<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="4120" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="http://66.213.69.5/items/show/4120?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-05-09T21:21:24+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="14046">
      <src>http://66.213.69.5/files/original/2c334a7481db2d4bad80105a5354959a.pdf</src>
      <authentication>807f74e07058b49bd6ae472db60fef78</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="14460">
                  <text>· Page B6 • The Daily Sentinel

·Wednesday, November 5, 2008

www.mydailysenJinel.eom ·

Iverson speaks of trade to Detroit
AUBURN HILLS, Mich.
(AP) - Allen Iverson
spoke at length about the
ways he's grown as a person and a player, saying
he's willing to make sacriflees to complete his career
with a championship as a
Detroit Piston.
· The former NBA MVP
then set himself up Tuesday
for an exchange that
. showed he's mature enough
to be the butt of the joke.
"One thing is for sure.
I'm going to do whatever
the coach wants me to do."
IVerson said.
" Even practice?" Joe
Dumars asked, mockingly.
" PRACTICE?'" Iverson
replied with a sparkling
~mile, using the word he
spoke over and over in
l'hiladelphia in 2002.
- Dumars, -the Pistons'
president of basketball
operations,
welcomed
Iverson at a packed news
conference and delved into
a deal that has created
unprecedented excitement
for a storied franchise with
three NBA titles.
"I can't think of one that
has created this kind of
buzz," said Dumars, who
has been a Pistons player
and executive for two-plus
decades. "He brings a certain stature with him that
only a handful of guys in
this league can bring."
The Pistons were close to
trading for Iverson from
Philadelphia entering the
2000-01 season, but 76ers
center Matt Geiger used a
clause in his contract to nix
the deal.
Pistons
Then,
the
watched Iverson lead
Philadelphia to the NBA
finals and become league
MVP.
· Eight years later, .Detroit
i.s hoping "The Answer"
was worth the wait.
Iverson does , too.
"I wa.nt to be the piece
that gets us over the hump."
he said. "I've done so many
thing~ in this league, being
an Ali-St~r and scoring
champion and things like
that, but I haven't accomplished my No. I goal and
that is to win a championship."
The Pistons acquired
fverson ·in ' a blockbuster
trade Monday, sending AllStar point guard and former
finals MVP Chauncey
Billups ,
top
reserve

Antonio McDyess and pro- six
straight
Eastern
ject Cheikh Samb to the Conference finals - the
Denver Nuggets.
longest such streak since
"This is a big day for us. the Los Angeles Lakers'
but I would be remiss if I dominant run in the 1980s ·
didn 't say how much we - and won the 2004 title
appreciated how much without a player expected
Chauncey Billups and to be in the Hall of Fame. ·
McDyess did for us ,"
Their lack of a superstar
Dumars said. "Much love seemed to hurt them the
to those guys because they past three seasons, exiting
helped build a foundation the
playoffs
against
to help us become who we Boston's Kevin Garnett,
are today." .
.
Cleveland 's LeBron James
Detroit is desperate for and Miami 's Dwyane
another shot at an NBA title Wade .
after getting eliminated in
Iverson brings plenty. of
Game 6 of the Eastern star power to Detroit.
Conference finals the past
The deal also clears a lot
three years following its of salary-cap space for the
third championship in 2004 Pistons because Iverson is
and falling just short llf making $20.8 million in the
winning a fo1,1rth the next final year of his contrac1
season .
while Billups is in the sec "We think he is going to ond season of a four-year
fit with exactly. what we contract worth a guaranteed
stand for here," Dumars $46 million with a $14 milsaid. "It's all about winning lion team option for a fifth
a.nd being in the big dance year.
at the end of the year.
Iverson. has acknowlThose are his goals along edged being excited about
with ours .
being a free agent for the
"! don 't think we're first time next summer.
going to sit here today and
Iverson's agent, Leon
make any grand promises, Rose, said he is not negotibut everybody knows our ating a contract extension
goals."
with the Pistons for his
If Billups completes a client and the team i~ not
physical and paperwork in pushing to get a deal done
time , Iverson , will play to keep him around beyond
Wednesday
night
in this season.
Toronto. McDyess and
"We'll see how it goes
Samb have · not been and how it unfolds,"
required to report to Dumars said.
Denver. Barring injury, the
Iverson's life has unfold33 -year-old Iverson will ed publicly for more than a
make his home debut decade, bringing to light
Sunday night against the run-ins with the law, feuds
Boston Celtics in an NBA with coaches and comgame as intriguing as one plaints about practice durcould
be
in
early ing that infamous news
· conference in ·which he said
November.
. If McDyess ends up play- "practice" about 20 times
mg for the Nuggets, he will during a rambling monoland on their roster for the Iogue.
third time.
"I don't do the same
The
Pistons
kept things I used to do. If I was
.McDyess off the free-agent still doing those things, I'd
market last summer by gtv- be a damn fool ," he said.
ing him a $13.5 million, "I've learned from my mistwo-year extensiOn. Detroll · takes. I have five kids. 1
would love to have the for- have my own basketball
mer Olymp1an a~d All-Star team now. My wife has
back next month tf the cost- helped me get better as a
cutting Nuggets buy out his person.
"As far as the basketball
contract. .
. "I'll . be talking with side. l think.,J'm . better
Antonio and his representa- because I know the .game a
tive directly," Nugg~ts lot more than did. Early in
ex~cullve Mark Warkentten my . career, I just f&gt;layed
satd Monday. "But we with my athletic ability. I
thtnk he's a bee~ of a play- use my athletic ability still,
er and know he s a quality but I try to think the game
guy. One step at a time."
sort of like John Stockton
The Pistons have reached or Karl Malone."

Baseball

notice, but the average.frice other needs that you need to
for a regular gallon o gas address. ·you can't really
dropped to $2.41 nationally hold them up waiting for
on Monday, down more somebody to make a decifromPageBl
than 30 percent from last sion, unless it's a very
14, and the offseason month, according to auto unique situation."
maneuvering is unlikely 10 club AAA, the Oil Price
Milwaukee said it made
pick up speed until the win- Information ServiCe and an offer to Sabathia last
f
· L "
Wright Express.
weekend, hoping to sign
1
f~~mm~~~n~~ 1;~ as vegas
"We' ll have to check the him before other clubs can
CC Sabathia, A.J. Burnett gas market, I guess, before I offer megabucks.
"It's in their hands," genand Francisco Rodriguez · go and speak with him,"
highlight the potential free- Dodgers general manager eral manager Doug Melvin
· hers, and Manny hNed Colletti
said. "I know said. "He hasn't really had a
agent pttc
h
Ramirez and Mark Teixeira
ow t e fans feel and how chance to talk with other
we
feel. It'' obvious. I !tams."
top the available hi tiers. San
Diego is·shopping ace lake mean, what · he did for 10
Free-agent
contract
Peavy in the lobbies of the weeks - regular season demands
won't
slow
and postseason - was as because of the economy.
d
Th
hotel. where a bagel goes
for $5.50 and a kobe burger . roo as anybody can do.
at could cause negotia. with truffle cheese fetches 've been at if long enough . tions to drag out even
to tell you that I'm not longer than usual because
2
$ ~~avy is guaranteed $63 going to tell you what my budgets may be .in flux.
million over the next four gut feeling is."
· "I think in some places it
seasons , and Padres GM
Ramirez is represented by may very well · have an
Scott Boras, who last year effect," Houston Astros
Kevin Towers said he had
d
talked exclusively with one persua ed Colletti to give president of baseball operaunidentified team . about a Andruw Jones a $36.2 mil- lions Tal Smith said. "From
lion , two-year contract. the standpoint · of free
trade before enlarging the Jones then hit .158 with agents, it's something clubs
field . Towers wo(l(d like three homers and 14 RB!s.
will probably take a look
·two major league players
Colletti said. the Dodgers at ."
plus prospects in return .
haven 't made an offer yet to
Some
high-revenue
"(iis preference is still the Ramirez and it would be teams, relatively certain that
National League. He likes difficult to afford both they will sell close to 100
that part of the game ," Ramirez and Sabathia.
percent of their tickets,
Towers · said. "I've got · "You can't let one player don't have to worry as
maybe a handful of clubs stand in the way of every- much. .
·
right now I'm going to thing else you need to do,"
"I think as long as we
focus on. A lot of those he said. "Every player's got win, we'll have revenue
Clubs we've already had their own timeline and their certainty," said Red Sox
quite a bit of dialogue."
own rhythm to their thought GM Theo Epstein, who just
Towers also said the process: So when you have received a new·contract.
Padres probably will exercise outfielder Brian Giles •
$9 million option by
Saturday's deadline and are
,.
trying to work out an agreeCotplnfl Thl• Saturday 'N/flhtl
ment to keep closer Trevor
November lith
Hoffman.
.._ ..., ••·" "FoDthW8 Fury"
· Ramirez, whose $20 million team options were
Hldelt
I ........... 7+
voided when the Los
·•· C'"ls C8n?
e ~Ill
wllll I 5 , I a•
............
. t•
Angeles Dodgers acquired
o,••.,.,__.., -ml-.lon .1 •• .,.,. .30
liim from Boston on July
a.- open at a p.m• • Rllclnfl ate p.m.
31, expects a bull market for
lp cati.- .. Wier IMIDI18._.
his services.
...... Jd
"I want to see who is the
Steel Block Llote MOdetaiSemi-Lates ·
$1 ,000 to WJ n ...• $121 to St.rt
highest bidder. Gas is up
AModlfl.- ~P...• Stvaka ..JIWD 4-Cyll....,._
and so am I," he said last
olllni/W. . . . . .
month after the Phillies
oliminated the Dodgers
from the playoffs.
Perhaps Ramirez didn't

Democrats in Congress
wary of overreaching, A2
'

•
:,o l l

.

'

• •, . . . . . .

'IS • \ul.

:;H. '" · Htf

. \'
AP photo

New Jersey Devils' Martin Brodeur (30) makes· a save with the hell) of teammate John
Oduya, left, on a shot by Atlanta Thrashers' Slava Kozlov, of Russia, during the ·second
period of an NHL hockey game in Newark, N.J. on Saturday. Brodeur injured his elbow
shortly after and did not retum .for the remainder of the game.
·

• Big Ten Notebook:
BY BRIAN J. REED
BREEOOMVOAILVSENTINEL.COM
RiChRod losing his
poise with struggling yM.
POMEROY ·
State Rep.
See rage Bl
·
Jimmy Stewart, R-Albany, was
.elected Ohio Senator Tuesday,
defeating
Morgan · County
Commissioner Rick Shriver by a
margin of 55 percent.
The 20th District Senate seat was
open because Senator Joy Padgett,
R-Coshocton, chose not to seek reelection.
Stewart lives in western Meigs
County, and is completing his third

Devils' Brodeur to have surgery, out 3-4 months
NEWARK, N.J. (AP) The injury was originally to Weekes, who was outFor the next three to four diagnosed as a bruised standing on Monday night in
months, the New Jersey elbow, and Brodeur had a 2-0 toss to Buffalo, makDevils are going to learn hoped that it was not serious ing 28 saves, including 19about life without Martin· because . there was no of-20 in the first period.
Brodeur.
swelling, discoloration and
The · 36-year-old Brodeur, muchpain.
·
Brodeur called Weakes a
a four-time Vezina Trophy
Brodeur was taken to see gr~at goalie and teammate,
winner who is on the verge several specialists before noting that the 33-year-old
of becoming the NHL's all- bein'g told that the biceps who is now in his lOth seatime winniilgesl goaltender, had tom from the elbow and son was always upbeat last
year despite playing in nine
will be sidelined until at would require surgery.
least February after tearing a
"This is not a career-end- games.
Brodeur.started 77 games,
distal biceps in his left ing injury," Devils president
and general manager Lou and had a streak of 56
elbow last weekend.
Brodeur will undergo I.amoriello said. "This is a stratght
· starts before missing
surgery Thursday.
bump in the road. (He'll Monday's game.
"It's shocking because you have) a total recovery, 100
expect my knee is goit)g to .percent, and with. this type
"! think it's a great opporgo or my groin or my thumb, of surgery there i~ no doubt tunity for him to go .out and
something I use as a goalie," about - and I liave total proye himself to be the top
Brodeur said Tuesday in a confidence that he will be · goalie," Brodeur·said. "He is
conference call. "I didn't back in a short period of going to play in front of a
expect my biceps could be a "time."
·
·
· great team like I did for a Io!
big factor it:I an injury., It was
Brodeur said it will take of years and, hopefuity, he
a freak acctdent. That s why two months before he can · will do well for us and hold
I am sho~ked about !he start moving the elbow the fort until J come back."
InJUry. That s·not somethmg again, and then he would
I expected to hurt."
begin rehabilitation.
Brodeur . has won the
The biceps ~ttacbes to the
"Then it depends on how Vezina Trophy as the NHL's
~tg bone (prol'tmal radms) it responds," said Brodeur, top goaltender four times,
~n the forearm at the elbow who had never had a major including last season when
JOint.
injury in his career in whtch he posted a 44-27 record and
Brodeur was ·. injured he has played it&gt; at .Jeast.67. . a. 2.17 gotlls-againsJ, aver- ·
Saturday against. Atlanta games every NHL season age. His seven seasons With .
making a second-period since 1995-96.
· 40 or more wins are an NHL
glove save on a shot that was
"It is an unfortunate situa- record, and his 2.20 career
tion for me and for my goals-against average is the
going wide of the net.
"I jl!st extended my arm team," Brodeur said. "It is lowest in the NHL's modem
real quick and I just felt a what it is. My spirits are era. He set a single-season
pop, and· a tapping kind of pretty good. I might as well record for wins with 48 in
feeling in my biceps," said stay positive. There is no 2006-07, breaking Bernie
Brodeur, who stayed in the reason to be negative. It is Parent's old inark of 47.
game for another minute not something that will
before being replaced by affect my career. My mobilBrodeur has 544 career
Kevin Weekes, the man who ity, nothing is ·going to be a wins, eight shy. of breaking
will now be asked to take factor. It is just a question of Patrick Roy's NHL record of
over for the 15-year veteran getting my biceps back into 551. Brodeur is five shutouts
who has led New Jersey to shape."
from tying Terry Sawchuk's
three Stanley Cups.
The starting job now falls NHL record of 103. ,

Bengals get exemption for Blackstock
CINCINNATI (AP) The Bengals were given a
one-week roster exemption
Tuesday for linebacker
Darryl Blackstock, who was
suspended the last four
games for using a nutritional
supplement that contained a
substance banned by the
NFL.

Blackstock is allowed to
participate in meetings and
practices this week - the
· team's bye week - without
counting toward the 53-man
roster. They would have to
open a roster spot for him by
next Monday if they want
him to play against the
Philadelphia E,!gles on Nov.

16.
. Blackstock played in the .
·first five · games, including
one sUit!, and had four tackles on defense.
The Bengals also· waived
cornerback Herana-D11ze ·
Jones · from · the injured
reserve list after reachmg a
financial settlement.

,.,.,,...

.. ---

···Jrr·-

·

"

•·

(All items in stock)

.

• Cllffl"" • NMfdiJ • Aftlf,.., ,,

lllf41M('

lJI••o••rlifmtrl&lt;atrl!xpr.u
lfrN;' M·t·1'/l· F I 1·5; Sal, 9·11)0; Clofed Wid, ~SIIt!day
.

•

'

.

.

.....
.

.

0

BY BRIAN

INSIDE

Sweet·release

Fiscal emergency cloud lifted at Southern

t• .,:

WEATHER

.JNDEX

•
: ' a slicnoi.s - 1a PAGES

Meigs voters support
payday lending reform
BY BRIAN

J. REED

BREEOOMVDAILYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY
Businesses offering payday
loans wi\1 be subject to caps
Calendars
•
on interest rates and borClassifieds
rowers will be limited to
'
four loans per year after
ComicS
v0ters .in Ohto passed a ref''
erendum Tuesday more
~ditorials
closely regulating those
•
businesses .
:Obituaries
POmeroy has at least three
•
of these businesses, which
~laces to go
cash post-dated personal
0.
B Section checks for a percentage fee.
Sports
The Texas-based company
'.
which. owns one of those
:Weather
Pomeroy payday Joan
stc)res, Cashland, had said
lt:loooS Oklo ValiOy Publloblaa Co.
. before the election it would
close up to a third of its
Ohio stores if voters
approved State Issue '5.
•
No specific store closings
.'

; . ~-

Mailbox

J. REED

BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

·0BITUARIFS

.

We liNdII ••• for"" Atli:UJt

Phillips Claims
victory in Ohio
House race

POMEROY
$196,978
Pomeroy's
paving project began this
week. with resurfacing
already being done on
Peacock. and Martin Streets
'Page AS
as well as milling work on
·• Donavan Clagg, 84
Lincoln Hill.
• John Foreman, 54
The entire project will
resurface Lincoln Hill up to
• Robert Leport, 72
the water tower, 7A from
the Beacon to the corporation limit, Pleasant Ridl!e
Road (not the hill), Martin
.
Bet~ Sefgontlphoto
Street . on both ends,
Riverview Dri.y_e, th&amp; exist~ ,Yesta.rtl.t!Y. ·!!Q -.pUic~ . r,li)IOIIIIi~n 'Nil$ .paased .to diiiSolve ttle. State Financial Planning
~-~ri\merii~ls
ing paved mails in Beech Supenllslon Commission which,oversees financial decisions in ttl~ Southern Local School
Dlstrlc:t. Celebrating the district's release from fiscal emeFgency are (from left)
pip to borrow $5508. ·Grove Cemetery. ·
At least four inches of Superintendent . Tony . Deel(1, Southern Local School Board member Denny Evans.
SeePage.Al
planing will be done on Treasurer Roy · ~ohnson, C9111mlssion members Tonja Hunter, David Hoback, Shirley
• Revival services set.
Lincoln Hill with two inch- Johrtaon, Paul Marshall, Neil· Uhrig, Jackie Osborne.
SeePageA3
es of new pavement added.
'If the village hadn't done
• Women's health fair
the additional planing, the
offered. See Page A3
streets could've ended up
:. Holzer Clinic
higher than the curbs.
On Tuesday, Musser said
·welcomes orthopedic
paving .on Peacock Street
surgeon. See Page A3
compliance and are operat- and those "yellow flags" are
liad been completed with
Bv BETH SERGENT
being addressed though
• Fair Board members
Martin Street to follow yes- BSERGENTOMVIlAILVSENTINELCOM ing in the !)lack.
• Basically, it's all .over but more time needed to pass to
terday as well as the planing
elected. See Page AS
RACINE
Yesterday
the
paperwork with the make sure the solutions for
on 'Lincoln Hill. Although
• Novels centering on
Musser said he couldn't be morning the Southern commission possibly meet- . those problems were corMeigs County released.
sure as to when all the work. Local School District's ing once more in January to rectly tmplemented, which
See Page AS .
would be done, he added he nirte, long years of operat- review a financial forecast he added was common in
would not be surprised if it ing in fiscal emergency and Commission President this situation.
• r:NCS releases honor were finished Friday.
Burlenski added the discame to an end when the Neil Uhrig needs to sign the
:roll. See Page AS
Of the $196,978 paving state's Financial Planning necessary papers to official- trict's purchase order
project, Pomeroy received Supervision Commission ' ly dissolve the Commission. process was now working
.• West Virginia artists
$147,000 in Issue Two passed a resolution dissolv- Uhrig's signature allows the "much better," · and the
·now on display at FAC. · funds
to pay for a la,rge por~ mg · the commission and process of release to begin bank account has been rec:See Page A6
.
and
payroll
lion of the resurfacing. The -releasing Southern from in the Office of the Ohio onciled
'.
accounts
had
been
reconvillage then took out a 4.I 5. fiscal emergency.
Auditor of State which
ciling
to
within
$20
in the
percent ·fixed rate five-year
Commission
member requires fees paid not l;&gt;y the
last
two
months.
Earlier
in
Joan with Fanners Bank for Shirley Johns.on made the district but the state to com$40,000 to pay for the motion 'to dissolve the com- plete the release, according the fiscal year Burlenski·
.insurance being paid
remainder of the project.
mission which passed unan- to Robert Burlenski from said
and other "odds and
twice
The unexpected cost of · imously. The Commission, that office.
ends" contributed to the
. additional
planing
of made up of both local resiBefore Johnson made the payroll not reconciling but
Lincoln Hill and the rising dents and Ohio Department motion to dissolve the
those issues seemed to be
cost of asphalt contributed to of Education appointed con- Commission,
Burlenski addressed. Burlenski said
Pomeroy eliminating paving sultants., functioned as a reported the financial "red
all roads in Beech Grove "watchdog" over the dis- flags" which have previous- his office would likely
Cemetery with the village trict's finances which have ly hindered the district from monitor the district for two
'
slowly but finally come into release have been addressed Please see Southern, A5
Plu10- Pnln.. AS

~nie's

~....,.,,...,., lltcflff.l/t/w,.., ..,.,

"It is difficult to come from a
small county like Meigs and win a
legislative district ,'' ·
Stewart said he expects a
smooth transition because of his
six-year experience in the statehouse. He said two legislative
matters , a bill regulating unli censed contractors and projeCted
budget shortfalls, will be his focus
between now and the end of his
term in the House.
"Balancing the budget is going to
be a challenge for all of us at the
state level." Stewart said.

Bv BETH SERGENT

•

We're Going to Remodel
Needing More Room

Stewart acknowledged that he
spent most of his 'energy on campaignirl$ in the northern part of the
20th Dtstrict, where he is lesser
known. The 20th, he said, is the
largest Ohio Senate District.
"It's really a humbling experience and was a daunting challenge ,
covering nine counties from Meigs
to Coshocton County, but I am
grateful I was able to do it with a
bi-~artisan support, and a combinatiOn of support from organized
labor and the business community," Stewart said.

BSERGENTOMVDAILYSENTINELCOM

0

Inventory Reduction Sale

term in the Ohio
House for the 92nd
District. . Shriver
received 40 )lercent
of the vote, and
Green . Party candidate
Timothy
Kettler, five ~rcent.
Jimmy
Stewart sa1d he is
Stewart
only the third Meigs
County resident to
serve ·as a state senator in Ohio's
history. The last, he said; was State
Senator Bob Jones, in the late
1940's and early 1950's.

•

Qelltlll on Plge A3

~'

Meigs senator for half century

Pomeroy
•
pavmg
begins

1
caoseo-'
.-.-.~.' to .....

~

'"'" "') dail )"' "t illd .n m•

TIII ' RSD ,\\ . '0\ 1-.:\1111·. 1{ h, :! ooH

Ste~art first

SPORTS

7

. . . . . . . . . .,

Printed on 100%
. Re&lt;yded Newsprint

Middleport • ·Pomeroy, Ohio ·

7

7

OVS offers 'Halloween
Spooktacular,' A6

have been announced, but
Cash America, the company
which operates Cashland
stores in Ohio, confmned
the 'closing of 4~ stores on
Wednesday.
The
referendum
as
approved caps the interest
rate on payday loans at 28
percent, ending the indus"
· try's practice of charging
300 percent ore more . It
also limits borrowers to four
loans per year, at 25 percent
of monthly income or $500
per Joan.
.
The referendum passed
with 64 percent of tl"\e vote.
In Meigs County, it carried
by 60 percent. Supporters
of the referendum argued
that the businesses preyed
on low-income people who
· often found themselves in
.
.
PIIIH-

Lincllllo AS

Retirement I"';:&gt;Jr~~t'Yir

POMEROY - Athens
City Councilwoman Debbie
Phillips is claiming victory
in h~r race ·for the 92nd
Ohio House District against
Athens County Treasurer
Jill Thompson.
This·
is
Phillips' second bid for
the
Ohio
House district, which
includes all
of Athens,
Meigs and
Morgan
Debbie
countie~ and
· Phillips
the portion
of Washington County
including Little Hocking
and Belpre. Two years ago,
she ran against Stewart,
With about 2,000 votes
uncounted
in
Athens
County, Democrat Phillips
said her lead of just 170
votes over Republican
Athens County Treasurer
Jill Thompson will widen
once those provisidnal and
absentee ballots are counted. ·
Phillips and Thompson
fought in a race considered
negative by both opponents
and many voters. Phillips
now has a pending complaint against the Meigs
County Republican Party,
alleging false information
contained in a newspaper ad
printed last week in The
Daily Sentinel.
On Monday, select members of the Ohio Elections
Commission determined
there was reasonable cause
to believes statements the
Meigs County GOP ma\le
against Phillips are false.
The complaint will now go
before the full commission
for a final determination
and possible penalties
against the GOP.
Phillips won in her home :

•L-=--l

Please see Phillips. AS

honors Meigs naval officer
deploym~nts

onboard the
USS John F. Kennedy,
During the tour he was
selected for the Command
POMEROY - A retireAdva ncement Program and
ment ceremony honoring
promoted to Petty Officer
,Aviation
Electronics
Second Class and made two
Technician Senior Chief
James M . .Bush of Meigs
Mediterranean deployments ·
· County was held Sept. 12 at
onboard the USS John F.
the Naval Air Station,
Kennedy (CV-67)..
Oceana, Virginia.
In May, 1990, Second
Bush, a native of Racine,
Class Petty Officer Bush
enlisted in the Navy's
reported to Grim Reapers at
Delayed Entry Program in
Oceana to begin the first
March 1984 before graduatphase of his career transiing from Southern High
tion. Here he honed his
School and.completed basic
technical skills on the
James M. Bulh
training at the · Recruit AviaNon Electronics TBChnician Navy's best fighter jet, th~
Training Center, San Diego,
F-14 Tomcat, as well as
Senior Chief (ReNred)
Calif. in March 1985. He
padding his Navy frequent
attended Avionics Technical Sunday Punchers at Naval flier miles traveling to Key
"A" School and AFTA at Air Station (NAS) Oceana West, Fla., for numerous
A6E training detachments.
Naval ·Air
Technical maintaining • the
.
During
his
tour
he· In May, 1993, Bush
Intruder
Training
Center
in
was
·
selected
for
the
Millington, Tenn .
reported to Ghost Riders al
Upon completion of train- Command Advancement N AS Oceana serving as the
ing, Petty Officer Third · Program and promoted to Integrated weapons team
Class Bush reported to' his Petty Officer Second Class,.
Please see Honan, A5
first comm·and VA-75 He made two Mediterranean
BY CHARLENE HOEFUCH

HOEFLICHOMYOAILYSENTINEL.COM

...:1

�•

The Daily Sentinel

'

NATION • W
· 0 RD

PageA2
Thursday, November 6, 2008

·~
· --~---------=~~~~~--~~~~~--~~~--~--

Government details
plans to borrow $550~

BY ANDREW TAYLOR
ASSOCIATED PRESS WAITER

• WASHINGTON
•President-elect
Barack
;Obama is facing a Congress
. with bulked-up Democratic
. majorities in both the House
:and Senate to put lflUCh of
his agenda into Jaw.
.. Obama will inherit a
· Congress with Democratic .
House and Senate majori' ties comparable to those
by President
:enjoyed
Clinton when the party last
. controlled both Congress
. and the White House in
: 1992. While Democrats are
:eager to chum out the new
president's legislative pro-.
. grams, they're also anxtous
. to avoid 1\le electoral wipeout that swept them from
power in the 1994 congres- .
sional elections.
That's one reason top
leaders like House Speaker
Nancy Pelosi promise not to
lurch to the left and give in
· to pent-up demands from
party liberals.
·
"The country must be
.governed from the middle,"
, Pelosi,
0-Calif.,
told
reporters Wednesday. "You
have to bring people together to reach consensus on
· solutions that are sustain- '
able and acceptable to the ·
·American people."
One of the complications
·for Pelosi and Obama is the
·.demise of GOP moderates
:like Rep . Christopher
· Shays, R-Conn., who lost
· his re-election bid.
"Never in modern day
· history has the Republican
Party been more bereft of a
center," ·said former Rep.
Jim Leach. R-Iowa. "So the .
·center has .to come from the
Democratic Party."
There are other reasons
. too, such as a coalition of
Republicans and a few con. servative Democrats in the.
Senate. In the House, a big
. bloc of moderate-to-conser·vative
"Blue
Dog"
Democrats also could put
the brakes on overreachmg
by Obama and allies like
Pelosi and Senate Majority
Leader Harry Reid, 0-Nev.
But after 14 . years of
either a GOP-dominated
Congress or a Republican
; president, Democratic Party
: regulars are under intense
~ pressure to deliver on an
•·agenda
they've
been
: promising long before
: Obama announced his bid
: for the White House.
. "I'm not worried about
; overreaching;" said Rep.
; Jim McGovern, D-Mass.
: "I'm worried,1'l!\Jout being
: too timid and"t&amp; cautious,
~:and not stepping up to the
; :Plate and doing what we
:.promised we would do."
; : Added Sen. Sherrod
'Brown, 0-0hio, "This elec.~ iion ushered in the next pro' gressive era for our nation.
From health care to trade to
·.education, progressive val·
ues will now be the priority
· ·:in Washiogton. It's ·time . to
'·get to work."

APphoto

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi of Calif. gestures during a news conference on Capitol Hill
in Washington, Wednesday, to discuss Tuesday's presidential election.
House Majority Leader
Steny Hoyer, 0-Md., countered that Democrats would
impose "self-discipline' '
because so many House
ne\\lcomers come from conservative-leaning districts.
"If we focus im the core
issues of jobs, of health
care , of education, of the
environment ... I think we
will not make mistakes ,"
Hoyer said.
Inside Pelosi 's caucus of
House Democrats, whose
numbers · will swell to at
least 254 from 235 now,
some tensions are already
apparent.
.
Rep. Henry Waxman, DCalif., a liberal Pelosi ally,
launched a bid to challenge
82·-year-old Rep. John
Dingell, 0-Mich., for the
chairmanship of the influential House Energy and
Commerce Committee, and
take the lead on issues like
global warming, energy and
health care. Dingell is a
staunch protector of Detroit
automakers, and his battles
with Waxman over clean air
laws date ·to the Reagan
administration.
Dingell, who has either
chaired the committee or
been its top Democrat since
1981, was "mounting a fullout war" to save his chair- ·
manship , a top adviser said
Wednesday.
Republicans, too, are facing tensions and a shake-up
of party leaders in the wake
of Tuesday's disappointing
election results.
·
Rep. Eric Cantor of
Virginia launched a bid to
become GOP whip , the No.
2 post, while Rep. Jeb
Hensarling, R-Texas, is
seeking to replace Rep .
Adam Putnam of Florida as
the
third-ranking ·
Republican in the House .
Putnam announced he
would step down after
Tuesday 's
losses
for
Republicans. The current
whip, Rep. Roy Blunt of
Missouri, was considering

his options but did not
immediately announce a bid
to keep his job, a sign that
he' ll likely step aside.
.
Both
Cantor
and
Hensarling are more conservative than the . lawmakers they're seeking to
replace, leading some
Republicans to grumble
that the party was moving
to the right when it should
be rcachinll toward the center if it IS to regain its
majority. House Minority
Leader John Boehner . of
Ohio said he would seek to
keep his post.
Leon Panetta, a former
House Democrat and White
House chief of staff for
Clinton, said Obama "has to
make an effort at bipartisan
cooperation, which means
that he has to reach out to
the Republicans . and see
whether or not they're willing to cooperate on some
issues," like education and
immigration. He added that
Obama will need to develop
coalitions. on issues that
divide Democrats.
Shake-ups elsp are possible in the Senate, where
Democrats have increased
their effective majority to at
least 56 seats in the I()().
member chamber. Sen. Joe
Lieberman of Connecticut,
one of two independents
who align with Democrats,
is threatened with the Joss
of his chairmanship of the
Homeland Secunty and
Government
Affairs
Committee as payback for
actively supporting the
presidential
bid · of
Republican Sen. John
McCain. Reid, the majority
l~ader, said he would meet
with Lieberman later in the
week to discuss the ll1atter.
"Now that the election is
over, it is time to put partisan considerations aside and
come together as a nation to
solve the difficult challenges we face and make
our blessed land stronger
and safer," Lieberman said

in a written statement. He
had harshly criticized
Obama in a speech at the
GOP nominatmg convention in September.
·
Then there's the game of
.musical chairs in the Senate
that has to be played
because of the departures of
Obama and Vice Presidentelect Joe Biden to the White
House . Illinois Gov. Rod
Blagojevich, a Democrat,
will appoint someone to fill
out the remaining two years
of
Obama 's
term.
Speculation has focused on
Chicago . Reps.
Jesse
Jackson Jr. and Danny
Davis, along "'ith Rep. Jan
Schilkowsky.
Bi4en's . departure 9pens
up not only his seat - he
won a seventh term Tuesday
- bu~ also the' prestigious
chairmanship of the Senate
Foreign
·
Relations
Committee.
Delaware's
departing Democratic governQr, Ruth An'n 'Minner,
likel;y will name·a &amp;!JCCessor
to serve until the end of next
year, when a special election will be held to fill the .
~ematmng
four years .
Speculation surrounds Lt.
Gov. John Carney and
Biden 's son Beau, who is
Delaware's first-term attorney general.
.
Sen. John Kerry, 0Mass .. could be in line to
fill the Foreign Relations
po ,t,
dependin~
on
whether Sen. Chnstopher
Dodd, D-Conn., decides to
stay on as chairman of the
Senate Banking Committee
to deal with the financial
meltdown.
Democrats have added at
least five seats in the
Senate, to bring their num. bers to 56 - for now. But
three GOP-held seats - in
Oregon,
Alaska
and
Minnesota - have yet to be
decided. A fourth still-disputed Senate seat now held
by a Republican incumbent
will be settled by a Dec. 2
runoff in Georgia.

·Medvedev: Russia to deploy missiles near Poland
.. MOSCOW (AP)
'Russia will deploy shorti range missiles near Poland
~to counter U.S. military
• plans in Eastern Europe ,
:President Dmitry Medvedev
:warned Wednesday, setting
. a combative tone that
: clashed with global good&gt;will over Barack Obama's

as a nation threatened by of Kaliningrad, sandwiched
encroaching American mili- between
Poland
and
tary might.
Lithuania, "to neutralize, if
"From what we have seen necessar,y. a mtss1le defense
in recent years - the ere- system. .
ation of a missile defense
The ls)&lt;.ander has a range
system, the encirclement of of about 280 ktlometers
Russia with military bases • . (175 mlles), whtch would
the relentless expansion of allow it to reach targets in
NATO ·- we have gotten Poland but not in the Czech
' ~election.
the clear impression that Republic - but officials
: In his first state of the they are . testing our have said its range could be
:nation speech, Medvedev strength," Medvedev said.
increased. Medvedev did
· blamed Washin~ton for the · He . signaled Moscow not say whether the missiles
; war in Georgta and the would not give in to Western would be fitted with nuclear
:world financial crisis and calls to pull troops from warheads.
: sugg~sted it was up to Georgia's ~reakaway regions
Russia will also deploy
• Washmgton to mend badly of Abkhazia and South electronic jamming equip-.
:damaged ties.
Ossetia, or rescind its recog- ment, Medvedev said.
:. Med~edev also eroposed nition of their independence
After the speecli, the
:mcreasmg the Russtan pres- following the August war.
Kremlin
announced
: idential term to six years
"We will not. retreat in the Medvedev had congratulat. from four - a change that Caucasus," he said, winning ed Obama for winning the
:could deepen West~rn con- one of many rounds of u.S . presidency, saying in a
: cern. over democ_racy m applause during the 'tele.- telegram he was "counting
:Russta and play mto .the vtsed 85-minute address.
on a constructive dialogue
.ha~ds of hts mentor, Pn~e
Talking tough, he fleshed with you on the basis of
:Mtmster Vladtmtr Putm , out long-promised military trust and taking each other's
· =who has not ruled out a measures m response to interests into account."
: return to the Kremlin.
.
U.S. plans for missile
In Washington, State
: Extendmg t.'1e prestde~ual defense facilities in Poland Department
spokesman
: term could mean a posstble and the Czech Republic, Sean McCormack empha·12 more years m the top former Soviet satellites now stzed that the planned mis:office for the popular Putin. in NATO . The Kremlin sile defenses were not
: Echoing 1-'utin, who made claims the system is meant aimed at Russia.
: criticism of Washington and to weaken Russia , not
"The steps that . the
: the \Vest a hallmark of hts defend against Iran. as Russian ·
government
, two-term, etght-year pres1- Washington ·insists.
. announced today are diSap~ dency, Medvedev used the
Medvedev said Iskander Pllinting," . McCormack
~speec~ in an ornate Kreml!n missiles would be deployed said. "But, again , this "is not
:receptton hall to cast·Russ1a to Russia's western enclave dtrected at them . Hopefully

-

\

.

suffered a sharper-thanexpected drop tO 44.4 in
October from 50 .2 in
WASHINGTON - One September as hotels , conday after Barack Obama struction firms and retailers
was elected the next U.S . saw business shrink. A readpresident, the outgoing ing below 50 signals con·_
Bush
administration !taction.
A manufacturing report
detailed its plans to borrow
a record $550 billion issued Monday by ISM
through the end of tlie year showed the worst reading
to back the tinancial bailout. since 1982 . when the counThe Federal Reserve, try was near the end of a 16meanwhile , said it will month recession.
The government said last
boost interest payments to
banks as authorities battle week that the overall econthe worst financial crisis in omy, as measured by the
gross domestic product , fell
decades.
The Treasury Department at an annual rate of 0.3 persaid Wednesday it will sell cent in the July-September
$55 billion in bonds next quarter, retlecting the
week, part of a massive bor· biggest drop in consumer
rowing effort to cover the spending m 28 years.
$700 billion bailout and a Analysts are forecasting
budget deficit that's expect- that GOP will fall by an
ed to hit a record of nearly even larger amount of
$1 trillion next year.
around 2 percent in the curThe government's surging rent quarter. That would
financing needs are a stark meet the classic definition
reminder of the challenges of a recession as two conawaiting Obama even as the secutive ·quarters of declincurrent
administration ing GOP.
m0ves to ·implement its resMark Zandi. chief econocue program and the Fed mist
at
Moody''s
fine-tunes its approach to Economy.com, said he
the crisis .
thin~s GOP will keep
The financial turmoil shrinking 'ihrough the ~~~t
flared anew Wednesday half of next year, pushmg
with the Dow Jones indus- the ,unemployment rate I!P
trial average plunging 1 to 8 percent before a ·sohd
486.01 points, or more than rebourid can begin.
.
5 percent, as investors
Zandi expects this downabsorbed more bad econom- turn to produce the ll1ost
ic news .
severe unemployment since
The central bank said it the 1981-82 recession,
will slightly boost the when the. jobless · nlte
interest rates it pays banks jumped to 10.8 percent, the
on their required reserves highest since the 1930s.
and the excess reserves
"I think we are lhroujlh
they choose to deposit with the . worst of the financtal
the Fed. The rescue bill panic, but I . expect the
authorized the central bank recession will last through
to start paying interest next summer," Zandi said.
rates to commercial banks
Major . bond trading
.on
the
reserves. firms are projecting that
Policymakers hope the the government will need
move wi II further bolster to borrow a record $1 .4
the banks' reserves.
trillion during the current
Treasury also gave budget year, which began
Congress its first report on Oct. I .
the operation of the
But Zandi said he
bailout fund, detailing the expects the borrowing
$125 billion the govern- costs to be closer to $2 trilment spent last week to lion . He noted the size of
buy stakes in nine of the the rescue program that
country's biggest banks. needs to be financed and
The bailout legislation th~ likelihood that Obama
requires Treasury to issue and a Congress with larger
reports ef!ch time its Democ,ratic majorities will
spending passes a $50 bil- pass a second economic
lion marker.
stimulus program
of .
Tr~asury
Secretary between $150 billion and
Henry
Paulson
has $300 billion .
pledged to work with
In
its
financing
Ob~ma to ensure a smooth
announcement for the curtransition. Paulson has ·set rent quarter, Treasury said
up desks and phone lines it was bringing back threeat the department where year notes and will sell
Obama's
incoming them monthly to help cover
Treasury team can work the increased borrowing ·
between now and the inau- needs. The first batch of
guration, on Jan. 20.
$25 billion is to be aucIn light of the crisis, tioned Monday. The govObama is expected to ernment also will offer $20
quickly name members of billion in 10-year notes on
his economic team. Former Nov. 12 and $10 billion in
Tre11sury
Secretary 30-year bonds on Nov. 13 .
Lawrence Summers, who
Asian stocks rallied earserved in the Clinton · l.ier
\Yednesday
as .
administration,
and investors there took hope
Timothy Geithner, president that Obama would tackle
of the New York Federal the financial crisis · with
Reserve Bank, are among renewed vigor. Still, some
the names being mentioned voiced concerns that a
Democratic president and
for Treasury secretary.
In another gloomy sign Congress might turn more
Japan's
for the economy, the protectionist.
Institute
for
Supply Nikkei 225 stock average
Management, a trade group climbed 4.5 percent, while
of /urchasing executives, Hong Kong's Hang Seng
sai its service sector index index rose 3.2 percent.
BY MARTIN CRUTSINGER
AP ECONOMICS WAITER

'

one day they'll realize that."
Medvedev appeared to be
trying_ t~ improve _Russia.'s
bargat~mg
postllon 10
potenttal talks wtth the
Obama administr~tion on
!fi1Sstle defense. H!s wordmg suggested Russta would
reverse the decision if the
U.S. scraps its missile
defense plans.'
"Moscow isn't interested
in confrontation, and if
Obama makes some conciliatory gestures it will
respond correspondingly,"
said Alexander Pikayev, an
analyst
at
Moscow's
Institute for World Economy
and lnt7mational Relations.
But mdependent mthtary
analyst Alexander Golts said
Medvedev's "confrontation·
al tone" cou_ld 'further harm
·relations wtth t~e Umted
States, whtch plunged to a
post-Cold W~ low over the
war in Georgta.
"Russia itself is cutting .
·off the route toward .better
ties," he said.
,, .
Region~ ~~~ cn11c1zed
Medvedev s mtssile wartUOg.
German Foreign Minister
Frank-Walter Steiruneier said
it was "certainly the wrong
signal at the wrong time". and
urged the U.S. and Russ1a to
see change in the White
House as an "opportunity for
a new beginning."

• Very Larve Manu • Children's Menu
• Vegetarian Meals • Desserts • Steaks
• Camltaa • F•Jit•• '

The Daily Sentinel

BYTHE BEND

ANNIE'S MAILBOX

Majority shareholder
.responsible for business
.

BY KATHY. MITCHELL
AND MARCY SUGAR

Dear Annie: A year ·ago,!
was mvited to invest in the
cornpany where I worked
and become a part-o,wner.
_My husband and I took out a
second mortgage and retinanced everything to buy in.
It was great at first, but now
everything is going downhill.
"Jane." the other investor,
.bas more stock and constantly reminds us that she
is the rr\ajority owner. I have
not even gotten a paycheck
·in the past two months . I
want out, but cannot find
,anyone to buy my shares. I
.am 'so stressed that I am
·constantly in a state .pf
panic.! have gained weight.
started smoking and now
s nap at my husband and
·children . Jane puts on a
great face at the office , but
behind closed doors she
reams out the employees sc;&gt;
much they actually cry. We
.keep losing good people
.because of her uttitude.
, I have also questioned
Jane about financial fmdings
.- trips for training; psychic
:readings, lunches , etc. She
.claims that as· majority
owner; the~e are legitimate
business e\:penses. Maybe ,
,but w~ are not profitable. I
,am about. to lose my house
·and car, and my marriage is
.in a sorry state.
. I am su angry I don 't
know what to do. How can I
·sell my portion of the busi;ness? - Sick of Crying
, Dear Sick: Even a major:ity shareholder has a
responsibility not to run the
,company into the ground,
,and it may be that the onlj'
way to hold Jane responsi·ble is to take her to court.
.You need to talk 'to a lawyer.
,Your ~tate bar association or
local law s~hool should be
.able to help you out.
. Dear Annie: I have a
daughter-in-law of whom
I'm very fond. She is · the
mother of my 3-year-old
grandson . . Unfortunately,
.she and my son divorced
after only a few months of
marriage . The split was not
,her fault.
I plan on calling her my
-daughter-in-law . from now
on, even if my son remar,ries. Am I correct in believing that the divorce does not
-affect my relationship with
her? Please let me know. ·:Troubled Father-in.Law
Dear Troubled: The
·divorce may not affect your
·.relationship, but a remar.riage absolutely will. ' It's

PageA3

wonderful that you are so
fond of your ex-daughterin-law, and it is .a good idea
for you to remain on friendly terms. However; if your
son remarries, it would be
rude to your new daughterin-law to use that term to
refer to someone else. She
will resent it, and rightfully
so. Don ' t court trouble.
There i's no insult in saying
" my former · daughter-inlaw." Or even "my grandson's mothe~" It won 't
change the degree of affection bet.ween you.
Dear Annie: Boy, did you
two miss the mark with your
r~sponse
to "Unwanted
Daughter-in-Law." Mommyin-law, who wore black to the
wedding, is a bully. and her
baby boy, the hubby in question, is a pantywaist. That
bride doesn't need to be
"unfailinlllY kind and helpful" to th1s boorish cow. That
will only embolden the old
crone. She ought to tell that
wimp of a husband that
either he stands _up for her or
she's out of there.
Before my wife of 21 years
and I were to be married in
her home church (Catholic),
my mother (Lutheran) made
a veiled threat that she might
not be able to keep from making comments about it at our
wedding. I told her if she
couldn't keep her big mouth
shut for one day, she was no
longer welcome to attend. I
then hung up. My mother
was the &lt;:ssence of graciousness that day. She just wanted
to control. things, and I stood
up for my wife. Being nice to
bullies is not the answer. - A
Guy with a Spine
Dear Guy: If you want to
tell YOUR mother how to
behave, that's fine. She
loves ypu. But for your w~e
to have done what you dtd
wou!Q have been a major
disaster and possibl~ poisoned .the. relationshtp forever. Newlyweds need
diplomacy with the in-laws
- and a spouse like you
who will stick up fQ.r them.
Annie's Mailbox is writ·
ten by KaJhy Mitch ell and
Marcy Sugar, longtime edi·
tors of the Ann Landers
column. Please e-mail your
questions· to a.nniesmail·
box@comcast.net, or write
to: Annie's Mailbox, P.O.
Box (18190, Chicago, IL
60611. To find out more
about Annie's Mailbox,
and read feaJures by other
· Creators SyndicaJe writers
and cartoonists, visit the
CreaJors Syndicate Web
page at www .creators .com.

:women's health fair offered
· GALLIPOLIS - A women's health fair will be held
from 10 a.m. to~ p.m. Satdurday at the Holzer Center for
Cancet Care. There will be free screenings, tea· samples,
massages and tips 011 makeup. Door prizes will be awarded
.and refreshments served. Those attending are asked to wear
,pink for Breast Cancer Awaren.ess Month.
· .

Local Weather
Friday and Friday
nlght ...Mostly cloudy with
a 40 percent chance of
showers. Highs i!l the lower
60s. Lows in the lower 40s.
through
·noon.
-. Saturday
:: Wednesday night •..Clear. Sunday nlght ••• Mostly
·;Lows in the upper 30s. East cloudy. Highs in the lower&gt;winds around 5 mph 'in the 50s. Lows in the lower
.
::evening ...Becoming light 30s .
Monday and Monday
·'and variable.
' · ThurSday •••Sunny. Highs night...Partly cloudy. Highs
:·in· the lower 70s. Southeast in the mid 50s. Lows in the
mid 30s.
·-winds around 5 mph .
Veterans Day ...Partly
:. Thursday night ..•Partly
:,cloudy. Lows in the mid 40s. sunny. Highs in the lower
:.South winds around_2, mph . 50s.
Wednesday ••• Sunny.
·Highs in the lower 70s.
·Light
and
variable
winds ... Becomil\g .
east
around 5 mph in. the after-

·--~------------~--------

Thursday, November 6,

2008

Community Calendar
cers conference, followed by
regular meeting, 6:30 p.m ..
Racine Grange Hall .
Thursday, Nov. 6
POMEROY
CHESTER - Chester Alzheimer's
Support Group
Township Trustees , 7 p.m. for caregivers
of those
at the town hall.
affected by Alzheimer's and
Tuesday, Nov. 11 ·
dementia, 1:15 p.m.,
POMEROY - .Salisbury other
Senior Center. light
Meigs
Township Trustee, 6:30 refreshments
served.
p.m. home of Manning
Satur:day, Nov. 8
Roush.
POMEROY - Christian
POMEROY
The . Motorcycle
Association
Bedford Township Trustees "Delivered" Chapter, elecwill old its regular meeting tion of officers, 5 p.m. ,
at 7 p.m . at the town hall.
Common Grounds.
Monday, Nov. lQ
POMEROY - Partners
in Care, ·interact~ve program
for those with memory loss,
9 a.m. - 1 p.m. , regular
Thursday, Nov. 6
meetings tnday and Fridays,
RACINE
Meigs Senior Center.
Pomeroy/Racine
Lodge
POMEROY - Special
#164 special meeting, 6 meeting of the Big Bend
p.m .. , at lodge in Racine. Farm Antiques Club, 7:30
Past Master's night with p.m. Mulberry Community
work in the E.A. degree. All Center (God's Net)
Past Masters are encoljrCHAUNCEY- Area 14
aged to attend. Chili dinner . Youth Council, regular
follows. Call Randy Smith, meeting, 9 a.m., Athens
508-0816 with questions.
CDJFS office.
Friday, Nov. 7
Tllesday, Nov ..ll
RACINE
Meigs
SYRACUSE - Syracuse
County Pomona Grange offi- Community Center Board

Public meetings

Clubs and
organizations

of Directors to meet, 7 p.m.
Nov. II at the community
center.
SYRACUSE
Wildwood Garden Club to
meet at 6:30 p.m. at the
Syracuse
Community
Center. Janet Bolin to present program on artistic
· arrangements for the holiday flower show.
POMEROY - Meigs
County Genealogy Society
to meet at 5 p.m. at Library.
Thursday, Nov. 13
CHESTER
Shade
River Lodge 452, at the
hall . Officers to be elected,
time
to
pay
due s.
. Refreshments.
RACINE - Sonshine
Circle, 7 p.m. at the
Bethany Church. Take col- .
lectibles , turn in noodle .
orders by Nov. 108 .
Hostesses , Betty Proffitt,
Martha Lou Beegle, and
Holly Stump.

Church events
Saturday, Nov. 8
RUTLAND - A free
contemporary
Christian

welcomes

GALLIPOLIS - Holzer
Clinic announces that Board
Certified
Orthopedic
Surgeon Bruce Haupt, ·MD
has joined its team of
skilled professionals.
Dr. Haupt, who now
serves as Holzer Clinic 's
Medical
Director
of
Orthopedic Services, . is
accomplished in all aspects
of general orthopedic
surgery ranging from bone
fractures to total joi'nt
replacements including the ·
knee, hip and shoulder.
With more than 20 years of
Bruce Haupt, M.D.
surgical experience, he is
accomplished in Sports Total Joint Replacement
Medicine, ACL reconstruc- Surgery
and
Limb
tion, Computer Navigated Reconstructive
Surgery

including
the
world
renowned , complex and
highly effective llizarov
Bone
Lengthening
Technique.
Haupt has a degree in
Aeronautical Engineering
from the United States Air
Force Academy. He . com'pleted medical school at
Vanderbilt University, and
completed 'his Orthopedic
residency at the University
of Cincinnati Medical
Center. He has practiced in
Charle.ston, WV, specializing in computer assisted
joint replacement. He is also
a team physician for the
WV Power professional
baseball team and the

Concert will be held at the
Meigs Middle School
Cafeteria. Bands featured
will be Romans Highway of
Oasb
Gallipolis
and
Christian Fellowship Band
of Pomeroy. Doors open at
5:30p.m. and the first band
will start ' at 6 p.m.
Refreshments available for
donations.
Sunday, Nov. 9 .
POMEROY - Revival
services 'at the Mt. Hermon
United Brethren Church.
each evening starting Nov. 9
continuing through Nov. 12
with the Rev. Clifford
Coleman. Following the
morning service on Nov . 9,
a carrv-in dinner will. be
held . Special mu sic each
evening.

Birthdays
Saturday, Nov. 15
LONG BOTTOM
Ernest Griffin will celebra1e
his 91 st birthday on Nov.
15 ., Cards may be sent to
him at 36606 Post Office
Road , Long Bottom.Ohio
45743.

University of Charleston.
He is a Diplomat of the
American
Board
of
Orthopedic Surgery as well
as a member of the
American
Medical
Association and the West
Virginia State Medical
, Association . ·
He is now accepting new
patients at the Holzer Clinic
Main Campus located at 90
Jackson Pike in Gallipolis.
Haupt and his wife Susan,
have two children. Ryan , a
recent graduate of the
University Of California
Santa Cruz, and Nicole,
studying prosthetic s and
orthotics at the University
of Texas, Austin.

Holzer Medical Center to host
Revival
Diabetes Awareness Day Saturday services set
GALLIPOLIS
In
recognition of · Diabetes
Awareness Month, Holzer
Medical Center will host a
Diabetes Awareness Day
Saturday, from 10 a.m. to I
p.m. in the Hospital's
Education and Conference
Center:
Several speakers are on
line to present information,
including internal medicine/endocrinology physician Dr. Fahmy, cardiologist
Dr. Perry, and Podiatrist Dr.
Shook. They will be speaking about trends in diabetic
treatments, , treatment
options, prevention, complications, and new advances
in diabetic care.
Also several representatives for diabetic supplies'
will be present inc! udi ng
Medtronic MiniMed insulin
pumps, . Lifescan and the
One Touch family of glucometers, Roche with the
Accu-Chek glucose monitors, Abbott with Freestyle
glucose monitors, Pfizer
Pharmaceuticals, a representative from the Ohio
Rehabilitation
Services

Commission ,
Sanofi ability to produce or
Aventis Pharmaceuticals, respond properly to insulin,
Dining with Diabetes from a hormone that allows blood
Gallia County . Extension glucose (sugar) to enter the
cells of the body and be
will all be available.
"We hope that through · used for energy. There are
National
.Diabetes 20.8 million children and
Awareness Month, we are adults in the United States,
· able to better educate the or seven percent of the popcommunity M diabetes," . ulation, who have diabetes.
stated Suzanna Duncan , While an estimated 14.6
RN , Diabetic Educator at million have been diagHolzer Medical Center. "We nosed with diabetes, unforwant to inform everyone on tunately, 6.2 million people
the different types of treat- (or nearly one-third) are
ments that are offered for unaware that they have the
those wno are diagnosed disease.
Every November, the
with diabetes , including
Diabetes
various prescriptions, thera- American
pies , free Diabetes Self- Association (ADA) encourManagement Classes, and ages the public to learn
our monthly support group. more about diabetes and the
If you have diabetes or risks associated with the
someone in your family disease . Holzer Medical
does , then this event is for Center joins the ADA ' in
you and we'd love to see promoting diabetes education and prevention tips .
you out on Saturday."
For more information
about the health fair or the
Hospital's services offered
for diabetics and their families , call (740) 446-5971.
Diabetes is a serious disease that affects the body 's

Submitted

photo

Leland "Bud" Allman will be
the evangelist at revival ser·
vices to be held at the
Laurel Cliff Free Methodist
Church, · 7 . p.m. each
evening, Nov. 20·23. There
will be spedal singing each .
evening. For more information call 992-2272 .

Purchase One
Greeting Card

Get3 FREE
With Coupon

Meigs County
Cha1llber of Commerce
"Annual Recognition Dinner"

Jon Petz
.Motivational Speaker, Author,
&amp; Entertainer

(Coupon Expires 11/10/08)

Selected Russell Stover Candies 112 Price
FREE 2009 Calendars Now In-Stock

wwwJonpetz.Com
• .AEP (NYSE) - 31 ,7&amp; .
, Akzo (NASDAQ) - 38.55
• :Ashland Inc. (NYSE) - 21 .48
• .Sig toll (NYSE) - 23.30
, Bob Evano (NASDAQ) - 20.11
• :~~orvwa,_ (NYSE) - 23.05
• -century Aluminum (NASDAQ)
• - 13.53
• :champion (NASDAQ) - 3.40
' 'Charming Shopl (NASDAQ) -

• .1.29

(2 Miles •boY. Muon/Pomeroy Bridge)

State Route 62, Mason, WV
. 304-773-5100
lltun: II&amp;· !Irs. II• ·llpl.fri

•

·I~

•

; •City Holding (NASDAQ) - 37.44
'Colllna (NYSE) - 38.36
' .OuPont(NYSE) - 30.88
:·us Bank (NYSE) - 29.73
'Gannatt (NYSE)- 11.87
' -General Eloctrlc (NYSE) - 19.93
; 'Harley-Davldoon(NYBE) - 22.71
JP MOt'llan (NYBE) - 311.22
: 'l(rogor (NYSE) - 26.70
;Limited srencio (NYSE) - 11 .51
Not101k Soulhlm (NYSE~- 57.07

Ohio Valley Bono Corp. (NA5DAQ) - 18.01 ·
SST (NYSE) - 33.55
Peopl" (NASDAQ) - 18.47
Pwpllco (NYSE) - 57.01
Pnmlor (NASDAQ) - 8
_ . 1 (NYSE) - 27.7.1
ROCky 8oOII (NASDAQ) - 4.38
Royol Dul&lt;:h Shell - 55.31
S... Holding (NA~) - 54.83
Wai·Mart (NYSE) - 54. I 3
Wencly'a (NYSE) - 3.29
w..Banco (NYSE) - 211. TO
Worthington (NYSE) - 12.22
Dally atock .-porta are tha 4
p.m. ET cloolng quotea of trana-

icllono lor Nov. 5, 2008, provld·
eel by Edward Jonea financial
lldvlaora t111c l!llhl In Galllpolla
at (740) 441-Mtt and Lealey
Marrero In Point Pteeuntll
(304) 87~174. Member SIPC.

Thursday, November 13th, 2008
6:00 pm • Social Time ·
6:30 pm • Dinner
Former Millenalum Ttleservlces Building

660 E. Main Street- Pomeroy
Tickets: $30.00 per person
TickeiS &amp; sponsorships available by calling
Michelle for more Information
992-SOOS or michelle@melgswuntychamber.rom

Ed Zata, R. Ph.
Kenneth McCullough·, R. Ph.
Charles Riffie, R. Ph.
Prescription Ph. 992-2955
Ill East Main Street
Pomeroy, Ohio

HOURS:
Mon.-Fri. 8am-9pm
Sat. Sam · Spm
Sun. Closed

'

Open Weeknights 'Till 9 • 'Friendly Service

,

•
•

�•

The Daily Sentinel

'

NATION • W
· 0 RD

PageA2
Thursday, November 6, 2008

·~
· --~---------=~~~~~--~~~~~--~~~--~--

Government details
plans to borrow $550~

BY ANDREW TAYLOR
ASSOCIATED PRESS WAITER

• WASHINGTON
•President-elect
Barack
;Obama is facing a Congress
. with bulked-up Democratic
. majorities in both the House
:and Senate to put lflUCh of
his agenda into Jaw.
.. Obama will inherit a
· Congress with Democratic .
House and Senate majori' ties comparable to those
by President
:enjoyed
Clinton when the party last
. controlled both Congress
. and the White House in
: 1992. While Democrats are
:eager to chum out the new
president's legislative pro-.
. grams, they're also anxtous
. to avoid 1\le electoral wipeout that swept them from
power in the 1994 congres- .
sional elections.
That's one reason top
leaders like House Speaker
Nancy Pelosi promise not to
lurch to the left and give in
· to pent-up demands from
party liberals.
·
"The country must be
.governed from the middle,"
, Pelosi,
0-Calif.,
told
reporters Wednesday. "You
have to bring people together to reach consensus on
· solutions that are sustain- '
able and acceptable to the ·
·American people."
One of the complications
·for Pelosi and Obama is the
·.demise of GOP moderates
:like Rep . Christopher
· Shays, R-Conn., who lost
· his re-election bid.
"Never in modern day
· history has the Republican
Party been more bereft of a
center," ·said former Rep.
Jim Leach. R-Iowa. "So the .
·center has .to come from the
Democratic Party."
There are other reasons
. too, such as a coalition of
Republicans and a few con. servative Democrats in the.
Senate. In the House, a big
. bloc of moderate-to-conser·vative
"Blue
Dog"
Democrats also could put
the brakes on overreachmg
by Obama and allies like
Pelosi and Senate Majority
Leader Harry Reid, 0-Nev.
But after 14 . years of
either a GOP-dominated
Congress or a Republican
; president, Democratic Party
: regulars are under intense
~ pressure to deliver on an
•·agenda
they've
been
: promising long before
: Obama announced his bid
: for the White House.
. "I'm not worried about
; overreaching;" said Rep.
; Jim McGovern, D-Mass.
: "I'm worried,1'l!\Jout being
: too timid and"t&amp; cautious,
~:and not stepping up to the
; :Plate and doing what we
:.promised we would do."
; : Added Sen. Sherrod
'Brown, 0-0hio, "This elec.~ iion ushered in the next pro' gressive era for our nation.
From health care to trade to
·.education, progressive val·
ues will now be the priority
· ·:in Washiogton. It's ·time . to
'·get to work."

APphoto

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi of Calif. gestures during a news conference on Capitol Hill
in Washington, Wednesday, to discuss Tuesday's presidential election.
House Majority Leader
Steny Hoyer, 0-Md., countered that Democrats would
impose "self-discipline' '
because so many House
ne\\lcomers come from conservative-leaning districts.
"If we focus im the core
issues of jobs, of health
care , of education, of the
environment ... I think we
will not make mistakes ,"
Hoyer said.
Inside Pelosi 's caucus of
House Democrats, whose
numbers · will swell to at
least 254 from 235 now,
some tensions are already
apparent.
.
Rep. Henry Waxman, DCalif., a liberal Pelosi ally,
launched a bid to challenge
82·-year-old Rep. John
Dingell, 0-Mich., for the
chairmanship of the influential House Energy and
Commerce Committee, and
take the lead on issues like
global warming, energy and
health care. Dingell is a
staunch protector of Detroit
automakers, and his battles
with Waxman over clean air
laws date ·to the Reagan
administration.
Dingell, who has either
chaired the committee or
been its top Democrat since
1981, was "mounting a fullout war" to save his chair- ·
manship , a top adviser said
Wednesday.
Republicans, too, are facing tensions and a shake-up
of party leaders in the wake
of Tuesday's disappointing
election results.
·
Rep. Eric Cantor of
Virginia launched a bid to
become GOP whip , the No.
2 post, while Rep. Jeb
Hensarling, R-Texas, is
seeking to replace Rep .
Adam Putnam of Florida as
the
third-ranking ·
Republican in the House .
Putnam announced he
would step down after
Tuesday 's
losses
for
Republicans. The current
whip, Rep. Roy Blunt of
Missouri, was considering

his options but did not
immediately announce a bid
to keep his job, a sign that
he' ll likely step aside.
.
Both
Cantor
and
Hensarling are more conservative than the . lawmakers they're seeking to
replace, leading some
Republicans to grumble
that the party was moving
to the right when it should
be rcachinll toward the center if it IS to regain its
majority. House Minority
Leader John Boehner . of
Ohio said he would seek to
keep his post.
Leon Panetta, a former
House Democrat and White
House chief of staff for
Clinton, said Obama "has to
make an effort at bipartisan
cooperation, which means
that he has to reach out to
the Republicans . and see
whether or not they're willing to cooperate on some
issues," like education and
immigration. He added that
Obama will need to develop
coalitions. on issues that
divide Democrats.
Shake-ups elsp are possible in the Senate, where
Democrats have increased
their effective majority to at
least 56 seats in the I()().
member chamber. Sen. Joe
Lieberman of Connecticut,
one of two independents
who align with Democrats,
is threatened with the Joss
of his chairmanship of the
Homeland Secunty and
Government
Affairs
Committee as payback for
actively supporting the
presidential
bid · of
Republican Sen. John
McCain. Reid, the majority
l~ader, said he would meet
with Lieberman later in the
week to discuss the ll1atter.
"Now that the election is
over, it is time to put partisan considerations aside and
come together as a nation to
solve the difficult challenges we face and make
our blessed land stronger
and safer," Lieberman said

in a written statement. He
had harshly criticized
Obama in a speech at the
GOP nominatmg convention in September.
·
Then there's the game of
.musical chairs in the Senate
that has to be played
because of the departures of
Obama and Vice Presidentelect Joe Biden to the White
House . Illinois Gov. Rod
Blagojevich, a Democrat,
will appoint someone to fill
out the remaining two years
of
Obama 's
term.
Speculation has focused on
Chicago . Reps.
Jesse
Jackson Jr. and Danny
Davis, along "'ith Rep. Jan
Schilkowsky.
Bi4en's . departure 9pens
up not only his seat - he
won a seventh term Tuesday
- bu~ also the' prestigious
chairmanship of the Senate
Foreign
·
Relations
Committee.
Delaware's
departing Democratic governQr, Ruth An'n 'Minner,
likel;y will name·a &amp;!JCCessor
to serve until the end of next
year, when a special election will be held to fill the .
~ematmng
four years .
Speculation surrounds Lt.
Gov. John Carney and
Biden 's son Beau, who is
Delaware's first-term attorney general.
.
Sen. John Kerry, 0Mass .. could be in line to
fill the Foreign Relations
po ,t,
dependin~
on
whether Sen. Chnstopher
Dodd, D-Conn., decides to
stay on as chairman of the
Senate Banking Committee
to deal with the financial
meltdown.
Democrats have added at
least five seats in the
Senate, to bring their num. bers to 56 - for now. But
three GOP-held seats - in
Oregon,
Alaska
and
Minnesota - have yet to be
decided. A fourth still-disputed Senate seat now held
by a Republican incumbent
will be settled by a Dec. 2
runoff in Georgia.

·Medvedev: Russia to deploy missiles near Poland
.. MOSCOW (AP)
'Russia will deploy shorti range missiles near Poland
~to counter U.S. military
• plans in Eastern Europe ,
:President Dmitry Medvedev
:warned Wednesday, setting
. a combative tone that
: clashed with global good&gt;will over Barack Obama's

as a nation threatened by of Kaliningrad, sandwiched
encroaching American mili- between
Poland
and
tary might.
Lithuania, "to neutralize, if
"From what we have seen necessar,y. a mtss1le defense
in recent years - the ere- system. .
ation of a missile defense
The ls)&lt;.ander has a range
system, the encirclement of of about 280 ktlometers
Russia with military bases • . (175 mlles), whtch would
the relentless expansion of allow it to reach targets in
NATO ·- we have gotten Poland but not in the Czech
' ~election.
the clear impression that Republic - but officials
: In his first state of the they are . testing our have said its range could be
:nation speech, Medvedev strength," Medvedev said.
increased. Medvedev did
· blamed Washin~ton for the · He . signaled Moscow not say whether the missiles
; war in Georgta and the would not give in to Western would be fitted with nuclear
:world financial crisis and calls to pull troops from warheads.
: sugg~sted it was up to Georgia's ~reakaway regions
Russia will also deploy
• Washmgton to mend badly of Abkhazia and South electronic jamming equip-.
:damaged ties.
Ossetia, or rescind its recog- ment, Medvedev said.
:. Med~edev also eroposed nition of their independence
After the speecli, the
:mcreasmg the Russtan pres- following the August war.
Kremlin
announced
: idential term to six years
"We will not. retreat in the Medvedev had congratulat. from four - a change that Caucasus," he said, winning ed Obama for winning the
:could deepen West~rn con- one of many rounds of u.S . presidency, saying in a
: cern. over democ_racy m applause during the 'tele.- telegram he was "counting
:Russta and play mto .the vtsed 85-minute address.
on a constructive dialogue
.ha~ds of hts mentor, Pn~e
Talking tough, he fleshed with you on the basis of
:Mtmster Vladtmtr Putm , out long-promised military trust and taking each other's
· =who has not ruled out a measures m response to interests into account."
: return to the Kremlin.
.
U.S. plans for missile
In Washington, State
: Extendmg t.'1e prestde~ual defense facilities in Poland Department
spokesman
: term could mean a posstble and the Czech Republic, Sean McCormack empha·12 more years m the top former Soviet satellites now stzed that the planned mis:office for the popular Putin. in NATO . The Kremlin sile defenses were not
: Echoing 1-'utin, who made claims the system is meant aimed at Russia.
: criticism of Washington and to weaken Russia , not
"The steps that . the
: the \Vest a hallmark of hts defend against Iran. as Russian ·
government
, two-term, etght-year pres1- Washington ·insists.
. announced today are diSap~ dency, Medvedev used the
Medvedev said Iskander Pllinting," . McCormack
~speec~ in an ornate Kreml!n missiles would be deployed said. "But, again , this "is not
:receptton hall to cast·Russ1a to Russia's western enclave dtrected at them . Hopefully

-

\

.

suffered a sharper-thanexpected drop tO 44.4 in
October from 50 .2 in
WASHINGTON - One September as hotels , conday after Barack Obama struction firms and retailers
was elected the next U.S . saw business shrink. A readpresident, the outgoing ing below 50 signals con·_
Bush
administration !taction.
A manufacturing report
detailed its plans to borrow
a record $550 billion issued Monday by ISM
through the end of tlie year showed the worst reading
to back the tinancial bailout. since 1982 . when the counThe Federal Reserve, try was near the end of a 16meanwhile , said it will month recession.
The government said last
boost interest payments to
banks as authorities battle week that the overall econthe worst financial crisis in omy, as measured by the
gross domestic product , fell
decades.
The Treasury Department at an annual rate of 0.3 persaid Wednesday it will sell cent in the July-September
$55 billion in bonds next quarter, retlecting the
week, part of a massive bor· biggest drop in consumer
rowing effort to cover the spending m 28 years.
$700 billion bailout and a Analysts are forecasting
budget deficit that's expect- that GOP will fall by an
ed to hit a record of nearly even larger amount of
$1 trillion next year.
around 2 percent in the curThe government's surging rent quarter. That would
financing needs are a stark meet the classic definition
reminder of the challenges of a recession as two conawaiting Obama even as the secutive ·quarters of declincurrent
administration ing GOP.
m0ves to ·implement its resMark Zandi. chief econocue program and the Fed mist
at
Moody''s
fine-tunes its approach to Economy.com, said he
the crisis .
thin~s GOP will keep
The financial turmoil shrinking 'ihrough the ~~~t
flared anew Wednesday half of next year, pushmg
with the Dow Jones indus- the ,unemployment rate I!P
trial average plunging 1 to 8 percent before a ·sohd
486.01 points, or more than rebourid can begin.
.
5 percent, as investors
Zandi expects this downabsorbed more bad econom- turn to produce the ll1ost
ic news .
severe unemployment since
The central bank said it the 1981-82 recession,
will slightly boost the when the. jobless · nlte
interest rates it pays banks jumped to 10.8 percent, the
on their required reserves highest since the 1930s.
and the excess reserves
"I think we are lhroujlh
they choose to deposit with the . worst of the financtal
the Fed. The rescue bill panic, but I . expect the
authorized the central bank recession will last through
to start paying interest next summer," Zandi said.
rates to commercial banks
Major . bond trading
.on
the
reserves. firms are projecting that
Policymakers hope the the government will need
move wi II further bolster to borrow a record $1 .4
the banks' reserves.
trillion during the current
Treasury also gave budget year, which began
Congress its first report on Oct. I .
the operation of the
But Zandi said he
bailout fund, detailing the expects the borrowing
$125 billion the govern- costs to be closer to $2 trilment spent last week to lion . He noted the size of
buy stakes in nine of the the rescue program that
country's biggest banks. needs to be financed and
The bailout legislation th~ likelihood that Obama
requires Treasury to issue and a Congress with larger
reports ef!ch time its Democ,ratic majorities will
spending passes a $50 bil- pass a second economic
lion marker.
stimulus program
of .
Tr~asury
Secretary between $150 billion and
Henry
Paulson
has $300 billion .
pledged to work with
In
its
financing
Ob~ma to ensure a smooth
announcement for the curtransition. Paulson has ·set rent quarter, Treasury said
up desks and phone lines it was bringing back threeat the department where year notes and will sell
Obama's
incoming them monthly to help cover
Treasury team can work the increased borrowing ·
between now and the inau- needs. The first batch of
guration, on Jan. 20.
$25 billion is to be aucIn light of the crisis, tioned Monday. The govObama is expected to ernment also will offer $20
quickly name members of billion in 10-year notes on
his economic team. Former Nov. 12 and $10 billion in
Tre11sury
Secretary 30-year bonds on Nov. 13 .
Lawrence Summers, who
Asian stocks rallied earserved in the Clinton · l.ier
\Yednesday
as .
administration,
and investors there took hope
Timothy Geithner, president that Obama would tackle
of the New York Federal the financial crisis · with
Reserve Bank, are among renewed vigor. Still, some
the names being mentioned voiced concerns that a
Democratic president and
for Treasury secretary.
In another gloomy sign Congress might turn more
Japan's
for the economy, the protectionist.
Institute
for
Supply Nikkei 225 stock average
Management, a trade group climbed 4.5 percent, while
of /urchasing executives, Hong Kong's Hang Seng
sai its service sector index index rose 3.2 percent.
BY MARTIN CRUTSINGER
AP ECONOMICS WAITER

'

one day they'll realize that."
Medvedev appeared to be
trying_ t~ improve _Russia.'s
bargat~mg
postllon 10
potenttal talks wtth the
Obama administr~tion on
!fi1Sstle defense. H!s wordmg suggested Russta would
reverse the decision if the
U.S. scraps its missile
defense plans.'
"Moscow isn't interested
in confrontation, and if
Obama makes some conciliatory gestures it will
respond correspondingly,"
said Alexander Pikayev, an
analyst
at
Moscow's
Institute for World Economy
and lnt7mational Relations.
But mdependent mthtary
analyst Alexander Golts said
Medvedev's "confrontation·
al tone" cou_ld 'further harm
·relations wtth t~e Umted
States, whtch plunged to a
post-Cold W~ low over the
war in Georgta.
"Russia itself is cutting .
·off the route toward .better
ties," he said.
,, .
Region~ ~~~ cn11c1zed
Medvedev s mtssile wartUOg.
German Foreign Minister
Frank-Walter Steiruneier said
it was "certainly the wrong
signal at the wrong time". and
urged the U.S. and Russ1a to
see change in the White
House as an "opportunity for
a new beginning."

• Very Larve Manu • Children's Menu
• Vegetarian Meals • Desserts • Steaks
• Camltaa • F•Jit•• '

The Daily Sentinel

BYTHE BEND

ANNIE'S MAILBOX

Majority shareholder
.responsible for business
.

BY KATHY. MITCHELL
AND MARCY SUGAR

Dear Annie: A year ·ago,!
was mvited to invest in the
cornpany where I worked
and become a part-o,wner.
_My husband and I took out a
second mortgage and retinanced everything to buy in.
It was great at first, but now
everything is going downhill.
"Jane." the other investor,
.bas more stock and constantly reminds us that she
is the rr\ajority owner. I have
not even gotten a paycheck
·in the past two months . I
want out, but cannot find
,anyone to buy my shares. I
.am 'so stressed that I am
·constantly in a state .pf
panic.! have gained weight.
started smoking and now
s nap at my husband and
·children . Jane puts on a
great face at the office , but
behind closed doors she
reams out the employees sc;&gt;
much they actually cry. We
.keep losing good people
.because of her uttitude.
, I have also questioned
Jane about financial fmdings
.- trips for training; psychic
:readings, lunches , etc. She
.claims that as· majority
owner; the~e are legitimate
business e\:penses. Maybe ,
,but w~ are not profitable. I
,am about. to lose my house
·and car, and my marriage is
.in a sorry state.
. I am su angry I don 't
know what to do. How can I
·sell my portion of the busi;ness? - Sick of Crying
, Dear Sick: Even a major:ity shareholder has a
responsibility not to run the
,company into the ground,
,and it may be that the onlj'
way to hold Jane responsi·ble is to take her to court.
.You need to talk 'to a lawyer.
,Your ~tate bar association or
local law s~hool should be
.able to help you out.
. Dear Annie: I have a
daughter-in-law of whom
I'm very fond. She is · the
mother of my 3-year-old
grandson . . Unfortunately,
.she and my son divorced
after only a few months of
marriage . The split was not
,her fault.
I plan on calling her my
-daughter-in-law . from now
on, even if my son remar,ries. Am I correct in believing that the divorce does not
-affect my relationship with
her? Please let me know. ·:Troubled Father-in.Law
Dear Troubled: The
·divorce may not affect your
·.relationship, but a remar.riage absolutely will. ' It's

PageA3

wonderful that you are so
fond of your ex-daughterin-law, and it is .a good idea
for you to remain on friendly terms. However; if your
son remarries, it would be
rude to your new daughterin-law to use that term to
refer to someone else. She
will resent it, and rightfully
so. Don ' t court trouble.
There i's no insult in saying
" my former · daughter-inlaw." Or even "my grandson's mothe~" It won 't
change the degree of affection bet.ween you.
Dear Annie: Boy, did you
two miss the mark with your
r~sponse
to "Unwanted
Daughter-in-Law." Mommyin-law, who wore black to the
wedding, is a bully. and her
baby boy, the hubby in question, is a pantywaist. That
bride doesn't need to be
"unfailinlllY kind and helpful" to th1s boorish cow. That
will only embolden the old
crone. She ought to tell that
wimp of a husband that
either he stands _up for her or
she's out of there.
Before my wife of 21 years
and I were to be married in
her home church (Catholic),
my mother (Lutheran) made
a veiled threat that she might
not be able to keep from making comments about it at our
wedding. I told her if she
couldn't keep her big mouth
shut for one day, she was no
longer welcome to attend. I
then hung up. My mother
was the &lt;:ssence of graciousness that day. She just wanted
to control. things, and I stood
up for my wife. Being nice to
bullies is not the answer. - A
Guy with a Spine
Dear Guy: If you want to
tell YOUR mother how to
behave, that's fine. She
loves ypu. But for your w~e
to have done what you dtd
wou!Q have been a major
disaster and possibl~ poisoned .the. relationshtp forever. Newlyweds need
diplomacy with the in-laws
- and a spouse like you
who will stick up fQ.r them.
Annie's Mailbox is writ·
ten by KaJhy Mitch ell and
Marcy Sugar, longtime edi·
tors of the Ann Landers
column. Please e-mail your
questions· to a.nniesmail·
box@comcast.net, or write
to: Annie's Mailbox, P.O.
Box (18190, Chicago, IL
60611. To find out more
about Annie's Mailbox,
and read feaJures by other
· Creators SyndicaJe writers
and cartoonists, visit the
CreaJors Syndicate Web
page at www .creators .com.

:women's health fair offered
· GALLIPOLIS - A women's health fair will be held
from 10 a.m. to~ p.m. Satdurday at the Holzer Center for
Cancet Care. There will be free screenings, tea· samples,
massages and tips 011 makeup. Door prizes will be awarded
.and refreshments served. Those attending are asked to wear
,pink for Breast Cancer Awaren.ess Month.
· .

Local Weather
Friday and Friday
nlght ...Mostly cloudy with
a 40 percent chance of
showers. Highs i!l the lower
60s. Lows in the lower 40s.
through
·noon.
-. Saturday
:: Wednesday night •..Clear. Sunday nlght ••• Mostly
·;Lows in the upper 30s. East cloudy. Highs in the lower&gt;winds around 5 mph 'in the 50s. Lows in the lower
.
::evening ...Becoming light 30s .
Monday and Monday
·'and variable.
' · ThurSday •••Sunny. Highs night...Partly cloudy. Highs
:·in· the lower 70s. Southeast in the mid 50s. Lows in the
mid 30s.
·-winds around 5 mph .
Veterans Day ...Partly
:. Thursday night ..•Partly
:,cloudy. Lows in the mid 40s. sunny. Highs in the lower
:.South winds around_2, mph . 50s.
Wednesday ••• Sunny.
·Highs in the lower 70s.
·Light
and
variable
winds ... Becomil\g .
east
around 5 mph in. the after-

·--~------------~--------

Thursday, November 6,

2008

Community Calendar
cers conference, followed by
regular meeting, 6:30 p.m ..
Racine Grange Hall .
Thursday, Nov. 6
POMEROY
CHESTER - Chester Alzheimer's
Support Group
Township Trustees , 7 p.m. for caregivers
of those
at the town hall.
affected by Alzheimer's and
Tuesday, Nov. 11 ·
dementia, 1:15 p.m.,
POMEROY - .Salisbury other
Senior Center. light
Meigs
Township Trustee, 6:30 refreshments
served.
p.m. home of Manning
Satur:day, Nov. 8
Roush.
POMEROY - Christian
POMEROY
The . Motorcycle
Association
Bedford Township Trustees "Delivered" Chapter, elecwill old its regular meeting tion of officers, 5 p.m. ,
at 7 p.m . at the town hall.
Common Grounds.
Monday, Nov. lQ
POMEROY - Partners
in Care, ·interact~ve program
for those with memory loss,
9 a.m. - 1 p.m. , regular
Thursday, Nov. 6
meetings tnday and Fridays,
RACINE
Meigs Senior Center.
Pomeroy/Racine
Lodge
POMEROY - Special
#164 special meeting, 6 meeting of the Big Bend
p.m .. , at lodge in Racine. Farm Antiques Club, 7:30
Past Master's night with p.m. Mulberry Community
work in the E.A. degree. All Center (God's Net)
Past Masters are encoljrCHAUNCEY- Area 14
aged to attend. Chili dinner . Youth Council, regular
follows. Call Randy Smith, meeting, 9 a.m., Athens
508-0816 with questions.
CDJFS office.
Friday, Nov. 7
Tllesday, Nov ..ll
RACINE
Meigs
SYRACUSE - Syracuse
County Pomona Grange offi- Community Center Board

Public meetings

Clubs and
organizations

of Directors to meet, 7 p.m.
Nov. II at the community
center.
SYRACUSE
Wildwood Garden Club to
meet at 6:30 p.m. at the
Syracuse
Community
Center. Janet Bolin to present program on artistic
· arrangements for the holiday flower show.
POMEROY - Meigs
County Genealogy Society
to meet at 5 p.m. at Library.
Thursday, Nov. 13
CHESTER
Shade
River Lodge 452, at the
hall . Officers to be elected,
time
to
pay
due s.
. Refreshments.
RACINE - Sonshine
Circle, 7 p.m. at the
Bethany Church. Take col- .
lectibles , turn in noodle .
orders by Nov. 108 .
Hostesses , Betty Proffitt,
Martha Lou Beegle, and
Holly Stump.

Church events
Saturday, Nov. 8
RUTLAND - A free
contemporary
Christian

welcomes

GALLIPOLIS - Holzer
Clinic announces that Board
Certified
Orthopedic
Surgeon Bruce Haupt, ·MD
has joined its team of
skilled professionals.
Dr. Haupt, who now
serves as Holzer Clinic 's
Medical
Director
of
Orthopedic Services, . is
accomplished in all aspects
of general orthopedic
surgery ranging from bone
fractures to total joi'nt
replacements including the ·
knee, hip and shoulder.
With more than 20 years of
Bruce Haupt, M.D.
surgical experience, he is
accomplished in Sports Total Joint Replacement
Medicine, ACL reconstruc- Surgery
and
Limb
tion, Computer Navigated Reconstructive
Surgery

including
the
world
renowned , complex and
highly effective llizarov
Bone
Lengthening
Technique.
Haupt has a degree in
Aeronautical Engineering
from the United States Air
Force Academy. He . com'pleted medical school at
Vanderbilt University, and
completed 'his Orthopedic
residency at the University
of Cincinnati Medical
Center. He has practiced in
Charle.ston, WV, specializing in computer assisted
joint replacement. He is also
a team physician for the
WV Power professional
baseball team and the

Concert will be held at the
Meigs Middle School
Cafeteria. Bands featured
will be Romans Highway of
Oasb
Gallipolis
and
Christian Fellowship Band
of Pomeroy. Doors open at
5:30p.m. and the first band
will start ' at 6 p.m.
Refreshments available for
donations.
Sunday, Nov. 9 .
POMEROY - Revival
services 'at the Mt. Hermon
United Brethren Church.
each evening starting Nov. 9
continuing through Nov. 12
with the Rev. Clifford
Coleman. Following the
morning service on Nov . 9,
a carrv-in dinner will. be
held . Special mu sic each
evening.

Birthdays
Saturday, Nov. 15
LONG BOTTOM
Ernest Griffin will celebra1e
his 91 st birthday on Nov.
15 ., Cards may be sent to
him at 36606 Post Office
Road , Long Bottom.Ohio
45743.

University of Charleston.
He is a Diplomat of the
American
Board
of
Orthopedic Surgery as well
as a member of the
American
Medical
Association and the West
Virginia State Medical
, Association . ·
He is now accepting new
patients at the Holzer Clinic
Main Campus located at 90
Jackson Pike in Gallipolis.
Haupt and his wife Susan,
have two children. Ryan , a
recent graduate of the
University Of California
Santa Cruz, and Nicole,
studying prosthetic s and
orthotics at the University
of Texas, Austin.

Holzer Medical Center to host
Revival
Diabetes Awareness Day Saturday services set
GALLIPOLIS
In
recognition of · Diabetes
Awareness Month, Holzer
Medical Center will host a
Diabetes Awareness Day
Saturday, from 10 a.m. to I
p.m. in the Hospital's
Education and Conference
Center:
Several speakers are on
line to present information,
including internal medicine/endocrinology physician Dr. Fahmy, cardiologist
Dr. Perry, and Podiatrist Dr.
Shook. They will be speaking about trends in diabetic
treatments, , treatment
options, prevention, complications, and new advances
in diabetic care.
Also several representatives for diabetic supplies'
will be present inc! udi ng
Medtronic MiniMed insulin
pumps, . Lifescan and the
One Touch family of glucometers, Roche with the
Accu-Chek glucose monitors, Abbott with Freestyle
glucose monitors, Pfizer
Pharmaceuticals, a representative from the Ohio
Rehabilitation
Services

Commission ,
Sanofi ability to produce or
Aventis Pharmaceuticals, respond properly to insulin,
Dining with Diabetes from a hormone that allows blood
Gallia County . Extension glucose (sugar) to enter the
cells of the body and be
will all be available.
"We hope that through · used for energy. There are
National
.Diabetes 20.8 million children and
Awareness Month, we are adults in the United States,
· able to better educate the or seven percent of the popcommunity M diabetes," . ulation, who have diabetes.
stated Suzanna Duncan , While an estimated 14.6
RN , Diabetic Educator at million have been diagHolzer Medical Center. "We nosed with diabetes, unforwant to inform everyone on tunately, 6.2 million people
the different types of treat- (or nearly one-third) are
ments that are offered for unaware that they have the
those wno are diagnosed disease.
Every November, the
with diabetes , including
Diabetes
various prescriptions, thera- American
pies , free Diabetes Self- Association (ADA) encourManagement Classes, and ages the public to learn
our monthly support group. more about diabetes and the
If you have diabetes or risks associated with the
someone in your family disease . Holzer Medical
does , then this event is for Center joins the ADA ' in
you and we'd love to see promoting diabetes education and prevention tips .
you out on Saturday."
For more information
about the health fair or the
Hospital's services offered
for diabetics and their families , call (740) 446-5971.
Diabetes is a serious disease that affects the body 's

Submitted

photo

Leland "Bud" Allman will be
the evangelist at revival ser·
vices to be held at the
Laurel Cliff Free Methodist
Church, · 7 . p.m. each
evening, Nov. 20·23. There
will be spedal singing each .
evening. For more information call 992-2272 .

Purchase One
Greeting Card

Get3 FREE
With Coupon

Meigs County
Cha1llber of Commerce
"Annual Recognition Dinner"

Jon Petz
.Motivational Speaker, Author,
&amp; Entertainer

(Coupon Expires 11/10/08)

Selected Russell Stover Candies 112 Price
FREE 2009 Calendars Now In-Stock

wwwJonpetz.Com
• .AEP (NYSE) - 31 ,7&amp; .
, Akzo (NASDAQ) - 38.55
• :Ashland Inc. (NYSE) - 21 .48
• .Sig toll (NYSE) - 23.30
, Bob Evano (NASDAQ) - 20.11
• :~~orvwa,_ (NYSE) - 23.05
• -century Aluminum (NASDAQ)
• - 13.53
• :champion (NASDAQ) - 3.40
' 'Charming Shopl (NASDAQ) -

• .1.29

(2 Miles •boY. Muon/Pomeroy Bridge)

State Route 62, Mason, WV
. 304-773-5100
lltun: II&amp;· !Irs. II• ·llpl.fri

•

·I~

•

; •City Holding (NASDAQ) - 37.44
'Colllna (NYSE) - 38.36
' .OuPont(NYSE) - 30.88
:·us Bank (NYSE) - 29.73
'Gannatt (NYSE)- 11.87
' -General Eloctrlc (NYSE) - 19.93
; 'Harley-Davldoon(NYBE) - 22.71
JP MOt'llan (NYBE) - 311.22
: 'l(rogor (NYSE) - 26.70
;Limited srencio (NYSE) - 11 .51
Not101k Soulhlm (NYSE~- 57.07

Ohio Valley Bono Corp. (NA5DAQ) - 18.01 ·
SST (NYSE) - 33.55
Peopl" (NASDAQ) - 18.47
Pwpllco (NYSE) - 57.01
Pnmlor (NASDAQ) - 8
_ . 1 (NYSE) - 27.7.1
ROCky 8oOII (NASDAQ) - 4.38
Royol Dul&lt;:h Shell - 55.31
S... Holding (NA~) - 54.83
Wai·Mart (NYSE) - 54. I 3
Wencly'a (NYSE) - 3.29
w..Banco (NYSE) - 211. TO
Worthington (NYSE) - 12.22
Dally atock .-porta are tha 4
p.m. ET cloolng quotea of trana-

icllono lor Nov. 5, 2008, provld·
eel by Edward Jonea financial
lldvlaora t111c l!llhl In Galllpolla
at (740) 441-Mtt and Lealey
Marrero In Point Pteeuntll
(304) 87~174. Member SIPC.

Thursday, November 13th, 2008
6:00 pm • Social Time ·
6:30 pm • Dinner
Former Millenalum Ttleservlces Building

660 E. Main Street- Pomeroy
Tickets: $30.00 per person
TickeiS &amp; sponsorships available by calling
Michelle for more Information
992-SOOS or michelle@melgswuntychamber.rom

Ed Zata, R. Ph.
Kenneth McCullough·, R. Ph.
Charles Riffie, R. Ph.
Prescription Ph. 992-2955
Ill East Main Street
Pomeroy, Ohio

HOURS:
Mon.-Fri. 8am-9pm
Sat. Sam · Spm
Sun. Closed

'

Open Weeknights 'Till 9 • 'Friendly Service

,

•
•

�~.

.. . .
..
'

..

PageA4

OPINION

:The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, November 6, 2008

Analysis:
Next
up
·qfter
Obama
win)
governing
~: The Daily Sentinel
·

Bv Liz Smon

111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

,

there in one year or even in
one term."
No new president has faced
so much since Franklin
Delano Roosevelt - and
even he didn't have two wars
on his plate.
.
. Roosevelt had four months
to come up with programs to
address the Great Derressinn
before he took office on
March 4, 1933.
Obama gets just 2 1/2 to put
together his government;
inauguration is Jan. 20.
·
He will chart the country's
co urs~ against this dreary
backdrop: Unemployment is
at 6.1 percent and predicted to
rise as high as 7.5 percent
.next vear; pessimistic ·con- .
sumeis have cU1tailed borrowing and spending; home
foreclosures are rampant;
Medicare , Medicaid and
Social Security face huge
financial problems; and,
152,000 U.S. troops are in
Iraq more than five years after
the initial invasion. while
32,000 are in Afghanistan in
the sixth year of the war
against terrorism .
With Democrats expanding
their majorities in both the
House and Senate. Obarna
will have to figure out how to
'lead a country that's more
conservative than liberul
while trying to satisfy the left
wing of his patty. He will face
demands f(Jr a quick pullout
from Iraq. He's promised
withdrawal. bll! carefully.
Perhaps addressi'ng his
party faithful. Obama said:
"There are many who w\ln 't
agree with every decision or
policy I make as president.
And we. know the govemment can't solve every problem. But I will always be honest with you about the challenges we face." ·
·
From the outset, · how
Obwna acts to deal with these

ASSOCIATED P!lESS WRITER

(740) 992-2156 o FAX (740) 992-2157
www.mydallyaentlnel.com

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

Congress shall make tto law respectittg' an
establishment of religion, or prohibiting the
free exerdse thereof; or abridging the freedom 1!,{
' speech, or.of the press; or the right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the
:· Government for a redress of grievances. ·
- The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

TODAY IN HISTORY
Today is Thursday, Nov. 6. the 311th day of 2008. There
·
: Today's Highlight in History:
, On Nov. 6, 1860, former Illinois congressman Abraham
·Lincoln defeated three other candidates fur the presidency:
John Breckinridge, John Bell and Stephen Douglas.
On this date:
.
In 1861, Confederate President Jefferson ()avis was
elected to a six-year term of office.
· In 1888, Benpmin Harrison won the presidential election, defeating mcumbent Grover Cleveland with enough
electoraJ votes, even though Cleveland led ht the popular
vote .
· In 1893 , composer Peter llyich Tchaikuvsky died in St.
Petersburg, Russia, at age 53.
· In 1900, President McKinley was re-elected. beating
Democrat William Jennings Bryan.
In 1906, Republican Charles Evans Hughes was elected
governor of New York , defeating newspaper publisher
William Randolph Hearst.
.
' In 1944,.British official Lori:! Moynt; was assassinatt~d in
Cairo, Egypt, by members of the Zionist Stern gang.
In 1956, Pres1dent Eisenhower won re-election, defeating
Democrat Adlai E. Stevenson.
' In 1976, Benjamin L. Hooks was chosen to be the new
executive director of the National Association for the
Advancement of Colored People, succeeding Roy Wilkins .
. In 1977, 39 people were killed when an earthen dam
burst, sending a wall of water through Toccoa Falls College
in Georgia. · .
. Ten years ago: Sen. Daniel Patrick Moynihan , D-N.Y,.
announced he would not run for re-election in 2000. Two
suicide bombers were killed when they set off blasts in a
crowded open-air market in Jerusalem. injuring a couple of
&lt;lozen bystanders.
Five years ago: President Bush signed an $87.5 billion
package approved by Congress for Iraq and Afghanistan .
Federal judges in New York and California blocked a new
ban on certain late-term abortions, a day after President
Push signed it into law. The U.S . Mint unveiled the new
!lickel.
· One year ago: 2007 becwne the dead)iest year for U.S.
troops in Iraq, with at least 853 military deaths. Six lawmakers were killed by a suicide bomber in northern
Afghanistan during a visit to ·a sugar factory; 61 students
also died as a result of the bombing and shots fired by
ards . Country singer Hank Thompson died ' in Keller,
exas, at age 82. Geor~e Osmond, father of Donny and
arie Osmond and patnarch to the family's singing group
The Osmond Brothers, died in Provo, Utah •.at age 90.
~. Today's Birthdays: Director Mike Nichols is 77. Country
singer Stonewall Jackson is 76.-Singer Eugene Pitt (The
Jive Five) is 71. Singer P,J. Proby is 70. Country singer
Guy Clark is 67. Actress Sally Field is 62.
, Thought for Today: "No one is so eager to gain new
experience as he who doesn't know how to make use of the
old ones." - Marie Ebner von Eschenbach. Austrian writer
()830-1916).

3re 55 days left in the year.

WASHINGTON - Now
the hard part.
Barack Obama essentially
came out of nowhere, beat the
Democratic establishment,
conquered doubts about his
experience and ·overcame
questions about his race to be
elected the first black president after a grueling campaign that lasted nearly two
years.
·
But for Obama there's no
time to savor his unprecedented victory.
Now he fa~-es unprecedented challenges.
The president-elect must
immediately confront the
worst economic conditions
since the · Great Depression,
determine the next steps in
two lingering wars, and lead
his Democrats, including liberals expecting that the
change he promises wi II
come in~tantly.
It won't.
On the heels of a campaign
in which cash wasn't a concern, Obama has to tackle all
of'lhose tasks with no room in
the budget a.5the nation heads
for a painful , perhaps longlasting, recession.
Even as he celebrated,
Obwna acknowledged "the
enormity of the task that lies
ahead." and offered a sobermg assessment.
"We know the challenges
that tomorrow will bring are
the greatest of our lifetime two wars, a planet in peril, the
worst financial crisis in a .:cnturv ," Obama said. "There's
!]OW energy to hw1tess, new
Jobs to ·be created, new
schools to build, and threats to
meet, alliances to repair."
He warned: "The road
ahead will be long. Our climb
will be steep. We may not get

.

conditions will set the tone I(Jr just his first Senate tenn and
has offered few specifics on
his presidency.
.
·how
he would govern.
Voters got an early glimpse
Culturally, Obama 's victory
of his ;ty le la' l month when
Wall Street (OIIapsed. stocks was so much more for a
tluc!llated and the uovern- nation on the verge of becomment. intervened. He stmd. a ing a true melting pot; go.vcautious stance a11d defe1Ted cmment estimates say wh1te
to lawmakeb; dealing directly people will no longer ~ake
with the problems. He was 'tip a majority of Amencans
deliberative and careful in his by 2042.
res1xmse - perhaps just the
The son of a bla :k father
approach voters were scekmg from Kenya and a .white
afier eight years of what cnt- mother
from
Kansas ,
ics call Presidenl Bush's cow- Obama 's call for change creboy appro:~ch.
ated a movement at a time of
Yet. Obama may be blamed great upheaval in the country.
fur recession woes despite the And, that proved to be a large
fact that h~ inherited the mess
from Bush. The troubles are enough force to overcome linon Obama's watch now even gering prejudices.
To be sure, the economy
if there's little he can do about
proved
a powerful moiivator.
them: The president in power
More than half of voters
always suffers when the econc
named
it their top issue. And,
omy tanks. Jt!st ask !he first
nearly
all . voters said the
President Bush in 1992.
Indeed. coming in with a economy was· in bad shape
big victory doesn't guarantee . and said they were worried
about the economy's direcsuccess .
Democrat Lyndon B. tiol1 . Obama had the advanJohnson won with 61 percent tag~ among these voters.
of the vote in 1964 . He won
Race didn't appear to be
·his Great Society programs in much of a hurdle.
his firs! two vears hut his
Obama won nearly half of
adininistration essentially col- the white vote while nearly all
lapsed in ih&lt;: final two with blacks and . two in · ti1ree
the escalation of the Vietnam . Hispanics supported him. ·
War. ·
.
And, . although Obama
In clmosipu Obama &lt;l' the played down his skin color, it
44th pr~sident. . the nation played a P.Urt in his general
took a historic leap beyond its election strategy. Mil\(Jrities,
legacy of slave!)' and toward as well as youth, were identihealing racial tensions just
four decades after the tumul- fied early on as a key demotuous Civil Rights movement. graphic to register and court.
. Politically. bbama's elec- That appeared to work.
tion amounted to a wholesale Blacks, Hispanics and voters
rejection of the status quo under age 30 tumed out in
at\er eiuht years of Bush and droves.
All - . whites, ·black,s,
Republfcan rule. • .
women,
Hispanics, you.ng
Voters were willing to take
Democrats,
a chance on a relative new- people ,
comer to the national stage. Republicans and indepenObama is a 47-year-old black dents - will have high
man from Chicago with a lib- expectations for Obwna 's
eral voti11g record who is in · presidency.

THIS IS
SHAPING UP

AS aVITE A I'IIG~T

li&gt;R

DEMOCRAT~.

MONOPOLY

Laylas road to Damascus

Everywhere I go, ·people
ask me less often about politics than about Layla. For
readers who missed my earlier column about the abandoned Charolais calf I
adopted at birth. Layla's
early· weeks consisted of
LETTERS TO THE
one life-threatening crisis
ED ,I TOR
after another.
All big brown eyes and
Letters to the editor are welcome. They should be less
than 300 words. All/etters are subject to editing, must be spindly legs , she was too
f,igned. and include address and telephone number. No weak to suckle. I learned to
l!nsigned letters will be published. Letters should be in force feed her through a
good taste , addressing issues, not personalities. Letters of plastic tube. She struggled
thanks to organizations and individuals will not be accept- hard against the insult; I felt
~d for publication.
she had a will to survive.
Experienced cattlemen
warned me that saving her
was likely impossible,
although several went to
great lengths to help. At two
·
(USPS
21g..96o)
.
Reader Services Ohlo.Vallet:.ubllshlng
weeks, she suddenly went
blind. Injec tions of the
Correction Polley
Pu~ished every afternoon, Monday
steroid
dexamethasone
Our main c~rn in all stories is to through Friday, 11 1 Court Street,
restored her sight.
. be accurate. tr you know of an error Pomeroy. Ohio. SecoOO-class postage
Raised among dogs,
. In a story, call the newsroom at (740) paid at Pomeroy.
Layla
appeared to think she
Member: The Associated Press and
: jl92-2156.
was a basset hound , lying
the Ohio Newspaper Association. •
Poatmaater: Send address correc·
on·
the porch, peering in the
Our main number Is
to The Daily Sentinel, 111 Court
lions _
window and mooing for her
(740) 992-2156.
Street, Pomeroy. Ohio 45769 .
bottle. The two Great
Department 11tenmns are:
Pyrenees patiently let her
Subscription Rates·
' ' .
· By carrier or motor route
nurse their ears. Centuries
.
News
One month
'1 0.27
of breeding made them
One year
'1 15.84
: !-dHor: Charlene Hoeflich. Elll. 12.
instinctively protect helpDolly
50'
RepOrter: Brian Reed, Ed. ·t4
less ca lve' .· ·
Senior Citizen rates
ReporW: Beth Sergent, Ext. 13
One month
. '10.27
. For me, loving a baby
One year
'103.90
cow was learned behavior.
Advertising
&amp;.t&gt;scot&gt;ets stOOd ram11 ;, --.oe
Having failed to receive
, •
.
c1tect to the Daily Sentilel. No sub15
: aut.lde Setn: Dave Harn~, Ext.
scriplion bV mail permitted In areas
antibodies from mother's
• J)ullildl.,_: Brenda Dav1s, Ext 16. where home canier service IS avail·
milk, Layla suffered repeat: C!au./Cin:.: Judy Clart&lt;. Ext . 10
able.
ed bacterial infections. I
learned to take her temperaMalt Subscription
General Manager
lnolde Melga County
ture, treat her with antibi13 Weeks
'32.26
Charlene Hoenk:h, Ext. 12
otics. and dose her with
26 Weeks
'64.20
Pcpto-Bisrnol and castor oil
1:1;.' Wn€'1&lt;•
'
127.11
e. flluil :
when hc:r tender stomach
flt"W s'W rnyd(::li!ysentim:!l.co11 1
Outside Meigs County
rebelled. I pestered veteri13 Weeks
'53.55
narians and friends for
Wob:
26 Weeks
' '1 07.10
advice.
52 Weeks
'214.21
www.mydaityS011Hnel.com
By mid-September, Layla
.

.

..

L---~~----------~----~,

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

www .mydailysentinel.com

Obituaries

Fair Board members elected
POMEROY - In Monday
night's election of members
to the Meigs County
Agricultural Society's Board.
five incumbents were reelected for another term and
a new member was nwned to

John Edward Foreman
LAKELAND, Fla. - John Edward Foreman, 54, formerly ?f Metgs County, passed away on Oct. 28, 2008 at
h1s res1dence.
He was . preceded in death by his parents and grandparents. He IS sumved by his wife, Linda, Lakeland, Fla.;
sons , Greg (Michelle) Ryan of Lakeland,. Fla. Jason
(Cheryl) Ry3J! of Letart, W. Va., John Jr., Lakeland Fla.;
daughters,_Kristm (Johnny) Somersville of Chandlersville,
Oh10, Apnl (Sam) Nicholson, Hampton, Va., and Heather
Foreman, Lakeland, Fla.
.
. Also surviving w-e sisters , Sylvia Reynolds of Cincinnati,
Jenmfer (M1ke) Mock of Kent; Naomi (Ray) Wilson of
Portlana, and a brother, Robert (Sharlene) Foreman of
Pom~roy, several nieces. nephews, aunts, uncles and cousins.
Pnvate services were held on Oct. 3 2008 in Lakeland
.
'
with family in attendance.

increase the Board to 17
member ·.
Incumbents ele~ted for
another term were Mike
Parker. Steve Sweatzel,
Buckley, Bob
Kenny
Calaway and Dave Watson .

The new member elected to Holter. Wes Karr, Tom
serve on the Board was Pullins, Brent Rose. Karen
Larry Life.
Werry, and Brian Windon.
Other members currently New officers will be named
serving are Dave Burt , at the next meeting of the
Brian Collins, Buddy Ervin, Board said Debbie Watson,
Jane Fitch, Ron Hensley, Ed secretary.

Novels centering on Meigs County released

. 'CANAL WINCHESTER to his family so it would not
- Steve Badgley, fonner die with him .
Meigs Countian and author,
Badgley's second novel is
has recently published his titled "Where the Lilies
second novel under the peri Cry" and it is also set in the
name.C. Stephen Badgley.
Letart Falls area where he
.Bad~lefs first novel is was born. This. novel is hisc
titled ' Arcadia" and is a his" torical fi~tion but more fact
tori cal
fiction/romantic than fiction, he says .It is the
mystery taking the reader story of a village of
back in time ·to tlie Letart Shawnee and Delaware
Falls area circa pre-Civil Indians who once inhabited
War and up to the turn of the the area · now ·. called
century. The story is told by Bucktown in· the little viian old man who kept a mys- !age of Letart Falls It tells
. GALLlPOLIS- Donavan F. "Don" Cl~gg,84,ofGallipolis terious family story to him- · the story of the family of
d1ed Tuesday, Nov. 4, 2008 at the Holzer Medical Center.
· self until, UJ'!ln rea~hing old James Letart during the preServices will be I p.m. Friday, Nov. 7, 2008 at Willis age, he dec1des·to p'aSs it on French &amp; Indian war era up
F~neral Hon:u: with Rev. Alfred Holley officiating. Burial
-·
Will follow m Centenary Cemetery. Friends may call on
Thursday (today) Nov. 6 from 6-8 p.m. at Willis Funeral
Home. There will be a Masonic service on Thursday
evening at the funeral home.
.
November ballots , or about
BY LISA CORNWELL
Visit www.willisfuneralhome.com to send e-mail condo. ASsbciATED PRESS WRITER
59 percent, according to
.Jences.
·
state records.
Ohio voters approve.d the
The state's largest school
majority of the 236 . school district was among the winfunding requests they faced . ners in the election. A levy
POINT PLEASANT, W.Va .. - Roben "Bob" Leport, 72, on ball&lt;its, but many still approved for the Columbus
Charleston, W.Va. , formerly of Point Pleasant, W.Va., died were ·.looking at slashing City Schools will generate
budgets in the wake of $77 million a year for more
Tuesday, Nov. 4, 2008, at his home.
failed
issues, the Ohio teachers and other operaService will be at II a.m. on Friday, Nov. 7, 2008, at
Department
of Education tional costs. An approved
Crow-Hussell Funeral Home in Point Pleasdant with Robert
bond issue will pay for $164
L. Patterson II officiating. Burial will follow at Lone Oak said Wednesday.
Results
from
Tuesday's
million in new schools and
Cemetery. Visitation will be an hour prior to the service. ·
election
were
still
unavail.
equipment.
Online · guest registry is available at www.crowhusable for 12 districts where
Votes were still being
sellfh.com.
·
final vote counts weren't counted Wednesday in
complete,
but
voters Montgomery County, but
approved 138 school issues, the latest count continued to
or 58.5 percent, while 86, or show the Dayton Public
from Page At
36.4 percent , had failed, Schools levy passing, and
department
spokesman the district believes that
county by a margin of 58 percent. She lost in Meigs
Scott
Blake
said.
won't change. The 4.9-mill
County, receiving 41 percent , and also lost in Morgan and
Issues
voters
approved
levy
will go toward operathe portion of Washington County included in the district.
will
allow
districts
to
renotions
for classrooms, class
However, she said, her margin .in Athens County made up
vate
buildings
and
avoid
cut.
sizes
and .restoration and
for those losses.
Although she went door-to-9oor for months in Meigs tirig services and personnel. maintenance of activities,
''It is encouragin~ to see said district .spokeswoman
County, Phillips said, "months of attacks" had an effect
Ohioans
- even m these Melissa Fowler.
on her chances here. She said Thompson targeted areas
Officials in the Little
tight
economic
times - recoutside of Athens County for most of her negative camognize that schools and edu- Miami district in southwest
paign activity .
"We tried to get the truth out, but it all had im effect on cation are an important part Ohio's Warren County said
they plan to .put a property
the race, especially outside of Athens County," Phillips said of our society," Blake said.
In
the
past
decade
,·
Ohio
\evy on the ballot sometime
Wednesday. ,
·
·
According to Phillips, 2,000 ballots will remain uncount- voters have passed 1,277 of before the summer of 2009
ed in Athens County until the .Board of Elections there con- 2, I 66 school issues on after a proposed I percent
duc~s its official count. That lot of ballots also includes
some which would not properly scan during the unofficial
count, Phillips said.
A recount is possible. despite Phillips' optimism. State
GALLIPOLIS - The Katie Westfall; Fowth grade:
law requires a recount if the final official count shows a dif- Ohio Valley Christian Brady Andrew, *Karlee
ference less than one-half of one percent.
School has released its honor Edmonds, *Aryel Kinder,
If Phillips prevails in the official count, she will be part roll for ·the fust nine weeks *Jared Parissi, *Abigail
of a new Democratic majority in the Ohio House. T.he with an asterisk to denote Walker, *Natalie Wilcoxon.
Democrats have gained six seats in the House, with eight ·students who made all As.
Fifth grade: Makenzie
. elected, two defeated and another race still too close to call
Listed on the A honor roll . Bari:, *Eric Blevins, · Ann
the day after .the election.
were First grade: *Levi Bowman, *Caleb Burnett,
· Phillips said she will "hit the ground running" Anderson, Amy . Dong, , *Marshall Hood; Sixth
Thursday, attending Impact Ohio in Colum.bus with leg- *Destiny Gray, *Jared ·grade: Evan Bowman,
islators to discuss budget projections and 2009 legislative Icenhower,
*Marcie *Emily Carman, *Alexis
priorities.
.
Kessinger, *Dayja' Leach, Clark, *Ashten Crank, *Teah
Thompson did not issue a statement Wednesday.
*Eli Leigh, *Olivia Muller; Elliott, ~Rachel Haddad,
Second grade: *Nick Andrew, . *Phil Hollingshead, Mikayla
Justin Beaver, *Trevor Blank, Jewell, Sebastian Kinder,
*Jeremiah Case, Andrew Brandon Troy; Seventh
from Page At
Ch:innongsuang, Colton ·c ox, grade: Katelyn Beaver,
*Wyatt Cox, Lexi Davis, •Sarah Blodgett, Alyssa
night shift supervisor. His career highlight while stationed *Noah Haddad, *Hayley Freeman, Jon Kostival,
there were the maiden deployment of the USS George Lathey, Dakota Sexton; Third • Aubrey Long, *Ranjit
Washington and participation in the Normandy "D-Day" Grade: *Harrison Luckeydoo, Mayi, *T.G. Miller, *Amy
.
50th anniversary celebration.
In May, I 995, Bush reported to Diafl)ondbacks at NAS
Oceana where he was promoted to Petty Officer First
Class serving as supervisor and ·making the farewell
deployment of the USS America . In August 1996. he
qualified as a master training specialist, and in I 999 years, which ,is also nonnal jections; expenditures were
accepted orders to the Swordsmen serving as the flight in this situation.
.
also up by nine percent from
deck coordinator, until Sept. 200 I when he was selected
Treasurer Roy Johnson's projections, an increase
and. initiated to. Chief Petty Of(icer, at which time he five-year, positive fmancial attributed to changes in
returned to instructor duty at Oceana where he was
assigned to the curriculum i.nst~uctions standards office forecast is another reason .insurance cov~,:rage; salaries
managing courses and momtonng curnculum devel~p ­ the Commission voted .to were down two percent
ment. While there he was promoted to Semor Chtef be~in the process of releas- from projections; benefits
ing the district from fiscal were up I6 percent over proPetty Officer.
·
.
The jections, · an increase again
In the final phase of his career, he reported to VFA-.143 emergency. .
Commission's
l.ackie
· attril;mted to a, change · in
Wo{ld Famous Pukin Dogs deployment on .the USS Dwtght
Osborne who does the finan- · . insurance premiums and
D. Eisenhower and became ·~~ "Trustee Shellback."
During Bush's years in the Na':y he J:eceiv~d many com- cia! monitoring of the dis- · payments. The district pays
mendation , meritorious and servtce awards, mcludmg the trict, said, receipts, were up 98 percent. of health care
National l)efense Service Medal , the Global War on ove~;~ight percent from 'pro- cbenefits for employees
Terriorisrn Expeditionary Medal, and the Armed Forces
'
S¢rvice Medal. .
'
. Bush is mil{ried ro the fonner Ruth Fcy of Pomeroy and
Page Al ·
they have two children, Cheryl, 17, 31\d.Justin, 12. They
res1de at Virginia Beach and plan to remam the~e . .
Attending the reti.rement ceremo~Y. from Metgs County having to financially settle for the resurfacing of previously
were his mother, Suzanne Bush . h1s m-laws, Barbar~ and paved road5 in the cemetery. If all the cemetery roads had
Jim Fry, and other relatives, Sue Fry, Judy E1chmger, been paved, the village's share of the project would've been
$113,000, a price tag the village couldn't afford.
Donald Bush , and MaryBeth Bush:
.· .
Shelly Company is the contractor for the project which is
The retired naval officer comes from a farm famtly. m
charging
the village $92.50 per ton of asphalt, according to
the Racine .area where he was taught s\I'Ong Christian val·
ues graduated from Southern High School,' was encour- a discussion had by council at a meeting in August.
aged to attend college by h.is PW:ef!tS, but decide~ on. a
career in the military. Wtth h1s chotce he was followmg m
the footsteps of other fwnily m~mbers.l'wo of hts brothers ..
were active duly Army &gt;ftnd ht~ f;;tther and uncles served
during World War ll.
•
I aches
Auxiliary Turkey Dinner
,
Sunday No

Deaths

Donavan Clagg .

to the expulsion of the
Indians from Ohio.
Jwnes Letart was the son
of a French Huguenot. His
family was one of the first
to set up trade with the
Indians of Pennsylvania,
Virginia and the Ohio frontier. Jafl)es had a reputation
of being fair to the Indians
in his dealings and became
an adopted member of .the .
.Shawnee Nation. He and his
brother Jacques were per- .
mitte~ to set up trading
posts in the Gre&lt;~t Bend
area, Jacques near present
day Ravenswood·, W.Va.

and James across the river
from the village at the falls
in present day Mason
County, W.Va. James took a
Shawnee woman as his wife ·
and they had a ·child named
lame~
James . Junior.
Junior's Shawnee name was
Cahiktodo and he became
chief tlf that little village on
the falls.
Both of these novels are
available at the Meigs
District Library 'or can be
purchased directly from
Badgley
Publishing
Company at www.badgleypublish ingcompany.com

·Voters·pass majority of Ohio school·issues

Robert.Leport

Phillips

earned income tax to fund
operational expenses failed
Tuesday.
.
"If the property levy fails,
we would have to make $4
.million in cuts , which.coul(l
include not opening two
new schools," district.
spokeswoman Lisa Knodel
said Wednesday.
She said the impact of
those cuts on the quality of
education in the district in
northeast Ohio,. would be
significant
Many officials pointed to .a
difficult economy as the main
reason some issues failed.
"It's just real tough 'on the
schools," Ohio School
Boards
Association
spokesman Scott Ebri~ht
said. ''They just keep trymg
to do the best they can with
the money that the voters
are giv in~ them."
Zanesvtlle voters in eastern
Ohio defeated a property tax
levy to save and renovate the
high school auditorium, and
Ebright said the Northwest
Local Schools district in
Stark County in northeast
Ohio was on the brink of
going into fiscal. emergency

if its levy bid failed. School
officials said Wednesday that
the final count wasn't in, but
the levy appeared to be heaqed for defeat.
. ·
Northwest
Local
Treasurer Dan Levengood
said that district 's board
would be meeting to discuss
when to pursue another levx.
Talawanda
Scho.ol
District in Butler County in
southwest
Ohio . won
approval of its bond issue;,
allowing officials to begin
the process of building a
new high school.
·
In northwest Ohio, voters·
approved two funding
'requests by Toledo Public
Schools - a levy renew~!
providing $15.7 million
annually to pay for operating expenses and a bono
issue to fund $37 million in
capital improvements.
"Districts that were not so
fortunate will see teacher
cuts, larger classes, pay-to~
play fees for extracurricular
acuvities and discontinued
busing and other services.''
Ohio Education Associatioh
spokeswoman
Michele
Prater said Wetlrresda~·

OVCS RELEASES HONOR ROLL

~

, The Daily Sentinel ·

•

Thursday, November 6, 2008

Gene .
Lyons

was in ~onstant pain. Was I
clinging to her out of love or
perverse vanity? Making
her suffer for a heart-warming story? '
·One afternoon, I found
Layla lying twisted in
agony. She could barely
stand. She refused her bottle. Outside, tn:lpical storm
Gustav .swirled over our
farm; 8 inches of rain fell
that day.
I felt the end had come for
my pooriittle girl. Had burial been possible, I might
have put her down.
In'stead, I called my veterinarian. A true professional, he admitted being at
wits' end. However. there
was a vet in Damascus.
Ark.. who treated only
C(}WS. Possibly. Dr. Alvill'
· Williams would have an
idea.
Williams asked nie to
read him the ingredients on
the bag of powdered
replacement milk. When I
came to "soy flour," he said:
"You can stop right there.
She's allergic to the soy.
Her stomach's too immature
to digest vegetable protein.
Basically. she 's starving."
Willimns advised me to
buy raw, unpasteurized milk
from a dairy farm. Layla's
pains abated overnight. Alas,
it soon became obvious

something was still wrong.
She'd clamber unsteadily to
her feet, drink her bottle,
then lie down . She scarcely
moved lor days. I'd cany her
from sun to shade. hoping
she'd regai n her stt·ength.
She barely acknowledged
the dogs. Who'd lick her face
and ears, then go about their
business.
One Saturday; we loaded
Layla up and drove 50 miles
tel Damascus. The dif1gnosis
was bad. Lay Ia 's heart and
lungs were sound , but she 'd
suffered brain damage sec·:
ondary to the infections.
Although strong enough to
walk. she'd forgotten how.
A hearty. st raightforward
·fellow like most in the livestock business, Williams
gave us some hope . He
taught me to inject her daily
with steroids and thiamine
hy,drochloride. Depending
on the location and severity
of the . lesions, recovery
might
be
possible.
Basically, I'd have to rehab
her like a stroke victim.
To make Layla walk. I
had to drag her wilh a halter
or shove her from behind.
She needed to 1fmvc her feet
or fall on her face. Her
innate cow stubbornness
made her resist. Soon. light
pressure on her rump would
make her step forward. My
wife would hold Layla's
bottle just out of reach
while I moved her feet.
Trembling like a little old
man. she had to concentrate
very hard.
The lirst time l saw her
gc:t tip and move on he~· own
made me very emotional.
Surrounded by dogs. she'd
select a spot on the lawn and

graze lying down . Could
she ever be a ·normal cow?
Williams said progress
would be slow but gradual.
Because most clients can't
devote much time ·to one
sickly calf, the project fascinated him .
·
The dairy where I bought
Layla's milk. had a healthy
Holstein with a single bad
quarter on her udder, making her unsuitable for a
milking machine, but fine
for raising calves. Would I
like to buy her? Along with
a n'eighbor who'd had a ·
black Ang~s calf orphaned
by a lighting strike, I did.
Now Layla had a proper
family. The Holsiein immediately adopted the black
Angus and the white
Charolais as her own. At
first she seemed puzzlect by
Layla's failure to shadow
her like· a normal calf.
' However, sweet, patient
Molly adjusted. When she
lies down. she lies by Layla,
conscientiously grooming
and teaching her the rudiments of Cow Ill l.
At five months, Layla still
grazes lying down. She
remains confident that proper nouri shment comes front
a bottle. I've learned to milk
her step10other twice daily
as she looks on, impatiently
licking her lips.
·
For the time being then ,
Lay! a has two mommies.
(Arkar1sas
DemocrarGazette columnist Gene
Lrons . is a National
Maga:)ne An·ard winner
and co - ~wtlwr of "ThP
Huulin x of the Presidem··
(SI. Martin's Press, 2(}()()).
Yoll can e-mail Lyons at
e!lge11e/yons 2@ yahoo .com.)

'

Honors

Ours, Sarah Schoonover;
Eighth grade: *Joshua
Blevins, *Madison Crank,
*Alex Haddad, *Elise Long;
Ninth grade: *Jennifer
Blevins, *Katie Blodgett,
*Paul Miller, *Ben Tillis;
Tenth grade: Dame! Irwin,
*Kathleen Long, Kyle Scott;
Eleventh grade: *Lindsey
Miller, *Melissa Stump;
Twelfth grade: *Annee
Carman, Tina Sargent, Alex
Trent, Andrea VanMeter. ·
Smdents making the B
Honor Roll for the first nine
weeks were: Third grade:
Austin Sherrill, Cody Troy;
Fourth grade: Drew Hall , .
Sy\lney Hood, Amber
Jacquard ,' Noah Jenkins,

.'

Jacob Riley; Fifth grade:
MaKenzie Case, Morgah
Jenkins , Hannah Westfall;
Sixth
grade:
Daml~
Ballantyne, Re~kah Bus~;
Seventh grade:
Logan
Edmonds, Cole Parenti,
Maggie . Westfall, ·Scotty
Wood; Eighth grade: Richai9
Bowman, Chance Burlesoil,
Caleb Lewis; Ninth grade:
Peter Carman, Maegan
Jewell, Chelsea Johnson,
Joshua Scott; Ten.th grade:
Allie Hamilton , Alex~
Henry. Elicia Irwin; Eleventh
grade: .Jared Bartley, Hali
Burleson; Twelfth grade:
Joey Absten, Braunlyft
Carter, Luke Hamad, Henry
Patrick, Kyle Scputen. .

Southern from Page At
which the administration
says costs the average
employee $20 a month.
· Still,
overall, . the
Commission felt confident
.enough to vote in favor of
the district's release. Uhrig
thanked members of the
Comniission, local . school
board, some previous
administrations aitd the current administration for their
work on the matter. Uhrig

particularly pointed out th'e
work of Treasurer Ro~
Johnson and Superintendeiu
Tony Deem, saying they
"do see the big picture."
Deem has always beeh
quick to give others theiT
due. saying his administra~
lion has tried to continue the
hard work done ·by many
others who helped lay th~
groundwork ·to get the district out of debt.
:

•
•

Paving rrom

TIPPERS PlAINS

At Tu '
,.mbereth o ff-1
Plaine VFW Hllll
Eppe,.
at In or Cany"Out
Adulta $8 o c 1;"'·867-8253
Turlc~lf, Maa,.: ~'!:..':.!:
lnclua.S

Lending rrom Page At
of taking and re-paying payday advances, often
loans at one check-,cashing business to pay off
,
.
at others.
industry, said the 'referendum

l'f:. . lng,

o,_.n a

Koll, Drink

.."'• :-•
raYif, NOOdlea

rB:~~c;!"• Sla~,

EVERYONE WELCOME

'

'

.

n

S11•r.a11

•••• ...JW

�~.

.. . .
..
'

..

PageA4

OPINION

:The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, November 6, 2008

Analysis:
Next
up
·qfter
Obama
win)
governing
~: The Daily Sentinel
·

Bv Liz Smon

111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

,

there in one year or even in
one term."
No new president has faced
so much since Franklin
Delano Roosevelt - and
even he didn't have two wars
on his plate.
.
. Roosevelt had four months
to come up with programs to
address the Great Derressinn
before he took office on
March 4, 1933.
Obama gets just 2 1/2 to put
together his government;
inauguration is Jan. 20.
·
He will chart the country's
co urs~ against this dreary
backdrop: Unemployment is
at 6.1 percent and predicted to
rise as high as 7.5 percent
.next vear; pessimistic ·con- .
sumeis have cU1tailed borrowing and spending; home
foreclosures are rampant;
Medicare , Medicaid and
Social Security face huge
financial problems; and,
152,000 U.S. troops are in
Iraq more than five years after
the initial invasion. while
32,000 are in Afghanistan in
the sixth year of the war
against terrorism .
With Democrats expanding
their majorities in both the
House and Senate. Obarna
will have to figure out how to
'lead a country that's more
conservative than liberul
while trying to satisfy the left
wing of his patty. He will face
demands f(Jr a quick pullout
from Iraq. He's promised
withdrawal. bll! carefully.
Perhaps addressi'ng his
party faithful. Obama said:
"There are many who w\ln 't
agree with every decision or
policy I make as president.
And we. know the govemment can't solve every problem. But I will always be honest with you about the challenges we face." ·
·
From the outset, · how
Obwna acts to deal with these

ASSOCIATED P!lESS WRITER

(740) 992-2156 o FAX (740) 992-2157
www.mydallyaentlnel.com

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

Congress shall make tto law respectittg' an
establishment of religion, or prohibiting the
free exerdse thereof; or abridging the freedom 1!,{
' speech, or.of the press; or the right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the
:· Government for a redress of grievances. ·
- The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

TODAY IN HISTORY
Today is Thursday, Nov. 6. the 311th day of 2008. There
·
: Today's Highlight in History:
, On Nov. 6, 1860, former Illinois congressman Abraham
·Lincoln defeated three other candidates fur the presidency:
John Breckinridge, John Bell and Stephen Douglas.
On this date:
.
In 1861, Confederate President Jefferson ()avis was
elected to a six-year term of office.
· In 1888, Benpmin Harrison won the presidential election, defeating mcumbent Grover Cleveland with enough
electoraJ votes, even though Cleveland led ht the popular
vote .
· In 1893 , composer Peter llyich Tchaikuvsky died in St.
Petersburg, Russia, at age 53.
· In 1900, President McKinley was re-elected. beating
Democrat William Jennings Bryan.
In 1906, Republican Charles Evans Hughes was elected
governor of New York , defeating newspaper publisher
William Randolph Hearst.
.
' In 1944,.British official Lori:! Moynt; was assassinatt~d in
Cairo, Egypt, by members of the Zionist Stern gang.
In 1956, Pres1dent Eisenhower won re-election, defeating
Democrat Adlai E. Stevenson.
' In 1976, Benjamin L. Hooks was chosen to be the new
executive director of the National Association for the
Advancement of Colored People, succeeding Roy Wilkins .
. In 1977, 39 people were killed when an earthen dam
burst, sending a wall of water through Toccoa Falls College
in Georgia. · .
. Ten years ago: Sen. Daniel Patrick Moynihan , D-N.Y,.
announced he would not run for re-election in 2000. Two
suicide bombers were killed when they set off blasts in a
crowded open-air market in Jerusalem. injuring a couple of
&lt;lozen bystanders.
Five years ago: President Bush signed an $87.5 billion
package approved by Congress for Iraq and Afghanistan .
Federal judges in New York and California blocked a new
ban on certain late-term abortions, a day after President
Push signed it into law. The U.S . Mint unveiled the new
!lickel.
· One year ago: 2007 becwne the dead)iest year for U.S.
troops in Iraq, with at least 853 military deaths. Six lawmakers were killed by a suicide bomber in northern
Afghanistan during a visit to ·a sugar factory; 61 students
also died as a result of the bombing and shots fired by
ards . Country singer Hank Thompson died ' in Keller,
exas, at age 82. Geor~e Osmond, father of Donny and
arie Osmond and patnarch to the family's singing group
The Osmond Brothers, died in Provo, Utah •.at age 90.
~. Today's Birthdays: Director Mike Nichols is 77. Country
singer Stonewall Jackson is 76.-Singer Eugene Pitt (The
Jive Five) is 71. Singer P,J. Proby is 70. Country singer
Guy Clark is 67. Actress Sally Field is 62.
, Thought for Today: "No one is so eager to gain new
experience as he who doesn't know how to make use of the
old ones." - Marie Ebner von Eschenbach. Austrian writer
()830-1916).

3re 55 days left in the year.

WASHINGTON - Now
the hard part.
Barack Obama essentially
came out of nowhere, beat the
Democratic establishment,
conquered doubts about his
experience and ·overcame
questions about his race to be
elected the first black president after a grueling campaign that lasted nearly two
years.
·
But for Obama there's no
time to savor his unprecedented victory.
Now he fa~-es unprecedented challenges.
The president-elect must
immediately confront the
worst economic conditions
since the · Great Depression,
determine the next steps in
two lingering wars, and lead
his Democrats, including liberals expecting that the
change he promises wi II
come in~tantly.
It won't.
On the heels of a campaign
in which cash wasn't a concern, Obama has to tackle all
of'lhose tasks with no room in
the budget a.5the nation heads
for a painful , perhaps longlasting, recession.
Even as he celebrated,
Obwna acknowledged "the
enormity of the task that lies
ahead." and offered a sobermg assessment.
"We know the challenges
that tomorrow will bring are
the greatest of our lifetime two wars, a planet in peril, the
worst financial crisis in a .:cnturv ," Obama said. "There's
!]OW energy to hw1tess, new
Jobs to ·be created, new
schools to build, and threats to
meet, alliances to repair."
He warned: "The road
ahead will be long. Our climb
will be steep. We may not get

.

conditions will set the tone I(Jr just his first Senate tenn and
has offered few specifics on
his presidency.
.
·how
he would govern.
Voters got an early glimpse
Culturally, Obama 's victory
of his ;ty le la' l month when
Wall Street (OIIapsed. stocks was so much more for a
tluc!llated and the uovern- nation on the verge of becomment. intervened. He stmd. a ing a true melting pot; go.vcautious stance a11d defe1Ted cmment estimates say wh1te
to lawmakeb; dealing directly people will no longer ~ake
with the problems. He was 'tip a majority of Amencans
deliberative and careful in his by 2042.
res1xmse - perhaps just the
The son of a bla :k father
approach voters were scekmg from Kenya and a .white
afier eight years of what cnt- mother
from
Kansas ,
ics call Presidenl Bush's cow- Obama 's call for change creboy appro:~ch.
ated a movement at a time of
Yet. Obama may be blamed great upheaval in the country.
fur recession woes despite the And, that proved to be a large
fact that h~ inherited the mess
from Bush. The troubles are enough force to overcome linon Obama's watch now even gering prejudices.
To be sure, the economy
if there's little he can do about
proved
a powerful moiivator.
them: The president in power
More than half of voters
always suffers when the econc
named
it their top issue. And,
omy tanks. Jt!st ask !he first
nearly
all . voters said the
President Bush in 1992.
Indeed. coming in with a economy was· in bad shape
big victory doesn't guarantee . and said they were worried
about the economy's direcsuccess .
Democrat Lyndon B. tiol1 . Obama had the advanJohnson won with 61 percent tag~ among these voters.
of the vote in 1964 . He won
Race didn't appear to be
·his Great Society programs in much of a hurdle.
his firs! two vears hut his
Obama won nearly half of
adininistration essentially col- the white vote while nearly all
lapsed in ih&lt;: final two with blacks and . two in · ti1ree
the escalation of the Vietnam . Hispanics supported him. ·
War. ·
.
And, . although Obama
In clmosipu Obama &lt;l' the played down his skin color, it
44th pr~sident. . the nation played a P.Urt in his general
took a historic leap beyond its election strategy. Mil\(Jrities,
legacy of slave!)' and toward as well as youth, were identihealing racial tensions just
four decades after the tumul- fied early on as a key demotuous Civil Rights movement. graphic to register and court.
. Politically. bbama's elec- That appeared to work.
tion amounted to a wholesale Blacks, Hispanics and voters
rejection of the status quo under age 30 tumed out in
at\er eiuht years of Bush and droves.
All - . whites, ·black,s,
Republfcan rule. • .
women,
Hispanics, you.ng
Voters were willing to take
Democrats,
a chance on a relative new- people ,
comer to the national stage. Republicans and indepenObama is a 47-year-old black dents - will have high
man from Chicago with a lib- expectations for Obwna 's
eral voti11g record who is in · presidency.

THIS IS
SHAPING UP

AS aVITE A I'IIG~T

li&gt;R

DEMOCRAT~.

MONOPOLY

Laylas road to Damascus

Everywhere I go, ·people
ask me less often about politics than about Layla. For
readers who missed my earlier column about the abandoned Charolais calf I
adopted at birth. Layla's
early· weeks consisted of
LETTERS TO THE
one life-threatening crisis
ED ,I TOR
after another.
All big brown eyes and
Letters to the editor are welcome. They should be less
than 300 words. All/etters are subject to editing, must be spindly legs , she was too
f,igned. and include address and telephone number. No weak to suckle. I learned to
l!nsigned letters will be published. Letters should be in force feed her through a
good taste , addressing issues, not personalities. Letters of plastic tube. She struggled
thanks to organizations and individuals will not be accept- hard against the insult; I felt
~d for publication.
she had a will to survive.
Experienced cattlemen
warned me that saving her
was likely impossible,
although several went to
great lengths to help. At two
·
(USPS
21g..96o)
.
Reader Services Ohlo.Vallet:.ubllshlng
weeks, she suddenly went
blind. Injec tions of the
Correction Polley
Pu~ished every afternoon, Monday
steroid
dexamethasone
Our main c~rn in all stories is to through Friday, 11 1 Court Street,
restored her sight.
. be accurate. tr you know of an error Pomeroy. Ohio. SecoOO-class postage
Raised among dogs,
. In a story, call the newsroom at (740) paid at Pomeroy.
Layla
appeared to think she
Member: The Associated Press and
: jl92-2156.
was a basset hound , lying
the Ohio Newspaper Association. •
Poatmaater: Send address correc·
on·
the porch, peering in the
Our main number Is
to The Daily Sentinel, 111 Court
lions _
window and mooing for her
(740) 992-2156.
Street, Pomeroy. Ohio 45769 .
bottle. The two Great
Department 11tenmns are:
Pyrenees patiently let her
Subscription Rates·
' ' .
· By carrier or motor route
nurse their ears. Centuries
.
News
One month
'1 0.27
of breeding made them
One year
'1 15.84
: !-dHor: Charlene Hoeflich. Elll. 12.
instinctively protect helpDolly
50'
RepOrter: Brian Reed, Ed. ·t4
less ca lve' .· ·
Senior Citizen rates
ReporW: Beth Sergent, Ext. 13
One month
. '10.27
. For me, loving a baby
One year
'103.90
cow was learned behavior.
Advertising
&amp;.t&gt;scot&gt;ets stOOd ram11 ;, --.oe
Having failed to receive
, •
.
c1tect to the Daily Sentilel. No sub15
: aut.lde Setn: Dave Harn~, Ext.
scriplion bV mail permitted In areas
antibodies from mother's
• J)ullildl.,_: Brenda Dav1s, Ext 16. where home canier service IS avail·
milk, Layla suffered repeat: C!au./Cin:.: Judy Clart&lt;. Ext . 10
able.
ed bacterial infections. I
learned to take her temperaMalt Subscription
General Manager
lnolde Melga County
ture, treat her with antibi13 Weeks
'32.26
Charlene Hoenk:h, Ext. 12
otics. and dose her with
26 Weeks
'64.20
Pcpto-Bisrnol and castor oil
1:1;.' Wn€'1&lt;•
'
127.11
e. flluil :
when hc:r tender stomach
flt"W s'W rnyd(::li!ysentim:!l.co11 1
Outside Meigs County
rebelled. I pestered veteri13 Weeks
'53.55
narians and friends for
Wob:
26 Weeks
' '1 07.10
advice.
52 Weeks
'214.21
www.mydaityS011Hnel.com
By mid-September, Layla
.

.

..

L---~~----------~----~,

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

www .mydailysentinel.com

Obituaries

Fair Board members elected
POMEROY - In Monday
night's election of members
to the Meigs County
Agricultural Society's Board.
five incumbents were reelected for another term and
a new member was nwned to

John Edward Foreman
LAKELAND, Fla. - John Edward Foreman, 54, formerly ?f Metgs County, passed away on Oct. 28, 2008 at
h1s res1dence.
He was . preceded in death by his parents and grandparents. He IS sumved by his wife, Linda, Lakeland, Fla.;
sons , Greg (Michelle) Ryan of Lakeland,. Fla. Jason
(Cheryl) Ry3J! of Letart, W. Va., John Jr., Lakeland Fla.;
daughters,_Kristm (Johnny) Somersville of Chandlersville,
Oh10, Apnl (Sam) Nicholson, Hampton, Va., and Heather
Foreman, Lakeland, Fla.
.
. Also surviving w-e sisters , Sylvia Reynolds of Cincinnati,
Jenmfer (M1ke) Mock of Kent; Naomi (Ray) Wilson of
Portlana, and a brother, Robert (Sharlene) Foreman of
Pom~roy, several nieces. nephews, aunts, uncles and cousins.
Pnvate services were held on Oct. 3 2008 in Lakeland
.
'
with family in attendance.

increase the Board to 17
member ·.
Incumbents ele~ted for
another term were Mike
Parker. Steve Sweatzel,
Buckley, Bob
Kenny
Calaway and Dave Watson .

The new member elected to Holter. Wes Karr, Tom
serve on the Board was Pullins, Brent Rose. Karen
Larry Life.
Werry, and Brian Windon.
Other members currently New officers will be named
serving are Dave Burt , at the next meeting of the
Brian Collins, Buddy Ervin, Board said Debbie Watson,
Jane Fitch, Ron Hensley, Ed secretary.

Novels centering on Meigs County released

. 'CANAL WINCHESTER to his family so it would not
- Steve Badgley, fonner die with him .
Meigs Countian and author,
Badgley's second novel is
has recently published his titled "Where the Lilies
second novel under the peri Cry" and it is also set in the
name.C. Stephen Badgley.
Letart Falls area where he
.Bad~lefs first novel is was born. This. novel is hisc
titled ' Arcadia" and is a his" torical fi~tion but more fact
tori cal
fiction/romantic than fiction, he says .It is the
mystery taking the reader story of a village of
back in time ·to tlie Letart Shawnee and Delaware
Falls area circa pre-Civil Indians who once inhabited
War and up to the turn of the the area · now ·. called
century. The story is told by Bucktown in· the little viian old man who kept a mys- !age of Letart Falls It tells
. GALLlPOLIS- Donavan F. "Don" Cl~gg,84,ofGallipolis terious family story to him- · the story of the family of
d1ed Tuesday, Nov. 4, 2008 at the Holzer Medical Center.
· self until, UJ'!ln rea~hing old James Letart during the preServices will be I p.m. Friday, Nov. 7, 2008 at Willis age, he dec1des·to p'aSs it on French &amp; Indian war era up
F~neral Hon:u: with Rev. Alfred Holley officiating. Burial
-·
Will follow m Centenary Cemetery. Friends may call on
Thursday (today) Nov. 6 from 6-8 p.m. at Willis Funeral
Home. There will be a Masonic service on Thursday
evening at the funeral home.
.
November ballots , or about
BY LISA CORNWELL
Visit www.willisfuneralhome.com to send e-mail condo. ASsbciATED PRESS WRITER
59 percent, according to
.Jences.
·
state records.
Ohio voters approve.d the
The state's largest school
majority of the 236 . school district was among the winfunding requests they faced . ners in the election. A levy
POINT PLEASANT, W.Va .. - Roben "Bob" Leport, 72, on ball&lt;its, but many still approved for the Columbus
Charleston, W.Va. , formerly of Point Pleasant, W.Va., died were ·.looking at slashing City Schools will generate
budgets in the wake of $77 million a year for more
Tuesday, Nov. 4, 2008, at his home.
failed
issues, the Ohio teachers and other operaService will be at II a.m. on Friday, Nov. 7, 2008, at
Department
of Education tional costs. An approved
Crow-Hussell Funeral Home in Point Pleasdant with Robert
bond issue will pay for $164
L. Patterson II officiating. Burial will follow at Lone Oak said Wednesday.
Results
from
Tuesday's
million in new schools and
Cemetery. Visitation will be an hour prior to the service. ·
election
were
still
unavail.
equipment.
Online · guest registry is available at www.crowhusable for 12 districts where
Votes were still being
sellfh.com.
·
final vote counts weren't counted Wednesday in
complete,
but
voters Montgomery County, but
approved 138 school issues, the latest count continued to
or 58.5 percent, while 86, or show the Dayton Public
from Page At
36.4 percent , had failed, Schools levy passing, and
department
spokesman the district believes that
county by a margin of 58 percent. She lost in Meigs
Scott
Blake
said.
won't change. The 4.9-mill
County, receiving 41 percent , and also lost in Morgan and
Issues
voters
approved
levy
will go toward operathe portion of Washington County included in the district.
will
allow
districts
to
renotions
for classrooms, class
However, she said, her margin .in Athens County made up
vate
buildings
and
avoid
cut.
sizes
and .restoration and
for those losses.
Although she went door-to-9oor for months in Meigs tirig services and personnel. maintenance of activities,
''It is encouragin~ to see said district .spokeswoman
County, Phillips said, "months of attacks" had an effect
Ohioans
- even m these Melissa Fowler.
on her chances here. She said Thompson targeted areas
Officials in the Little
tight
economic
times - recoutside of Athens County for most of her negative camognize that schools and edu- Miami district in southwest
paign activity .
"We tried to get the truth out, but it all had im effect on cation are an important part Ohio's Warren County said
they plan to .put a property
the race, especially outside of Athens County," Phillips said of our society," Blake said.
In
the
past
decade
,·
Ohio
\evy on the ballot sometime
Wednesday. ,
·
·
According to Phillips, 2,000 ballots will remain uncount- voters have passed 1,277 of before the summer of 2009
ed in Athens County until the .Board of Elections there con- 2, I 66 school issues on after a proposed I percent
duc~s its official count. That lot of ballots also includes
some which would not properly scan during the unofficial
count, Phillips said.
A recount is possible. despite Phillips' optimism. State
GALLIPOLIS - The Katie Westfall; Fowth grade:
law requires a recount if the final official count shows a dif- Ohio Valley Christian Brady Andrew, *Karlee
ference less than one-half of one percent.
School has released its honor Edmonds, *Aryel Kinder,
If Phillips prevails in the official count, she will be part roll for ·the fust nine weeks *Jared Parissi, *Abigail
of a new Democratic majority in the Ohio House. T.he with an asterisk to denote Walker, *Natalie Wilcoxon.
Democrats have gained six seats in the House, with eight ·students who made all As.
Fifth grade: Makenzie
. elected, two defeated and another race still too close to call
Listed on the A honor roll . Bari:, *Eric Blevins, · Ann
the day after .the election.
were First grade: *Levi Bowman, *Caleb Burnett,
· Phillips said she will "hit the ground running" Anderson, Amy . Dong, , *Marshall Hood; Sixth
Thursday, attending Impact Ohio in Colum.bus with leg- *Destiny Gray, *Jared ·grade: Evan Bowman,
islators to discuss budget projections and 2009 legislative Icenhower,
*Marcie *Emily Carman, *Alexis
priorities.
.
Kessinger, *Dayja' Leach, Clark, *Ashten Crank, *Teah
Thompson did not issue a statement Wednesday.
*Eli Leigh, *Olivia Muller; Elliott, ~Rachel Haddad,
Second grade: *Nick Andrew, . *Phil Hollingshead, Mikayla
Justin Beaver, *Trevor Blank, Jewell, Sebastian Kinder,
*Jeremiah Case, Andrew Brandon Troy; Seventh
from Page At
Ch:innongsuang, Colton ·c ox, grade: Katelyn Beaver,
*Wyatt Cox, Lexi Davis, •Sarah Blodgett, Alyssa
night shift supervisor. His career highlight while stationed *Noah Haddad, *Hayley Freeman, Jon Kostival,
there were the maiden deployment of the USS George Lathey, Dakota Sexton; Third • Aubrey Long, *Ranjit
Washington and participation in the Normandy "D-Day" Grade: *Harrison Luckeydoo, Mayi, *T.G. Miller, *Amy
.
50th anniversary celebration.
In May, I 995, Bush reported to Diafl)ondbacks at NAS
Oceana where he was promoted to Petty Officer First
Class serving as supervisor and ·making the farewell
deployment of the USS America . In August 1996. he
qualified as a master training specialist, and in I 999 years, which ,is also nonnal jections; expenditures were
accepted orders to the Swordsmen serving as the flight in this situation.
.
also up by nine percent from
deck coordinator, until Sept. 200 I when he was selected
Treasurer Roy Johnson's projections, an increase
and. initiated to. Chief Petty Of(icer, at which time he five-year, positive fmancial attributed to changes in
returned to instructor duty at Oceana where he was
assigned to the curriculum i.nst~uctions standards office forecast is another reason .insurance cov~,:rage; salaries
managing courses and momtonng curnculum devel~p ­ the Commission voted .to were down two percent
ment. While there he was promoted to Semor Chtef be~in the process of releas- from projections; benefits
ing the district from fiscal were up I6 percent over proPetty Officer.
·
.
The jections, · an increase again
In the final phase of his career, he reported to VFA-.143 emergency. .
Commission's
l.ackie
· attril;mted to a, change · in
Wo{ld Famous Pukin Dogs deployment on .the USS Dwtght
Osborne who does the finan- · . insurance premiums and
D. Eisenhower and became ·~~ "Trustee Shellback."
During Bush's years in the Na':y he J:eceiv~d many com- cia! monitoring of the dis- · payments. The district pays
mendation , meritorious and servtce awards, mcludmg the trict, said, receipts, were up 98 percent. of health care
National l)efense Service Medal , the Global War on ove~;~ight percent from 'pro- cbenefits for employees
Terriorisrn Expeditionary Medal, and the Armed Forces
'
S¢rvice Medal. .
'
. Bush is mil{ried ro the fonner Ruth Fcy of Pomeroy and
Page Al ·
they have two children, Cheryl, 17, 31\d.Justin, 12. They
res1de at Virginia Beach and plan to remam the~e . .
Attending the reti.rement ceremo~Y. from Metgs County having to financially settle for the resurfacing of previously
were his mother, Suzanne Bush . h1s m-laws, Barbar~ and paved road5 in the cemetery. If all the cemetery roads had
Jim Fry, and other relatives, Sue Fry, Judy E1chmger, been paved, the village's share of the project would've been
$113,000, a price tag the village couldn't afford.
Donald Bush , and MaryBeth Bush:
.· .
Shelly Company is the contractor for the project which is
The retired naval officer comes from a farm famtly. m
charging
the village $92.50 per ton of asphalt, according to
the Racine .area where he was taught s\I'Ong Christian val·
ues graduated from Southern High School,' was encour- a discussion had by council at a meeting in August.
aged to attend college by h.is PW:ef!tS, but decide~ on. a
career in the military. Wtth h1s chotce he was followmg m
the footsteps of other fwnily m~mbers.l'wo of hts brothers ..
were active duly Army &gt;ftnd ht~ f;;tther and uncles served
during World War ll.
•
I aches
Auxiliary Turkey Dinner
,
Sunday No

Deaths

Donavan Clagg .

to the expulsion of the
Indians from Ohio.
Jwnes Letart was the son
of a French Huguenot. His
family was one of the first
to set up trade with the
Indians of Pennsylvania,
Virginia and the Ohio frontier. Jafl)es had a reputation
of being fair to the Indians
in his dealings and became
an adopted member of .the .
.Shawnee Nation. He and his
brother Jacques were per- .
mitte~ to set up trading
posts in the Gre&lt;~t Bend
area, Jacques near present
day Ravenswood·, W.Va.

and James across the river
from the village at the falls
in present day Mason
County, W.Va. James took a
Shawnee woman as his wife ·
and they had a ·child named
lame~
James . Junior.
Junior's Shawnee name was
Cahiktodo and he became
chief tlf that little village on
the falls.
Both of these novels are
available at the Meigs
District Library 'or can be
purchased directly from
Badgley
Publishing
Company at www.badgleypublish ingcompany.com

·Voters·pass majority of Ohio school·issues

Robert.Leport

Phillips

earned income tax to fund
operational expenses failed
Tuesday.
.
"If the property levy fails,
we would have to make $4
.million in cuts , which.coul(l
include not opening two
new schools," district.
spokeswoman Lisa Knodel
said Wednesday.
She said the impact of
those cuts on the quality of
education in the district in
northeast Ohio,. would be
significant
Many officials pointed to .a
difficult economy as the main
reason some issues failed.
"It's just real tough 'on the
schools," Ohio School
Boards
Association
spokesman Scott Ebri~ht
said. ''They just keep trymg
to do the best they can with
the money that the voters
are giv in~ them."
Zanesvtlle voters in eastern
Ohio defeated a property tax
levy to save and renovate the
high school auditorium, and
Ebright said the Northwest
Local Schools district in
Stark County in northeast
Ohio was on the brink of
going into fiscal. emergency

if its levy bid failed. School
officials said Wednesday that
the final count wasn't in, but
the levy appeared to be heaqed for defeat.
. ·
Northwest
Local
Treasurer Dan Levengood
said that district 's board
would be meeting to discuss
when to pursue another levx.
Talawanda
Scho.ol
District in Butler County in
southwest
Ohio . won
approval of its bond issue;,
allowing officials to begin
the process of building a
new high school.
·
In northwest Ohio, voters·
approved two funding
'requests by Toledo Public
Schools - a levy renew~!
providing $15.7 million
annually to pay for operating expenses and a bono
issue to fund $37 million in
capital improvements.
"Districts that were not so
fortunate will see teacher
cuts, larger classes, pay-to~
play fees for extracurricular
acuvities and discontinued
busing and other services.''
Ohio Education Associatioh
spokeswoman
Michele
Prater said Wetlrresda~·

OVCS RELEASES HONOR ROLL

~

, The Daily Sentinel ·

•

Thursday, November 6, 2008

Gene .
Lyons

was in ~onstant pain. Was I
clinging to her out of love or
perverse vanity? Making
her suffer for a heart-warming story? '
·One afternoon, I found
Layla lying twisted in
agony. She could barely
stand. She refused her bottle. Outside, tn:lpical storm
Gustav .swirled over our
farm; 8 inches of rain fell
that day.
I felt the end had come for
my pooriittle girl. Had burial been possible, I might
have put her down.
In'stead, I called my veterinarian. A true professional, he admitted being at
wits' end. However. there
was a vet in Damascus.
Ark.. who treated only
C(}WS. Possibly. Dr. Alvill'
· Williams would have an
idea.
Williams asked nie to
read him the ingredients on
the bag of powdered
replacement milk. When I
came to "soy flour," he said:
"You can stop right there.
She's allergic to the soy.
Her stomach's too immature
to digest vegetable protein.
Basically. she 's starving."
Willimns advised me to
buy raw, unpasteurized milk
from a dairy farm. Layla's
pains abated overnight. Alas,
it soon became obvious

something was still wrong.
She'd clamber unsteadily to
her feet, drink her bottle,
then lie down . She scarcely
moved lor days. I'd cany her
from sun to shade. hoping
she'd regai n her stt·ength.
She barely acknowledged
the dogs. Who'd lick her face
and ears, then go about their
business.
One Saturday; we loaded
Layla up and drove 50 miles
tel Damascus. The dif1gnosis
was bad. Lay Ia 's heart and
lungs were sound , but she 'd
suffered brain damage sec·:
ondary to the infections.
Although strong enough to
walk. she'd forgotten how.
A hearty. st raightforward
·fellow like most in the livestock business, Williams
gave us some hope . He
taught me to inject her daily
with steroids and thiamine
hy,drochloride. Depending
on the location and severity
of the . lesions, recovery
might
be
possible.
Basically, I'd have to rehab
her like a stroke victim.
To make Layla walk. I
had to drag her wilh a halter
or shove her from behind.
She needed to 1fmvc her feet
or fall on her face. Her
innate cow stubbornness
made her resist. Soon. light
pressure on her rump would
make her step forward. My
wife would hold Layla's
bottle just out of reach
while I moved her feet.
Trembling like a little old
man. she had to concentrate
very hard.
The lirst time l saw her
gc:t tip and move on he~· own
made me very emotional.
Surrounded by dogs. she'd
select a spot on the lawn and

graze lying down . Could
she ever be a ·normal cow?
Williams said progress
would be slow but gradual.
Because most clients can't
devote much time ·to one
sickly calf, the project fascinated him .
·
The dairy where I bought
Layla's milk. had a healthy
Holstein with a single bad
quarter on her udder, making her unsuitable for a
milking machine, but fine
for raising calves. Would I
like to buy her? Along with
a n'eighbor who'd had a ·
black Ang~s calf orphaned
by a lighting strike, I did.
Now Layla had a proper
family. The Holsiein immediately adopted the black
Angus and the white
Charolais as her own. At
first she seemed puzzlect by
Layla's failure to shadow
her like· a normal calf.
' However, sweet, patient
Molly adjusted. When she
lies down. she lies by Layla,
conscientiously grooming
and teaching her the rudiments of Cow Ill l.
At five months, Layla still
grazes lying down. She
remains confident that proper nouri shment comes front
a bottle. I've learned to milk
her step10other twice daily
as she looks on, impatiently
licking her lips.
·
For the time being then ,
Lay! a has two mommies.
(Arkar1sas
DemocrarGazette columnist Gene
Lrons . is a National
Maga:)ne An·ard winner
and co - ~wtlwr of "ThP
Huulin x of the Presidem··
(SI. Martin's Press, 2(}()()).
Yoll can e-mail Lyons at
e!lge11e/yons 2@ yahoo .com.)

'

Honors

Ours, Sarah Schoonover;
Eighth grade: *Joshua
Blevins, *Madison Crank,
*Alex Haddad, *Elise Long;
Ninth grade: *Jennifer
Blevins, *Katie Blodgett,
*Paul Miller, *Ben Tillis;
Tenth grade: Dame! Irwin,
*Kathleen Long, Kyle Scott;
Eleventh grade: *Lindsey
Miller, *Melissa Stump;
Twelfth grade: *Annee
Carman, Tina Sargent, Alex
Trent, Andrea VanMeter. ·
Smdents making the B
Honor Roll for the first nine
weeks were: Third grade:
Austin Sherrill, Cody Troy;
Fourth grade: Drew Hall , .
Sy\lney Hood, Amber
Jacquard ,' Noah Jenkins,

.'

Jacob Riley; Fifth grade:
MaKenzie Case, Morgah
Jenkins , Hannah Westfall;
Sixth
grade:
Daml~
Ballantyne, Re~kah Bus~;
Seventh grade:
Logan
Edmonds, Cole Parenti,
Maggie . Westfall, ·Scotty
Wood; Eighth grade: Richai9
Bowman, Chance Burlesoil,
Caleb Lewis; Ninth grade:
Peter Carman, Maegan
Jewell, Chelsea Johnson,
Joshua Scott; Ten.th grade:
Allie Hamilton , Alex~
Henry. Elicia Irwin; Eleventh
grade: .Jared Bartley, Hali
Burleson; Twelfth grade:
Joey Absten, Braunlyft
Carter, Luke Hamad, Henry
Patrick, Kyle Scputen. .

Southern from Page At
which the administration
says costs the average
employee $20 a month.
· Still,
overall, . the
Commission felt confident
.enough to vote in favor of
the district's release. Uhrig
thanked members of the
Comniission, local . school
board, some previous
administrations aitd the current administration for their
work on the matter. Uhrig

particularly pointed out th'e
work of Treasurer Ro~
Johnson and Superintendeiu
Tony Deem, saying they
"do see the big picture."
Deem has always beeh
quick to give others theiT
due. saying his administra~
lion has tried to continue the
hard work done ·by many
others who helped lay th~
groundwork ·to get the district out of debt.
:

•
•

Paving rrom

TIPPERS PlAINS

At Tu '
,.mbereth o ff-1
Plaine VFW Hllll
Eppe,.
at In or Cany"Out
Adulta $8 o c 1;"'·867-8253
Turlc~lf, Maa,.: ~'!:..':.!:
lnclua.S

Lending rrom Page At
of taking and re-paying payday advances, often
loans at one check-,cashing business to pay off
,
.
at others.
industry, said the 'referendum

l'f:. . lng,

o,_.n a

Koll, Drink

.."'• :-•
raYif, NOOdlea

rB:~~c;!"• Sla~,

EVERYONE WELCOME

'

'

.

n

S11•r.a11

•••• ...JW

�. . . . . . .""""'- · --.,

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

Page A6

·The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, November 6, 2008

www.mydailysentinel.com

Thursday, November 6, 2008

Marshall's ·music faculty
to perforln classical work
HUNTINGTON, . W.Va.
Marshall University
music faculty members will
perform "L'Histoire du
Soldat" ("The Soldier's
Tale") by Igor Stravinsky at
8 p.m. Sunday in the Smith
Recital
Hall on the
Huntington campus. The piece , a 1918 thearrical work to be read, played,
or danced, is the folk tale of
a · soldier who is going
home . from the war and
trades his fiddle for a book
that predicts the economy.
The story is told by three
characters: the soldier
(played by Dr. Larry
Stickler), the devil (played
by Dr. David Castleberry)
and the narrator (Dr.
Jeffrey Pappas).
Prior to the perfonnance,
Dr, Vicki Stroeher, who
teaches music history at
Marshall, Will s~ak about
Stravinsky and 'L'Histoire
'
· .
du Soldat." ·
"Igor Stravinsky is one of
the most interesting composers of -the early 20th
century, both in tenns of
his works and his life
story," Stroeher said. "
'L'Histoire du Soldat' dates
from that time during

ular

GALLIPOLIS - Not all the ghosts "Sorcerer's Avprentice" (immortalTickets to the OVS "Halloween
and goblins slink back to their world ized in Disney s original "Fantasia"), Spooktacular" are available through the
after Halloween. Some have been the spooky "Witches Ride" from Ariel-Ann Carson Dater Performinjl Arts
biding in the dark corners of the Ariel "Hansel and Gretel," and Johann Centre at 426 Second Ave., Gallipolis.
Theatre, waiting for one more night Strauss Jr.'s sparkling overture to "Die · The box office is open 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.
Fledennaus" ("The Bat"). Malcolm Thesd;lys, Wednesdays and Fridays; 10
ef fun .
The . Ohio Valley Symphony's Arnold's "Tain O'Shanter Overture" a.m. to 6 p.m. Thursdays; and from 90
·
"Halloween Spooktacular" is becom- and the theme to "Ghostbusters" cele~ minutes.before performances.
ing .a southeast Ohio tradition. The brate the ghoulish holiday.
·
Prices are $22, $20 for seniors and
otchestra 's members ~ including
There are two beloved excerpts from $10 for students. Call (740) 446-ARTS
Music Director Ray Fowler on the Grieg's "Peer Gynt," "Ase's Death" and (2787).1ickets are also available online
podium - trade their tails and bow "In the Hall of the Mountain King." A at ww~·&lt;?hiovalle_ys:ymphony.org. .
ljes for whimsical or ghoulish cos- medley of tunes from Andrew Lloyd
A mmr subscnpllon to the remamtumes as they offer concert-goers a Webber's "Phantom of the Opera," now ing four concerts in the 2008-09 Ohio
full plate of musical tricks and treats . the most successful entertainment ven- Valley Symphony season is still availThis year's is at 8 p.m. Saturday at lUre in history, rounds out the evening. able. Prices range from $40 for stuthe Ariel-Arm Carson Dater Performing
"Halloween dents up to $220 for family passes
November's
Spooktacular" reflects the OVS mis- · admitting two adults and as many
Arts Centre in downtown Gallipolis.
: It's ali p~ of the OV$ I?hilosophy sion to bring great music ,played by ...children as they have in their families.
of making orchestral mus1c easy to great artists to southeast Ohio - all · Sllindard adult season tickets cost
- . · .. ·
· •·
lpve, according to OVS Manager Lora . wl:lile making orchestral music easy to' ·$8{1, seniors $72.:
jc;~ye. The public is enC()J.lr(\ied . tQ.~" ,§~nding for t~e Ohio Valley
I:.ynn .~J!I, .. 1.,- .,
•
.
.
"It g1ves the audience a chance to attend OVS rehearsals for free at 7-10 'Symphony is provtded by the Ann
see that we're ali real people up there p.m. Friday and 1-4 p.m. Saturday. Carson Dater Endowment. Further
on stage, and it. gives us a chance to Open rehearsals are an excellent way support is provided· by the Ohio Arts
show off our individual personalities," to grow comfortable with symphonic Council, a state agency that funds and
music. Young children unable to sit supports quality arts ex~riences to
she said.
Among the works on the eclectic through an entire concert can benefit strengthen Ohio commumties culturalmusical menu are Paul Dukas ' magical from time spent at the open rehearsal. ly, educational.ly and economical.ly.

World War I when composers were having difficulties finding enoug_h
musicians to perform the1r
large-scale
works .
Stravinsky answered that
. problem with a chamber
work - which is the perfeet medium t~ showcase
Marshall . must~ f~culty.
The story 1s capuvatmg for
all audiences, and the
music, written in the 'cafe
style' cif Paris, is universally appealing,"
Dr. W. Edwin B!ngham,
professor of mus1c, w1ll
conduct the perfotrnance,
which will also include
Marsh .11 faculty members
Dr. Elizabeth Reed Smith,
violin; Dr. Ann Marie
Bingham, clarinet;' Kay
Lawson , bassoon; Martin
Saunders,. trumpet; Dr.
Michael Stroeher, tr:&gt;m·
bone; and James Steven
Hall, percussion. They will
.be joined by Marshall
alumnus Jason McNeel,
contrabass.
.
.

QAUUPOICJS - A -

_...-

d lpDI1iig ..... irM:Itmo

....

.,_,
....,.

Fdctl¥ Novlmbor l

Foolllotl
Chapmanville at Point Pleasant 7:30
p.m.
~lo at Wahama, 7:30 p.m.
Hundred at Hannan, 7:30 p.m.

Pairings for the
OHSAA regional
football sernifmals
Q'VINON ' ·

Solunloy, 3p.m.

H~ber Hta. Wayne (8·3) vs. Cin.
Colerain Ull-1 ), Nippert Stadium ·
A l l - llol\lrdoy, 7 p.m.
~~~.'Gienville {11.()) vs. creve. St.

U

(10.1), Lakewood StadiUm;
(9-2) vo. Strongsville (10.1),
Byers Field; Twinsburg (9-2)
N. Canton Hoover ((10.1), Canton

vs.
Fawcett Staalum; BrunSWicl&lt; (1().1) 111.
canton GlenOak (11-2), MassUton Paul

Brown Tiger Stadium; WOrthington
Kilbourne (11-2) vs. Hilliard Davidoon
(10·1), OubUn Coffman Stadium;
Pickerington Co~trol (1 1-0) vs. Upper
Arlington (10.1), Gahanna Lincoln
Stadium; Cln. Elder (10.1) vs. Clayton
!'«&gt;rthmont (10.1), Nippert Stadium

AP SPORTS WRITER.

II
2) vs. Newark l.il*lng Val.
Philadelphia Woody Hoyos
~tadlum; Co~. Eastmoor Acad. (10.1)
ve. Thornville Sherk:lan (11·0).
OeSafes Alumni Stadium; Chillicothe
(11-3) va. Ctrdavllle LOgan Elm (1 Hl),
Teayo Valay Viking Sllltdl"m·

..

ADDISON - Addaville Elementary PTO will ho~t its
first annual basket games on Saturday at the schoql. Doors
open at 5 p.m., and games start at 6'.
Twenty games are available: for $20. There will be three
big games for $5 each, with prizs valued at over $100.
There will be full concessions, and split the pot and special
·
·
raffle are scheduled.

Women's heatlh fair
GALLIPOLIS - A women's· health fair will be held
Saturday at the Holzer Center for Cance( Care from 10 a.m.
untll2 p.m.
·
The fair includes free screenings, tea samples, massa~es,
makpu, skin care, door prizes and a Longaberger drawmg.
Refreshments will be offered.
.

West Virginia artists now on display atFAC

For information, call (740) 446-5474&gt;or (800) 821-3860.

Play set Nov. 15

Work by 10 West Virginia artists can be seen at the
"Wild and Wonderful" exhibit, on display at the French
Art Colony in Gallipolis through Nov. 30. The show features a variety of .two-dimensional.pieces of exceptional caliber, including."Over and Under: An Allegory," a
cut woodblock print by Mary Grassel!, and "Diverse
Species," a woodcut by J.P. Owens,

POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. - The Heights and
Community Players will present "Hillbilly Blessings," a
religious comedy play in three acts, at 7 p.m. Saturday,
Nov. 15.
The play, written and directed by the Rev. Nancy Hamm,
will take place in the auditorium at Point Pleasant Junior
Senior Hi~h School.
Admisston is free, but a free-will offering will~ accepted for the Mason County Samaritan Fund.
·

Joy i&lt;ocmoudlphotoa

Stuart's sets fund-raiser

.

BY RUSTY MILLER

Holiday baiaar

'Wlld and Wonderful'

team's many woes.
"Nobody saw it coming;·· linebacker Willie McGinest said. '"I
don't think it's one person ·why
we're losing. When we lose , we lose
Denver at Cleveland, tonight
as a team."
A sixth-round draft pick , who
How long they'll be cheering .is worked his way up from No. 3 on
the depth chart all the way to the Pro
anyone's guess.
Crennel's decision _ at least Bowl in three seasons, Anderson
that's the party line _ to ' bench was. blindsided by Crennel's choice
to hand the ball off to Quinn . Back
Derek Anderson in favor Qu1'nn to be'm~ an understu dy, A
. nderson
could be a risky gamble . for the · wouldn t bite when asked if he felt
underachieving Browns (3-5), who Crennel acted alone in making the
thought it was so nice to have two decision.
"I respect Romeo and what he's
quality quarterbacks and now have
to hold their breath that they have at done," said Anderson, who signed a
least one.
three-year, $24 million free-agent
Anderson's demotion sent shock- deal to stay with Cleveland, "and
waves through the Browns' locker that's as far as I want to go."
room as teammates wondered why
Crennel, a former defensive coorhe was being singled out for the dinator, rebuffed the notion that he

.

Entertainment Briefs

Basket games·Saturday

CLEVELAND (AP) - Ready or
not, here comes Brady Quinn.
"Knock wOOd, I hope the guy
doesn't fall on his face," Browns
coach Romeo Crennel said.
How's that for confidence? ·
Following another strange few
days in Cleveland, where foothill
freakishness has ruled for years,
Quinn, the former Notre Dame golden boy quarterback with Ohio pedigree and pop idol looks, will make
his first NFL·start on Thursday night
as 'the struggling Browns host the
Denver Broncos.
The moment he emerges from the
tunnel in his No. 10 jersey in front
of a national TV audience, Quinn
will be serenaded by chants of "Brady. Bra-dy," from adoring Browns
fans, who fell for the first-round
pick before he completed his frrsl
pass as a pro.

Diverse Species

Gate&amp;
I
Yoooga. Ursuline (1
Stadium: Kirtland
(1Hl)
Columblene Crelt&gt;1aw (1().1), Niles
Bo Roln Stadium/ Ardlbola (9-2) vs.
Findlay
Ltbarty-Benton
(11..0) ,
BowNng Green Stale Unhlorslty Doyt
Parry Stadium; Cols. Ready ·(7·2) vs.
f'ortsmoulh W. (-11.0), Logan Chieftain
Stadium; Ball Wberty·Unlon (10.1) .va.
Wheeleroi&gt;Jrg (10.1), Jackson Holzer
Reid; W. Jefforaon (9-2) ve. Ctn. Hilla
Chrltllen Acad. (11-0), -Kettering
Roush Sladlum; wa~vlllo (11-2) va.
:Marla Stein Marion Local (9·2),
Kettering Roush Stadium

Michigan first-year coach
Rich Rodriguez has kept his
composure this season
desptte leading college football's winningest program to
its first losing season in four
decades.
But Rodriguez seemed to
approach a breaking point
earlier this week.
'Tall want to make
everything so much drama,''
Rodriguez
snapped
at
reporters. "This is unbelievable. Every time there's
something said, everybody
wants to make a big deal.out
of something and make so
much drama about everything.
"That's why· I don't tell
y'all too much. You think I.
tell you a lot. I think I've
b¢eo pretty transparent, but
sometimes I 'don't because I
don't know what y •all are
going to take and make a big
deal out of a wee little
thing," he said. "Seems \.ike
for nine, 10, months that's
happened. Oh, he said this .
Let's psychoanalyze this.,
psychoanalyze that.'
''We're not going to a
bowl game, but do you think
we're going to pack it in1
You think the guys are a
bun9h of quitters1 I don't
think we've got any quitters.
You think the coaches are
going to pack it in, not show
up for work? Golly."
The ·
once-mighty
Wolverines (2-7, 1-4 Big
Ten) have lost five straight
- since rallying from a 19point, second-half deficit to
beat Wisconsin - and will
have to win at Minnesota,
against Northwestern and at
Ohio State to · avoid a
~hool-record eighth loss.
DRIVER'S SEAT: Penn
State is in prime position to

West Virginia Prep Football

740-446-5381

NELSONVILLE - The annual fall fund-raiser of
Stuart's Opera House to be held 8:30 p.m. on Saturday,
Nov. 18 will feature music from soul legend Bettye
LaVette.
LaVette is one of the greatest soul singers in American
music history, possessed of an incredibly expressive voice
that one moment will exude; 11: formidable level of strength
·and intensity and the 11ext Will appear vulnerable, reflective, reeking of heartbreak.
two types of tickets available for the evening.
There
There are a limited number of tickets for a seat in the first
four rows, heavy hors d'oeuvres,drinks, and more,at $100.
Reserved tickets fOr the concert only may also be purchased at $25 each.
There will a)so be a silent auction featuring items from
area businesses and individuals throughout the evening .

Point Pleasant looking for first
outright league title since 1985
Wahama fighting for playoff berth
STAFF REPORT
· SPORTS@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

· For more infonnation and tickets, call (740) 753-1924 or
visit till! web site at www.stuartsoperahouse .org.

Medical Excellence.
Loall Caring:
Lorry Crumlltle photo

www.holzercliriic.com
•

Point Pleasant running back Allan Wasonga (1) runs around the Sissonville defense dur·
ing a Week 2 non-league football contest at Sanders Stadium 1n Point Plea$ant, W.Va .
. . . . . . _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

•

.

Week 11 Roundup

At Holzer Cltnic, You Can Always ·Count on ...

HOLZER
CLINIC

Please see Quinn. 86

captui:C its third Big Ten title
and first outright since 1994.
The Nittany Lions (9-0, 5·0) play at Iowa (5-4, 2-3) on
Saturday before closing at
Beaver Stadium against
Indiana (3-6, 1-4) and
Michigan State (8-2, 5-1).
Should the Lions falter, a
couple of teams are hanging
around, ready to pounce.
·
. Michigan State has games
remaining against Purdue
(3-6., 1-4) at home this week
and the.n a bye week before
going to Happy Valley.
Ohio State (7-2, 4-1) hits
the
road
to
play
Northwestern (7-2, 3-2) on
Saturday and Illinois (5-4,
3-3) before its annual curtain-closer against Michigan
(2-7, 1-4).
In case of a two-way tie
involving two teams, the
conference's
Bowl
Championship Series repre--~
sentatlve · would be determined by the head-to-head
meeting. Penn State beat
Ohio State, Ohio State
rolled over Michigan State,
and Penn State and
Michigan State meet on
Nov. 22.
Should the race end in a
three-way deadlock, there's
a long list of tiebreakers
(see: www.bigten.org) to
determine who grabs the
conference's top bowl spot.
PENN
. LIONIZING
STATE: Penn State was No.
2 in 1999 when it came to
Iowa .and beat the Hawkeyes
in Kirk Ferentz 's first year
as a head coach. The Nittany
Lions who come to Kinnick
Stadium this weekend are
No. 3. But that's just a number:
"This is a much stronger
team," Ferentz said. "When
,
AP photo
you talk about November .
records , November polls, Michigan coach Rich Rodriguez wipes his face with a towel on the sidelines during
the fourth quarter of a 46-17Ioss to Penn Slate in a. NCAA college football game in
PIHH IH 8IIJ , ... 86
State College, Pa.

are

Over and Under: An Allegory

succumbed to public pressure in
swapping QBs. But he acknowledged hearing the chants for Quinn
and the boos which reigned down on
Anderson after he threw a late interception in Sunday's loss to
Baltimore .
Anderson played superbly for
three quarters before making a poor
decision and throwing the ball
directly to linebacker Terrell Suggs.
who returned it for a TO to seal the
Ravens' 37-27 win.
"Generally I don't think they have
m~ telephone number," Crennel
sa1d. "I haven't been fielding calls
from the fans. I made the decision.
what I think is best and what I think
needs to be done."
Quinn's ascension leaves the
Browns with a much smaller safety

Big Ten Notebook: RichRod losing his poise with struggling UM

For more information
about this performance,
contact Vicki Stroeher by
phone at (304) 696-6437 or
by
e-mail
at
stroeherv@marshall.edu

GALLIPOLIS - A holiday bazaar has been scheduled
for Saturday at Christ United Methodist Church, 9688 Ohio
7 South, from 10 a .m. until 2 p.m.
Crafts, candy; baked goods, "second time around," and
lunch of beans and cornbread as well as hot dogs and
desserts will be available.

BroWiis h~d off to Q~ for matchup with Broncos

_L , __

_ _ -----·--

·-·

------

PLEASANT,
.POINT
W.Va. - It bas been-a long
time since Point Pleasant
has played a game with this
much meaning , but for the
2008 edition of the Big
Blacks football team, Friday
night's challenge is being
greeted with open arms.
After nearly a decade ' of
playoff-less football, the
gritty, in-your-face Big
Black football of old has
returned to Point Pleasant
and now the young men in
Red imd Black will have an
opP?rtUnity .to do something
Fnday night that no team at
Point Pleasant has done
since 1985 - win a league
title.
But !hats not all.
The Big Black.s, with a
win over fourth ranked
Chapmanville.. might also
get an opportunity to host a
first-round pla~Qff game for
the first time smce 1979.
Talk about a big night.

And PPHS will have the
opportunity to pull off both
feats Friday night with a win
over Chapmanville (8- 1, 3-1
Cardinal) in the friendly
.confines
of
Sanders
Stadium.
Point Pleasant (6-3, 4-0
. Cardinal) has unofficially
punched its fi~st trip to the
postseason since '1998
thanks to big wins over No.
3 Wayne (22-2 1). Herbert
Hoover (41-15), Poca (4112), Midland Trail (64-28),
Tug Valley (41-6) and
Sissonville (42-10) while
losses to No. 5 Ravenswood
(24-21), South Point (34-26)
and GalliaAcademy (28-21)
have prevented the team
from already holding down
a spot in the top eight, which
is where the team will need
to ,finish to host a playoff
game.
With last weeks win the
Big Blacks moved up one
spot _to lOth in the SS'AC
standings . sharing the spot
PIHse see W.V•~ 82

�. . . . . . .""""'- · --.,

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

Page A6

·The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, November 6, 2008

www.mydailysentinel.com

Thursday, November 6, 2008

Marshall's ·music faculty
to perforln classical work
HUNTINGTON, . W.Va.
Marshall University
music faculty members will
perform "L'Histoire du
Soldat" ("The Soldier's
Tale") by Igor Stravinsky at
8 p.m. Sunday in the Smith
Recital
Hall on the
Huntington campus. The piece , a 1918 thearrical work to be read, played,
or danced, is the folk tale of
a · soldier who is going
home . from the war and
trades his fiddle for a book
that predicts the economy.
The story is told by three
characters: the soldier
(played by Dr. Larry
Stickler), the devil (played
by Dr. David Castleberry)
and the narrator (Dr.
Jeffrey Pappas).
Prior to the perfonnance,
Dr, Vicki Stroeher, who
teaches music history at
Marshall, Will s~ak about
Stravinsky and 'L'Histoire
'
· .
du Soldat." ·
"Igor Stravinsky is one of
the most interesting composers of -the early 20th
century, both in tenns of
his works and his life
story," Stroeher said. "
'L'Histoire du Soldat' dates
from that time during

ular

GALLIPOLIS - Not all the ghosts "Sorcerer's Avprentice" (immortalTickets to the OVS "Halloween
and goblins slink back to their world ized in Disney s original "Fantasia"), Spooktacular" are available through the
after Halloween. Some have been the spooky "Witches Ride" from Ariel-Ann Carson Dater Performinjl Arts
biding in the dark corners of the Ariel "Hansel and Gretel," and Johann Centre at 426 Second Ave., Gallipolis.
Theatre, waiting for one more night Strauss Jr.'s sparkling overture to "Die · The box office is open 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.
Fledennaus" ("The Bat"). Malcolm Thesd;lys, Wednesdays and Fridays; 10
ef fun .
The . Ohio Valley Symphony's Arnold's "Tain O'Shanter Overture" a.m. to 6 p.m. Thursdays; and from 90
·
"Halloween Spooktacular" is becom- and the theme to "Ghostbusters" cele~ minutes.before performances.
ing .a southeast Ohio tradition. The brate the ghoulish holiday.
·
Prices are $22, $20 for seniors and
otchestra 's members ~ including
There are two beloved excerpts from $10 for students. Call (740) 446-ARTS
Music Director Ray Fowler on the Grieg's "Peer Gynt," "Ase's Death" and (2787).1ickets are also available online
podium - trade their tails and bow "In the Hall of the Mountain King." A at ww~·&lt;?hiovalle_ys:ymphony.org. .
ljes for whimsical or ghoulish cos- medley of tunes from Andrew Lloyd
A mmr subscnpllon to the remamtumes as they offer concert-goers a Webber's "Phantom of the Opera," now ing four concerts in the 2008-09 Ohio
full plate of musical tricks and treats . the most successful entertainment ven- Valley Symphony season is still availThis year's is at 8 p.m. Saturday at lUre in history, rounds out the evening. able. Prices range from $40 for stuthe Ariel-Arm Carson Dater Performing
"Halloween dents up to $220 for family passes
November's
Spooktacular" reflects the OVS mis- · admitting two adults and as many
Arts Centre in downtown Gallipolis.
: It's ali p~ of the OV$ I?hilosophy sion to bring great music ,played by ...children as they have in their families.
of making orchestral mus1c easy to great artists to southeast Ohio - all · Sllindard adult season tickets cost
- . · .. ·
· •·
lpve, according to OVS Manager Lora . wl:lile making orchestral music easy to' ·$8{1, seniors $72.:
jc;~ye. The public is enC()J.lr(\ied . tQ.~" ,§~nding for t~e Ohio Valley
I:.ynn .~J!I, .. 1.,- .,
•
.
.
"It g1ves the audience a chance to attend OVS rehearsals for free at 7-10 'Symphony is provtded by the Ann
see that we're ali real people up there p.m. Friday and 1-4 p.m. Saturday. Carson Dater Endowment. Further
on stage, and it. gives us a chance to Open rehearsals are an excellent way support is provided· by the Ohio Arts
show off our individual personalities," to grow comfortable with symphonic Council, a state agency that funds and
music. Young children unable to sit supports quality arts ex~riences to
she said.
Among the works on the eclectic through an entire concert can benefit strengthen Ohio commumties culturalmusical menu are Paul Dukas ' magical from time spent at the open rehearsal. ly, educational.ly and economical.ly.

World War I when composers were having difficulties finding enoug_h
musicians to perform the1r
large-scale
works .
Stravinsky answered that
. problem with a chamber
work - which is the perfeet medium t~ showcase
Marshall . must~ f~culty.
The story 1s capuvatmg for
all audiences, and the
music, written in the 'cafe
style' cif Paris, is universally appealing,"
Dr. W. Edwin B!ngham,
professor of mus1c, w1ll
conduct the perfotrnance,
which will also include
Marsh .11 faculty members
Dr. Elizabeth Reed Smith,
violin; Dr. Ann Marie
Bingham, clarinet;' Kay
Lawson , bassoon; Martin
Saunders,. trumpet; Dr.
Michael Stroeher, tr:&gt;m·
bone; and James Steven
Hall, percussion. They will
.be joined by Marshall
alumnus Jason McNeel,
contrabass.
.
.

QAUUPOICJS - A -

_...-

d lpDI1iig ..... irM:Itmo

....

.,_,
....,.

Fdctl¥ Novlmbor l

Foolllotl
Chapmanville at Point Pleasant 7:30
p.m.
~lo at Wahama, 7:30 p.m.
Hundred at Hannan, 7:30 p.m.

Pairings for the
OHSAA regional
football sernifmals
Q'VINON ' ·

Solunloy, 3p.m.

H~ber Hta. Wayne (8·3) vs. Cin.
Colerain Ull-1 ), Nippert Stadium ·
A l l - llol\lrdoy, 7 p.m.
~~~.'Gienville {11.()) vs. creve. St.

U

(10.1), Lakewood StadiUm;
(9-2) vo. Strongsville (10.1),
Byers Field; Twinsburg (9-2)
N. Canton Hoover ((10.1), Canton

vs.
Fawcett Staalum; BrunSWicl&lt; (1().1) 111.
canton GlenOak (11-2), MassUton Paul

Brown Tiger Stadium; WOrthington
Kilbourne (11-2) vs. Hilliard Davidoon
(10·1), OubUn Coffman Stadium;
Pickerington Co~trol (1 1-0) vs. Upper
Arlington (10.1), Gahanna Lincoln
Stadium; Cln. Elder (10.1) vs. Clayton
!'«&gt;rthmont (10.1), Nippert Stadium

AP SPORTS WRITER.

II
2) vs. Newark l.il*lng Val.
Philadelphia Woody Hoyos
~tadlum; Co~. Eastmoor Acad. (10.1)
ve. Thornville Sherk:lan (11·0).
OeSafes Alumni Stadium; Chillicothe
(11-3) va. Ctrdavllle LOgan Elm (1 Hl),
Teayo Valay Viking Sllltdl"m·

..

ADDISON - Addaville Elementary PTO will ho~t its
first annual basket games on Saturday at the schoql. Doors
open at 5 p.m., and games start at 6'.
Twenty games are available: for $20. There will be three
big games for $5 each, with prizs valued at over $100.
There will be full concessions, and split the pot and special
·
·
raffle are scheduled.

Women's heatlh fair
GALLIPOLIS - A women's· health fair will be held
Saturday at the Holzer Center for Cance( Care from 10 a.m.
untll2 p.m.
·
The fair includes free screenings, tea samples, massa~es,
makpu, skin care, door prizes and a Longaberger drawmg.
Refreshments will be offered.
.

West Virginia artists now on display atFAC

For information, call (740) 446-5474&gt;or (800) 821-3860.

Play set Nov. 15

Work by 10 West Virginia artists can be seen at the
"Wild and Wonderful" exhibit, on display at the French
Art Colony in Gallipolis through Nov. 30. The show features a variety of .two-dimensional.pieces of exceptional caliber, including."Over and Under: An Allegory," a
cut woodblock print by Mary Grassel!, and "Diverse
Species," a woodcut by J.P. Owens,

POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. - The Heights and
Community Players will present "Hillbilly Blessings," a
religious comedy play in three acts, at 7 p.m. Saturday,
Nov. 15.
The play, written and directed by the Rev. Nancy Hamm,
will take place in the auditorium at Point Pleasant Junior
Senior Hi~h School.
Admisston is free, but a free-will offering will~ accepted for the Mason County Samaritan Fund.
·

Joy i&lt;ocmoudlphotoa

Stuart's sets fund-raiser

.

BY RUSTY MILLER

Holiday baiaar

'Wlld and Wonderful'

team's many woes.
"Nobody saw it coming;·· linebacker Willie McGinest said. '"I
don't think it's one person ·why
we're losing. When we lose , we lose
Denver at Cleveland, tonight
as a team."
A sixth-round draft pick , who
How long they'll be cheering .is worked his way up from No. 3 on
the depth chart all the way to the Pro
anyone's guess.
Crennel's decision _ at least Bowl in three seasons, Anderson
that's the party line _ to ' bench was. blindsided by Crennel's choice
to hand the ball off to Quinn . Back
Derek Anderson in favor Qu1'nn to be'm~ an understu dy, A
. nderson
could be a risky gamble . for the · wouldn t bite when asked if he felt
underachieving Browns (3-5), who Crennel acted alone in making the
thought it was so nice to have two decision.
"I respect Romeo and what he's
quality quarterbacks and now have
to hold their breath that they have at done," said Anderson, who signed a
least one.
three-year, $24 million free-agent
Anderson's demotion sent shock- deal to stay with Cleveland, "and
waves through the Browns' locker that's as far as I want to go."
room as teammates wondered why
Crennel, a former defensive coorhe was being singled out for the dinator, rebuffed the notion that he

.

Entertainment Briefs

Basket games·Saturday

CLEVELAND (AP) - Ready or
not, here comes Brady Quinn.
"Knock wOOd, I hope the guy
doesn't fall on his face," Browns
coach Romeo Crennel said.
How's that for confidence? ·
Following another strange few
days in Cleveland, where foothill
freakishness has ruled for years,
Quinn, the former Notre Dame golden boy quarterback with Ohio pedigree and pop idol looks, will make
his first NFL·start on Thursday night
as 'the struggling Browns host the
Denver Broncos.
The moment he emerges from the
tunnel in his No. 10 jersey in front
of a national TV audience, Quinn
will be serenaded by chants of "Brady. Bra-dy," from adoring Browns
fans, who fell for the first-round
pick before he completed his frrsl
pass as a pro.

Diverse Species

Gate&amp;
I
Yoooga. Ursuline (1
Stadium: Kirtland
(1Hl)
Columblene Crelt&gt;1aw (1().1), Niles
Bo Roln Stadium/ Ardlbola (9-2) vs.
Findlay
Ltbarty-Benton
(11..0) ,
BowNng Green Stale Unhlorslty Doyt
Parry Stadium; Cols. Ready ·(7·2) vs.
f'ortsmoulh W. (-11.0), Logan Chieftain
Stadium; Ball Wberty·Unlon (10.1) .va.
Wheeleroi&gt;Jrg (10.1), Jackson Holzer
Reid; W. Jefforaon (9-2) ve. Ctn. Hilla
Chrltllen Acad. (11-0), -Kettering
Roush Sladlum; wa~vlllo (11-2) va.
:Marla Stein Marion Local (9·2),
Kettering Roush Stadium

Michigan first-year coach
Rich Rodriguez has kept his
composure this season
desptte leading college football's winningest program to
its first losing season in four
decades.
But Rodriguez seemed to
approach a breaking point
earlier this week.
'Tall want to make
everything so much drama,''
Rodriguez
snapped
at
reporters. "This is unbelievable. Every time there's
something said, everybody
wants to make a big deal.out
of something and make so
much drama about everything.
"That's why· I don't tell
y'all too much. You think I.
tell you a lot. I think I've
b¢eo pretty transparent, but
sometimes I 'don't because I
don't know what y •all are
going to take and make a big
deal out of a wee little
thing," he said. "Seems \.ike
for nine, 10, months that's
happened. Oh, he said this .
Let's psychoanalyze this.,
psychoanalyze that.'
''We're not going to a
bowl game, but do you think
we're going to pack it in1
You think the guys are a
bun9h of quitters1 I don't
think we've got any quitters.
You think the coaches are
going to pack it in, not show
up for work? Golly."
The ·
once-mighty
Wolverines (2-7, 1-4 Big
Ten) have lost five straight
- since rallying from a 19point, second-half deficit to
beat Wisconsin - and will
have to win at Minnesota,
against Northwestern and at
Ohio State to · avoid a
~hool-record eighth loss.
DRIVER'S SEAT: Penn
State is in prime position to

West Virginia Prep Football

740-446-5381

NELSONVILLE - The annual fall fund-raiser of
Stuart's Opera House to be held 8:30 p.m. on Saturday,
Nov. 18 will feature music from soul legend Bettye
LaVette.
LaVette is one of the greatest soul singers in American
music history, possessed of an incredibly expressive voice
that one moment will exude; 11: formidable level of strength
·and intensity and the 11ext Will appear vulnerable, reflective, reeking of heartbreak.
two types of tickets available for the evening.
There
There are a limited number of tickets for a seat in the first
four rows, heavy hors d'oeuvres,drinks, and more,at $100.
Reserved tickets fOr the concert only may also be purchased at $25 each.
There will a)so be a silent auction featuring items from
area businesses and individuals throughout the evening .

Point Pleasant looking for first
outright league title since 1985
Wahama fighting for playoff berth
STAFF REPORT
· SPORTS@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

· For more infonnation and tickets, call (740) 753-1924 or
visit till! web site at www.stuartsoperahouse .org.

Medical Excellence.
Loall Caring:
Lorry Crumlltle photo

www.holzercliriic.com
•

Point Pleasant running back Allan Wasonga (1) runs around the Sissonville defense dur·
ing a Week 2 non-league football contest at Sanders Stadium 1n Point Plea$ant, W.Va .
. . . . . . _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

•

.

Week 11 Roundup

At Holzer Cltnic, You Can Always ·Count on ...

HOLZER
CLINIC

Please see Quinn. 86

captui:C its third Big Ten title
and first outright since 1994.
The Nittany Lions (9-0, 5·0) play at Iowa (5-4, 2-3) on
Saturday before closing at
Beaver Stadium against
Indiana (3-6, 1-4) and
Michigan State (8-2, 5-1).
Should the Lions falter, a
couple of teams are hanging
around, ready to pounce.
·
. Michigan State has games
remaining against Purdue
(3-6., 1-4) at home this week
and the.n a bye week before
going to Happy Valley.
Ohio State (7-2, 4-1) hits
the
road
to
play
Northwestern (7-2, 3-2) on
Saturday and Illinois (5-4,
3-3) before its annual curtain-closer against Michigan
(2-7, 1-4).
In case of a two-way tie
involving two teams, the
conference's
Bowl
Championship Series repre--~
sentatlve · would be determined by the head-to-head
meeting. Penn State beat
Ohio State, Ohio State
rolled over Michigan State,
and Penn State and
Michigan State meet on
Nov. 22.
Should the race end in a
three-way deadlock, there's
a long list of tiebreakers
(see: www.bigten.org) to
determine who grabs the
conference's top bowl spot.
PENN
. LIONIZING
STATE: Penn State was No.
2 in 1999 when it came to
Iowa .and beat the Hawkeyes
in Kirk Ferentz 's first year
as a head coach. The Nittany
Lions who come to Kinnick
Stadium this weekend are
No. 3. But that's just a number:
"This is a much stronger
team," Ferentz said. "When
,
AP photo
you talk about November .
records , November polls, Michigan coach Rich Rodriguez wipes his face with a towel on the sidelines during
the fourth quarter of a 46-17Ioss to Penn Slate in a. NCAA college football game in
PIHH IH 8IIJ , ... 86
State College, Pa.

are

Over and Under: An Allegory

succumbed to public pressure in
swapping QBs. But he acknowledged hearing the chants for Quinn
and the boos which reigned down on
Anderson after he threw a late interception in Sunday's loss to
Baltimore .
Anderson played superbly for
three quarters before making a poor
decision and throwing the ball
directly to linebacker Terrell Suggs.
who returned it for a TO to seal the
Ravens' 37-27 win.
"Generally I don't think they have
m~ telephone number," Crennel
sa1d. "I haven't been fielding calls
from the fans. I made the decision.
what I think is best and what I think
needs to be done."
Quinn's ascension leaves the
Browns with a much smaller safety

Big Ten Notebook: RichRod losing his poise with struggling UM

For more information
about this performance,
contact Vicki Stroeher by
phone at (304) 696-6437 or
by
e-mail
at
stroeherv@marshall.edu

GALLIPOLIS - A holiday bazaar has been scheduled
for Saturday at Christ United Methodist Church, 9688 Ohio
7 South, from 10 a .m. until 2 p.m.
Crafts, candy; baked goods, "second time around," and
lunch of beans and cornbread as well as hot dogs and
desserts will be available.

BroWiis h~d off to Q~ for matchup with Broncos

_L , __

_ _ -----·--

·-·

------

PLEASANT,
.POINT
W.Va. - It bas been-a long
time since Point Pleasant
has played a game with this
much meaning , but for the
2008 edition of the Big
Blacks football team, Friday
night's challenge is being
greeted with open arms.
After nearly a decade ' of
playoff-less football, the
gritty, in-your-face Big
Black football of old has
returned to Point Pleasant
and now the young men in
Red imd Black will have an
opP?rtUnity .to do something
Fnday night that no team at
Point Pleasant has done
since 1985 - win a league
title.
But !hats not all.
The Big Black.s, with a
win over fourth ranked
Chapmanville.. might also
get an opportunity to host a
first-round pla~Qff game for
the first time smce 1979.
Talk about a big night.

And PPHS will have the
opportunity to pull off both
feats Friday night with a win
over Chapmanville (8- 1, 3-1
Cardinal) in the friendly
.confines
of
Sanders
Stadium.
Point Pleasant (6-3, 4-0
. Cardinal) has unofficially
punched its fi~st trip to the
postseason since '1998
thanks to big wins over No.
3 Wayne (22-2 1). Herbert
Hoover (41-15), Poca (4112), Midland Trail (64-28),
Tug Valley (41-6) and
Sissonville (42-10) while
losses to No. 5 Ravenswood
(24-21), South Point (34-26)
and GalliaAcademy (28-21)
have prevented the team
from already holding down
a spot in the top eight, which
is where the team will need
to ,finish to host a playoff
game.
With last weeks win the
Big Blacks moved up one
spot _to lOth in the SS'AC
standings . sharing the spot
PIHse see W.V•~ 82

�-..-·-

Thursday, November 6, 2008

·www.mydiillysentinel.com

Page B2 • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydallysentlnel.com

·tlr:rtbune - Sentinel CLASSIFIED
Galli a
County,

OH

Bryon Walrero
Sports Write"r
Recm&amp; 87-23
Last Week: 8-2
(winnen in IMdd)
Chapmanville

.tt

. 1'!!iDLI'luunl

Larry C rum
Spons Writer
R &lt;cord: 77-33
Last Week: 8- 2
(winners in h2ld)
Chapnwwille

Jl

~

Charlie Shepherd
Paginaror
Record: 75-35
L!.st Week: fi- 4
· (winners in b.2l.d)

Scott Wolfe
Spo rts Corrc:~pontlt•m
R&lt;cord : 69-4 1
Last Week: 5-5
{winners ln .b.2!sl)

Gary Clark

(winners in h2ld)

Beth Sergent
Reporter
Record: 73-37.
l as t Week : 7-3
(win ners in h!!ld)

Jt

Chapm:mviUt• at

Ch~rnn.anvill\ dt

~

~

Spom C(lrrespondem

Record: 69-41
Last Week: 6-4
(winne rs in h.W.d)
ChapmJ1wUle

~ at

Pmnt PleAsAnt

~

B11ffal~ at
~

lilmllrnl

lilmllrnl

at Hamun

at H01nnan

at

Hannan

ar H;mnan

" Hawlan

" Hawlan

lrogtgg vs

Ironton vs

l.mn12.o \'!

'.lm&amp;Wm VS

New Lexjngto n

~

lr2ntlm v•

New Lexingto n

New Lt•x m.,.&gt;ton

New Lexington

Ironton vS
~

l og:m vs

logm v§

~

l&amp;Jii.u:ilk

i&amp;Cill V&lt;

Hu£falo at

l ogan

VS

~
Tr imble~

Buffalo

Jt

..lVAiwna

lilmllrnl

Bufralo

Jt

tblwlwl

H u ndred

Louisville

C hillicothe v~

Chillicot he ~

Ch1llicotlw vs

twiniJW.Jl.i=
Chilh t:othe ,.s

LQpg Elm

Loian Elm

LopnEim

I.ocan Elm .

Li!'Jerty Union
vs Wbcclenhurg ·

;s..,i

'IJ9ramo~th

vs .
tst

· :Eastmoor Academy
. vt

Sbtridap

Liberty U mon
vs Wheelersburg

Truuble

~

Hengjbal Rmr

Liberty U nion

3t ·

~

Tru nble V!&gt;
Haonjhal Rjver

vs Wbt•lenhura

Dt1ffalo

~ ·

Tn mble vs
Hanojbal Rjver

Bitbgp

Wah~ma

Hu ndred

Trimble vs .

Trimble vs
Haggjbal ftjvcr

twiniJW.Jl.i=

Chillicothe vs

Chillicothe vs

Lopo

Loa•n Elm

Elm

But1illo

.'lWwwl

.'lWwwl

Bufi3lo at
~

Hundred

Hlawlrlll

l:hmJirul

Ironton vs

lmntml \'S

lromon \ ' S •
~

· ~

C hillicotht· vs
Losen .Elm

Trimble vs

L&lt;&gt;llin1lk

Trimble vs

Tnmble vs

WIWLAd.i
Dally Jn .. Column: lhOO a.m.

Chillim the vs
Ipgap Elm

Chillkorhe vs
Lgiao Elm

Lib ertv Uni on
v~ WbeilenbutJ

Lib.:rty Union
n Wbrelcnburl

Bishop R eady vs

Bishop

m WRIIE At!.62

Libcrry Union

vs Whedcrshurg

BishoP Rea· d~V! ·

Bishop R e:a d~vs

Porhmoytbut

Portamoutbt~t

Portsmouth West

Porhmoutb West

Portsnwutb Wtat

Porramputh Weat

Ejlstmom Academy
vs Shrridan

Eas rm~or Academy
vs Sheridan

E astm~or Acdden ly

' EastmOgr Acade my
v~ Sheridan

Eastmoor Academy:

&amp;•tmoor Acadcmv

Easrm oor Academy

vs Sherjden

~ Sh e ridan

vs Sberjdan

She~an,

Bishop

R~;~d)'

vs

.v~

Sberjdap

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

992·2157

. Fax To (304) 675·5234
~~~~~----------~-

'

R e~dy \ ' 5

Sunci.o,

YOUR CLASSIFIED LINE AD NOTICED

~

Monday.· Frlday for Jn•ertlon
tn Next Day•a Pap•r · ·

In-Column : 9:00 a . m.
Sunday• ·Pap•r ,

Now you can have borders and graphics
~
added to your classified ads
-fl~
!'f'f',
Borders $3.00/per ad
I!
Graphics SOc for small
$1.00 for large

.

All Display: 12 Noon' 2
Busln••• Days Prior To
Publl&lt;:atlon
Sunday Dlaplav: 1:00 • ~ ··· ··
Thursday for Sund•y•

• All ads must be prepaid'

• Start 'four Adt With A Keyword • Include Complete
Duc:rlptlon • Include A Price • Avoid Abbrevl•tlont
• Inelude Phone Number And Addrut When Needtd

. Tu'i:ceSsliif'Ads
Should Include These Items
To Help Get Response ...

Liberty Union

Bjtb«tp Rudy· vs

Or Fax To

OeculifirU'

lhnnillll.Bi.w: .

Chil! kothe vs

v'i' Wbeelenhyrc

Sentinel

Or Fax To (740) 446·3006

Logan vs

\'S

i&amp;Yin:ilk
~

Liberty Union

· J.

New Lexington

llanDil&gt;iLRiw:
Locan Elm

Liberty Union
, o,:s Wbeelerdmr&amp;'

.

..

~

www.mydailytribune.coni
www.mydailysentinel.com
www.mydailyregister.com

l\egt~ter
(740) 446-2342 (740) 992·2156 , (304) 675-1333

tlr:rtbune

at H.anna n

at Hannan

Logan

Trimble vs
~

lit

Place

ca~;:,::·

1'!!iDLI'luunl

vs Wbeelenhyrg

vs Sheridan

•

~

To

Chapnunvillr ;u

libcny Union

Eaumoor As;ademy

Sheridan

~."
Pumt PlrJ!&gt;Jnt

Stacey Walters
Paginator
Record: i0-40
· Last Week: 5-5
(wi n ners ill h2ld)

vs Wheelersburg

EutmMt Academy
V1

~
L ogan vs

Portmuiuthcd .

D~hop Read~VI

lromon vs

l&amp;!iinillt

Reporter
Record: 77-33
l ast Week: 7-3
(w1imers in lw1d)

at Han..oan

H1mw1

Logan vs

Pprtunguth Wcat

Re&lt;~dy \ 'S

Hund red
. at

Hope Roush

Uutf&lt;&amp;lo :it

llul[aLo "

Bhhop Ruty vs
Pol15mouih West

Bi5hop

Diane Pottorlf
Reporter
R ecord: 70-40
Last Week: 9- l

l&amp;Jii.u:ilk

Previous Champions - 2001 : Butch Cooper, 2002: Butch Cooper, 2003: Brad
•

Dave Harris
Ad. Repn.-sentative
Record : 78-32
Last Wee k: 6-4
(winner~ in .hWd)

E-mail
classified @mydailytribune.com

In One Week With Us
REACH OVER 285,000.PROSPECTS
NE

• Adl Should RUlli 7

Days

.

POUCIES: Ohla Valily Publahlng r...rvu the rlgtrt ta edit, reject, or canctlany ed It any time. Errort mu11 be reportld on tM tlrlt day o1
TrlbuM-SenttMI-Regllhtr will be rnpontlbll for no more than the eoll ol the ~pace occuplld bV the error end only the Hrit lnstrtlon. we shall noJ bt
•ny lou or U:plftM " ' • mulls tram lht publication or omltsmrt'ot en ICIVti'IIHmtnt Con'eetiOn' wlll be madl ln tnt flrtt avtllable edition . • Bo~~: ;;.,.~,;,,•re 1lw1y1 confldentlll. · Current filii c.trd appiiH. · All reel tit* edvertlstmtnts lrt subJ•ct to the Feder• I Fair Housing: Act ot 1168. · Thlt
ecceptt only help Wl~ted 1d1 mMtlng EOE tttlnderdt. We will not knOWingly .ccept eny.edvtrtltlng In vkliiiiOn of the llw. Will not be r•pontlble !Of
emwa In 1n ad ttkfln o* the phone.

,,.;,1

oewopor&gt;e• I

KIT . CARLYLE

« POJ,ICIES«.
Ohk&gt; Valley
Publlahlng rnentH
the right to odlt,
relect or canctlany
ad auny tlme.
Emn Mutt
epartod on ·tht li
y of publlcat
nd the · Trtbun
ntlnt~Rtglottr wll
reaponalbtt for n
orethanthecooto

2004: Brad Sherman. 2005: Bryan Walters. 2006: Brad Sherman, 2007: Dave Harris.

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

occ:up
y tht error and on
flrot lnoertlon. W
hall not bt llablt I

200

Re-:r:. 1110nal

1000

A•11'0U l( Ul (•O!&lt;;

Ve11cles

l.ool &amp; Found

Campen I RVo &amp;

Troilen

Found

black male daehs·
hund on . gravel rd call to
describe. 388·9472

SeNice

RV

a1

chael

Carm ~~

Trailers

740-446·3825

Found Oc1 28 on St. At
681 large bag of pillows

RV

between (740)698·2606
FOUND

Service
Trailers

at

Carm icha el

740·446·3825

male gray kitten al Twin
Rivers
·
Tower

304·675-2897

2000

Au•omolrve

.NOTICE OHIO VALLEY
FIUBLISHING

limited its opponents to a pounded out 66~ yards and games
this
week .
·PREP F~AIL S':{ANDINGs , · .·r.., _•1
touchdown or less in five of seven touch~owns this year Parkersburg Catholic will
r ., . ~Ohio Athletic L..gue .
filling in for senior Tyler claim the final position if
. •I
,
·. · , · . ·
, · ., , . lt ldl· ";·,
nine games this season .
. d
II ff '. i: ",, ' .; . I iii 'J ., \ -&lt;MiL . ' .' ,'
On offense the Tigers are Grant who had to sit out this the C rusa
fromPageBl
ers can pu o
~
· •f.·,(!: Alr1c,t~~ •. .~ 'A:.i} -W...'ir PP~ 1'1\ • : tt-L ; , ,, q 'A'
led by Todd Terry and Joey s~son due to a, pre~ason the upset of th.e year against
.,,, ""'""~H,ll· 1,.;,, ·~~; ·6oll, J ..213 ,.68 :.. L,rt t.O•.) ·!R \ ·86
No. 2 Williamstown which
I..L ., .. ,,1,.,..'... , . .~1 .. . .221 . .ao ...... B·S , .· ....,. .·.1.55
Stevens
who
both
had
rush-·
injury.
Third
·on'
the
'
highwith James Monroe, .good
"- ~t'- J~. irJ~ ... .. . .:·~;'! , .-. .. ..~.~
. .· ~; ... 183· ' .76 ', . , ;8-'3 i :.•'.:l81' •..170
likely to happen so that ~... .. .,. .,,., .. " !•.· c .. , ..44.. !· .149 ..63 .. •... 5·5 .. , .202' . ·.166
enough to unoffiCially lock ing . touchdowns against powered n)sh ' attack is isn't
would leave Wahama and MaJioll8 ....... ,'.. , •••.•••.. . .....~ ..•• 141 .. 150 ..... 4-a ....244,; .3.04
the Mason County team into Wayne last week . Stevens Nathan Roberts who has Iaeger as the leading con" Gallli AoadolliY · ' :·., ., ·' ·'- · · :. L · ·24 ·: · .ss · · .137 · · · · .15'5 · · · .163 •-2&lt;1Q
~ .•. . ·, . · •: • .':: ..... j ••.... ,2·5 : ....109 .. 2S5 ' ... .5-5 . .. .204 . .289
the 2008 Oass. AA playoffs. finished the night as the 267 yards and five scores ..
tenders for the final spot. Warren" ...•.••. •. ...• ...••.... .1·5 ....ole '.. .16:i .. . .. 4-fl .•.-.108 . .271
team's
leading
rusher
with
Their
success
has
been
Friday night will also be
The White Falcons hold the Porlemouth ·:•• • · · · ·•·( · · .•. ::. ·• · •'.o-e ·: · .el · · .153 · · · · .1-9
·· · .101 . · .211
'
senior night at Sanders ·69 yards on II carries and made p&lt;'lssible by the blockalso pulled in three catches ingyower of big men Chase edge over Iaeger, who faces . , ,.
OhloVall11Y Conference
,.
·Stadiwn.
1
·for
Liptrap,
Clay
28
yards.
Terry
added
62
Krebs,
Matt
No.
10
Man
this
week,
proALL '·
. .
But while Friday is sup·
viding the Bend Area team
· 1¥-1. PF 1'1\
W·L PF '1'1\
·posed to be .a celebration of yards on 15 carries and also Thompson , Eric Veith and defeats
Buffalo on Friday CoaiGr0"/8
····
··"•··
·
·
"'
·'
·
··
:•
..
4-1. .. , 158 ..94 .. &lt;, .!8-4 .. : .238 . .. 11!0 ·
went 5-of: l2 through the air Kenny LongwelL .
.South Polot ... ......... .. . , .•.,... 4·1. ... '1.07 .. 92 ... ...8-4 .. :.311· ; ;209
the final home game of the
and Parkersburg Catholic l'alrlarld. ... "' •.... .• .• ••.. ,.: .. ...,, , •i· . 2o1e .. 124 ,, ... 4-5 ... ,311 : .224
for
62
yards
and
an
interBJ.
Lloyd
has
continued
.year, for the 14 seniors,
" · •• '·'·,· •·· • :., i.:. · ·2"3· :. · 111 ...1121· · · .4-6 • · : .230 . o3Q4
to come into his own under fall s to the second rated CheMJ)eoke
Aivar llal~ .,•.........
, . . , .... . .., H ... . . 106 ..213 . •.•: .:1-7 ... .173 • .:Jol6
Friday may tum into a mis- ception.
Yellow Jackets. Meadow ROOI&lt;HIII ., ........•.,. c; .,•.. :, ....g;u .. !l!i ...22s ._. .. .1M0 .•• 1o1e .' &lt;131
.
Running
back
David
·
26-of-53
·
center,
completing
.sion to make sure that isn't ·
Wiley tacked on 55 more passes this season for 484 Bridge 'also has an outside
,, ,1
,:,.: · l)i·Valj~ Conferltice •·
"· . ·1····
the case.
yards
and
yards
on
seven
carries
.last
six
touchdowns.
.chance
but
several
teams
·
·
·
·
·
·
,
··
&lt; • •
••
•*'•&lt;,.&lt;
And with a win "over
must
lose
for
the
Wildcats
,
'
li
;
·
~,
;.,'-.~.:,,,.·'~Dit'gn
.
'
·
·
ALL
'
week,
C&lt;)mpleting
a
dangerHis top targets have been
Chapmanville,
Point
, '
.
: . 1¥-L · PF PA - , W-L PF PA
Pleasant's seniors may get ous smash-mouth trio. Chris Mitchell, Roberts , Wasonga to get into the payoff pi~- Ne~~Yor)&lt;
• . . .. ~. 1 • .o,. . , ~'-~: -~•. •. 211 .. 11a ..\ •. a.-a ....334 .. 225
Bailey
was
the
team
's
top
and
Cody
Durst.
ture.
S-1. ,. ~ .. 108 .. ·'· .8·3 ....359 .,:229
their wish.
Buffalo
will
bring
a
4-5
too
.,
.......
-.
.
.....
,
.
,
•..
11-2.
, .. 192 . .130 .. • .. 4·8 .. ••.w ..:m.
aerial
target
with
two
catchFriday
night's
Cardinal
· A win over the Tigers
record
to
the
Bend
Area
..
::
......
...
.....•...
:
...
~
.
...
I.W ..n3 ... : .c.8 .... 195 ..187
·
Conference championship
.
~-·•...... • :.c ..••• ,.i- · ··· , . ~-4 ....105 ·.. 187 ., ... 3·7 ·....1.!5 .. 28(1
would not only give the Big es for 34 yards.
Chafmanville holds the will Jqck-off at 7:30 p.m. with the Bison , of seventh 'AIIIilnder ... , , ..•.......• . ....• H Lt .•125 ..201 .....cce .. ,..250 _. ,25;4
Blacks a potential home
year Coach Mike Sawyer, ~(loUotly , . . .• .'L t.;\'.·......O·tL, .. 79 ...214 .... .1·9 ... ,13:1 ; -3:14
,
game in the postseason , it overal edge in the series . Friday night.
failing to make the playoffs
~ '
· '' ' ~:V ....., ~
would also give them the with Point Pleasant, win·
' Jf'4ti')1"' { t " ' TVC ' '
ALL. .~'#
'"'1&gt;
Buffalo at Wabama
for the first time in four
, · 11 ~,,, ~ .#): '&lt;~Il-L "!!..:, PA·
W-L, ,Pf
outright
Cardinal ning the only .game played
years. Buffalo opened the
.1'' . ••••.•. . •• . ·.-litO ..• ·"""'· .ole .'.. , .11'2 ..•.362.&gt;, ;J62
Conference championship. · between the two teams 27-6
season
with
a
22-6
win
over
;;~~~
·"1L
::.. ·. :· ~:~-.;:
·: · ·:; :,,.
:...}2
4'1 ·. i..t66
·'·68 · .. ·' .7·3 · · · .250 ··tiS&amp;
MASON - The stakes
: ~· .84' ~ r.l• : \. r .s.s·....113 -.' :202
Holding the only perfect last season.
· · , :... .. "'' · . ,. ·. ~ •..,..,: .14•. l. .81 .'~&lt;. 158 .....ll-6 . !,..,198 . :284
But last year means noth- will be ·high would be an Gilbert before dropping a
record in the conference, the.
26-0
decision
to
·· ·····•· .t.;.•........J.:r ....76 ..•158 ....3-6 .•..167 · . ~1$
ing
anymore
.;_
the
Point
understatement when visit, I • .• t ,'•.\IM'.if, . ~..t,i"! .•Qr5 . 1 • •&amp;1 &gt;'· .201 ......1-9 .. . .13$• •·;311$
Big Blacks would clinch
~
, 'r•. ·.{}l~I··Y• ~~Rtt ~
., · ·, ;• 1': r¥'
their first conference cham- Pleasant football team of ing Buffalo Putnam visits Parkersburg Catholic . The
2008
is
a
completely
differthe
Bend
Area
Friday
Bison
losing
s
kid
continued
,,
'
,
i
&lt;.iii,
~r,...~'
·
pionship since winning the
evening for the regular sea- over the next two weeks
· ALL • •· , ...
Pioneer Athletic Conference ent monster.
·
with
Portsmouth
East
·
·
'1¥-1.
PI' .PA·
' ,'
After scoring just 122. son finale to the high school
~ahoma .•. , .. q ..... ". :' ..••..11-3 ••••318 . ·!!!! ·.
back in 19.85.
squeaking by the Pulliam SOulll Galle ••. . , .......... .. .. .2-a • , .•84 .. ·""" I ;1.' ·
: A I8Ss , however, would points in all of 2007 , the Big football season.
County team by a 13-12 HW'nan ··· : · • ··· ; · ~,- ··· ···~· ···· 1 :1r~ ··•ss,..293
,
,.
Blacks
have
already
put
up
For
Buffalo
a
season
end:create a three-way tie atop
·a
remarkable
319
points
this
ing victory to avoid a losing margin before . No. 3
• ,
·
Cillllllll~
• •
;I ' ~·
the Cardinal standings with
and
146
points
in
season
2008
campaign
is
·OR
t~e
Matewan
dealt
Buffalo
a
.
,
.
.,
.
'f'o~'
;CARD
'
.;
),
ALL
·
Wayne, C,hapmanville and
conference
play,
good
line
while
the
stakes
are
37-12
setback.
Thtee
'
con,
.
.
1
,
..
-.1.
,
PI'
·
M
,
1¥-1.
PI'
· PA
Point Pleasant - all with
enough
for
second
best
secutive
victories
over
P1W~C
..
,
...
.
..
""
..
'.
o4:&gt;()
;
•••
·,o~e
.
;58
.....
,e-3
..
,
.319
..
1~
even higher for Coach Ed
one loss apiece.
.j... 11. . •• 210 ..93 .... ..:s-1 ....340 •..189
Cromley 's White . Falcon · South Gallia (40-12),
And no one is more hun- bchird Wayne.
Clarksburg Notre Dam
. e ·'
'. : ·.......
· · .; · · ·. 7'·•....., ' "· · ;24
$ 1..
.se· · ·•.· ,.· · .5-5
.11-1 •....
• · '233
.:92
The
319
points
scored
so
eleven
with
a
playoff
berth
•..· ·.,1IQ6
15 ·.,)76
2~ . .. ~
gry for a championship than
far is the most since Bob within the Wahama gridders (50-29) anq Clay County ..
~-~t~. ··'-'~'•". ,
) "\... ,...102... 199,.... .2-e :·...228 ., .$7
Point Pleasant.
44-20).precededsuccessive ~ . · 1• .,, ,•.,..
.\1\5. · •· 73 .. .17tl ·· ..,.2·7 . . •.•1.111 ••1!&amp;6
high
scoring
91
Schertzer's
·
grasp
on
senior
night
at
the
(
Since joining the Cardinal
·
r:r- ·•·
1 ·t
,ll'
•
·~ · t·,· ,,
losses to No. 5 ·Fayettville
,'
,AA )ptlo)oolr· team
·
Conference back in 2004, team from 1956 that fin- WHS campus .
10-game
schedished
their
,The Mason. County team (35-20 ) and No. 10 Man 100 yards in six &lt;&gt;ames this score more than 100 points
the Big Blacks have generule
with
358
total
points.
has
stumbled over the past (14-6).
.
•· •.'
.
h " .
.
.
ated just one winning record
The Bison · featu~ a: num- · year to gtve t e JUnior sig- .m a season .
Already
one
of
the
highest
three
weeks
in
losing
sucin confe rence pl ay while
her of . ret"ming' senior nal caller a total of 1226
Senior wide receiver
posting an overall record of scoring offenses in PPHS cessive road outings after
"'
~ards
through
the
auways
Garrett
Underwood ca,ught
history.
coach
Dave
Darst's
with senior Corev
.
.. ·
beginning the year- with six starters
8-15 between the inaugural
·
,
·(
·
.
f
&lt;
uspan
IS
currently
m
nine
passes
for 104 yards
season and last year. But squad of 2008 could stand stra ight victori es. The Go&lt;!~!, sh! t~II:Il (()~ ' a foUrth place ·tunong WHS and two touchdowns 'in
Friday night could erase all alone at the tot? with anoth- Bend Area gridders will receiver position : ·to -quat· ·passing ,leaders and trail.s addition to th rowin~ his
pursue an elusive seventh
the bumps and bruises that er big game Fnday night.
And that high scoring win of the current season terb.ack. an~ semor COdy Chad ZerMe (1242 yards in first touchdown pass m the
came in the fi rst fo ur years
. Craig JOI~~g sophomore .. 2004) by just 115 yards and loss
to
Parkersburg
auack has erased all memo- and with it a third consecuof league play.
~avi~
m
t~e
BuffAlo
is
just
32
yards
shy
of
Mike
Catholic.
Underwood
has
Tray
Standing in their way, ries of last year's stagnant tive Class A post-season bac~field. Goods · t~p Goldsberry's ('assing mark 90 receptions for. 1246
however, is a very tough offense with a lofty 35 .4 playoff berth during the receivers
ar~
sen~or of 1238 yarils in 1976. yards and 17 touchdowns
points per game average. 7:30 p.m . senior night con-. Schuyler Frazier, semor 1969 graduate Tim Howard during his career at
Chapmanville squad.
The Tigers have only one Point Pleasant's defense has test. ·
Nathan Winterstein and owns the record for the Wahama.
loss on the season, a 25- 13 · also been air-tight this year, · WHS tumbled out of the sophomore Cameron Jones. most passing yards in a seaWahama is averaging
setback at Wayne last week. giving up j11st 19.7 points top 16 in the latest wvs. The veteran interior line for son at Wahama with 1800.
35 .3 points per !!arne oftenBefore that Chapmanville per game against .some pret- SAC rankinas following its Buffalo includes seniors
Senior running back Kyle . sively while givmg up 21.0
had recorded consecutive ·i high-powered offenses.
aaonizing 37-34 setback to Chris Cobb, Chris belcher Zerkle is coming off a spec· points per outing to the
wins over Tug Valley (45Alian Wasonga has been Parkersburg Catholic last and Chase Wysong.
tacular night aaalnst the opposition. Buffalo is scor·
8), Man (21· 3), Wtnfield the biggest part of this sea- week and current! y holds
Wahama junior quarter· Crusaders with Zerkle scor· ing 22 .8 ppg while the
(17·12), Logan (21 -6) , Poca son 's turnaround , racking down the 17the position . back William Zuspan will lng three touchdowns, kick· Bison defense is allowing
(28·12), No.9 Scott (1 6-7), up 23 total touchdowns in Eleven teams
· have be looking to move into sec· ing four extra points and 20.2 ppg. The Putnam
Herbert Hoover (24-0) and 2008 while pili n ~ up I ,657 clinchetf a spot in the Class ond place in passing running 'for 196 yards in County team o).Vns a slim
Sissonville (41-19).
yards on 167 cames. He has A post-season with Big yarda~e for a season after only 12 carries. Zerkle has 16-14 edge in the series
Overall Chapmanville is also been named West' Creek , Tucker County, throwmg for 129 yards lasf totaled Ill points on the with its neighboring rivals.
averaging 25.I points per Virgi nia player of the week Moorefield and Midland week against Parkersburg year to rank him as the Kickoff time for the senior
~arne while surrendenng twice this season.
Zuspan has eighth · top scorer for n i~ht contest is 7:30 p.m.
Trail all expected to join the Catholic.
JUSt 10 points per game .
Behind him is senior 16-team field without much thrown 19 touchdowns and Wahama and is the U th wtth pre-game festivities
That stout defense has also Derek Mitc hell who has difficulty in their final has passed for more than White Falcon gridder to slated lo begin at 7 p.m.

Box number odo

lwaya confidential.

1 1
", , :

,

·

""i

, • • • ' .I' • •

. .

·· ·

&amp;:i:·.·. . . . .,..........

'

. Notice· No
hunting,
4-whee)er riding or r respas~ ·
ing. I'm nm writing any .per·
mits. no! responsible for any

accid~nts, urea

Lane Hende1"9011 WV.

All

Real

02 Honda Accord V&amp;.
loaded.
92,000
miles.

Butch Leport Ord

a

Call 74().245·5526
1999
23.300

a y r une
mustbepicked .

We . will
n
nawtngly accept
leament
n of 111t tow.

CLASSIFIED INDEX

Legols ........................................................... 100
Announcemente ................ .......................... 200
Blrthday/Annlver..ry ..................................205
Happy Ada........................,...........................210
Loat I Found ...............................................215
Memory/Thank You ..................................... 220
Nolle•• ......................................................... 225
Poroonala .......................................... ,........... 230
Wantad ........................................................ 235
S.rvlceo .......................................................300
Appllanca S.rvlce .............................:.: .......302
Automottve .......................................,..........,304
Building Marerlalo .......................................306
Bu81na.............................................. .......... 308
atorlng .........................................................310
Chlld/Eidtrly care ....................................... 312
Computoro ................................................... 314
Cont'ractora .......................... - ...................... 311
Domeotlco/JanHorlal ...... :............................318
Etectrlcol ............................................... :...... 320
Flnanclol ...................................................-.. 322
Health ........................................................... 32e
Hooting &amp;Cooling ....................................... 328
Home lmprovem•nta ;130
ln•urance ...................:................................. 332

Recreo!IONI Vehlcl................................. 1000
llcycioo......................................................1010
. Boato/Acceooorteo .................................... 1015
campor/RVs lll"allero ............................. 1020
Motorcycleo ............................................... 1025
Other ..........................................................1030
. Want to buy ........................... ,...................1035
Automotlve ....:........................................... 2000
Auto Ron101/Luoo .....................................2005
Autot/ ....................................................,..... 2010
Clooolc/Antlqueo ....................................,.. 2015
Commarclalllndustrlal .............................. 2020
Parte'&amp; Acceaaorlea..................................2026
Sports Ulltlty ............. ,................................2030
ll"ucko......................................................... 203S
Ullllty Trotloro ............................................ 2040
Van~~ ....................... ............................. ........2045
Want to buy ........:...................................... 2050
Rut EoiiiiO S.ln ......................................3000 .
Cemetery Plote ..........................................300a
C.........,lol..;.....;.......................................3010
Condomlnlumo .......................................... 3015
ATV ............................................................. 1005

For Sale by Owner .....................................3020
Houue tor Slle ........................~ ................ 3025

~n S.rvl ..............'................................... 334
und (AcrNgt) .......................................... 3030
Muotc/Donce/Oramo .................................... 33B Loll ..............,........................................:....3035 .
Other Servlceo .........~ ................................... 338 Wont to buy ............ ,...................................3040

''Piumblngl'l;l.c:trlcal ...................................... 340
Profeaelonal Servlcea ................................. 342

Real E1tate Rentall ................................... 3600
Apartmenta/Townhou............. .............. 3505

Rapalra .........................................................344
Securlry ......................:........................... -.... 341 .
TaiiiAccountlng ...........................................350
ll"avei/Enlertolnment ..................................362
Flnanclol ....................................................... 400

Commerclol... .............................................3510
Houo11 for Renl ........................................ 3520
Land (Acreoge) ......................,................... 3525
Storage...................................................... 3536
Want to Rent ...............:.............................. 3540

MoiMiy to Lend ............................................~ 415
Educotton ..................................................... $00
Buolneoo &amp; Trade Schoot ...........................sos
Instruction I Trolnlng ................................. 510
Looaono ........................................................515
Portonol .......................................................520
Animal a........................................................ 8110
Animal Supplleo .................,...•................... 505
Horaaa .......................................................... 610
Llveetoc~ ......................................................615
Peta...............................................................&amp;20
Want to buy..................................................625
Agriculture ................................................... 700
Farm Equlp!nent.......................................... 705
Garden &amp; Produce ............................... ....:... 710
Hay Feed, Sold, Graln ...........................~ ... 715
Hu.;ung&amp; Llnd ...:....................................... 720
want to buy..................................................ns
Merchonc!foo .......:........................................ aoo
Antlqueo ......................:................................IGS
Appllence ..................................................... 110
Aucllor\e .......................................................t15
Bargain Blotmenr.......................................ll20
Colioctlbleo .................................................. ll25
compUIOro ................................................... t30
Equlpmont1Supptteo....,...............................l1311
Flea Marketa ................................................ l40
FUIII Oil Coai/Wood'Oal ............................. 945
Furniture ......................................................950
Hobby/Hunt I Sport ...................:................ 955
Kkl'l Oorner ................ ....... ~ ......................... I&amp;O
Mioc*llonoouo..............................................IMIS
wonr to buy..........•:...................................... t70
Yard S.le .......................:............................. 175

Movero........................................................4010
Rentolo ........................................................W15
- ...........................................................4020
SuppliM ......................................................I()25
Wont to Buy ...............................................4030
·Rnort Property .............:........................... saoo
Rnort Property for Mle ........................... 5025
Rooort Property lor rant ........................... 5050
Employment...-..........................................11000
Accountlng!F,lnonclol .....:..........................5002
Admlnlotretlve/ProfetloiONI.....................8004
Coohttri'Clori&lt; ............................................. I006
Child/Elderly Core ..................,...................eooa
Cttrtcol ....................................................,.5010
Conltrucuon .................................~ ............8012
Drlvero&amp; O.IIV8ry ..................................... eo14
Ed11C11lon ...................................................eo1e
EtoCtrlcol Plumblng...............:..:................eo1a
Employment Ageo-..............................8020
Emlanotn~nt ............................................ eo22
Food Servlceo............................................eo24
G-nmenl &amp;F-.ol Jobo ....................eo:ze
Help entad- Gonerol ..................................eo2a
Low Enforc:ement ...................................... eo30
MolntononceiDomoottc ............................. 5032
Mlnogemont/Supervloory ........................ 5034
Mechanlca ........,.................................... ..... 8031
Madlcal ....................................................... 6038,
Muelcot ...................... ,................................ 6040
Port-nm•Tempororleo .......................~ .....8042
Aeatauranta ............................................... 6044
Soleo ...........................................................6048
T-nlcolll"-o ....................................... IIOBO
Texllln/Foctory ...........,.......................;.....eo52

Roofing ... ,.................................1............... . ... 348

Financial S.rvlcea.......................................405
lnaurance .........................: .......................... 410

Condomlnluma ................... ,, ..... ; .........,..... 3615

Manufactured Houalng ....................: ........ 4000
Lota ................................................... ..........4005

Z28
miles,
T Top.

Camara

V·8. 6
$.12.500.

sr&gt;&lt;ied.
740-256·6989
2000 · Buick Ceorury LS
NEA, Inc.

www.comlct .com

:=~~~~~:;.;;.~~;;;;,~~~~~;
S..
Pels
Mlacllloneoua
OtMr

wlcea

have been
George's Portable Saw· AKC Mini Dachshund
placed In ads at . mill. oon't haul your Lqgs pup.
$300.
Call
the Gallipolis
to 1t1e Mill just ·c.ll 740-256·1498
0 11 1i lb
304-1175·1957
..-.-----~

.

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

----------~----~----------------------~----------- - · ---- ------------~'~-- -----·

· purrent rote
pplln. .

.

ave· ·

rec·

do
you
know, and NOT to send
money rhrough the mall
until you have iflvesti g~l ·
ing tho offering.

W.Va.

'

CO.

ommends that you
business with people

"""'7"""'"7':"'""'""
.

whhln 3.0 daya.
Any plctUres
thalare not
picked will be
discarded.

Prol..oional Seriicu
TURNED DOWN ON

446·3364
2001Hujndyl Accenl 2 ·

OR , 5 sp, air, salvage ti·

NEW AND USED STEEL tie mest sell, $800 080
Steel Beams. Pipe Robe• 74().709-6339
for Concrele Anglo. - - - - - - Chenoel. Rsl Be•. Sleel 97 Dodge lnt&gt;epid auto·
Grating for Drains, Drive~ matic V6 $1800 080 .

CKC Maltese pups. Fe·
male $550 . . Mala $500 ways

740·256-1498

. runs excellent good tires
needs body work $500.

&amp; Walkways.

L&amp;L 256-1652 or 256·1233

Scrap MetalS Open Mon.

Truc:b

&amp; Closed
Fri, -;;;;;;;;~~~~~
~

.
Wed
Gweaway;
. 1 mama cat Tue,
Bam-4:30pm.

sOciAL SECURITY SSI &amp; 2 cute k&gt;ttens. 1 Gray Thuis sat &amp; Sun. WMe 95 GMC Sia&gt;re. 4
No Fee Unless We Win! 10. 1 Black ~ While 740-44£.7300
WD. high miles. runs
1·888·562·3345
304·675·3598.
,..;_;_______ good. ext cab, ladder
Zero

The Tribune

Septic

Olflce has many
unclaimed
plcturn that will
be dlacarcled on
December 31, 08,
II you think you
mly hive
forgolttln to pick
. up a pletUrt you
have placed In

tha paper, pleaae
feel free to come
Into tha office
and look through
the them.

pumping

$160. Miniatllre

Ron Evans Jacl&lt;son.
800.537-9528

S&lt;:hnouzers Gravely.

tum
60

27 HP. Moving. must
selL367;7129
/CIO
Aqr11 t.lttll"
WantTolu)l
Jtl()
f n
11
------farm e....;Absolule Top Dollar - sil·
,_.,..........
ver/gold
coins,
any
Money To Lend
10K/14K/18K gold jew·
EBY,
INTEGRITY. er.,.
"' dania I gold . P'•
KIEFER Bul••
NOTICE Borrow Smar1.
'"'•
1935
US
curren cy,
Contacl t•·
Ohio Dive STOCK
VALLEY HO
RSEJ\.IVE· proof/mint sets, dla·
•~
TRAILERS
sion of Financial instltu• monds, MTS Coin Shop.
tlons (mice or Consumer LOAD
MAX
EQUIP- 151 2nd Avenue , Galli·
Affairs BEFORE you reff MENT.
TRAILERS. polis. 446·2842
•ance uni1r home or ob- CARGO EXPRESS &amp; ~;,;;;;;;;;;;;;;,,""""
'"
=
y·--•
tain a ,_
loan. BEWARE of HOMESTEADER
uru So',.
requesls for any large CARGO/CONCESSION
advance payments of TRAILERS.
B+W
fees or insurance. Call GOOSENECK FLATBED
the Office of Consumer $3999. VIEW OUR EN·
Affiars
toll
free
at TIRE TRAILER INVENt-SIIe·278·0003 lo leam TORY AT
If the mortgage broker or WWW.CARMICI-IAEL·
lendar is propeny If TAAILEAS.COM
censed. (Thie Is e publ~ 741&gt;446-3625
OH .

available. (740!992·1328

mower.· racks,

inch deck. V-8

I I'(

CD player,
motor.

350

S2500,

(740)416·2969
Vano

03 Kia saoona. under
Wa&gt;ranty
$7.500
:,:304,...·6!!75;;;·2!;5!;!50""'""'""'""
=
W nt T B
-;;;;;;;;ii;oiiiii;;;i;oii;i;uy;;_;;;;;;;;;
~
Car&gt;. Trucks, and GMC.
Saturn, Buick SUV's with
warranty. Visit us at (go·

coookmotors com)
.
Cook M
oiors 328 Jackson Flike. 740·446·0103

:::;;:::=:·
Wanlod

Lead singer for estatr
llshed
southemlctassic
rock band. Serious In(!. service

announcement ----....,-~
only.
740-446·f974 from the Ohto Valley Have you priced a John
Publishing Camparry)
Deere lalely? You'll be
eves. after 6PM.
surprised! Check oul our
used
InventorY
a1
Now taking blds for '-,()\)
fdio 1 Ill www.CAAEQ.com.
Car~
painting and or cleaning
michael
EQuipment
of vacant units. Must pro·
74().446·2412
vide proof ot · Workers
&amp; T-'-

Compensalioo and iabll·

luolneaa

...,..

Hou... For Sole

Moving sale 4667 SA ;;;;.;;i;;,;;ii.i;~...,...,.
850 Bidwell Oct. 3rd • 4 bed 2 bath &amp; office In
~
O:c:;:t~
. 9t
:;::h,:__....,-~ town , hw &amp; lila floors ,
Must sale moving out of updated kitchen &amp; baths,
state Garage Sale, Fli· privacy fence &amp; above
day 11 n 108 f gam.4pm,. ground
pool,
security
Janet Jeffers residence, system, much more. '130

33795 · Hiland

Ad. .Bastian! Dr $129.000For

Pomeroy, 0 hiO
..

pies and information go
b
to.
www.orv .com

ity
Insurance. Please -~...-Sch~IOOI~~--Yar&lt;l Sale Sat Nov. B. 446·2923
call Honey Suckle · Hills ., OalHpotll c-r
08, Sam Ewing Base·
Apls. 741).446.3344 or
· College
Fvol I Oil/ Ctd I
ment. 300 4th St .. ·2·'3!' bed
- roo
- m-s,-1-b-am- .
siOjl by otf~e at 25&amp; c..
l
Pomeroy. Ohio
new
roof .
hardwood
loolalDr. BltlweB. Ohio
(9areers ClOSe 0 Home1
9aW Todayt 740-446-4367 '!i";;;;;W&amp;o~od!"/i..iGoaii~~ 5 familes · sat 1118 Homs. goldl;sh pond.
H!OQ.214;0452
Seasoned Firewood CAA = m. g.~~~r. A~:. fenced in yard. 1 acre.
galllpolltcareertOilege.*Ckl
HEAP
""""flied. Ch. tm
-~
kids Rocksprings
Ad ..
-'ocrfldittd.M«nber Accredit•
645-5946 or« H )941
na as, lv, .. ,
' Pomeroy,
log Counci tor lodf~Prtnden~
College$ and School• ·12748
~-"'!"'-~~~ men"s. women"s clotlling Oh.(140)992·2355
Seasoned

Take care of elderly . or
someone close to GaMI·
jlolls. Da ys or nights.
645-544()

H.,.. lrnproYMiento
Blillllnll'll

Wotooproolt"'J

Uncoodllionalliltllme
ences furnished. Estel&gt;
guarantee~ Locel refer·

li&amp;hed 1975. Cal124 Hrs.

7-I(H46.()870. Rogers
Basement Waterproofing.

Pet

Cremations.

740-446-3745

GOD

,' ·•rn 1 '~

~~~;:::;;,.~~

Firewood (P. SM • XL), Misc.

Hardwood. 446·9204

Indoor Yar&lt;l S.le boys Claj1oo. 3 br. 1990.

clothing, 9·18 mon., ma- 14x70
wJappWances.
Mitcellaneous
!~rial &amp; pa.ttens, new par· must
be
moved,
....;;;;;;~~~~= oolaln dolls, lots of misc. $13,000, (740)992·5924
Jel Aeration Motor,
R
·
- -·
paired, new &amp; rebuilt In ~Ad miles
Ap legout Jerrys
WV N un E-onllnory
.....
nvt'"""'
•r .

re-

Croas Bred Bull. Hairy stoc~. Call Ron Evans. 5-8 aof.e7~~5.
ov. ~lo
-~ror vlow ol the
Bear Son. $1200. 1-8()0.537·9528.
~· """
446~3669 or 441- 1489
Rummage .Sale Sacred Private driv.e off linooln"
A Polr of tar Heart Catholic Cl.urd1 Hill. Pomeroy. Ohio.
,...
Kool I Tbo Cleng Sciclal Hall. 2222 Jacl&lt;· woods on "'""' sides
Dlrnce Party
Extrn• ton Avt. Pt. Pleasant, (-4-+)acras, to a hls1orical
1 Female 1 Male ~ 111,.. on Frldoy Nov. 7. WV Tllur&gt;day. Friday, home. Circa 1900. 5
Golden Aetr. pk:k up
T1ckltmaattr
Price Saturday Nov. 6,7,6, 9·3
bedrooms. 2 lireP'&amp;ces, 2
21 $350. 367-0037
$130. will 1041 polr for
full bams. 2 slaircases.
$76. C.ll331-941•
beautiful original woocs-

=-.,

work many picture win·
dows, mostly new win·
COws, large kitchen and
breakfast room, beautl-

Give away Alaskan Maltese needS to have Mollohan
Carpet
Fall
plenty of room to run &amp; 1 Special. 20 oz. Commer·
Call mill
breed
puppy. cial Carpet $6.95/yard.

446-4128

Saveral

Colors.

~~~~~~- ..,..-,-.,.-"""':.,..-~ 74~7444 . Quaily at
Sell your Items online!
Toy Poodles for sale .Lo;;;w;,;P:.n;;;
·ce:;;s;.l...,.--...,.,.,
Fme listings with up . to 3 they'll be n:lady for •
pictures. www.740claasi- Chrtstmas can re~I'Ye Nice Spinet Plano S300
fleds.com
one now. ae7-o&amp;89
304·n3-3362

lully landscaped wim In
g'Ound pool. Sit on the

l2;;~~;rj

wrap around porch and
enjoy
the
spectacular
view of the Ohio River. 2

•
•

�-..-·-

Thursday, November 6, 2008

·www.mydiillysentinel.com

Page B2 • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydallysentlnel.com

·tlr:rtbune - Sentinel CLASSIFIED
Galli a
County,

OH

Bryon Walrero
Sports Write"r
Recm&amp; 87-23
Last Week: 8-2
(winnen in IMdd)
Chapmanville

.tt

. 1'!!iDLI'luunl

Larry C rum
Spons Writer
R &lt;cord: 77-33
Last Week: 8- 2
(winners in h2ld)
Chapnwwille

Jl

~

Charlie Shepherd
Paginaror
Record: 75-35
L!.st Week: fi- 4
· (winners in b.2l.d)

Scott Wolfe
Spo rts Corrc:~pontlt•m
R&lt;cord : 69-4 1
Last Week: 5-5
{winners ln .b.2!sl)

Gary Clark

(winners in h2ld)

Beth Sergent
Reporter
Record: 73-37.
l as t Week : 7-3
(win ners in h!!ld)

Jt

Chapm:mviUt• at

Ch~rnn.anvill\ dt

~

~

Spom C(lrrespondem

Record: 69-41
Last Week: 6-4
(winne rs in h.W.d)
ChapmJ1wUle

~ at

Pmnt PleAsAnt

~

B11ffal~ at
~

lilmllrnl

lilmllrnl

at Hamun

at H01nnan

at

Hannan

ar H;mnan

" Hawlan

" Hawlan

lrogtgg vs

Ironton vs

l.mn12.o \'!

'.lm&amp;Wm VS

New Lexjngto n

~

lr2ntlm v•

New Lexingto n

New Lt•x m.,.&gt;ton

New Lexington

Ironton vS
~

l og:m vs

logm v§

~

l&amp;Jii.u:ilk

i&amp;Cill V&lt;

Hu£falo at

l ogan

VS

~
Tr imble~

Buffalo

Jt

..lVAiwna

lilmllrnl

Bufralo

Jt

tblwlwl

H u ndred

Louisville

C hillicothe v~

Chillicot he ~

Ch1llicotlw vs

twiniJW.Jl.i=
Chilh t:othe ,.s

LQpg Elm

Loian Elm

LopnEim

I.ocan Elm .

Li!'Jerty Union
vs Wbcclenhurg ·

;s..,i

'IJ9ramo~th

vs .
tst

· :Eastmoor Academy
. vt

Sbtridap

Liberty U mon
vs Wheelersburg

Truuble

~

Hengjbal Rmr

Liberty U nion

3t ·

~

Tru nble V!&gt;
Haonjhal Rjver

vs Wbt•lenhura

Dt1ffalo

~ ·

Tn mble vs
Hanojbal Rjver

Bitbgp

Wah~ma

Hu ndred

Trimble vs .

Trimble vs
Haggjbal ftjvcr

twiniJW.Jl.i=

Chillicothe vs

Chillicothe vs

Lopo

Loa•n Elm

Elm

But1illo

.'lWwwl

.'lWwwl

Bufi3lo at
~

Hundred

Hlawlrlll

l:hmJirul

Ironton vs

lmntml \'S

lromon \ ' S •
~

· ~

C hillicotht· vs
Losen .Elm

Trimble vs

L&lt;&gt;llin1lk

Trimble vs

Tnmble vs

WIWLAd.i
Dally Jn .. Column: lhOO a.m.

Chillim the vs
Ipgap Elm

Chillkorhe vs
Lgiao Elm

Lib ertv Uni on
v~ WbeilenbutJ

Lib.:rty Union
n Wbrelcnburl

Bishop R eady vs

Bishop

m WRIIE At!.62

Libcrry Union

vs Whedcrshurg

BishoP Rea· d~V! ·

Bishop R e:a d~vs

Porhmoytbut

Portamoutbt~t

Portsmouth West

Porhmoutb West

Portsnwutb Wtat

Porramputh Weat

Ejlstmom Academy
vs Shrridan

Eas rm~or Academy
vs Sheridan

E astm~or Acdden ly

' EastmOgr Acade my
v~ Sheridan

Eastmoor Academy:

&amp;•tmoor Acadcmv

Easrm oor Academy

vs Sherjden

~ Sh e ridan

vs Sberjdan

She~an,

Bishop

R~;~d)'

vs

.v~

Sberjdap

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

992·2157

. Fax To (304) 675·5234
~~~~~----------~-

'

R e~dy \ ' 5

Sunci.o,

YOUR CLASSIFIED LINE AD NOTICED

~

Monday.· Frlday for Jn•ertlon
tn Next Day•a Pap•r · ·

In-Column : 9:00 a . m.
Sunday• ·Pap•r ,

Now you can have borders and graphics
~
added to your classified ads
-fl~
!'f'f',
Borders $3.00/per ad
I!
Graphics SOc for small
$1.00 for large

.

All Display: 12 Noon' 2
Busln••• Days Prior To
Publl&lt;:atlon
Sunday Dlaplav: 1:00 • ~ ··· ··
Thursday for Sund•y•

• All ads must be prepaid'

• Start 'four Adt With A Keyword • Include Complete
Duc:rlptlon • Include A Price • Avoid Abbrevl•tlont
• Inelude Phone Number And Addrut When Needtd

. Tu'i:ceSsliif'Ads
Should Include These Items
To Help Get Response ...

Liberty Union

Bjtb«tp Rudy· vs

Or Fax To

OeculifirU'

lhnnillll.Bi.w: .

Chil! kothe vs

v'i' Wbeelenhyrc

Sentinel

Or Fax To (740) 446·3006

Logan vs

\'S

i&amp;Yin:ilk
~

Liberty Union

· J.

New Lexington

llanDil&gt;iLRiw:
Locan Elm

Liberty Union
, o,:s Wbeelerdmr&amp;'

.

..

~

www.mydailytribune.coni
www.mydailysentinel.com
www.mydailyregister.com

l\egt~ter
(740) 446-2342 (740) 992·2156 , (304) 675-1333

tlr:rtbune

at H.anna n

at Hannan

Logan

Trimble vs
~

lit

Place

ca~;:,::·

1'!!iDLI'luunl

vs Wbeelenhyrg

vs Sheridan

•

~

To

Chapnunvillr ;u

libcny Union

Eaumoor As;ademy

Sheridan

~."
Pumt PlrJ!&gt;Jnt

Stacey Walters
Paginator
Record: i0-40
· Last Week: 5-5
(wi n ners ill h2ld)

vs Wheelersburg

EutmMt Academy
V1

~
L ogan vs

Portmuiuthcd .

D~hop Read~VI

lromon vs

l&amp;!iinillt

Reporter
Record: 77-33
l ast Week: 7-3
(w1imers in lw1d)

at Han..oan

H1mw1

Logan vs

Pprtunguth Wcat

Re&lt;~dy \ 'S

Hund red
. at

Hope Roush

Uutf&lt;&amp;lo :it

llul[aLo "

Bhhop Ruty vs
Pol15mouih West

Bi5hop

Diane Pottorlf
Reporter
R ecord: 70-40
Last Week: 9- l

l&amp;Jii.u:ilk

Previous Champions - 2001 : Butch Cooper, 2002: Butch Cooper, 2003: Brad
•

Dave Harris
Ad. Repn.-sentative
Record : 78-32
Last Wee k: 6-4
(winner~ in .hWd)

E-mail
classified @mydailytribune.com

In One Week With Us
REACH OVER 285,000.PROSPECTS
NE

• Adl Should RUlli 7

Days

.

POUCIES: Ohla Valily Publahlng r...rvu the rlgtrt ta edit, reject, or canctlany ed It any time. Errort mu11 be reportld on tM tlrlt day o1
TrlbuM-SenttMI-Regllhtr will be rnpontlbll for no more than the eoll ol the ~pace occuplld bV the error end only the Hrit lnstrtlon. we shall noJ bt
•ny lou or U:plftM " ' • mulls tram lht publication or omltsmrt'ot en ICIVti'IIHmtnt Con'eetiOn' wlll be madl ln tnt flrtt avtllable edition . • Bo~~: ;;.,.~,;,,•re 1lw1y1 confldentlll. · Current filii c.trd appiiH. · All reel tit* edvertlstmtnts lrt subJ•ct to the Feder• I Fair Housing: Act ot 1168. · Thlt
ecceptt only help Wl~ted 1d1 mMtlng EOE tttlnderdt. We will not knOWingly .ccept eny.edvtrtltlng In vkliiiiOn of the llw. Will not be r•pontlble !Of
emwa In 1n ad ttkfln o* the phone.

,,.;,1

oewopor&gt;e• I

KIT . CARLYLE

« POJ,ICIES«.
Ohk&gt; Valley
Publlahlng rnentH
the right to odlt,
relect or canctlany
ad auny tlme.
Emn Mutt
epartod on ·tht li
y of publlcat
nd the · Trtbun
ntlnt~Rtglottr wll
reaponalbtt for n
orethanthecooto

2004: Brad Sherman. 2005: Bryan Walters. 2006: Brad Sherman, 2007: Dave Harris.

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

occ:up
y tht error and on
flrot lnoertlon. W
hall not bt llablt I

200

Re-:r:. 1110nal

1000

A•11'0U l( Ul (•O!&lt;;

Ve11cles

l.ool &amp; Found

Campen I RVo &amp;

Troilen

Found

black male daehs·
hund on . gravel rd call to
describe. 388·9472

SeNice

RV

a1

chael

Carm ~~

Trailers

740-446·3825

Found Oc1 28 on St. At
681 large bag of pillows

RV

between (740)698·2606
FOUND

Service
Trailers

at

Carm icha el

740·446·3825

male gray kitten al Twin
Rivers
·
Tower

304·675-2897

2000

Au•omolrve

.NOTICE OHIO VALLEY
FIUBLISHING

limited its opponents to a pounded out 66~ yards and games
this
week .
·PREP F~AIL S':{ANDINGs , · .·r.., _•1
touchdown or less in five of seven touch~owns this year Parkersburg Catholic will
r ., . ~Ohio Athletic L..gue .
filling in for senior Tyler claim the final position if
. •I
,
·. · , · . ·
, · ., , . lt ldl· ";·,
nine games this season .
. d
II ff '. i: ",, ' .; . I iii 'J ., \ -&lt;MiL . ' .' ,'
On offense the Tigers are Grant who had to sit out this the C rusa
fromPageBl
ers can pu o
~
· •f.·,(!: Alr1c,t~~ •. .~ 'A:.i} -W...'ir PP~ 1'1\ • : tt-L ; , ,, q 'A'
led by Todd Terry and Joey s~son due to a, pre~ason the upset of th.e year against
.,,, ""'""~H,ll· 1,.;,, ·~~; ·6oll, J ..213 ,.68 :.. L,rt t.O•.) ·!R \ ·86
No. 2 Williamstown which
I..L ., .. ,,1,.,..'... , . .~1 .. . .221 . .ao ...... B·S , .· ....,. .·.1.55
Stevens
who
both
had
rush-·
injury.
Third
·on'
the
'
highwith James Monroe, .good
"- ~t'- J~. irJ~ ... .. . .:·~;'! , .-. .. ..~.~
. .· ~; ... 183· ' .76 ', . , ;8-'3 i :.•'.:l81' •..170
likely to happen so that ~... .. .,. .,,., .. " !•.· c .. , ..44.. !· .149 ..63 .. •... 5·5 .. , .202' . ·.166
enough to unoffiCially lock ing . touchdowns against powered n)sh ' attack is isn't
would leave Wahama and MaJioll8 ....... ,'.. , •••.•••.. . .....~ ..•• 141 .. 150 ..... 4-a ....244,; .3.04
the Mason County team into Wayne last week . Stevens Nathan Roberts who has Iaeger as the leading con" Gallli AoadolliY · ' :·., ., ·' ·'- · · :. L · ·24 ·: · .ss · · .137 · · · · .15'5 · · · .163 •-2&lt;1Q
~ .•. . ·, . · •: • .':: ..... j ••.... ,2·5 : ....109 .. 2S5 ' ... .5-5 . .. .204 . .289
the 2008 Oass. AA playoffs. finished the night as the 267 yards and five scores ..
tenders for the final spot. Warren" ...•.••. •. ...• ...••.... .1·5 ....ole '.. .16:i .. . .. 4-fl .•.-.108 . .271
team's
leading
rusher
with
Their
success
has
been
Friday night will also be
The White Falcons hold the Porlemouth ·:•• • · · · ·•·( · · .•. ::. ·• · •'.o-e ·: · .el · · .153 · · · · .1-9
·· · .101 . · .211
'
senior night at Sanders ·69 yards on II carries and made p&lt;'lssible by the blockalso pulled in three catches ingyower of big men Chase edge over Iaeger, who faces . , ,.
OhloVall11Y Conference
,.
·Stadiwn.
1
·for
Liptrap,
Clay
28
yards.
Terry
added
62
Krebs,
Matt
No.
10
Man
this
week,
proALL '·
. .
But while Friday is sup·
viding the Bend Area team
· 1¥-1. PF 1'1\
W·L PF '1'1\
·posed to be .a celebration of yards on 15 carries and also Thompson , Eric Veith and defeats
Buffalo on Friday CoaiGr0"/8
····
··"•··
·
·
"'
·'
·
··
:•
..
4-1. .. , 158 ..94 .. &lt;, .!8-4 .. : .238 . .. 11!0 ·
went 5-of: l2 through the air Kenny LongwelL .
.South Polot ... ......... .. . , .•.,... 4·1. ... '1.07 .. 92 ... ...8-4 .. :.311· ; ;209
the final home game of the
and Parkersburg Catholic l'alrlarld. ... "' •.... .• .• ••.. ,.: .. ...,, , •i· . 2o1e .. 124 ,, ... 4-5 ... ,311 : .224
for
62
yards
and
an
interBJ.
Lloyd
has
continued
.year, for the 14 seniors,
" · •• '·'·,· •·· • :., i.:. · ·2"3· :. · 111 ...1121· · · .4-6 • · : .230 . o3Q4
to come into his own under fall s to the second rated CheMJ)eoke
Aivar llal~ .,•.........
, . . , .... . .., H ... . . 106 ..213 . •.•: .:1-7 ... .173 • .:Jol6
Friday may tum into a mis- ception.
Yellow Jackets. Meadow ROOI&lt;HIII ., ........•.,. c; .,•.. :, ....g;u .. !l!i ...22s ._. .. .1M0 .•• 1o1e .' &lt;131
.
Running
back
David
·
26-of-53
·
center,
completing
.sion to make sure that isn't ·
Wiley tacked on 55 more passes this season for 484 Bridge 'also has an outside
,, ,1
,:,.: · l)i·Valj~ Conferltice •·
"· . ·1····
the case.
yards
and
yards
on
seven
carries
.last
six
touchdowns.
.chance
but
several
teams
·
·
·
·
·
·
,
··
&lt; • •
••
•*'•&lt;,.&lt;
And with a win "over
must
lose
for
the
Wildcats
,
'
li
;
·
~,
;.,'-.~.:,,,.·'~Dit'gn
.
'
·
·
ALL
'
week,
C&lt;)mpleting
a
dangerHis top targets have been
Chapmanville,
Point
, '
.
: . 1¥-L · PF PA - , W-L PF PA
Pleasant's seniors may get ous smash-mouth trio. Chris Mitchell, Roberts , Wasonga to get into the payoff pi~- Ne~~Yor)&lt;
• . . .. ~. 1 • .o,. . , ~'-~: -~•. •. 211 .. 11a ..\ •. a.-a ....334 .. 225
Bailey
was
the
team
's
top
and
Cody
Durst.
ture.
S-1. ,. ~ .. 108 .. ·'· .8·3 ....359 .,:229
their wish.
Buffalo
will
bring
a
4-5
too
.,
.......
-.
.
.....
,
.
,
•..
11-2.
, .. 192 . .130 .. • .. 4·8 .. ••.w ..:m.
aerial
target
with
two
catchFriday
night's
Cardinal
· A win over the Tigers
record
to
the
Bend
Area
..
::
......
...
.....•...
:
...
~
.
...
I.W ..n3 ... : .c.8 .... 195 ..187
·
Conference championship
.
~-·•...... • :.c ..••• ,.i- · ··· , . ~-4 ....105 ·.. 187 ., ... 3·7 ·....1.!5 .. 28(1
would not only give the Big es for 34 yards.
Chafmanville holds the will Jqck-off at 7:30 p.m. with the Bison , of seventh 'AIIIilnder ... , , ..•.......• . ....• H Lt .•125 ..201 .....cce .. ,..250 _. ,25;4
Blacks a potential home
year Coach Mike Sawyer, ~(loUotly , . . .• .'L t.;\'.·......O·tL, .. 79 ...214 .... .1·9 ... ,13:1 ; -3:14
,
game in the postseason , it overal edge in the series . Friday night.
failing to make the playoffs
~ '
· '' ' ~:V ....., ~
would also give them the with Point Pleasant, win·
' Jf'4ti')1"' { t " ' TVC ' '
ALL. .~'#
'"'1&gt;
Buffalo at Wabama
for the first time in four
, · 11 ~,,, ~ .#): '&lt;~Il-L "!!..:, PA·
W-L, ,Pf
outright
Cardinal ning the only .game played
years. Buffalo opened the
.1'' . ••••.•. . •• . ·.-litO ..• ·"""'· .ole .'.. , .11'2 ..•.362.&gt;, ;J62
Conference championship. · between the two teams 27-6
season
with
a
22-6
win
over
;;~~~
·"1L
::.. ·. :· ~:~-.;:
·: · ·:; :,,.
:...}2
4'1 ·. i..t66
·'·68 · .. ·' .7·3 · · · .250 ··tiS&amp;
MASON - The stakes
: ~· .84' ~ r.l• : \. r .s.s·....113 -.' :202
Holding the only perfect last season.
· · , :... .. "'' · . ,. ·. ~ •..,..,: .14•. l. .81 .'~&lt;. 158 .....ll-6 . !,..,198 . :284
But last year means noth- will be ·high would be an Gilbert before dropping a
record in the conference, the.
26-0
decision
to
·· ·····•· .t.;.•........J.:r ....76 ..•158 ....3-6 .•..167 · . ~1$
ing
anymore
.;_
the
Point
understatement when visit, I • .• t ,'•.\IM'.if, . ~..t,i"! .•Qr5 . 1 • •&amp;1 &gt;'· .201 ......1-9 .. . .13$• •·;311$
Big Blacks would clinch
~
, 'r•. ·.{}l~I··Y• ~~Rtt ~
., · ·, ;• 1': r¥'
their first conference cham- Pleasant football team of ing Buffalo Putnam visits Parkersburg Catholic . The
2008
is
a
completely
differthe
Bend
Area
Friday
Bison
losing
s
kid
continued
,,
'
,
i
&lt;.iii,
~r,...~'
·
pionship since winning the
evening for the regular sea- over the next two weeks
· ALL • •· , ...
Pioneer Athletic Conference ent monster.
·
with
Portsmouth
East
·
·
'1¥-1.
PI' .PA·
' ,'
After scoring just 122. son finale to the high school
~ahoma .•. , .. q ..... ". :' ..••..11-3 ••••318 . ·!!!! ·.
back in 19.85.
squeaking by the Pulliam SOulll Galle ••. . , .......... .. .. .2-a • , .•84 .. ·""" I ;1.' ·
: A I8Ss , however, would points in all of 2007 , the Big football season.
County team by a 13-12 HW'nan ··· : · • ··· ; · ~,- ··· ···~· ···· 1 :1r~ ··•ss,..293
,
,.
Blacks
have
already
put
up
For
Buffalo
a
season
end:create a three-way tie atop
·a
remarkable
319
points
this
ing victory to avoid a losing margin before . No. 3
• ,
·
Cillllllll~
• •
;I ' ~·
the Cardinal standings with
and
146
points
in
season
2008
campaign
is
·OR
t~e
Matewan
dealt
Buffalo
a
.
,
.
.,
.
'f'o~'
;CARD
'
.;
),
ALL
·
Wayne, C,hapmanville and
conference
play,
good
line
while
the
stakes
are
37-12
setback.
Thtee
'
con,
.
.
1
,
..
-.1.
,
PI'
·
M
,
1¥-1.
PI'
· PA
Point Pleasant - all with
enough
for
second
best
secutive
victories
over
P1W~C
..
,
...
.
..
""
..
'.
o4:&gt;()
;
•••
·,o~e
.
;58
.....
,e-3
..
,
.319
..
1~
even higher for Coach Ed
one loss apiece.
.j... 11. . •• 210 ..93 .... ..:s-1 ....340 •..189
Cromley 's White . Falcon · South Gallia (40-12),
And no one is more hun- bchird Wayne.
Clarksburg Notre Dam
. e ·'
'. : ·.......
· · .; · · ·. 7'·•....., ' "· · ;24
$ 1..
.se· · ·•.· ,.· · .5-5
.11-1 •....
• · '233
.:92
The
319
points
scored
so
eleven
with
a
playoff
berth
•..· ·.,1IQ6
15 ·.,)76
2~ . .. ~
gry for a championship than
far is the most since Bob within the Wahama gridders (50-29) anq Clay County ..
~-~t~. ··'-'~'•". ,
) "\... ,...102... 199,.... .2-e :·...228 ., .$7
Point Pleasant.
44-20).precededsuccessive ~ . · 1• .,, ,•.,..
.\1\5. · •· 73 .. .17tl ·· ..,.2·7 . . •.•1.111 ••1!&amp;6
high
scoring
91
Schertzer's
·
grasp
on
senior
night
at
the
(
Since joining the Cardinal
·
r:r- ·•·
1 ·t
,ll'
•
·~ · t·,· ,,
losses to No. 5 ·Fayettville
,'
,AA )ptlo)oolr· team
·
Conference back in 2004, team from 1956 that fin- WHS campus .
10-game
schedished
their
,The Mason. County team (35-20 ) and No. 10 Man 100 yards in six &lt;&gt;ames this score more than 100 points
the Big Blacks have generule
with
358
total
points.
has
stumbled over the past (14-6).
.
•· •.'
.
h " .
.
.
ated just one winning record
The Bison · featu~ a: num- · year to gtve t e JUnior sig- .m a season .
Already
one
of
the
highest
three
weeks
in
losing
sucin confe rence pl ay while
her of . ret"ming' senior nal caller a total of 1226
Senior wide receiver
posting an overall record of scoring offenses in PPHS cessive road outings after
"'
~ards
through
the
auways
Garrett
Underwood ca,ught
history.
coach
Dave
Darst's
with senior Corev
.
.. ·
beginning the year- with six starters
8-15 between the inaugural
·
,
·(
·
.
f
&lt;
uspan
IS
currently
m
nine
passes
for 104 yards
season and last year. But squad of 2008 could stand stra ight victori es. The Go&lt;!~!, sh! t~II:Il (()~ ' a foUrth place ·tunong WHS and two touchdowns 'in
Friday night could erase all alone at the tot? with anoth- Bend Area gridders will receiver position : ·to -quat· ·passing ,leaders and trail.s addition to th rowin~ his
pursue an elusive seventh
the bumps and bruises that er big game Fnday night.
And that high scoring win of the current season terb.ack. an~ semor COdy Chad ZerMe (1242 yards in first touchdown pass m the
came in the fi rst fo ur years
. Craig JOI~~g sophomore .. 2004) by just 115 yards and loss
to
Parkersburg
auack has erased all memo- and with it a third consecuof league play.
~avi~
m
t~e
BuffAlo
is
just
32
yards
shy
of
Mike
Catholic.
Underwood
has
Tray
Standing in their way, ries of last year's stagnant tive Class A post-season bac~field. Goods · t~p Goldsberry's ('assing mark 90 receptions for. 1246
however, is a very tough offense with a lofty 35 .4 playoff berth during the receivers
ar~
sen~or of 1238 yarils in 1976. yards and 17 touchdowns
points per game average. 7:30 p.m . senior night con-. Schuyler Frazier, semor 1969 graduate Tim Howard during his career at
Chapmanville squad.
The Tigers have only one Point Pleasant's defense has test. ·
Nathan Winterstein and owns the record for the Wahama.
loss on the season, a 25- 13 · also been air-tight this year, · WHS tumbled out of the sophomore Cameron Jones. most passing yards in a seaWahama is averaging
setback at Wayne last week. giving up j11st 19.7 points top 16 in the latest wvs. The veteran interior line for son at Wahama with 1800.
35 .3 points per !!arne oftenBefore that Chapmanville per game against .some pret- SAC rankinas following its Buffalo includes seniors
Senior running back Kyle . sively while givmg up 21.0
had recorded consecutive ·i high-powered offenses.
aaonizing 37-34 setback to Chris Cobb, Chris belcher Zerkle is coming off a spec· points per outing to the
wins over Tug Valley (45Alian Wasonga has been Parkersburg Catholic last and Chase Wysong.
tacular night aaalnst the opposition. Buffalo is scor·
8), Man (21· 3), Wtnfield the biggest part of this sea- week and current! y holds
Wahama junior quarter· Crusaders with Zerkle scor· ing 22 .8 ppg while the
(17·12), Logan (21 -6) , Poca son 's turnaround , racking down the 17the position . back William Zuspan will lng three touchdowns, kick· Bison defense is allowing
(28·12), No.9 Scott (1 6-7), up 23 total touchdowns in Eleven teams
· have be looking to move into sec· ing four extra points and 20.2 ppg. The Putnam
Herbert Hoover (24-0) and 2008 while pili n ~ up I ,657 clinchetf a spot in the Class ond place in passing running 'for 196 yards in County team o).Vns a slim
Sissonville (41-19).
yards on 167 cames. He has A post-season with Big yarda~e for a season after only 12 carries. Zerkle has 16-14 edge in the series
Overall Chapmanville is also been named West' Creek , Tucker County, throwmg for 129 yards lasf totaled Ill points on the with its neighboring rivals.
averaging 25.I points per Virgi nia player of the week Moorefield and Midland week against Parkersburg year to rank him as the Kickoff time for the senior
~arne while surrendenng twice this season.
Zuspan has eighth · top scorer for n i~ht contest is 7:30 p.m.
Trail all expected to join the Catholic.
JUSt 10 points per game .
Behind him is senior 16-team field without much thrown 19 touchdowns and Wahama and is the U th wtth pre-game festivities
That stout defense has also Derek Mitc hell who has difficulty in their final has passed for more than White Falcon gridder to slated lo begin at 7 p.m.

Box number odo

lwaya confidential.

1 1
", , :

,

·

""i

, • • • ' .I' • •

. .

·· ·

&amp;:i:·.·. . . . .,..........

'

. Notice· No
hunting,
4-whee)er riding or r respas~ ·
ing. I'm nm writing any .per·
mits. no! responsible for any

accid~nts, urea

Lane Hende1"9011 WV.

All

Real

02 Honda Accord V&amp;.
loaded.
92,000
miles.

Butch Leport Ord

a

Call 74().245·5526
1999
23.300

a y r une
mustbepicked .

We . will
n
nawtngly accept
leament
n of 111t tow.

CLASSIFIED INDEX

Legols ........................................................... 100
Announcemente ................ .......................... 200
Blrthday/Annlver..ry ..................................205
Happy Ada........................,...........................210
Loat I Found ...............................................215
Memory/Thank You ..................................... 220
Nolle•• ......................................................... 225
Poroonala .......................................... ,........... 230
Wantad ........................................................ 235
S.rvlceo .......................................................300
Appllanca S.rvlce .............................:.: .......302
Automottve .......................................,..........,304
Building Marerlalo .......................................306
Bu81na.............................................. .......... 308
atorlng .........................................................310
Chlld/Eidtrly care ....................................... 312
Computoro ................................................... 314
Cont'ractora .......................... - ...................... 311
Domeotlco/JanHorlal ...... :............................318
Etectrlcol ............................................... :...... 320
Flnanclol ...................................................-.. 322
Health ........................................................... 32e
Hooting &amp;Cooling ....................................... 328
Home lmprovem•nta ;130
ln•urance ...................:................................. 332

Recreo!IONI Vehlcl................................. 1000
llcycioo......................................................1010
. Boato/Acceooorteo .................................... 1015
campor/RVs lll"allero ............................. 1020
Motorcycleo ............................................... 1025
Other ..........................................................1030
. Want to buy ........................... ,...................1035
Automotlve ....:........................................... 2000
Auto Ron101/Luoo .....................................2005
Autot/ ....................................................,..... 2010
Clooolc/Antlqueo ....................................,.. 2015
Commarclalllndustrlal .............................. 2020
Parte'&amp; Acceaaorlea..................................2026
Sports Ulltlty ............. ,................................2030
ll"ucko......................................................... 203S
Ullllty Trotloro ............................................ 2040
Van~~ ....................... ............................. ........2045
Want to buy ........:...................................... 2050
Rut EoiiiiO S.ln ......................................3000 .
Cemetery Plote ..........................................300a
C.........,lol..;.....;.......................................3010
Condomlnlumo .......................................... 3015
ATV ............................................................. 1005

For Sale by Owner .....................................3020
Houue tor Slle ........................~ ................ 3025

~n S.rvl ..............'................................... 334
und (AcrNgt) .......................................... 3030
Muotc/Donce/Oramo .................................... 33B Loll ..............,........................................:....3035 .
Other Servlceo .........~ ................................... 338 Wont to buy ............ ,...................................3040

''Piumblngl'l;l.c:trlcal ...................................... 340
Profeaelonal Servlcea ................................. 342

Real E1tate Rentall ................................... 3600
Apartmenta/Townhou............. .............. 3505

Rapalra .........................................................344
Securlry ......................:........................... -.... 341 .
TaiiiAccountlng ...........................................350
ll"avei/Enlertolnment ..................................362
Flnanclol ....................................................... 400

Commerclol... .............................................3510
Houo11 for Renl ........................................ 3520
Land (Acreoge) ......................,................... 3525
Storage...................................................... 3536
Want to Rent ...............:.............................. 3540

MoiMiy to Lend ............................................~ 415
Educotton ..................................................... $00
Buolneoo &amp; Trade Schoot ...........................sos
Instruction I Trolnlng ................................. 510
Looaono ........................................................515
Portonol .......................................................520
Animal a........................................................ 8110
Animal Supplleo .................,...•................... 505
Horaaa .......................................................... 610
Llveetoc~ ......................................................615
Peta...............................................................&amp;20
Want to buy..................................................625
Agriculture ................................................... 700
Farm Equlp!nent.......................................... 705
Garden &amp; Produce ............................... ....:... 710
Hay Feed, Sold, Graln ...........................~ ... 715
Hu.;ung&amp; Llnd ...:....................................... 720
want to buy..................................................ns
Merchonc!foo .......:........................................ aoo
Antlqueo ......................:................................IGS
Appllence ..................................................... 110
Aucllor\e .......................................................t15
Bargain Blotmenr.......................................ll20
Colioctlbleo .................................................. ll25
compUIOro ................................................... t30
Equlpmont1Supptteo....,...............................l1311
Flea Marketa ................................................ l40
FUIII Oil Coai/Wood'Oal ............................. 945
Furniture ......................................................950
Hobby/Hunt I Sport ...................:................ 955
Kkl'l Oorner ................ ....... ~ ......................... I&amp;O
Mioc*llonoouo..............................................IMIS
wonr to buy..........•:...................................... t70
Yard S.le .......................:............................. 175

Movero........................................................4010
Rentolo ........................................................W15
- ...........................................................4020
SuppliM ......................................................I()25
Wont to Buy ...............................................4030
·Rnort Property .............:........................... saoo
Rnort Property for Mle ........................... 5025
Rooort Property lor rant ........................... 5050
Employment...-..........................................11000
Accountlng!F,lnonclol .....:..........................5002
Admlnlotretlve/ProfetloiONI.....................8004
Coohttri'Clori&lt; ............................................. I006
Child/Elderly Core ..................,...................eooa
Cttrtcol ....................................................,.5010
Conltrucuon .................................~ ............8012
Drlvero&amp; O.IIV8ry ..................................... eo14
Ed11C11lon ...................................................eo1e
EtoCtrlcol Plumblng...............:..:................eo1a
Employment Ageo-..............................8020
Emlanotn~nt ............................................ eo22
Food Servlceo............................................eo24
G-nmenl &amp;F-.ol Jobo ....................eo:ze
Help entad- Gonerol ..................................eo2a
Low Enforc:ement ...................................... eo30
MolntononceiDomoottc ............................. 5032
Mlnogemont/Supervloory ........................ 5034
Mechanlca ........,.................................... ..... 8031
Madlcal ....................................................... 6038,
Muelcot ...................... ,................................ 6040
Port-nm•Tempororleo .......................~ .....8042
Aeatauranta ............................................... 6044
Soleo ...........................................................6048
T-nlcolll"-o ....................................... IIOBO
Texllln/Foctory ...........,.......................;.....eo52

Roofing ... ,.................................1............... . ... 348

Financial S.rvlcea.......................................405
lnaurance .........................: .......................... 410

Condomlnluma ................... ,, ..... ; .........,..... 3615

Manufactured Houalng ....................: ........ 4000
Lota ................................................... ..........4005

Z28
miles,
T Top.

Camara

V·8. 6
$.12.500.

sr&gt;&lt;ied.
740-256·6989
2000 · Buick Ceorury LS
NEA, Inc.

www.comlct .com

:=~~~~~:;.;;.~~;;;;,~~~~~;
S..
Pels
Mlacllloneoua
OtMr

wlcea

have been
George's Portable Saw· AKC Mini Dachshund
placed In ads at . mill. oon't haul your Lqgs pup.
$300.
Call
the Gallipolis
to 1t1e Mill just ·c.ll 740-256·1498
0 11 1i lb
304-1175·1957
..-.-----~

.

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

----------~----~----------------------~----------- - · ---- ------------~'~-- -----·

· purrent rote
pplln. .

.

ave· ·

rec·

do
you
know, and NOT to send
money rhrough the mall
until you have iflvesti g~l ·
ing tho offering.

W.Va.

'

CO.

ommends that you
business with people

"""'7"""'"7':"'""'""
.

whhln 3.0 daya.
Any plctUres
thalare not
picked will be
discarded.

Prol..oional Seriicu
TURNED DOWN ON

446·3364
2001Hujndyl Accenl 2 ·

OR , 5 sp, air, salvage ti·

NEW AND USED STEEL tie mest sell, $800 080
Steel Beams. Pipe Robe• 74().709-6339
for Concrele Anglo. - - - - - - Chenoel. Rsl Be•. Sleel 97 Dodge lnt&gt;epid auto·
Grating for Drains, Drive~ matic V6 $1800 080 .

CKC Maltese pups. Fe·
male $550 . . Mala $500 ways

740·256-1498

. runs excellent good tires
needs body work $500.

&amp; Walkways.

L&amp;L 256-1652 or 256·1233

Scrap MetalS Open Mon.

Truc:b

&amp; Closed
Fri, -;;;;;;;;~~~~~
~

.
Wed
Gweaway;
. 1 mama cat Tue,
Bam-4:30pm.

sOciAL SECURITY SSI &amp; 2 cute k&gt;ttens. 1 Gray Thuis sat &amp; Sun. WMe 95 GMC Sia&gt;re. 4
No Fee Unless We Win! 10. 1 Black ~ While 740-44£.7300
WD. high miles. runs
1·888·562·3345
304·675·3598.
,..;_;_______ good. ext cab, ladder
Zero

The Tribune

Septic

Olflce has many
unclaimed
plcturn that will
be dlacarcled on
December 31, 08,
II you think you
mly hive
forgolttln to pick
. up a pletUrt you
have placed In

tha paper, pleaae
feel free to come
Into tha office
and look through
the them.

pumping

$160. Miniatllre

Ron Evans Jacl&lt;son.
800.537-9528

S&lt;:hnouzers Gravely.

tum
60

27 HP. Moving. must
selL367;7129
/CIO
Aqr11 t.lttll"
WantTolu)l
Jtl()
f n
11
------farm e....;Absolule Top Dollar - sil·
,_.,..........
ver/gold
coins,
any
Money To Lend
10K/14K/18K gold jew·
EBY,
INTEGRITY. er.,.
"' dania I gold . P'•
KIEFER Bul••
NOTICE Borrow Smar1.
'"'•
1935
US
curren cy,
Contacl t•·
Ohio Dive STOCK
VALLEY HO
RSEJ\.IVE· proof/mint sets, dla·
•~
TRAILERS
sion of Financial instltu• monds, MTS Coin Shop.
tlons (mice or Consumer LOAD
MAX
EQUIP- 151 2nd Avenue , Galli·
Affairs BEFORE you reff MENT.
TRAILERS. polis. 446·2842
•ance uni1r home or ob- CARGO EXPRESS &amp; ~;,;;;;;;;;;;;;;,,""""
'"
=
y·--•
tain a ,_
loan. BEWARE of HOMESTEADER
uru So',.
requesls for any large CARGO/CONCESSION
advance payments of TRAILERS.
B+W
fees or insurance. Call GOOSENECK FLATBED
the Office of Consumer $3999. VIEW OUR EN·
Affiars
toll
free
at TIRE TRAILER INVENt-SIIe·278·0003 lo leam TORY AT
If the mortgage broker or WWW.CARMICI-IAEL·
lendar is propeny If TAAILEAS.COM
censed. (Thie Is e publ~ 741&gt;446-3625
OH .

available. (740!992·1328

mower.· racks,

inch deck. V-8

I I'(

CD player,
motor.

350

S2500,

(740)416·2969
Vano

03 Kia saoona. under
Wa&gt;ranty
$7.500
:,:304,...·6!!75;;;·2!;5!;!50""'""'""'""
=
W nt T B
-;;;;;;;;ii;oiiiii;;;i;oii;i;uy;;_;;;;;;;;;
~
Car&gt;. Trucks, and GMC.
Saturn, Buick SUV's with
warranty. Visit us at (go·

coookmotors com)
.
Cook M
oiors 328 Jackson Flike. 740·446·0103

:::;;:::=:·
Wanlod

Lead singer for estatr
llshed
southemlctassic
rock band. Serious In(!. service

announcement ----....,-~
only.
740-446·f974 from the Ohto Valley Have you priced a John
Publishing Camparry)
Deere lalely? You'll be
eves. after 6PM.
surprised! Check oul our
used
InventorY
a1
Now taking blds for '-,()\)
fdio 1 Ill www.CAAEQ.com.
Car~
painting and or cleaning
michael
EQuipment
of vacant units. Must pro·
74().446·2412
vide proof ot · Workers
&amp; T-'-

Compensalioo and iabll·

luolneaa

...,..

Hou... For Sole

Moving sale 4667 SA ;;;;.;;i;;,;;ii.i;~...,...,.
850 Bidwell Oct. 3rd • 4 bed 2 bath &amp; office In
~
O:c:;:t~
. 9t
:;::h,:__....,-~ town , hw &amp; lila floors ,
Must sale moving out of updated kitchen &amp; baths,
state Garage Sale, Fli· privacy fence &amp; above
day 11 n 108 f gam.4pm,. ground
pool,
security
Janet Jeffers residence, system, much more. '130

33795 · Hiland

Ad. .Bastian! Dr $129.000For

Pomeroy, 0 hiO
..

pies and information go
b
to.
www.orv .com

ity
Insurance. Please -~...-Sch~IOOI~~--Yar&lt;l Sale Sat Nov. B. 446·2923
call Honey Suckle · Hills ., OalHpotll c-r
08, Sam Ewing Base·
Apls. 741).446.3344 or
· College
Fvol I Oil/ Ctd I
ment. 300 4th St .. ·2·'3!' bed
- roo
- m-s,-1-b-am- .
siOjl by otf~e at 25&amp; c..
l
Pomeroy. Ohio
new
roof .
hardwood
loolalDr. BltlweB. Ohio
(9areers ClOSe 0 Home1
9aW Todayt 740-446-4367 '!i";;;;;W&amp;o~od!"/i..iGoaii~~ 5 familes · sat 1118 Homs. goldl;sh pond.
H!OQ.214;0452
Seasoned Firewood CAA = m. g.~~~r. A~:. fenced in yard. 1 acre.
galllpolltcareertOilege.*Ckl
HEAP
""""flied. Ch. tm
-~
kids Rocksprings
Ad ..
-'ocrfldittd.M«nber Accredit•
645-5946 or« H )941
na as, lv, .. ,
' Pomeroy,
log Counci tor lodf~Prtnden~
College$ and School• ·12748
~-"'!"'-~~~ men"s. women"s clotlling Oh.(140)992·2355
Seasoned

Take care of elderly . or
someone close to GaMI·
jlolls. Da ys or nights.
645-544()

H.,.. lrnproYMiento
Blillllnll'll

Wotooproolt"'J

Uncoodllionalliltllme
ences furnished. Estel&gt;
guarantee~ Locel refer·

li&amp;hed 1975. Cal124 Hrs.

7-I(H46.()870. Rogers
Basement Waterproofing.

Pet

Cremations.

740-446-3745

GOD

,' ·•rn 1 '~

~~~;:::;;,.~~

Firewood (P. SM • XL), Misc.

Hardwood. 446·9204

Indoor Yar&lt;l S.le boys Claj1oo. 3 br. 1990.

clothing, 9·18 mon., ma- 14x70
wJappWances.
Mitcellaneous
!~rial &amp; pa.ttens, new par· must
be
moved,
....;;;;;;~~~~= oolaln dolls, lots of misc. $13,000, (740)992·5924
Jel Aeration Motor,
R
·
- -·
paired, new &amp; rebuilt In ~Ad miles
Ap legout Jerrys
WV N un E-onllnory
.....
nvt'"""'
•r .

re-

Croas Bred Bull. Hairy stoc~. Call Ron Evans. 5-8 aof.e7~~5.
ov. ~lo
-~ror vlow ol the
Bear Son. $1200. 1-8()0.537·9528.
~· """
446~3669 or 441- 1489
Rummage .Sale Sacred Private driv.e off linooln"
A Polr of tar Heart Catholic Cl.urd1 Hill. Pomeroy. Ohio.
,...
Kool I Tbo Cleng Sciclal Hall. 2222 Jacl&lt;· woods on "'""' sides
Dlrnce Party
Extrn• ton Avt. Pt. Pleasant, (-4-+)acras, to a hls1orical
1 Female 1 Male ~ 111,.. on Frldoy Nov. 7. WV Tllur&gt;day. Friday, home. Circa 1900. 5
Golden Aetr. pk:k up
T1ckltmaattr
Price Saturday Nov. 6,7,6, 9·3
bedrooms. 2 lireP'&amp;ces, 2
21 $350. 367-0037
$130. will 1041 polr for
full bams. 2 slaircases.
$76. C.ll331-941•
beautiful original woocs-

=-.,

work many picture win·
dows, mostly new win·
COws, large kitchen and
breakfast room, beautl-

Give away Alaskan Maltese needS to have Mollohan
Carpet
Fall
plenty of room to run &amp; 1 Special. 20 oz. Commer·
Call mill
breed
puppy. cial Carpet $6.95/yard.

446-4128

Saveral

Colors.

~~~~~~- ..,..-,-.,.-"""':.,..-~ 74~7444 . Quaily at
Sell your Items online!
Toy Poodles for sale .Lo;;;w;,;P:.n;;;
·ce:;;s;.l...,.--...,.,.,
Fme listings with up . to 3 they'll be n:lady for •
pictures. www.740claasi- Chrtstmas can re~I'Ye Nice Spinet Plano S300
fleds.com
one now. ae7-o&amp;89
304·n3-3362

lully landscaped wim In
g'Ound pool. Sit on the

l2;;~~;rj

wrap around porch and
enjoy
the
spectacular
view of the Ohio River. 2

•
•

�Thursday, November 6, 2008

www.mydallysenUnel.com

Page 84 • The Daily sentinel

av.....,.... aFederal

and
2 OUI ...-.. 3 1001111 and up·
ft-. 1 wondelfuf frlmlly stalm. Completely fur"'""" or beKI &amp; breal&lt;laol. nl8hed wilh WID. No
~ nt Pictumqua
pots. Ref. Req. 441.()245
-

,

1

"""

-

• SPECTACUlAR VIEW

lnqLi""' only. Apartment avallabte now
, _ ... 740-992-3678
RM&gt;rt&gt;end Apts. New
Haven WV. Now accepting
'applications
IDf

'--' !Aon•••l

HUD-subsidized.
Bedroom Apts.

one

Utilities
••• ..,.. • ool 200 IICt8 lnclu&lt;led. Based on 30%
lann lo Galla Co. ot adjuoted income. Call
Ott.
60+
acres 304-882-3121, availafMl;
wofl-dralned
bottomland for Senior and Disabled
etono Raoooori c...k.
~people.
80+ acr89 pasture, bal·
ance worxlad. .stock wa·

.. .

lor pond, 2 · sptlogs, welL .,..,...,==,...-....,.~

Farm has carried 40-45 CONVENIENTLY
LOCOWI wlcllvea. Modem CATEO
&amp;
AFFORD·
brick style house ABLEI Townhouse ..,.••
wl flntshed
wa/tr-out ments,
and'or
small
bss ment. 937-596-6774
houses tor rent. Call

Now accept1119
applications at
Valley VieW Apartments
800 State Route 325
Th&lt;Jnnan, Ohio 45685
7«1-2&amp;5-1178

1-2 Bedroom Apartmeots
with appliances tumlshed

Oo site laundry 1ocltity.
Call lor details Of pick up
application at rental ·
office
Possibility Dl rental
assiStance.
· Equal Housing

Opponunity
TPDO •19-526-0466

"This institution iS an
EQUal Opportooily
Provider and Employe('

I(X70 newly remodeled
mobile t&gt;oma 36R $450

.....

The Daily Sentinel • Page ~

Help Wttftlrtd • GMorcrl

· =~~~~~- nlty

POSTAL JOBS

Aeaso

ACROSS

Phillip
Alder

cah

rent Mtddlepon,al ~- emp serv.
lric.Cia,no Inside pets, ::::=--:=~-~
$450 roonlh ,plus dep. POST OFFICE
NOV¥

20ft.pon:h740-ll84-4356
or 740-797-4356 lo· !.!!!!.!;;;;;.!!i!!.!J!!l""""'
.........Wanlod. Gonorcrl
,...,.
Da rwin.
cated
at
$250 5 ' - Bonuol
$26 000
'

·

"'"-'

Volod mi'FIVEBelf

-

to Wod' In Oh/ot

Come See Why/

No Sates!

NoCot~onsl
Full and Part·llme
Positions
Day and Evening

Shifts
Professional Work

Environmen1!
Medtcilt. Dental,
EAP, 401KI

ho~

lot lor
renl in Pt. Pleasant
$125.00 pi mon. with a

On-site Doctor
W~Payand

Borws Incentives!

dap. incluK!as
water &amp; sewer call
3()(-674-6219 for an
llppllcatlon.

CARPENTER
SERVICE

"'

•.•.

$75.00

SEE WHAT WE CAN
OFfER YOU AT
htlpJ-.Infodalon.com
OR CALL
1-888-fMC-PAVU
Ext. 1901

5

H,1sSr ··

YOUNG'S

•· -·-

S'crage
'

&amp;

9 MJi

Rlicfne, Ohio
4sn1

·-Gnio•
'
• Ettcbiclll ~"SS
Re:

740-t49-2217

:339:·1~2~10~
~== · ·VInyl
•RoOrtnQI"'"*'
SIOing Painting.
MeC:hania
·Patio arid Porch Decb

S&amp;illl;x1b'
·1
.
'

&amp;

wv 036725

Appalachian Tire PJOCIucts, Inc. Is currenfty
seeking tireloil service
tech· fof our Point Pleasani, WV location. Wages

10 10'1130' ' &lt;\

V.C YOUNG Ill

Hours
7:00AM • 8:00 PM

Y926?1S
\r•o1 C•• ·
'

.,., .. • ' ' l [ l , l ( '

_,.

L

304-675·3930,

Modi;.,.
Middleton
Estates
&amp;
ResCare Home Care is

accepting
applications
for Direct Care Staff. In·
terested persons may
contact Rhonda Harrison
at 74().446-4614 ext 26
Monday

through Friday
9a-5p or e-mail a resume

to
rflarnson @rescare.com

--.New Homes
• Gafages
•Complete

LTire Darn

We buy used tire~.
~.:nmputer whed
alignm~rns. light
me~.: hank work..
t:omplete scrvil'C" oil
cilangcs . sn mll cnginr
repair.
Wr: Sl'r\ ice and
wi uh:rize boiiiS ami

I.4.
ANI&gt; MA!Ct fACfS.
. • ,,.

':::::::=:--~::::::~:::::::~~~~:~~::::::::.
~

Sal . H:lXl am- 12

BARNEY

.

Hardwood Cablimry And Flll'lliirl
w-W-w.tlmberoHokcoblnfll')'-

7

_____.J!:~~:.!.!:!J
fl~'

·-

I .NEARLY

rr

I FtGG€RED
UP, ELVINE"''-IF "''A SUBTRACT TH' SPATS,'
FIGHTS AN' ALL TH' TIMES WE
WARN'T ON SPEAKIN' TERMS...

•"

AIN'T BEEN FRIENDS FER
AS LONG AS WE'RE
ALWA"''S TELLIN' FOLKS 1

WE

'
·1'

·

30

111111111:

HoW To

T .

Aeletences/Oepo~VNo

'JIERE TMft' COME! OIVIN6 OUT OF TUE SUN !!
BULLETS laiHININ6.ALL AAOIINP!! ENE,\\'t'
PLANES A80\'E, 8ELOW,A~P ON ALl. SICIES !!!

Pats 304-675-5162

CI 4ASSIFIEDS
,.

'

AstroGraph

Help Wanted

e

IIUIISE PRACTITIOIIER
Pleasant Valley Hospital is currently
accepting resumes for a full-time
Emergency Department Nul$e Practitioner
or Physician Assistant Applicant should
have a minimum of one year experience
in a clini~ urgent care or family practice
setting.
Send resumes to:
l'telltlant V1ll1y .1:101111111
c/o HumM Raaurcn
ti20V.Ieyllrlw
Point PIIPMinl:, WV 25550
Or fax: aD4-171·1t71
AA/EOE

COW and BOY

A~IES

WI{Y 00 I HAVETO .
CMOOSE BETWEEN
GOO Of! SCIENCEl

Johcj:e,....

__
__
.,__

CGmpltlo 11M Clro

I SEE SCIENCE

~GOO. GOD,_

SCIENCE. I SEE...

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

......... f,..U....

J&amp;L
Construction

CORNER STONE
CONSTRUCTION

• VInyl Skiing

Rooting, Siding,
Soffit, Decks,
. Doors, Wlndo~,
E:lsctrlc, Plumbing,
DrywaH, .
Remodeling, Room
Additions
t.ocaleomr-

• Replacement
Windows
·Roofing

•Decks
·Garages

•Pole Bulldlngo
• Room AddHions
Owner:
. James Keesee II
742·2332

•

74o-367-o544
FreeEatlrnaiM

0

740-367-(1536

0

For Remodeling ~nd New Ho..,. Building
Call: MARCUM CONSTRUCTION

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

Fri-Sat- Sun
Nov. 7, 8, 9

French 500
Flea Market
Galli a County Fairgrounds

Dealers Welcome

IIIEW.IIICII..M U
47239 Riebel Road. Long Bouom , OH

740-985-4141

ibor'lllrll!dtiY:

..

Cell: 740-416-1834
lS+ yefJI'S t:rperience Frte EstilfUIItJ

Advertise
in this space for,
·$64 per month

(March 21·Aprll

19) -

By

remaining optimistiC and keeping your
BllpeCI&amp;Uons within rvallsllc bounds, you
wHI gradually gain grourld on your goa~~,
Because you don't expect fT'IOfelhan you
should, you won't glw up:
·
TAURUS {April 20-May 20) - One of
your bast assets 16 baing a good 6stener,
and this will prove to be an actvantaoeous trait. You Will team about some·
thing that you'll put to good use at this
time.
·
GEMINI (May 21..June 20) - Keep your
goals and desires in proportloo to your
abiMIIes, and you will have more posslbil·
tties for success than most people do.
regardless of your flak! of endea'o'Or.
CANCER (June 21-July' 22}- You have
what II lakes to accomplish your goals.
You'H not only be' an efficlant wonter;
you'll atso know how 10 Interact wnh others to make them eff&amp;cttwt as wall.
LEO {July 23-Aug. 22) -Handling omatl
details could be more significant than
usual, particular1y In domesttc matters.
Pavtng attentiOn 10 ewn rneanJngleu
family acttvmH will grMtty pleue your
loved 'onea.
VIRGO {Aug. 23-SePt. 22i- Anoclates,
friends and family wll be more willing to
listen to what you hive to say If you keep'
your conwi'Mtiont brief. The ·ab"nce of
boring amalllalk will maklo whal you uy
tar mo,.. lnte,..llng.
LIBRA (Stpt• •~3-oct. ~3) - Evan 1
smel1 minor ~lopment can tum out to

many ;ood thlollf going tor you at thla

llmf,

SOUP TO NUTZ

~"t- '
lbU~t'~.

,,

-··

~ ~--··~~--- -

rOIId

8 Readiu
vllloy
chompall"• 32 OK
.

divleion-

52 Proper,

as reepct .
54 Cotton gin

.,.,.

seabird
40 ·Ftowtr part
41 Proteat

17 Not 'neath

song writer

CElEBRITY CIPHER
by luis Campos
C4Wetl!1ty Ol)'ltr c~ogr!rns ara crMt«llrcmqucutO'lS bylamous ~ oas; a-xl PIM'Il "
Each Je:ler in !h9Clltl8f &amp;ta"ds !01 arintler
•

Toda1sckJe: W equals C

"RPM
GBS

VOA
DOF

ET 0

XPG NXPZ EG,
SXA

ZBEGS

ET OKVPTG

PO

JMG

ASTHOEF,

OG

GBSFS '

1'/KSOFEXL ZBSFS
BOHHR."-

UPOX

PXS

JOSC ·

PREVIOUS SOLUTION- "My father was not a failure After all, he was the
father o!a Preside.nt of lhe United Slates.' -Harry S. Truman

'::~:t~~, S©~~1J. -LG"ttfS!l

WOlD
GAM! .

,ldkod by CIAY R. IOU AN

of the

wotdJ b..
low to form four simple words.

bo p!Ofttalllo " dono In oonjunctlon wttn

~A.t ~ . - - - - - -

7 Country

lettt~n;

Whit ~ olrMdV on the llbto.\l&gt;u Will "-'"

· GRIZZWELLS

25 Leory
coating
28 Houfo- 49 lltf011,
29 .Fioeco
poetically
31 Vinoy•d
51 Pll)'

6 -atudont

·Rearrange
0
· loUt Kramblod

of:

Help Wanted

Dovor'. .t .
toupt~
· 47~~
5 ExhaJot
24 Latin lvtrt&gt; 48 Orange

4

.

Organization and proper planning will
·greatly strengthen your possibilities for
success In the year ahead, and they wilr
be the major reasons lor you making
Such IMps and bounds In both your par·
sonal and worf(·related life.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) - Make
pJans to engage In a rtK:reational activity
with friends or family. Getting your mind
ot1 aJI the serious things In tire will do
wonders for your outlook.
SAGITTARIU,S (Nov. 23-0ec. 21)- This
Is an 8)(cellent day to gather the information you Qeed on a matter of importance,
whether It Is work-related, personal or
homework. You'lf have an easier time
dolhQ so than usual.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) Quality, not flamboyance, Is what you
should be looking lor In companiOns. A
comfortable, eompallble friendship will
be more enjoyable and tulfiMing than
spending time with garish, ftashy people.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) - If you
haw to make a choice between profit
and pride of accomplishment, choose
the latter. Acquiring se1t.. s1eem will be.
~ora valuabla and long lasting than
procortng material wealth.
. PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) - One
your better asse1s IS your ability to communicate effectively. You're not only ·gOod
at gathering fact&amp; but also at disseminatIng th&amp;m to thO!Ie who wfll put them to
fruitful uses.

,,

David Lewis

Clean
Ground
Floor, 2bt. WID hookup,

44 W. Coul

9 Mock fon·
33 Prolorrod
f•o (hyplt)
shift
10 Murmur
37 North.orn

38 Sow'a pon

Frldily, Nav. 7, 2008
By Bernice Becte 0.0.

CAPITALIZE 01'1 OUil
NEwFOUNI&gt; FAME !

Mce

22 Fr. miu
23 Hearty

36 Enter data 12 Fra,.
37 Two-BA unit
of mind

Yes. the defense could have boon
· stronger. West could have led his low
diamond at trick two, East winning.with
his queen and returning a diamond.
Then West shifts lo a low club.' The
temptation 10 play dummr's queen wookl
be loo slrong for mosl players. However,
any·pair who defends like that wins world
tmas.

cen: 740-416-5047

28 Years Experience

·-

{2wdo.)

c.nal
3 Cool

35 Soffron diah 11 Lot go

fmesse.

Tl\~.

PEHON~TRATE

~·
2 Old blrgo

the diamond
king,
a
. cashes
third round.
East wins.
withthen
his plays
(JJeel'l

OSSERVE, GENT~. A'&gt; I

on his 801h
. Birllulay

plonot
32 Joined
by treaty
34 Dojo
activity

42 Cheorio!
(hyph.)
43 Graceful

Trip

itiner•te•
21 Aocontly

~ Cowarll saKI, "My dear boy, forget
about the motivation. Just say the lines
and don't ~ .,..,r the lumiture."
Vesterday's deal woold not have tripped
Ull marry players at the table. Today's is
different. Dor\'t peek at the East or West
hand belore dociding how I&lt;&gt;U would
plan the play in lour spades West leads
the diamond aco, urider wlllcll East sig·
nals enthusiastically with his 10. West

G
Housing CJPpo•unHy.

27

Mooon

f~esseto

.!

. IT~ ONL.'i TIW~~t&gt;f&gt;,'(~

Racine, Ohio 740.247-2019

Dale Barr

26

Dealer: SOuth
Vulaerabte: Both

hehadsudlstOI'DedlstnMon.Bewary
of4-3-3-3whenplanningasuncontract.
II looks as though you need the heart
worlt aut theie is one other
possibility, unlikely as it seems: East
might have the -ton or lripleton
dub ~ng.
Win wRh your heart aoe, play a trump to
tho board, cash lhe club ace, discarding
the heart five, ruff a club in your hand,
return to dummy with ·a trump, and ruff
ano1her club.
Hero. tho ~ng appears, so play a spade
to dummy's Quean and discard your
. heart Jilek on the club queen. H, though,
the dub ~ng does not drop, cross to
dummv wHh a spa&lt;le and take the heart

&lt;C::O
. -;;,

lOIII

111 lovillg memmy
of

23

tion
Longbow
wood
Gall!r
ala¥. . tool
Boo~ u
wingo
Sownlh

20

I Petry ·

and shifts to a heart. What now?.
Yes, East might have bid three ~ubs. b&lt;lt

I

Jon Van Meter &amp;
Paul Rowe

ol reotric-

when on paper

TOLl&gt; TttE 11AQtfll ~·,..,
GOING TO WO#lf: IN
/ A CLOCK fACTOilY

DOWN

19Lock

It is easier
~

utime

57 Sladcon olf
58 Port of MIT

counltrplrt

Opening lead: t A

TttiS ISN'T FAIIl!

56=·

RoiMd

tho tid

18 NASA

Soutb

~ M on - Fri .
8:00am :·ct :30 pm

&amp; doposlt,
Jro
Sl.,
Racine (740)247-4292

• 9 84
• Q 10 8 5
6 K 10 8

Stnp &amp; Compote

BIIIV B. Goble Jr.
140-416·1184

Owners:

• Q76
+ A~ 3
•Jil76.52

741-112·1171

~.....t

coollt.
16 Lav, in
London

54 2

A K J ,i
• J 6 2

E·mail: captb11165@yahoo.com
www.auctlonzlp.com
#5548

441-()194
3 br. $400 ~ mo., 1 bt.
$295 a mo., plus utilities

•

•

AUCTIONS/ ANTIQUES
·AICU1188r:

•

• 3

6AK98l6

{740) 992·5344

bU!i'illt.'i.'i

Eul

Soolll

RV ':-

....Townhoutet

Gnc:louo Living 1 aoo 2
Bedroom Apts. al Village
Manor
and
RIVerside
ApiS . In Mkklap011, lrom
$327
to
$592.
740-992-50E4.
Equal

~Iabrie

53
55 Ball

15 a.-lllo

WHI

Remodeling

We t~pprecitllc _rn11r

····"'

46Yo.....,_
50 Pinboff

Pormk~

build«

14

• v7 4
6 A Q 43

111411 mo. pd

based on experience and ...- - - - - - - .
inctll;(iing 40, K,
&amp;
Health Insurance. and
.W187
Wlpt&gt;le Rd.
Paid Vacation are also
available.
Please apply
Pomero)·.OH
in person.. For any more
\) Pnints)
information
contact'
New· &amp; Us~'tl Tires.
Teddv
Lambert
@

benefits

291170 Bashan 'Rood

13

• 10 3 2

-

45 Sup Ray

12 llulical
Nortlt
• Q J .10

G-••lw&lt;l

42 T, In Athlnl

illm

a/

HIRING "''I· Pay $l!Q/hr ..,..J~==·~·~;;;;;;
~::--~o:::--~~
S51Kiyr.
inctooas ~
2005
14(/Q
_M_ Fed.Ben, QT. Place by Pa•-lime . - Homo, 21lodfoom, 2balh, adSotriOO, nQI alfil~led needed (taleleuces ,.
vl nyl siding, shlng4e roof, ..-. USPS w11o hlraa. quired) . .,_ be dependthermapayne .
windoW, 1-866--403-2582
abte and honest. ,Call

740-416-1354or9926068

10

•=~:::':i"""'
•M.. l

3t

~- lioalon
=-80

American M - AU)(itiary Aids and Serv~~~~""'::':"""~~ soc.
ol
labor ices are available upon
3 Bt. Mobile Home lor t -913-599-8226,
2411&gt;rs. tequesl
into,

NEA Cro11word Puzzle

BRIDGE

with
·
Fooward c-.+
utiiiUes. Ret/security
Lett8f. and Resume to
deposit, e~ecellent loe8- SI7.89-S2B.2711iR.. oow wmonterossoOrossprov.
tion. 446-8300 between hlmg. FO&lt; application com Equal ()pportuf1ity
6·9PM
and tree government tab Employer/Program

740.441-1111 lor appli cation &amp; information.

Mottle

www.mydailyeentlnel.com

ALLEVOOP

•

., • •II/

l'hurwdly, November 6, 2008

I
I

AMDION
2
I I I 1 I

S l UF H

,I

'
m

.

HKN I T '
I 5 6 '
0

"Doing nothing is hard to
do,''.!he not sc smart g!l)'
remalted, "you never know ~

IQ when you're·----."
lb.i

A RS y E G
l--rl.:.:..;lr:7~~:.._rl~e;lr•

•

•

•

•

:

Complete
chuckle quoted. _
by filling in lhi misOnQ words:

rov dovelop from srep No. 3 below. ;

e m~:~~~i~~RES r r I' I r I' I' lj
6
IIIIIIIIf
2

1

UNSCRAM8lE lETTERS

FOR ANSWER

.

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS 1115108
Island - Veldt - Knife - Facing - NICKLES
.
There are Several things you can get with a quaner, like fiv~
NICKLES.
•
ARLO&amp;JANIS

j

I
)

�Thursday, November 6, 2008

www.mydallysenUnel.com

Page 84 • The Daily sentinel

av.....,.... aFederal

and
2 OUI ...-.. 3 1001111 and up·
ft-. 1 wondelfuf frlmlly stalm. Completely fur"'""" or beKI &amp; breal&lt;laol. nl8hed wilh WID. No
~ nt Pictumqua
pots. Ref. Req. 441.()245
-

,

1

"""

-

• SPECTACUlAR VIEW

lnqLi""' only. Apartment avallabte now
, _ ... 740-992-3678
RM&gt;rt&gt;end Apts. New
Haven WV. Now accepting
'applications
IDf

'--' !Aon•••l

HUD-subsidized.
Bedroom Apts.

one

Utilities
••• ..,.. • ool 200 IICt8 lnclu&lt;led. Based on 30%
lann lo Galla Co. ot adjuoted income. Call
Ott.
60+
acres 304-882-3121, availafMl;
wofl-dralned
bottomland for Senior and Disabled
etono Raoooori c...k.
~people.
80+ acr89 pasture, bal·
ance worxlad. .stock wa·

.. .

lor pond, 2 · sptlogs, welL .,..,...,==,...-....,.~

Farm has carried 40-45 CONVENIENTLY
LOCOWI wlcllvea. Modem CATEO
&amp;
AFFORD·
brick style house ABLEI Townhouse ..,.••
wl flntshed
wa/tr-out ments,
and'or
small
bss ment. 937-596-6774
houses tor rent. Call

Now accept1119
applications at
Valley VieW Apartments
800 State Route 325
Th&lt;Jnnan, Ohio 45685
7«1-2&amp;5-1178

1-2 Bedroom Apartmeots
with appliances tumlshed

Oo site laundry 1ocltity.
Call lor details Of pick up
application at rental ·
office
Possibility Dl rental
assiStance.
· Equal Housing

Opponunity
TPDO •19-526-0466

"This institution iS an
EQUal Opportooily
Provider and Employe('

I(X70 newly remodeled
mobile t&gt;oma 36R $450

.....

The Daily Sentinel • Page ~

Help Wttftlrtd • GMorcrl

· =~~~~~- nlty

POSTAL JOBS

Aeaso

ACROSS

Phillip
Alder

cah

rent Mtddlepon,al ~- emp serv.
lric.Cia,no Inside pets, ::::=--:=~-~
$450 roonlh ,plus dep. POST OFFICE
NOV¥

20ft.pon:h740-ll84-4356
or 740-797-4356 lo· !.!!!!.!;;;;;.!!i!!.!J!!l""""'
.........Wanlod. Gonorcrl
,...,.
Da rwin.
cated
at
$250 5 ' - Bonuol
$26 000
'

·

"'"-'

Volod mi'FIVEBelf

-

to Wod' In Oh/ot

Come See Why/

No Sates!

NoCot~onsl
Full and Part·llme
Positions
Day and Evening

Shifts
Professional Work

Environmen1!
Medtcilt. Dental,
EAP, 401KI

ho~

lot lor
renl in Pt. Pleasant
$125.00 pi mon. with a

On-site Doctor
W~Payand

Borws Incentives!

dap. incluK!as
water &amp; sewer call
3()(-674-6219 for an
llppllcatlon.

CARPENTER
SERVICE

"'

•.•.

$75.00

SEE WHAT WE CAN
OFfER YOU AT
htlpJ-.Infodalon.com
OR CALL
1-888-fMC-PAVU
Ext. 1901

5

H,1sSr ··

YOUNG'S

•· -·-

S'crage
'

&amp;

9 MJi

Rlicfne, Ohio
4sn1

·-Gnio•
'
• Ettcbiclll ~"SS
Re:

740-t49-2217

:339:·1~2~10~
~== · ·VInyl
•RoOrtnQI"'"*'
SIOing Painting.
MeC:hania
·Patio arid Porch Decb

S&amp;illl;x1b'
·1
.
'

&amp;

wv 036725

Appalachian Tire PJOCIucts, Inc. Is currenfty
seeking tireloil service
tech· fof our Point Pleasani, WV location. Wages

10 10'1130' ' &lt;\

V.C YOUNG Ill

Hours
7:00AM • 8:00 PM

Y926?1S
\r•o1 C•• ·
'

.,., .. • ' ' l [ l , l ( '

_,.

L

304-675·3930,

Modi;.,.
Middleton
Estates
&amp;
ResCare Home Care is

accepting
applications
for Direct Care Staff. In·
terested persons may
contact Rhonda Harrison
at 74().446-4614 ext 26
Monday

through Friday
9a-5p or e-mail a resume

to
rflarnson @rescare.com

--.New Homes
• Gafages
•Complete

LTire Darn

We buy used tire~.
~.:nmputer whed
alignm~rns. light
me~.: hank work..
t:omplete scrvil'C" oil
cilangcs . sn mll cnginr
repair.
Wr: Sl'r\ ice and
wi uh:rize boiiiS ami

I.4.
ANI&gt; MA!Ct fACfS.
. • ,,.

':::::::=:--~::::::~:::::::~~~~:~~::::::::.
~

Sal . H:lXl am- 12

BARNEY

.

Hardwood Cablimry And Flll'lliirl
w-W-w.tlmberoHokcoblnfll')'-

7

_____.J!:~~:.!.!:!J
fl~'

·-

I .NEARLY

rr

I FtGG€RED
UP, ELVINE"''-IF "''A SUBTRACT TH' SPATS,'
FIGHTS AN' ALL TH' TIMES WE
WARN'T ON SPEAKIN' TERMS...

•"

AIN'T BEEN FRIENDS FER
AS LONG AS WE'RE
ALWA"''S TELLIN' FOLKS 1

WE

'
·1'

·

30

111111111:

HoW To

T .

Aeletences/Oepo~VNo

'JIERE TMft' COME! OIVIN6 OUT OF TUE SUN !!
BULLETS laiHININ6.ALL AAOIINP!! ENE,\\'t'
PLANES A80\'E, 8ELOW,A~P ON ALl. SICIES !!!

Pats 304-675-5162

CI 4ASSIFIEDS
,.

'

AstroGraph

Help Wanted

e

IIUIISE PRACTITIOIIER
Pleasant Valley Hospital is currently
accepting resumes for a full-time
Emergency Department Nul$e Practitioner
or Physician Assistant Applicant should
have a minimum of one year experience
in a clini~ urgent care or family practice
setting.
Send resumes to:
l'telltlant V1ll1y .1:101111111
c/o HumM Raaurcn
ti20V.Ieyllrlw
Point PIIPMinl:, WV 25550
Or fax: aD4-171·1t71
AA/EOE

COW and BOY

A~IES

WI{Y 00 I HAVETO .
CMOOSE BETWEEN
GOO Of! SCIENCEl

Johcj:e,....

__
__
.,__

CGmpltlo 11M Clro

I SEE SCIENCE

~GOO. GOD,_

SCIENCE. I SEE...

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

......... f,..U....

J&amp;L
Construction

CORNER STONE
CONSTRUCTION

• VInyl Skiing

Rooting, Siding,
Soffit, Decks,
. Doors, Wlndo~,
E:lsctrlc, Plumbing,
DrywaH, .
Remodeling, Room
Additions
t.ocaleomr-

• Replacement
Windows
·Roofing

•Decks
·Garages

•Pole Bulldlngo
• Room AddHions
Owner:
. James Keesee II
742·2332

•

74o-367-o544
FreeEatlrnaiM

0

740-367-(1536

0

For Remodeling ~nd New Ho..,. Building
Call: MARCUM CONSTRUCTION

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

Fri-Sat- Sun
Nov. 7, 8, 9

French 500
Flea Market
Galli a County Fairgrounds

Dealers Welcome

IIIEW.IIICII..M U
47239 Riebel Road. Long Bouom , OH

740-985-4141

ibor'lllrll!dtiY:

..

Cell: 740-416-1834
lS+ yefJI'S t:rperience Frte EstilfUIItJ

Advertise
in this space for,
·$64 per month

(March 21·Aprll

19) -

By

remaining optimistiC and keeping your
BllpeCI&amp;Uons within rvallsllc bounds, you
wHI gradually gain grourld on your goa~~,
Because you don't expect fT'IOfelhan you
should, you won't glw up:
·
TAURUS {April 20-May 20) - One of
your bast assets 16 baing a good 6stener,
and this will prove to be an actvantaoeous trait. You Will team about some·
thing that you'll put to good use at this
time.
·
GEMINI (May 21..June 20) - Keep your
goals and desires in proportloo to your
abiMIIes, and you will have more posslbil·
tties for success than most people do.
regardless of your flak! of endea'o'Or.
CANCER (June 21-July' 22}- You have
what II lakes to accomplish your goals.
You'H not only be' an efficlant wonter;
you'll atso know how 10 Interact wnh others to make them eff&amp;cttwt as wall.
LEO {July 23-Aug. 22) -Handling omatl
details could be more significant than
usual, particular1y In domesttc matters.
Pavtng attentiOn 10 ewn rneanJngleu
family acttvmH will grMtty pleue your
loved 'onea.
VIRGO {Aug. 23-SePt. 22i- Anoclates,
friends and family wll be more willing to
listen to what you hive to say If you keep'
your conwi'Mtiont brief. The ·ab"nce of
boring amalllalk will maklo whal you uy
tar mo,.. lnte,..llng.
LIBRA (Stpt• •~3-oct. ~3) - Evan 1
smel1 minor ~lopment can tum out to

many ;ood thlollf going tor you at thla

llmf,

SOUP TO NUTZ

~"t- '
lbU~t'~.

,,

-··

~ ~--··~~--- -

rOIId

8 Readiu
vllloy
chompall"• 32 OK
.

divleion-

52 Proper,

as reepct .
54 Cotton gin

.,.,.

seabird
40 ·Ftowtr part
41 Proteat

17 Not 'neath

song writer

CElEBRITY CIPHER
by luis Campos
C4Wetl!1ty Ol)'ltr c~ogr!rns ara crMt«llrcmqucutO'lS bylamous ~ oas; a-xl PIM'Il "
Each Je:ler in !h9Clltl8f &amp;ta"ds !01 arintler
•

Toda1sckJe: W equals C

"RPM
GBS

VOA
DOF

ET 0

XPG NXPZ EG,
SXA

ZBEGS

ET OKVPTG

PO

JMG

ASTHOEF,

OG

GBSFS '

1'/KSOFEXL ZBSFS
BOHHR."-

UPOX

PXS

JOSC ·

PREVIOUS SOLUTION- "My father was not a failure After all, he was the
father o!a Preside.nt of lhe United Slates.' -Harry S. Truman

'::~:t~~, S©~~1J. -LG"ttfS!l

WOlD
GAM! .

,ldkod by CIAY R. IOU AN

of the

wotdJ b..
low to form four simple words.

bo p!Ofttalllo " dono In oonjunctlon wttn

~A.t ~ . - - - - - -

7 Country

lettt~n;

Whit ~ olrMdV on the llbto.\l&gt;u Will "-'"

· GRIZZWELLS

25 Leory
coating
28 Houfo- 49 lltf011,
29 .Fioeco
poetically
31 Vinoy•d
51 Pll)'

6 -atudont

·Rearrange
0
· loUt Kramblod

of:

Help Wanted

Dovor'. .t .
toupt~
· 47~~
5 ExhaJot
24 Latin lvtrt&gt; 48 Orange

4

.

Organization and proper planning will
·greatly strengthen your possibilities for
success In the year ahead, and they wilr
be the major reasons lor you making
Such IMps and bounds In both your par·
sonal and worf(·related life.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) - Make
pJans to engage In a rtK:reational activity
with friends or family. Getting your mind
ot1 aJI the serious things In tire will do
wonders for your outlook.
SAGITTARIU,S (Nov. 23-0ec. 21)- This
Is an 8)(cellent day to gather the information you Qeed on a matter of importance,
whether It Is work-related, personal or
homework. You'lf have an easier time
dolhQ so than usual.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) Quality, not flamboyance, Is what you
should be looking lor In companiOns. A
comfortable, eompallble friendship will
be more enjoyable and tulfiMing than
spending time with garish, ftashy people.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) - If you
haw to make a choice between profit
and pride of accomplishment, choose
the latter. Acquiring se1t.. s1eem will be.
~ora valuabla and long lasting than
procortng material wealth.
. PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) - One
your better asse1s IS your ability to communicate effectively. You're not only ·gOod
at gathering fact&amp; but also at disseminatIng th&amp;m to thO!Ie who wfll put them to
fruitful uses.

,,

David Lewis

Clean
Ground
Floor, 2bt. WID hookup,

44 W. Coul

9 Mock fon·
33 Prolorrod
f•o (hyplt)
shift
10 Murmur
37 North.orn

38 Sow'a pon

Frldily, Nav. 7, 2008
By Bernice Becte 0.0.

CAPITALIZE 01'1 OUil
NEwFOUNI&gt; FAME !

Mce

22 Fr. miu
23 Hearty

36 Enter data 12 Fra,.
37 Two-BA unit
of mind

Yes. the defense could have boon
· stronger. West could have led his low
diamond at trick two, East winning.with
his queen and returning a diamond.
Then West shifts lo a low club.' The
temptation 10 play dummr's queen wookl
be loo slrong for mosl players. However,
any·pair who defends like that wins world
tmas.

cen: 740-416-5047

28 Years Experience

·-

{2wdo.)

c.nal
3 Cool

35 Soffron diah 11 Lot go

fmesse.

Tl\~.

PEHON~TRATE

~·
2 Old blrgo

the diamond
king,
a
. cashes
third round.
East wins.
withthen
his plays
(JJeel'l

OSSERVE, GENT~. A'&gt; I

on his 801h
. Birllulay

plonot
32 Joined
by treaty
34 Dojo
activity

42 Cheorio!
(hyph.)
43 Graceful

Trip

itiner•te•
21 Aocontly

~ Cowarll saKI, "My dear boy, forget
about the motivation. Just say the lines
and don't ~ .,..,r the lumiture."
Vesterday's deal woold not have tripped
Ull marry players at the table. Today's is
different. Dor\'t peek at the East or West
hand belore dociding how I&lt;&gt;U would
plan the play in lour spades West leads
the diamond aco, urider wlllcll East sig·
nals enthusiastically with his 10. West

G
Housing CJPpo•unHy.

27

Mooon

f~esseto

.!

. IT~ ONL.'i TIW~~t&gt;f&gt;,'(~

Racine, Ohio 740.247-2019

Dale Barr

26

Dealer: SOuth
Vulaerabte: Both

hehadsudlstOI'DedlstnMon.Bewary
of4-3-3-3whenplanningasuncontract.
II looks as though you need the heart
worlt aut theie is one other
possibility, unlikely as it seems: East
might have the -ton or lripleton
dub ~ng.
Win wRh your heart aoe, play a trump to
tho board, cash lhe club ace, discarding
the heart five, ruff a club in your hand,
return to dummy with ·a trump, and ruff
ano1her club.
Hero. tho ~ng appears, so play a spade
to dummy's Quean and discard your
. heart Jilek on the club queen. H, though,
the dub ~ng does not drop, cross to
dummv wHh a spa&lt;le and take the heart

&lt;C::O
. -;;,

lOIII

111 lovillg memmy
of

23

tion
Longbow
wood
Gall!r
ala¥. . tool
Boo~ u
wingo
Sownlh

20

I Petry ·

and shifts to a heart. What now?.
Yes, East might have bid three ~ubs. b&lt;lt

I

Jon Van Meter &amp;
Paul Rowe

ol reotric-

when on paper

TOLl&gt; TttE 11AQtfll ~·,..,
GOING TO WO#lf: IN
/ A CLOCK fACTOilY

DOWN

19Lock

It is easier
~

utime

57 Sladcon olf
58 Port of MIT

counltrplrt

Opening lead: t A

TttiS ISN'T FAIIl!

56=·

RoiMd

tho tid

18 NASA

Soutb

~ M on - Fri .
8:00am :·ct :30 pm

&amp; doposlt,
Jro
Sl.,
Racine (740)247-4292

• 9 84
• Q 10 8 5
6 K 10 8

Stnp &amp; Compote

BIIIV B. Goble Jr.
140-416·1184

Owners:

• Q76
+ A~ 3
•Jil76.52

741-112·1171

~.....t

coollt.
16 Lav, in
London

54 2

A K J ,i
• J 6 2

E·mail: captb11165@yahoo.com
www.auctlonzlp.com
#5548

441-()194
3 br. $400 ~ mo., 1 bt.
$295 a mo., plus utilities

•

•

AUCTIONS/ ANTIQUES
·AICU1188r:

•

• 3

6AK98l6

{740) 992·5344

bU!i'illt.'i.'i

Eul

Soolll

RV ':-

....Townhoutet

Gnc:louo Living 1 aoo 2
Bedroom Apts. al Village
Manor
and
RIVerside
ApiS . In Mkklap011, lrom
$327
to
$592.
740-992-50E4.
Equal

~Iabrie

53
55 Ball

15 a.-lllo

WHI

Remodeling

We t~pprecitllc _rn11r

····"'

46Yo.....,_
50 Pinboff

Pormk~

build«

14

• v7 4
6 A Q 43

111411 mo. pd

based on experience and ...- - - - - - - .
inctll;(iing 40, K,
&amp;
Health Insurance. and
.W187
Wlpt&gt;le Rd.
Paid Vacation are also
available.
Please apply
Pomero)·.OH
in person.. For any more
\) Pnints)
information
contact'
New· &amp; Us~'tl Tires.
Teddv
Lambert
@

benefits

291170 Bashan 'Rood

13

• 10 3 2

-

45 Sup Ray

12 llulical
Nortlt
• Q J .10

G-••lw&lt;l

42 T, In Athlnl

illm

a/

HIRING "''I· Pay $l!Q/hr ..,..J~==·~·~;;;;;;
~::--~o:::--~~
S51Kiyr.
inctooas ~
2005
14(/Q
_M_ Fed.Ben, QT. Place by Pa•-lime . - Homo, 21lodfoom, 2balh, adSotriOO, nQI alfil~led needed (taleleuces ,.
vl nyl siding, shlng4e roof, ..-. USPS w11o hlraa. quired) . .,_ be dependthermapayne .
windoW, 1-866--403-2582
abte and honest. ,Call

740-416-1354or9926068

10

•=~:::':i"""'
•M.. l

3t

~- lioalon
=-80

American M - AU)(itiary Aids and Serv~~~~""'::':"""~~ soc.
ol
labor ices are available upon
3 Bt. Mobile Home lor t -913-599-8226,
2411&gt;rs. tequesl
into,

NEA Cro11word Puzzle

BRIDGE

with
·
Fooward c-.+
utiiiUes. Ret/security
Lett8f. and Resume to
deposit, e~ecellent loe8- SI7.89-S2B.2711iR.. oow wmonterossoOrossprov.
tion. 446-8300 between hlmg. FO&lt; application com Equal ()pportuf1ity
6·9PM
and tree government tab Employer/Program

740.441-1111 lor appli cation &amp; information.

Mottle

www.mydailyeentlnel.com

ALLEVOOP

•

., • •II/

l'hurwdly, November 6, 2008

I
I

AMDION
2
I I I 1 I

S l UF H

,I

'
m

.

HKN I T '
I 5 6 '
0

"Doing nothing is hard to
do,''.!he not sc smart g!l)'
remalted, "you never know ~

IQ when you're·----."
lb.i

A RS y E G
l--rl.:.:..;lr:7~~:.._rl~e;lr•

•

•

•

•

:

Complete
chuckle quoted. _
by filling in lhi misOnQ words:

rov dovelop from srep No. 3 below. ;

e m~:~~~i~~RES r r I' I r I' I' lj
6
IIIIIIIIf
2

1

UNSCRAM8lE lETTERS

FOR ANSWER

.

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS 1115108
Island - Veldt - Knife - Facing - NICKLES
.
There are Several things you can get with a quaner, like fiv~
NICKLES.
•
ARLO&amp;JANIS

j

I
)

�.

..... ·

..

--

···~

-

.

~·

.. . . .... .. .

·•

. ·-

~

. . .

I

•

Quinn

•

fromPageBl

llet if he doesn't live up to
expectations . The team
!faded away two draft
gjcks, one of them a firstrounder in 2008, to select
~nn, who didn't make his
NFL debut unti I the 16th
game last season. He went
~-of-8 for 45 yards and led
.!J!e Browns to a field .goal
on an 11-play drive.
He
was
seen
as
Cleveland's future - and it
lias arrived.
Although he's had a short
\Veek to prepare, Quinn
should benefit from playing
against
Denver's
defense, which is ranked
~mong the AFC's worst.
Seeing
Anderson
get
demoted could. be a concern, but the 24-year-olo
.
'
said he isn't wonjed about
lpng-term job security.
.: "Honestly, J'w not look-

r _.. . "''""
1 1/u
I
I
I
I

I

--- __
.

1!1""11

1,

Big Ten

ing pas~ this week," he said.
"The biggest thing is getting . a win this week. I'm
not looking at eight games.
I'm looking at one game."
While the Browns are
lookin·g for someone to
throw the ball accurate! y,
the Broncos, . who rushed
for 14 yards on 12 carries
- Denver's worst rushing
perfonnance in 36 years are searching for someone
to run with it.
They lost two running
backs, Michael Pittman .
(spinal cord) and Andre
Hall (hand), to season-ending injuries against Miami
last week. Rookie Ryah
Torain, who drew comparisons to former Broncos
star Terrell Davis before
breaking his elbow in training camp, is expected to get
the bulk of carries against
the Browns.
done are the days when
the Broncos could count on
their trademark running
game to carry them.
But they'll be going

_,..

,.

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

.

'

against a Cleveland defense
which let Ravens rookie
Ray Rice run all over them
fromPageBl
last week . Rice gained season-high 154 yards, 60 on a
key run in the fourth quar- they're certainly deserving
ter. Like Quinn, Torain, is of their ranking. You can
hoping to make the most of argue they deserve to be
ranked higher. I know peohis opportunity.
"This is huge," he said. pl~ have. I'll stay out of that
"This is huge for me to one.n
show how hard I've worked
GOING
GREENE:
with studying film and run- · Coach Joe Paterno reached
ning plays and just being back into the Penn State
out there to help the team annals when asked for his
win."
impressions of Hawkeyes
That 's what the Browns tailback Shonn Greene.
are hoping to get from Iowa, whose school colors
Quinn, who may be able to are black and gold, will be
spark a turnaround and sal· having a "Greene Out" in
vage a season that's hang- his honor at Kinnick
Stadium on Saturday.
ing by a thread.
Paterno compared Greene
Quinn hasn't made a
to
Lydell Mitchell, the out·
meaningful start since the
2007 Sugar Bowl, when the standing running back who
Fighting Irish. were throt- holds Penn State recoros for
rushing touchdowns for a
tled 41-14 by LSU.
career (38) and season (26,
Crennel doesn't know as a senior in 1971).
how l01ig Quinn will keep
With 11 touchdowns this
his job. One thing is clear, season, Greene has a ways
though, the Browns are run- to 110, though .his l ,257
ning out of options.
rushmg yards on 198 carries

II ('f·c r orr\

,t'

SUNDAY· BLT

man.

a maned

"He's one of those guys
that takes a real good tackle
and doesn't get knocked
down . .He's always going
this way," said Paterno. as
he quickly shQt his hands
straight out in front of him."

STILL IN UNIFORM:

are going to handle it like
you would a family di~pute.
But things do happen.
And as · the Dlini f!lllke
their way through a d1sap- ·
pointing season - they
started the year in the ~op
25 but now are scrambling
to be bowl eligible - ~
denied there were chemistry
problems on his team. ·
"No, not in this case," he
said. "There's absolutely
not one iota that I'm con· cemed about right now."

Illinois
WR
Jeff
Cumberland will be in unifonn when the lllini face
Western Michigan Saturday
in Detroit, even though he
QUICK· HITTERS:
allegedly broke teammate
Mikel LeShoure's jaw dur- Saturday's ~th~r games
include
M1ch1gan
at
ing a fight Satilrday night.
Cumberland, a 6-foot-5, Minnesota and Wisconsin at
247-pounder, reportedly Indiana .... Players of the
accused the 240-pound tail- week: Northwestern QB
back of taking his cell Mike Kafka, Purdue QB
phone last Saturday after Justin Siller; Northwestern
Illinois' 27-24 win over S Brendan Smith; Michigan
State K Brett Swenson. ...
Iowa.
. LeShoure, a freshman Everybody says the Big
who has started one game, Ten's bad and doesn't play
will miss the ·~arne against anyone. Then why are six
Western
M1chigan
at · conference members among
Detroit's Ford Field; and the top 18 in the nation in
·
strength of schedule this
may be out Ion11er.
"It was a fam1ly dispute," week? (And Penn State is ·
coach Ron Zook said. "We 67th!)

'Hillbilly Blessings'
to be presented, A7

•

•
Prinled oa 100%
Reeyrled Newoprlnt

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

..

• {J (

I ' Is

. \ 0 I. ,;X ' :\'I J.

I· H II ) \' . :\ () \ I· ,\1 B I .I{ ~.

X .i

Thompson: Philli

SPORTS
• Broncos rally past

BY BRIAN

J.

REED

BREE.DOMYDAILYSENTINEL.Ct:)M

. .Browns. See Page 81 .

POMEROY - Athens
Coqnty
Treasurer Jill
Thornpson issued a state·
ment Thursday calling her
opponent's victory declaration "premature," but the
Republican congratulated
Athens City Councilwoman
Debbie Phillips for a hard'
fought campaign.
Phillips, the Democratic
candidate, said Wednesday

Jill
Thompson

Debbie
Phillips

she expected the 170-vote
lead in the race to succeed
State Rep. Jimmy Stewart ,
R-Albany, would widen

:.! 0

oH

\\ \\ \\

II n

d.Ill' ..,,

II !

I ll\

~

D ...·

I

I I /Ill

'premature'·in claiming race
once 2,000 provisional and
absentee.ballots were counted in Athens County.
Thompson won the race
in Meigs, Morgan and
. Washington · counties, but
Phillips said she exl?ected
her victory margm in
Athens County to carry
her to victory - particularly after the provisional
ballots, cast mostly by
Ohio University students,
were counted.
"l congratulate Debbie

Phillips on a hard-fought count will be relea~ed.
campaign. If she ultimate- . Every vote counts an~ ever}'
ly wins election to repre- vote should be counted."
sent the 92nd House
"Win or lose, I am grateDistrict, I wish her every ful to the tens of thousands
succes.s. in the General of voters who gave me
Assemb.Iy,"
Thompson their trust and their vote.
said in an e-mail ~tatel)'lent I'm also very thankful for
yesterday. "Her victory the many campaign volunspeech may be premature , teers that have worked tireas the results on Election lessly for our cause.
Day were ve~y close."
Finally, I thank my family
. "Soon, all of the absentee for their patience and
and provisional ballots Will strong support throughout
be counted and the official · this long campaign."

tradition
•
continues

I' •,

BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENTCIMYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

LOIS
LIEVING

,.

'.

1,.·.:,.
I' '' .

..

OBITUARIES

I

CONGRATS!

I'

·Enter To Win A
FREE LUNCH!

f,

PageAJ

• Roland Morris, 66
. • Charlotte. Vecchio, 74

..

,

Taro-iu·•·blt! $4.49

IIIOtZhifh

WEDNFSDAY
2 Hot Dogs, Slll&lt;e &amp; otaw $l.99
Aller 4pm Pasta Nigllt ·all you cu eat $8.99
12-Undcr $5.99
5-V nder FREE
THURSDAY. R•uben S5.49orlwofor$9.75
FRIDAY· Soup &amp; Sm. Garden Salad $5.49
SATURDAY • 7 inch Pepperoni piml $3.9'1

QIIPMalr

,..

Thar~k

POMEROY - The tradi'
tion of toys and .bikers con. tinues tomorrow when the
County
Bikers
. Meigs
Association's 23rd Annual
Toy Run gets underway . .
Bikes will begin to gather
in the Pomeroy Parking Lot
around II a.m. tomorrow
with Santa leading the bikes
out at I p.m. on a run that
makes stops at Beth's Place
in Middleport, Bun's Party
Barn
in
Pomeroy,
Summerfields in Chester,
·
·
•
···.·~·· -· ~ - ····~·"•' .; •· ~-· .,,... ........ . • . ·.. . · . · . . •.
.. , .
.
·
.............. ,J, ...... ..:.....
. &gt;,. . . lubrntned photoe
River City Carry-Out in .
Drivers from Meigs, Eastern and Southern lociD school districis competed for fun a mini bus rodeo MOi'll:lay at Alligator Pomeroy and. ends at
Gloeckner's Cafe on East
Jack's. It was designed ,to simulate everyday driving experiences and to highlight the skill of.lbcal bus drivers.
Main Street in Pomeroy,
according
to
MCBA
President Rudy Stewart.
At Gloeckner's, prize
drawings, an auction and
food will be available, all to
raise money to purchase
toys
for underprivileged
. STAFF REPORT
were overall winners.
children in Meigs County.
NEWSOMYOAILYSENTINEL.COM
The three districts and their transThe cost to participate in the
portation coordinators hope this will
ride is $10 per person which
POMEROY - A school bus "rodeo" become an annual event, proving .that
is money ,that goes into the
was a fun and practical event for bus dri- bus drivers·are among the saf~st drivers
.
toy fund and benefits those
vers in the county's three local school on the road and school buses are the
same
children. A child's toy
dil!lricts Monday.
safest vehicles on the road. School buses
equivalent
to $10 will also
The-drivers and transportation depart- are nearly eight times safer than passenbe accepted.
ments·with the district took advantage a ger vehicles, according to the National
Typically
the
day off school . - teachers and other Transportation Safety Board.
toy
run
beneAssociation's
staff were in training at Meigs High
"Bus drivers are a humble group,"
fits between 100-200 chilSchool and Middle School - to•show said Rose. "They don't brag about their
dren every year. Just how
record, they just go about their job each
off their skills.
many children benefit:
The event was fashioned after a state day in a quiet and unassuming way."
depends
on how successful
event held every spring, with less inten"So tomorrow or next week or any
sity but more happy competition. Drivers time you ~ee a school bus driver tell him
Please see Toy run, A:S
competed in several driving maneuvers or her 'thanks' for transporting your
that showcased their skills as bus drivers, children or grandchildren."
simulating daily drivin~ experiences. . . "Remember to stop on red and watch
Meigs Local Bus Driver John Gaus
Drivers competed mdividually and for the big yellow bus ."
Rose thanked the owners of Alligator was the outstanding individual dri·
for their district, with four drivers per
district. Meigs Local School District Jack's and school district administra- ver in a mini bus rodeo held at
Alligator Jack's Monday.
and Meigs Local driver John Gaus tions for cooperating in the event.

In

• Taxpayers may pay
legal bills for mortgage
execs. See Page A2
• For the Record.
·See Page A3
·• Was God in the
: election resutts?
' See Page A6
:• AHunger For More.
See Page A6
• Celebrating through
·music. See Page A7
· • 'Roots of Christianity'
topic of three-day
seminar in area ..
;See Page A7

$3.~

MONDAY· Meolball Sub$3.99
TUESDAY· WIDp 49t

A young family, a
new style for the ·
"White House, A2

ff f
1'h'IS UT
neeks Ul'
n tnner ...

$30 Gift C'ertificate

I
I
I Name:. ___________
I
.I Phone#·~----------1

have made him

Toy run

1.\" '-.uth \ J'll'ug A .,.
'
..\ f-'n'e I tUN It.'
I il
Enter

'"'·

'lbunday, November6, :zooS

www.mydailysentinel.com

.: P11ae 86 •lre Daily Sentinel

You

ICJ Our Many

Customers

10 Years;,,

WEATIIER

Gallipoli.~

COMING SOON· BEAN BOULEVARD

Meigs Local drivers

were rodeo winners

BUCKEYE TAILGATING •

PAUL DOEFFINGER ,

MLEF moving forward with donations
BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENTDMYDAILYSENTINELCOM

o.tatla on Page ~

....

INDEX
. Jl SEC110NS - 16 PAGES
';..~
.

Sodexo Dining
Services

.

loalltd oa Tile Ualvenlty ~
RloGnllde'tcampusla £ftll
and Elbabedl om. Uaivenlty
CtottrlavUes yoa to our
Suclay bt'lllltb buffet. We
haft DilDY iw- t4t dl001e from
ladlldla~

A3

Bucl~.eye

88

Edition
Calendars
Classifieds

1118de to order

.
Movies

bmlkf..t and luaeb, de~~trt,
lee cram blr, 1011p, plzr.a,
aad madl.more. ·

NASCAR
Obituaries
Sports
Weather

Oar bruacb hoan are
11 a.m. to 1 p.m.

Brfaa your family ~md jolu us.

A3
Bs-6

Comics ·
Editorials
Faith. • Values

amelets, ~es; ..... bar,

B7

A4
Afr7

A8
B3

A3
B Section

A3

C 1008 Ohio Volloy Publlohlna C..

$7.95 ror adults 1111d we oft'er

dl8ewated l'lltfs for dlildren.

'

~ie's Mailbox

----

·----'---·---- ~· ---·- - ·----·- · ~- --···-- -~~· .

POMEROY
The
Meigs Local · Enrichment
Foundation
recently .
received some major.dona- ·
lions from Farmers Bank
and the family of the late
Don Dixon.
The MLEF continues to
raise funds for constll!Ction of athletic, academic
and recreational facilities
for Meigs County. To dafe.
the MLEF reports its
raised around $2 million in
cash, pledges and · in-kind
donations,. '
According to the MI.£F,
the organization is not only
about raising funds to benefit those in Meigs Local but
residents who live all over·
Meigs County. The MLEF
is financing two phases of
development on land local·
ed in Salisbury Township,
the first being the 'community phase while the second is
the Meigs Local phase.
Recently Farmers Bank,
represented by Paul Reed,
president Farmers Bank
and Paul Kloes ; chairman
of Farmers Bank, made a

•

.

Stloll photo

Judy Dixon (far left) and daughter Amity (far right) recently
presented the Meigs Local Enrichment Foundation with a
$3,000 donation in memory of the late Don Dixon, a longtime coach at Meigs. Mike Bartrum (center) of the MLEF
accepts the donation.
donation of $50,000 to sup·
port the organization and
1ts goal to benefit all those
livin~ in Meigs County. In
addition, the bank made a
$5,000 donation to Meigs
Local Band Director Toney

.. '

Dingess toward the purchase of a new trailer for
the
Meigs
Marauder
Marching Band.
A statement from the
MLEF said: "It's good to
know that in spite of tur·

Association
begins plans
for holiday .
season events

BY BRIAN J. REED
moil in the financial markBREEDIIMYDAILYSFNTINEL.COM
ers, the Fanners Bank is
still here, stronger than
MIDDLEPORT - The
ever and dedicated to makCo!"munity
Middleport
ing our community a better
.Association began plans for
· place to live."
· In addition to help from Christmas holiday events
local businesses, the MLEF and finalized plans for its
is receiving help from indi- fall Bear/Basket Game dur·
viduals like Judy Dixon ing Tuesday's monthly
who presented the founda- meeting .
The Bear/Basket Game
tion with a $3,000 donation
be held Nov. J 8 at the
will
made in memory of her late
firehouse
. Doors will ·open
husband, Don .
at
4:30
p.m. , and games
Don was a long-time
football . coach and the begin at 6. Advance tickets
MLEF stated: "Coach are available, and may be
Dixon helped to shape the purchased at the Middleport
lives of countless boys office of Peoples Bank ,
who played'·for Meigs for Locker 219, Ohio River
over 20 years . He helped · Bear Co ., Dan's in Pomeroy ·
boys become young men, and the Chamber of
and he taught them that Commerce.
Setup will begin at 3:30
they could achieve anything with enough effort p.m. Proceeds from the
and planning. Most imp'Or- event are used to finance
tantly, Coach Dixon taught holiday . promotions and
them about teamwork, dig- activities.
Plans for decorating
nity and class."
downtown
Middleport for
As for Mrs. Dixon , the
the
holiday
season will
MLEP stated: "Judy has
been one of the mos't active begin at a me~ting at 8:30
of
Meigs a.m. on Nov. 21 at the bank .
supporters
Athletic Boosters, having Decorating work will begin
worked in the concession on Nov. 24.

.PIHH IH Dotultl0111, A3

PluM- Hc!I!Uys. A3

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="549">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="10000">
                <text>11. November</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="14462">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="14461">
              <text>November 6, 2008</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="531">
      <name>clagg</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="1492">
      <name>foreman</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="394">
      <name>leport</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
