed.
Thursday, ()ct. 16
My daughter, "Jacey."
If your company has an
POMEROY - Revival
wanted to buy a house , but E\llployee
'Assistance with
Evangelist Jerry
her husband's credi t was Program, that would be Cottrell, 7 p.m.. Faith
bad and she couldn't get a extremely usefuL
Valley Tabernacle Church·,
bank loan, so she asked me
Dear Annie: This is for Bailey Run Road . Services
to take out a second mort- "Bitter Ex-Wife,'' who feels continue through Oct. 19.
gage and give her the her hatred toward her ex - ·
Sunday, ()ct. 19
money.
.
husband is healthy . I
RACINE
Jacey was to pay $400 a thought so. too , when my ex
•
.month and I'd pay the rest , left me for another woman.
A few months ago. we had a Animosity was my friend. ·
fight and now she refuses to
My ex began his affair
pay anything. Needless to two months after my father
say, this has left me in a dire was diagnosed with .fermiCurrent Bethel Guardian
MIDDLEPORT
'. position because '[ cannot nal cancer. Not only did I Bethel #62, Middleport, Greta Davis and her council
make ends meet. Do I have spend eight months dealing Ohio, International Order are seeking past honored
any legal options? - Lost with the shock and pain of of Jab's Daughters will eel- queens, majority members,
and Barely Making It
his affair and our divorce, . ebrate its golden anniver- and fonner council memDear Lost: We wish we but my 7-year-old son and sary on May 2, 2009, and bers to assist in pla\ming a
.had better news . Since you I had to watch my loving plans are moving forward celebration that will be held
·weren't coerced into .tak- father wither away and die. for an observance.
on that date in conjunction
ing out that mortgage , you To have his last months
The Bethel held its first with the Bethel's official
.are legally responsible for marred by the callous meeting on that day in the visitation ..
it. If the interest rates are behavior of my ex was Pomeroy Masonic Temple
"We would really love to
·substantially lower now unbearable. Counseling with Sandra Potts serving as have th'e assistance and inthan five . years ago, you was the only thing that its first honored queen. Since . put of those who have been
might want to refinance. . kept both of us going. I that time, the Bethel moved a part of this Bethel's his. You also can sell the house was also lucky to work in its charter to Middleport tory," Davis · said. "Job's
if you can make enough an office full of wonderful where the daughters current- Daughters has changed so
from the sale to pay off the people who let me cry, ly meet at 2 p.m. on the sec- much over the years. We
. mortgage.
yell. cuss and spit until I ond and fourth Sundays of s.eldom have the opportuniOtherwise, your only felt better.
ty to get together and share
every month.
recourse is to sue Jacey and
It bas been seven years
see if a judge will agree'that and my ex and I can finally
there was a verbal contract have a civil conversation. I
and she needs to pony up. can also speak to his wife,
·We hope Jacey does the and· although we will never
STAFF REPORT
·
American doctor, lived . in
right thing before you have be friends , I don't wish for
NEWSCMYDAILYSENTINEL.COM
the home .
to take her to court.
either of them to be hit by a
The dedication ceremony
Dear Annie: My office is ·bus anymore. My son now
ATHENS - Renowned · . will include ~emarks . by
in close proximity to that of loves his stepmother and African-American author Ohio ·university President
a co-worker who seems to· has gained some wonderful and educator Booker T. ·Roderick J. McDavis and
:have no regard for his wile .. new relatives.
. Washington was married on representatives of the
:Even if I sh4t my door, I
I hope "Bitter" finds Athens' west side in 1886. Athens County Historical
· often hear him arguing with someone to help . her And after Oct. 18, more Society. The list of sched·
her through the waiL
.through this. The pain does people will know the histo- uleO participants includes
. He yells. threatens and lessen, the anger does dull, ry of the house at 193 W. Athens Mayor Paul Wiehl;
talks down to her. often and . you finally realize it Washington St., where the Gary Cording ley, a physi·
·using phrases that make it takes more of'your.energy ceremony occurred.
cian and Ohio University
clear he thinks she's an to hate than to forgrve and
To bring the site out of its associate professor of neu.idiot. I have lived in a house · move on. - Been There relative obscurity, the Ohio rology; and descendents of
with verbal abuse and rec- and Survived
University Department of Booker T. Washington and
:ognize . how . painful .his
Dear Bee" There: YOIJ African American Studies the Ruffner fa1nily. for
. behavior must be for her. J. were fortunate to have sucli and the Athens County whom Washington worked
.am ·also concerned because a • supportive group of Historical Society and after he was emancipated.
. people who speak to their friends, and smart 'to seek Museum will place a historiCarl Denbow a member of
·loved ones in · such nasty counseling for you and your cal marker in front of the the Athens Cou~ty Historical
.ways often may be doing son. Thanks for the backup: home at 10:30 a.m. Saturday. Society and Museum boand
more at home .
, Annie's Mailbox is writCadot-Blessing
Camp and Ohio University adminisl do not like being entan- ten by Kathy Mitchelt and 126 of the Sons of Union trator, can1e up with the idea
:gled in other peopfe;s per; Marcy Srtgar, longtime edi· Veterans of the Civil War, toplaceamarkeratthehouse.
sonal business, but I am tors of the Ann Landers based in Gallipolis, will His inspiration was the histostarting to feel like I should colum_f!. Please e·m.ail YO'fr serve as the color guard for ry of the West Washington
'say something. Should I, questrons to anmesma!l· the dedication.
Stre et area and the Africanand if so. to whom?
box@comcast.nef, or wnte
Washington, who founded Americans .who lived there in
Hearing Too Much in to: Annie's Mail~ox, P.O. Alabama's
Tuskegee the 19th century.
Indiana
Box 118190, Chrcago, IL University in 1881, never · "The period of time from
Dear Indiana: Bring up 6061 I. ro find put more Hved in Ohio. But his future the end of the Civil War until
the subject to the Human about Amtie'.f Mailbox, wife, Olivia Davidson, was the first few decades of the
Resources department, or if and read features by other a teacher in Albany, and her 20th century marked the
your company 'doesn't have Creators Syndicate writers brother-in-law Noah Elliott, zenith of the Africanone , to the head supervisor. and cartoonists1 visit the Athens' first
African- American presence in southDiscuss the issue not only Creators Syndicate Web
.as a matter of professional page at www.creators.com.

•28.73

!itl:lli'IIM &amp; ln~~tttmenl Adlll!o!y Serw:n

'

The Daily SentiJ1el

er touting Channio toilet
paper for ·savings because
it's more absorbent than
other bathroom tissues.
The stock was· on a run of
record highs this time. last
year that took it to $75.. 18 in
December. It had fallen last
week as low as $59.56, but
has partially bounced back
this week with the broader
market rally. Shares closed
Tuesday at $64.10, up 81
cents or 1.3 percent.
"Yes, 1 am as confident
today as 1 was a year ago,"
Lalley told shareholders at a
downtown performing arts
theater who gave him a
round of applause at the end
. of his remarks .

A consumer analyst for
Toronto-based MFC Global
Investment Management
said Lalley gave a "relatively . bullish" commentary
that's important for shareholders to hear now.
.
"I think they are really
sticking to their knitting
here and they ha~e a very
clear road map, analyst
Sarah Henry said of.P&amp;G's
management . . She sa1d·
P&amp;G's recent good results
and success m overcommg
. cost increases. and being
able to rarse pnces support
Lalley:s c(:mfi~ence.
"I thmk tt wrll come back ,
but it will take .some time,"
satd mvestor Bttl Mast. 75.

a relrred Cmcmna!l research
executiVe. whose _m.~J~r
: holdmg ts P&amp;G stock. Its
a ver~ -stable company .. no
question abo.~l that.l ' mJU~I
ndmg 11 out.
.
·Robert Wallace .. 72. ol
Wrlhamsbur~ . Ohro . also
to~k. a long v1ew.
.
I ve been , th~?ugh . It
before, back 111 87. he smd.
"I held ?n to ever,ythr~F
then, and It all came back ..
P&amp;G leaders. who .wrll
report quarterly. earnmgs
Oct. 29, had sard. recen~ly
that sales were h~ldmg up for
the company s popular
household rtems such as
Crest ' · tooth~aste. G~llett~
shavers and Pampers drapers .

[

I

Selling 85 Show Heifer Prospects

32 Productive Cows- Many "ith Cnlvcs
18 Bred Heirers

October 20th, I lam, At the farm in Bidwell

2008 Fall Sale
Catalog
...r Online @
w~ w.championhillangus.com

�r

PageA4

OPINION

The Daily Sentinel
·- '

Wednesday, Octo~r 15, 200 s

Wednesday, October 15,2008

·The Daily Sentinel
1 f1 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio
(740) 992-2156 ·FAX (740) 992·2157
www.mydallysentlnel.com

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Dan Goodrich
Publisher
Charlene Hoeflicll
General Manager-News Editor

Congress shall make no law respecting an
establishment of religion, or prohibiting the
free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom .
of speech, or of the press; or the right of the
people peaceably to assemble, and to petition
the Government for a redres~ ofgrievances.
- The Rrat Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

TODAY IN HISTORY
Today is Wednesday, Oct . 15 , the 289th day of 2008.
There are 77 days left in the year.
. Today's Highlight in History: On Oct. 15, 1917, Dutch
dancer Mata Hari , convicted of spying for the Germans,
was executed by a French firing squad outside Pari.s.
On this date: In 1858. the seventh and final debate
between senatorial ,candidates Abr~ham Lincoln and .
Stephen Douglas took place in Alton, Ill.
In 1860, 11-year-old Grace Bedell of Westfield, N .Y.1
·wrote a letter to presidential candidate Abraham Lincoln,
suggesting he could improve his appearance by letting his
whiskers grow.
. In 1908, economist John Kenneth Galbraith was born in
Ontario, Canada.
· In 1914, the Clayton Antitrust Act was signed intp law by
President Wilson.
• In 1928, the German dirigible Graf Zeppelin landed in
Lakehurst, N.J. , completing its first commercial tlight
··
across the Atlantic.
In 1945, the former premier of Vichy France, Pierre
Laval, was executed for treason.
,
In 1946.Nazi war criminal Hermann Goering fatally poisoned himself hours before he was to have been executed.
'" In 1964, it was announced that Soviet leader Nikita S.
Khrushchev had been removed from office.
· In 1969. peace demonstrators staged ,activities across the
country, including a candlelight march around the White
House, as part of a moratorium against the Vietnam War.
In 1976, in the first debate of its "ind between vice presidential nominees, Democrat Walter F. Mondale and
·Republican Bob Dole faced off in Houston.
· Today's Birthdays: Jazz musician Freddy Cole is 77.
Singer Barry McGuire is 73. · Actress-director Penny
Marshall is 66. Singer-musician Richard Carpenter is .62.
Tennis player Roscoe Tanner is 57. Singer Tiro Jackson is 55.
Britain's Duchess of York, Sarah. Ferguson, is 49. Chef
Emeril Lagasse is 49. Rock musician Mark Reznicek is 46.
.Actress Vanessa Marcil is 40. Singer-actress-TV host Paige
Davis is 39. Singer Eric Benet is 38. Rhythm-and-blues
singer Ginuwine is 38. Christian singer-actress Jaci
Velasquez is 2.9. Rhythm-and-blues singer Keyshia Cole is
27. Actor Vincent Martella ("Everybody Hates Chris") is 16.
Thought for Today: "The conventional view serves to
P.rotect us from the painful job of thinking." - )ohn
Kenneth Galbraith, Canadian-born American economist
(1908-2006).

Chailes Sealtes

Court's Gonzales v. Carhart nativ
to abortion) will
Speaking to a group of·
ruling . which affirmed the increase
rather
than
young Catholics in New
feucral
partial-birth
abordecrease
abortions
in
the
York almost one month
United
States.
tion
ban
.
before Election Day,l had a
"The election · of Barack
Barack Obama supports
harsh awakening as jarring
of
abortion.
Obama
would endanger the
federal
funding
as a shor of Wild Turkey
Kathryn
Bilrack
Obama
opposes
lives
of
thousa~ds o,!
I0 l. Weeks befort\!!_9.4lg to
· the Hyde Amendment, unborn
children.
Lopez
booth ,
the
polling
1
which
resrrids
use
of.
taxUniversity
of
Alabam~
proAmericans do not know
payer
dollars
for
supporting
fessor
Michael
New
tells
Burack Obama.
abortion.
me. "If he follows through
In a packed bar, I ,was
Obama
called
on
his pledge t~ s1gn th.e
Barack
discussing the contentious
not have the same rights as pregnancy "punishment."
Freedom
of Chm~c Act, It
question of whether a a child carried to·, term .
Barack Obanm believes would likely nullify many
Catholic
can .support That , in and of itself - his
that
the 1:ight to have an state-le vel pro-life laws that
Obama for president: I opposition to illinoi s' Born
;•hnrtion
i ~ a matter of equal the pro-life moveme~.t has
highlighted the priority Alive Infants Protection
worked hard to enact.
that defending innocent Act, which sought lo man- rights fQr women.
Barack Obama wants to
Calculations from the
human lives takes in these date safeguards for such
to
criresults
of a 2004 Heritage .
stop
federal
funding
considerations, according unwanted children - is a
. Foundat10~ stu\ly, authored
to the Church. I then went ·heavy obstacle to over- sis-pregnancy centers.
Barack Obama :does not by ·New, md1cate that the
through Obama 's rad.ical come for those Obama fan s
I he
Pregnant r~peal of '\ll state-level_pub- ,
record on abort.ion. The jolt concerned about the future · support
came after I finished and dignity of human life . Women Support Act, a pro- lie fundmg restncuons ,
speaking, when one by He . defended infanticide. ject of Democrats for Life, parental-involvement laws
·one , people told me they That alone would be meant to reduce abortions and informed-consent laws
had no idea Obama was so enough to keep me from by strengthening the social would result in 125,000
radical.
voting for him . But, as it safety net. This is important ·· more abortwns every· year.
They were shocked. And happens. it 's not the only because it exposes as a lie a The repeal of federal protalking
point life laws might well . push
so was I.
ethical affront the Obama . mnjor
We've been understand~ campaign has committed, employed by those who the numbers up .even h1gher.
You can fall m love w1th
ably focused on the econo- and far fro~ the only · argue that pro- lifers can
support
Obama.
It
shows
the
romantic idea of a black
my lately. so much so that offense to human rights
1t's as if there are no other that the Democratic presi- much of the left's patroniz- man becoming president of
ISsues. But there are. And in dential candidate supports . ing rhetoric to be nothing the United States , but m a
but rank deceit. House country where black women
the time we have left, voters
Care for some others?
Speaker
Nancy Pelosi - a have abortions at five times
must consider them . .
Barack Obama has told
Though for Catholics, in the Planned ·Parenthood Catholic who developed her the rate of white women, he
the. end. it's up to the indi- Action Fund that the first own .theology to justify her i.s a profile in cowardiCe. In
vidual, through prayer, to thing he will sign as presi- abortion support - and a l an~Lw.~ere we . have
decide upon political mat- dent will be the Freedom of Senate Majority Leader devotei!"ffiirselves to the
ters, my conclusion is that Choice Act , whi.ch will Harry Reid .have not pursuit of life , this is unac1t would ·be a very tough sweep away limits on abor- allowed this important act ceptable. Vote as if lives
to even caine to a vote.
depend on you.
thing for a follower of th~ timi - state and federal pope to back the senator I
don't
think
I"m
unreaThey do.
including restrictions on
impossible,
· actuall y. ·government funding · of sonnble in thinkin g that
(Kathryn Lopez is the ediObama has stood _on the abortion and laws · protect - sweeping away all abor- tor · of National Review
lloor of the Illinois state- ing anti-aboaion health care tion ·limits and funding Online (wwwnationalre- ·
house and argued that a providers.
.ahonion with federal tax view.com). She can be conbaby born alive , due to a
Barack Obama has con- d'Ollars (while defunding tacted ·at klopez@ nationalthe
botched abortion should demned
Supreme centers that provide alter, review:com.)

MIDDLEPORT - Charles Searles, Middleport, .passed
away on Monday, Oct. 13,2008, at Overbrook Nursing and
·
Rehabilitatio:n Center, Mid~lepon.
He IS SUfVIved by h1s w1fe Mary, four ~ldren, several
gr~ndchlldren , a .brother Carl and Eileen Searles.
Mtddleport, and a Sister, Kathryn Bur.ton, Middleport.
At the request of Mr. Searles there will be no service or
visitation. Burial will be conducted at Gravel Hill
Cemetery in Cheshire. Arrangements are being handled by
the A~der~on McDaniel Funeral Home in Midt:llep&lt;irt.
Onhne condolences may be sent to www.ande!'Sonmcdan1el.com ,
·
·

Deaths .
James Dean Taylor
POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. - James Dean "Jim" Taylor
died Friday, Oct. 10. Calling hours ' at the Crqw-Hussell
Funeral Home in Point Pleasant will be Saturday, 0&lt;.:1..18,
from 2 to 4 p'.m. Graveside service will be a private affair.
An online guest registry is available at www.crowhussellfh.com. A full obituary will appear in Thursday's edition of the Point Plel!Sant Register.

Local Briefs
Trick or treat
POMEROY - Residents on New Crew Road will participate in ·Porneroy's Trick or Treat.
·
.·
The comm.unity of Danville will have trick or treat at 6
p .m. on Oct. 30. Residents participating should turn on
their porch lights.
.·

Smorgasbord
,LONG BOTTOM, Long Bottqm Community
Association will hold an all-you-can-eat smor~asbord dinne·r on Saturday at the Long Bottom Cornmumty Building.
The cost is $7 for adults and $3.50 for children.

Sen. Voinovich visiting
POMEROY . - Sen. George Voinovich (R·Ohio) will
visit the Meigs· County Republican Headquarter~ at 3:30
p.m. tomorrow for an informal reception.,Refreshments
will be served. The event is open to the public.

THIS
IS A

· Rio solicits part-time faculty
POMEROY - The University of Rio Grande is taking
applications for plirt-tiine faculty me!Jibers for the spring
semester of academic year 2008-09 for .the Meigs campus.
· Instructors are needetl in the areas of biology, zology,
environmental science and history. A bachelor's degree 1s
required, with a master's degree preferred.
All candidates should submit a letter of interest, current
resume and the names and addresses of three references.
Resumes will be reviewed as received. Information tnust .be
submitted to Phyllis Mason, SPIHR, director of Huiiil\ll
Resources, University of Rio Grande, .P.O. Box 500, Rio
Grande, Ohio 45674.'e-rnailpinason@rio.edu.EEO/AA
Employer.

BAD

SIGN.

~IDYMfNT
OfFICE

Final day for stimulus payment tiling
POME.ROY - Today is the final day residents in Ohio
and West Virginia .can file for the. 200~ stimulus payme~t,
accordmg ·to a release from Enc Enckson, IRS Med1a
Relations. Questions may be directed to him at 404.-3367884 all day Wednesday. IRS.gov contains all information
and details about filing for the rebate.

Elections letters advisory
Letters dealing with the Nov. 4 election are welcome and
will be accepted up until 5 p.m. on Friliay, Oct. 24. Letters
received after that deadline will not be published. Letters
.Yhould be 300 words in length or less and must address
issues. f)OI personalities. Letrers endorsing local or national candidates, or col!taining personal a/lacks, will not be
accepted.

.

Meigs FFA fniit sales under way
POMEROY - The annual fruit sales program conducted annually by the Meigs FFA and used to finance programs and trips by the group is now under way and ~ill
continue through Nov. 3.
&lt;
The studenis are selling half and full boxes of navel oranges,
'tangelos, Hamlin oranges ,' red grapefruit, Golden Delicious
apples, Red Delicious apples, Fuji app\lls, and a mixed box.
The fruit will be dehvered the week of Dec. 3. To place
an order or for more information contact Ronald Vlasak or
Mic" \'Ieber at 992-2185 or any local FFA member.
· Also participating in the fruit sales are SkillsUSA mem·
bers , advisor Linda Yonker.

LETTERS TO THE '
EDITOR
Letters to the edlror are welcome. They should be less
than 300 words. All lerters are subject 10 editing, must be
signed, and include address and telephone number. No
unsigf)ed letrers will be published. Letters should be in
.good taste, addressing issues, not personalities. Lerters of
thanks to organizations and individuals will not be accept.e d for publication.

'

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Web:
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It has been my privilege
to serve as chairperson of
the Meigs County Relay .for
Life Committee for the past .
nine years. The experience
of helping put an event like
this together is one of great
pride and joy. There is an
unbelievable amount of
work that goes into 'Relay.
The committee is like no
other around in their compission and diligence to
make sure the Relay is one
of the best in Ohio and this
year, even with the rain. was
no exception.
.
The event raised a c~~et of
$4 7,538 for the American
Cancer Society to educate
the publi~ about cancer and
lo fund research and free
programs such as Reach to
Recovery, Look Good ... Feel
Better, and Hope Lodge.

b:moc~

Charlene Hoeflich. Ext. 12

news0mydaily98111inel.com

Dear Editor.

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Study show's C8 levels
linked to high cholesterol

OUR READERS' VIEWS

(USPS 213-960)
Ohio vanec!Jubllshlng

Poltmnter: Send address

•

Obituaries

The Obama abortion men ....__--,...
e

'53.55
' 107.10
'214.21

•

just to name a few. This
year's event was dedicated
to the memory of.Ferman E.
Moore. who battled cancer
and played a big part in
starting, Relay in Meigs
County. Moore's widow
Rae catered the survivor's
,receptioq at Relay which
was not only for those survivors but for their spouses
and significant other.
The focus of Relay 'is the
cancer survivor who takes
the open in¥ lap of the event,
walkmg With other indi victuals who have faced cancer
and won and are proud of it.
Around the Relay track this
year there were 300 lumi- ·
naries · purchased for survivors and those who have
lost their bairle with cancer.
Cancer touches each of us
every day in some way. We
can all "make a difference t
The committee works hard
·all year long for that one
moment in time when we
can make a difference to a
cancer surv1vor and their

CHARLESTON, W.Va. (AP) - A study shows MidOhio Valley residents have far _g_reater blood levels of a
chemical used to make the nonstick product ·Teflon compar~d wiih the average American.
'
The study released Tuesday b~ a three-person panel ~so
shows that residents who have h1gher levels of ammonmm
perfluorooctanoate - contmonly referred to as C8 - also
tend to have elevated cholesterol levels.
·
The· study is part of a class-action lawsuit that claims
water supplies were contaminated by C8 releases from
DuPont's Washington Works Plant near Parkersburg along
the Ohio border.
·
·
The study found that Parkersburg-area residents had an
average of nearly six times more CS in their blood than
those in the rest of the country. It also found no link
between CS exposure and diabetes.
DuPont plans t.o phase out the use of C8 by 2015.

family.! urge each of you to
volunteer for something that
is close to your ·heart and
make a "difference in your
community." The '·"heart
that gives gathers."
·
JoAnn Crisp

cancer risk. Countries with
a·higher intake of fat, especially animal fat, have a
higher incidence of breast
cancer. The American diet,
of course .. is centered on
animal products , which tend
to be h1gh in fat' and low in
Racine
important .
nutrients .
Consuming high-fat dairy
products may increase
breast cancer risk because
Dear Editor:
of high levels of the bovine
O&lt;.:tober is Breast Cancer progesterone · hormone,
AWareness Month and as according to a study prewomen across the ·nation sented last December at the
are pinning their pink rib- annual San Antonio Breast'
bons, they're also looking Cancer Symposium . .
to · learn more ,.about this
But eating a plant-based
I ife-threatening disease diet rich in fruits, vegetaand how to prevent it. As a bles, and other low-fat vegdietitian , I think women etarian foods could help
need more information on women m the battle against
how they can ' make healthy breast cancer - while also
lifestyl e
and
dietary reducing the risk of heart
cha nges to reduce the risk · disease, diabetes and other
of b1'east cancer.
chronic di ~eases. This is
The foods girls eat during information every woman
childhood and throughout deserves to have .
Jennifer K. Reilly, RD
their lives ap£Car to have ali
Washington D:C.
important effect on breast

Good to know

.

'

..

·· Raises rrom Page At
"'

'

lllsciplinary action in the
. Pomeroy Police Department.
The Ohio Sunshine Law
now states the motion "must
be speCific to the matters to
be discussed ." The law goes
on to read: "For instance, if
the purpose of the executive
sessron is to discuss .one of
the personnel-related matters
listed iii the (?Crsonnel exct:etion the motion must specify

one or more of the listed purposes it is going to discuss,
1.e., 'lo discuss the dismissal
of a public emplo~ee.' It is
not sufficient to move for an
executive. session to discuss
·
'personnel."'
Attending the executive
session were Musser. council, Clerk Treasurer Kathy
Hysell and Pomeroy Chief
of Police Mark E. Proffitt.

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

www.mydailysentinel.coin

BY JEANNINE AVERSA
AP ECONOMICS WRITER

·---

WASHINGTON - Big
banks started falling in line
Tuesday behind a rejiggered
bailout plan that will have
the government forking
over as .much as $250 billion in exchange for pjlrtial
ownership - putting the
world's bastion of capitalism and free markets
squarely in the banking
business.
Some early signs were
hopeful for the .latest in a
flurry of radical efforts to
save the nation's . financial
system: Credit Wl\5 a bit easier to conie by. And stocks
were down but not alarm- ·
ingly so after Monday's
stratospheric leap.
The new plan, President
Bush declared, is · "noi
mtended to take over the free
market but to preserve it."
It's all about cash and
confidence and convincing
banks to lend money more
freely again. Those are all
included."
Treasury move aimed al getting credcritical ingredients to get- Secretary Henry Paulson it tlowing again.
ting financial markets to
said in announcing the iniBesides the $250 billion
function more nonnall y and tiative. "Yet the alternative . this year on the stock purreviving the economy.
· of leaving businesses and chases, Bush said Tuesday
The big question: Will it consumers without access that an additional $100 bilwork?
to financing is totally unac- .Jion would be needed in
.T here was a mix of hope ceptable ."
connection with coveting
and ,skepticism on thill front.
Whether the $250 billion bad assets, Tpat would
Unprecedented steps recent- will l:t sufficient to encour- leave $350 billion ·of . the
ly taken - including hefty age banks to lend again 'is $700 billion program, preinterest rate reductions by hard to tell, said Anil sumably to be spent by the
the Federal Reserve and Kashyap, professor of eco- next president.
other major central banks in nomics and finance· at the
Economists as well as
a coordinated assault just University of Chicago's both
Democratic
and
last week'- have failed to Graduate School of Business. Republican lawmakers on
break through the credit clog The Treasury DeP.artment Capitolr Hill had urged
and. the panicky mind-set arrived at the $250 b1llion fig- Treasury to first move forgripping mvestors on Wall ure after consulting with ward on the capital injection
Street and around the globe. banking regulators.
plan, arguing that was a
The Dow Jones industri"This plan will work if we more effective way to battle
als declined 77 points on wind up with everybody 1he financial crisis.
Tuesday after piling up their pretty well capitalized,"
The. first bank to take
biggest point gain ever on · l&lt;ashyap said. "But if it advantage of the program
Monda~
on news of doesn ' t reach that point, · was Bank of New York
Europe s rescue plan and in we'll be back in soup down Mellon which announced it
anticipation of the United the road.':
· would sell $3 billion in preStates' new measures.
The government is count- ferred shares to the Treasury.
lnitiall y the U.S . govern- ing on banks not to just · Other·banks initially particiment will pour $125 billion clutch onto the cash, which paring include Goldman
into nine major banks with aggravated the credit crisis Sachs Group Inc., Morgan
the hope that they will use to begin with.
Stanley, JPMorgan Chase,
the money to rebuild th~ir
. "The needs of our econo- Bank of America Corp. ,
reServes and to increase my require ihat our fiilan- including
the soon-tolending ,to cons1,1mers. and cia] institutions not take this acquired Merrill Lynch ;
businesses. Another $125 new capi!al to hoard it, but Cillgroup Inc .. Wells. Fargo
billion will be made avail- to deploy it," Paulson said. ·&amp;Co., and State Street Corp.
able this year to other banks
Treasury switched gears
The government's cash
- if they need it - for cash deciding to first use a chunk · infusions are attractive to
mfusions.
of the $700 billion from the banks because they are havIn retuql, the $overnment recently enacted financial ing trouble getting money
will get owne~h1p stakes in bailout package to pay for from elsewhere. Skittish
the financial institutions. taking partial ownership investors have cut them off,
Banks, meanwhile, will stakes in banks, rather than moving their money into
have to accept limitations on using the inoney to buy rot- -safer Treasury securities,
executives' compensation. · ten debts ·from financial Financial in~titutions are
"Governme·n t owning a institutions. The gove.rn- hoarding whatever cash they
stake in any private U.S. · ment said it still intends to · have rather than lending itlo
company is objectionable to buy the bad mortgages and each other or customers.
TWo other initiative also
most Americans me other toxic assets, another

President
Bush delivers
rem11rks on
the economy
in the Rose
Garden of
the White
House in
Washington ,
Tuesday.
AP photo

were unveiled to stem the
credit crisis: The Federal
Deposit Insurance Corp.
launched an insurance fund
to temporarily guarantee
new issues of bank debt ful ly protecting the money
even if the institution fails·..
And , the FDIC will st3l"t
providing unlimited deposit
insurance for non-interest
bearing accounts, which ar.e
mainly used by business&lt;tS
to cover payrolls and other
expenses. Frequently these
accounts exceed the current
$250,000 insurance limit, sp
the expanded insurance
should discourage nervollll
companies from pulling
their monev out. Both of
these effo.fts would be
financed by fees charged to
participating financial insti- ·
tutions ~ not · money from
the bailout package.
Even if the new plan
works, economists caution
that it could ·take years
before locked up lending
returns to normal.
.
The difference betweep
the rate at which banks lend
to other banks and the rate
at which they buy U.S. goV:.
ernment debt has narrowe..t,
but remains near a 25-year
high - a glaring sign that
there's still fear in the ·market. But there was a hopef4l
glimmer elsew-here: A cru,cial short-term, bank-tobank lending rate called the
London Interbank Offered
Rate, or Libor, inched down
Tuesday. That rate is important because a lot of coni·
mercia! loans and manv
adjustable-rate mortgage's
are tied td it.

Obama, McCain seek leader's image in final debate
over the past month·. Obama
has built leads natjonally
and in key states as the turWASHINGTON
,
moil has returned the
Barack Obama and John nation's focus to the unpopMcCain will both pursue the u.lar Bush 's policies. Now.
image of a strong leader in the burden is on McCain to
troublesome
economic , try to reverse his slide.
Tonight· ~
debate
at ·
times as they · meet tonight
Hofstra
University
in
.
for their third and final presHempstead, N.Y. , is slated .
idential debate .
· Their face-off comes as to focus ·entirely on the
Obama widens his lead in economy and domestic politypically Democratic states cy. The candidates will be
and campaigns with ·an air seated at a table with moderof . optimism about his ator Bob Schieffer of CBS.
Both presidential conprospects, while McCain
seeks a way to gain grou.nd tenders have used the prev1and finds himself defending ous debates to make and
traditionally . Republican remake their main camstates with less than three paign points. frequ~ntly
sidestepping direct quesweeks left in the.race.
''We cannot spend the lions s'u ch as how they
next four years as we have would have to scale back ·
spent much of the last eight: iheir long lists of campaign
waiting for our luck to promises in light of the ecochange. ... As president I nomic crisis.
Advisers for each candiintend to act, quickly and
date
say he will use the final
decisively," McCain said
Tuesday in battleground · debate to lay out his vision
Pennsylvania . There, ' he for the count!)' and promote
unveiled new economic his economic policies while
proposals and previewed a drawing differences with
possible debate strategy:
argue that be would lx: aifferent from Bush and better
than Obama .
One day earlier in swing
state Ohio, Obama outlined
his own economic plan and
showed off his own pitch.
He .suggested that McCain
was more of the same and
• FR1E Wf' T.c~Wcil hpport
tha.l putting ·a Democrat in
• kOm Meueglng .- yru IJJddy ~ttl~
charge was the only way to
•10t-mlllldlhutlllllh WtbtneiM!
fix the economy's woes: "It
• Cullom~ Ptge • I'IIWI, wu'tler &amp; morel
will take new direction . It
AI!l ..
'
will take new leadership in
( Surf up 10
Washington. It will take a
Sign Up OnliMI www.~Htt.com
real change in the policies '
· and politics of the last eight
BY LIZ

StDOTt

ASSOCIATED PRESS WAITER

a

years.':

6X[!'.f!![!J

.

The economic crisis has '
transformed the campa1gn

his opponent.
Character attacks - subtie or not - a-lso iould
occur.
Obama has increasingly
labeled McCain "erratic"
and ';lurching" during the
economic crisis. The words
suggest unsteadiness on the
part of the 72-year-old. fourterm senator.
The Democrat 's campaign released a pre-debate
memo Tuesday that argued
McCain was " ill-equipped"
to lead du"ring this crisis.
saying his response "has
careened, sometimes changing course within the span
of a single day."
·
McCain has accused
Obama of lying about his
association with 1960s radical William · Ayers , a
founder of the vio lent antiwar
group
Weather ·
Underground . Obama was 8
years old when the Weather
Underground
claimed .
responsibility for a serie·s of
bombings . Now a professor
in Chicago. Ayers hosted a
meet-the-candtdate session

.

at his home fo r Obama as he
prepared to run for the state
Senate. Later. the tw.o
worked with .th e same charity .md social-service orga.
nizations in Chicago .
McCain has softened that
attack on the campaign trail
in recent days. though not in
his TV an~ radio ads:
His campaign assailed
Obama 's on Tuesday for its
'"failure to ex plain how it is
that Barack Obama carried
on a decade -long friendship
with a man who sought to
iopple th e U.S. government
through violence."
·

~nJerson '.Mc'DanM

·'Fumra(
?feme.
.,
~--~"···

'

~·

Adam McDaniel
&amp; Jnine~ Andersc:m
DIRECTORS

Pre-Anwtftmelll

Middlepon
992·5141

,.llmtrint

Pomeroy
992-5-14-1

... ~.

OUf-

~~--'i'

hav•

114~

•

h-

•w.--•
pt'OW'Id4ng
tar 11h• ,.,..., , W•
In ttJ• horm I"MAr-.no:•lndu•h-'11' throu gtu,.., t Ohio.
~

ln •u~..,~

••~

P'I,&lt;W .

oo .., ,...,..., r •

.,.I!N_ ""- •flO'

Reed &amp; Baur Insurance Agency
220 East Main Street
Pomeroy, OH 45769
www.reedbaur.com
jdillon@reedbaur.com

.

~

�r

PageA4

OPINION

The Daily Sentinel
·- '

Wednesday, Octo~r 15, 200 s

Wednesday, October 15,2008

·The Daily Sentinel
1 f1 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio
(740) 992-2156 ·FAX (740) 992·2157
www.mydallysentlnel.com

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Dan Goodrich
Publisher
Charlene Hoeflicll
General Manager-News Editor

Congress shall make no law respecting an
establishment of religion, or prohibiting the
free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom .
of speech, or of the press; or the right of the
people peaceably to assemble, and to petition
the Government for a redres~ ofgrievances.
- The Rrat Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

TODAY IN HISTORY
Today is Wednesday, Oct . 15 , the 289th day of 2008.
There are 77 days left in the year.
. Today's Highlight in History: On Oct. 15, 1917, Dutch
dancer Mata Hari , convicted of spying for the Germans,
was executed by a French firing squad outside Pari.s.
On this date: In 1858. the seventh and final debate
between senatorial ,candidates Abr~ham Lincoln and .
Stephen Douglas took place in Alton, Ill.
In 1860, 11-year-old Grace Bedell of Westfield, N .Y.1
·wrote a letter to presidential candidate Abraham Lincoln,
suggesting he could improve his appearance by letting his
whiskers grow.
. In 1908, economist John Kenneth Galbraith was born in
Ontario, Canada.
· In 1914, the Clayton Antitrust Act was signed intp law by
President Wilson.
• In 1928, the German dirigible Graf Zeppelin landed in
Lakehurst, N.J. , completing its first commercial tlight
··
across the Atlantic.
In 1945, the former premier of Vichy France, Pierre
Laval, was executed for treason.
,
In 1946.Nazi war criminal Hermann Goering fatally poisoned himself hours before he was to have been executed.
'" In 1964, it was announced that Soviet leader Nikita S.
Khrushchev had been removed from office.
· In 1969. peace demonstrators staged ,activities across the
country, including a candlelight march around the White
House, as part of a moratorium against the Vietnam War.
In 1976, in the first debate of its "ind between vice presidential nominees, Democrat Walter F. Mondale and
·Republican Bob Dole faced off in Houston.
· Today's Birthdays: Jazz musician Freddy Cole is 77.
Singer Barry McGuire is 73. · Actress-director Penny
Marshall is 66. Singer-musician Richard Carpenter is .62.
Tennis player Roscoe Tanner is 57. Singer Tiro Jackson is 55.
Britain's Duchess of York, Sarah. Ferguson, is 49. Chef
Emeril Lagasse is 49. Rock musician Mark Reznicek is 46.
.Actress Vanessa Marcil is 40. Singer-actress-TV host Paige
Davis is 39. Singer Eric Benet is 38. Rhythm-and-blues
singer Ginuwine is 38. Christian singer-actress Jaci
Velasquez is 2.9. Rhythm-and-blues singer Keyshia Cole is
27. Actor Vincent Martella ("Everybody Hates Chris") is 16.
Thought for Today: "The conventional view serves to
P.rotect us from the painful job of thinking." - )ohn
Kenneth Galbraith, Canadian-born American economist
(1908-2006).

Chailes Sealtes

Court's Gonzales v. Carhart nativ
to abortion) will
Speaking to a group of·
ruling . which affirmed the increase
rather
than
young Catholics in New
feucral
partial-birth
abordecrease
abortions
in
the
York almost one month
United
States.
tion
ban
.
before Election Day,l had a
"The election · of Barack
Barack Obama supports
harsh awakening as jarring
of
abortion.
Obama
would endanger the
federal
funding
as a shor of Wild Turkey
Kathryn
Bilrack
Obama
opposes
lives
of
thousa~ds o,!
I0 l. Weeks befort\!!_9.4lg to
· the Hyde Amendment, unborn
children.
Lopez
booth ,
the
polling
1
which
resrrids
use
of.
taxUniversity
of
Alabam~
proAmericans do not know
payer
dollars
for
supporting
fessor
Michael
New
tells
Burack Obama.
abortion.
me. "If he follows through
In a packed bar, I ,was
Obama
called
on
his pledge t~ s1gn th.e
Barack
discussing the contentious
not have the same rights as pregnancy "punishment."
Freedom
of Chm~c Act, It
question of whether a a child carried to·, term .
Barack Obanm believes would likely nullify many
Catholic
can .support That , in and of itself - his
that
the 1:ight to have an state-le vel pro-life laws that
Obama for president: I opposition to illinoi s' Born
;•hnrtion
i ~ a matter of equal the pro-life moveme~.t has
highlighted the priority Alive Infants Protection
worked hard to enact.
that defending innocent Act, which sought lo man- rights fQr women.
Barack Obama wants to
Calculations from the
human lives takes in these date safeguards for such
to
criresults
of a 2004 Heritage .
stop
federal
funding
considerations, according unwanted children - is a
. Foundat10~ stu\ly, authored
to the Church. I then went ·heavy obstacle to over- sis-pregnancy centers.
Barack Obama :does not by ·New, md1cate that the
through Obama 's rad.ical come for those Obama fan s
I he
Pregnant r~peal of '\ll state-level_pub- ,
record on abort.ion. The jolt concerned about the future · support
came after I finished and dignity of human life . Women Support Act, a pro- lie fundmg restncuons ,
speaking, when one by He . defended infanticide. ject of Democrats for Life, parental-involvement laws
·one , people told me they That alone would be meant to reduce abortions and informed-consent laws
had no idea Obama was so enough to keep me from by strengthening the social would result in 125,000
radical.
voting for him . But, as it safety net. This is important ·· more abortwns every· year.
They were shocked. And happens. it 's not the only because it exposes as a lie a The repeal of federal protalking
point life laws might well . push
so was I.
ethical affront the Obama . mnjor
We've been understand~ campaign has committed, employed by those who the numbers up .even h1gher.
You can fall m love w1th
ably focused on the econo- and far fro~ the only · argue that pro- lifers can
support
Obama.
It
shows
the
romantic idea of a black
my lately. so much so that offense to human rights
1t's as if there are no other that the Democratic presi- much of the left's patroniz- man becoming president of
ISsues. But there are. And in dential candidate supports . ing rhetoric to be nothing the United States , but m a
but rank deceit. House country where black women
the time we have left, voters
Care for some others?
Speaker
Nancy Pelosi - a have abortions at five times
must consider them . .
Barack Obama has told
Though for Catholics, in the Planned ·Parenthood Catholic who developed her the rate of white women, he
the. end. it's up to the indi- Action Fund that the first own .theology to justify her i.s a profile in cowardiCe. In
vidual, through prayer, to thing he will sign as presi- abortion support - and a l an~Lw.~ere we . have
decide upon political mat- dent will be the Freedom of Senate Majority Leader devotei!"ffiirselves to the
ters, my conclusion is that Choice Act , whi.ch will Harry Reid .have not pursuit of life , this is unac1t would ·be a very tough sweep away limits on abor- allowed this important act ceptable. Vote as if lives
to even caine to a vote.
depend on you.
thing for a follower of th~ timi - state and federal pope to back the senator I
don't
think
I"m
unreaThey do.
including restrictions on
impossible,
· actuall y. ·government funding · of sonnble in thinkin g that
(Kathryn Lopez is the ediObama has stood _on the abortion and laws · protect - sweeping away all abor- tor · of National Review
lloor of the Illinois state- ing anti-aboaion health care tion ·limits and funding Online (wwwnationalre- ·
house and argued that a providers.
.ahonion with federal tax view.com). She can be conbaby born alive , due to a
Barack Obama has con- d'Ollars (while defunding tacted ·at klopez@ nationalthe
botched abortion should demned
Supreme centers that provide alter, review:com.)

MIDDLEPORT - Charles Searles, Middleport, .passed
away on Monday, Oct. 13,2008, at Overbrook Nursing and
·
Rehabilitatio:n Center, Mid~lepon.
He IS SUfVIved by h1s w1fe Mary, four ~ldren, several
gr~ndchlldren , a .brother Carl and Eileen Searles.
Mtddleport, and a Sister, Kathryn Bur.ton, Middleport.
At the request of Mr. Searles there will be no service or
visitation. Burial will be conducted at Gravel Hill
Cemetery in Cheshire. Arrangements are being handled by
the A~der~on McDaniel Funeral Home in Midt:llep&lt;irt.
Onhne condolences may be sent to www.ande!'Sonmcdan1el.com ,
·
·

Deaths .
James Dean Taylor
POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. - James Dean "Jim" Taylor
died Friday, Oct. 10. Calling hours ' at the Crqw-Hussell
Funeral Home in Point Pleasant will be Saturday, 0&lt;.:1..18,
from 2 to 4 p'.m. Graveside service will be a private affair.
An online guest registry is available at www.crowhussellfh.com. A full obituary will appear in Thursday's edition of the Point Plel!Sant Register.

Local Briefs
Trick or treat
POMEROY - Residents on New Crew Road will participate in ·Porneroy's Trick or Treat.
·
.·
The comm.unity of Danville will have trick or treat at 6
p .m. on Oct. 30. Residents participating should turn on
their porch lights.
.·

Smorgasbord
,LONG BOTTOM, Long Bottqm Community
Association will hold an all-you-can-eat smor~asbord dinne·r on Saturday at the Long Bottom Cornmumty Building.
The cost is $7 for adults and $3.50 for children.

Sen. Voinovich visiting
POMEROY . - Sen. George Voinovich (R·Ohio) will
visit the Meigs· County Republican Headquarter~ at 3:30
p.m. tomorrow for an informal reception.,Refreshments
will be served. The event is open to the public.

THIS
IS A

· Rio solicits part-time faculty
POMEROY - The University of Rio Grande is taking
applications for plirt-tiine faculty me!Jibers for the spring
semester of academic year 2008-09 for .the Meigs campus.
· Instructors are needetl in the areas of biology, zology,
environmental science and history. A bachelor's degree 1s
required, with a master's degree preferred.
All candidates should submit a letter of interest, current
resume and the names and addresses of three references.
Resumes will be reviewed as received. Information tnust .be
submitted to Phyllis Mason, SPIHR, director of Huiiil\ll
Resources, University of Rio Grande, .P.O. Box 500, Rio
Grande, Ohio 45674.'e-rnailpinason@rio.edu.EEO/AA
Employer.

BAD

SIGN.

~IDYMfNT
OfFICE

Final day for stimulus payment tiling
POME.ROY - Today is the final day residents in Ohio
and West Virginia .can file for the. 200~ stimulus payme~t,
accordmg ·to a release from Enc Enckson, IRS Med1a
Relations. Questions may be directed to him at 404.-3367884 all day Wednesday. IRS.gov contains all information
and details about filing for the rebate.

Elections letters advisory
Letters dealing with the Nov. 4 election are welcome and
will be accepted up until 5 p.m. on Friliay, Oct. 24. Letters
received after that deadline will not be published. Letters
.Yhould be 300 words in length or less and must address
issues. f)OI personalities. Letrers endorsing local or national candidates, or col!taining personal a/lacks, will not be
accepted.

.

Meigs FFA fniit sales under way
POMEROY - The annual fruit sales program conducted annually by the Meigs FFA and used to finance programs and trips by the group is now under way and ~ill
continue through Nov. 3.
&lt;
The studenis are selling half and full boxes of navel oranges,
'tangelos, Hamlin oranges ,' red grapefruit, Golden Delicious
apples, Red Delicious apples, Fuji app\lls, and a mixed box.
The fruit will be dehvered the week of Dec. 3. To place
an order or for more information contact Ronald Vlasak or
Mic" \'Ieber at 992-2185 or any local FFA member.
· Also participating in the fruit sales are SkillsUSA mem·
bers , advisor Linda Yonker.

LETTERS TO THE '
EDITOR
Letters to the edlror are welcome. They should be less
than 300 words. All lerters are subject 10 editing, must be
signed, and include address and telephone number. No
unsigf)ed letrers will be published. Letters should be in
.good taste, addressing issues, not personalities. Lerters of
thanks to organizations and individuals will not be accept.e d for publication.

'

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It has been my privilege
to serve as chairperson of
the Meigs County Relay .for
Life Committee for the past .
nine years. The experience
of helping put an event like
this together is one of great
pride and joy. There is an
unbelievable amount of
work that goes into 'Relay.
The committee is like no
other around in their compission and diligence to
make sure the Relay is one
of the best in Ohio and this
year, even with the rain. was
no exception.
.
The event raised a c~~et of
$4 7,538 for the American
Cancer Society to educate
the publi~ about cancer and
lo fund research and free
programs such as Reach to
Recovery, Look Good ... Feel
Better, and Hope Lodge.

b:moc~

Charlene Hoeflich. Ext. 12

news0mydaily98111inel.com

Dear Editor.

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Study show's C8 levels
linked to high cholesterol

OUR READERS' VIEWS

(USPS 213-960)
Ohio vanec!Jubllshlng

Poltmnter: Send address

•

Obituaries

The Obama abortion men ....__--,...
e

'53.55
' 107.10
'214.21

•

just to name a few. This
year's event was dedicated
to the memory of.Ferman E.
Moore. who battled cancer
and played a big part in
starting, Relay in Meigs
County. Moore's widow
Rae catered the survivor's
,receptioq at Relay which
was not only for those survivors but for their spouses
and significant other.
The focus of Relay 'is the
cancer survivor who takes
the open in¥ lap of the event,
walkmg With other indi victuals who have faced cancer
and won and are proud of it.
Around the Relay track this
year there were 300 lumi- ·
naries · purchased for survivors and those who have
lost their bairle with cancer.
Cancer touches each of us
every day in some way. We
can all "make a difference t
The committee works hard
·all year long for that one
moment in time when we
can make a difference to a
cancer surv1vor and their

CHARLESTON, W.Va. (AP) - A study shows MidOhio Valley residents have far _g_reater blood levels of a
chemical used to make the nonstick product ·Teflon compar~d wiih the average American.
'
The study released Tuesday b~ a three-person panel ~so
shows that residents who have h1gher levels of ammonmm
perfluorooctanoate - contmonly referred to as C8 - also
tend to have elevated cholesterol levels.
·
The· study is part of a class-action lawsuit that claims
water supplies were contaminated by C8 releases from
DuPont's Washington Works Plant near Parkersburg along
the Ohio border.
·
·
The study found that Parkersburg-area residents had an
average of nearly six times more CS in their blood than
those in the rest of the country. It also found no link
between CS exposure and diabetes.
DuPont plans t.o phase out the use of C8 by 2015.

family.! urge each of you to
volunteer for something that
is close to your ·heart and
make a "difference in your
community." The '·"heart
that gives gathers."
·
JoAnn Crisp

cancer risk. Countries with
a·higher intake of fat, especially animal fat, have a
higher incidence of breast
cancer. The American diet,
of course .. is centered on
animal products , which tend
to be h1gh in fat' and low in
Racine
important .
nutrients .
Consuming high-fat dairy
products may increase
breast cancer risk because
Dear Editor:
of high levels of the bovine
O&lt;.:tober is Breast Cancer progesterone · hormone,
AWareness Month and as according to a study prewomen across the ·nation sented last December at the
are pinning their pink rib- annual San Antonio Breast'
bons, they're also looking Cancer Symposium . .
to · learn more ,.about this
But eating a plant-based
I ife-threatening disease diet rich in fruits, vegetaand how to prevent it. As a bles, and other low-fat vegdietitian , I think women etarian foods could help
need more information on women m the battle against
how they can ' make healthy breast cancer - while also
lifestyl e
and
dietary reducing the risk of heart
cha nges to reduce the risk · disease, diabetes and other
of b1'east cancer.
chronic di ~eases. This is
The foods girls eat during information every woman
childhood and throughout deserves to have .
Jennifer K. Reilly, RD
their lives ap£Car to have ali
Washington D:C.
important effect on breast

Good to know

.

'

..

·· Raises rrom Page At
"'

'

lllsciplinary action in the
. Pomeroy Police Department.
The Ohio Sunshine Law
now states the motion "must
be speCific to the matters to
be discussed ." The law goes
on to read: "For instance, if
the purpose of the executive
sessron is to discuss .one of
the personnel-related matters
listed iii the (?Crsonnel exct:etion the motion must specify

one or more of the listed purposes it is going to discuss,
1.e., 'lo discuss the dismissal
of a public emplo~ee.' It is
not sufficient to move for an
executive. session to discuss
·
'personnel."'
Attending the executive
session were Musser. council, Clerk Treasurer Kathy
Hysell and Pomeroy Chief
of Police Mark E. Proffitt.

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

www.mydailysentinel.coin

BY JEANNINE AVERSA
AP ECONOMICS WRITER

·---

WASHINGTON - Big
banks started falling in line
Tuesday behind a rejiggered
bailout plan that will have
the government forking
over as .much as $250 billion in exchange for pjlrtial
ownership - putting the
world's bastion of capitalism and free markets
squarely in the banking
business.
Some early signs were
hopeful for the .latest in a
flurry of radical efforts to
save the nation's . financial
system: Credit Wl\5 a bit easier to conie by. And stocks
were down but not alarm- ·
ingly so after Monday's
stratospheric leap.
The new plan, President
Bush declared, is · "noi
mtended to take over the free
market but to preserve it."
It's all about cash and
confidence and convincing
banks to lend money more
freely again. Those are all
included."
Treasury move aimed al getting credcritical ingredients to get- Secretary Henry Paulson it tlowing again.
ting financial markets to
said in announcing the iniBesides the $250 billion
function more nonnall y and tiative. "Yet the alternative . this year on the stock purreviving the economy.
· of leaving businesses and chases, Bush said Tuesday
The big question: Will it consumers without access that an additional $100 bilwork?
to financing is totally unac- .Jion would be needed in
.T here was a mix of hope ceptable ."
connection with coveting
and ,skepticism on thill front.
Whether the $250 billion bad assets, Tpat would
Unprecedented steps recent- will l:t sufficient to encour- leave $350 billion ·of . the
ly taken - including hefty age banks to lend again 'is $700 billion program, preinterest rate reductions by hard to tell, said Anil sumably to be spent by the
the Federal Reserve and Kashyap, professor of eco- next president.
other major central banks in nomics and finance· at the
Economists as well as
a coordinated assault just University of Chicago's both
Democratic
and
last week'- have failed to Graduate School of Business. Republican lawmakers on
break through the credit clog The Treasury DeP.artment Capitolr Hill had urged
and. the panicky mind-set arrived at the $250 b1llion fig- Treasury to first move forgripping mvestors on Wall ure after consulting with ward on the capital injection
Street and around the globe. banking regulators.
plan, arguing that was a
The Dow Jones industri"This plan will work if we more effective way to battle
als declined 77 points on wind up with everybody 1he financial crisis.
Tuesday after piling up their pretty well capitalized,"
The. first bank to take
biggest point gain ever on · l&lt;ashyap said. "But if it advantage of the program
Monda~
on news of doesn ' t reach that point, · was Bank of New York
Europe s rescue plan and in we'll be back in soup down Mellon which announced it
anticipation of the United the road.':
· would sell $3 billion in preStates' new measures.
The government is count- ferred shares to the Treasury.
lnitiall y the U.S . govern- ing on banks not to just · Other·banks initially particiment will pour $125 billion clutch onto the cash, which paring include Goldman
into nine major banks with aggravated the credit crisis Sachs Group Inc., Morgan
the hope that they will use to begin with.
Stanley, JPMorgan Chase,
the money to rebuild th~ir
. "The needs of our econo- Bank of America Corp. ,
reServes and to increase my require ihat our fiilan- including
the soon-tolending ,to cons1,1mers. and cia] institutions not take this acquired Merrill Lynch ;
businesses. Another $125 new capi!al to hoard it, but Cillgroup Inc .. Wells. Fargo
billion will be made avail- to deploy it," Paulson said. ·&amp;Co., and State Street Corp.
able this year to other banks
Treasury switched gears
The government's cash
- if they need it - for cash deciding to first use a chunk · infusions are attractive to
mfusions.
of the $700 billion from the banks because they are havIn retuql, the $overnment recently enacted financial ing trouble getting money
will get owne~h1p stakes in bailout package to pay for from elsewhere. Skittish
the financial institutions. taking partial ownership investors have cut them off,
Banks, meanwhile, will stakes in banks, rather than moving their money into
have to accept limitations on using the inoney to buy rot- -safer Treasury securities,
executives' compensation. · ten debts ·from financial Financial in~titutions are
"Governme·n t owning a institutions. The gove.rn- hoarding whatever cash they
stake in any private U.S. · ment said it still intends to · have rather than lending itlo
company is objectionable to buy the bad mortgages and each other or customers.
TWo other initiative also
most Americans me other toxic assets, another

President
Bush delivers
rem11rks on
the economy
in the Rose
Garden of
the White
House in
Washington ,
Tuesday.
AP photo

were unveiled to stem the
credit crisis: The Federal
Deposit Insurance Corp.
launched an insurance fund
to temporarily guarantee
new issues of bank debt ful ly protecting the money
even if the institution fails·..
And , the FDIC will st3l"t
providing unlimited deposit
insurance for non-interest
bearing accounts, which ar.e
mainly used by business&lt;tS
to cover payrolls and other
expenses. Frequently these
accounts exceed the current
$250,000 insurance limit, sp
the expanded insurance
should discourage nervollll
companies from pulling
their monev out. Both of
these effo.fts would be
financed by fees charged to
participating financial insti- ·
tutions ~ not · money from
the bailout package.
Even if the new plan
works, economists caution
that it could ·take years
before locked up lending
returns to normal.
.
The difference betweep
the rate at which banks lend
to other banks and the rate
at which they buy U.S. goV:.
ernment debt has narrowe..t,
but remains near a 25-year
high - a glaring sign that
there's still fear in the ·market. But there was a hopef4l
glimmer elsew-here: A cru,cial short-term, bank-tobank lending rate called the
London Interbank Offered
Rate, or Libor, inched down
Tuesday. That rate is important because a lot of coni·
mercia! loans and manv
adjustable-rate mortgage's
are tied td it.

Obama, McCain seek leader's image in final debate
over the past month·. Obama
has built leads natjonally
and in key states as the turWASHINGTON
,
moil has returned the
Barack Obama and John nation's focus to the unpopMcCain will both pursue the u.lar Bush 's policies. Now.
image of a strong leader in the burden is on McCain to
troublesome
economic , try to reverse his slide.
Tonight· ~
debate
at ·
times as they · meet tonight
Hofstra
University
in
.
for their third and final presHempstead, N.Y. , is slated .
idential debate .
· Their face-off comes as to focus ·entirely on the
Obama widens his lead in economy and domestic politypically Democratic states cy. The candidates will be
and campaigns with ·an air seated at a table with moderof . optimism about his ator Bob Schieffer of CBS.
Both presidential conprospects, while McCain
seeks a way to gain grou.nd tenders have used the prev1and finds himself defending ous debates to make and
traditionally . Republican remake their main camstates with less than three paign points. frequ~ntly
sidestepping direct quesweeks left in the.race.
''We cannot spend the lions s'u ch as how they
next four years as we have would have to scale back ·
spent much of the last eight: iheir long lists of campaign
waiting for our luck to promises in light of the ecochange. ... As president I nomic crisis.
Advisers for each candiintend to act, quickly and
date
say he will use the final
decisively," McCain said
Tuesday in battleground · debate to lay out his vision
Pennsylvania . There, ' he for the count!)' and promote
unveiled new economic his economic policies while
proposals and previewed a drawing differences with
possible debate strategy:
argue that be would lx: aifferent from Bush and better
than Obama .
One day earlier in swing
state Ohio, Obama outlined
his own economic plan and
showed off his own pitch.
He .suggested that McCain
was more of the same and
• FR1E Wf' T.c~Wcil hpport
tha.l putting ·a Democrat in
• kOm Meueglng .- yru IJJddy ~ttl~
charge was the only way to
•10t-mlllldlhutlllllh WtbtneiM!
fix the economy's woes: "It
• Cullom~ Ptge • I'IIWI, wu'tler &amp; morel
will take new direction . It
AI!l ..
'
will take new leadership in
( Surf up 10
Washington. It will take a
Sign Up OnliMI www.~Htt.com
real change in the policies '
· and politics of the last eight
BY LIZ

StDOTt

ASSOCIATED PRESS WAITER

a

years.':

6X[!'.f!![!J

.

The economic crisis has '
transformed the campa1gn

his opponent.
Character attacks - subtie or not - a-lso iould
occur.
Obama has increasingly
labeled McCain "erratic"
and ';lurching" during the
economic crisis. The words
suggest unsteadiness on the
part of the 72-year-old. fourterm senator.
The Democrat 's campaign released a pre-debate
memo Tuesday that argued
McCain was " ill-equipped"
to lead du"ring this crisis.
saying his response "has
careened, sometimes changing course within the span
of a single day."
·
McCain has accused
Obama of lying about his
association with 1960s radical William · Ayers , a
founder of the vio lent antiwar
group
Weather ·
Underground . Obama was 8
years old when the Weather
Underground
claimed .
responsibility for a serie·s of
bombings . Now a professor
in Chicago. Ayers hosted a
meet-the-candtdate session

.

at his home fo r Obama as he
prepared to run for the state
Senate. Later. the tw.o
worked with .th e same charity .md social-service orga.
nizations in Chicago .
McCain has softened that
attack on the campaign trail
in recent days. though not in
his TV an~ radio ads:
His campaign assailed
Obama 's on Tuesday for its
'"failure to ex plain how it is
that Barack Obama carried
on a decade -long friendship
with a man who sought to
iopple th e U.S. government
through violence."
·

~nJerson '.Mc'DanM

·'Fumra(
?feme.
.,
~--~"···

'

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&amp; Jnine~ Andersc:m
DIRECTORS

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.

~

�'

•
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, Page A6 • The Daily Sentinel

c·

Bl

The Daily Sentinel
prep football n~tebook, Page 82
football computer ratings, Page 82

Wednesday, October 15,2008

'OM!oROY - A schedule of upcoming high
sporting events involving
And Oallia counties .

Woclnetdty Dctgbtr 15

02 Volleyball
Mariena at (2) Meigs. 6 p.m.
Galli~

Academy at (1) Uniolo, 6 p.m.

Tburtda)! October 16
D4 Volleyblill - secuanal finals

Miller at (2) Ea!rtem, 6 p.m.
Pike Eastern at (4) SOuth Gallia., 6
O~S&lt;&gt;uthe&lt;n

at (3) Waterford, 6 p.m0

StumtAY

Octpbtr 11

03 Volleyball

Sectional line\

Nelsonville-York at River Valley, 4

Crou Country
)lv~:~~ 11-111

Jn

District meets at
of Rio Grande, 10 a.m.
SOccer - ACSI Tourn.
II ChrfStlan at Granville, TBA

fans
dump tickets
. CINCINNATI (AP) Disappointed fans of the
winless Cincinnati Bengals
are .trying to unload thousands of tickets for remain- ·
ihg home games, many of
them well below face value.
· The online ticket agency
StubHub .com has 3 ,000
tickets' for Sunday's game
against the Pittsburgh
Steelers·. At least 4,000 tickets are available for each of
the remaining games.
Some sellers don't care
about making ·a profit . .
There are $64 tickets priced
as low as $24.
The Bengals are 0-6 after
losing to the New York Jets
last weekend.
Longtime fan Steve Carr
of Cincinnati says it's gotten so he can't even bear to
watch the. team on TV. .
Coach Marvin Lewis says
he shares that frustration
and feels responsible. He
says he hopes fans will wait
patiently for a turnaround.

Tickets $5.00 ·Adults &amp; $2.50 Child ten
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Proceeds Benefit·God's N.E.t!s:aner~~hooi..nutrifioii~LJii,Ograms ..

Ohio State
eoach Jim
Tressel
directs his·
team dur·
ing a footbaUgame
· in
Columbus.
Despite
nine ,return. lng starters
and the
addition of
· the nation's
No.1 quar·
terback
recruit,
. Ohio
State's
offense
continues
to spin its
wheels.
AP photo

Not every Buckeye thinks Pryor
.should be lone quarterback
COLUMBUS (AP)- Ohio State coach
Jim Tressel has no doubt Terrelle Pryor is
the best quarterba&lt;;k to lead the Buckeyes.
_
Not all his players agree .
Tight end Jake Ballard sa id it could help
the Buckeyes ' struggling offense to tum
back to former starter Todd Boeckman
and have him share the job with Pryor.
The freshman ·has shown flashes of skill,
but is still a work in progress .
"The senior leadership tiJat Todd brings
to the table and just how he commands
the huddle would definitely help us out,"
Ballard said : "And he could make some
big throws for us .... I don't think a twoquarterback system would be a bad idea ."
No. 12 Oh10 State (6-1, 3-0 Big Ten)
will be facing one of its biggest tests of
the season Saturday when it plays at No.
20 Michigan State.
· The Buckeyes are last in the Big Ten in
passing and next to last in total offense.
But Tressel clearly is committed to
Pryor going it alone, though he said
Tuesday he wants to play Boeckman. The
senior has not played either of the last two
games, both Ohio State victories.

"( I) haven't determined that that was
the right moment (or) sityation." Tressel
said tersely.
Boeckman led Ohio State to a Big Ten
title and a spot in the BCS national championship game last season. This season,
he had the job for three games before
Pryor, who was playing high school ball
in Jeannette. Pa., a year ago, was promoted.
The Buckeyes have won all four of
Pryor ·s· starts, but the offense has sput- .
. tered.
A unit that returned nine st;~rters stands
94th in total offense in major college foot ball. including 108th in pa ssi n~.
.
"If an apology is what you d like , we
can all go to lunch ," he cracked. "I apologize. And we'll try to get better."
But at the same time, he knows it's no
laughing matter. The Buckeyes have
totaled 18 touchdowns in their first seven
games; a year ago at this point, they had
31.
.
Buckeyes fans on radio call-in shows

Please see Buckeyes, Bl

Browns revive
season with
Giant upset

BEREA (AP) - Fans
hugged each other in disbelief. Quarterback Derek
Anderson asked to keep the
game ball . then tucked it
under his arm and headed to
the locker room amid delirium rarely . seen inside
Browns Stadium.
All that was missing from
the wild celebration following Cleveland's shocking •
35-14 win Monday night
over the New York Giants
was the obligatory bucket
dumping.
Coach Romeo Crennel
'
'lfl • t..C·-r-.- ~..:
. '
saved the chilly dousing for
Tuesday. .·
One day
after the
Browns' stunning upset of
the defending Super Bowl
HUNTINGTON , W.Va.
champions, Crennel deliv(AP) - Season tickets for
ered a sobering message so
the 2008-09 Marshall men's
his team, still trying to dig
basketball season are now
its way out of a 2-3 start,
on sale.
AP photo doesn't get carried away by
Ticket packages start at The Philadelphia Phillies celebrate their 7-5 win over the Los Angeles Dodgers in Game 4 of the National League base· 60 successful minutes.
$90 for the . Thundering ball championship series Monday in Los Angeles.
· ·
"We still have a lot of
Herd's 16-game, regularwork to do." Crennel said
season schedule at the Cam
during his news conference.
Henderson Center. Tickets
"The season is still a long
can be purchased through
season and just because we
the Henderson Center ticket
"We don 't want to disrupt won one game it doesn't put
LOS ANGELES (AP) ..,. his team needing a consider- nothing to lose now. We
office.
need to grasp on to every the flow of things," Greg us in the playoffs. We're not
Just one win from the World able comeback.
Single-game tickets will Series. the Phillies took their
"I'll just remind them of, positive thought we c·an at Dobbs said before baiting even .500 ."
go on sale at a later date. . swings Tuesday during bat- everything that they 've this time."
practice . "There's a nice
With an imaginative
Marshall opens the regu- ting practice .
That's why Torre canceled sense of realism in here. You offense and opportullistic
accomplished to this point
lar season at home Nov. 16
The Dodgers? They took and to just continue to the team ·s scheduled work· don 't want to give any team defense, Cleveland made ·
against WYU Tech .
fight," he said. "You don 't out, believing another round hope. You want to pounce the most of its tlrst Monday
the day off.
·
early. score runs and put night appearance since
"I JUSt thought getting get to this· time of year with- of BP was useless.
"I sense we'll be back here pressure on defensively."
2003. Playing perhaps ttieir
away from it would proba- out the ability to win three ,
most-complete
four,
five
g&lt;tmes
in
a
row."
with
the
right
attitude,"
he
History
.
is
.
on
home game
bly
benefit
them
more
than
ComAcrUs
The Dodgers are ·in a hole said. "These guys have been Philadel{'hia's side. Nine of in the expansion era - or
anything else," manager Joe
1-740-446·2342 ext. 33
Torre sa,id after canceling after · pinch-hitter Matt playing hard. There's a little . the prev10us .JJ tearps to go any other - the Browns
Stairs' two-mit, two-run inexpe&amp;(ence sprinkled in, up 3-1 went on to win the dominated the favored
Los Angeles' workout. ·
Fax- 1-740·446·3008
Giants. who came in
Coming off a late-inning homer off Jonathan Broxton but we know that . . But NLCS .
E-mail - sportsOmydailysentinel.com
"We're anticipating some- unbeaten, riding an It loss, the Dodgers are down capped a four·run eighth and they'I:e certainly not afraid."
Soorta Staff
Phillies manager Charlie thing good to · happen ," game road winning streak
3-1 in the best-of-seven NL sent the Phillies to a 7-5 victory
Monday
night
.
Manuel
took the opposite Jimmy Rollins said. "No one and on the best-teams-inchampionship series heading
Bryan Walters, Sports Writer
"1 think the fans were just ap oach, with his team is overly excited, When we the-NFL short list.
·into Wednesday night~s
(740(446·2342, ext. 33
bwaltersO mydallytriDune.com
But beginning with wide
Game 5 a~ Dodger Stadium. as disappointed and shocke&lt;I-&gt;&lt;Wi ing freely oh a warm, get there, we'll be excited."
receiver
Braylon Edwards'
as
we
were
,"
Casey
Bl
y
day
that
offered
only
Chad
Billingsley
will
start
few
'
The
day
off
gave
Torre
a
. Larry Crum, Sports Writer
extra. moments to come up said after the Dodgers ble
int of a breeze rustling the
Pleese see NLCS, 82
(7401446·2342. ext. 33 .
Pleese see Revive, Bl
e palm trees in left field.
lcrumOmydallyreglstar.COI'Jl
with something to say .with a two-run lead . "We

Marshall season·.
tickets bn sale

Phillies swing away, Dodgers·rest on off day

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.Ward puzzled·by rmes
· PITTSBURGH (AP) The Pittsburgh Steelers are
asking the NFL to clarify
why Hines Ward, one of the
league's best.blocking wide
receivers,
was . fined
$15.000 the past two games
for unnecessary roughness
despite not bei~g penalized .
; Ward was fmed $10,000
follo~ing the Steele~s· 26:11 wm at Jacksonvtlle on
Oct. 5, a week af:er drawn~g
~ $.5.000 fine for allay· m
wht~h he steppe
over
Baltimore
cornerback
Corey Ivy on Sept ..29. Ward
~id not .dra'f · a penaltY on
either play. . .., ,_ .; ,,
: Also
following . the
Jacksonville game, Steelers
linebacker James Harrison
was fined $20 000 for critioizing the offi~ials. He was
upset about a roughing-thepasser penalty.
"It's starting to cost too
much money to come to
Work for these guys;: coach
Mike Tomlin said Tuesday.

•·

Tomlin plans to call the
NFL office about the Ward
. fines, and team chairman
Dan Rooney . wrote a le.tter
questioning why Ward was
fined.
"We want to be a team
and he (Ward) wants to be a
player who plays the game
the way it's supposed. to be
played , the way our league
wants it to be played,"
Tomlin said . "We respect
that. But we need a little
clarity in that situation."

W~rd has been one of.the
NFI: s
most
phystcal
recetvers smce breaktng
m~? the league 10. years ago.
. Make no mtstake,. he
pia~~ tb~ wtde recetver
posttton dtfferent than most
peo~le play it," T~mlin said.
He s probabl y VJewed a ht·
tie different because of it."
Tomlin wouldn't say tpe
league is singling out Ward
because of hi s reputation for .
not letting up on any play . .

�'

•
www.mydailysentinel.com

, Page A6 • The Daily Sentinel

c·

Bl

The Daily Sentinel
prep football n~tebook, Page 82
football computer ratings, Page 82

Wednesday, October 15,2008

'OM!oROY - A schedule of upcoming high
sporting events involving
And Oallia counties .

Woclnetdty Dctgbtr 15

02 Volleyball
Mariena at (2) Meigs. 6 p.m.
Galli~

Academy at (1) Uniolo, 6 p.m.

Tburtda)! October 16
D4 Volleyblill - secuanal finals

Miller at (2) Ea!rtem, 6 p.m.
Pike Eastern at (4) SOuth Gallia., 6
O~S&lt;&gt;uthe&lt;n

at (3) Waterford, 6 p.m0

StumtAY

Octpbtr 11

03 Volleyball

Sectional line\

Nelsonville-York at River Valley, 4

Crou Country
)lv~:~~ 11-111

Jn

District meets at
of Rio Grande, 10 a.m.
SOccer - ACSI Tourn.
II ChrfStlan at Granville, TBA

fans
dump tickets
. CINCINNATI (AP) Disappointed fans of the
winless Cincinnati Bengals
are .trying to unload thousands of tickets for remain- ·
ihg home games, many of
them well below face value.
· The online ticket agency
StubHub .com has 3 ,000
tickets' for Sunday's game
against the Pittsburgh
Steelers·. At least 4,000 tickets are available for each of
the remaining games.
Some sellers don't care
about making ·a profit . .
There are $64 tickets priced
as low as $24.
The Bengals are 0-6 after
losing to the New York Jets
last weekend.
Longtime fan Steve Carr
of Cincinnati says it's gotten so he can't even bear to
watch the. team on TV. .
Coach Marvin Lewis says
he shares that frustration
and feels responsible. He
says he hopes fans will wait
patiently for a turnaround.

Tickets $5.00 ·Adults &amp; $2.50 Child ten
-.

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All

Proceeds Benefit·God's N.E.t!s:aner~~hooi..nutrifioii~LJii,Ograms ..

Ohio State
eoach Jim
Tressel
directs his·
team dur·
ing a footbaUgame
· in
Columbus.
Despite
nine ,return. lng starters
and the
addition of
· the nation's
No.1 quar·
terback
recruit,
. Ohio
State's
offense
continues
to spin its
wheels.
AP photo

Not every Buckeye thinks Pryor
.should be lone quarterback
COLUMBUS (AP)- Ohio State coach
Jim Tressel has no doubt Terrelle Pryor is
the best quarterba&lt;;k to lead the Buckeyes.
_
Not all his players agree .
Tight end Jake Ballard sa id it could help
the Buckeyes ' struggling offense to tum
back to former starter Todd Boeckman
and have him share the job with Pryor.
The freshman ·has shown flashes of skill,
but is still a work in progress .
"The senior leadership tiJat Todd brings
to the table and just how he commands
the huddle would definitely help us out,"
Ballard said : "And he could make some
big throws for us .... I don't think a twoquarterback system would be a bad idea ."
No. 12 Oh10 State (6-1, 3-0 Big Ten)
will be facing one of its biggest tests of
the season Saturday when it plays at No.
20 Michigan State.
· The Buckeyes are last in the Big Ten in
passing and next to last in total offense.
But Tressel clearly is committed to
Pryor going it alone, though he said
Tuesday he wants to play Boeckman. The
senior has not played either of the last two
games, both Ohio State victories.

"( I) haven't determined that that was
the right moment (or) sityation." Tressel
said tersely.
Boeckman led Ohio State to a Big Ten
title and a spot in the BCS national championship game last season. This season,
he had the job for three games before
Pryor, who was playing high school ball
in Jeannette. Pa., a year ago, was promoted.
The Buckeyes have won all four of
Pryor ·s· starts, but the offense has sput- .
. tered.
A unit that returned nine st;~rters stands
94th in total offense in major college foot ball. including 108th in pa ssi n~.
.
"If an apology is what you d like , we
can all go to lunch ," he cracked. "I apologize. And we'll try to get better."
But at the same time, he knows it's no
laughing matter. The Buckeyes have
totaled 18 touchdowns in their first seven
games; a year ago at this point, they had
31.
.
Buckeyes fans on radio call-in shows

Please see Buckeyes, Bl

Browns revive
season with
Giant upset

BEREA (AP) - Fans
hugged each other in disbelief. Quarterback Derek
Anderson asked to keep the
game ball . then tucked it
under his arm and headed to
the locker room amid delirium rarely . seen inside
Browns Stadium.
All that was missing from
the wild celebration following Cleveland's shocking •
35-14 win Monday night
over the New York Giants
was the obligatory bucket
dumping.
Coach Romeo Crennel
'
'lfl • t..C·-r-.- ~..:
. '
saved the chilly dousing for
Tuesday. .·
One day
after the
Browns' stunning upset of
the defending Super Bowl
HUNTINGTON , W.Va.
champions, Crennel deliv(AP) - Season tickets for
ered a sobering message so
the 2008-09 Marshall men's
his team, still trying to dig
basketball season are now
its way out of a 2-3 start,
on sale.
AP photo doesn't get carried away by
Ticket packages start at The Philadelphia Phillies celebrate their 7-5 win over the Los Angeles Dodgers in Game 4 of the National League base· 60 successful minutes.
$90 for the . Thundering ball championship series Monday in Los Angeles.
· ·
"We still have a lot of
Herd's 16-game, regularwork to do." Crennel said
season schedule at the Cam
during his news conference.
Henderson Center. Tickets
"The season is still a long
can be purchased through
season and just because we
the Henderson Center ticket
"We don 't want to disrupt won one game it doesn't put
LOS ANGELES (AP) ..,. his team needing a consider- nothing to lose now. We
office.
need to grasp on to every the flow of things," Greg us in the playoffs. We're not
Just one win from the World able comeback.
Single-game tickets will Series. the Phillies took their
"I'll just remind them of, positive thought we c·an at Dobbs said before baiting even .500 ."
go on sale at a later date. . swings Tuesday during bat- everything that they 've this time."
practice . "There's a nice
With an imaginative
Marshall opens the regu- ting practice .
That's why Torre canceled sense of realism in here. You offense and opportullistic
accomplished to this point
lar season at home Nov. 16
The Dodgers? They took and to just continue to the team ·s scheduled work· don 't want to give any team defense, Cleveland made ·
against WYU Tech .
fight," he said. "You don 't out, believing another round hope. You want to pounce the most of its tlrst Monday
the day off.
·
early. score runs and put night appearance since
"I JUSt thought getting get to this· time of year with- of BP was useless.
"I sense we'll be back here pressure on defensively."
2003. Playing perhaps ttieir
away from it would proba- out the ability to win three ,
most-complete
four,
five
g&lt;tmes
in
a
row."
with
the
right
attitude,"
he
History
.
is
.
on
home game
bly
benefit
them
more
than
ComAcrUs
The Dodgers are ·in a hole said. "These guys have been Philadel{'hia's side. Nine of in the expansion era - or
anything else," manager Joe
1-740-446·2342 ext. 33
Torre sa,id after canceling after · pinch-hitter Matt playing hard. There's a little . the prev10us .JJ tearps to go any other - the Browns
Stairs' two-mit, two-run inexpe&amp;(ence sprinkled in, up 3-1 went on to win the dominated the favored
Los Angeles' workout. ·
Fax- 1-740·446·3008
Giants. who came in
Coming off a late-inning homer off Jonathan Broxton but we know that . . But NLCS .
E-mail - sportsOmydailysentinel.com
"We're anticipating some- unbeaten, riding an It loss, the Dodgers are down capped a four·run eighth and they'I:e certainly not afraid."
Soorta Staff
Phillies manager Charlie thing good to · happen ," game road winning streak
3-1 in the best-of-seven NL sent the Phillies to a 7-5 victory
Monday
night
.
Manuel
took the opposite Jimmy Rollins said. "No one and on the best-teams-inchampionship series heading
Bryan Walters, Sports Writer
"1 think the fans were just ap oach, with his team is overly excited, When we the-NFL short list.
·into Wednesday night~s
(740(446·2342, ext. 33
bwaltersO mydallytriDune.com
But beginning with wide
Game 5 a~ Dodger Stadium. as disappointed and shocke&lt;I-&gt;&lt;Wi ing freely oh a warm, get there, we'll be excited."
receiver
Braylon Edwards'
as
we
were
,"
Casey
Bl
y
day
that
offered
only
Chad
Billingsley
will
start
few
'
The
day
off
gave
Torre
a
. Larry Crum, Sports Writer
extra. moments to come up said after the Dodgers ble
int of a breeze rustling the
Pleese see NLCS, 82
(7401446·2342. ext. 33 .
Pleese see Revive, Bl
e palm trees in left field.
lcrumOmydallyreglstar.COI'Jl
with something to say .with a two-run lead . "We

Marshall season·.
tickets bn sale

Phillies swing away, Dodgers·rest on off day

Trollbeads

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..

.Ward puzzled·by rmes
· PITTSBURGH (AP) The Pittsburgh Steelers are
asking the NFL to clarify
why Hines Ward, one of the
league's best.blocking wide
receivers,
was . fined
$15.000 the past two games
for unnecessary roughness
despite not bei~g penalized .
; Ward was fmed $10,000
follo~ing the Steele~s· 26:11 wm at Jacksonvtlle on
Oct. 5, a week af:er drawn~g
~ $.5.000 fine for allay· m
wht~h he steppe
over
Baltimore
cornerback
Corey Ivy on Sept ..29. Ward
~id not .dra'f · a penaltY on
either play. . .., ,_ .; ,,
: Also
following . the
Jacksonville game, Steelers
linebacker James Harrison
was fined $20 000 for critioizing the offi~ials. He was
upset about a roughing-thepasser penalty.
"It's starting to cost too
much money to come to
Work for these guys;: coach
Mike Tomlin said Tuesday.

•·

Tomlin plans to call the
NFL office about the Ward
. fines, and team chairman
Dan Rooney . wrote a le.tter
questioning why Ward was
fined.
"We want to be a team
and he (Ward) wants to be a
player who plays the game
the way it's supposed. to be
played , the way our league
wants it to be played,"
Tomlin said . "We respect
that. But we need a little
clarity in that situation."

W~rd has been one of.the
NFI: s
most
phystcal
recetvers smce breaktng
m~? the league 10. years ago.
. Make no mtstake,. he
pia~~ tb~ wtde recetver
posttton dtfferent than most
peo~le play it," T~mlin said.
He s probabl y VJewed a ht·
tie different because of it."
Tomlin wouldn't say tpe
league is singling out Ward
because of hi s reputation for .
not letting up on any play . .

�'

Wednesday, October 15, 2008

Page Ba • The Dculy Sentinel

www.mydallysentlnel.com

Wednesday, October 15,2008

www.mydailysentinel.com

'

•

~Stress fracture

sidelines IPrep Football Notebook: Teams piling up the points

. CLASSIF 'I ED

~~~~~:~.~~!~:'h., M"::,~:::::, •h• Weekly football computer ratings

:(AP) - Marshall se111or
• ·
M k 1
.swmgman
ar e
:Humphrey will mtss up to
' SIX weeks With a sttess !rae. 1f &lt;
•.t ure Ill hIS e I oOOt
:· Thundenng Herd coach
;Donnie Jones s,ud Tuesday
•!hat Humphrey won't have
:surgery but wtll have to
:wear a protecttve boot
'.

back for the season opener
N
16
W
on ov
, agamst
e&gt;t
Vtrgmia Tech
l;lumphrey played most ot
1
h
ast season Wtl a stre's
fracture m hts nght heel , an
mJury that forced httn to
mtss three games He ,tveraged 13 3 potms and 56
rebounds last seasott.

..

NLCS

•..•

from Page 81

the ship the next tune out.
He's gomg to com~ out wtth
a lot of mtensily ,md as "
dub. we neeu to le&lt;.'tl ull
that"
The Philhes have built a
commandmg lead desptte the
offen"ve stntggles of home
run hmer Rymf Howatd and
Jtmmy Rollins, who are a
combmed 5-for-33 m the
senes. Myers, Stmrs. Shane
VK·tonno. Chase Utley and
Pdl Burrell have provtded
some of the team's btg Juts m
tts thtee come-from-behmd

•.
•,

:Wednesday mght for the
Podgers, who need a better
'perfo!TI1ance out of the 24: year-old nght-hander than
:what he showed m Game 2
• He allowed etght runs :seven earned - and etght
~Its over 2 1-3 mmngs 111
:.thetr 8-5 loss Fnday m
:Phtladelphta
"It's pretty much do or
. dte," he satd Monday
: Billingsley took tl hard
.after Phtlhes starter Brett
: Myers -a career 116 httter
.- h11 a go-ahead RBI smgle
:Off h1m With two outs m the
-second mnmg. then c:h.tsed
'Bilhngsley wtth a two-run
· smgle m the thtrd
: "He's sensmve , yet he's
:very aggresstve and very sure
:of htmself," Torre smd ''The
tough part about playmg m
th1s postseason ts to nMke
sure you keep tt as a baseball
game and let the pamc come
from the manager and not
from you Hopefully he can
get htmself m that frame of
lrund . you can only wm one
_game nght now and that's the
game you're ptlchmg "
Game I wmner Cole
Hamels returns tor the
· Phtlhes He staked the
Dodgers to a 2-0 lead 111 the
senes opener before 'ettl mg
down , allowmg two runs and
six hits over seven mmngs
"He's our guy Any ttme
you have your EUY gomg you
feel very conhdent.'' Dobbs
srud. "He finds a way to nght

Buckeyes
fromPageBl
and Web sttes are calhng the
offense ummugmattve and
predtctable.
Several
Southern Caltfomta players
sa1d they knew what the
Buckeyes were gomg to do
on almost every snap after
USC pounded Ohto State
35-3 m Boeckman's last
start
Even Tressel seemed to
questiOn hts own approach
on Tuesday
"You always have to start
by bemg troubled by the
plan.becausc there's got to
be some reasons why you're
not eKecutmg·." he satd
A porous offenstve ltne
mtght be Ohto State's
biggest
problem
The
Buckeyes are 106th m the
nation m sacks allowed
Tressel has taken an
mcreasmg mterest in the
hne in recent weeks. even
dubbmg htmself the "assi stant offenstve line coach"
Usually reserved on and off
the field, Tressel has
stramed h1s votce yellmg at

Cleveland
Browns
wtde recetver Braylon
Edwards
dunks the
ball over
the cross·: bar after an
11-yard
· touchdown
catch in the
fourth quarter of an
.NFL football
game
against the
New York
Gtants on
Monday in
Clevl!land
Edwards
had f1ve
catches lor
154 yards
fn
Cleveland's
35-14wm
AI' photo

WillS

"Who though~ Myers was
gomg to get three hns·1 You
couldn ' I draw th.tl up."
pmch-httter Geoff Jenkms
sat d. "Even t! Jtmmy tsn't
locked in at the plate. he takes
mns &lt;tWa) m the field He
nlways plays defense "
Rollins hasn't come close
to matchmg hts MVP numbers from a yc,tr ago
"Thts team has been bUtlt
arouhd a nutt1ber of guys
There tsn't JUSt one hero,
whtch makes everyone feel
hke they're mvolved.'' he
satd "I was able to do somethmg m the first senes and
guys weren't. Now I'm not
and guys are It's about the

team"
For the Dodgers, tt's about
gettmg strong perfommnces
from Billmgsley and thcu
bullpen , whtch collapsed m
Game4
••Pttchmg ts gomg to be
the way yo u get off on the
nghl foot and get a httle
momentum gomg," Torre
sa td "Our goal right now IS
to be on that plane on
Thursday.'
the linemen to be qutcker
and hold thetr blocks
longer
But the sacks aren 't all
the lmes ' fault.
Pryor is dangerous runner
- able to dodge or outmn
onrushmg defenders Yet he
sometimes doesn't know
when to throw a ball away
to avotd trouble He was
sacked three ttmes on
Saturday m a 16-3 vtctory
over Purdue , a game 111
whtch the Buckeyes' dtdn 't
score an offenstve touchdown
'·He can make b1g plays
wtth hts feet but he h.ts to
teahze It's not htgh school
he c.tn't nw.ke btg plays
every smgle ttme tor 20
yards or more. B,lllard
satd "He's not alwdys
gomg to get btg plays."
He satd the Buckeyes
cannot contmue playmg the
way they have been
"It's
frustratmg
Everybddy thmks tl \ ft ustratmg." he smd "But we're
not warned about tl as
much as maybe others are
because we know tt's thmgs
th.n we can change. to turn
around the way the 'cason
ts gomg nght now ..

w.ner
Some htgh schoolloothall
teams . for some r~a sun. arc
VITall y mlected "tth olfcnsc
Or maybe the y're tmmumzed :111 mnst defense
. Just m Central Olmf '"
Week 6. B.1lt1motc Ltbet1y Unton bcdl Moller&gt;pott 77-0
In Week 7, Grove City
Chnsttan beat M,mchester
96-20
and
DeGt aff
Rtvctstdc bc.tl M.tnon
Catholic gJ-0. And on Week
8.
Becchcrolt
be.\1
Centen111.1l
96-0
.md
Wayne slte ld -Goshen beat
Manon Cttholte 74 6
The
oulbllfst
by
Beechcroft (7-1) c.tme one
week afte• ,, 13-6 loss to
Brookh,tven The Cougars
are still a&gt;eragmg 5 1 4
pomts pe• game
And ptty poo• Manon
Cttholtc . the smalle't foot ball school m Ohto wtth JU St
43 boys It IS ,J IIowmg Sf 6
pomts a game
It's 11ot JUS I tn the heat! of
Oh10, en her Shet wood
Fatrvtew beat Havtland
Wayne Trace 73-21 last
weeke nd James Ekhmger
threw for "x TDs and scored
on tour TD runs
Elchmger had four passes
for scores mthe fttsl qumter
as the Apaches took &lt;1 35-0
lead Fan vtew had 318 yat ds
of total oflense 111 the first
while
holdt!l~
quarter
Wayne Trace to 63 At hall
time, Fairvtew led 53 21 and
had amassed 598 yards of
total offense
The Apaches ended the
game wtth 740 yat ds of
offense
mcludmg
490
through the atr Wayl1e Trace
was held to 148 yards total
(104 111 the fu st half)
Elchtnger ftmshed the
ntght 14-of-20 p.1ssmg for
485 yards whtle adding 154
mshmg yards
NOT A BAD SUB: When
Ottawa-Glandotf lost stat
RB Log.m Kaufman to .1
season-endmg knee mjury,
sentor Jacob Lugo was
asked to take up the slack In
a 35-6 Will over Van Wert,
Lugo c.trtted 23 tunes lor a
school record 302 yards,
surpasslllg the smgle-game
mark of 298 yards set by
Luke Polhast m 2002
RECORD-SMASHERS:
Coldwater's Zach Stelrmg
returned an mterceptton I 02
yards tor a touchdown m the
Cavalters 3~-7 wm ovet
Delphos
St
John's.
Rockford Parkway .til-putpose man Josh Ftshet. who
bas play ', runmng back ,
wtde rece1ver. qumtcrhack
and dcfenstve b.tck thts sc,tson. set the schooltecord fot
career tou chdowns (30) m a
38-27 Will OVCI Mtnstet;
Coldwatet \ Ton y Hatlamert
11cd the state record by
catclung ,, p.1ss tn hts 35th
consecuttve g&lt;~mc. n1.1tchmg
Jtmmy Jewett from North
Lebanon DIXle hom 1.999to
2002. and Ad,tm Brown
ru shed 10 t11nes lor 177
yards - all m the first h,Jif
. - and ttcd the 'chool recotd
wtth ftvc rushmg TDs .1s he
led Cmc Ill null Eldct pu't
Covmgton Cuthohc (Ky.) .
56-7
4-\N YOU TOP THIS'!
Mtke M,tsnerus set an Avon
Lake tccord wtlh 369 y.trds

Revive

'coLUMBUS (AP) - tlefe are the
fourth weekly football compulerrotlnQI
trom me Ohio Hogh School AthletiC
Asso&lt;oa!IOn RatongsarebydM-811&lt;1
oegoon woth record and ooorage 1&gt;1-pomls per game (101&gt; eiQhl !Nma In
eacn regoon advance oo ragional quartertonetsl
·

Andetson(B-2)175875 5 K1ngs
Millo l(lngs (S.3) 154125 6 Day
Dunbar (7_1, 13S250 1 Mt orab
Western Brown (8·0) 128785 . 8
Morrow Utile Miami (IH) 12 5376 9
Trenton Edgewood (8-2) 109125 10,
BellbfQok(4-4198375

141750 6 Cln Wyomong (8-2)
121000 7 Archbishop Allar (0.2)
117250 6 Con N CoUege HIH (5-3)
99125 9 Ham Badln{!l'3)9687510,
Cartoste (3-5169250

DIVISION Ill

RegiOn 17- 1 Young UrsuUne (8-Q)

Reglcn 9-1. Aufl&gt;ra (6-2) 15 8375 2
Cuya Fa111Walo11JftJK(S.2) 155787
3, Young Uberty (8.0) 14 7000 4
Chagnn Falla (6-2) 12 9800 5, Ravenna
(6·2) 1'2 6000 6. Hubbard {6 21
11 8625 7, Cnarrlon ND·Calhedral
(.sHn' (4·4) 10 M6o 8 Corlland
LakeVIew (S.3) 9 11235 9 S1r..tsboro
(5·31 8 9750 16, Chesterland W
Gasufl" (5·3) a 9250
Region I&lt;HI St Marys !olemonal{7·1 )
' 17.7375 2. Beii&amp;IIUe (1·1)174125 3
Avon (8.0) 171760 4 Clyde (7 1r
149250 ~TiflPCttyllppecanoe 17·1)
146000 6, 0eti81JC9 (6·2) 145000 1
~ry Big Walrwt (5-21 14 2500 8
Urt&gt;ona (7·1) • 12 7000 9, , Toffln
Columbian (6 2) 12 1455 10 Lorna
Sllawnee (5.,'3) 11 0250
Reglcn' 11-1, Can! souln (82)
19 2750 2, Canal Fllffi&gt;n NW (7-1)
1821175. 3 Newark Licking ¥allay {7 1)
150695 4, Dover (7·1) 150500 5
Poland Bemtnary' (6-2) 14 5750 6
Granville (6.2) 12 4250 7 Raylan~
BUcl&lt;oye l,pcol (5-3) 11 B64S 8 New
Phttadetpl)la (8-;0) 11 7500 9. Cactiz
Harrttson C~ ($-2) 10;1700 10
¥1nc:&amp;l11 Warren (4-4) 1o0790
Region 12-1, Circleville Logan Elm t6
or17.6625.:f.GtnmanlownValleyVIew(7·
t7 eS?Ii. 2. Thornville Shendan (8 0)
1) 187250 4, ChUIIcothe {6·2) 16 5875
5, Canal WinChester (80) 137875 6.
Colo Eaatmoor Acad (7·1) 133750 7,
Frantclin (5.,'3) ~ 11500 8. Norwoo&lt;l (7·1 I
10.11!75 9," s,xtey tS.3) 10 2720 10.
oay.' il~I"IOhne (6-2) 102250

Creston Norwayne (7-1} 13 6750 -4,
Columb.ana CresMew (7·1) 12 8590 5,
Gates Mills G1lmour Acaa (7·1)

• Cln

DIVISION I

Regoon 1-1 Glenville Academic
Campus 18.0) 24 3475 2. Cleve St
tgnahus (1-1) 22 5805 3. SVOngsvltr.
(7 ,, 22 f500 4 Menlar (8·2) 21.5500
5 Euclfd (6 ~1114250 8, Lakewood 51
~dward (6 2) 16 4440 1 Willoughby
South (6 2) 15 9e90 8 BrOCI&lt;svllleBroadVoew Hts (5 3) 15 0750 9, Solon
(5·3) '2 6500 1o Jonn Adams (6·2)
11 6135
Regoon 2-1 Cant GienOak {7·1)
225375 2 N Canton Harwer (7·1)
204785 3 Amllerst S!eete (8·0)
193250 4 Brunswick (7·1) 181375 5.
Twonshurg (6 2) 17.2750 6 Macedoola
Nordonla (6·2) 167250 7, C8Jit
McKontey (5'3) 16 5155 8, Wadtloorlb
(5·3) 14 8625 9, Mass WMI$0n (5'
3) 144895 10. Fremont Rllt!O (6-2)
14 0210
•~
Regoon a-t, HiHtonl llavideon (8.0)
238500 2 PickerlngionHigtlSchooiC
(8·0)222500 3 Cola Brookhaven{7·1)
20 0165 4, Upper Arhnogtoh (1-1)
17 4500 5, Worthington Klll&gt;ourt~&lt;&gt; (6-2)
14 9875 6, Delaware Hayet ~S-3)
137125 7 Dublin GoHman (7-1)
13 2875 8 Grove CHy (5·3) 11 2500 a,
(.si]Casler (4 4) 9 6995 10. Milr)l.ovflte
(5'3) 9.6750
'
R•gton 4-1 , Ctn. Eldar (7-1) 222925:
2 Con Coleraon (7, 1) 21 5880 3,
Kettering Fairmont (7·1) ~1 1500 4,
Huber HIS wayne (6-2) 209910 5.
Clayton Norlhmonl (J.l) 19.25QO. 8.
Con Woodward (8·0). 17 930!1. 7,
Harrison (5·3). 17 8125 8, Ctn Sf
Xllvier ~4-4) 16,1785 9 Cin Sycamore
(6·2) 15 282~. 10, Centewllle (5·3) ,:/
141500

•

, '

.

J

\

· DIVISION II

I

·r f

'

Region

y;

J.i
ulVJSION IV
~
13-1,

':&gt;'
~

Steubenville (8-0)

1\rSlaw (8.()) 18 6875
3. Young Mooney (7·1) 16 9730 4.
Aegoon 5-1 E Clava Shaw (7.0) Akron St Voncenl·SI Mary (6-21
19 0658 2 Mayfield (7-1) 18 3500 ~. 189480 5, Cuyo Falls Cuya Yalley
Parma Padua (6·2) 14 8725 4, Akron CMI!IIII! ('(j1) 15 4400. 8, Perry [7-1)
Hoban (5·3)137935 5. Kent Roo- 14 2000 " ~lor :rt'lway (6.C2)
(6·2) 12 6750 6. warren HowtaM (M) 13~5 e ~' (7,1) 13 3500 0,
11 8580 7 Mapte Hts (li-3) 11 8125 8, Akron 'Mane(1U1itl&lt; 'i~ 12 9875 10
Berberlon (3-5) 109250 9, Tallmadge Lltll'"'!(7•1)12201!0 , , ' lJ
(5·3) 10 8000 10 Madison (5·3) Rl!!llon 1.._1, f'rlll1o!ja t7·1) 1&amp;5275
10 6625
2;'lo!tln ~ ·(~ 181625 3,
Ragoon 6-1, Tot Cent Cath (8.0) Morlo&gt; Plaa8an1 ~7-1) 1~2875. 4[
23 0990 2, Medina Hoghland (a·O) ~ Alas (8:9) 15 0876,6, Hol'&lt;ll] (820 8750 3 Lexlngion (8·0) 18 3500 •• 2) 10 8375-ll, t!eiMIJo IOIIor Fork (5'23)
Sylvania SouthVIeW (8·0) 16 5215 5, 10.0875 7, Oftl\Viii;Gia(ldort. (S.,JIJ
Lewis ceoter.otentang( {6·2)16 21~5 9.5769 s. Pemt&gt;orvtlle Eaalwolll•(&lt;l'2)
6 Avon Lake (8-.j! 1~5125 7, 82125 '9, 8~rua (6·2) 8os0o 10,
Graenvltle (8-2) 14 9295, 8, Olootangy Hignl"l'd (4-4) 7 3625 '! ' • .1;
loberty {5-3) 14 4375 9, Piqua (5-3) Region 1s-1. M«rilns Ferry , (7·1}
12 8875 10. LOdl Ctoverteal (8·2) 172850. 2, New leKington (8'0)
12 3750
15 3945 3, Belil)ol&gt;1 I.Jr,ton1.ocat (7-1)
Regoon 7-1 Cots DaBeles (8·0) 141125 4, Ironton (5,3) 13,8125 5,
261685 2.l0ulsvllle (8-o) 24850Q. 3. Colo Hartley (5-2), .11.6187, 8,
Logan (8.0) 21 7625 4/ Cols Marlon WIUia._rt W-11 (8-2) 11 ,11!!7~ 1 7 ,
Franklin (S.Q) 20 2500 5. Dublin Jerome Goll •!lollla ~ (8-3)10 819&amp;;,: 8,1S!
(53) 14 6750 6 Alllenc;e t6-2) 128125 Ct~lrtvlllt &lt; ($•3) {0 8175/' 9,.)\jcldng
7 Canfield (6·2) 1~ 4500. 8, 'eolo Holg~tl (Q·2) 9 B750 ,1~. 110~
Beechorott t7-1J 124405 9 Cola Metga(6-2)9 " '" 1.:..
~~wyt t-:
Independence (5·2) 11 5825 101 Cola,, Region 1&lt;1-' ~ Jldwator~8.0) 22 ~I
Wa~erson (4-4) 11 4345
,
~. Ctarl&lt;svllle Cllr\l~n-llloure .(~-0~
Region il-l Now Carlisle Tt&lt;:~~mleh o16.J750 3J.~~aon CftY JonathOn' Alcfttr
(8.0) 20 0000 2 Con Winloti Woods (7- 1 (7-1) e,...., 4, Brookville (8'0)
1) 19 8875 3, Con 1Urpon (7-1) 17 6878 18.19:!P 5, Do
Oilrwoed !6·2)
rtl'hmg m a 36-25 win over pleted 2 of 27 passes for
Berea, runmng for four TDs 455 yards and four TDs Wtth
and throwmg for another on no mtercept1ons - and has a
a 39-yard halfback-opllon, 19-to-1 TDs-to-ptcks rallo'
and Jeremy Scott rushed for th1s season, Pamesv1lle
374 yards and four TDs on Rtvers~de's Kyle Shafter
34 carncs to lead Norwood threw for 287 yards and
past Cmcmnati Northwest touchdowns of 50 and 95
34-2 1
yards in the Beavers' 45-7
BOMBERS
'ARE victory over Chardon; Bo
BACK: Cmcmnati St. Cordell went 27-for-37 passXavter bwke a rare three- mg for 425 yards and five
game losmg streak wtth a TDs as Cincinnau Indian
13-3 wm at Lakewood St. Htll beat Finneytown 47-20,
Edward The Bombers (4-4), wtth Ted Bolser catchmg
1ctgnlllg Dtvtstolt 1 state seven of those passes for
champtons, have tn the past 128 yards and three TDs;
and Zach Toerner ran 29
month lost two quarterbacks ttmes tor 149 yards and two
(Luke Massa , Sam Male) to
bt oken collarbones and lead- TDs and was 15-of-22 pass'mg rusher Connor Earley to mg for 272 yards and three
more TDs as Hamtlton
''knee lllJUry
Badm beat Roger Bacon 38'ThiMt's the way thl ts,,_asnd 21.
you ave to ro 11 wtt tl , t.
BULLETIN
BOARD
X coach Steve Specht satd
MATERIAL: W1th a 36-34
St Xa'ter has tts annual Will over New London,
showdown with Cleveland Ashland Mapleton (2-6) has
St lgnattus on Saturday at won two games m a row for
St Xavter The Bombets the first ltme since the 2000
have not lost to the mne- season; McComb has 499
ttme state champtons smce total wms headmg mto
the 2001 state finals , WJih St. Friday mght's game at
X beatmg lgnatms each year Letpstc; unbeaten and stateranked Ltberty-Benton beat
since m the regular season
PASSING FANCY: In the Hardm Northern 49-0. the
past two weeks, Lexmgton 's school's 26th consecuttve
Coutlncy Avery has com- Blanchard
Valley
i~Q835o;~. Mass

1

Dawson on field goals and

cxtt,l pomts. It was the first

ltme the Browus have not
punted 111 a game since
from Page 81
1995
The Browns racked up
49-yard receptton on the 454 yards of total offense,
game 's tlmd play. the nearly 200 yards more than
Browns controlled one of thetr preVIOUS htgh thiS seathe NFC East superpowers son agamsl a team that had
And , ftnally. with 73 ,000 been allowing only 236
frenzted tans oil hand and Offenstve coordmator Rob
mtlhons of skeptics watch- Chudzinski, who had two
mg on TV, they looked ltke weeks to prepare for the
the team everyone expected Gtants , dev1sed a superb
them to be commg into the game plan that the Browns
season
executed w1th almost ~m­
Wtth their season on hfe , pomt prects1on He unvetled
support, the Browns pulled some new wnnkles, putting
through
the versatile Joshua Cribbs
"It's the guys I've been .in the shotgun and calhO!l a
tellmg you about," sa td reverse for reserve runnmg
quarterback
Derek back Jerome Hamson, who
Anderson, who rewarded went 33 yards to set up a
Crennel's faith and silenced field goal.
more cnttcs by throw1ng for
Anderson barely $Ot h1s
310 yards and two !Ouch- umfoiTil dtrty as hts line
downs Without an mtercep- gave hun an1ple protection
tJon "I never doubted II wh1le leading Cleveland on
ever. It's the ~arne guys that five sconng dnves in eight
made plays last ydtr all sea- pmsesstons The other three
son ,,
ended wtth Dawson mtssmg
Cleveland's offense was a 51-yard field goal, the end
so effie tent that punter D~ve of the f1rst half and
lastud1l's on ly asstgnment Anderson takmg three kneel
wa' to hold for ktcker Phil downs m the closmg sec-

'

Gallia
County
OH

DIVISION V
190610 2

Korllan~

(8·0) 164250. 3,

12 3125 6 N Lima S. Rango (8-2)
10 4250 7. Apple Creek Weynedale (52) 10 ~875 8, Rod&lt;y Rover Luth W (S.
3)9 3500 9 Sm tnvolle (5'3) 9 1500 10.
TnnJIY (5·3) 90495
Region 18-1 Hamler PatriCk Henry (801 156500 2, Bucyrus Wynford (8.0)
14 1125 3 Fondtay Liberty Benton If.())
, 2 9025 4 Delphos Jefferson &lt;a-of
12 3350 5 Sherwood FEmvlew ~7·1
11 8625 6 Archbold (7 1) 11 8500 7,
Liberty Cir (7· 1) 11 7000 8 Hlcksvtlle
(~ 0) 11 0625 9 Ashland CresiV!ew (7·
1l 10 6125 10 Cothns Western
Reserve (6-2) 99375
Reg1on 19-1 Nelsonvtlle-Vork (7-1)
15 86 25
2 Wheelersburg (8·0)
15 1120 3 Portsmouth West (8-Q)

13 5660 4. Johnstown-Monroe (6-2)
13 1125 5 Heatht7·1)123125 6 eaK
Ltberty Unton (7 1) 12 0375 7. W
Lafavene Ridgewood (1-1) 11 7875 8
Cots Readv (4-2) 11 6088 9 ~lnfDrd
(6-2) 11 3375 1o Frederlcl&lt;town t8·2)
10 5500
Aeg~on 2o-1 Cln Hills Ctmstian Acad
{B·O) 16 7125 2. Anna (7·1) 14 6515 a
West JeffonlOO (7·1) 13 0080 4, West
Ltberty Salem (8 0) 1211375
5'
Waynesvtlle {6-2) 12 0370 6 Marla
Ste1n Manon Local (7·1) 11 .8875 7
Casstown Mlamt E (7·1) 101125 8 N
Lewisburg Triad {&amp;-2) -9 7875 9, St

E-mail
classtfied@ mydatlylnbune.com

In One Week With Us
REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS
~=y~
OW NLINE

;a Place

ca.r:.::;. .
·

~rtbune

Sentinel

8 8485

9, New Middletown Spnngfllld
(4·4)7 7875 10 WellsviH&lt;&gt;(B 2) 7 0375
Regoon 22-IL Carey (7·1) 12 5625 2
Ada (8.0) 11 •ODD 3. Pan~ora·Gitboa
(8·0)10 7000 4, Delphos Sl John's (62) 10 6750 5 Antnglon (6·2) B7750 6,
Mt Blanchard Rtverdale (6·2) 81000 7,
Me Comb (6·2) 76250 B. W Umty
Hilltop (6 2) 6 5000 9, New Wash
Buckeye Cent (5 3) 56500 tO
An!werp (4-4) 5 4125
Region 23-1. Hannobai Rlvor (8·0)
15 9545 2. Malvem (6-0j 11 9875 ~.
Glouster Tnmble (6-2) 11 17!10 4,
Snadyslde (6-2) to 6985 5, CalciWtli (62)9 6420 6, Bridgeport (5·3) 9.2395. 7,
Bealtsvl~e (7·1) 8 2725 8 Zli.n$8.
Rosecrans (5-.3) 8DSOO' 9, Newark
Calh (5·3) 1 02s0 10 Sugar Grewe
Berna Unoon (3-5) 6 7750
•
Region .24- 1 Mechanicsburg (8.0)
15 2675 2. Sidney Lehman (6·1)
114198 3 Lockland (6·2) 105250 4,
Sclolovllle Community (7·1) 99785 5,
Cavtngton (6-2) 9 7~50 6, Spring CatH
Cent (5·3) B3875 7, Mlnsler (5-3)
8 2000 8 Ansonia (6·2) 17750 9.
Waynesfield-Goshen (6·21 88250. 10.
Troy Chrtshan (4·4) 6 5960

Conference
wm;
West
Vtrglma power Wheehng
Cenllal makes a v1sit to
Hardmg Stadtum to play
Steubenvtlle Bt~ Red, w1th
the Maroon Kmghts trytng
tu stop Btg Red's 58-game
regulat season and 51-game
home wmmng streaks, m a
matchup of state-ranked
Dtviston V powers. No. 3
Patnck Henry beat No 2
Atchbold 35-7 to cltnch its
seventh stratght Northwest
Ohto League champwnshtp;
a week after 11s 42-39 upset
o; Coleram . Mtddletown
w,,, routed 14-7 by Lakota
West as Stephen Houston,
committed
to
who
Mtsstssrppt earlter m the
week, rushed 2ll ttmes for
146 yards and thtee TDs;
and Madtson had three players ru sh for mote than 100
yards m a 55-22 wm o'er
Asht&lt;tbula Lakeside
MR. EVERYtHING:
Jake Phelp&lt; of Ashtabula
SS. John and P.tul passed for
213 yards. ran tor 78, threw
touchdo\lon passes of 39 and
67 yards , ran for a three-yard
touchdown , returned a ktckoff 80 yards for a touchdown
and mtercepted &lt;1 pass m the
Herulds' 26-14 vtclu~
Thompson Ledgemont

the league 's top-ranked
onds.
The
Anderson-to- offense The Bt owns batEdwards conncctwn, so tered New York quarterback
lethal last year, chcked bet- Eli Mannmg and forced htm
ter than at any point so far to throw three mterceptions,
m 2008 On the first play the last ot whtch was
after the Gtants took a 7-3 r-:turned 94 ya rds for a
lead tn the second quarter, game-sealtng touchdown by
Edwards lost cor~ck cornerback Enc Wright
Aaron Ross with a i:louble wtth 8.07 lett
move and caught a 0-yard
The G tants rolled up 181
pass from Anderson
rushing yatds but those
The Pro Bowlers had were ollsct by Munnmg's
been out of sync, partly the mtstakes
result of m1ssmg extended
The Browns weren't perIt me dun ng the preseason fect - fa r from tt The
because of injuries. But league 's most penalized
they're slowly developmg team comnutted 10 tnfrac:
the chemistry that made nons, six of them false
them one of the league's top starts , m•~t.tkes that can be
corrected.
combmattons m '07 .
Crennel knows hts team IS
"We were JUSt in a freaktsh rhythm," sa1d Edwards, .flawed, but may be finally
who caught five passes for a fulfilhng lis promtse
He had no clue Edwards
career-htgh 154 yards - 59
more than h1s season total was gomg to perform a tumroutme
dunng
through four games "If we bltng
mtroducttons.
contmue that rhythm, who pregame
knows what can happen. I Boundmg out of the tunnel,
told D.A , 'I've never seen Edwards completed a peryou play like this.' He was fect cartwheef mto a back
111 a wne and that's the kind flip that won htgh marks
of guy we need to fintsh the from stunned teammates
.md Browns fans.
season"
Cleveland's defense was
up to the challenge agamst

Aeglster

(74o&gt; 446-2342 (74o&gt; 992-2156 (304) 675-1333
Or Fax To

446-3008

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Henry (5-3) 96625 ' 10, Lees Creek E
Clinton {5·3) 95410 DIVISION VI
Regton 21-1 Bascom HopewenLqudon (B.Q) 16 9000 2, Nonvalk St
Paul (8·0116 0125 3, Mogadore (8-o)
15 2395 4. McDonald (8.0) 14 6735 5

Leetonta {7-1 ) 12 0375 6, Berlin Center
Western R&amp; ...erve {8 2) 11 3500 7
Columbiana
(6·2)
11 0750
8,
Yo1.mgstown Chn,ttan Schoo (6-2)

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kltncar1yle@lcamc•st net

Publlahlng reurves
1ht rtgntto adn,
reject or cancel any

ad at any time
Errore

Muel
Aeo&lt;&gt;rled on 1he

C...n~

Loll &amp; Found
FOUND Keys at Parrtsh
Ave &amp; Comer of 29th St
PI PI clatm at pt PI C1ty

Polce Dept

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• Oth01'-IVI"fl'

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~ !if, So

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0

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to ~ re; _
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•I

""'"'"'""'!~""""-;;;;;;;;; ,_w;.:w;.:w.;..:.co;.:m.;;;.;lc..:..•..:..·c..:..o;:,m;__ _ _ _ _ _ __:&lt;Dl::.::2008:::::::_b::;Y~N:::;EA:,:..:I:::n:::;cJ

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w/ ::E=~~==~
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&amp;

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404 456 3802

HouMI for Sale
186 North Park Dr call
304 675 5640
or
304·593·1204 w111 sell on
Land Contract or Out
Rtght Also a Wellington
Ptano call for appotnt·
men! to see them both

2 br 1 b , full basement
above ground pool detached double garage
Buy1Rg tools se11 or trade
fenced-In bacK yard n1ce
mechanic-carpenter lawn
neighbOrhood tn Racine
&amp; garden power tools
(740)992 1424
Call 740·368·1515 or cell
740"208 0320
·,"'Y"'r-ot-d"'s"'R"'586"""-,o-r-mo-re

Want To Buy

(.A.)I4 UH'f

~., 11 \r'

Sat

cancelled orders
wtll
sell for balance owed
~ 6x24 &amp; 25)(36
Call
today to save thou·
sands! aoo-352.Q469

Penonab

300

Thurs

Galllpo·

on

Its
1800
sq
ft
Closed $400/month Call Wayne
Fn

STEEL ARCH
, BUILDINGS
Made In USA Thr..

ongthe oftenng

722 Paca, WV 25159

f

&amp;

740 4467300

ommends that you do
bustness with people you
know, and NOT to send
money through the mall
unt1l you have rnvesttgat·

fjomance
55·72 PO

Conunercial

Angle

Wed
30pm

Tue
Bam

NOnCE OHIO VALLEY
PUBLISHING CO rec·

woman

Concrete

Scrap Metals Open Mon great locallon

rest Call (740)742·3014
or 740·992·3371

seeks

S •te~

Grattng tor Dratns Onve For
sale
or
lease
ways &amp; Walkways L&amp;L offoce/warehouse/storage

,-r

~ ...,.., A\.WA'1':&gt; ~N\'tii ~l""'f-\11;01
.,,lr1 ~~ otuol••lL fiqU,. A~p.

Stolen11 Razor redlblack
$1 000 Fleward for Infer
maltOn, leading to Ar

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

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LOST 1 tg &amp; 1 sm Black
Lab Leta~. Reward
304-895 3274
or
304-593 3702

M~~~~

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1000

Farm Equlpmtnl

p..,

Waterproofing
Unconditional lifetime
guarantee Local refer·
ences furnished Estab

AKC Min Dachshunds 7
wk old 1 Dapple long
tlatr male 1 short tlalr
male
740 446 2751 or
740 645 2340

loshed 1975 Call 24 Hrs

-------

740 446..()870 Rogers
Basement waterproofing

Ct&lt;C

Fleglslered

Btctlon

Frlse puppieS 8 wks old
Great wtth chtldren and
non
shsddrng
Male

$450 females
Marnett
740·376·0664
740 525-4143

$500

OH
or

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stl
any

1nto and p•ctures. go to
www orvb com
ID
Browning 740-446 7204

pre
currency

New 2BA 2 bath on 3 ac
new refng range &amp; dishwasher tncluded $75 000

Absolute Top Dollar
ver/gold
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10KI14KI18K gold tew·

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1935

dental

proof/mtnl

US

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INTEGRITY, monds MTS Com Shop

KIEFER BUILT,
~51 2nd Avenue, Galh
VALLEY
HORSEJUVE poliS 446·2842
STOCK
TRAILERS
Yard Sale
LOAD
MAX
EQUIP
~-~~~~-MENT
ffiAILERS Garage Sale Ra 1n or
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Lew1s Lane Pt Pleasant
CARGO/CONCESSION
Oct 1617 ~8 eam-spm,
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E Matn St, Pomeroy Oh
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740-446 7029
Extraordinary

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Spoctocutor view

thl

of

Ohio River
Pnvate dnve ott Lincoln
Hdl
Pomeroy
Oh10
woods on three Sides
(4+)acres to a htstoncal
home
C1rca 1900 5
bedrooms 2 fireplaces 2
full baths 2 sta trcases
beauttful orlgtnal wood
work, many ptcture wrn
dows mostly new wrn
dows largE! ktlchen and
breakfast room
beauft
fully landscaped with 1n
ground pool Sit on the
wrap around porch and
enroy
lhe spectacular
vtew of the Ohto Rtver 2
car detached garage and
2 out bUtldtngs Would
make a wondertul fam tly
home or bed &amp; breakfast
Pnvate and PICturesque

SPECTACULAR VIEW

Senous

1nqu res

only

please ca11740 992 3678

3500

Rc:~l

EstatC'
Rrn1als

Clip thiS AD and take 11
w1th you when you vtstt
our community to get
thts spec1al dtscount
Move 1n 1n Oct and get
$100 DO off your 2BR
Apt. tn Nov Currently
renlulQ 1 &amp; 2 BA umts
Spacious floor plans
ranch &amp; townhome style
llv1ng, playground &amp;
buketball coun on Stle
laln'tdry factltty 24 hr
emergency matnte
nance qutel country lo
cation close to ma1or
medteal
tac11tttes
pharmactes grocery
store JUSt mtnutes
away from other maror
shoppmg In the area

Honoyoucl&lt;le Hills
Aportmonts
266 COiontal Onve f!:113
Bidwell OhiO 45614

740-446·3344

Ofi'ICe Hours M W F

9AM 5PM

�'

Wednesday, October 15, 2008

Page Ba • The Dculy Sentinel

www.mydallysentlnel.com

Wednesday, October 15,2008

www.mydailysentinel.com

'

•

~Stress fracture

sidelines IPrep Football Notebook: Teams piling up the points

. CLASSIF 'I ED

~~~~~:~.~~!~:'h., M"::,~:::::, •h• Weekly football computer ratings

:(AP) - Marshall se111or
• ·
M k 1
.swmgman
ar e
:Humphrey will mtss up to
' SIX weeks With a sttess !rae. 1f &lt;
•.t ure Ill hIS e I oOOt
:· Thundenng Herd coach
;Donnie Jones s,ud Tuesday
•!hat Humphrey won't have
:surgery but wtll have to
:wear a protecttve boot
'.

back for the season opener
N
16
W
on ov
, agamst
e&gt;t
Vtrgmia Tech
l;lumphrey played most ot
1
h
ast season Wtl a stre's
fracture m hts nght heel , an
mJury that forced httn to
mtss three games He ,tveraged 13 3 potms and 56
rebounds last seasott.

..

NLCS

•..•

from Page 81

the ship the next tune out.
He's gomg to com~ out wtth
a lot of mtensily ,md as "
dub. we neeu to le&lt;.'tl ull
that"
The Philhes have built a
commandmg lead desptte the
offen"ve stntggles of home
run hmer Rymf Howatd and
Jtmmy Rollins, who are a
combmed 5-for-33 m the
senes. Myers, Stmrs. Shane
VK·tonno. Chase Utley and
Pdl Burrell have provtded
some of the team's btg Juts m
tts thtee come-from-behmd

•.
•,

:Wednesday mght for the
Podgers, who need a better
'perfo!TI1ance out of the 24: year-old nght-hander than
:what he showed m Game 2
• He allowed etght runs :seven earned - and etght
~Its over 2 1-3 mmngs 111
:.thetr 8-5 loss Fnday m
:Phtladelphta
"It's pretty much do or
. dte," he satd Monday
: Billingsley took tl hard
.after Phtlhes starter Brett
: Myers -a career 116 httter
.- h11 a go-ahead RBI smgle
:Off h1m With two outs m the
-second mnmg. then c:h.tsed
'Bilhngsley wtth a two-run
· smgle m the thtrd
: "He's sensmve , yet he's
:very aggresstve and very sure
:of htmself," Torre smd ''The
tough part about playmg m
th1s postseason ts to nMke
sure you keep tt as a baseball
game and let the pamc come
from the manager and not
from you Hopefully he can
get htmself m that frame of
lrund . you can only wm one
_game nght now and that's the
game you're ptlchmg "
Game I wmner Cole
Hamels returns tor the
· Phtlhes He staked the
Dodgers to a 2-0 lead 111 the
senes opener before 'ettl mg
down , allowmg two runs and
six hits over seven mmngs
"He's our guy Any ttme
you have your EUY gomg you
feel very conhdent.'' Dobbs
srud. "He finds a way to nght

Buckeyes
fromPageBl
and Web sttes are calhng the
offense ummugmattve and
predtctable.
Several
Southern Caltfomta players
sa1d they knew what the
Buckeyes were gomg to do
on almost every snap after
USC pounded Ohto State
35-3 m Boeckman's last
start
Even Tressel seemed to
questiOn hts own approach
on Tuesday
"You always have to start
by bemg troubled by the
plan.becausc there's got to
be some reasons why you're
not eKecutmg·." he satd
A porous offenstve ltne
mtght be Ohto State's
biggest
problem
The
Buckeyes are 106th m the
nation m sacks allowed
Tressel has taken an
mcreasmg mterest in the
hne in recent weeks. even
dubbmg htmself the "assi stant offenstve line coach"
Usually reserved on and off
the field, Tressel has
stramed h1s votce yellmg at

Cleveland
Browns
wtde recetver Braylon
Edwards
dunks the
ball over
the cross·: bar after an
11-yard
· touchdown
catch in the
fourth quarter of an
.NFL football
game
against the
New York
Gtants on
Monday in
Clevl!land
Edwards
had f1ve
catches lor
154 yards
fn
Cleveland's
35-14wm
AI' photo

WillS

"Who though~ Myers was
gomg to get three hns·1 You
couldn ' I draw th.tl up."
pmch-httter Geoff Jenkms
sat d. "Even t! Jtmmy tsn't
locked in at the plate. he takes
mns &lt;tWa) m the field He
nlways plays defense "
Rollins hasn't come close
to matchmg hts MVP numbers from a yc,tr ago
"Thts team has been bUtlt
arouhd a nutt1ber of guys
There tsn't JUSt one hero,
whtch makes everyone feel
hke they're mvolved.'' he
satd "I was able to do somethmg m the first senes and
guys weren't. Now I'm not
and guys are It's about the

team"
For the Dodgers, tt's about
gettmg strong perfommnces
from Billmgsley and thcu
bullpen , whtch collapsed m
Game4
••Pttchmg ts gomg to be
the way yo u get off on the
nghl foot and get a httle
momentum gomg," Torre
sa td "Our goal right now IS
to be on that plane on
Thursday.'
the linemen to be qutcker
and hold thetr blocks
longer
But the sacks aren 't all
the lmes ' fault.
Pryor is dangerous runner
- able to dodge or outmn
onrushmg defenders Yet he
sometimes doesn't know
when to throw a ball away
to avotd trouble He was
sacked three ttmes on
Saturday m a 16-3 vtctory
over Purdue , a game 111
whtch the Buckeyes' dtdn 't
score an offenstve touchdown
'·He can make b1g plays
wtth hts feet but he h.ts to
teahze It's not htgh school
he c.tn't nw.ke btg plays
every smgle ttme tor 20
yards or more. B,lllard
satd "He's not alwdys
gomg to get btg plays."
He satd the Buckeyes
cannot contmue playmg the
way they have been
"It's
frustratmg
Everybddy thmks tl \ ft ustratmg." he smd "But we're
not warned about tl as
much as maybe others are
because we know tt's thmgs
th.n we can change. to turn
around the way the 'cason
ts gomg nght now ..

w.ner
Some htgh schoolloothall
teams . for some r~a sun. arc
VITall y mlected "tth olfcnsc
Or maybe the y're tmmumzed :111 mnst defense
. Just m Central Olmf '"
Week 6. B.1lt1motc Ltbet1y Unton bcdl Moller&gt;pott 77-0
In Week 7, Grove City
Chnsttan beat M,mchester
96-20
and
DeGt aff
Rtvctstdc bc.tl M.tnon
Catholic gJ-0. And on Week
8.
Becchcrolt
be.\1
Centen111.1l
96-0
.md
Wayne slte ld -Goshen beat
Manon Cttholte 74 6
The
oulbllfst
by
Beechcroft (7-1) c.tme one
week afte• ,, 13-6 loss to
Brookh,tven The Cougars
are still a&gt;eragmg 5 1 4
pomts pe• game
And ptty poo• Manon
Cttholtc . the smalle't foot ball school m Ohto wtth JU St
43 boys It IS ,J IIowmg Sf 6
pomts a game
It's 11ot JUS I tn the heat! of
Oh10, en her Shet wood
Fatrvtew beat Havtland
Wayne Trace 73-21 last
weeke nd James Ekhmger
threw for "x TDs and scored
on tour TD runs
Elchmger had four passes
for scores mthe fttsl qumter
as the Apaches took &lt;1 35-0
lead Fan vtew had 318 yat ds
of total oflense 111 the first
while
holdt!l~
quarter
Wayne Trace to 63 At hall
time, Fairvtew led 53 21 and
had amassed 598 yards of
total offense
The Apaches ended the
game wtth 740 yat ds of
offense
mcludmg
490
through the atr Wayl1e Trace
was held to 148 yards total
(104 111 the fu st half)
Elchtnger ftmshed the
ntght 14-of-20 p.1ssmg for
485 yards whtle adding 154
mshmg yards
NOT A BAD SUB: When
Ottawa-Glandotf lost stat
RB Log.m Kaufman to .1
season-endmg knee mjury,
sentor Jacob Lugo was
asked to take up the slack In
a 35-6 Will over Van Wert,
Lugo c.trtted 23 tunes lor a
school record 302 yards,
surpasslllg the smgle-game
mark of 298 yards set by
Luke Polhast m 2002
RECORD-SMASHERS:
Coldwater's Zach Stelrmg
returned an mterceptton I 02
yards tor a touchdown m the
Cavalters 3~-7 wm ovet
Delphos
St
John's.
Rockford Parkway .til-putpose man Josh Ftshet. who
bas play ', runmng back ,
wtde rece1ver. qumtcrhack
and dcfenstve b.tck thts sc,tson. set the schooltecord fot
career tou chdowns (30) m a
38-27 Will OVCI Mtnstet;
Coldwatet \ Ton y Hatlamert
11cd the state record by
catclung ,, p.1ss tn hts 35th
consecuttve g&lt;~mc. n1.1tchmg
Jtmmy Jewett from North
Lebanon DIXle hom 1.999to
2002. and Ad,tm Brown
ru shed 10 t11nes lor 177
yards - all m the first h,Jif
. - and ttcd the 'chool recotd
wtth ftvc rushmg TDs .1s he
led Cmc Ill null Eldct pu't
Covmgton Cuthohc (Ky.) .
56-7
4-\N YOU TOP THIS'!
Mtke M,tsnerus set an Avon
Lake tccord wtlh 369 y.trds

Revive

'coLUMBUS (AP) - tlefe are the
fourth weekly football compulerrotlnQI
trom me Ohio Hogh School AthletiC
Asso&lt;oa!IOn RatongsarebydM-811&lt;1
oegoon woth record and ooorage 1&gt;1-pomls per game (101&gt; eiQhl !Nma In
eacn regoon advance oo ragional quartertonetsl
·

Andetson(B-2)175875 5 K1ngs
Millo l(lngs (S.3) 154125 6 Day
Dunbar (7_1, 13S250 1 Mt orab
Western Brown (8·0) 128785 . 8
Morrow Utile Miami (IH) 12 5376 9
Trenton Edgewood (8-2) 109125 10,
BellbfQok(4-4198375

141750 6 Cln Wyomong (8-2)
121000 7 Archbishop Allar (0.2)
117250 6 Con N CoUege HIH (5-3)
99125 9 Ham Badln{!l'3)9687510,
Cartoste (3-5169250

DIVISION Ill

RegiOn 17- 1 Young UrsuUne (8-Q)

Reglcn 9-1. Aufl&gt;ra (6-2) 15 8375 2
Cuya Fa111Walo11JftJK(S.2) 155787
3, Young Uberty (8.0) 14 7000 4
Chagnn Falla (6-2) 12 9800 5, Ravenna
(6·2) 1'2 6000 6. Hubbard {6 21
11 8625 7, Cnarrlon ND·Calhedral
(.sHn' (4·4) 10 M6o 8 Corlland
LakeVIew (S.3) 9 11235 9 S1r..tsboro
(5·31 8 9750 16, Chesterland W
Gasufl" (5·3) a 9250
Region I&lt;HI St Marys !olemonal{7·1 )
' 17.7375 2. Beii&amp;IIUe (1·1)174125 3
Avon (8.0) 171760 4 Clyde (7 1r
149250 ~TiflPCttyllppecanoe 17·1)
146000 6, 0eti81JC9 (6·2) 145000 1
~ry Big Walrwt (5-21 14 2500 8
Urt&gt;ona (7·1) • 12 7000 9, , Toffln
Columbian (6 2) 12 1455 10 Lorna
Sllawnee (5.,'3) 11 0250
Reglcn' 11-1, Can! souln (82)
19 2750 2, Canal Fllffi&gt;n NW (7-1)
1821175. 3 Newark Licking ¥allay {7 1)
150695 4, Dover (7·1) 150500 5
Poland Bemtnary' (6-2) 14 5750 6
Granville (6.2) 12 4250 7 Raylan~
BUcl&lt;oye l,pcol (5-3) 11 B64S 8 New
Phttadetpl)la (8-;0) 11 7500 9. Cactiz
Harrttson C~ ($-2) 10;1700 10
¥1nc:&amp;l11 Warren (4-4) 1o0790
Region 12-1, Circleville Logan Elm t6
or17.6625.:f.GtnmanlownValleyVIew(7·
t7 eS?Ii. 2. Thornville Shendan (8 0)
1) 187250 4, ChUIIcothe {6·2) 16 5875
5, Canal WinChester (80) 137875 6.
Colo Eaatmoor Acad (7·1) 133750 7,
Frantclin (5.,'3) ~ 11500 8. Norwoo&lt;l (7·1 I
10.11!75 9," s,xtey tS.3) 10 2720 10.
oay.' il~I"IOhne (6-2) 102250

Creston Norwayne (7-1} 13 6750 -4,
Columb.ana CresMew (7·1) 12 8590 5,
Gates Mills G1lmour Acaa (7·1)

• Cln

DIVISION I

Regoon 1-1 Glenville Academic
Campus 18.0) 24 3475 2. Cleve St
tgnahus (1-1) 22 5805 3. SVOngsvltr.
(7 ,, 22 f500 4 Menlar (8·2) 21.5500
5 Euclfd (6 ~1114250 8, Lakewood 51
~dward (6 2) 16 4440 1 Willoughby
South (6 2) 15 9e90 8 BrOCI&lt;svllleBroadVoew Hts (5 3) 15 0750 9, Solon
(5·3) '2 6500 1o Jonn Adams (6·2)
11 6135
Regoon 2-1 Cant GienOak {7·1)
225375 2 N Canton Harwer (7·1)
204785 3 Amllerst S!eete (8·0)
193250 4 Brunswick (7·1) 181375 5.
Twonshurg (6 2) 17.2750 6 Macedoola
Nordonla (6·2) 167250 7, C8Jit
McKontey (5'3) 16 5155 8, Wadtloorlb
(5·3) 14 8625 9, Mass WMI$0n (5'
3) 144895 10. Fremont Rllt!O (6-2)
14 0210
•~
Regoon a-t, HiHtonl llavideon (8.0)
238500 2 PickerlngionHigtlSchooiC
(8·0)222500 3 Cola Brookhaven{7·1)
20 0165 4, Upper Arhnogtoh (1-1)
17 4500 5, Worthington Klll&gt;ourt~&lt;&gt; (6-2)
14 9875 6, Delaware Hayet ~S-3)
137125 7 Dublin GoHman (7-1)
13 2875 8 Grove CHy (5·3) 11 2500 a,
(.si]Casler (4 4) 9 6995 10. Milr)l.ovflte
(5'3) 9.6750
'
R•gton 4-1 , Ctn. Eldar (7-1) 222925:
2 Con Coleraon (7, 1) 21 5880 3,
Kettering Fairmont (7·1) ~1 1500 4,
Huber HIS wayne (6-2) 209910 5.
Clayton Norlhmonl (J.l) 19.25QO. 8.
Con Woodward (8·0). 17 930!1. 7,
Harrison (5·3). 17 8125 8, Ctn Sf
Xllvier ~4-4) 16,1785 9 Cin Sycamore
(6·2) 15 282~. 10, Centewllle (5·3) ,:/
141500

•

, '

.

J

\

· DIVISION II

I

·r f

'

Region

y;

J.i
ulVJSION IV
~
13-1,

':&gt;'
~

Steubenville (8-0)

1\rSlaw (8.()) 18 6875
3. Young Mooney (7·1) 16 9730 4.
Aegoon 5-1 E Clava Shaw (7.0) Akron St Voncenl·SI Mary (6-21
19 0658 2 Mayfield (7-1) 18 3500 ~. 189480 5, Cuyo Falls Cuya Yalley
Parma Padua (6·2) 14 8725 4, Akron CMI!IIII! ('(j1) 15 4400. 8, Perry [7-1)
Hoban (5·3)137935 5. Kent Roo- 14 2000 " ~lor :rt'lway (6.C2)
(6·2) 12 6750 6. warren HowtaM (M) 13~5 e ~' (7,1) 13 3500 0,
11 8580 7 Mapte Hts (li-3) 11 8125 8, Akron 'Mane(1U1itl&lt; 'i~ 12 9875 10
Berberlon (3-5) 109250 9, Tallmadge Lltll'"'!(7•1)12201!0 , , ' lJ
(5·3) 10 8000 10 Madison (5·3) Rl!!llon 1.._1, f'rlll1o!ja t7·1) 1&amp;5275
10 6625
2;'lo!tln ~ ·(~ 181625 3,
Ragoon 6-1, Tot Cent Cath (8.0) Morlo&gt; Plaa8an1 ~7-1) 1~2875. 4[
23 0990 2, Medina Hoghland (a·O) ~ Alas (8:9) 15 0876,6, Hol'&lt;ll] (820 8750 3 Lexlngion (8·0) 18 3500 •• 2) 10 8375-ll, t!eiMIJo IOIIor Fork (5'23)
Sylvania SouthVIeW (8·0) 16 5215 5, 10.0875 7, Oftl\Viii;Gia(ldort. (S.,JIJ
Lewis ceoter.otentang( {6·2)16 21~5 9.5769 s. Pemt&gt;orvtlle Eaalwolll•(&lt;l'2)
6 Avon Lake (8-.j! 1~5125 7, 82125 '9, 8~rua (6·2) 8os0o 10,
Graenvltle (8-2) 14 9295, 8, Olootangy Hignl"l'd (4-4) 7 3625 '! ' • .1;
loberty {5-3) 14 4375 9, Piqua (5-3) Region 1s-1. M«rilns Ferry , (7·1}
12 8875 10. LOdl Ctoverteal (8·2) 172850. 2, New leKington (8'0)
12 3750
15 3945 3, Belil)ol&gt;1 I.Jr,ton1.ocat (7-1)
Regoon 7-1 Cots DaBeles (8·0) 141125 4, Ironton (5,3) 13,8125 5,
261685 2.l0ulsvllle (8-o) 24850Q. 3. Colo Hartley (5-2), .11.6187, 8,
Logan (8.0) 21 7625 4/ Cols Marlon WIUia._rt W-11 (8-2) 11 ,11!!7~ 1 7 ,
Franklin (S.Q) 20 2500 5. Dublin Jerome Goll •!lollla ~ (8-3)10 819&amp;;,: 8,1S!
(53) 14 6750 6 Alllenc;e t6-2) 128125 Ct~lrtvlllt &lt; ($•3) {0 8175/' 9,.)\jcldng
7 Canfield (6·2) 1~ 4500. 8, 'eolo Holg~tl (Q·2) 9 B750 ,1~. 110~
Beechorott t7-1J 124405 9 Cola Metga(6-2)9 " '" 1.:..
~~wyt t-:
Independence (5·2) 11 5825 101 Cola,, Region 1&lt;1-' ~ Jldwator~8.0) 22 ~I
Wa~erson (4-4) 11 4345
,
~. Ctarl&lt;svllle Cllr\l~n-llloure .(~-0~
Region il-l Now Carlisle Tt&lt;:~~mleh o16.J750 3J.~~aon CftY JonathOn' Alcfttr
(8.0) 20 0000 2 Con Winloti Woods (7- 1 (7-1) e,...., 4, Brookville (8'0)
1) 19 8875 3, Con 1Urpon (7-1) 17 6878 18.19:!P 5, Do
Oilrwoed !6·2)
rtl'hmg m a 36-25 win over pleted 2 of 27 passes for
Berea, runmng for four TDs 455 yards and four TDs Wtth
and throwmg for another on no mtercept1ons - and has a
a 39-yard halfback-opllon, 19-to-1 TDs-to-ptcks rallo'
and Jeremy Scott rushed for th1s season, Pamesv1lle
374 yards and four TDs on Rtvers~de's Kyle Shafter
34 carncs to lead Norwood threw for 287 yards and
past Cmcmnati Northwest touchdowns of 50 and 95
34-2 1
yards in the Beavers' 45-7
BOMBERS
'ARE victory over Chardon; Bo
BACK: Cmcmnati St. Cordell went 27-for-37 passXavter bwke a rare three- mg for 425 yards and five
game losmg streak wtth a TDs as Cincinnau Indian
13-3 wm at Lakewood St. Htll beat Finneytown 47-20,
Edward The Bombers (4-4), wtth Ted Bolser catchmg
1ctgnlllg Dtvtstolt 1 state seven of those passes for
champtons, have tn the past 128 yards and three TDs;
and Zach Toerner ran 29
month lost two quarterbacks ttmes tor 149 yards and two
(Luke Massa , Sam Male) to
bt oken collarbones and lead- TDs and was 15-of-22 pass'mg rusher Connor Earley to mg for 272 yards and three
more TDs as Hamtlton
''knee lllJUry
Badm beat Roger Bacon 38'ThiMt's the way thl ts,,_asnd 21.
you ave to ro 11 wtt tl , t.
BULLETIN
BOARD
X coach Steve Specht satd
MATERIAL: W1th a 36-34
St Xa'ter has tts annual Will over New London,
showdown with Cleveland Ashland Mapleton (2-6) has
St lgnattus on Saturday at won two games m a row for
St Xavter The Bombets the first ltme since the 2000
have not lost to the mne- season; McComb has 499
ttme state champtons smce total wms headmg mto
the 2001 state finals , WJih St. Friday mght's game at
X beatmg lgnatms each year Letpstc; unbeaten and stateranked Ltberty-Benton beat
since m the regular season
PASSING FANCY: In the Hardm Northern 49-0. the
past two weeks, Lexmgton 's school's 26th consecuttve
Coutlncy Avery has com- Blanchard
Valley
i~Q835o;~. Mass

1

Dawson on field goals and

cxtt,l pomts. It was the first

ltme the Browus have not
punted 111 a game since
from Page 81
1995
The Browns racked up
49-yard receptton on the 454 yards of total offense,
game 's tlmd play. the nearly 200 yards more than
Browns controlled one of thetr preVIOUS htgh thiS seathe NFC East superpowers son agamsl a team that had
And , ftnally. with 73 ,000 been allowing only 236
frenzted tans oil hand and Offenstve coordmator Rob
mtlhons of skeptics watch- Chudzinski, who had two
mg on TV, they looked ltke weeks to prepare for the
the team everyone expected Gtants , dev1sed a superb
them to be commg into the game plan that the Browns
season
executed w1th almost ~m­
Wtth their season on hfe , pomt prects1on He unvetled
support, the Browns pulled some new wnnkles, putting
through
the versatile Joshua Cribbs
"It's the guys I've been .in the shotgun and calhO!l a
tellmg you about," sa td reverse for reserve runnmg
quarterback
Derek back Jerome Hamson, who
Anderson, who rewarded went 33 yards to set up a
Crennel's faith and silenced field goal.
more cnttcs by throw1ng for
Anderson barely $Ot h1s
310 yards and two !Ouch- umfoiTil dtrty as hts line
downs Without an mtercep- gave hun an1ple protection
tJon "I never doubted II wh1le leading Cleveland on
ever. It's the ~arne guys that five sconng dnves in eight
made plays last ydtr all sea- pmsesstons The other three
son ,,
ended wtth Dawson mtssmg
Cleveland's offense was a 51-yard field goal, the end
so effie tent that punter D~ve of the f1rst half and
lastud1l's on ly asstgnment Anderson takmg three kneel
wa' to hold for ktcker Phil downs m the closmg sec-

'

Gallia
County
OH

DIVISION V
190610 2

Korllan~

(8·0) 164250. 3,

12 3125 6 N Lima S. Rango (8-2)
10 4250 7. Apple Creek Weynedale (52) 10 ~875 8, Rod&lt;y Rover Luth W (S.
3)9 3500 9 Sm tnvolle (5'3) 9 1500 10.
TnnJIY (5·3) 90495
Region 18-1 Hamler PatriCk Henry (801 156500 2, Bucyrus Wynford (8.0)
14 1125 3 Fondtay Liberty Benton If.())
, 2 9025 4 Delphos Jefferson &lt;a-of
12 3350 5 Sherwood FEmvlew ~7·1
11 8625 6 Archbold (7 1) 11 8500 7,
Liberty Cir (7· 1) 11 7000 8 Hlcksvtlle
(~ 0) 11 0625 9 Ashland CresiV!ew (7·
1l 10 6125 10 Cothns Western
Reserve (6-2) 99375
Reg1on 19-1 Nelsonvtlle-Vork (7-1)
15 86 25
2 Wheelersburg (8·0)
15 1120 3 Portsmouth West (8-Q)

13 5660 4. Johnstown-Monroe (6-2)
13 1125 5 Heatht7·1)123125 6 eaK
Ltberty Unton (7 1) 12 0375 7. W
Lafavene Ridgewood (1-1) 11 7875 8
Cots Readv (4-2) 11 6088 9 ~lnfDrd
(6-2) 11 3375 1o Frederlcl&lt;town t8·2)
10 5500
Aeg~on 2o-1 Cln Hills Ctmstian Acad
{B·O) 16 7125 2. Anna (7·1) 14 6515 a
West JeffonlOO (7·1) 13 0080 4, West
Ltberty Salem (8 0) 1211375
5'
Waynesvtlle {6-2) 12 0370 6 Marla
Ste1n Manon Local (7·1) 11 .8875 7
Casstown Mlamt E (7·1) 101125 8 N
Lewisburg Triad {&amp;-2) -9 7875 9, St

E-mail
classtfied@ mydatlylnbune.com

In One Week With Us
REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS
~=y~
OW NLINE

;a Place

ca.r:.::;. .
·

~rtbune

Sentinel

8 8485

9, New Middletown Spnngfllld
(4·4)7 7875 10 WellsviH&lt;&gt;(B 2) 7 0375
Regoon 22-IL Carey (7·1) 12 5625 2
Ada (8.0) 11 •ODD 3. Pan~ora·Gitboa
(8·0)10 7000 4, Delphos Sl John's (62) 10 6750 5 Antnglon (6·2) B7750 6,
Mt Blanchard Rtverdale (6·2) 81000 7,
Me Comb (6·2) 76250 B. W Umty
Hilltop (6 2) 6 5000 9, New Wash
Buckeye Cent (5 3) 56500 tO
An!werp (4-4) 5 4125
Region 23-1. Hannobai Rlvor (8·0)
15 9545 2. Malvem (6-0j 11 9875 ~.
Glouster Tnmble (6-2) 11 17!10 4,
Snadyslde (6-2) to 6985 5, CalciWtli (62)9 6420 6, Bridgeport (5·3) 9.2395. 7,
Bealtsvl~e (7·1) 8 2725 8 Zli.n$8.
Rosecrans (5-.3) 8DSOO' 9, Newark
Calh (5·3) 1 02s0 10 Sugar Grewe
Berna Unoon (3-5) 6 7750
•
Region .24- 1 Mechanicsburg (8.0)
15 2675 2. Sidney Lehman (6·1)
114198 3 Lockland (6·2) 105250 4,
Sclolovllle Community (7·1) 99785 5,
Cavtngton (6-2) 9 7~50 6, Spring CatH
Cent (5·3) B3875 7, Mlnsler (5-3)
8 2000 8 Ansonia (6·2) 17750 9.
Waynesfield-Goshen (6·21 88250. 10.
Troy Chrtshan (4·4) 6 5960

Conference
wm;
West
Vtrglma power Wheehng
Cenllal makes a v1sit to
Hardmg Stadtum to play
Steubenvtlle Bt~ Red, w1th
the Maroon Kmghts trytng
tu stop Btg Red's 58-game
regulat season and 51-game
home wmmng streaks, m a
matchup of state-ranked
Dtviston V powers. No. 3
Patnck Henry beat No 2
Atchbold 35-7 to cltnch its
seventh stratght Northwest
Ohto League champwnshtp;
a week after 11s 42-39 upset
o; Coleram . Mtddletown
w,,, routed 14-7 by Lakota
West as Stephen Houston,
committed
to
who
Mtsstssrppt earlter m the
week, rushed 2ll ttmes for
146 yards and thtee TDs;
and Madtson had three players ru sh for mote than 100
yards m a 55-22 wm o'er
Asht&lt;tbula Lakeside
MR. EVERYtHING:
Jake Phelp&lt; of Ashtabula
SS. John and P.tul passed for
213 yards. ran tor 78, threw
touchdo\lon passes of 39 and
67 yards , ran for a three-yard
touchdown , returned a ktckoff 80 yards for a touchdown
and mtercepted &lt;1 pass m the
Herulds' 26-14 vtclu~
Thompson Ledgemont

the league 's top-ranked
onds.
The
Anderson-to- offense The Bt owns batEdwards conncctwn, so tered New York quarterback
lethal last year, chcked bet- Eli Mannmg and forced htm
ter than at any point so far to throw three mterceptions,
m 2008 On the first play the last ot whtch was
after the Gtants took a 7-3 r-:turned 94 ya rds for a
lead tn the second quarter, game-sealtng touchdown by
Edwards lost cor~ck cornerback Enc Wright
Aaron Ross with a i:louble wtth 8.07 lett
move and caught a 0-yard
The G tants rolled up 181
pass from Anderson
rushing yatds but those
The Pro Bowlers had were ollsct by Munnmg's
been out of sync, partly the mtstakes
result of m1ssmg extended
The Browns weren't perIt me dun ng the preseason fect - fa r from tt The
because of injuries. But league 's most penalized
they're slowly developmg team comnutted 10 tnfrac:
the chemistry that made nons, six of them false
them one of the league's top starts , m•~t.tkes that can be
corrected.
combmattons m '07 .
Crennel knows hts team IS
"We were JUSt in a freaktsh rhythm," sa1d Edwards, .flawed, but may be finally
who caught five passes for a fulfilhng lis promtse
He had no clue Edwards
career-htgh 154 yards - 59
more than h1s season total was gomg to perform a tumroutme
dunng
through four games "If we bltng
mtroducttons.
contmue that rhythm, who pregame
knows what can happen. I Boundmg out of the tunnel,
told D.A , 'I've never seen Edwards completed a peryou play like this.' He was fect cartwheef mto a back
111 a wne and that's the kind flip that won htgh marks
of guy we need to fintsh the from stunned teammates
.md Browns fans.
season"
Cleveland's defense was
up to the challenge agamst

Aeglster

(74o&gt; 446-2342 (74o&gt; 992-2156 (304) 675-1333
Or Fax To

446-3008

Oeacl/1irec .

YOUR CLASSIFIED LINE AD NOTICED
How you can have borders and graphics
~
addedtoyourdassiftedads
Borders$3.00/perad
I!
-Graphics SOC for small
S1.00 for large

.s,;..

pjsplay Ads

Wprd Ads

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

992-2157

Or Fax To

Dally In-Column: 9:00 a.m.
Monday-Friday for ln•artlon
In Ne•t Day•• Paper
Sunday In-Column: 9:00a.m.
For Sundays Paper

AU Dleplay: l:Z Noon 2
llu•ln. .s Day• Prior To
Publication
Sunday Display: 1:00 p.m •
Thursday for Sundays

• All ads must be prepaid'

Henry (5-3) 96625 ' 10, Lees Creek E
Clinton {5·3) 95410 DIVISION VI
Regton 21-1 Bascom HopewenLqudon (B.Q) 16 9000 2, Nonvalk St
Paul (8·0116 0125 3, Mogadore (8-o)
15 2395 4. McDonald (8.0) 14 6735 5

Leetonta {7-1 ) 12 0375 6, Berlin Center
Western R&amp; ...erve {8 2) 11 3500 7
Columbiana
(6·2)
11 0750
8,
Yo1.mgstown Chn,ttan Schoo (6-2)

Websttes·
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KIT &amp; CARLYLE

rk;~~~~~~~==::~::;::=~;:~:-----~

Ohio Volley

kltncar1yle@lcamc•st net

Publlahlng reurves
1ht rtgntto adn,
reject or cancel any

ad at any time
Errore

Muel
Aeo&lt;&gt;rled on 1he

C...n~

Loll &amp; Found
FOUND Keys at Parrtsh
Ave &amp; Comer of 29th St
PI PI clatm at pt PI C1ty

Polce Dept

..\Kf''Eo

• Oth01'-IVI"fl'

1'~ ~ CA'@,
~ !if, So

\"t'~ ..AJ~t&gt; ~R

~

lor

._v...r,,

~\)t;'"'

0

0

to ~ re; _
?~r ~

•I

""'"'"'""'!~""""-;;;;;;;;; ,_w;.:w;.:w.;..:.co;.:m.;;;.;lc..:..•..:..·c..:..o;:,m;__ _ _ _ _ _ __:&lt;Dl::.::2008:::::::_b::;Y~N:::;EA:,:..:I:::n:::;cJ

70 yr old 'Country Boy'

w/ ::E=~~==~
Box
HotMimpoo•tm-

BaMmMt

-Hooting &amp; Cooling

&amp;

Sun

404 456 3802

HouMI for Sale
186 North Park Dr call
304 675 5640
or
304·593·1204 w111 sell on
Land Contract or Out
Rtght Also a Wellington
Ptano call for appotnt·
men! to see them both

2 br 1 b , full basement
above ground pool detached double garage
Buy1Rg tools se11 or trade
fenced-In bacK yard n1ce
mechanic-carpenter lawn
neighbOrhood tn Racine
&amp; garden power tools
(740)992 1424
Call 740·368·1515 or cell
740"208 0320
·,"'Y"'r-ot-d"'s"'R"'586"""-,o-r-mo-re

Want To Buy

(.A.)I4 UH'f

~., 11 \r'

Sat

cancelled orders
wtll
sell for balance owed
~ 6x24 &amp; 25)(36
Call
today to save thou·
sands! aoo-352.Q469

Penonab

300

Thurs

Galllpo·

on

Its
1800
sq
ft
Closed $400/month Call Wayne
Fn

STEEL ARCH
, BUILDINGS
Made In USA Thr..

ongthe oftenng

722 Paca, WV 25159

f

&amp;

740 4467300

ommends that you do
bustness with people you
know, and NOT to send
money through the mall
unt1l you have rnvesttgat·

fjomance
55·72 PO

Conunercial

Angle

Wed
30pm

Tue
Bam

NOnCE OHIO VALLEY
PUBLISHING CO rec·

woman

Concrete

Scrap Metals Open Mon great locallon

rest Call (740)742·3014
or 740·992·3371

seeks

S •te~

Grattng tor Dratns Onve For
sale
or
lease
ways &amp; Walkways L&amp;L offoce/warehouse/storage

,-r

~ ...,.., A\.WA'1':&gt; ~N\'tii ~l""'f-\11;01
.,,lr1 ~~ otuol••lL fiqU,. A~p.

Stolen11 Razor redlblack
$1 000 Fleward for Infer
maltOn, leading to Ar

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

NEW AND USED-STEEL
Steel Beams Ptpe Rebar !!

Channel Flat Bar Steel ;;;;;;;...;;;;;;;;;;;;"-;;;; ·

'\~.:......\ V " t" "'"""

LOST 1 tg &amp; 1 sm Black
Lab Leta~. Reward
304-895 3274
or
304-593 3702

M~~~~

Real bt tiP

1000

Farm Equlpmtnl

p..,

Waterproofing
Unconditional lifetime
guarantee Local refer·
ences furnished Estab

AKC Min Dachshunds 7
wk old 1 Dapple long
tlatr male 1 short tlalr
male
740 446 2751 or
740 645 2340

loshed 1975 Call 24 Hrs

-------

740 446..()870 Rogers
Basement waterproofing

Ct&lt;C

Fleglslered

Btctlon

Frlse puppieS 8 wks old
Great wtth chtldren and
non
shsddrng
Male

$450 females
Marnett
740·376·0664
740 525-4143

$500

OH
or

EBV,

stl
any

1nto and p•ctures. go to
www orvb com
ID
Browning 740-446 7204

pre
currency

New 2BA 2 bath on 3 ac
new refng range &amp; dishwasher tncluded $75 000

Absolute Top Dollar
ver/gold
coins

10KI14KI18K gold tew·

elry

1935

dental

proof/mtnl

US

gold,
sets

dta

INTEGRITY, monds MTS Com Shop

KIEFER BUILT,
~51 2nd Avenue, Galh
VALLEY
HORSEJUVE poliS 446·2842
STOCK
TRAILERS
Yard Sale
LOAD
MAX
EQUIP
~-~~~~-MENT
ffiAILERS Garage Sale Ra 1n or
CARGO
EXPRESS &amp; Shine
HOMESTEADER
Lew1s Lane Pt Pleasant
CARGO/CONCESSION
Oct 1617 ~8 eam-spm,
TRAILERS
B+W adults boy.s girts brand
GOOSENECK FLATBED name clothtng tw 1n bed ,
$3999 VIEW OUR EN drapes &amp; m1sc,
TIRE TRAILER INVEN ......,.&lt;::-"""':"'~~-~
TORY AT
Odd's &amp; End"s Sale
WWW CARMICHAEL·
Monday
Fnday
TRAILERS COM
8-4p m Sat 8-12 600
740-446·382~
E Matn St, Pomeroy Oh
I COO

RPcrC',ll 0 HI
Veh•cles

740-446 7029
Extraordinary

Property:

Spoctocutor view

thl

of

Ohio River
Pnvate dnve ott Lincoln
Hdl
Pomeroy
Oh10
woods on three Sides
(4+)acres to a htstoncal
home
C1rca 1900 5
bedrooms 2 fireplaces 2
full baths 2 sta trcases
beauttful orlgtnal wood
work, many ptcture wrn
dows mostly new wrn
dows largE! ktlchen and
breakfast room
beauft
fully landscaped with 1n
ground pool Sit on the
wrap around porch and
enroy
lhe spectacular
vtew of the Ohto Rtver 2
car detached garage and
2 out bUtldtngs Would
make a wondertul fam tly
home or bed &amp; breakfast
Pnvate and PICturesque

SPECTACULAR VIEW

Senous

1nqu res

only

please ca11740 992 3678

3500

Rc:~l

EstatC'
Rrn1als

Clip thiS AD and take 11
w1th you when you vtstt
our community to get
thts spec1al dtscount
Move 1n 1n Oct and get
$100 DO off your 2BR
Apt. tn Nov Currently
renlulQ 1 &amp; 2 BA umts
Spacious floor plans
ranch &amp; townhome style
llv1ng, playground &amp;
buketball coun on Stle
laln'tdry factltty 24 hr
emergency matnte
nance qutel country lo
cation close to ma1or
medteal
tac11tttes
pharmactes grocery
store JUSt mtnutes
away from other maror
shoppmg In the area

Honoyoucl&lt;le Hills
Aportmonts
266 COiontal Onve f!:113
Bidwell OhiO 45614

740-446·3344

Ofi'ICe Hours M W F

9AM 5PM

�Wednesday, October 15, 2008

www.mydailysentinel.com

Wednesday, October 15,2008
ALLEYOOP

Mricc:l

Saloo

The Daily Sentinel• Page 85

WW!ft.mydailysentinel.com

NEA Crossword Puzzle

BRIDGE

ACROSS

Phillip
Alder

53 Lampoon
54 Ptlinler'o

1 Pie baker

5Roloca1e

55=pot

10 Frtgld ....
12~lhe

1

YOUNG 'S

CARPENTER
SERVI CE

·--

Racine , Ohio
45771
740449:2217

• Elldric:al 1: Ptumblng
• Roofing &amp; Gutlln
· Vtnyl Sldlfti &amp; htntlng
· P•tto •nd Porcb OKkl

. -

WV031725

V.C. YO UN G Ill
J9?f,~i~

p '" (''0\ ( • ~

,

t , ''

,

,

'a'riO' "'

t&gt;/l 1010'11e' '
'

Hours
7:00AM· 8:00PM

MONTY

• Garages
• Complete
Remodeling

• 4,
.KJ 1095
• 8 6 32

•AQJ098
• %·

•

A 9 2

148-992-1871

•AQ 764
t K J 7
olio K 6 3

Stop &amp; Compare

Dealer: South
Vulnerable: Neither

llctloneer:
IIIII R.loble Jr.
140-416·1164

West

Nort.h

1•

Pass

I•

Pass

Pass

Pass

Pass

Pass

Ea"'

Pass

Dbl .

Opening lead: "!?

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

T~IS P~OMOTIONA£.
GIVEAwAY

SO wt4AT'S

U&gt;eA OF
......... YOtJM1.

TINY

"

/ 'OA~l&gt;f{

WHATtHA
POtN',

740.446.9200

BASED ,

ON YORE
AI.IBIS !!

SHERIFF?

2459 St. Rl 160 • GaHipolls

doubled?

Mon-Fri.
· Sat. 8:00am· 12 .

we appreciate your
·

THE BORN LOSER
'i FIGURE. TilE.~ ~E:. flo.'(

Aac:lne, Ohio 740.247-2019
Owners:
Jon Van Meter &amp;
Paul Rowe ,

cell: 7411-41&amp;-5047

I'EA.K

email:
jrshad1rm@eol.com

~~~
.•

,,..

E~l~ 'l't:.I&gt;St.!&gt;, ..

/

'U~FORTUAATE:L'(, Tl-tf&gt;..T I~ ""'i
OFF5E.1 f&gt;'( 11\t:. REAUIA.\10~
TAATTI\E.5l mt~-.'1' FA/o\JL'i:S

\Bo.K

West s~ould lead the spa&lt;te lour.
The play may take one of several courses. East's best de"fense is to win the first
trick and shift to the" club jack, which
West ducks around to North's queen.
Declarer wOuld probably run the diamond 10, then play another diamond,
but East can win, cash liis spade ace,
and play another club. Alternatively, East
can switch to his heart at trick two, West

"from nowhere" on a partSCOJe deal.

Recruit volunteers tor
non-prolll organizations
such as St. Jude
Children's Research
Hospital

peckat.

373-6400

(10) 15

piCket.

: CGmmunlty
Service
· B~k Grant Program.
·•Sentlceo eiJntbte
for
•
,funding era: Home, .....,_, Medical e.cort,
:rr.noportetlon, Con·
Millo ond
Delivered Mello.
Dilallo o1 Nrvl- and
fundlngaralnctudedln
:H RFP. TechniCII as·elatance will be lVII...
upon raqUIII. Tho
·RFP packet will be
'evaltabte September
29, 2008. Compr.ted
jlropoul deadline 4:00
P. M. Oct- 17, 2008.
Corrllct Mindy Coyton,
:AM Planner •t (740)
·373-e400 lor RFP
: (IOICUI.
·(10) 15

=-

:lblo

Public Notice
Tho ArM Agency on
·Aging at II!H:Itep Hills:Hocking Valley R•
·glonll Development
·Dtotrtct, P.O. Box 370.
RMc&gt;, Ohio 45773 lo raqUIIIIlng propoaato fDI'
200t Title til 0 0 1 ·PtiWoillton and Health
'PromotiOn Servl-.
;Title Ill 0 DI-N Pro-

;....Ilion- Health Plo-

'

Guttering

F4ll and Part-time
Positions
Day and Evening
Shifts

111\Y tliS
PI!OTEC.TIIIE CUP
CI\VSE liiM
DESILITATING
CHAfiNG. P~SLEHS ,

Seamless Gutters

Roofing, Siding, Clutters
Insured &amp; Bonded
740·653·9657

Professional Work

Environment!
Medical, Dental. EAP,
401KL

On-site Doctor
· Weekly Pay and
Bonus Incentives!

, WANTED: Part-time po·

1-888·1MC·PAYU
EICI. 1921
tlt1p:l/)obl.lntoclllon.com

__

ATTENTION;
LOcal company with .lull
time and part time po·
our

cust(lmer

for

sition available to assist
individuals with mental
retardation at a. group
home in Bidwell:

Quality Seamless
Gutters
Maintenance Plus

1) 35 hrs: tO::JOa-7:30p
Sun; 2·10p MfTuNI;
2) 27.5 hrS: 3:30-11p Frl;

9a-7p 5at: 1-9p Sun;
Must have higll school
diploma/GEO, va~d driyer's license and three
years good drilling e~Cpe­
rience.
$8.40/hr
after
training.· E)(cellent Oene.fll
package.
Pre-employ·

Cmmntn:in/ &amp; Residentiaf

Vinyl
·Siding/Replacement
Windows/Remodeling
Bonded Ill. Insured
7411-992·1493 Office

RFP minion at the follow· service department · No
lng addreaa:
experience required per·
(10) 15
Environmental Review manent position com·
Appelll Commloalon pany training provided ment Drug Testing. Send
309 South
Fourth must be a High School resume
to:
Buckeye
Public Notice
Public Notice
Street, .Room 222 gradua,te. Full time po- Community
Services.
PUBLIC NOTICE
Columbue, DH 43215
tiona $560 per week, P.O. Box . 604, Jackson,
Tho Aru Agency on PUBUC NOTICE
All lnqulrtu concern· rapid advancements and OH · 45640 or e-mail to
Aging at Buckeye Hilts- ISSUANCE OF AP. lng thll action may be benefits. For an interview beyeeserv@yahoo.com. ,
Hocking V•lley Re- PROVAL TQ AELO- directed to" Ohio EPA call740·446·7798,
be~d1ine for 8ppllcants :
glonet Development CATE A PORTABLE DAPC, Southeaat Dla·
10115108, Equal Opportu·
Dtotrlct, P.o. Box 370, AIR
CONTAMINANT trlct Office at (740)38S. Ohio
valley
Home
I
Reno, OH 451T3 Ia re- SOURCE
Stonoco 8501 ..
Health, Inc. hinng Home
queollng proposalo to Equipment 121.8809
(10) 15
Health
Aides , STNA,
Managomont I
:provide oervlcas to l11ue Date : 1010712008 - - - - - - - - - . , CNA, . CHHA, PCA .may
Supervisory
·penono 60 yaore of Relocation
Number.
'- apply at 1480n Jackson -;~~:;;;:~
: oge lind older In Mon- REL00227
Public Notice
Pike, Gallipolis, Ohio or . . prppeny Manaaetbent
fOI and Noble Coon· Facility 10:0684960029
phone 740 441 1393 !or P.T. Community Man·
tiel
. , Funding oource1 Facltlly
Location: PUBLIC NOTICE
.
'
more
info.. Competitive.
ager needed lor local
are Title-Itt B, Title-ttl C.. Stoneco
Equipment NOTICE: Is hereby wages,
mileage · reim· eparlment community to1, ntl..ll C·2, and the 1:21.8809

G

:SIG NATE

drtterer~cel

in

given that on Saturday, bursement

PO Box .266, 48947 October 16, 2008 at
State
Route
124, 10:00 a.m., a public
Racine, Ohio , , 45771 oale wilt be held •t 211
Thornville, OH 43076
W
Second
St.,
Foclllty Dlocrlptlon: Pomeroy, Ohio. Tho
AophoHPivlngMillllra FarmeraBonklndSev·
and Block Manufoctur- lngo Company lo uti·
Jng
lng lor caoh In hand or
Ohio EPA hll received certlfllcl cheek the lot·
araquesttoratocoteo lowtngcoltateral:
portable air conlltml· 2007 Cllevrotat Stiver·
nant eource for the. ado
2KH
Vln
compony
Identified IIGCHK29U17E118487
obove. upcSn ravlow of Tho Fonnere Bank and
the raquell, the Dirac· Sevlng1
Company,
tor hll approved tho Pomeroy, Ohio, r•
relocation and the teet~ sarvea therlght to bid
lly lo authorized to at thlo oale, and to with·
move to 49947 Stole clraw the llbove colla!·
Route 124, Racine, era! prior to aote.
Ohio upon tile publiCI· Furth.,, The Formero
lion of thto notice.
Bonk and Sevlnga
You are hereby nblllled CQmpony l'ller'lll the
thll thll octlon (op-. right to rajlctany or all
proval) of the Dlroctor bldoaubmltted.
lo final lind may beep- Tho . above deocrlbed
pNied to the Environ- collateral will be ootd
Reilew Appeela "II lo-where II", with
Commluton purauont no exprnoed or lm·
to Seclton 3745.04 of plied warrMlly given.
tile Ohio Reviled Code. For further Information,
Tho oppNI mu1t be In or tor on appolnlment
writing and HI torth to tnopecl colt otero!,
tile action complained prior to uta date con·
of and the groundo tact Cyndle ·or Kon at
upon which the oppul 7~·2136.
lo baaed. Tho oppool (10) 15, 16, 17
mull be filed with tile
CommiNion
within

and

740-416-8339Celt
Free Estimated
Pomeroyi Ohio

It has been voted by the .
members present at the
May 28, 2008 regular meeting
of Feeney-Bennett Post #1 28',
American legion, Middleport,
OH, to sell the Post's larm
located ·on Bailey Run Amid. A
purchase agreement has been
accepted from a bid closest to
the appraised value. This
pending sale will impact those .
with hunting rights on this farm.

municatiOn and organizetiona! s~lls and be de·

pendable, Health insur•nee &amp; 401 k available.
~·
Salary dependent upon
experience. Submit re·
sume &amp; salaf'/ req~re­
ments to:' Gallipolis C.M ,
Gorsuch MQI., P.O. Box
190, Lancaster OH
60-hr, · EMT Miner Class 431 3().(1190 or em~l to:
&amp; Refreshers 4D-hr. Sur· kd~uf'/1!~-M,eom
face Apprentice BO-hr.
Underground Apwenlice =
M"""""
16-hr.
Troo
Clearing ---~--~~=~
Mine Underground For· Home Health ' Care · of
man Class, Minor Safety Southeast Oh~ Inc., Is
Equipment StOle.
For currently
hiring home
more
Information call health aides. CenHied or
WM-Co
Training e'I)Ot~t~nce.
Bonuses
304·372 .f!:MB
Available.
Call
~A-~LOC~A::"l~M::"A:':N~U~F:':AC::". 1866-368-1100,

-..==""';,""',;,=

AesCare

Home Care

'of
to

MOTOCROSS
RACE
Sat. 10/18/08
6:00pm

·

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

Suppon
Individuals

wittl MR/00. Direct Care

Staff,

Contact

(Practice 4:30 pm)
304·882·2884

Rhonda'

Harrison .
Monda~
earn thfough
Friday 9a-5p.
The New AVon. 740-446-4814 ext 26 or
Marilyn e-mail resume to: marri·

304·675·5463

An Excellent way lo
Call

304-882-2645

sonOrescare.com

't'OV COULD
\. DIIIKE A JIG

•Reasonable Rates
• insured

•Experienced
References Availa"le! ·
Call Gary Stanley @

CELEBRITY CIPHER
· by,Luis Campos
Ca!ttlfltv Crpher cryptogr.-ns are created from oootations by !amous PeOple pasl and presenT
E~~ lerter 1n tile crpl"l!!r !!lands lor enotMr
'

,.

·

TOday's clue: 1equals G

"EWFVF'T

TZ

LMGW

YZNNMEDZK

EWJE

DP

EWF

J, DY

KZS

PZY

ZMY

NMKIT

YNJGF

EZ

DE

JNN ."

AF

KZ

YZAFYE

PREVIOUS SOLUTION- "1guess truth can hurt you worse in an electio~

• VInyl Siding
• Replacement
W!ndowa
·Roofing ·

Please leave messa e

.,

..

,,

[

.·Garages
Dec"'

• Pole Buildings
• Room AddHions
Owner:
James K - I t
742·2;132

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

''blr'llrthdtttv:

Thu~·~~-

18,2008

By Bemtce Bede 01101
In th8 year ahead, you might become
closely involved with a unique person
who is exlfemely selective as to whOm
he or she shares time with. Although this
individual WOn't be your only friend, the
relationship will produce unusual benefils.
~
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) - Steer yourself away from a friend's complex finanCial or buslne~ pi'oblems as last as you ,
· can, because If you stick arouild, you
·could get drawn into his or her complicated affairs.
SCOR,~O (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) - It you discuss your problems with an Ineffective
counselor. you could ond up worse 011
than you were before. Be rilore discern·
lng.
SAGITTARIUS (No1.1. 23-Dec. 21) A11hough you can be quite industrious
when the mood stnkes. you could spend·
more time and energy rationalizing why
you shouldn't do something lllan it would
take to do the lob.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22.Jan. 19) - Your
judgment as to what things are wor1h is
e)(fremely questionable, causing you to
pay far mOre tor something lh ~n 11 · is
worth to you or anyone else. II could be
an ego lhlnQ.
.
r

COW and BOY
lfS WEIIIO HOW
AGESTU~ CAN BE
PERFECTLY INNOWT
IN ONE CULTU11£ AND BE
INCREDIBLY OFFENSIVE
TO ANOTHE~
CULTU~

j

''
·,

GAaFIELD
MY FRA'I" 8ROfHER6 WERE
REAl. PRAC'I"ICAI. JOKeR&amp;

LOCIII Contractor

740-367-0544
Free Eatlrnatea

740-367·0536

For RemodelhiR and New House Building

MARCUM CONSTRUCTION
•
• Room Additions • Garages • Vinyl
and Wood Siding • RO()fing • Pole
Barns • Patio's, Porches and Decks

Call:

IIU W.IDCUI, IWNEI
47239 Riebel Road, Long Bottom, OH

I MEAN, TAI&lt;E

'THUMBS UP" FOR ·
INSTANCE...

\

I'M J.JST ~iCING
TO SAY, YOU liOT
OFF LIGHTLY,

(__
WHERE'D..

YOU GET A

TOASTER?.

Disappointment is In the offing 11 you sin1ply expect others to drop what they are
doing In order to Qrallfy -/our whims. Be
more conJiderate about their 1nteres.ts
and help them Instead.
PISCES (Feb. 20-Marcll 20\ Sometimes you have a tendency to
falsely anticipate tha feelings of others
and never give ltlem a chance to show
you otherwise. Today could be one of
those days- unless you allow friends to
express themselves.
ARIES (March 21-Aprit 19) - Be pre·
pared to pay the lion's share of the bill
when out with a friend who is always
broke. II you're smart, you'll stick to doing
things that don't cost anything.
TAURUS (April 20-May20)- If you think
too optimistically 'about what you can
accomplish. you could find yourself over·
whelmed In no tltna, not to mention overwol1&lt;ed. Complete one job at a time.
~E.MINI (Muy 21 -June 2P) - Th9re are
no certalntles In life, so don't take anything important tor granted, even ttlat
which is usually a sure thing . Little dis·
tractions may take you far ott the mark."
CANCER (Jline 21·July 22)- II some·
one yoi.J lcnow is suddenly displaying
overty friendly behavior, yOur antenna
should be vibrating loud and clear that
something Is amiss. This person likely
has ulterior motiVaa .
lEO (July 23-Aug. 22 ) - Don't allow
companions or friends to dletate your
mode of behavior, or malca you do some·
thing that makea you feel uOcomflilrlable
or uhamed. Be ·your own person .
·
VIRGO (Aug. 23·Stpt. 22) Even
thoi.Jgh vour performance level might be.
poor, you may not tolertnt another whO
It haVIng the tame type or problem•
ba!:*uM you expect him or nar to pick up
your stack.

I:~~:t;~T S©~J:.\)A- ~

,

t.zrss

~eorrnnge ft~tten of
O four
scrambled words

1he

bt-

1ow !O form four !lf"'pltr words .

I

iHKSAD

: I' I I I' I
T H0 C N

:=:::~6

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I

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.nc!"

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1. 1.
.

"ldeas,"'the professor told,his
class, "art nothing bul dreams
nntillhcy are given tomr by --,

,

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by filling In fhe mi~rng words

=====:::::=~~~you dtweloo Iron: .st~o No. 3 belcw. ·

@ ?O[N!
NUMB~RFD
LEi! H .S

I'

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I' ', t• I' I' •

SCRAMLETS ANSWERS l(J/14/08
NobQdy - Print - Lunge - Accost- COUNTS
'"Watching the clock and counting time," the employer

workers, "is not as important .as making sure our timC
COUNTS.'"

. ARLO &amp; JANIS

•

SOUP TO NUTZ

740-985-4141
Cell: 740-416-1834

1liiul'oi8Ni SCJ:&gt;URGE

T&gt;l~ ~SL BaLteTf

25+ Y,tan experitnc~ Free Estimates

Advertise
· in this space for
$64 er month

\
I

'

.

WORD
GAMI ·
ldltod by eLAY R. POUAN _.;__ _ _""':

I

'

DE · S' FVFK'E

EWFYF'H

YME

OK

Z VA F K

AstroGraph

AQUARIUS (Jan, 20·Feb, 19) -

740-59!-8044

Construction

a Rural Development
property, e&gt;cellent com·

Provider
SeMcea

TAMBOURINES, .

'

proper1y management at

TURER is taking appllca·
tlono lor EXPERIENCED
Mig Welders, 'Pteasa apply tn person at 21 5Q
Eastem Avenue, Gallipo·
tis, OH

'fES, n: 't'Oll MAP

'Prompt anti Quality
Work

RICK PRICE
,New Homes, Room Additions, RemodelinR,
Metal &amp;
'
Decks,

benefits cat9d in Gallipolis, Ohio.

Gallipolis career College
,
k·nn
rt t'
.
"structors
.see 1 who
• pa ·tme rn·
possess a
, ...,
1
mast•• • -.ree n gen·
eral education subject ar·
eas • . -• as· Englt'sh
~·
,
•
Math, .and Social Sci ·
ences. E·mall resumes
to
JdanickiOgallipolisca·
reercolloge.com or call
600-2 t 4-0452

Stanley TreeTrimming
&amp; Removal

PSI CONSTRUCTION

including health insur- Ideal candidate will have
ance 8. much more ,
pre~ous experience in

money.

henna

38 Obstruction

than about anything that can happen to you.· . Will Rogers

Get paid to m'ake a

RFP AAA Planner, It 740. Review Appeals Com- tions

pt.

48 FruH·
bearing
tree
49 Wanl·ad
fe«era
51 Deli order

,

heart. Both those lines result in clown
, two, giving East-West a detighUul 3oo

for

"trillion"

44 Poker stake 19 Boonles
39 Morsels
48 More
20 Flower
40 Icy crystals
· unyielding
parts
41 Poet's eyes
so Triplets
, 21 Sooner then 42' Ostrich kin
52 .Suffused
anon
44 Bohemian

winning and continuing wilh a high

373-6400

47 Comp11so ,

J.,... ,

noise

Do you think East's double is dangerous? II isn'l, because West Is marked
with· some points when the opponents
st~p in one no-trump.

8:00am · 4:30pm ,

~~=:::-.;..

24 Makeshift
coathanger
26 Zenilh
27 Baseball ·
stadium
28 Ocean
dwellers
30 Away from
the wind ·
32 Apply

Rhine

48 Prefix for

second·ro4nd double? .

RV's

C•ll TODAYI
Interview
TOMORROW II
Worl&lt; NEXT WEEKIIi

45 No, on the

To pass on the first round, then tO sou!)CI
strong on the next round , normally
· means that that player has le "o1 h and
strength in the suit initially bid on his
right. East is making a penalty double
and promising strong spades. West, wtlo
has hearts sitting over South's -length,
should be happy to pass. Then, v1hat
should West lead against one no-trump

(740) 992-5344

·

22 le1 off
atoam ,
23 Jazzy -

In "The Darcy Connection; Elizabeth
Astoo wrole. "'ne's life is not as fixed as
ooe believes. Surprises may lie in store
for you; the unexpected often tends to
happen, sometimes bringing in its train
the most deli"ghttul change in one's life or

SC~AJI£.E

.. $ARNEY '

alignmeniS ,'iight

The ArM Agency on mbllon Servlcea pro- thirty (30) days afler
Agfng at Buckeye Hills- pouts ora being ra- notice of tho Director"•
Hocking Yalley Re- quelled for Monroe action. The appeal
glonal Development and Noble counties.
must be oceompanled
Dtotrlct, P.O. Box ~70, Tltla111-G ....ka to In~ by a ltllng lee of $70.00
Reno, Ohio 45773 Ia re- !late programa de- which tho Commlsaton,
queotlng propooall for olgned to help older In Its ~lacretlon, may
2009-2010 AM!elmer'o eduHo prevenUmanoge reduce If by aflldevH
Dluou and Related chronic dlseaus and you demonstrate that
Dornantle State Funded lncreeu
healthier payment of . the 'full
Program In Monroe and · llfellylea. 0118111 of al· amount of the fee
Noble counties. Small, lowoble oervlca and would cauae extreme
mlnorlly ,owned and funding available are hardship. Notice of tha
women buolneeo enter· Included tn tho , Re- filing .of tho appeal
priiH are encouraged . queot for Proposal shalt be flied with the
to oubmlt propoaala. Small, mlnorlly-owned Dlractor wtthln throe (3)
' RFP pocket wtll be and women buol....a days of filing with tha
avellable September enterpriiH are oncour· Commlaalon. Ohio EPA
29, 2008 • . Detslla of aged to oubmlt. As- ·raqueota that • copy of
oervlcao and funding quaot tor Propooat the appeal be served
ore Included In the RFP. Pockato wilt be avail· upon the Ohio Attorney
Completed proposal able September 29, G-rol'l Office, Env~
deadline Ia 4:00 P. M. 2001. Completed pro- ronmental
EnforceOctober 17, 2008. Con- . poNt deedltne October mont Section. An
tact Mindy Cayton, 17, 2008 by 4:00 p.m. appeal may be flied
AAA Planner at 740- Contact Mindy Cayton, with the Environmental

18 Fleming or 4 Touch
WQO\nam
of frosl
19 Philatelisf's 5 Take legal
item
action
21 Big
6 Stereo
occaolon
(hyph.)
25 Satisfy
7 Project
29 list priu·
slarter
31 Had polson 6 Frond
ivy
producer
33 Lure
9 NFL
34 Thalia to say
scores
35 Made
10 Copperhead
COIIYirl8lion
relative
37 Charter
11 Stonehenge
38 Mops'the
builder
dePt
12 'Mischle40 FISh e?gs ,
VOUI one
43 Yvette a
17 Puppaey

The unexpected will occasionally hap·
pen at the bridge table. but, assuming
the players know wnat they are doing,
there r'ill be a logical expl"'nation. In
today's deal, what do you make of East's

computer wheel

Yoor lligllt In Know,Dolivtr!d lligllt to v~.n..,

2 coolde
Playback
lblla totter
mochlnes
Wood nh
3 Iowa, to
product •
JacqUes

cif(:umstances."

44087 Wipple Rd.
Pomeroy,OH
(5 Points)
New &amp; Used Tires,
We buy used1ircs,

Public NOCk!! in llewSIOP"',

1 Sandwich

date

After a pass,
· a penalty c:Jouble

L&amp; L Tire Bam

complete scrvkl.! oil
changes. small engine
repair.
We. service and
winterize boats and

South
l NT

#5548

work ,

...

t AQ4
• J 10 8 7

South

E-mail: captblll65@yahoo.com
www.auctlonzlp.com

busine~s

East

111o4/1 mo pd

••

'*112-5112

mechanic

West

AUCTIONS/ANTIQUES

_.....

RII.IMPt

• New Homes

... Q' '

DOWN

-Aludu to

14
15
16

• 10 9 5

2967() Boshan Road

......- . og

-.. . vr ,..

10114

.KJ 76t
• 83

• Roonl Addition~ •

,

13 =...hi

No~

Answer to Previous Puzzle

,

�Wednesday, October 15, 2008

www.mydailysentinel.com

Wednesday, October 15,2008
ALLEYOOP

Mricc:l

Saloo

The Daily Sentinel• Page 85

WW!ft.mydailysentinel.com

NEA Crossword Puzzle

BRIDGE

ACROSS

Phillip
Alder

53 Lampoon
54 Ptlinler'o

1 Pie baker

5Roloca1e

55=pot

10 Frtgld ....
12~lhe

1

YOUNG 'S

CARPENTER
SERVI CE

·--

Racine , Ohio
45771
740449:2217

• Elldric:al 1: Ptumblng
• Roofing &amp; Gutlln
· Vtnyl Sldlfti &amp; htntlng
· P•tto •nd Porcb OKkl

. -

WV031725

V.C. YO UN G Ill
J9?f,~i~

p '" (''0\ ( • ~

,

t , ''

,

,

'a'riO' "'

t&gt;/l 1010'11e' '
'

Hours
7:00AM· 8:00PM

MONTY

• Garages
• Complete
Remodeling

• 4,
.KJ 1095
• 8 6 32

•AQJ098
• %·

•

A 9 2

148-992-1871

•AQ 764
t K J 7
olio K 6 3

Stop &amp; Compare

Dealer: South
Vulnerable: Neither

llctloneer:
IIIII R.loble Jr.
140-416·1164

West

Nort.h

1•

Pass

I•

Pass

Pass

Pass

Pass

Pass

Ea"'

Pass

Dbl .

Opening lead: "!?

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

T~IS P~OMOTIONA£.
GIVEAwAY

SO wt4AT'S

U&gt;eA OF
......... YOtJM1.

TINY

"

/ 'OA~l&gt;f{

WHATtHA
POtN',

740.446.9200

BASED ,

ON YORE
AI.IBIS !!

SHERIFF?

2459 St. Rl 160 • GaHipolls

doubled?

Mon-Fri.
· Sat. 8:00am· 12 .

we appreciate your
·

THE BORN LOSER
'i FIGURE. TilE.~ ~E:. flo.'(

Aac:lne, Ohio 740.247-2019
Owners:
Jon Van Meter &amp;
Paul Rowe ,

cell: 7411-41&amp;-5047

I'EA.K

email:
jrshad1rm@eol.com

~~~
.•

,,..

E~l~ 'l't:.I&gt;St.!&gt;, ..

/

'U~FORTUAATE:L'(, Tl-tf&gt;..T I~ ""'i
OFF5E.1 f&gt;'( 11\t:. REAUIA.\10~
TAATTI\E.5l mt~-.'1' FA/o\JL'i:S

\Bo.K

West s~ould lead the spa&lt;te lour.
The play may take one of several courses. East's best de"fense is to win the first
trick and shift to the" club jack, which
West ducks around to North's queen.
Declarer wOuld probably run the diamond 10, then play another diamond,
but East can win, cash liis spade ace,
and play another club. Alternatively, East
can switch to his heart at trick two, West

"from nowhere" on a partSCOJe deal.

Recruit volunteers tor
non-prolll organizations
such as St. Jude
Children's Research
Hospital

peckat.

373-6400

(10) 15

piCket.

: CGmmunlty
Service
· B~k Grant Program.
·•Sentlceo eiJntbte
for
•
,funding era: Home, .....,_, Medical e.cort,
:rr.noportetlon, Con·
Millo ond
Delivered Mello.
Dilallo o1 Nrvl- and
fundlngaralnctudedln
:H RFP. TechniCII as·elatance will be lVII...
upon raqUIII. Tho
·RFP packet will be
'evaltabte September
29, 2008. Compr.ted
jlropoul deadline 4:00
P. M. Oct- 17, 2008.
Corrllct Mindy Coyton,
:AM Planner •t (740)
·373-e400 lor RFP
: (IOICUI.
·(10) 15

=-

:lblo

Public Notice
Tho ArM Agency on
·Aging at II!H:Itep Hills:Hocking Valley R•
·glonll Development
·Dtotrtct, P.O. Box 370.
RMc&gt;, Ohio 45773 lo raqUIIIIlng propoaato fDI'
200t Title til 0 0 1 ·PtiWoillton and Health
'PromotiOn Servl-.
;Title Ill 0 DI-N Pro-

;....Ilion- Health Plo-

'

Guttering

F4ll and Part-time
Positions
Day and Evening
Shifts

111\Y tliS
PI!OTEC.TIIIE CUP
CI\VSE liiM
DESILITATING
CHAfiNG. P~SLEHS ,

Seamless Gutters

Roofing, Siding, Clutters
Insured &amp; Bonded
740·653·9657

Professional Work

Environment!
Medical, Dental. EAP,
401KL

On-site Doctor
· Weekly Pay and
Bonus Incentives!

, WANTED: Part-time po·

1-888·1MC·PAYU
EICI. 1921
tlt1p:l/)obl.lntoclllon.com

__

ATTENTION;
LOcal company with .lull
time and part time po·
our

cust(lmer

for

sition available to assist
individuals with mental
retardation at a. group
home in Bidwell:

Quality Seamless
Gutters
Maintenance Plus

1) 35 hrs: tO::JOa-7:30p
Sun; 2·10p MfTuNI;
2) 27.5 hrS: 3:30-11p Frl;

9a-7p 5at: 1-9p Sun;
Must have higll school
diploma/GEO, va~d driyer's license and three
years good drilling e~Cpe­
rience.
$8.40/hr
after
training.· E)(cellent Oene.fll
package.
Pre-employ·

Cmmntn:in/ &amp; Residentiaf

Vinyl
·Siding/Replacement
Windows/Remodeling
Bonded Ill. Insured
7411-992·1493 Office

RFP minion at the follow· service department · No
lng addreaa:
experience required per·
(10) 15
Environmental Review manent position com·
Appelll Commloalon pany training provided ment Drug Testing. Send
309 South
Fourth must be a High School resume
to:
Buckeye
Public Notice
Public Notice
Street, .Room 222 gradua,te. Full time po- Community
Services.
PUBLIC NOTICE
Columbue, DH 43215
tiona $560 per week, P.O. Box . 604, Jackson,
Tho Aru Agency on PUBUC NOTICE
All lnqulrtu concern· rapid advancements and OH · 45640 or e-mail to
Aging at Buckeye Hilts- ISSUANCE OF AP. lng thll action may be benefits. For an interview beyeeserv@yahoo.com. ,
Hocking V•lley Re- PROVAL TQ AELO- directed to" Ohio EPA call740·446·7798,
be~d1ine for 8ppllcants :
glonet Development CATE A PORTABLE DAPC, Southeaat Dla·
10115108, Equal Opportu·
Dtotrlct, P.o. Box 370, AIR
CONTAMINANT trlct Office at (740)38S. Ohio
valley
Home
I
Reno, OH 451T3 Ia re- SOURCE
Stonoco 8501 ..
Health, Inc. hinng Home
queollng proposalo to Equipment 121.8809
(10) 15
Health
Aides , STNA,
Managomont I
:provide oervlcas to l11ue Date : 1010712008 - - - - - - - - - . , CNA, . CHHA, PCA .may
Supervisory
·penono 60 yaore of Relocation
Number.
'- apply at 1480n Jackson -;~~:;;;:~
: oge lind older In Mon- REL00227
Public Notice
Pike, Gallipolis, Ohio or . . prppeny Manaaetbent
fOI and Noble Coon· Facility 10:0684960029
phone 740 441 1393 !or P.T. Community Man·
tiel
. , Funding oource1 Facltlly
Location: PUBLIC NOTICE
.
'
more
info.. Competitive.
ager needed lor local
are Title-Itt B, Title-ttl C.. Stoneco
Equipment NOTICE: Is hereby wages,
mileage · reim· eparlment community to1, ntl..ll C·2, and the 1:21.8809

G

:SIG NATE

drtterer~cel

in

given that on Saturday, bursement

PO Box .266, 48947 October 16, 2008 at
State
Route
124, 10:00 a.m., a public
Racine, Ohio , , 45771 oale wilt be held •t 211
Thornville, OH 43076
W
Second
St.,
Foclllty Dlocrlptlon: Pomeroy, Ohio. Tho
AophoHPivlngMillllra FarmeraBonklndSev·
and Block Manufoctur- lngo Company lo uti·
Jng
lng lor caoh In hand or
Ohio EPA hll received certlfllcl cheek the lot·
araquesttoratocoteo lowtngcoltateral:
portable air conlltml· 2007 Cllevrotat Stiver·
nant eource for the. ado
2KH
Vln
compony
Identified IIGCHK29U17E118487
obove. upcSn ravlow of Tho Fonnere Bank and
the raquell, the Dirac· Sevlng1
Company,
tor hll approved tho Pomeroy, Ohio, r•
relocation and the teet~ sarvea therlght to bid
lly lo authorized to at thlo oale, and to with·
move to 49947 Stole clraw the llbove colla!·
Route 124, Racine, era! prior to aote.
Ohio upon tile publiCI· Furth.,, The Formero
lion of thto notice.
Bonk and Sevlnga
You are hereby nblllled CQmpony l'ller'lll the
thll thll octlon (op-. right to rajlctany or all
proval) of the Dlroctor bldoaubmltted.
lo final lind may beep- Tho . above deocrlbed
pNied to the Environ- collateral will be ootd
Reilew Appeela "II lo-where II", with
Commluton purauont no exprnoed or lm·
to Seclton 3745.04 of plied warrMlly given.
tile Ohio Reviled Code. For further Information,
Tho oppNI mu1t be In or tor on appolnlment
writing and HI torth to tnopecl colt otero!,
tile action complained prior to uta date con·
of and the groundo tact Cyndle ·or Kon at
upon which the oppul 7~·2136.
lo baaed. Tho oppool (10) 15, 16, 17
mull be filed with tile
CommiNion
within

and

740-416-8339Celt
Free Estimated
Pomeroyi Ohio

It has been voted by the .
members present at the
May 28, 2008 regular meeting
of Feeney-Bennett Post #1 28',
American legion, Middleport,
OH, to sell the Post's larm
located ·on Bailey Run Amid. A
purchase agreement has been
accepted from a bid closest to
the appraised value. This
pending sale will impact those .
with hunting rights on this farm.

municatiOn and organizetiona! s~lls and be de·

pendable, Health insur•nee &amp; 401 k available.
~·
Salary dependent upon
experience. Submit re·
sume &amp; salaf'/ req~re­
ments to:' Gallipolis C.M ,
Gorsuch MQI., P.O. Box
190, Lancaster OH
60-hr, · EMT Miner Class 431 3().(1190 or em~l to:
&amp; Refreshers 4D-hr. Sur· kd~uf'/1!~-M,eom
face Apprentice BO-hr.
Underground Apwenlice =
M"""""
16-hr.
Troo
Clearing ---~--~~=~
Mine Underground For· Home Health ' Care · of
man Class, Minor Safety Southeast Oh~ Inc., Is
Equipment StOle.
For currently
hiring home
more
Information call health aides. CenHied or
WM-Co
Training e'I)Ot~t~nce.
Bonuses
304·372 .f!:MB
Available.
Call
~A-~LOC~A::"l~M::"A:':N~U~F:':AC::". 1866-368-1100,

-..==""';,""',;,=

AesCare

Home Care

'of
to

MOTOCROSS
RACE
Sat. 10/18/08
6:00pm

·

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

Suppon
Individuals

wittl MR/00. Direct Care

Staff,

Contact

(Practice 4:30 pm)
304·882·2884

Rhonda'

Harrison .
Monda~
earn thfough
Friday 9a-5p.
The New AVon. 740-446-4814 ext 26 or
Marilyn e-mail resume to: marri·

304·675·5463

An Excellent way lo
Call

304-882-2645

sonOrescare.com

't'OV COULD
\. DIIIKE A JIG

•Reasonable Rates
• insured

•Experienced
References Availa"le! ·
Call Gary Stanley @

CELEBRITY CIPHER
· by,Luis Campos
Ca!ttlfltv Crpher cryptogr.-ns are created from oootations by !amous PeOple pasl and presenT
E~~ lerter 1n tile crpl"l!!r !!lands lor enotMr
'

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·

TOday's clue: 1equals G

"EWFVF'T

TZ

LMGW

YZNNMEDZK

EWJE

DP

EWF

J, DY

KZS

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NMKIT

YNJGF

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AF

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PREVIOUS SOLUTION- "1guess truth can hurt you worse in an electio~

• VInyl Siding
• Replacement
W!ndowa
·Roofing ·

Please leave messa e

.,

..

,,

[

.·Garages
Dec"'

• Pole Buildings
• Room AddHions
Owner:
James K - I t
742·2;132

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

''blr'llrthdtttv:

Thu~·~~-

18,2008

By Bemtce Bede 01101
In th8 year ahead, you might become
closely involved with a unique person
who is exlfemely selective as to whOm
he or she shares time with. Although this
individual WOn't be your only friend, the
relationship will produce unusual benefils.
~
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) - Steer yourself away from a friend's complex finanCial or buslne~ pi'oblems as last as you ,
· can, because If you stick arouild, you
·could get drawn into his or her complicated affairs.
SCOR,~O (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) - It you discuss your problems with an Ineffective
counselor. you could ond up worse 011
than you were before. Be rilore discern·
lng.
SAGITTARIUS (No1.1. 23-Dec. 21) A11hough you can be quite industrious
when the mood stnkes. you could spend·
more time and energy rationalizing why
you shouldn't do something lllan it would
take to do the lob.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22.Jan. 19) - Your
judgment as to what things are wor1h is
e)(fremely questionable, causing you to
pay far mOre tor something lh ~n 11 · is
worth to you or anyone else. II could be
an ego lhlnQ.
.
r

COW and BOY
lfS WEIIIO HOW
AGESTU~ CAN BE
PERFECTLY INNOWT
IN ONE CULTU11£ AND BE
INCREDIBLY OFFENSIVE
TO ANOTHE~
CULTU~

j

''
·,

GAaFIELD
MY FRA'I" 8ROfHER6 WERE
REAl. PRAC'I"ICAI. JOKeR&amp;

LOCIII Contractor

740-367-0544
Free Eatlrnatea

740-367·0536

For RemodelhiR and New House Building

MARCUM CONSTRUCTION
•
• Room Additions • Garages • Vinyl
and Wood Siding • RO()fing • Pole
Barns • Patio's, Porches and Decks

Call:

IIU W.IDCUI, IWNEI
47239 Riebel Road, Long Bottom, OH

I MEAN, TAI&lt;E

'THUMBS UP" FOR ·
INSTANCE...

\

I'M J.JST ~iCING
TO SAY, YOU liOT
OFF LIGHTLY,

(__
WHERE'D..

YOU GET A

TOASTER?.

Disappointment is In the offing 11 you sin1ply expect others to drop what they are
doing In order to Qrallfy -/our whims. Be
more conJiderate about their 1nteres.ts
and help them Instead.
PISCES (Feb. 20-Marcll 20\ Sometimes you have a tendency to
falsely anticipate tha feelings of others
and never give ltlem a chance to show
you otherwise. Today could be one of
those days- unless you allow friends to
express themselves.
ARIES (March 21-Aprit 19) - Be pre·
pared to pay the lion's share of the bill
when out with a friend who is always
broke. II you're smart, you'll stick to doing
things that don't cost anything.
TAURUS (April 20-May20)- If you think
too optimistically 'about what you can
accomplish. you could find yourself over·
whelmed In no tltna, not to mention overwol1&lt;ed. Complete one job at a time.
~E.MINI (Muy 21 -June 2P) - Th9re are
no certalntles In life, so don't take anything important tor granted, even ttlat
which is usually a sure thing . Little dis·
tractions may take you far ott the mark."
CANCER (Jline 21·July 22)- II some·
one yoi.J lcnow is suddenly displaying
overty friendly behavior, yOur antenna
should be vibrating loud and clear that
something Is amiss. This person likely
has ulterior motiVaa .
lEO (July 23-Aug. 22 ) - Don't allow
companions or friends to dletate your
mode of behavior, or malca you do some·
thing that makea you feel uOcomflilrlable
or uhamed. Be ·your own person .
·
VIRGO (Aug. 23·Stpt. 22) Even
thoi.Jgh vour performance level might be.
poor, you may not tolertnt another whO
It haVIng the tame type or problem•
ba!:*uM you expect him or nar to pick up
your stack.

I:~~:t;~T S©~J:.\)A- ~

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t.zrss

~eorrnnge ft~tten of
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scrambled words

1he

bt-

1ow !O form four !lf"'pltr words .

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"ldeas,"'the professor told,his
class, "art nothing bul dreams
nntillhcy are given tomr by --,

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@ ?O[N!
NUMB~RFD
LEi! H .S

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SCRAMLETS ANSWERS l(J/14/08
NobQdy - Print - Lunge - Accost- COUNTS
'"Watching the clock and counting time," the employer

workers, "is not as important .as making sure our timC
COUNTS.'"

. ARLO &amp; JANIS

•

SOUP TO NUTZ

740-985-4141
Cell: 740-416-1834

1liiul'oi8Ni SCJ:&gt;URGE

T&gt;l~ ~SL BaLteTf

25+ Y,tan experitnc~ Free Estimates

Advertise
· in this space for
$64 er month

\
I

'

.

WORD
GAMI ·
ldltod by eLAY R. POUAN _.;__ _ _""':

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DE · S' FVFK'E

EWFYF'H

YME

OK

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AstroGraph

AQUARIUS (Jan, 20·Feb, 19) -

740-59!-8044

Construction

a Rural Development
property, e&gt;cellent com·

Provider
SeMcea

TAMBOURINES, .

'

proper1y management at

TURER is taking appllca·
tlono lor EXPERIENCED
Mig Welders, 'Pteasa apply tn person at 21 5Q
Eastem Avenue, Gallipo·
tis, OH

'fES, n: 't'Oll MAP

'Prompt anti Quality
Work

RICK PRICE
,New Homes, Room Additions, RemodelinR,
Metal &amp;
'
Decks,

benefits cat9d in Gallipolis, Ohio.

Gallipolis career College
,
k·nn
rt t'
.
"structors
.see 1 who
• pa ·tme rn·
possess a
, ...,
1
mast•• • -.ree n gen·
eral education subject ar·
eas • . -• as· Englt'sh
~·
,
•
Math, .and Social Sci ·
ences. E·mall resumes
to
JdanickiOgallipolisca·
reercolloge.com or call
600-2 t 4-0452

Stanley TreeTrimming
&amp; Removal

PSI CONSTRUCTION

including health insur- Ideal candidate will have
ance 8. much more ,
pre~ous experience in

money.

henna

38 Obstruction

than about anything that can happen to you.· . Will Rogers

Get paid to m'ake a

RFP AAA Planner, It 740. Review Appeals Com- tions

pt.

48 FruH·
bearing
tree
49 Wanl·ad
fe«era
51 Deli order

,

heart. Both those lines result in clown
, two, giving East-West a detighUul 3oo

for

"trillion"

44 Poker stake 19 Boonles
39 Morsels
48 More
20 Flower
40 Icy crystals
· unyielding
parts
41 Poet's eyes
so Triplets
, 21 Sooner then 42' Ostrich kin
52 .Suffused
anon
44 Bohemian

winning and continuing wilh a high

373-6400

47 Comp11so ,

J.,... ,

noise

Do you think East's double is dangerous? II isn'l, because West Is marked
with· some points when the opponents
st~p in one no-trump.

8:00am · 4:30pm ,

~~=:::-.;..

24 Makeshift
coathanger
26 Zenilh
27 Baseball ·
stadium
28 Ocean
dwellers
30 Away from
the wind ·
32 Apply

Rhine

48 Prefix for

second·ro4nd double? .

RV's

C•ll TODAYI
Interview
TOMORROW II
Worl&lt; NEXT WEEKIIi

45 No, on the

To pass on the first round, then tO sou!)CI
strong on the next round , normally
· means that that player has le "o1 h and
strength in the suit initially bid on his
right. East is making a penalty double
and promising strong spades. West, wtlo
has hearts sitting over South's -length,
should be happy to pass. Then, v1hat
should West lead against one no-trump

(740) 992-5344

·

22 le1 off
atoam ,
23 Jazzy -

In "The Darcy Connection; Elizabeth
Astoo wrole. "'ne's life is not as fixed as
ooe believes. Surprises may lie in store
for you; the unexpected often tends to
happen, sometimes bringing in its train
the most deli"ghttul change in one's life or

SC~AJI£.E

.. $ARNEY '

alignmeniS ,'iight

The ArM Agency on mbllon Servlcea pro- thirty (30) days afler
Agfng at Buckeye Hills- pouts ora being ra- notice of tho Director"•
Hocking Yalley Re- quelled for Monroe action. The appeal
glonal Development and Noble counties.
must be oceompanled
Dtotrlct, P.O. Box ~70, Tltla111-G ....ka to In~ by a ltllng lee of $70.00
Reno, Ohio 45773 Ia re- !late programa de- which tho Commlsaton,
queotlng propooall for olgned to help older In Its ~lacretlon, may
2009-2010 AM!elmer'o eduHo prevenUmanoge reduce If by aflldevH
Dluou and Related chronic dlseaus and you demonstrate that
Dornantle State Funded lncreeu
healthier payment of . the 'full
Program In Monroe and · llfellylea. 0118111 of al· amount of the fee
Noble counties. Small, lowoble oervlca and would cauae extreme
mlnorlly ,owned and funding available are hardship. Notice of tha
women buolneeo enter· Included tn tho , Re- filing .of tho appeal
priiH are encouraged . queot for Proposal shalt be flied with the
to oubmlt propoaala. Small, mlnorlly-owned Dlractor wtthln throe (3)
' RFP pocket wtll be and women buol....a days of filing with tha
avellable September enterpriiH are oncour· Commlaalon. Ohio EPA
29, 2008 • . Detslla of aged to oubmlt. As- ·raqueota that • copy of
oervlcao and funding quaot tor Propooat the appeal be served
ore Included In the RFP. Pockato wilt be avail· upon the Ohio Attorney
Completed proposal able September 29, G-rol'l Office, Env~
deadline Ia 4:00 P. M. 2001. Completed pro- ronmental
EnforceOctober 17, 2008. Con- . poNt deedltne October mont Section. An
tact Mindy Cayton, 17, 2008 by 4:00 p.m. appeal may be flied
AAA Planner at 740- Contact Mindy Cayton, with the Environmental

18 Fleming or 4 Touch
WQO\nam
of frosl
19 Philatelisf's 5 Take legal
item
action
21 Big
6 Stereo
occaolon
(hyph.)
25 Satisfy
7 Project
29 list priu·
slarter
31 Had polson 6 Frond
ivy
producer
33 Lure
9 NFL
34 Thalia to say
scores
35 Made
10 Copperhead
COIIYirl8lion
relative
37 Charter
11 Stonehenge
38 Mops'the
builder
dePt
12 'Mischle40 FISh e?gs ,
VOUI one
43 Yvette a
17 Puppaey

The unexpected will occasionally hap·
pen at the bridge table. but, assuming
the players know wnat they are doing,
there r'ill be a logical expl"'nation. In
today's deal, what do you make of East's

computer wheel

Yoor lligllt In Know,Dolivtr!d lligllt to v~.n..,

2 coolde
Playback
lblla totter
mochlnes
Wood nh
3 Iowa, to
product •
JacqUes

cif(:umstances."

44087 Wipple Rd.
Pomeroy,OH
(5 Points)
New &amp; Used Tires,
We buy used1ircs,

Public NOCk!! in llewSIOP"',

1 Sandwich

date

After a pass,
· a penalty c:Jouble

L&amp; L Tire Bam

complete scrvkl.! oil
changes. small engine
repair.
We. service and
winterize boats and

South
l NT

#5548

work ,

...

t AQ4
• J 10 8 7

South

E-mail: captblll65@yahoo.com
www.auctlonzlp.com

busine~s

East

111o4/1 mo pd

••

'*112-5112

mechanic

West

AUCTIONS/ANTIQUES

_.....

RII.IMPt

• New Homes

... Q' '

DOWN

-Aludu to

14
15
16

• 10 9 5

2967() Boshan Road

......- . og

-.. . vr ,..

10114

.KJ 76t
• 83

• Roonl Addition~ •

,

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Answer to Previous Puzzle

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''
•

Page B6- The Daily Sentinel

•

Wedn~sda y, October 15,2008

www.mydailysentinel .com

..

McCain, Obama get

Annual Foothills Art
Festival sets up shop
for this weekend, A6

tough, personal
in debate, A2

•

e

.
'

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

Arrests, rmes collection up in Middleport

SChool football
:previrms.See.Page Bl

BY BRIAN

J,

REED

BREEDOMYDAILYSENTINELCOM

MIDDLEPORT
Arrests are up and so are
other citations through the
Middleport
Police .
Department, resulting in a
dramatic increase in revenue for village operations.
At Monday · evening's
of
regulat
'meeting
Middleport
Village
Council , during review of a
monthly report from Police
Chief Bruce Swift, Mayor
Michael Gerlach said individual officers are now
making as many arrests lUld
issuing as many citations

BOICK ENCLAVE
Cl4

tUltmY
· D~ DRIVEi
C«iRDEIICE M

collected
last
month
totaied $8,192.
Fiscal 0fficer Susan
Baker said over $7,000 has
been collected so far in
October, including $2,700
in · old fines. The village
has sent letters to those
owing old fines, giving a
time window to pay them.
That window is now
closed. Those who did not
pay up now must do so
before they renew their
vehicle registration and
their driver's licenses.
September cases included
the following: 10 cases of
theft,' four vandalism, three
assault,. two criminal mis-

chief, two burglary, two
breaking ana entering , five
drug-related charges, one
· domestic violence charge ,
two cases · of operating
mc.tor vehicle under the
influence, two driving
under suspension, one disorderly · conduct,
one
telecommunication harrassment, and one escape.
The village has upgraded
its Mayor's Court software,
which makes tracking cases
ell$ier for the court clerk.
Passage of a levy last year
has also made funding
available for more police
officers. Council approved.
.increasing hours of a part-

time patrolman, Steve
Koebel, to full-time status.
"Dping this will put
staffing levels in the police
department closer to where
we have wanted them for . a
long time," Gerlach said.
The police department is
not the only village operatim) increasing revenue .
Fiscal Officer Susan Baker
said Regional Income Tax
Administration has collected $35,000 for the village
since July, when it took over
the operation of the village's income tax administration . That number, Baker
said, has increased monthly.
·but collections are seasonal.

Feeliilg
the pinch
on salt

PotntAC G6 's

A~

·each month as · were made
department-wide at the
beginning of the year.
. Gerlach
commended
'Swift, officers and Mayor's
Court staff for their efforts
in increasing fines and their
collection:
The collection of old fines
through Mayor's Court,
partly through the use of
driver's license blocks, and
even enforcement Of parking regulations are also on
the increase. .
.
· In September, Gerlach
heard 72 cases in Mayor's
Court - 39 traffic· cases
and 33 criminal cases. The
mayor's report of fines

8 IN $TDCI(/

0BITuARIFS

Bv

BETH SERGENT

BSERGENTOMYDAILYSENTINELCOM

PageAS ..
POMEROY - With temperature in the 80's, the
thought of ice and snow
may be the furthest from
most people's minds though
it is on the minds of
Pomeroy Village Council
which recently heard it may
not be able to purchase any
~i(year.
·
.Pomeroy--•' ·~ · S\l:l:et
Superintendent
JackKrautter told council the.village would have to "scrimp"
on nsing salt this winter
because of the shortage and
the fact l'omeroy, like many
villages, do not have a contract to purchase it. Krautter
sa•1 he was told by the vill'age's salt distributor that it
could. only purchase salt
after "the state" had purchased what it needed.
Krautter said demand is
so high the distributor
couldn't give him a price
and in fact didn' t have "a
drop" of salt at the facility
when he called. Krautter
added· he should know by
the end of the month if

:. John LYc&gt;ns, 65

ff

CNEw Cot BAtT's
SKt~ CNEw MAusu's
"Mi.811fij
1tN srocld li:~ ·· 8 IN ST(I()/d

PomtAc V1BE's
10 IN STOCI(/

NEW BOD'f STI'LE

3tN STDCI(/

IN STOCK!

'

GMC

CoLORADO's

INSIDE
';

•,' ·

.

'iJI.....l

GMC CANYOII'S

5

$1'f).,

E1TENDED CAB

Err C;ll,

CRUISE, CD

•• · Bielen respOnds to
. ;Palin quip. See P¥ AS
:. Right to Ufe parade
set for Saturday.
'
'
:See Page A3
:. For the Record.
.·See Page AS
•
-:• 'Haunted Ariel' opens
::Oct. 17. See Page A6
::. French City Chili
::Fest to warm up City
·'·:Park. See ·Page A6
'.
'

..

' BUICK lUCERNE ,'

·~

Rio Center
targets low .
college·
attendance

'

.

.WEAmER
.. '

'

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\,

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.
595

, SPECIAL EtHTION, - · ·
NEATED.COOLED
SEAT~ LOADfDI ':rl!IV;
;
·,.:. i
' 1\, J

r._'4..!

BY BRIAN

J, REED

i!REEDOMYOAILYSENTINEL.COM

Delllila on Page A3

...,,.
...

..... '
'1;

PoNTIAC SOLSTICE

f:io:
,._.._'111\t!

BLAZE ORAME,
AI/TD, LEATHER, AIR, ~
· aa~
C~Sl, ,. ONSTATt ~ . o!ll
.,.,

&gt;\f.i\~

CAPILIM SRI

li/11/RY C61/.l&amp;TIOII,
vi, Alf4 20H ~
111/RD ROf

CNEw SttrEWJO
z7f, eREW~
lOADED!
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.........
•

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2 SI!Cl10NS- Ul PAGES

'

;innie's Mailbox .
'.
Calendars

'~lassifieds
.

Bs

.t:omics
if!:ditorials
. . ·.
.Obituaries ·
?laces to go

CHEVROLET • CADILLAC
808 fast Mail • 1(740) 882-8814 8P 1·800-887·1
In: Mon•• Tlllrs. 8-7 •
8-8 •

'A4
As
A6

B Section

~ports

Weather
Cl aool Olllo Volley PuN!ahl'llf Co.

.

latUPdaY lerVIca 8-1

t· lt~

i

.

4 11, t

"

on

Please see Salt. AS

I

POMEROY - The new
Rio Grande Meigs Center is
"all about economic development," Perry , Varnadoe
said Tuesday.
The center' will be offi"
cially dedicated on Oct. 31. .
Varnadoe presented a
report on the county's economic condition at the
Meigs County Chamber of
Commerce's
monthly
Business-Minded Luncheon,
and presented data that
might be suiprising to some.
According to Varnadoe,
only 26 percent of Meigs
County's residents have
education beyond high
school. Statewide, 47 percent have attended some.
form of college or technical
training. The Rio Grande
Meigs Center, he said, was
proposed and opened to
address this statisnc . A high
school diploma, alone, is
rarely eno~gh now to secure
a well-paymg )Ob .
"The more educated the
workforce;the more money
the workforce ·can spend in
, .. . . . -

The 78-member Meigs Marauder B~nd (pictured) recently took home some major
awards at local marclilng band competitions,
including first place band and a superior
music rating at the t&gt;Jelsonville Marching
Band Contest, a "class A" competition. The
band also took home second place band,
'second place percussion and received
another superior music rating at the Logan
Elm Marching Band Competition (also a
"class A" competition) which qualified them
for state finals. The Marching Marauders
travel to .Ripley on Saturday where they will
compete at 5 p.m. This year's competition
show "Rock \his Town" is a mix of rock,
swing, jazz and classic blues. The band is
under the direction of Toney Dingess.
Beth S.VenVphotoa

Major DoWning marker to be dedicated
Bv CHARLENE HOEFLICH
HOEFLICHOMYO.O.ILYSENTINEL.COM

MIDDLEPORT - An
historical marker in tribute
to Major John B. Downing
will be dediclited in a Meigs
County Historical Society
ceremony at 2 p.m.
Saturday at the Downing
House Bed and Breakfast,
232 N. Second St., in
Middleport.
Major John B. Downing
·was born in Rutland in
February 1834, son of
Rodney and Marian Black
Downing . He was educated
at Marietta Colle~e .and
spent 27 years as a p1lot and
boat owner on
the
llo Canter. AS Mississippi River, operat-

'

ing between St. Louis and
New Orleans.
Downing became one of
the most ex )ll:rienced river
boat . pilots
on
the
Mississippi. As such, he
was sought after by Mark
TWain to teach him piloting.
Later Twain gave him the
name "Alligator Jack" and
referenced him in his book
"Life on the Mississippi."
Downing also played a
role in the Civil War. piloting the fleet in cooperation
with General U.S. Grant
past the Vicksburg fortress
during the famed 1863
Vicksburg Campaign.
He was marned Romaine
Miller in 1868, and they had
two sons, Miller R . and John
\

~ ·· Jr. An accomplished via-·
· !mist, marksman, and hunter,
Downing died in March
1914 and was buried in
Middleport Hill Cemetery.
This is the infonnation
included on the marker.
A reception will follow
the marker dedication at the
restored Middleport Depot
on Front Avenue. At 3 p.m.
there Judy Cook , folksinger,
will present a program "The
Songs of Mark TWain" in
Dave
Diles
Park ,
Middleport . .
Cook is an.internationally
tounng folksmger spec1ahzing in historically themed
programs of songs and
Images . Her programs have
been
enthusiastically

",)

received at universities.
museums , h1stoncal socJ eties, lecture series . and
concert series around the
country.
Exceipts from letters.
journals. and other first person sources introduce the
songs. "History comes alive
through these narrative
songs and the stories surrounding
them." · Sl!id
Margaret Parker. Historical
Society president. Those
attending are encouraged to
bring lawn chairs for the
program.
,
The 132nd annual meeting of the IJ;1eigs County
Historical Society will take
follow the program in the
depot.

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