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•

GARDENING

iunbap .lime• ·itnttnel

PageD6
Sunday, November 30, 2008.

Endeavour finishes
t6-day mission, A2

•

This Nov. 29, 2007 file
photo shows poinsettia
plants lor sale at
Oklahoma State University,
Oklahoma City campus.
Although poinsettias of all
stripes and colors remain
the best-selling standard,
there are a number of
good, winter-blooming
options.

AP photo

This undated photo provided by The Chile Pepper Institute
NMSU shows a NuMex Christmas ornamental chile plant
The ornamental NuMex line is built primarily around the
ancient Capsicum pepper species, a shrub native to South
and Central America that exhibits a wide range of desirable
traits.

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
:; o ( I '\ I ~ • \ " I. :;H. '\ " ·

Bv DEAN FosotcK

Paul Bosland is a pepper
plant breeder whose spectalty
adds zest and dazzle to the
holidays.
So far, he's introduced
ornamental chile. plants for
Halloween (orange and black
· fiuit) , Thanksgiving (creamcolored pods that turn
orange), Christmas (red and
green), St. Patrick's Day
(green · and orange) and
Valentine's Day (cream to
pink to red).
In the works hybrid-wise
for launch in 2009 lW multi-.
colored pepper varieties commemorating the Chinese New
Year (burnished orange) and
Cinco de Mayo (yellow to
red).

The ornamental NuMex
line developed by Bosland is
built primarily around the
ancient Capsicum pepper
species, a shrub native to
South and Central America
that exhibit~ a wide range of
desirable traits.
Bosland assembles decorative new cultivars from a
small group of parent plants
having different colors and
shapes and the promise of
high yields and low maintenance. All produce nectar-rich
blooms before they fruit,
making them excellent border
plants or attr&lt;Jetive choices for
potting.
"(Commercial) greenhouse
growers were looking for
additional plants to grow during the major holidays, like
Mother's
Day
and
Christmas," said Bosland, a
horticulture professor at New
Mexico State University and
director of the school's Chile
Pepper Institute. .
"By associating the diflerent color combinations to
other holidays, I am hoping
that it helps marketing and
Sales." ·
: While these ·multicolored
chilies aren't likely to replace
poinsettias as Ute lop-selling
holiday plant, Utey are a hot
option, Bosland said.
Ornamental chile peppers
are stunning as they flower
and again as the fruit ripens .
Chilies bring a different look
to flower gardens - -unique ·
and eye-catching when
placed alongside more traditional !lowers or when displayed alone in containers.
The plants also are droughttolerant.
"Tiley are as easy to grow
as a potted mum,and if someone wanted, they could be
kept alive for years," Bosland
said., "Those that have the
dwarf gene make a good
indoor plant as long as you
put them by a bright window. ·
But varieties that get kind.of
tall do better outside, in sunny
gardens."
The popularity of these
!lowering vegetables has been
increasing, · but should gain
momentum next year when
they begin arriving at such
national retail chains as
Lowe's and Wai-Mart, said
Travis Knoop, special pro-~cts ' manager at Metrolina
·Greenhouses in Huntersville.
N.C, .
.
.."'fhere?s more ofa dernand
for !hem now, with people
asking for a heat tolerant plant
that's also very showy," said
Knoop, who studied under
Bosland at New Mexico
State. "Their fruit la~L~ longer
tban any flower for the
money. People new to these
pepper plants are usually
pleased with the outcomes.''
Ornamental peppers are
frost-sensitive and generally
grow best ' when planted in
well-drained, slightly acidic
soil. . They perform as soft
perennials in frost-free zones,
I

Knoop said.
"Although they self-sow.
it's best to buy new plants off
!he shelf each year for more
consistency," he said.
Their drying ability is
another plus, said Janie
Lamson , whose Cross
Country . Nurseries
at
Rosemont , N.J .. turns out
some 500 pepper varieties.
"You can cut a whole
branch of them and they will
dry and display well on a wall
or h'l!lging from the ceiling."
Lamson said. "A lot of pe~ple
use them for table arrangements. A great many display
Utem in the workplace.
"They're
thin-skinned.
When you want to use them
to spice up some food, they
will crumble easily in your
tingars."
All peppers are suitable for
eating - fresh or dried,
whole or ground.
"t&gt;u me of the potted peppers will be marked 'For
Ornamental Use Only: but
only because they 've been
sprayed with something not
for use on· edible crops."
Lamson said. "If you grow
your own, they're edible."
But for the most part, the
ornamentals ate raised primarily for. their del)se , multi- .
branched foliage and colorful
fruit "Ornamental chilies can
have all the colors of the rainbow, often displaying pods in
four or five (,"Olors . on the
same plant at the same time,"
Bosland said.
They long have been called
"Christmas peppers" because
of Uteir bright red fruits during the holiday season, he
said . Wreaths made from
dehydrated peppers are popular in the Southwest and are a
major tourist product there .
"A tradition in New Mexico
is to harvest mature ·red
chilies and string them into
colorful strings (ristras),"
Bosland said. "The ristra is
hung near the entrance of the
house as a symbol ofhospitidity. Ornamental chilies have
become an innovative way
for small farmers to produce a
high-value alternative crop."

\ ] ( ) ' J) \ \ .

1" 1

'""" "" d.oil~ ""lltin&lt;•l.•·um

I 1 H 1·. " II L)( t , :!OOH

AP photo

otnre,

SPORTS

Ornamental peppers
beconling a holiday favorite
FOO THE ASSCCIATEO PRESS

~

Printed on 100%
Recycled Newsprint ~4f

·:• Lady Marauders
· roll past River Valley.
SeeP.Bl

Bv BETH SERGENT
BSERGENTOMVDAILYS[NTINELGOM

POMEROY - At its
most
recent
meeting ,
Pomeroy Village Council ·
)Ieard and passed two read. ings on two separate ordinances, one pertaining to
the fire department's ability
to recoup expenses on accident calls outside the village, the other on a longterm plan to eliminate the
. ·village's two combined
sewer overflows (CSO).

The second reading of the
Emergency . Service Cost
Reimbursement Ordinance
was heard and passed, ·
meaning one more reading
and vote iS-required for the
ordinance t'd become effective on Jan . I, 2009. The
ordinance will allow the
Pomeroy Fire Department
to seek reimbursement for
"fjre, safety and rescue, .
n;sponses and hazardous
material and environmental
incidents" it responds to
outside the village. ·
'

The ordinance doesn't
affect those liv'ing in lhe village whose taxes pay to
finance the department.
However, if Pomeroy
respon&lt;!J; to a call outside
village limits, the ordinance
would permit the department to seek recovery for
expenses incurred relating
to ·personnel hours, use of
equipment, etc.
At the most recent council
meeting , Clerk Treasurer
Kathy Hysell told Mayor
John Musser she'd re..:eived a

call from Middleport Fiscal
Officer Susan Baker asking
if this mean if Pomeroy was
called
to
assist
the
Middleport Fire Department
outside Pomeroy village lim- ·
its, if Middleport may be
subject to those cost recovery
charges. ,..
Although Musser said he
wasn't 100 percent .sure, he
said he didn't think if
Pomeroy
had
a
service/mutual aid agreement with another department (as it does with

Middleport) to respond to an
accident, that the fee would .
be applied. Musser said it
was his understanding that ·
the ordinance was meant for
the department to recoup
funds for use of its equipment on accident scenes outside the village by billing
insurance C()mpanies, not
other fire departments.
Musser said he would clari fy this point with Village .
Solicitor Chris Tenaglia.
Please - Ordinances, A5 ·

Deer gun
season
be ·..
&amp;lo.lll'

to ay
.

BY BRIAN

J.

REED ·

eREEDOMYDAILYSENTINELCCM

.

~P

·:page AS
• Manning.M: Dorst, 72
· •·James A. Grady, 48 .
• Maxwell E. Johnson, 69

photo

This undated photo provided by Hawaiian .;unshine
Nursery, Inc. shows a Hawaiian Volcano Plant with
Anthurium. Although poinsettias of all stripes and colors
remain the best-selling standard, there are a number of
good, winter-blooming options.

APphoto

In this undated file photo provided by Lee Reich, an amaryl-

lis flower is seen. Although poinsettias of all stripes and colors remain the best-selling standard, there are a number of
good, winter-blooming options.

INsiDE...~. ~· ~.i~~ ~~~r::~f~r~:iE~J~

·A survey.of some holiday houseplants
BY DEAN FOSDICK
FOR THE ASSOC IATED PRESS

Atthough poinsettias of
all stripes and colors remain
the best-selling holiday
plant of choice, there are a
number of good, winterblooming options. Here are
some elegant and carefree
holiday hmiseplant suggestions:
• Amaryllis: These bulbous plants bear one or
more lily-like flowers on a
single. strong stem. They
come in differenl sizes and
colors and usually are sold
in 6- or 8-inch pots. They
also.make gorgeous holiday
bouquets when freshly cut.

They are long-lasting and
low maintenance. Some
selections are fragrant.
• Christmas-cactus: A sunloving succulent that flowers during the holidays and
makes a good foliage plant
when tended minimally the
resr of the year. They flower
in red, whtte, pink and vio. let, ·and look good in containers or hanging baskets.
Christmas cactus 1s a long- .
lived plant. · Many are
passed along from family
member to family member
through the generations.
• Christmas topiary :
Potted plants, usually
English ivy, rosemary,
juniper or an assortment of

POMEROY - Meigs
County and the region
become paradise for hunters
this. week, with the start of
the deer-gun season this
morning.
The season brings hunters
from ma:ny other areas, and
they bring their money to
spend here, taking meals in

miniature conifers, used for · flowers generally last severtabletop display. Most are · al weeks. The plant origitrimmed into holiday shapes nates from a bulb that has
- Christmas trees, reindeer grow.ing habits similar ~o
and ornamental balls, the amaryllis.
·
among others - and draped
• Antherium (Hawaiian
with ribbons and miniature Volcano Pll\llt):.These tropilights. "Topiaries are time cal plants are valued for
consuming if you do them their heart· ·or arrow-shaped
well," said Byron Martin, leaves and contrasting red
owner of Logee's Tropical or yellow flowers, which
Plants in lJanielson.• Conn; willlastfor ~eeks.":They are
"They can be beauttful, but a great chmce fot .table or
it takes a long time to make mantle liiTangeme!ltS. "You
a quality one."
can't kill it," M;utl:ti;said. "It
• Ornithogalum (White flops down if it gelS too dry.
Star of Bethlehem): Tllis But after you give it some
fragrant flowering plant water, it perks ri¥ht up
produces a number of white, again. An unbelievable
star-shaped bl ~qms on t"ro iJlant for the holidays or any
or .three taW stems.
'tbe
.
. . ttme."
.,

ed to ' participate in "'this
year's season statewide,.
Each year, hunting has a
$1.5
billion economic
impact in Ohio. Hunting
related retail sales in Ohio
total more than $700 million.
The white-tailed deer is
the most popular game animal in Ohio, frequently pursued by generations of
hunters. Ohio ranks sixth
nationally in annual hunt. ing-related .sales and fourth
.Both SergenVphotos
.in the number of jobs associated with the hunting- This young lady was one of many children who lined up to speak to Santa yesterday at Peoples Bank following the
related industry.
Pomeroy Christmas Parade.
The UJ?Coming season will
again mclude an extra
weekend of gun hunting on
• Christmas Story
Dec. 20-21 , according to the
; fans celebrate 1983
Ohio Department of Natural
Resources Division of
.film. See Page A3
Wildlife. ·
. , FDA sets melamine
Deer can be legally
BY BETH SERGENT
standard for baby
BSERGENHI MYDAILVSENTIN EL COM
PIMH see Hunting. A5
formula. See Page A6
POMEROY - In th e film
"F.unny Girl" .Barbra Streisand
sings 'Til march my band out, I'll
beat
my drum" and. oh, yeah,
WEATHER
..
"don't rain on my parade."
Despite yesterday's rain and
dreary conditions, the bands
marched on as Christmas arrived
in Pomeroy during the village's
annual parade sponsored by the
Pomeroy Merchants Association.
With the sound of the
BY CHARLENE HOEFuCH
HOEFLICHOMYOAILYSENTINEL.COM
Communitv Band in the background, rain didn't dampen the
POMEROY :- Again this
spirit of many small children linyear as a part of the
Ing the parade route. waiting for
Christmas celebration, the
not only a glimpse of Santa but
Detail• on Page A2
Pomeroy
Merchants
some free candy tossed to them
Association will be staging
along the route. From walking
. three contests - one for
units, to floats, to the Meigs and
candies on Dec. 6, orie for
Southern Marching Bands, to a
cookies on Dec. 13, .and
banal ion of fire trucks · from
••
another
for
crafts
on
Dec.
20.
across Meigs County. the parade
No, your eyes
; a SECI1oNs - 111 P&lt;'O!!S
Sponsoring the contests
had something for the young. a.nd
aren't deceiving
Annie'~ ·Mailbox
As will be Peoples Bank in
young at heart .
you, pictured
Pomeroy, candies; Ohio
Shortly after the parade wrapped
are members of
As Valley Bank at 700 West
up,
both the Meigs Marauder and
..~l~ndars
both the
Main St. (Save -0-lot),
Southern
Tornado · Marching ·
Southern and
83-4 cookies,' and Farmers
Classifieds
Bands joined together on Court
tylelgs Marching
Bank, homemade 'holiday
•' .
Street
to form one band which
Bands who
85 crafts and toys .
Comics
played
Christmas songs for the
joined forces to
In all three. contests cash
gathering crowd. Southern Band
become one
Editorials
A4 prizes will be awarded. First
Director Chad Dodson , an alumni
band on Court
place winners will be
of
the Meigs Marauder Marching
Street alter yesAs awarded $50 and second
bbituaries
Band, joined his former band
terday's parade.
place will re~ive $25.
director
Toney Dingess in melding
B Section
Both bands
Sports
In the candy and cookie
their respective bands together for
contests, entries of six
played
'
the special perfonnance:
A2 pieces are to be submitted
Weather
Christmas
As the bands played on Court
•
on paper plates with the
·songs during
Street.
the line for pictures with
· ~ aoo8 Ohio Vallor Pu1&gt;111!Yn&amp; eo. . nartie, address and phone ·
the special
Santa began to form outside
number of the person enterevent.
Peoples
Bank, ~ain or not, chiling . written on the bottom
dren
had
a mission to meet Santa
and a copy of the recipe
Please sH Parade. AS
PleeH - Contuta, AS

' Don't rain on my parade'

CHRISTMAS ARRIVES IN .POMEROY

Association
.
sponsonng
holiday contests
- candy, cookie
and crafts
.

INDEX
.

f.

'.

.

•

J.

,,

'

'

.

'I

�The Daily Sentinel·

ACROSS THE NATION

PageA2
Monday, December 1, 2008

ANN.IE'S MAILBOX

Students lie,.cheat, steal,.
but say they're good
NEW YORK (AP) - In the past year, 30 percent of U.S.
high school students have stolen from a store and 64 percent have cheated on a test, according to a new, lar~e-sca le
survey suggesting that Americans are .too apathetiC aboul
ethical standards. .
·
Educators reacting to the findings questioned any suggestion that today's you11g people are less honest than previous generations, but several agreed that intensified pressures are prompting many students to cut corners.
"The competition is greater, the pressures on kids have
increased dramatically," said Mel Riddle of the National
Association of Secondary School Principals. "They have
opportunities their predecessors didn't have (to cheat). The
temptation is greater."
The Josephson Institute, a Los Angeles-based ethics
institute, surveyed 29,760 students at 100 randomly selected high schools nationwide , both public and private . All
students ·in the ·selected schools were given the survey in
class; their anonymity was assured.
Michael Josephson. the institute's founder and president,
said he was most di, mayed by the findings about theft. The
survey found that 35 percent of boys and 26 percent of girls
- 30 ~rcent overall -:-- acknowledged stealing ·from a
store Within the past year. One-fifth said they stole something from a friend: 23 percent said they stole something
from a parent or other relative.
"What is the social cost of that - not to mention the
implication for the next generation of mortgage brokers?"
Josephson remarked in an interview. "In a society drenched
, with cynicism, ·young people can look at it and say 'Why
shouldn't we? Everyone else does it."'
Other findings from the survey:
• Cheating in school is rampant and getting worse·. Sixtyfour percent of students cheated on a test in the past year
and 38 percent did so two or more times, up from 60 percent and 35 percent in a 2006 survey. ·
· • Thirty-six percent said they used the Internet to plagiarize an assignment, up. from 33 percent in 2004.
• Forty-two percent said they sometimes lie to save
money - 49 percent ofthe boys and 36 percent of the girls.
Despite such responses, 93 percent of the students said
they were satisfied with their personal ethics and character,
and 77 percent affirmed that "when it comes to doing what
is right. I am better than most people I know."
Nijmie Dzurinko, executive director of the Philadelphia
Student Union, said the findings were not at all reflective of
the inner-city students she works with as an advocate for
better curriculum and school funding.
'
"A lot of people like to blame society's problems on
young people, without recognizing that young people aren't
making ·the decisions about what's happening in society,"
said Dzurinko , 32. "They're very easy to scapegoa.t."
Peter Anderson, principal of Andover H1gh School in
Andover. Mass., sa1d he and his colleagues had detected
very little cheating on tests or Internet-based plagiarism.
He has, however, noticed an uptick in students sharing
homework in unauthorized ways .
"This generation is leading incredibly busy lives involved in athletics, clubs, so many with part-time jobs,
and - for seniors - an incredibly demanding and anxietyproducing college search," he offered as an explanation.
Riddle, who for four decades was a high school teacher and
principal in northern Virginia, agreed that more pressure could
lead to more cheating, yet spoke in defense of today's students.
" I would take these students over other generations," he
said. "I found them to be more responsive, rriore rewarding to
work with, more appreciative of support that adults give them.
"We have to create situations where it's easy for kids to
do the right things," he added. "We need to create classrooms where learning takes on more importance than having the tight answer." ·
·
On Long Island, an alliance of school superintendents
and college presidents recently embarked qn a canwaign to
draw attention to academic integrity problems and to crack
down on plagiarism .and cheating.
.
·
· Roberta Gerold, -iuperintendent of the Middle Country
School District and a leader of.the compaign, .said parents
and school officials need to be more 'li;i•gent - for example, emphasizing to students the distinciions between origmal and borrowed work.
·
"You can reinforce the character trait of integrity," she
· said. "We overload kids these days, and they look for ways
to survive .... It's a flaw irt our system that whatever we are
doing as educators allows this to continl!e.''
.
Josephson contended that most Americans are ·too blase
about ethical shortcomings among young people ·and in
society at large.
"Adults are not taking this very seriously," he said. "The
schools are not doing even the most moderate thin~ ....
They don't want to know. There's a pervasive apathy.'
Josephson also addressed the argument that today's youth
are no less honest than their predecessors.
"In the end, the question is not whether things are worse,
but whether they are bad enough to mobilize concern and
concerted action," he said .
"What we need to learn from these survey results is that
our moral infrastructure is unsound and in serious need of
repa"ir. This is not a time to lament and whine but to take
thoughtful, positi~e actions."

Local Weather
Munday ...Cloudy.
A
chance of rain and snow
showers in the morning ...
Then snow and rain showers likely in the afternoon.
Little or no snow accumulation. Breezy with highs in
the upper 30s. Southwest
winds 15 to 20 mph .
Chance of precipitation 70
percent.
Monday night ...Cloudy.
Snow showers likely in the
evening ...Then scattered
snow showers after midnight. Snow accumulation
around an inch possible.
Cold w,ith lows in, the upper
20s. Southwest wmds 10 to
15 mph . Chance of snow 60
percent.
Tuesday ... PartJy. sunny
with isolated snow showers.
Highs in the upper 30s.
Southwest winds around 10
mph. Chance of snow 20
percent.
Tuesday night ...Partly
cloudy. Cold with lows in
the upper 20s. South winds
around 5 mph .
Wednesday ... Partly

•

sunny in the morning ...Then
becoming mostly c!Qudy.
Highs in the mid 40s.
Wednesday night ...Rain
and -snow showers likely.
Lows in the lower 30s.
Chance of precipitation 70
percent.
Thursday.. .Mostly cloutly
in the morning ...T\Ien
becoming partly sunny. A
chance of rain and snow
sho"l'(t . Highs in the upper
30s ..Chance of precipitatim~
50 percent.
Thursday
night ...
Mostly cloudy with scattered snow showers . Lows
around 20. Chance of snow
30 percent.
Friday... Partly . sunny
with scattered snow showers. Highs around 30.
Chance of snow 40 percent.
Friday
night ...Partl y
cloudy. Lows around 20.
Saturday ... Partly sunny
in the morning ... Then
becom ing mostly cloudy.
Scattered snow showers.
Highs in the mid 30s.
Chance of snow 30 percent.

BYTHE .B EN

The Daily Sentinel

Intruding on
their 'adult'
time
.

PageA3
Monday, December 1,

2008

Eastern student a~arded scholarship

REEDSVILLE - Carly Kimes. was chosen from m;;;rcditing Commission of turing , produc't lnm1 ledge.
Kimes , a st udent at Eastern applicants on the basis of Cosmetology Arts and salon manage men I. ' P" nai I
High School, has been educational and d tracurric- Scien;;es.
The
Salon iliervices, and slin c.1rc
awarded a scholarship by ular merits as well as per- Schools Group includes treatments 10 prepare her to
the Ohio State School of sonal interest in the cosme- seve n cosmetology. barber- exce l in any capacit) in a
Cosmetology to attend the tology profession.
ing, sk in care and manicur- profe"ional salon . Upon
Bv KATHY MITCHELL
mother. Stella no longer managing cosmetology proOhio State School of ing schools in the centra l graduation she ·"ill be
AND MARCY SUGAR
cooks and depends solely gram at the Westerville Cosmetology is a member Ohi.o area.
qualified to resiing an&lt;l
upon her kids for food. training facility of Salon sc hool of the Salon
Kime 's intensive training licenser as a profe,ional
Dear Anniei I haye been · which consists of pizza, Schools.
·
Schools Group and is will include hair des ign, Managing Cosmctologi-r
in a Bunco group for sever- burgers and snacks. The son
Kimes, daughter of Carla accredited by the National cutting. chemical r~s truc- in the state of Oh"1o.
al years now. We all get "borrowed" her car two
along great, and I · really years ago, yet she still
look forward to our monthly makes the insurance payaduli time together. The ments and pays his tickets.
problem is that every time
When I visJt I try to help,
POMEROY
Dana career as a lawyer and his the hardest. He suffered , Brain lnjuri~s. The money
it's "Nancy's" turn to host, but there is only so muclll ·
Kessinger
reviewed
"In
An first job was teaching law to traumatic brain inj11ry that raised will be used to help
:she "lets her 8-year-old can do . I have asked Stella .
Instant"
at
a
recent
meeting
Chine~e
lawyers
in almost killed him. After the the injured and ti1eir fami daughter join us. The girl is to come live with me, but .
:there the entire time while she refuses. She is depressed of the Middleport Literary PekingChina.lt was in China ai:i:ldcnt. Bob wa; flown lie s cope with the twer.:We eat, talk about what's and things are getting worse. Club held at the Pomeroy that he fell in love with jour- from 1raq to Germany and whelming consequences of
·going on in our lives. etc. How can I inake those chil- Library. Vanessa Folmer nalism when he worked for later to a hospital in New brain injuries . To learn more
CBS as a translator duling York where he remai ned in and/or to maKe a donation
·We really have to watch dren stop taking advantage was the hostess .
In An Instant is a non-fic- the Tiananmen Square inci- a coma for five weeks.
go to www .bobwoodruff.'what we say in front of her. of their mother? tion
book
co-authored
by
a
dent
The
excitement
of
The
reader
leam
s
about
f&lt;tn1ilyfund .org. Woodruff i,
:'She also plays the game Frustrated in Floi'lda
marriec_l
couple
Lee
and
being
part
pf
a
historical
current
workin!.! a:-. a
Woodruff
s
amazing
recov:with us . She has even won
Dear Florida: Report the
Bob
Woodruff.
Bob
is
best
event
caused
him
to
give
up
ery and how family and reporter for ABC and U c i&gt;
:first prize a few times .
situation to Adult Protective
· Part of the enjoyment of Services in Stella's state or known for his work as a his career as a lawyer and friends helped l1im tn recov- s1ill a freelance wri ter. ·
After the review. memgetting together is leaving check the National Center reporter and later co-anchor take a very" low paying job as er. The reviewer thought
for
ABC
News,
arid
Lee
a
reporter
for
a
small
TV
stathat
the
book
was
interestbers
answered roll c-&lt;\11 hy
our kids at home.and having on
Elder
Ahuse
works
as
a
public·
relations
tion
in
Northern
California.
ing but that it skipped back telling of another person or
·an adult conversation. Mind (ncea.aoa.gov), · which has
:you, this doesn 't happen an online listing of state executive and freelance He quickly moved up the and forth too much between ficrional character who
'because Nancy lacks child hotlines. You J!lso cim con- writer. They are the parents journalism)reporter ladder story lines. The rev iewer li ved through a signifi;;ant
"'Care. Her husband is always tact the Eldercare Locator at of four children.· The fact and in 2006 was appointed was interested in reading li fe-cha nging eve nt. The
home when we play, but he 1-S00-677-1116 for infor- that the book was published co-anchor of ABC World about Woodruff", road to next meeting will be Dec.
recovery and how the fami- I" at the Pomeroy library
stays in another part of the marion
and
referrals . in 2007 is amazing consid- News Tonight.
ering
that
Bob
was
seriously
While
covering
the
War
in
ly
responded to the tragedy with the officers_and pro'house with their other child. Someone needs to investi,
injured
in
Iraq
in
January
of
Iraq,
he
was
given
permis.
but
felt that the authors . gram committee as hostSometimes I don't wantto gate what's going ,on.
go when Nancy !s hosting.
Dear Annie: Here 's a 2006 while covering the sion to accompany the Iraqi included too much back - e"es. Members are asked to
We are all too polite· to say comment for "Frustrated in war for. ABC News. The· army on n mi ssion . The tank ground infonnation on thei r bri1ig a finger food to share.
anything to her, and 1 cer- Indiana,'' the woman who hook revolves · around he was riding in was hit by · earl y marriage that was not Frankie Hunnel will review
'·Einstein: Hi s Life and
tainly don't want to hurt her complains that her.husband , Woodruff s· accideni in Iraq an improvi sed explosive relevant to the story.
device (lED) and Woodruff
The family has estab- Universe" a biography by
·feelings. What can we do? son and graJ)dson eat lunch and his road to recovery.
Woodruff
started
off
his
and
his_
cameraman
were
hit
lished
a fund for Traumatic Waller lsaac.son.
- Charlotte, N.C. .
and take naps in their greasy
Dear Charlotte: Nancy work clothes:
·will continue to let her
This lady needs to look on
:young daughter intrude on the bright side. She has a
:your "adult" time unless family that is working hard
:you speak Ul;l- You have two at honest labor and supportCLEVELAND (AP) :ways of domg this: Either ing themselves. She should Fans of the · holiday movie
·tell Nancy dfrectly that be proud ofthem. Her house "A Christmas Siory" are
you'd prefer her daughter is their home, too, and the'/ celebrating the film's 25th
)tot participate in these ses- should be able to live in 1t anniverSary with a conven· sioris because it detracts comfortably. People are tion arid trips to the house
. :.Crom your enjoyment, or more important than furni· where the movie was made.
~pretend the girl isn't there ture. Let her cover the funiiAbout 4,000 fans are
:and talk as you normally ture and· the carpet if it , attending . a · convention in
·would. A few inappropriate makes her happy, fix them a Cleveland honoring the
~onversations and Nancy
wonderful lunch , and then movie this weekend, which
:may decide on her own that give thanks for these ·ambi- inCludes tours of the house
: he~ child should play else- lions guys: - Who Cares? in Cleveland's Tremont
·where.
Dear Who: We're sure neighborhood .
.
• Dear Annie: My 80-year- she can be just as proud of
The 1983 film , an adapta"old sister, "Stella,'' lives in her ambitious guys if they tion of ·lean Shepard's
another state. Her 59-year- stop makjng a mess in .the childhood m~ moir of a boy
old son flops at her apart- house and treating her like in-the 1940s, w.as set in
ment· whenever he sees fit. · the family servant.
.
Indiana but largely filmed in
The reason Stella is livjng . Annie's Mailbox is writ- Ohio. 'the film starred Peter
in this apartment is bec~use ten by Kathy Mitchell and Billingsley as Ralphie
:her son and grandsons , Marcy Sugar, longtime edi- Parker• a young boy deterund~r the guise of taking tors of the Ann Landers mined to get a Red Ryder
·care of· her house, bought column. Pleasrt e·100il your BB gun for Christmas.
the place she lived in for questions to anniesmail·
The film was a modest
· over 50 years. They had her box@comcast.net, or write theatrical success, but critsign papers she didn't fully to: Annie's Mailbox, P.O. ics loved it. It eventually
understand, giving them Box. 118190, Chicago, IL joined "It's a Wonderful
$40,000 and making her pay 606JJ. To find out more Life" and "Miracle on 34th
-rent to live there. Now the about Annie's Mailbox, Street" as one of the
house is in foreclosure.
and readfeatures _by other Christmas films audiences
Stella's
57~year-old Creators Syndicate writers
watch year after year.
daughter moved mto the and cartoonists, visit the . "It's a film about being a
same apartment building. Creators Syndicate Web kid and looking . back,"
.
.
. AP pholos
· but does nothing to help her page at www.creators.com.
said Brian Jones,' who Russ Twoey, 33, left, and his father Gary Twoey. 56, right, touch the original Leg Lamp durowns "A.Christmas Story ing their tour of the house that was made famous in the film "A Ctlristmas Story" on Friday
House" &lt;\11!1 the neighbor- . ·in Cleveland.
. ing museum.
..
The
convention
. ,. · R . · · atH the1 newsiiaper contest. ,
,
"ltts a Christmas movie ·
city s: enatssance. ote'
fealllres actors who starred
Tuesday, Dec. 2
in the movie, three- docu- that you can watch and
MIDDLEPORT - Stated me.ntaries about the film relaie to,'' Mark Tqmpkins
meeting of Middleport
:..
sai~ . "Everyone, whether
Tuesday, Dec.l
and·
t11e
original
1938
fire
they
.want to admit it or not
Masonic Lodge #363, 7:30
ALFRED Orange p.m.,
truck
thl)t
drove
to
the
resreally
wanted a special gifi
Masonic Temple.
Township Trustees, 7:30 Installation
cue_
m
a
famous
scene.
m
one
holiday."
All
p.m. at the home of fiscal members . ofando!Iicers.
wh1ch a chtld ts dared to · Christa ' Pu skar· of
Master
officer, Osie Follrod.
Masons '
invited. slick h1s tongue to a frozen Everson, Pa .. said she has
VVednesday,bec.3
tree ornaments and board
Refreshments at 6:30, meet- flagpole.
PAGEVILLE - Regular ing
Scott Schwartz, ~8, games based on th.e nrovie
at
7:30.
monthly meeting of Scipio
played that R1d named Filck and buys Lifebuoy soap
Thursday, Dec. 4 .
. Township Trustees , 6:30
by
POMEROY · The whose tongue ge~s _stuc~ on t~e brand . used
· p.m., Pageville Town H.all : Meigs
the
pole
.
SchwaJtZ,
ho
Ralphie's
mother
to
wash
County Retired
REEDSVILLE
Association, noon spent two we_eks m his mouth out after he
Regular and special meeting Teachers
luncheon at Trinity Church, Cleveland shootmg the swears in the film .
of Olive Township Trustees, Pomeroy
Puskar also keeps , the
District. Director film, sa1d the c1ty has vastly
.6 :30 p.m., at the township Walter Bevins
1
.. television bn for the 24to speak, ~Pr?ved smce then·
building.
lts
a.!11ucll
better
place,
hour marathon of ''A
Eastern Bell :_choir to play.
: PAGEVILLE .,-- S9ipio Guests
he
sa1d.
You
ha'e
the
baseChristmas
Story",'" which The original fire truck that was used in "A Christmas Story",
welcome, reserva.:rownship Trustees, regular
ball
st~dmm,
the
Cavs,
the
begins
airing
on Christmas a 1938 Ford La France pump truck, gives movie fans a ride
:,tleeting, · 6:30 p.m., town tions to 992-32 14 by Dec. 3. stores.
Ev 1 TBS
. around the Tremont neighborhood on Friday in Cleveland.
take books for children or
The widow and children
e Ql
·
hall .
.
. : POMEROY - Meigs older young people for of Jeff Gillen, who played
gifts. .
{:ounty Board of Health, Christmas
the movie's scary and wornFriday,
Dec. 5
regular meeting, 5 p.m.,
out
Claus, traveled
POMEROY - PERI, 1 from Santa
·conference room, Meigs
Miami to attend the
p.m., Mulberry CommunitY.. convention. Gillen . died in
:County Health Department. Center.
Potluck luncheon 1995. a dozen years after
~
Thursday, Dec. :\1
witli meat, beverage, cake the movie was filmed .
:· SYRACUSE - Syracuse and
table service furnished.
·:Village Council, regular
His wife, Arlene, and
di
sh
and
Bring
covered
meeting, 7 p.m ., village
children, Phil and Elana.
exchange gift.
joined other fans of the
llall.
movie in the hotel lobby on
Friday morning .
'
~
"It is unbelievable that a
Thursday, Dec. 4
movie has touched ·the lives
POMEROY
of million s of families,"
FREE 7/L6" Pad w/purchase of Carpet
Decorate/take
home
gingersaid
Phil Gillen. ·
Monday1 Dec. 1
bread houses, 6 ·p.m.,
Mark
and
Becky
. POMEROY ·
FREE No Obligation Quotes
Pomeroy
Library,
supplies
Tompkins
traveled
600
:Middleport-Pomeroy Rotary
:club to meet at noon . Bun's furnished, for children of miles from LaPorte City
·FREE Removal of Old Carpet
all ages.
·
with their children, 9-year:Party Barn.
Sunday, Dec. 7
old Madison and 5-year-old
: SYRACUSE - Sutton
FREE Furniture Moving
POMEROY
The
Brandon.
:Township Trustees, . 7:30
p.m. at the Syracuse V11lage • Coolville Community Choir . The family decorates their
under the direc•ion of home with scenes from the
.Hall.
• . RACINE - Racine chap- Martha Sue Math..:ny . will movie and even took a fam:ter 134, O.E.S. 7:30 p.m • . present "The Name ...Jesus" ily photo around the "leg
:rake secret pal gift. at 7 p.m. at God's NET. lamp" - the infamous prize
Mulberry Avenue, Pomeroy. that Ralphie's dad wins in a
:Refreshments .

Club members hear review of 'In An Instant'

.
AP phoiOI
In this image rendered tram video and provided by NASA-rv, space shuttle Endeavour commander Christopher
Ferguson, bottom center, prepares to pass a microphone to astronaut Gregory Chamitoff, right, Saturday. Endeavour and
its crew of seven departed the international space station on Friday, ending a 12-day visit that left the orbiting compi81C
with more modern and deluxe living quarters for bigger crl)ws.
·

· BY JOHN ANTCZAK ·
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

EDWARDS AIR FORCE
BASE, Calif. - Space shuttle Endeavour and its seven
astronauts safely returned to
Earth on. Sunday, taking a ·
detour to sunny Californ!a
after storms h1t the mam.
landing strip in Florida.
Endeavour wrapped up a
16-day trip that left the
international space station
freshly remodeled and capable of housing bigger crews.
The shuttle dropped. off all
kinds of home improvement
equipment, including a new
bathroom, kitchenette, exercise machine , two sleeping · The space shuttle Endeavour touches down at Edwards Air Force Base as a fire truck
quarters and a recycling stands by, Sunday in Calif. Endeavour's landing ends a 16-day mission during which the
system designed to convert .
astromltits' urine and sweat , shuttle flew to the international space station delivering a new bathroom , kitchen, exercise
into drinking water.
· machine, sleeping quarters and recycling system d91&gt;igned to convert urine and sweat into
.
But the ..mission wasn't drinking. water.
.
problems.
without
its
· than the Kennedy landing
crew
members, call," he radioed.
Astronaut
Heidemarie ihree
It was the first space shuttle strip. Edwards' main runStefanyshyn-Piper let go of a Ferguson spoke briefly on
landing
at Edwards in more way - which p&lt;\l"allels the
the
tarmac,
He
said
$100,000 tool bag during the
than
a
year.
When Endeavour temporary one - . just
first spacewalk, muttering Endeavour "fared entry pret"Oh, great" as it floated away. ty well" and called the 'mis- hurtled over metropolitan underwent maintenance and
Los Angeles, firefighters upgrades , and has yet to be
And Endeavour's astro- sion extremely successful.
nauts also had to put in e)!:tra .. He noted that Chamitoff responded to a report of an equipped wit!\ all the neceseffort to get the urine wasn't present because it explosion that turned out to sary navigation equipment.
NASA officials said. both
takes longer for a persop who have been the spacecraft's
processor working.
signature
sonic
booms.
Ferguson
·and his co-pilot,
About seven liters.of recy- has been in space so long to
Ferguson·
landed
on
a
.
Eric
Boe,
had _practiced on
cled urine and condensation · reacclimatize -to _gravity, and
"that's
temporary
runway
~em#niry runway in
were coming back aboard ·said the other tvi'o astronauts
shorter
and
more
narrow
trammg
aircrilft.
. .
Endeavour for extensive test- - Stefanyshyn·Piper and
ing. No one at the space sta- Donald Pettit - were just
'
tion will drink the recycled keeping an eye on him.
•
water until the equipment
"The crew members who
runs for90 days and ground are noi with us are doing
tests ensure it's safe .. More just fine," he said.
samples will be returned on
NASA always pref~rs to
the next shuttle flight.
. land the space shuttles at their
The shuttle crew also con- home base in Florida. It takes
ducted four spacewalks to about a week and costs $1.8
clear metal shavings from a million to transport a -shuttle
solar wing rotary joint at the from California to Florida,
space station. The joint had atop a modified jumbo jet.
been jammed for more than
The astronauts also had
a year and hampered energy been rooting for a Florida
production at the orbiting touchdown; that's where
outpost.
their families were waiting.
Sheriff
Initial tests indicated the
As Endeavour soared over
Robert E. Beegle
repairs on the joint were · Houston, home to Mission
successful.
FergUson could see
The space station auditions Control,
candidatt.
all
the
bad
weather in Florida.
- and a few more "scheduled
"I think you rhade a gdod
to go up on the next shuttle
flight in February ~ should
enable NASA to double the
size of the space station crew
by June .
·
.. On Sunday, NASA
ordered . the detour to
California after dangerously
high wind and a stormy sky
prevented a Florida landing.
"Welcome back. That was
a. great wa't to finish a fantastic fi•!lht ," . Mission
Control radioed . ·
"And· we're hapey to be
here in California,' shuttle
commander Christopher
Ferguson replied.
Congratulations
also
came down from the space
station. "Wow," said skipper
Mike Fincke, who watched
the landing broadcast live.
Returning home from a
~,'
six-month mission was former space station resident
Gregory. Chamitoff, whp
had rocketed away from the
planet at the end of May.
Nationwide·
The space 'shuttle's jourOn Your Side
ney, short by comparison , .
spanned 6.6 million miles
Auto Home Ufe Buslnes~ ,
and 250 orbits of Earth.
· After landing, the astronauts inspected the shuttle's
underbelly. Accompanied by

th«:

Si~eeete 7~ t~
to All who supported
and voted for me .
I appreciate your
vote of confidence!

•.

Jeff Warner
113 W2nd St
Pomeroy, OH 45769
(740) 992-5479
warnerj 1@nationwide.com

.
D

Chrisbnas Story fans celebrate 1983 film

Community Calendar
Public meetings

: Clubs and
::. organizations

Other events

All Styles included

•

�·'

OPiNION

The Daily Sentinel
..•

The .Daily Sentinel
.

111

Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

(740) 992-2156 o fAX (740) 992-2157
wwv..mytlallysentlnel.com
•,

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

Congress shall make no law respecting an
establishment of religion, or prohibiting the
free exercise there~{; or abridging the freedom
. · of speech, or ~f tire press; or the riglit of the
people peaceably to assanble, and to petition
· the Gor•errrmenl for a redress of grievances.
- The First Amendment to the U.S, Constitution

TODAY IN HISTORY
Today is Monday. De..: . I, the JJ6th day of 2008 . There
jll'e 30 days ld t in the year.
Today ·s Highlight in History: On Dec. I , 1955 . Rosa
.Parks. a bla&lt;:k seamstress. retu,ed to g1ve up her seat to a
white man on a Monlgomery. Ala .. city bus . Mrs. Parks was
arrest.ed. ~ parkin g a yearlong boycott of !he buses by blacks.
On th is dale: In 1824. the prcmlent1al election was
turned over to the U.S . House of Representatives v,:hen .a
· deadlock developed between John Quincy Adams, Andrew
Jackson , William H. Crawford and Henry Clay. (Adams
ended up !he winner.)
In 1904. the Louisiana Purchase Exposilion in St. Louis
closed afkr .'even months and some 20 million visitors.
In 1913 . Jhe first drive-in automobile service station,
built by Gulf Refining Company opened in Pittsburgh.
In 192 1. 1he Navy flew the first nonrigid dirigi~le to use
helium: the C-7 traveled · from Hamplon Roads. Va., to
Washington . D.C.
·
In 1943. President Fnmklin D. Roosevelt, British Prime
Minister Winston Churchill and Soviet leader Josef Stalin
concluded their Tehran conference.
·
·
In 1958. the Rodgers and Hammerstein musical "Flower
Drum Song"' opened on Broadway.
.
In 1969 . !he U.S. government held its first draft lottery
since World War II.
In 1973. David Ren-Gurion , Israel 's first prime minister,
died in Tel Aviv at age 87. ·
In 1992. in Mineola, N.Y., Amy Fisher was sentenced to
5 to 15 years in prison for shouting and seriously wounding
Mary Jo Buttafuoco. (Fisher served seven years .)
In ·2uoo. Vicente Fox was sworn in as president of
Mexico, ending 71 years of ruling-party domination.
Ten years ago: Exxon agreed to buy Mobil for ~73 .7 billion. Cuba's Communist Party recommended that Dec. 25
be re-esta~lished as a permanent holiday.
·
.
Five years ago: India and Pakistan agreed ro restore ~tr­
line overflight and la11ding rights by Jan . I, 2004. Boemg
Co. chairman and chief exc~:utive Phil Condit resigned
unexpectedly. U.S. Rep. Bill Janklow went on trial in
Flandreau, S.D., •;harged wilh manslaughter in the death of
a motorcyclist who 'd collided .with his automobile .
(Janklow was con victed and served 100 days in jail.)
Today's Birthdays: t\ctor Paul Picerni is 86. Singer Billy
Paul is 74. A&lt;:~or director Woody Allen is 73. Golfer Lee
Trevino is 69. Television produ..:er David Salzman is 65.
Rock musician John Densmore (The Doors) is 64. Actress·
singer Bette Midler 1s 63 . Singer Gilbert O'Sullivan is 62.
.Actor Treat Williams is 57. Country singer Kim Richey is
52. Actress Charlene Tillun is 50. Actress-model Carol Alt
is 48 . Actor Nestor Carbonell is 41. Actress Golden Brooks
is 38. Actress-comedi&lt;liJ Sarah Silverman is 38. Actor Ron
Melendez is 36 . Contemporary Christian singer Bart
Millard is 36. Singer Sarah Masen is 33 . Rock musician
Brad Delson (I. ink in Park 1 is 31. Actress Ashley Monique
Clark is 20 .
•
Thought for Today: "Life begins when a person first realizes how soon il will end .'' - Marcelene Cox, American
writer.

.

PageA4
Monday, December 1 1 2008

Sweeping away the traditional from the public square
Americans may have just
communication and conduct of Pt:op . 8. In a shameful
embarked on these most rit·
are vetted and approved, h~s d1splay &lt;?f easy~ll_lark btg·
ualistic Weeks of the year
a_ggressivel&gt;: eJected tradt- otry, antt:8 actiVIsts hav~
stretching
between
tto_n and tts SUiJporte.rs, mste.ad ~e1zed on the ~eak
Thanksgiving and New
gomg so far~ to sllgmat•ze est hnk m the pro-8 cham ~
Year's Day, but something
the sacred , ttm~-tested c~&gt;O- Mormons - fot. ~ubhc
is clearly uifferent this time
Diana
~eption of_ marnage asbemg flay mg. In~eed, anti· pro·
around. .
West
mdecent, 1f not anathema.
testors con~mue to plan ~yIt isn't that the customary
~nd
such
cu)~ural cotts agamst. enterpnses
rites show signs of change.
wh1plash . has been we1rdly . owned l?y Mormon .support·
Americans roasted ceremoaccepted tf not welcomed by · ers of Prop. 8, from
nial turkeys by the million
. the traditi&lt;?nalists, if the.ir Cinemark Theaters to ~I
on Thanksgiving Day to already implies the exis· ove~helmmgly apologe_t•.c . Self-~torage . Some anll·8
sustain themselves as they tence of alternative fonns of reactions to the•r own pohll- activists are pushmg a "?Ywedlock.
Indeed, open
the very
· are cott of th
hunt and gather goods to act
of throwing
. the cal and mora 1 ostrac1sm
. e upcommg
.
~
disperse during Hanuklcah definition of marriage to ·a any measure . . Sure, they ~undance F1lm Fesllva1 or
or on Christmas morning. vote reveals how dramati· . belong to a maJonty bac~ed 1ts ties to Utah, headquarters
by thousands of years of ctv- of the Mo~on church. ,
There will be fewer big·
cally notions ·of the tradi·
but those who
The pomt .here doesn. t
.
cket
item
·
s
and
more
dis·
d
ilization,
tl
be
1 t
tiona!
have
a1rea Y
transformed ~to vote, or w~~e, c.on.~ se~m to . stmp y o . wm
counted goods given this changed,
year, but that's not the dif- bevond even. re..nanition to tnbu~ money to restnct
fa1r and square at. the polls,
'
--.,
mamage to · one man and wh1ch , frankly, IS a darn
ference . Nor am I sensing
resistance to red and green, P)~r ~en:~~o~~~t Barack one · woman now seek . to good bet for same-sex marnor a break in the continu- Ob
· 6!
tt
make amends and apologtze nage .proponents, com~
ama won,
percen Q for their loudly derided 2010. Thts ye.ar s. large
Ous Iooft Of "St'lver Bells" John
McCain's 37 percent,
red b
and "Si ent Night" that, by ''traditional marriage" also beliefs. From Scott .&amp;kern, black turnout, msg• . Y
melodic rote, choreographs triumphed, clearly but not the mustcal theater d1rector Barack Obama an SHid to
the patterns of holiday overwhelmingly, due to in Sacramento who, havmg have. put Prop. 8 over th.e
· behavior
strong support _ exit been "outed" for contribut· top, 1s unhkely to be dufeh·
In other words, every- polling indicates _ from ing $~ ,000 to support Prop. c_ated in an off-year e ec·
thing promises to look and church-going voters, senior 8, restgned under pressure , t1on . A lower black turnout
sound what you might call . citiiens, Republicans, a slim to Marjorie fhristoffersen, mig~t well clear the way f&lt;;&gt;r
traditional. But the fact is, majority of Hispanic voters, co-owner o . a well-hked a fan'ly speedy democrat~c
'.'traditional" is out. The and a whopping 70 percent . Los Angeles eatery, whose repeal of Prop. 8. No, thrs
rock-solid assumptions on of black voters. Yet the $100 donation in support of current anti-8 effo~ seems
which society is built have question remains: despite "traditional'.' . marriage to. be a~out sometht_ng else.
gone wobbly, while the the will of the California brought hundreds of protes· Someth~ng
dtffere,nt.
guideposts to "traditional" electorate, how has tradition tors to the restaurant, the Somet_hmg mo~e · hke
behaviors are, of course, · fallen from favor?
· response has been one of cleansm.g the pubhc sq':ll!fe•
long gone,
Tradition as pariah is the guilty contrition.
ostentatiously, of tradttton
That's the lesson of the message of the past weeks . Not coincidentally, both . and its followers.
.
p()isoitously volcanic after- of protests, boycotts, fir- Eckem and Ch~istoffersen
I ~onder whether .JU~t
math to Proposition 8, the ings, condemnation and are Mormons. The brunt &lt;;&gt;f hangmg a bu!lch more hobballot measure defining revilement of supporters of the pr&lt;?tests and p~bhc day ~1ghts w~U keep every"
marriage as between one Prop. 8, not only
same.- opprobnum has been d1rect- one from nottcmg.
man and one woman which sex marriage actiVISt$' but ed at Mormons, whose
(Diana West is a co/urnCalifornia voters aPProved also by leading figures in church st~ngly supported nist for T~e Washington
on Election Day by a mar· the political, media, educa- Prop. 8, wuh "!any of 1ts '!!mes . She 1s the author oj
gin of 52.5 tQ 47.5 percen,t. tiona! and entertainment follower.s donatmg generThe Death of the Grown·
How can "traditional': be establisftments. · This mes· ously to the campaign. Of up:How America's Arrested
out when w~lrt is now being sage tells us that the public course, other churches _sup· Development Is ~ringing
labeled ''traditional mat; square no longer enshrines, port "tr&lt;tdittonal" mamage , Down
Western
riage" won ·at the polls?
.protects or even re~~qizes inclUding black churches , Civilization," ·and . has a
· To begin ' with, framing the traditional. Ind , this but anti-8 activists are not ., blog at. dianawest net. S'!e
husband-wife nuptials as centtal clearing house of boycotting
businesses mn be con~acted vra
"traditional"
·marriage society, where custom, rites, owned by black supporters dwnawest@vemon.net.)

br

The Daily Sentinel• Page As

Obituaries
James A. Grady
James A. Gra4y. 48, Chester community, passed away at
8:13 p.m. Fnday. Nov. 28, 2008, at his residence.
Born May 8, 196Q, in Pomeroy, he was the son of the late
Ronald.fU1d Betty Justice Grady.
Survmng are two. sisters, Darlene (Elmer) Newell,
Po~e~oy, and Joyce Grady, Racine , two brothers, Tom
(VIckte) Gr~dy, Cleveland, Ohici, and Jeff (Gwenn) Grady,
Pomeroy, meces, Jenmfer Grady and Jeannie Ridenhour,
nephews, ~ex Justice, Scott Justice, J.R. Grady, Eric
Gt:a~Y. Jam1e Trezzopolous , Danny Trezzopolous and Matt
~il~tron and spe~tal friends , Margilee Lemley, Jamie
B•!h!lgsley, Paul Gtbbs Jr., Steve and Connie Miller, Joann
Mtlhron! ~epck Jackson and Frank and Candy Davis.
.
· In addltton to his parents , he was precedeilm death by a
.
.
brother, Steven Grady.
In keeping with James' wishes, there are nQ calling hours
or funeral services.
· A~angemehts. are by the Cremeens ' Funeral Home,
Racme: E~press1ons of sympathy may be sent to the fall).iIy by vts•hng www.cremeensfuneralhomes .com.
,

POMEROY Mei~ ~
County Recorder Kay HID
reported the following
transfers in real estate:
Jerome K. Howard to
Cheryl Call, deed, Rutland.
Stephanie D. Barrin~er to
Carl Patrick . Barrmger,,
deed, Olive.
. David
R. · Stic~len ;
Dawnda L. Sti'cklen, to'
David R. Sticklen, Dawnda
L. Sticklen, deed, Pomeroy
Vtllage .
Janet K. Graham, Harold
D. Graham; 'to Oxford Oil
Co., right of way, Scipio.
John Trenon Scott, Vicki
Sue Chancey, Vicki Sue
Seott, to Michael Eugene
Chancey, utility easement.
R.. Craig Copeland to
Ohio . Dep~~ment
of
. Transportation, Olive . . ,
Raymopd D. Priddy
Judy ·. A. Porter, deed ,
Middle!XJrt Village . .
Karen · L. Hiehle to
Kramer Exploration Co.,
affidavit of non production.
Karen L. Hiehle to ,
Murphy Oil Co., affidavit of

'.0

Deaths
Manning MiHorcl Dorst
Manning Milford Dorst, 72, of Kanauga, died Friday,
Nov. 28, 2008, at his home. Local survivors include a
,
daughter, Rose Ash worth of Kanauga.
Funeral Service will be held on at 11 a.m. Wednesday, Dec.
3, 2008, at tile Deal Funeral Home, Pomt Pleasant, W.Va.,
with Rev. Jamie Watts officiating. Burial will be in the
Kee~aygh Cemetery, Chester, Ohio, with Military Graveside
Serv1ces conducted by Gallia County Veterans Service.
. Friends may call frQm 6-8 p.m. Tuesday at the funeral home.

non production.
Karen L. Hiehle to JD
Drilling Co., affidavit of
non production.
Phllip E. Hawk, Donna
Darlene Hawk, to Robert E.
Johnson , Jr., deed, Salem.
Phyllis Larkins, deceased,
to Dorsel E. Larkins, affiqa11it , Olive.
Clair Eugene Jacks to
Leeanna Jacks , certificate of
transfer, Salem.
Edith Jane Hysell to
William D. Hysell , deed .
Salisbury.
·
Randall Kimes to Carla S.
Kimes, deed, Chester.
Charles Stanley, Norma
Stanley,Connie Neal, Loren
Neal , Roger
Barrett,
Virginia Barrett, Jinney
Barrett, toDaniel. W. Young.
deed , Rutland.
·
Edard W. Stines to Jerome
D. Homish, deed , Orange.
Georgina. A. Thompson,
James . D. Thompson , to
Columbus Southern Power,
easement. Orange.
Bruce A. Myers, Bonnie
J. Myers, to Columbus

Southern Power, easement ,
Orange.
Richard Mora. Debra D.
Mora,
to
Co lumubs
Southern Power, easement.
Chester.
Rober!
Murphy
to
Columbus Southern Power.
easement , Chester.
Howard · M. Brewer to
Columbus Southern Power,
easement, Salisbury.
Tamara D. Bissell to
Columbus Southern Power.
easement. Bedford .
Delbert Griftin , Jr.. Tonda
M. Koon, to Wells Fargo
Bank , sheriff 's deed , Olive.
B and C Rentals, LLC , to
Marilyn J. Wolfe , Regina D.
Wolfe, deed. Rutland .
·
Jennifer Lance. Jennifer
Seers, Thomas E. Seers. to
Alice Hawthorne. · deed :
Orange.
Jason E. Prater. Kelly
Prater, to Jason E. ·Praler.
Nancy L. Prater, · deed,
Racine.
COCCA Propert ies to
Nationwide DG In vestment.
deed . Orange.

John
M. Cremea n'.
Tammy L. Cremeans. to
Au stin B. Cro". deed,
Middleport Vi ll ag~.
Wendol W. Herrmann .
Ramona M. Herrmann. to
Kenneth R. Wood. deed.
Salisbury.
Edward C. Joh nson.
deceased, to Kan .1 Lott.
Karen Criss. certitica1e of
transfer. Olive .
Adam
McDanie l to
Proffit! Propert ies. LLC.
deed. Pomeroy Village.
Sharon
R. Wi lson.
Howard P. Wilson. to
Gatling Ohio. tLC. deed.
Sutton .
Randall Kimes to Carla
Kimes,.deed . Chester.
Timothy J.Seller&gt; . Ambe r
M. Sellers. to Max
Eichinger, deed, Orange.
Joan Seder, Joan Cuu p. to
Kent
Stewart.
deed.
Bedford .
Winfred A. Dent. Joseph
D. Marci'nk o. Rox ie A.
Marcink o. to Joseph D.
Marcinko ,
Roxie
A.
Marcinko. deed, Oli ve.

Maxwell E. "Max' Johnson
Maxwell E. "Max" Johnson, 69, Crown City, died
Sunday, Nov. 30, 2008. He is survived by his wife, Peggy
Myers Johnson.
.
Services will ·be II a.m. Wednesday, Dec. 3, 2008, at
Providence Missionary Baptist Church with Pastbr Troy
Delaney officiating; Burial will.be in Providence Cemetery.
Friends may call from 6-9·p.m. on Tuesday, Dec. 2, 2008,
at Willis Funeral Home. There will be a Masonic service at
9 p.m. on Tuesday at the funeral hom!!·. A flai presentation
by veterans of area lodges will be done at the graveside. ·
. · The fal!lilY suggests 111emorial donations be IJ!ade to
the Hosptce of Huntlflgton, llOI 6th Ave., Huntmgton ;
W.Va. 2570 I.
.
Plellse visit www.willisfuneralhome.com to send e-mail
condolences.
·

··'

'

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~

'

~

Evening c~nic

PR~ER.9X ..-;.. 'f.:~e. Meigs Count~ Health Department
wtll ·effCr evemng chmc hours unt1l 6 p.m. tomorrow. · • · •
Beth SergenVphotos
Se~ices offered Will include childhOOd and.adult immu·
This
battalion
of
tire
trucks
from
across
Meigs
County
led
the
way
for
the
man
himself,
Santa
Claus,
during
yesterday's
nizations, blOOd pres~ure measurements, WIC, prenatal ser- Pomeroy Christmas Parade.
·
vices/pregnancy· testing, head lice screenings/eradication,
environmental health .• ·vital statistics .

----

.---=
--

, Christmas dinner

Parade

· from Page Al

MIDQLEI'ORT - Middleport Church of C\lrist will host
make sure he received
a free Christmas Day dinner at 2 p.m. ReserVations are and
their .Christmas lists person·
required by Dec. 8. Transportation will . be available to ally
.. The bank once again
those who request it .
.
PI:QVided
can~y and pictures
The family"style dinner will also include music, craft ot the moment
Santa.
projects for childre.n and othentctivities. Reservations On iheir . way with
out of the
may be made by calling the church at 992·2914,and pro· bank, many stopped to
viding a telephone number and address for confirmation speak tb ·~arilyn Wolfe of
purposes.
Racine,-, a::teller at Peoples
BIUik:.. ·who retired on
Sa~ay .after' 54 years in
the )'anking'business .'
POMEROY- The Coolville Community Choir under the
After ilie parade, many
direction of Martha Sue Matheny will present "The merchants in downtown
· Name ... Jesus" at 7 p.m. on Sunday, Dec. 7 at God's Net, 260 PoinefQ.y had extended hoi·
Mulberry Ave., Pomeroy. The public is invited to attend:
iday ;htjprs and open•houses to . attract customers,
hoping. those customers
will shop locally during
this
holiday seasdn.
POMEROY - ·Phyllis Turner, former Meigs County .resFor
more on other
ident, is now under Hospice at the Walowa Valley Care
Merchants
Center, in Oregon. Cards may be sent to her at the Center1 Pomeroy .
Assoaititiori.
events
planned
207 E. Park St., Room 101, Enterprise, Oregon, 97828 .

Choir to perform at God's Net

0

The Daily Sentinel

.www.mydailysentinel.com

Local Briefs .

LETTERS TO THE .
.
EDITOR

Letters to the edit(lr are wekome . They slwuld be less
than 300 wordl· . All/etters are sitbject to editing. must be
signed, and include addres.1· and telephone number. No
. unsigtied · letters 11'ill !Je puhlished. Letters should be in
good taste. addressing issues, not personalities. Letters of
thanks to organizatifms and individual.&lt; will 1w1 be accept·
ed for publication .

Monday, December 1, 2008

..
.

.

.

A president named Obama changes the name game
BY DEEPTt HAJELA

.

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

NEW YORK - Zenas
Ackah has heard it all his
life: What kind of name is
that? You must not be from
(USPS
213·960)
Reader Services
Ohio Valley Publishing . . here. You must be foreign.
Co.
· Actually, no. Born in the
Cor..ectlon Polley
Published every afternoon, Monday
United States, the 22-year· Our main concern in till stories is to ttl rough Frldav. 111 Court Street,
old
college senior with the
.be accurate. It you know of an error Pome r~. Ohio. Secof"!d-class postage
Greek
frrst name and the
in a story, call the newsroom at (74 0) patd at Pomeroy.
Ghanian
last name grew up
Member: The Associated Press and
992·2)56
in Philadelphia.
the Ohto Newspaper Association.
Poetmuter: Send address correc·
But Ackah is hopeful that
Our main number Is
lions to The Daily Sentinel, 11 1 COurt
change
is coming, !Qat the
(740) 992·215E.
Str eet. Pomeroy. Ohio 45769.
idea of an "American"
Department extensions are:
name will expand beyond
Subscription Rates
monikers
like Tom and
By carrier or motor route
Harry and · Sally and Jane
News
One month
'10.27
One year
'115.14 .
Editor: Charlene Hoeflich, Ext . 12
and Smith and Jones. He
Dally
50' ·
RepOrtor: Brian Reed. Ext ~4
figures
he's got' a strong
Senior ·citizen rates
Aeportor: Bett1Sergenl, E&lt;l. 13
weapon.
on
his side - for at
One month
'10.27
least
tile
nex.t
four years,
One year
'1 03;80
when people look to the
subscribers should Jef1'Wt in irllanoo
Advertising
difect to the Oaity ~ - No sub- . most powerful American in
·Outside S.l11: Dave Harris, EKt 15
scripti on by mail permitted in areas
the country, the "uber·
.Outolde $ales : Brenda Davis, Ext 16 wh ere home ca rrier service is avallAmerican" if you will,
ClouJCirc.: Judy Clark. Ext 10
alje.
they 'll be looking at
President Barack Hussein'
Mall Subscription
General Manager
lnolde Melga County
Obama.
13 Weeks
' 32.26
•. Charlene Hoefli ch , Ext. 12
"I think it will help people
26 Weeks
'64.20
understand
that people in
· 52 Weeks
'127.11
E-moll:
America aren't JUSt · John,
news@mydailysentinel.com
Jack, Mary," Ackah said.
Outolde Melga County
13 Weeks
'53.55
"They 're
Zenas
and
Web:
26 Weel&lt;s
' 107.10
Barack."
52 Weeks
' 214.21
www.mydailysenlinel .com
Obama's name gave hint

his share of trouble during
the campaign. He acknowl·
edged its unfamiliarity to
most Americans, and there
were times when supporters
of his oppoqent made a
poi~tt of using his iniddle
name, which was seen as an
attempt to cast doubt on his
background and faith.
But the next four years
will ensure that his name is
no longer unfamiliar.
People , have already
nained their infants after
him.
The more people hear it,
the more mainstream it
becomes, said Don Nilsen,
a professor of English linguistics at Arizona State
University and co-presi·
dent of the American
Name Society:
"Wllo is more American
than the president of the
United States?" he said.
"There's no question it will
have a npp1e effect,
because of the power of the
position." .
.
Names traditionally considered "American" tend to
be
"British-sounding
stuff," said Cleveland
Evans , professor of psychology
at · Bellevue
University in Nebraska.

"We are still basically 'an
"As a group, American
English-culture country. ' parents are naming much
We really are still in many more creatively and are
ways at our base an Anglo· striving .to be distinctive
Saxon culture." ·
. . with the names they pick,"
He and Nilsen pointed out she said, pointing out . that
that immigrants have long · shift started in the 19605
had a history of changing . when Obama was born and
their names to fit in more has only accelerated in the
with the Uni.ted States, or last 25 years or so.
have · even had others
So while certa,in names
change ilofor them.
· · may be more popular and
· Obama, born in Hawaii prevalent than others, it's
and na,med after his Kenyan noi by much, she said. In
father," went by .Barry for 2007, Jacob was the most
some years before deciding popular name for boys. But
to use his full first name. · Watten!Mlrg pointed out that
Ackah can understand . only I percent of boys were
He still finds the com- given that name.
In contrast, a century ago,
ments about his name irri·
tating, along wit~ the 7.5 percent of parents chose
assumptions peo(lle make · the top name, John.
upon hearing a name
A president named
they're not familiar with .
Obama could break down
"People start talking the perception "that there il;
down to you because they such a thing as a ' normal '
think you ' re foreign," he name," said Wattenberg ~
·
said.
"It's a powerful symbol of
Electing someone named breaking down barrien
Barack Obama president where it wasn't that long
reflects a shift in attitudes ago where kids with a nt.n·
·about names that 's been . English mime would go to
going on in 'American soci- school and teachers would
. ety for the past le w dec;tdcs, routinely change it. The .
says .Laura Wattenberg , a president having a non ·
name expert and author who En~lish ,name is a sign that
·runs the blog The .Baby we re not squeezmg every.
Name Wizard .
one into that box." she said.
•

· Card shower planned

for the Christmas. season. see
·related story on page one .

Hunting from Page At
hunted with a gun from
one half-hour before sunrise to sunset through Dec.
7 and during the extra designated weekend. With a
pre-hunting season population estimate of 700,000
whitectailed deer, the
Division of Wildlife anticipates 115,000' to 12S,000
deer wlll be killed during
the nine-day season.
Ohio i~ ,divid~d. into
three 'deer hunting zoh,es.
'

.

Ordinances fro~ Page At

A total of three deer may
be harvested in eastern
Counc'l
al 0 p oved' th
~illage raise the rates.for san·. with a minimum ch~r e of during the first reading of
and southeastern Ohio's first -reading
. 1 s of
ap ordinance
r
e . itary sewage services lo a. $7.50 For the first 2:
gal - the ·plan which req~ire s two:
Zone C. Any time a hunter 732 which is a long term minimum of approximately . Ions and $4.50 per 1,000 more r~ adin gs and a finat
js allowed to take mor~ control phm with the Ohio · two percent of the median gallons used in addition to .vote to be approved.
·
income . If the 2,000 gallon minimum .
than one deer, thl!y must Environmental · Protection household
purchase an 11dditiortal Agency which is implement· Pomeroy didn't comply the Then on Sept. 10. 2009, the
permit. Tbe antler less deer ing a federal mlmdate·requir· OEPA could again lesson the rate will go to $8 For the
permit will be valid for ing Pomeroy to eliminate it's number of years (20( it first 2,000 gallons and $5
'Anderson 'Mi:'DanW •
deer-gun -week only . in two CSO's in the next 20 requires For the village to per l ,OOO gallons used in
'Funera{ 1fome
.Zone C.
.· years or face a penalty . of eliminate its CSO. CSO are a addition to the minimum.
Adam M c D a niel
. Antlerless deer permtts ·. less time to comply.
· · source of stream pollution in
·Last year that long term
&amp; J am e ~ Anderson
DIR ECl'O~S
must be purchase4 by
Musser told council .the older cities and are outlets plan to eliminate the CSO
Nov. 30.
on!inance basically allowed that dump excess water (such was estimated to cost under
the village to file the . plan as after a large rainfall) from $3 mill inn and be complet·
.
with the Ohio EPA , show- the sewers into strean1s and ed by 2027. An'y new cost
Middlcpon Pomeroy
ing the agency a ·long term . rivers, keeping sewers from figures. completion date or.·
rrom Page At
992-5141 992-5444
plan was officially adopted. bacldng up into homes, bu si- possible grant money to
Musser said he believed ' nesses and streets.
assi st with the replacement
,ll"" • .andersonmcda:nitol.tom
entries ot six pieces to the part of the engineering
Beginning on Oct. 10 last project was not discussed
Ohio Valley Bank anytime remained to be· finished in year, sewer cus1omers
from 9 a.m. to noun when regards to ihe plan.
began paying $6.50 for the
the judging will begin.
Part,ofthatplan took shape first 2,000 gallons and
In the craft and toy con- last · year when Pomeroy $3.50 for ever 1,000 gallons
· test, entries can be taken to raised its sewer rates. Last used in addition' to that first
Farmers Bank any time the year council was told the 2,000 gallons. Tlie next rate
There will be no hunting on property belonging
to Linda Diddle, James D iddle or Maxine
week
before judging Ohio EPA was requiring the incre.ase carne on Sept. I0
Sellei"S without written permis s ion from Jamea
where they will be dis"
Diddle . If permla•l on Is granled the place of
played and then judged on
desired hunting spec incally and when muat be
To see more newsphotos
Dec. 20 after the bank
des ignated and adhered to for your permit to.
from our ph0 togrnphers go to
be valid . If you have penni~sion to hunt In one
closes at noon .
place and you are found lh another area · your
www
.
lllJ'dailySentinel.eom
The winners in all three
perm'lst~Jon will be withdrawn forever, People
You
can
order
reprints
and
contests will be notified by
without w rttten pennlss ton will be prosecuted .
•
'pl~ol:o gifts· of your favorite
.JAMES E . DIDDLE
telephone immediately after
photos th!'I'e too.
being selected.·

.Contests
attached. Residents are
encouraged to participate in
tlie contests.
·
As for the candy-making
contest, those e~tering a(e
asked to have their entries
at Peoples Bank by 9 a.m.
since this year customers
of the bank will. be given
samples and then be aske&lt;l
to vote for their sele&lt;;tion
of first and second . The
votes will be counted at
noon.
Those entering the cookie
contest are to take their

.

These little angels trom ·Rocksprings United Methodist Church brave the weather to ride in
yesterday's Pomeroy Christmas Parade.
·

�FDA sets

PageA6

HEAI,TH -.

aily Sentinel

Monday, December 1, 2008

Patients treat serious illness as Ia

melamine
standard for
baby forntula

BY ULA ILHYTZKY
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

NEW YORK - The off- WASI-IINOTON (APJ _ color joke&gt; tlew around the
l'Wn munth;. ago, tederal room. As the anecdotes got
t\1lld regulator;. ,atd they bawdier, the laughter inten&gt;ilied. Some recited from
w~:~ro unublc to set a ;.a fety
· rnemlht-eshnld J&lt; 1r the indu;.trial ory, otherS read from notc~hdmicnl mdaminc in baby hook.s they brought along.
rormu la. Now , however.
The ;.etting fur the hilarity
they Jound a way to ;cttlc . was the Montefiore Ein;.tei n
on a stundun.lthat allow;. fur Cancer Center at Monteliore
higher levels than thow · Ho, pital. The panicipant'
found in u .S.-madc hatchc;. were cancer patients, some
with advanced stages of the
oI' the product.
Food
and
Drug illness. ·
Administration offictal ' on
They were taking part in
Friday set a thre,hold of 1 the hospital's monthly
part
per million of "S trength
T.hrough
melamine in .formula . pro- La~ghter" therapy. It is one
vided a re lated chemical is of several type;. of laughter
not present. They in, istcd or humor therapy being
the formulas are ;.ale .
offered by medical faci lities
The devc lopn1e·nt comes arou nd the country for
days after The A;,sociated patietlth diagnosed with canp ress reported that FDA ccr or other chronic dt's·eases.
tes ts found tracn of
The' programs feature joke
melamine in the inl ant for- se"ion&gt;, clown appearances
mula of one major U.S. und funny movies.
While the verdict is out on
manufactu re r and cyanuric
acid , a chcrnical rel ati ve, in whether laughter plays a role
the formul a. of a second in healing, the ·American
major maker. The wntami- Cancer Society and other
. h both medical expert' say it reduces
nate d sump Ics. whtc
measured at level&gt; below stre» and promotes relax the new ;tandard , were ana- at ion by lo~ering .blood presJyzed ;,cvcral weeks ago. ·
sure, improves breathing and
The FOA had said in mcreases muscle function.
early October it was .unable
On u recent day before
.to sci a safety contamina- Halloween , many of the two
lion level for melamine in dozen
patients
at
infant formttla .
Montefiore urrived in cosOr. St cphcti Sundlof. the tume to "spook cancer."
FDA's director of tood safe"The session makes you
ty, said Friday the agency feel better," said Luz
was confident in the I part Rodri guez. 57, a breast canper million level for either cer patient now in remisof the chemicals alone , even sian. who came'disguised as
though there have been no a security officer. "I feel
new scientifi c studies since healthy when I laugh ."
October that would gi ve
The laughs generated a
regulators more safety data. warmth among the group
He had no ready ex plana- that was palpable, paniculartion fur why the level was ly when Rodriguez changed
not set earlier.
illlil an an~_;el costume and
The &gt;-landard is the same went arouni:l offering a red
as the one public health offi- rose and a hug or kiss to each
cial.s have set in Canada and of the paniciP.ants.
China, but is 20 times highThetr factlitator, senior
er than the most stringen_t oncology social worker
.
Gloria Nelson , staned the
leve l in Taiwan.
The prnhl em of melamine session five years ago to
in infan t formula first sur- help cnns:er patients focus
fa c&lt;!d In
China
in on living, i'nstead of dying.
September.
"They have such amazing
Sundlof said the lack of strength , but it's a con~tant
dual contamination wus kry challenge, the fear 'of it
hccause studies so fm show coming back. how to go on
dange rous hea lth dfccts living knowing you have
only when both chcmical.s cancer." said Nelson_, who
are present. He cmphasi 7.ed came dressed as the mother
that neither 'of the two taint- of the bride . "Every time
ed samples had both conta- they laugh , it's like kicking
minant.&gt;.
cancer out the door. You' re
The agen~y still ,will not takin~ control, you're sayset a salety leve l for ing it s not controlling me."
melamine if cyanuric acid is
The most famou s case of
also present , he said.
laughter's therapeutic effects
Both the new safety levd on the body was described
and the amou nt nf the by Nonnan Cousins, editor
chemical fatllld in U.S .- of the Saturday Review, in
made infant formula arc far his 1979 book, "Anatomy of
. below ·the · &lt;tmount s nf an Illness." He claimed that
melamine added to infant a combination of laughter
formula in China that ha ve and vitamins cured him of u
been blamed for killing at potentially fatal illness.
least three babies and mak"
'·J made the joyous discovin§ thousands ill.
. ery that 10 minutes of gen·
'The levels were so low uine belly laughter had an
· ... that they do not cause a anesthetic effect." he wrote.
health risk to infants."
Still. laughter therapy is not
Sundlof said. "Parent.s using for everyone. Some cancer
infant formula should con- patit;nts are so overwhelmed
tinue using U.S.-manufac- with their diagnosis that they
tured
infant
formula . arc unable to participate.
Switching away from one nf Medtcal experts stress that
•.hebe infant formul a11 to laughter and other comple·
dternate diets or homemade mentary therapies like
'•Jrmulas could , rebuh in acupuncture. massage · and
n 1ant~ not receivi ng the meditation are not substitutes ·
·JJmplete nutrition re&lt;Juircd for traditional medical treat•._., proper growth and mcnt but can be used to help
·•~. d opment."
relieve the anxiety brought on
"&gt; &gt;C t enti~t for a national by the di:;ease .
,·..:" ;me r gro11p •aid 11 was
At the Cancer Treatment
·rt &gt; J.-&lt;ln~ ible l!f FDA t&lt;J Center~ of America in Zion ;
'' ' _,·c the publit that Ill ., patients experience
' ' &lt;~.• f&lt;mnul a i• ' "' " another form of laug hter
·.•-•o:d ,,n tcota_of 1mly 74 therapy that brpasses j9ke~ .
· &gt;«rr.pic'., c •pec J.all ~ 't ncc In tht ~ vers1on, pattcnt s
&lt;- )'• num add i~ a prod- practice laughter sounds like

•

matter

examining you and asking
about bodily functions," said
Dr. Richard Wender, former
president of the American
Cancer Society and the hospital's chief of family medicine.
The clown volunteers, he
said. create a sense of cornfon thai helps narrow the
"interpersonal gap" between
patient and medical staff.
Robbie Robinson. 52, a
non-Hodgkin 's Lymphoma
survi vor. became a certified
laughter leader after witnessi ng the "coping mech'\ni sm" laughter offered him
as a patient at CTCA.
"Some people came in
wheelchairs, some were
helped by family and
friend». You could tell people were down ... then I
noticed that through some
stimulated laughter, people
staned smiling. They forgot .
.
.
.
.
.
.
M~
their troubles. You could see
Pancreatic cancer_survivor Barbara Wilder, left, and lymphoma survivor Ca~olyn Smith, the pressure come off them."
center.. smtle durrng a laugh the~apy sass ion led by an oncology social worke r at
The nonprofit Rx Laughter,
Monteftore-Emstetn Cancer Center tn New York , Oct. 28. Former cancer patients and those m~anwhile , focuses on man~ndergomg_ treatment meet regularly with an oncology social worker to share amusing sto- aging patient pain and
nes and sptcy Jokes, as well as share stories about their illness. .
improving· mental health
through comic entertainment,
dozen hospitals an;JUnd the move through the body.
to get patient's to giggle - or including films and TV clips.
country have ask'ed to be
An international program at least smile - and open up. It is . a unique collaboration
trained in the method in the with a similar goal but totally
"One of the challenges of between the entenainment
past two to three years. One different approach is "Caring being .diagnosed with cancer and . medical field.s that was
hospital wants to try the Clowns ." The Thomas is preserving your dignity ... founded in 1998 by Sherry
therapy with lung transplam Jefferson Ufllversity Hospital when we tell you to put on a Dunay Hilber, one-time
pattents becau se laughter in Philadelphia uses the pro- gown where r}]e back half is director of prime time proallows more oxygen to gram of costumed volunteers · missing and . everyone's gramming for ABC and CBS.

(Jf

mclam u1c , n1~ 1t1g Jl

"he-he ," '"ha-ha." and

li ke!~

A .::heclult of upcomi1g hig1

tftlrTI GaliiiiW'Id Meigs counties.

'

MonMy. O'C=btr 1
GlrloB-t
CNCS at Falrtand. 6:00 p.m.
South Gallla at Symmes Valley, s p.m.

RACINE :,_ Outscoring
Southern II-2 in the last
round , the Beaver-Eastern
Eagles
grounded
the
Tbtpdey Oec:emtw 4
Southern Lady Tornadoes
.. GlriiBIIkelbolt
44-41
Saturday night in the
Belpre at Rl\ler Valley, 6 p.m.
season opener lor . both
EaJt~rn at Waterford, 6 p.m.
Glllla Academy at Chesapeal&lt;e, 6 p.m. . clubs.
· ·
M~ll~r at Southern, 6 p.m.
Southern led most of the
fdcla¥, Dlctmblr I
game
only to stumble in the
,.
lloywBaok-JJ
·
finale.
All was not lost for
Belpre at Meigs. 6:00 p.m.
.Croll Lanes at South Gallla, 7:30p.m.
the Tornado hopeful as
liastem at Southern , 8:30p.m.
freshman
Courtney Thomas
CNCS tournamen1. TBA
hinted
at
signs
of a very pro.
GtrfiBCross Lanes at South Gallla, 6 p.m.
ductive career, tickling the
CNCS tournament, TBA
·
nets for I 8 points in her first
varsity match-up. Breanna

~Lholding

· hoops tourney
for grades 4-6
. ·. RUTLAND
The
Middleport Youth League
will be holding a 4th, 5th
apd 6th grade basketball
tqurnament for boys and
girls. The tournament will
jJe held at the Rutland
pvic Center and no traveling teams or all-star teams
will be allowed to panicipate.
. · The tournaments will
take place on Satuiday,
· Dec. 20; and run, through
Tuesday, Dec. 23, and also
on Friday, Dec. 26, through
Tuesday, Dec. 30.
For more information ,
contact either Dave at
(740) 590-0438; Tanya at
(740) 992-5481; Tim at .
(740) 416-9527; or Mike at
(740) 4I6 -5301 .

MASON, W.Va. ~ The
~ahama Athletic Boosters
~II be hosting its second

apnual girls and boys 5th
)lpd 6th grade basketball_
tournament December 6-7
Wahama High School.
,.. The format will be dou'le
elimination
with
~wards to the top three
(OBms. Entry fee is $50 per
i.am payable to the
Wahama Athletic Boosters.
~or more information, call
~onard Koenig (740) 591 Z431 or Dave Jenkins
(S04) 674-5178.

pi

RACINE

•

SYRACUSE

We~e Got

36759 Rocksprings' Road
PometQy ,' OH 45769

ltl

949-2210 ·Racine, OH
992-8333 • Syracuse, OH

· www, rockspringsskillednursing.oom

....
'

·. ~NTACTUS

t:·

!It-""'-"'
Cefe.6ration ofLift"
·

...!{

333 Page Stlwt • Middleport, Ott (740) 882-6472
www.cwerbrookiehlblllllllof'IC!InW.com
~ ' '••*1 2() 1' ru ¥ 2ucf4', ~-,.._, t!..

www. TbePharmacytU.com

1

2·2955 • Pomeroy, OH
•

Tay lor netted
nine.
while seniur .

Eagles(
point s ..
S t e v i e
E m m a·
Horn sb ury
Hunt e r ,
added three
Lindsay
and Mariah
Teaford and
Fitch two.
.Lynzee
As young
Tucker each
Courtney
added four,
Thoma s
.~&amp;&lt;...£l!W broke the
and Jessica
Thomas
first game
Taylor
Riffle
notched
jitters rather
twq.
quick ly , Southern surged
Eastery1 was led by the tan- ahead courtesy of her eight
dem of Courtney Rowe, who . points by a 12-10 score for
teamed with sidekick Rachel Coach Alan Crisp's gals.
Stoker for I9 and 20 points Rowe and Stoker kept pace
respectively. That duo had for Eastern with fo;mr each in
all but five of the Lady -the first canto.

As Thomas drew more
second period pressure . she
joined Lynzee Tucker with
four points each in the frame
as Southern grew its lead to
25-2 1 at the intermiss ion.
Bre Taylor and Lindsay
Teaford each had two tallies
for the Tornadoes. while
Rowe opened up Eastemfs
outside game with a long
three and a pair of deuces.
Southern appeared to
overcome any adjustments
Eastern made at the half. But
little did anyone know that
Eastern was saving its \Jest
for last. Even after Southern
took away the Eagle inside
game and Eastern kicked it

ou t for a trio of tri-fecta's.
Southern continued to lead
39-33.
Then the ceiling fell in on
Southern. Eastern becal)le
more
aggressive
and
Southern's youth translated
into a barrel of turnovers.
Stoker came on with four
key buckets to bring Eastern
back into the mix .
Despite a wealth of strategies to pull · out the win by
both clubs in the late going.
Southern fell to its first loss
44-41.
.
There was no reserve
game .
Please see Southern, B:Z

SPORTS BRIEFS

5th-6th
grade tourney

REIIABD.JTADON CENtER

STAFF REPORT
SPOATSI)MYDAJLYSENTINEL.COM

Glrlo-t
Meigs at·Eastern, 6 p.m.
'River VallO!' at Gatlla Academy, 6 p.m.

Boos~rs

Rocksprings

.Southern falls to·Beaver-Eastern in opener

DWd• Qtcamber 2

Wahama Athletic

1

I

(W..UPCIJS -

~ Vll'lity aporting 8¥ll'ltt invdlri1g learns

GALLIPOLIS
. Reserve seats for the'200809 Gallia Academy basketball season are now on sale
at the' principal's office ai
GAHS between the hours
of 8 a.m. and 3 p.m.
The price is $48 per ticket and there will be a limit
of four tickets per individllal.
~

1

I

Monday, December I, 2008

GAHS basketball
reserve seating

"' h o~

that they .wtll ht ho," greet each other with
found to2ether.
laughter in Ntead of words
11us is a &gt;lippery slope and engage in games like a
elf. rationalizatton by FDA ." llretclld MJowhull light until
;atd Urvash,_ Ranga t\ . a a~tghtcr o ~c rl'ukes them. .
' COlOr ~CtentiS ! Wtth the
ntc .stall at the center Jit"Nt
CoR.•u~er!l Unton tn New u-i&lt;,d it in 2fKl4 . They felt
York . FDA needs to get a "weird and ~illy" but when
handle on how wtdespread they u-it\1 it out with patients
the problem _ts and . ll1ost the next day.lh~ htughter soon
tm portant. . tr both the' " because C'llJita~ious, suit!
~hemJCal~ are occumng in Kad1erine Pt11:k"tt. a lkcns.:d
any ~roducts They just clinical ' OCial worker and a
hav~ t .te~ted. enough to mind-body medi..:ine expert.
kno_ that yet. _
The · rherupy h.as since
Earlter lht ~ v. eek. mem - been mtegr:tt ~d intn the cuihe!'\ of CongreG' and the tore of the hospital. and is
llhnm' attMn&lt;; ~ ~enera \ · also oll'ered at the center 's
demanded a nattonar recall. I facilitie., it1 J&gt;hilutlelphia.
'IOmethmg FDA 'atd made Tulsa and ~ealtle .
no sen~ because tt had no
Steve Wilh&lt;m. ., 11,ycltnlocvJdence \ ugge, tmg that the gi't who n 111s the \Vorl 1
formula v.ould be danger' ' Laughter-Tou1•.• \~lticlt ,,,,~,
ous for bahtc' at the levels tram, and ce11itie' laul!hter
ol contammatton fou nd .
. club leaderG. sa1d Jhout two

.B l

The Daily Sentinel

Buckeyes dominate Samford, Page 82
Browns, Bengais ran again, Page 86 .
8CS polls favor Oklahoma, Page 86

TUPPERS PLAINS All basketball passes are
now on sale for .the 200809 season. Passes include
senior citizens, adult and
student for ·both boys and
girls basketball.
Prices for the 2008-09
~chool year are $4 for
!idults and $2 for students
to attend High School and
~unior High games.
: All passes rna y be pur~ased in the main office at
):~astern High School from
8' a.m. to. 3:30 p.m.

1

u.tt

Inside

•

i-740-446-2342 ext. 33

e..
l!o.nolt- aportaOmydatlytrtDuno.com
1-740-448-3008

'fc¢' &amp;twtt
B!')'lln Welters, Sports Writer
(74C) -1-48-2342, ext 33
lillft'a~mO my&lt;Saitytrlbuna.com

Lany Crum, Sport1 Writer
(74C) -1-48-2342 . .... 33
lcrumOmydallyNglster.com

'·

Lady Marauders roll .
past River Valley, 63-41
· 8\' BRYAN WALTERS

of eight and four points for
the hoStS.
.
The Silver and Black were
ROCKSPRINGS - For led by sophomore Brooke
the most pan, Meigs could- Marcum with a double-doun't have staned the 2008-09 ble of 15 points and 14
girls basketball season much rebounds. Seniors lliana
better than it did Saturday Corfias and Amanda Hager
night during a 63-41 non- also had eight J?Oints each
conference victory over vis- for the Lady Ratders in the
iting River Valley at Larry setback. ·
R. Morrison Gymnasium.
Junior Jenna Ward added
The Lady Marauders (l-0) six points for RVHS, folnever trailed in the contest lowed by senior Molly Ruff
and had four players reach and sophomore Kelsey
doubl.e figures while limit- Sands with two . points
ing the Lady Raiders (0-1) apiece .
to just 24 percent shooting The hosts staned out of
from the field. The Maroon the gates strong, going 8-ofand Gold also shot 48 per- 13 from the floor m the
cent for the game and held a ol&gt;ening eight minutes while
comfortable 37-24 ad van- establishing a 22- I I edge
tage at the break,
after the ·first quarter. Smith
RVHS - which trailed by had eight of her 10 points in
as many as 17 in the first the frrst canto, helping MHS
half - made · a gallant jump out to a lead of 22-8
charge out of the break, witti 1:031eft 1'li the &lt;'pener.
outscoring the hosts 15-8 in
RVHS pulled to within I 0
the third quarter to pull points (26-16) with 5:35 left
within two possesstons m the half, but Meigs held
entering the final stanza.
the guests scoreless for the
But down the stretch, next J:47 while going on a
MHS once aj:ain found its 7-0 run for a 33-16 edge.
rhythm - gomg.on an 18-2 River Valley closed out the
fourth quaner run to secure final two mmutes of the first
th_e 22-point season-opening half _on an 8-4 surge to pull
trtumeh.
.
within 13 points at the interSemor Calle Wolfe led · mission . ·
Meigs, and all scorers with The Lady Raiders went 918 pomts, whtle sophomore of-30 from the field in the
. Morgan Howard added a first half for 30 percent,
double-double for the vtc- while Meigs connected on
tors with 13 points and II 13-of-27 floor shots for 48
reb&lt;?unds. Senior Adrian percef!L The guests also
Bolm and JUntor Tncta commttted 12 of their 16
Sn:Uth also scored 10 points turnovers in the opening 16
ap1ece for the Lady minutes. MHS also had 16
Marauders .
turnovers in the . contest,
Sophomores
Miranda eight in each half.
Grueser and · Shellie Bailey
also added respective totals
PIMH IH Roll, B:Z
BWALTERSOMYDAJL~IBUNE.'COM

·

Bryan Walters/photo

Meigs defenders Morgan Howard, left, and Adrian Bolin, right, harass River Valley's
Brooke Marcum in the post during the first half of Saturday night's seasoh-opening girls
basketball game at Larry A. Morrison Gymnasium in Rocksprings.

Prep Football
- .OHSAA State Finals Roundup
.
'

St. Ignatius
CANTON (AP) - Coach
Chuck Kyle doesn't count
championships, just character.
And
Cleveland
St.
Ignatius has had plenty of
hoth for more than 20 years.
- Andrew Holland, not yet
born when Kyle and the
Wildcats won their ftrst state
title in 1988, passed for 208
yards and three touchdowns
to ·lead St. Ignatius to an
Ohio record lOth state
. championship, 28-20 over
Cincinnati Elder' in Division
I on Saturday night.
"I don't count wins and
losses," said Kyle , who
never even got his first
championship ring and has
simply tossed all the others
into a dresser drawer.
"Som~day, maybe I'll sit
in a wheelchair somewhere
and reflect on it all. Right
now, it's special to the players. This one was for this
tearn . That is what has
meaning to me."
Holland found Connor
Ryan for two TDs and staned the scoring with a 21yarder
to
Brendan
Carozzoni
at Fawcett
Stadium. That helped the
Wildcats (I4- I) to their first
title since 200 I - in a
record 21st consecutive
ap~arance in the.playoffs.
'All I can remember is St.

record 10111 state

Ignatius in the playoffs,"
Holland said. "I dreamed of
doing this and it feels great."
St. Ignatius . won · 14 in a
row following a seasonopening 20-17 loss to
Cleveland Glenville. The
win gave the Wildcats an
overall55-11 playotl' record.
They overcame a recordsettin~
performance by
Elder s Mark Miller, who
went 27-for-50 for 399
yards and two TDs.
Despite combinin~ for 12
state championshtp-game
appearances since 1988, the
teams met for the first time
for the Iitle. Elder (13-1)
ranked fifth in the final
-Associated Press regularseason poll and state champs
in 2002-03, came in averagin~ 36 points. The No. 4
Wildcats had held nine
opponents to single-digit
scorin~ with four shutouts .Yet 1t was St. Ignatius that
bolted to a 21-0 lead with
8:56 left in the ftrst half.
"They put us in a hole and
limited some thin§s we
could do on offense,' Elder
coach Doug Ramsey said.
"I'm most proud of the way
we never quit, kept coming
back right to the end."
.
AP photo
The Wildcats went 80
Cleveland
St.
Ignatius
Wildcats
teammates
celebrate
after
Cleveland
beat
Cincinnati
Elder
yards for their first TD,
Panthers 28-20 in a Division I high school football state championship game, Saturday in
PIAH see Sute. B:Z
Canton .
•
•'

�·-

·---

Page 82 • The Daily Sentinel

Bulldogs can't score in 59-22 loss
COLUMBUS (AP)
Thad Matta gave a halftime
tulk that was umque after his
Ohio State Buckeyes held
ovennatched Samford to six
measly points.
Bastcally, it was this: Don't
lau~h at the Bulldogs.
u
e told us, tt• ' s zero-zero
and if he sees someone with a
&lt;'1\lle, he pretty much, well,
you know how that goes
from there," swingman Evan
Thrner said.

Southern
from Page Bl
Ea.tem 44, Southern 41
Eastern
Southern

10 11 12 11
12 13 14 2

-

44
41

Eaatern (1..0) Martah Fttch i 0-0 2,
Courtney Ftowe 8 0-0 19, Rachel Stoker
9 t.J 20, Hanna Schrader 0 0-1 0,
Stevte Hornsbury 1 1-2 3, Anna Mtlls 0

0-0 0 Totals 15 :;, 2-6 44 Th ree Point
Goals· Rowe three , Stoker one

Southern (0-1) Emma Hunter 2 0-0 4,
Breanna Taylor 4 t 3 9 Ltndsay Teaford

1 2-2 4, Lynzee Tucker 2 0-0 4 Courtney
Thomas 7 4-6 18 Jesstca Atltle 1 0-0 2.

Morgan
McMillan o 0-0 o Totals 17 7 11 41

Gabby Johnson 0 0 0 0

GALLIA WINS OPENER
AGAINST ATHENS
GALLIPOLIS - Round
two of the Renee Barnes'
era as the head girls basketball coach at Gallia
Academy got off to a .great
start Saturday night against
visiting Athens , as the Blue
Angels jumped out to a 267 halftime lead and never
looked back durin~ a 41-30
season-opemng vtctory m
the Old French City.
The Blue and White shot
40 percent overall in the
contest and had six players
score in ihe triumph, jumping out to a 13-5 advantage
after just eight minutes of
play. Following a 13-2 second quarter run for a 19point intermission edge,
GAHS ( 1-0) increased its

Turner scored 16 points
and had a career-high 13
rebounds and Ohto Swte held
Samford to the fewest points
by an opponent m 69 years in
a 59-22 victory on Saturday.
The Bulldogs (3-2) had
only nine field goals while
the Buckeyes (3-0) blocked
seven shots.
,
It was the fewest points by
a Samford team since the
Bulldogs lost 35-21 to
Auburn on Feb. 19, 1941.
lead to 37- 13 after three
periods of play.
The Lady Bulldogs (0- 1)
outscored Gallia Academy
17-4 in the final canto, but
the guests never came closer than three possessions the
rest of the evening.
Junior Allie Troester
paced the victors with 12
points and nine rebounds,
while senior Rachel Jones
fo llowed with 11 points.
Both Troester and Jones
also sat out the fourth
frame.
Amy Noe added eight
points to the winning cause,
fo llowed
by
Morgan
Daniels with seven markers
and Shantelle Rathburn
with a basket. Tara Young
rounded out the scoring
with one point.
The Blue Angels were 2of-11 from three-point terntory for 18 percent and
were also 7-of-21 at the free
throw line for 33 percent.
GAHS also committed 18
turnovers in the contest.
Athens was led by
Adriana Lein with a gamehigh 16 points, followed by
Jamie Sindelar with six and
Cindy Willi s wtth five
markers . That trio also
· scored 15 of those 27 points
in the fourth quarter.
Whitney Dtckens rounded out the Green and Gold
scoring with three points.
AHS was also 5-of-10 at
the charity stripe for 50 per-

Monday, December 1, 2008

www.mydailysentinel.com

_Monday, December 1, 2008

'(!tribune - Sentinel - l\egi~ter
CLASSIFIED

Roll

fromPageBl
Dallas Lauderdale had 10
point' for the Buckeyes.
The game wa&gt; over almost
Meig&gt; started the third
before it began, with the stanza with an 8-2 run that
Buckeyes scoring the first covered the opening fiveseven points while holding plus minutes for a 45-26
Samford scoreless over the cushion , but the guests
opening 7:25. The Bulldogs made a furious charge over
scored on consecutive pos- the final 2:46 - holding
sessions - then didn't score MHS scoreless while going
again for ~ 1/2 minutes.
:'!In a 13-0 surge to enter the
· By that time . they trailed finale down 45-39.
24-4 and had hit 2 of their · Ri ve r Valley, however.
first 19 shots from the field . came no closer the rest of
the way as the hosts started
the fourth wtth a 9-0 run rl)
cent .
take a 54-39 lead with 4:48
For the second consecu- remaintng in regulation .
tive sports" season, Gallia RVHS scored with 4:35 left
Academy has handed for- to make it 54-41 , then went
mer SEOAL-rival Athens a scoreless the rest of the way.
loss in its debut as a memBesides the slight third
ber of the Tri- Valley quarter lull , the only other
Conference Ohio Division . area of concern for Meigs
The Blue Devtl s football on Saturday night was on
team accompli shed the feat the glass. The Lady Raiders
this past fall with a 31-22 claimed ·a 37-24 ed~e in
victory during Week 1 in total rebounds, includtng a
whopping 20-5 discrepancy
The Plains.
The Blue Angels return to on the offensive glass .
action Tuesday when they · In contrast, Meigs held
)j_ost River Valley in a non- edges of 14-8 m steals, 9-1
conference battle of Gallia in assists and 3-1 in blocks.
County schools. The junior The Lady Marauders also
varsity game will tip-off at had the only success ful
6 p.m.
three-pointers in the game.
The
hosts were 15-of- 18 at
Gallla Academy 41 , Athena 30
the free throw line for 83
A1hens
5 2 ~ 17 30
Gallipolis 13 13 ~ 1 4 - 4i percent, while RVHS was
10-of-22 at the charity
ATHENS (G-1)" Eliza Chnstensen 0 0-0 stripe for 46 percent.
• 0, Whitney Dickens '1 1-4 3, Raven
Meigs needed two overCline 0 0-0 O. Cindy Willis 2 H 5, Cally
W1llis 0 0-0 0, Gracie Staten 0 0· 0 0, times, but the hosts claimed
.Cayla Nicholson 0 0-0 0, Jess Wallum 0
an evening sweep with a 420..:0 0, AdriBila lain 6 3-4 16, Jamie
Shldehu 3 0-0 6. TOTALS 12 5-10 30. 41 victory in the junior varThree·polnl goals. 1 (Lain).
GALLIA ACADEMY (1-0). Amy Noe 3 sity contest. Laticia Kline
0-2 B. Allie Troester 5 2-2 12, Rachel stole an inbounds pass, went
Jones 4 3·5 11 , Shantelle Rathburn 1 0·
the length of the floor and
0 2. Karl Campbell 0 0-3 0, Emily Whtte
nailed a 15-(ooter with
0 0·0 0, Morgan Daniels 3 1·7 7.
Samantha Barnes 0 0·0 0, Kimber seven seconds left in the
Dav1s 0 0·0 o, Tara Young 0 1·2 1.
TOTALS:18 7·21 41 Thr,e-poln1 goals second overtime to give the
2 (Noe 2)
JV Lady Marauders the season-opening decision.
GAHS ttatlttlclllndlvldualleadera
Emalee Glass led MHS
Field goals. 16-40 (400); Three-point with eight points. while
goals: 2-11 ( 182), Free throws· 7-21
Kaitlyn Roberts had a
(. 333~ ; Total rebounds· 39 (Troester 9),
Offensive rebounds; 19 (Daniels 5), game-high 13 points for
Assists. 12 (Troester 3. Barnes 3, White
3); Steals 13 (Troester 3), Blocks. 1 River Valley in the setback .
(Daniels 1). Turnovers. 18.
Both !vfeigs and River
1

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•-r--:---'----'· _ __:·..,....;.O:.:r..;F.;;a;.;xTo

Monday thru Friday

8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.
Meigs guard Catie Wolfe (20) dribbles past River Valley
defender Amanda Hager during the second half of
Saturday night's season-opening girls basketball game at
Larry A. Morrison Gymnasium m Rocksp~mgs.
·
Valley return to action IIIana CortlaS 2 4·10 8. Janna Ward 2 11 6. Brooke Marcum 6 3·4 15 TOTALS.
Tuesday in a pair of non- 15 10-22 41. Three-polnl goals. 1
conference road games. The (Ward). •
(1-0): Mlcki Barnes 0 o-o o.
Lady 'M arauders WI"II !rave1 • MEIGS
Adrian Bolin 42-3 10. T"c•a Sm1th 4o-o
to Tuppers Plains for an in- 10. Ca1oeWolle 8 2-418. Shanalle Sm1th
. hE
0 0-0 0. Miranda Grueser 1 6·6 e.
county contest Wit astern , Shelll e sa,ley2O·O 4. MorganHoward·4
while the Lady Ratders 5-5 13 Chandra Stanley o o-o o.
head to·Gallipolis for an in- TOTALS. 23 15-18 63. Three-point
goals. 2 (T. Sm1th 2)
county matchup with Gallia
Team atatlatlcallndlvtdualleader•
Academy . Both contests
have JV tip-off times of 6 F1eld goals RV 15-63 (238), M23-48
{.479); Three-pomt goals· RV 1-9 ( 11 1),
p.m .
M 2-12 ( 167): Free throws· RV 10-22
(055). M15·18 (833). Total reboundpMeigs~.

R Valley
Meigs

River Valley 41

11 13 15 2
22 15 8 18

-·

41
63

RIVER VALLEY (o-1)· Amanda Hager 4
0·1 8, Mensa Marcur'fl o 0-4 0 Kelsey
Sands o 2-2 2, AUI N evi ll~ o 0-0 0, Molly
Ruff 1 0-0 2,

Mackenz1a Cluxton 0 0-0 0,

session .
Aurora
eliminated
defending
cnampion
Sunbury Big Walnut in the
semifinals last week to
advance to its first championship game .

from Page Bl
capped by Carozzoni 's
catch. The tight end went up
between two defenders for
the grab at the 5, then bulled
mto the end zone.
First team All-Ohio linebacker
Scott
McVey
stopped Elder with an inter·ception and Holland directed a 10-play. 76-yard drive.
He connected· "'ith Ryan
from 2 I yards for a 14-0
lead two plays after overthrowing him on the same
route.
Pat Hinkel's 2-yard burst
over left tackle made it 210.
Holland and Miller, cooffensive players of the year
in the divtsion . combined
for (1)7 yards passi ng The
teams amassed 726 'total
yards, 424 of them by Elder.
One play after an mterception by Dan Fox stopped
Elder at the I , Zachary
Autenreib 's pick put the
Pan(hers back on offense at
the St. Ignatius 35. Seven
plays later. Miller's arcing
9-yarder to Tim 0 'Connor
made it 21-7. O'Connor hnished with a division titlegame record 15 receptions
•
for 184 yards.
The drive cost Elder us
top lineman. 275-pound
Austen Bujnoch . He was
helped off with a knee
injury and did not return .
"I haven 't heard exactly
what it was, but it did not
look good." Ramsey said.
Then defensive back
Jonathan Taylor's thirdquarter misplay cost Elder.
Holland hit Ryan with a
short out pass and Taylor
missed the tackle. Ryan ran
b fi
d
d
t e ma 1 40 yar sand ove
in to the end zone to comPlete the 51-yard TD for a
28-7 lead.
Mtller JUSt kept passing .
His 50 attempts set a diviston title-game mark . He
connected with Josh Jones
for a 45-yard TD wi th 17
seconds left in the third , but
the extra-point kick was
blocked. Miller had the
"':ind knocked out of him on
his final pass and Joe Betzer
came m,and tossed a 2-yard
TO to&lt;? Connor on the next
p!Wt With 1_:221eft.
.
!· lgna.uus recovered the
oniide .klck, ran out the
cl~k and celebrated another,!Itle ,
,
. Te,n of,tbem, .R~sey
S8ld. 'That s amazing.

OtV!StON

v

YOUNGSTOWN URSULINE 21.
FINDLAY LIBERTY·BENTON 0

AP photo
Aurora Greenman quarterback Brendan Gallagher (5) and running back Andrew
Badalementi celebrate after Aurora ·beat Columbus Eastmoor Academy Warriors 2 t -1 0 in
a Division Ill high school state football championship game, Saturday in Canton.
·
•
Eastmoor (13:2) had tying hi s shoe ," Mihalik
DtvtSION Ill
outscoredopponents617-97 said . "I grabbed him and
in its 13 wins , including said, 'You OK? Because
COLUM~~~~~~~~OOR 10
four stra ighht mwidsc:ason vic- we're going to go up top .'
tones. 1 e arnors out- His eyes lit up and he satd,
CA NTON
(AP)
gained Aurora in total yards , 'I'm good, coach.'"
Aurora played takeaway 297-191, but could not
Eastmoor took a 3-0 lead
and grabbed the ultimate match. the Greenmen 's 21- on a 35-yard field goal by
grand prize .
boint second quarter out- Kwesi Sample with 8:26
Brendar, Gallagher twice
urst.
left in the first quarter.
threw touchdown passes on
"The key was the final
The Warriors didn 't
the first play after a few minutes before half- muste r much consistent
turnover 10 lead the time," Aurora coach Bob offense until putting togethGreenmen to their first Ohio Mihalik said.
er an Impressive 93-yard
Division III high school · Trailing 3-0, Aurora line- scoring drive that took more
&amp;
b
h
· h.
backer Danny Myers recov- than six minutes to com.oot a 11 c amptons tp, 21 - ered a fumble · by Touche plete . Johnson
found
10
over
Columbus Hopkins at the Warriors' 49 . Coleman for a 30-yard TD
Eastmoor Academy on G 11
S
d
a agher passed to a wide- pass that made it 2 1- 10 with
atur ay.
.
open Steven Yung ,and the I :52 left in the third quarter.
"Except foJ som~ m1s- 5-foot-8 tailback raced 30
"No one expected us to be
takes and them sconng 14 yards down the left side for here , so we're proud of our
points in 21_ seconds , .~ · a 7-3 lead.
.
- ·· accomplishment
even
thought we dtd all ~1ght,
Eric Schultz bulled the though we're .disappointed
said Eastmoor quarterback final 3 yards as Gallagher we didn 't play our best,"
Mal?n Johnson. "We had a , guided the Green men on an Eastmoor
coach
Jim
hornble secon~, quarter. We 11 -play, 79-yard drive and Miranda said after the
beat ourselves.
14-3 lead 4:15 before half- Warriors' first appearance in
Aurora's ball-hawking tim~ .
.
the state final. "We knew
defense gave Gallagher and
Moments later, Dee Aurora was an opportunistic
the Greel\men's opportunis- Brizzol11ra intercepted. a team and we had to take
tic offense good field posi- pass by Eastmoor's Malon care of the football. We didtion - arid the senior sec- Johnson and returned it 2.5 n 't and ·m1n-was the story.''
ond team All-Ohio selection yards to the Waniors ' 26.
Johnson finished 10-forquickly capitalized.
Gallagher capitalized q!JiCk· 19 for !.52 yards, but was
Gallagher went 7-for-1.5 ly, finding Brizzolara tn the intercepted a second time
for 120 yards for the left corner of the end zone with 2:20 left when his pass
Gn:enmen (13-2), who won to make it 21·3.
bounced off Hopkins' hands
thetrlastl2gamesafteral "Dee was kind of tired andwasgrabbedbySchultz
2 stan.
afteHhe pick and was down to end Eastmoor's last pos·
I

446-3008

Or Fax To (740) 992-2157

HOW I0 W§Jjt! 6ft 6Q
Sui:cesfu ds
Should Include These Items
To Help Get Response •..

«POLICIES..

MASSILLON (AP) Three big-play touchdowns
and plenty of determined
defense gave Youn~stown
Ursuline another Ohto high
school foot ball cham pionship.
Allen Jones scored on a
59-yard -run and the
Fighting Irish returned two
interceptions for touchdowns to win the Division
V title, 21-0 over Findlay
Liberty-Benton
on
Saturday.
The outcome shocked
Ursuline
coach
Dan
Reardon, who expected a
high-scoring matchup.
"I thought it would be a
54-52 -barnburner," Reardon
said. " If anyone had said
'shutout' before the game,
I'd have said , 'You're
crazy.' "
Ursuline (15-0) got the
first shutout in a Division V
title game in 23 years, since
Newark Catholic beat
Delphos Jefferson, 19-0.
"Really?" Reardon said.
'That's great. Fantastic ."
Dale Peterman went 44
yards and LaVance Turnage
40 yards with picked passes
in the fourth quarter at Paul
Brown Tij!er Stadium to put
the finishmg touches on the
Irish's second state crown.
They a! so won in 2000.
Jones · burst 59 yards
down the right side at 10:49
of the third quarter to put
Ursuline ahead 7-0. The
gai n nearly doubled the
Fighting
Irish's
total
yardage in a sluggish first
half.
"We made some adjustihents in the running game
and got Allen open;' senior
lineman Dan Baco said .
"Once we get him throus h
the line, I always like his
chances against a safety.
Not many guys can catch
Allen."
Both · teams came in
unbeaten . sponing stifling
defenses and high-powered
attacks - but neither mus·
tered much offense in a
frustrating first half in
which Ursuline managed
only 37 total yards and was
intercepted twice.

That wasn 't too surprising , since Liberty-Benton
(14-1) came in with 10
shutouts and had outscored
opponents 649-36.
"We put' sbme drives
together, but if you don't get
past that final white line it
doesn't matter," Eagles
coach Tim Nichols said.
"We executed sometimes,
but not consistently."
Eagles quarterback Aaron
Craft went 18-of-27 for !52
yards, but was intercepted
four times - one more pick
than ~ e threw all season.
" I hadn't faced a defense
· like that," Craft said.
"They're fast, they're
strong and they make
plays."
Craft guided the Eagles to
their best chance, but was
stacked up at the Iri sh 4 on
fourth -and- I with less -than
a minute to go before half,
time.
Liberty-Benton drove to
the ,Irish 8 with 58 seconds
left in the third quarter,
where Justin Hyde missed a
25-yard field goal attempt.
The Trish came up with
one big defensive play after
another. With 9:37 to play,
Peterman picked off &lt;1 pass
at his own 5 and returned it
40 yards.
A few minutes later
Petennan stepped in front of
another pass and ran down
the right side to make it 14•
0. Turnage did the. same on
the left side for a 21-0
advantage.
"Early on, coach said to
watch· their quarterback,"
Petennan said . "His eyes
were locked in on one
receiver. Coach said, 'You
can make a play on that .'
"The stop was bigger to
me than scoring. We were
only up by seven at the time
and had to stop them ."
Jones finished with 87
yards on 17 carries for the
Irish , who got onl y eight
first downs and had a paltry
28 yards passing.
A )lear ago, Ursuline lost
in the cha mpi o~ s hip ga_me
to Mana Stem Marton
Local, which won its fourth
state title and extended its
winning streak to 27 games
with a 20- 14 wi n. LibertyBenton ousted the defending champiens a week ago
in the semifinals, 35-0.
"We had a lot of motivation from then," Irish senior
receiver LJ. Stevens said.
"We knew what it was like
to lose the final game, we
saw how our seniors a year
ago felt . We didn't want to
experience it,"

•

All Display: 12 Noon 2
Business Days Prior To
Publication

Sunday In·Column: 9:00 a .m .
For Sundaya Paper

Sunday Dl•play: 1 : 00 p . m .
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Publllhll'lfl

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Trlbune-s.ntlnei·Regltter will be responsible for no more lhan the cost of the apace occupied by the error l nd only the llrst lnsertlon. We shall not be liable tor
any lots or
tt1at rtsulta lrom the publlc1110n or omlallon or an sdvertlsement. COJrectlon will be mad e In
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••1*'1•

accaptl only help wantM ads meeting EOE.slanderda. We
Rt'ora an ad taken ovf!f tna phone

In

lhe 11111

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740-949-211~

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. on

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rtOWIIpa

have been placed In ads at
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Dally Tribune
must be picked
within 30 days.
Any pictures
that are not
plc:ked will be
discarded.
The Tribuna
Office has many
unclaimed
pictures that will
be discarded on
December 31, 08.
If you think you

Pet Cremations.
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NOTICE Borrow Smart
contact the Ohoo Dovl. may h8V8
SIOn of F1nanc1al lnslltU·
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Into
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office
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and
look
Aff1arsOfficetonof Consumer
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the them.
1-866-278-0003 lo learn
-;;;;;;;~ 1f the mortgage broker or
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BMouncement
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Publishing COmpany)
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only hoi
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f1'1UCill101l

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BaWaterpr~tlng

Uncondrtlonal Ulellmo
guarantee local references lum1shed. Estab·
llshed 1975. Cal\24 Hrs
740·446·0870, Rogers
Br;~sement Waterproofing

wilt
n
nowlngly accept on
dvortlooment
I
lollllon of the taw.

Bua111011 &amp; Trade

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Col loge

(Careers Close To Home)
Call Todayl740-446-4367
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AC&lt;;rtdltad ~ember A
cer&amp;dft·
lng Counc1t tor Independent
College&amp;and Scnooll t274B

CL"ASSIFIED INDEX
Loga11 . ........................................................ tOO Rocroo11on11 ...hlctos ................ ........... 1000

Annou-.. ..................................... 200 ATV .............................•.............................. 1!105

Blr1hdoy/Annlverury .•..................... .... ....20! lllejelol....................................................1010
HappJ Ado .................................................. 210 Booii/ACCOIIOriel....•.•...•......•..•.........•....iOI5
Loti &amp; Fooncl ................................•........... 215 ClmporiRVI 8 Trllllro ............................. 1020
Memory/Thank You ..••.••••••.••..••.••..•••..•••.•• 220 Motorcvcteo .............................................. 1025
NOtlcol ~--···-··· ·····-······· ···· ·····-·· ····· ··········225 Other ...................................................... 1030
Ptrl001ail.................................... ............230 w1nt"' baJ ...... .........., ........................•... 1035

Wonted ..................................................... 235 Automo11vt ......•...•........•..................•...• 21100

•· 5ervlcll ................................................... :t011 Auto Renllill.eo11 ................................•... 2005
Ajipllanco Ser&lt;lco •..............•.•.••.................302 Autoo ...•.......•............•....•....•..•........•....2010

. Aulomollvo .•........•...•........•...•..•............. 304 Claaii&lt;/AndqUII"•.........:•........•.............. 2015
Bolldlnfl-a ..... .................. ............... 306 COmmerelttlllnclul1rt~ ...•.......................• 2020
'. B111)neu ........................•....•....................308 Porta &amp; Acca-................................ 2025
Clllrlng........•..................•.......... ."............•.. 310 Sporll UIIIIJ ......................................... 2030
Chl~y Clrt .................... "''"'''''"''"''' 312 Truckl......................................................... 2035
COrttpolllro ......................•.......... ...... ..... ..... 314 Ulllty Trallerl •.•..•~•••••••••- ••••.•.•.••••••.• 21140
Controctont ..•...•.....•., ...........•..............•.. 316 V.no.................:-···-·-···--···-···········~
uao-ucorJonHortol . ............................. 318 Wtnt tobu1 ......................................... 2050

600

/J

I

1) ,1 1~

"---•_.
~
--;;;;;;;;;;.;~,;;;;.=;;
"'2 p addy o• M
ally Hell·

approx. 950
Ready to breed.
each. 7.0·245·5325

ers,

lbs
$850

AKC Reg. Golden Retrievers ltrst shots &amp;
wormed $250 ready to
go
1112W8 5 males 4
tle111ngl Coollng ...................•........•........ 328 ConciOrnlniURII ....•.•.- ..................... 3015
lemales 740-:l67-5037
Homo tmprovorntn11 330
For Sate by llwnof................... - ...._m
or 740-&amp;45-8098
lnltlrlnCI ............................. _ ..................... 332 Hou~ttfor Slte ......... _ ............................. as
LMm SorYI&lt;t ....•...•••...•...•; ....................... 334 Land (Acrtago) .•••••-·-·····················3030
-------·
... ~ ............ : .•••••••••••••••. 3311 Loll •....•.......•..•..- ..-···-·····'-···-·.3035
Registered
Beautiful
- Othlr -·····-···-···:. ••1.................... 3311 Wllnt 10 buy ...•.......••......••..- ..•.. --~--Plumlll~---···-····.,····· ·············:140 Roo! Eillto •.•...., ....... ...... - ... 3&amp;00' , fluffy Toy Poodles, Just
, Plollulonat Selv~o ............................... 342 AportmonloiTown-.................-. 3105 in t1me for Chnstmas.
. Rlpok1................................................... 344 Comrno&lt;elll...•...•...•... ; .... : .............•....:.• 3510
740..367.Q689
Rootlng.....•.............•.. ...............•................m Conclomlnlumo ..................., ...............&lt;t515
• Securlty ....•.•.•...•...•........•........•..••....... - .. 348 Hou101 I« Raill ........... _................... - 3620
·· Tu/Aecounllng ...................•...•..•.............350 Land (~) .......•.:••.•.••..••..••.•••.._ .•. 352$ ,.,..,.,....-..,.---·
Golden
Flat.
~ups
Tmtlll:nttrtllnment ..•.............•..............•..352 S1oroge ....................:.••....••..•...•....•.•.•... 353$
m/S200, tl$250; Ch huaRnantltll...•......•.............•.........................400 Wllnt 1o Rant ......................:...-:.•...•.... 3540 hua pup rnl$200; Cocker
Pinlindll Sttvlotl ....................... ~ .............. 405 llarNftctured Houlfng ..."'"'"""'"""'-'"4000 pups
Mini
"""''"'" ................................................... 410 Loll .............................................." .. 4005 Schnauzermi$200,
(partl)
rnl1
lloney1o Land •..•.•.••..••..•..•••.....•..•...•....••.415 ·-·······-··-··-·-·-··.:.··--·-··-···4010
$400;
Boxer
pups,
Ecklcotlort ...............................................soo Ran1ata.............................................4015
blacl!iwtlne m/$600, All
&amp; Trldo Sct1001 ........................505 Salea••....•...•...•.....• "·········-····............... 4020
- . Trllnlng .......................... -.. 510 Suppiill .............~··-··-·-··....:...•.... 4025 AKC reg .. 74o-696-1085
Electlteal ................................................... 320 RooiEilltoSIIH ................................. :tOOO
Flilondal ....................................................322 c-tery Plo11 .................................... 3005
Hool1h ........................................................ 326 Comrno&lt;elll...........,:.... ~: ................... ~.•:tOIO

a.-

Wont lo 8Uy ••••••••••••••••••••-••••••••u•••••• 4030
Ptrlonlt ................................................ 520 Ploparty •... ---····-·······-·-·········50110
Anlmlll ...................................................600 P1oparty I« . ........................ 5025
• Anlmii·S!ippfloa ....................................... 605 Rolor1 Prtlf*IJ I« rtnt .•....•..•........•.... 5050
Horl0o ••••..••••••..••...•..••.•..••..••••.•...••..••...•••. 610 EmploJ1nOni........................................... IIOOO
Lll'tltoc:ll•••..•••..•.....•........•..•..•.........•....•.615 Accountlngr!'lttlnciii.............................. II002

• • l.ellont..•-•••••••••••u•••••••• ••••••U••"••••• •••••••••I15

Ptr1 .............................................. .............620
Yll!nt lo buJ................................................625
Agrtcu~uro....•........•..........................•....... 700
Farm Equlpmant ........................................70!1
Garden &amp; Produco...................................710
Illy, Food, Sold, Groin .......................... 715
Hunllntlll.lncl ........ ........................ _. 720
Wlnllo bUy•••••...•..•.•.•..••..••••••..•. .!.. •••••••••• 725

Admlnlalra1-.r.atonai.....................II004
Cftlki'Eidorly Clro .................................6008
Clerlcol •...•............•...•.........•.......•....•... 6010
C-.uC11Dn..................,........................• 6012
Oriw&lt;t l Otllvery .••...•..........•...•........•... 6014
~lon ................................................6016
Eloc1ttell Ptumblng................................ 6018

lllrdlltl1diM ·····-··············-·········'" · ·····1100

Entploymlnt Agandol-·· ····-················61120

Caohler1Claril ....•.••.........•..•...............•... t10116

. AntlqUit...•••...........•..•.. _ ..................... i05 - -·-··-···-······-·······-···-

• Appt-··········---······-·····-················810 Food ·-······--···...···-·-··-····-··1024
Auctlona..................................................... 815 Go-mnn.nt &amp;Fodonl Jobl .••..•....•...••.. 60211

, Balgoln Bo~trrttrtl........................ &amp;...........820

Help lnfld. --·-·-·······-..·-···-···Coltectlbill............................................ i25 Law Entorcornont .............................. 6030
Compu1n •...•_.,...•..•..........•......•...•...•... 830 ~~a~.-.,
11032
. Equlpmont/Supplill •...•...•...-....... -.....ll35 ...__poMtory --··-··-····-·· Fill Mlrillll ..........•..................... ······-··-· !MO Medllnko ............._ ...... ,_.,_.,,............. 60:JI

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

. FUll Oil COIIrWOOIMlla -............•...•...•.. MS
Funtlturt ...................... ,...................... 950
Ho!IDJJI1unl &amp; Sporl •....•...•.......•••....•...•.955
Kld'seomtr"..............................................:
1 ..,....,,, ,,,,, .. ,.,,,,,., ............. ·•••
,, llllcelllneGUS
Wlnttobuy.................................. ............ 9711
Ylnl Salt .....................................................915

Houses For Rent
1BR house $375 ullhtles
are NOT 1m:luded. Refer·
ences required. Gallipolis
area 709-1372
::-:-~-~-::-~-:
2 b1. house in Ru11and
$350 a mon1h, $200 de·
posit, 740-742-1903
-~":':'~~~~- 2 story country home 1n
ELLM VIEW APTS LangsVIlle
area
3
2&amp;3BR and up Central Bd.l1&amp;1'2bathsS450 per
AI{ WID hookup, tenant M
plus
ut1ht1eslon
pays electnc EHO Elm 3acres+.740-742-2628
V1ew
Apls. .
(304)882-30 17
iiBA Muse 1n Gallipolis.
740-36H762
Twm Rivers Tower IS ac.:· ::.:,;~~~....- - cepllng applicatiOns lOr Beaut1tu1 3BR 1n country:
walling list lor HUD sub- new appl. new carpet
Sldlzed, 1.BA apar1ment lresh pa1nted, CIA, wasl"i·
lor the elderlylct1sablod room wl WID hookup
call675·6679
Water pd $550/mo
614-595 7773/645-5953
N1ce 3 br. ranch m Pt
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Plea . anached gar .
Brand New 2 bedroom stove &amp; refnd. included.
1 5 bath dupleiC $575 on dep req"304·675·7783
O
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35
Call
740·208·7934
email RentJSale 3br w/lg. Ga·
1t . 1
1
sou1hohlo,11v1ng@gma1c rage,
$500/deposlt
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om
304·755·8744
or
~ 0!-tf
304-675-6113
~~w~w~w~-~co~m~lc~s~.c~o~m~-;;;;;;;;;;;;;~©~2;0;08;;N;E;A;,;'";c;.~ 2nd
Furmshed
Ave upsta1rsApar1ment
au ut1h· Rt 7 w/ Riverview nver
t~s paid tBR no pets room. 2BR. 15 baths, 2
Want To Buy
GallipoliS. 446·9523
car garage. Lr LA w/
d1mng space · daunory
Absolu1e Tap Dollar - sH· ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; Beech 2 Street Middle' rm . S600 + ulilihes
verfgold co1ns, any
port,
bedroom fur- 70:3·451 ·2591
·
mshed apartment. ut1li·
FarmEquipmtnl
10K/1 4KI18K gold jaw- ForSoleByOwnor nes paod, no pets. deManu1aclured
4000
EEIV:,
INTEGRITY, elry, dental gold, pre
posit
&amp;
references,
Housmg
1935
US
currency, Hot.~se on SA 588 for
740
992
0165
KIEFER BUILT,
proof/mint sets. d1a· more 1nforma11on and ( ) ·
VALLEY HORSE/LIVE· monds, MTS Coin ShOp pictures go to mvb.com 4
room
apt ~
STOCK
TRAILERS, 151 2nd Avenue. Galli· id. number 1s brownmg w/stove/fr~dge,
u11llt1es --==R;;".;"ta.;l;;'==•
LOAD
EQU IP- ~po~il..
pd. upsta1rs, no pels at '!"
MENt MAX TRAILERS,
= s...4..46,.-2;;;8;;;42,.,",.,,., 740-446-7204
46 Olive St. $ 4SO/mo + 2br all electnc near Hwy
CARGO E~PRESS &amp;
Yard Solo
HouJOI For Solo
dep 740-446·3945
160 no pets. depoSit
HOMESTEADER
plus reference 441-5062
CARGO/CONCESSION Thnft ShOp now open 3 Bed, 2 Bathl Only BeautHul Apta, at Jack· or 379·2923
TRAILERS.
B+W Thurs.&amp;Sai.9:00-3.Free
$15,500 for' listings son Estates. 52 West- ,..,........,,...---GOO&amp;ENECK FLATBED clo1hes &amp; stuff 482 Hor- 800·620·4946 ex A01 9
wood Dr, from $365 to Federal Funds illS! re·
$3999. VIEW OUR EN· ton St.,Mason,W.Va.
$560
740-446-2568 INeased tor Land Ot wnendrs
TIRE TRAILER INVEN·
3br,
2ba,
Central Equal Housmg Qpportu· o c1os1ng cos a
TORY AT
A1r/Heet, newly remod- My ThiS 1nstltut1on is 'an ZERO DOWN 1 Will dO
WWW.CARMJCHAEL·
eted' bathrooms, new Equal Opportunity Pro- land
nnprovemen1s.
T~AILERS COM
hardwood &amp;. tile floors, vider and Employer
Bankruptcy &amp; Bad Cred1t
Sandholl Ad $155,000 ,...,..._.....,____ OK 2 3 4 and 5 bed740.446•3825
Campen / RVa &amp;
304-675-4880
Gracious Living 1 and 2 rooms
available
• T-"-""""""""""""0!!!!0!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Bedroom Apts at Village 740·446 3384
Have you priced a John ~=;;;;ii;i""'""
....;i;;;== _.
Manor and R1verside
Deere lalely7 You'll be ~
land (Acroagt~)
Apts. 1n Middleport, lrom 2 3 &amp; 4Br for rent.
surprised! Check ou1 our RV
5327
to
$592 36?·7762
1nventory
Service at Ca rm1chae 1 .345 Acres located on 740-~J92·5064
used
at
E I
www cAREQ com
car- Trailers
496 PaiCton Ad Gall1po·
qua 3BR 2 ba111 on farm $750
740-446·3825
lis
Is
adequa1e
lor
a
m
oH
ousing
Opportumty
mth
ut1illies 1 nc1u~"~ed
michael
Eqwpment
,..
740·44&amp;2412
bile home. Has all hook· Modern 1BA apt Call :.54~0~·7;;;29:::·';,;;3;3'--:-~~
;;
74;;0~
,;=;,;,,.,;,==,;,, RV Service al Carmi- ups 740"441 "5 ~ 29
;.
-4~46~-0~3~90~~~- 3sR Obl : w1Cie near
chael
Trailers
:"Ex·c~-p~
t 1 on--:al-~
200
~-ac-r
e
HOLIDAY SPECIAL
Pomeroy great condition
900
~IPI~rtiln~ se
740-446·3825
cattle farm m GallIa Co Pat a full secunty t1epos1t w11h mce yard Rent 1n·
OH
60+
acres and get your f1 rst montns clur:les
well-drained
bottomland
Rent Freel
Furmsh1ngs/washerldryer
2000
Aulomo!l~oe
Appliancu
along Raccoon Creek,
At
&amp; som e utilitieS •ncluded
Free- GE auto clo1hes
60+ acres pasture. bal- Valley V1ew Apartments •S5751mo No pets Call
washer, free If you will Autos
ance wooded Stock wa- 800StateAoute325 441·0110or591·5174
pick 1t up call ==-'~"'-==• ter pond, 2 spnngs. well. Tl"iurman. OhiO 45685 N1ce newer 2br on Ba1ley
Run Ad Me1gs Co Ref
e304~-6~
75-~60~47;_;·,.,,.,"""" 02 Honda Accord V6 , Farm has earned 40·45
740-245-9170
loaded, 92,000 miles cows w/calves Modern 1·2 Bedroom Apartments Req No , P~!s $425/rent
AuCtions
Call 740·245·5526
bnck ranch style house w1th appl1ances lurmshed + $425! dep. 367-7025
w/ finished
walk-out On site laundry tac1llty Scen1c location conven·
GUN SHOW &amp; SALE - - - - - - - • baaemenL937•596·6n4
Call for deta1ls or p1ck up 1ent to town and af1ordMARIETTA, OH Comlort 1996 Lincoln runs good
app11ca11on at rantal
able 2 &amp; 3 bedrooms
Inn Sat. &amp; Sun. Dec 6&amp;7 21 miles per gal
off1ce
ava1lable
call
Tables $25 Adm $4 oo $1995,00 304-773-5299
Poss 1b11ity of rental
.
(740)992-5639
""BUY.SELL'TRADE..
,...-----....- ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
assiSiance
Equal Housmg
Open
to the public Pol1ce Impounds' Cars
740-667-0412
lrom $500 1. Honda.
Apor!monll/
Opponun11y
;.;;;!!!!,!.!!!;.;;,.,,.,!!!!!~ Chevyo, Jeeps. Fords, &amp;
Townhouaoo
TDDn 4t9-52S-0466 Brand new 3bed 2bath
Fuel/ Oil/ Coal/
more!
for listings
"Th1s 1ns111u110n 1s an on + -half acre 1n Pt
Wood 1Gao
800-li20·4876 exV435
1 and 2 bedroom apts..
Equal Opponun~~y
Pleasant OWNER ,:1.
=-'~~~~=;;
turn1shed and · unfur- Prov1der and Employer" NANCE
AVAILABLE
Seasoned
Arewood Commercial I Industrial nlshed, snd houses in
(740)
446·3570
Hardwood. 446-9204
Pomeroy and Middlepon.
Case 550 G Bulldozer,
security
depOSit required,
"AA" Govemment Funds
80% under· no pels. 740·992-2218
Ml
...
llanooul
wide
tracks.
•=;;;;i;i;,;;'#;;.;=;;; carriage, 3400 hours
Available tor 1st 11me
•Jet Aerat1on Motors re· 524.000 _740_245_5325
home buyers ..m•~o own
1BR Apt, WID hoo6&gt;iups,
1 nd o h
pai red, new &amp; rebuilt in
satellite TV 1ncl wlrent. Tara
Townhouse a
r ave 1an d or
sloclt Call Ron Evans, ·c-AT-3,.11- T
'"ra·c·k- h•oe· , close to hosp1tal Call Apartments · 2BA. 15 have family land Zero
1-800·537-9528
740 339 '362
bath, .r back pa110, nool Down Easy Fmanclng
Excellent cond 5400 ::.:..:_.;:~-~-.,~~'""':"~~
. . Call to be Pre-Qualified
c
H
playground, (trash ,sew·
$30.000 28R APT lose to o.1 age,
NEW AND USED STEEL hours.
740·423-9728 _ _,....
water
pd J -~~,;,.,;;;,..,
245
740
5325
S
l
Beams,
Pips
Rsbar
·
·
zer
Hospital
on
A
160
Sl••
5425/rent.
$425Jsec 1984 Shultz · 3 br· M·H·
CiA(740) 441-0 t94
Ior Concrete Angle,
Trvc:b
tlep Call740·367·0547
plywood floors
new
Channel, Flat Bar, Steel
3 rooms and bath up·
HP/Fumace, call lor de·
Grating tor Dralns1 Dnve- 99 Chevy 314 ton eiC· sta1rs. Completely fur·
Commercial
tails
$ 4500
OBO.
ways &amp; .Walkways. L&amp;L tended cab, long bed, nlshed wllh WID No ::":"";;;;;;~;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;: {740)949·3179
Sorap&lt; Metals Open ' Mon. 60 L. auto. 90,000 miles pets Ref Req. 441·0245
2 bay serv1ce s1a110n
Tue, Wed &amp; Fn, $6500. 740 .245 .5325
Jactcson P1ke Lease Great used t6X80 three
8am-4.30pm.
Closed
Apartment available now reqwed. Call 446·3644 Bedroom new vmyl Sid·
Thurs. 5at &amp; Sun.
.
Alverbend Apts New
. $22 995 00 WII h I
Wont To luy
Haven wv Now acct:~pl· lor more tnfo
1ng
.
ep
740-446-7300
with dehvery.
Call1 Nikki
Want to buy Junk cars. IOQ applicatiOns lor
HouHS For Rent
740·385·962 I
call 74().388.0664
HUD-subs1d1zed.
one ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;i;i;i;;;;=~=- ~~-~":'!"-":':"~
Bedroom Apts Ut11ittes , 11191mol 3 bell. ::: t.uh. 2005 141(70 Mobile
1ncluded Based on 30% Hank Rcr"'1 1 t~"t Ju~n. 1 ~ Home. 2Bedroom. 2ba!h,
WANTED: 69 Camaros · ol adJusted 1ncome Call ~em gc:~ APRl f ,r 11 ,tm~~ v1nyJ s1d1ng sh1ngle roof
projects or restored cars 304·882·3121
available ~Q(}-020 -194~ c-~ ROJ7 ~ thermapayne
w1ndow ·
· any 'condl11on · finders tor Senior and D1sab~d
20ft porch 740-664-4356
fee paid Call Doug people
2br. house In Mason
or 740-797-4356 lo·
~~;;;~~~j 614--203·,272 cell or
at Darwin
~
$325 man '* $325 dep cated
$26 000
614-444-2909 office
~
no pets 3(14·682·3652
Aparlmonll/

A ~ 11ouncemenb

NOTICE OHIO VALLEY
PUBLISHING CO. recommends that you do
bus1ness w1th people you
know, and NOT to send
money through ttle maH
until you have Investigating_ the offering
Grave Blankets, Wreaths
$10 &amp; up, Blankets
$5-$25. Sue's Greenhouse, 47310 Morning
Star
Ad.• . Racine.-

•

(.:i?

D•lly In-Column: !it:OO a .m.
Monday-Frlda for Insertion
In Next Day't P•p•r

• All ads must be prepaid•

Now you can have borders and graphics
~
addedtoyourclassifiedads
1m
Borders $3.00/per ad
~
Graphics 50¢ for small
$1.00 for large

KIT &amp; CARLYLE

200

Found 3 labfret m1xed
pups White wl gold
spots, approx. 4-6 mon
Old 740.245-0310

1(Hager 1) M9 (Wolfe 41. Steals. R)/8
(Hager 4), M14(Wolte 7). Blocks RV 1
(Ciuxton 1), M 3 (T. Sm1th, Bo hn, Ball~) .
Turnovers· RV 16, M 16, Personal fouls .
RV 18 . M 21 ; JV score· Me1gs 42, A
l\l&amp;r
Valley 41 (2 OT)

YOUR CLASSIFIEP LINE AD NOTICED

Display Ads

• Start Your Ads With A Keyword • Include Complete
Description e lnc:lude A Price a Avoid Abbrevlatlona
• I,.clude Phone Number And
When NMided
• Ads Should R~o~n ? Day•

loll&amp; Found

RV 37 (8 Marcum 14) M 24 (Howard
11): Offensive rebounds· RV 20 (B
Marcum 8) ~ 5 (Howard 4), Ass1sts. AV

675·5234

OearliflrlU'

Wgrd Ads

•

State

www.mydallysentlnel.com

Mldlell ..............••....•.....- ...•...........•.... 1031
Mullcll ..............................- ...................... 6040
Plf1o11mt-Tompororloi..•.:..................... II042
~uranti .... ,, ............... ,...._,,.,.,,,,..... I044
_ . .. ,~ ........,,,,,.,,_,,.,,,..,,_ ........ ,_.1048
TlchrtiCIITII&lt;IM ...c•.,...,.................. IIIO

'IICKC ·
Reg.blacMan
longhair Dachshur&lt;l, (m)
shots,
wormed
$200.
eac~ 304 ' 593 "3820
Found Whtte older
mala poodle in the
Gall. Ferry area
304-675-3955.

Free to

7,
also 8
old
F b~ leb Very lr1er&lt;lly
Call after 5at 740.9890
good . ~orne ;
wk
mon

old pups

~--..,..-.,.....,....~

. Giveaway, 3 mon old
kitten cream color
wlblue eyes
·
304..S75..S184.

Townhou111
CONVENIE NTLY
LO·
GATED &amp; AFFORD
ABLE! Townhouse apart·
ments, and/or Small
houses tor rent Call
740-44~·1111 for apph·
cation &amp; Information

til

1

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

=

1

Salt/pepper
CKC
Schnauzer pups, will be
6 wks 1214, wttl have 1st
shits / wormed. 256·6887

T....,.aclory.--·---.. . . . . . . 1015:1
L---------'---------------1 ·

�Clnl.e "'-nb·

We would Uke to extend our
sluc:~e thanks to our family,
li'lends and neighbors for all
tile flowers , food, telephone
cal~, thoughts and prayers
daring the Illness and death of
William R. (Bill) Call.
Anderson M~Daniel Funeral
Home, Rev. and Mrs. Bob
Robinson for the words of
comfort and music during the
services. Forest Run United
Methodist Churd1 for the meal
following the service. The
Hospice nurses for their care
and support l i• the Forked
Rwi Sportsmen Club for their
care and concern. God bless
each and everyone of you for
your kindm·ss.

The Family of
William R. Call

~========::=::::==~

"'

For-,
ANew Home?

Trv the
Classifieds!!

For sale 12x60 2 br.
remodeled. new car·
·pet,appliances, lur·
naoo, hot water tank &amp;
plumbing exc. cond.
$6500. lot can be

rented 304·576-4037.

Driver's

Education

-

New 3 Bedroom homos

OualifiOd

~tea
.,;,., haw! 1
IChool . &lt;fii&gt;IDma,

~~ =~~~~~-

tioo with -

•-'-·-·~·-{

~

20011 81

NOON

1rom 740-446-4367
porsons H1terestod H1 the 800-214-0452.
&lt;:nd

resumes

position ot Parlt Admtnfs.
trator. The Parlt Admin!..
trator is responslbla ror
admini stratil)n, . planning,
·
·
nd
management a
opore·
tions ol the countywide
.Parlt District. Applicants
should

posses a mini·

mum of a .Bachelors De·
gree, Bl(perience in com·

ffiiMlily

leadership,

com·

01

.

cia- .

'&amp;'i .

Me' Co F112()08
i1Jl110111d s
H1R1N0 ovg. Pay S2Mv
or
$5711/jf,
• 25,
Focf.llon, OT. PB» by
9:00o.m.-11:00o.m.
adSoun:e. no1 allllfOIId
April 25,2009
With USPS w11o hlroo. A lee or $20.110 will be
clwJed lor early ltrival.
1. - -2582
.;.,;;!!!!...,ii!il~!!!!!!!!!!~ late atrivaJ. evly removal,
~
~-' GUG al Jatc
mnoval, c. an"'ime
•
~ is wanted' to
lailpoonds Olher than
()t)()()()4()8A
Extollent sOOd dated. Bui)djng

lie_,

FIND AJOB Conte t n Mil cr 1
OR ANEW to:
Road, GalliJ&gt;9IIe. Apply
Ga1ia County Board
CAREER ofo...MfWO,G•"""""
n MIIJ Creek
...,......,
IN THE
coli
. 45631
740 448 6902.or The Gal11a County Board o1
CLASSIFIED$ MR/00 Is an Equal Op~.

Street,

way to eem money. The spaa: is
New Avon. CtL~ Marilyn save.
304-882·2845

1262.

Gallipclis,

Ohio
valley
Home
.......
Hooltlt, Inc. ·~· ,. Home
Hooltlt Altltto.
S1NA.

- · GaJil&gt;oll8. Olllo or
phone 740-441· 1393 1o1

44087 Wlpple Rd.

more

Compet1tive
mileage rein·

Info.

Retail

aomeone

We service
and
winterize
boats
and

~-1:.

(740) 992·5344

Slortally.

:::.

with

Fomltlar

register.

credit

SMITH
SUPERSTORE
'

• Complete
Remodeling

WINTER RATES

Retell

DEC. · FEB

· ·5

t A K 4

O.aler: South ,
Vulnerable: Botb

AUCTIONS/ANTIQUES

Soutb
1A
66

llcU•er:

~AVt

OATH ...

lJ

I ,. .

THE
ar.w.......
~·. ,ww..roo
'(QU

~ AAI/11'.

1(J.I()W!

!t01"£.T~I!o16 -==~~
I~COMI-\00

P'"'NE. BOTI\ AA'JE.
/&gt;.,FIVE. O'Q.OC.K.
~M&gt;OW!

wm~

Tl\t
.;;: ::.U~t&gt;\~l ...

j1'8hadlrm®aol.com

...

All Major Holidays OfF

WITH PAY!
Woeldy Pay +Bonus
potential
Medical. Dental, EAP.
o401KI

club jack.

1Uelday.o&amp;c.2, 2008

,t.f'IO HERE's
NUMBER ONE! ...
' REAOY , oAO?
l&gt;"O' ... ReAt&gt;'l' ?

ICCU NURSE

.......

. ~~t Ometfiins.'.

..fU.Hf S_peciafSOnutne

say

,,

.

letters

20 That's

1

2
3
4
5

41 -it's at
22 It has rings 42 Captain
Hook's tick·
New Mexico 23 Honk
ingnemesis ·
24 Kind
town
Shutter part
or molding 43 That hurls ! .
25 Lunchtime 44 Samprae ·
Lap dog
of tennis ·
Cave
26 Fiery heap
27 To be, to
45 Warehouse
entrance
Actress
Balzac
pallet
46 Wild
-Gordon
28 ArmY

no-show

6 Midwest at

7 Cigar

source

35 Forehead
36 Wistful
39 Dressy
a Hire
40 Small bill

mountain

29 Ski Iiiii
goat
47 Countess 's
31 Ramb)e
around
spouse
35 Guide in a 48 AAA
suggestions
particular

exporter

34 Copper

cache

disgusting ~

DOWN

8 libra's
stone
9 Sunny
11 Rummixers

direction

51 Gloating

12 Woman 's
37 Plea at sea
hat
38 Awkward
18 Son of Hera 39 Mioer's

cry

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by .Luis Campos
Celabrtl}' Of.ilercrwtogrM1S are created Irom quotat·ons b1• larro.J s PQCV'e Pti! ar:d Pl&amp;S&amp;Ot
Eil:h letler •nthe c• phet stn;l6 ~ ~ another

Today's clue· UBmi8Js W

" F GWIREO'X

UVFX

TWZ

XMP NIO XW

G W Y P I H X M P 0 P K X Y W Z 0 F 0 B , .N W
XMVX

F GWIRE BPX

.G W I Z N P V B V F 0 . ..

WIX

WO

XMP

• S P 0 M W8 V 0

PREVIO US SOLUTION - 'II you're playing a poket game and you look
around the table and can't tell who the sucker is, it's you." . Paul Newman

WOAD
GAM I

!ow to form 101ft slmpl• wordt.

YE L P T N

be extremely valuable in furthering your
ambitious ob]ee11ves. Romance won't be

a factor.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) - In
situations where you are strongly moll·
vated to provide for those yo u love,
things witt 1urn out to be tar more fortU·
nate than you could imagine. The more
. YQU give, the greater the return.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22·Jan. 19) Although obstacles that impede th e
progtess lor others may also slow you
down, 'they're not apt to stop yo u from
L...L-l-.J.....l..-1;:!
moving faiWard on your plans. Your will to
win Is el(traordlnary.
AQUAR IUS (Jan . 2D-Feb. 19)- You'll be
right to gl\le credence to your hunChes or
insights, especially when they pertain to
your Involvement with lrrends . Your psy·
yCiu
che will perceive what your intellecl
misses.
•
PiiNI NUMB[·RED tEJ ;[RI
. PISCES (Feb. 20·March 20} - Don'!
IN IHEIE SQUMES
hesitate to establish contact with per·
sons ol influance when given the
UN SCRAMSlf lETTERS
chance . They will secure important con·( \
.
fOR AN S WE~
nections that you oo uldn'l make on your ""

~~ ~

~--,,....s..,.r....L....A_E..-l!

'11111111 Yll

949-2734

23 Doggie
treats
26 Cookbook
word
30 ld
companions
31 Type
of whiskey
32 Duo
33 Want-ad

By Bernice Bede O•ol
A platonic relationship with a member of
the opposite sex is likely to be ,estab·
lished in the year ahead that wltl prove to

,..
.............
IIPUMII
IIIE

tees

R:aorronge letttrs cf the
Olour
S&lt;romblod wordo be·

llrlllllfll Till

F.-.

19 Mis9ivin ~ ·

21 Go,.feam.
22 Harbor

·Ull.. by CLAY R. lOLL AN .

RN NURSES

-

55 Before
56 Fidel 's
friend
57 Lyric poem
58 Really big

'~~::~~, S©~~~-~t-tfis~

,,til', . . . .

•

Pass

ate/advanced.
With each deal, Bird gives a brief lead·
in, then allows the reader a chance to
decide what he"would do, before provld·
ing a comp·r~hensive analysis. As the
title suggests, though, you will have to
be imaginative, not just play the card
nearest your thumb.
In this deal, for elUi mple, how would you
try to malc.e she spades? West l~ads the
heart queen.
You have one t lub loser. And that wll! be
that unless trumps are 4·0. Well , If East
has all four, you can pick them up by
starting with dummy's queen, then
finessing twice. Bu1 here West has all
four and must gel a trump trick. So, you
seem destined to lose a trick in each
black suit - un le ss you can take 12
tricks first
You mig ht collect six spades, one heart,
three diamonds and two clubs. That
requires ruffing dummy's three low
hearts. However, as you have only three
dummy entrif)s, ave ry lime ·you are
there, you must ruff a heart In your hand.
So, win with dummy's heart ace and ruff
a heart. Ne~ play a spade to dumm'{s
queen to get the bad news. Than the
play goes: heart ruff. ace-king of spades,
· diamond to the queen, he!rl ruff, two top
diamonds and two top clubs. Finally,
concede trick 13 to both opponents,
West with his trump and East with the

\.oJHAR'D 'I'A CATCH THAT .
NICE STRINGER OF
TROUT WE, SAW
· WIF YESTIDAY .

B'l' TH' WA'I', SMIF·-WHILE

ribbon

14 Panoling
wood
15 Excel
16 Lounge
17 Furtiveness

This is sub1it1ed ·unusual ways to play a
bridge hand" and Is labeled Intermedi-

.,

I GOT 'I'A HERE UNDER

13 -.....:creek

· Play" by David Bird (Master Point Press).

IC~rP

roTTOM L/f'lf.

BARNE'(

45 CoOler,
maybe
49 Regret
50 Card ;arne
52 Flying fo•
53 Autumn
mo.
54 White

appeal to the bridge player on your give
· list (OJ get list. if you include yourself).
Driving up lirst is "'ff-Road Declarer

AN ~Yr ON Tt-lf

Jon Van Meter &amp; ·
Paul Rowe

PUBLIC NOTICE
liONS: ARE ACTIONS EPA, DIVISION OF
THE FOLLOWING AP· OF THE DIRECTOR SOLID AND INFEC·
PLICATIONS AND/OR WHICH ARE EFFEC· TIOUS WASTE MAN·
VERIFIED
COM· TIVE UPON ISSUANCE AGEMENT,
ATTN: --~----'-On·Stte doctor's of1toe
. PLAINTS WERE RE- OR A STATED EFFEC· SYSTE.MS .MANAGE·
Help Wanted
Help W.Jrt.d
CEIVED, ' AND THE TIVE DATE. . PUR· MENT UNIT, P.O. BOX
. Caii·TOOAY.I
FOLLOWING DRAFT, SUANT TO
OHIO 1()49,
COLUMBUS, r
PROPOSED, OR FINAL REVISED CODE SEC.· OHI043216-1049, TEL:
~- •low TOIIORROWI
-NEXT WEEKI
ACTIONS WERE IS· TION 3745.04, A FINAL (6141 1144-2621. N011CE
1~VU
SUED, BY THE OHIO ACTION MAY BE AP· IS HEREBY GIVEN
. .
·
E&gt;t.:MM
EN VIR 0 N MENTAL PEALED TO THE ENVI· THAT ON NOVEMBER
Apply-:
PROTECTION AGENCY RONMENTAL REVIEW 14, 2008, THE OIREC- •
(OEPA) LAST WEF.K. APPEALS COMMIS· TOR OF OHIO EPA
Pleasant Valley HospiQII is cumolly.
lllt.llltlliw'' I
"ACTIONS" INCLUDE SION (ERAC) (FOR· HAVE DETERMINED
accepting
resumes for . Full . time
THE ADOPTION, MODI· MERLY KNOWN AS THAT MEIGS COUNTY
WANTED
FICATION, OR REPEAL THE ENVIRONMENTAL MEALTH
DEPART·
REGISTERED NURSES. Applications
WOt1t year round
OF ORDERS (OTHER BOARD OF REVIEW) MENT, 112 E. MEMOR·
must have a current WV license.
Will Train/No IJIP.
naedod
THAN EMERGENCY BY A PERSON WHO IAL DRIVE, SUITE A,
Send resumes to;
ORDERS); THE IS- WAS A PARTY TO A POMEROY, OH 45719,
. FU111mo With
SUANCE, . DENIAL. PROCEEDING
BE· IS IN ' SUBSTANTIAL
Pleas1111t Volley Hospital
MODIFICATION OR RE· FORE THE DIRECTOR COMPLIANCE
AND
do Human Resilui'Cts
-fleqtJitocf
Dtlve o con.,.ory book
VOCATION . OF Ll· BY FILING AN APPEAL HEREBY PLACE THE
•• 2o''all Dr! ·
CENSES,
PERMITS. WITHIN 30 DAYS OF MEIGS
COUNTY
'"" " ey
we
Dt1vlr91Jrug teatlnv 18&lt;1·
LEASES, VARIANCES. NOTICE OF THE FINAL HEALTH DEPARTMENT
POint Pleasaat, WV 25550
No
OR
CERTIFICATES; ACTION. PURSUANT . ON OHIO EPA'S AP·
AND THE APPROVAL TO OHIO REVISED PROVED . LIST OF
Look to hire Fax. to: !304) 675-6975
OR DISAPPROVAL OF CODE
SECTION HEALTH DISTRICTS
herd WOti&lt;Jnillor apply online at: www .pva!ley.O(g
lo lnllllfl end IOMco Dish
PLANS AND SPECIFI· 3745.07. A FINAL AC· AUTHORIZED TO AllNatwotlt Setellte ·
CATIONS. "DRAFT AC· TIDN ISSUING, DENY· MINISTER AND EN. liONS" ARE WRITIEN lNG,
MODIFYING, FORCE THE SOLID
~­
AAIEOE
c.IIIOO 113-11191 .
STATEMENTS OF THE REVOKING, OR RE· AND
. INFECTIOUS
Deer ProceMing
DIRECTOR OF ENVI· NEWING A PERMIT, Ll· WASTE AND/OR CON·
Opt I
Skinned- Cut &amp;
RONNENTAL PROTEC· CENSE, OR VARIANCE STRUCTION AND DE· - - - - - - Service Manager &amp; 'SeiV·
Wrapped
liON'S (DIRECTOR'S) WHICH IS NOT PRE· MOLITION
DEBRIS
u-lp We..._..
Htlp ..._n......,.
Ice Tocltntclan pooltiona
INTENT WITH RE· CEDED BY A· PAD- LAWS AND RULES IN
.,..
.....,
... ..u
. . -. -llh care &amp; Summer Slueage
SPECT TO THE IS· POSED ACTION, MAY ACCORDANCE WITH
Fletlrtlt1llrt1 plana availmade
SUANCE,
DENIAL. BE APPEALED TO THE SECTIONS
3734.08
able. send 'reETC. OF A
ERAC BY FILING AN AND 3714.09 OF THE
aume
1o
PERMIT,
LICENSE, APPEAL WITHIN 30 OHIO REVISED CODE
UCClCAREQ.COM
or
ORDER, ETC. INTER· DAYS OF ISSUANCE (ORCJ.
THIS
AP·
Between Racine
ESTED PERSONS MAY OF THEFINAL AC110N. PROVAL IS SUBJECT
Pleasant Valley Hospital is currently 1u 1o 74().448·9104
&amp;SyrtcuH
SUBMIT .
WRITIEN ERAC APPEALS, AC· TO ALL RULES, REGU·
State
Rt. 124
COMMENTS OR RE· COMPANIED BY A $70 LATIONS, AND SPEC!·
accepting resumes for a per diem (!I!
l101llil)
QUEST A PUBLIC FILING FEE WHICH FlED CONDITIONS.
!l!i[tt) Registered Nur.e in ICCU Dept. .
5ECtJRifi OFFiCERS
MEETING REGARDING THE COMMISSION IN (12) 1
Applicanis must have a current West
. Paflttmepositian
DRAFT
ACTIONS . ITS DISCRETION MAY
·
av-ln GaJ11po1is
COMMENTS OR PUB· REDUCE IF BY AFFI· - - - - - - Virginia license. Previous ICCU experience
Wte1tends only
LIC MEETING RE· DAVIT THE APPEL·
Public Notice
preferm!.
2nd a 3rd 11111111
QUESTS MUST BE L
A
N
T - - - - - - - ·send resumesto;
$8.00perhotJr
SUBMITTED WITHIN 30 DE M 0 N STRATE S PUBLIC SALE
Muot be 18 _ .
DAYS OF NOTICE OF THAT PAYMENT OF Notice Ia hereby given
Pleasiu)t Valley Hospital
""'older
THE DRAFT ACTION. THE FULL AMOUNT OF thai on December 6,
do Human Resoun:es
Muat have a c11an
"PROPOSED
AC· THE FEE WOULD 2008 at 10:00 a.m., e
2520 VaHey Drive
crtminllreoord and be
110NS" ARE WRITTEN CAUSE
EXTREME public aale will be held
drug free
STATEMENTS OF THE HARDSHIP, MUST BE for the purpoaa olaal·
Point Pleasant, WV,25550
CONTINENTAL
DIRECTOR'S INTENT FILED WITH: ENVI· lalylng a landlord's lien
SECRET SERVICE
WITH RESPECT TO RONMENTAL REVIEW on the contente olaoll·
F
304 675 6975
BUREAU INC.
THE ISSUANCE, DE· APPEALS COMMIS· service otorego room.
ax to: (
)
. ·
Mon thru Fn 9om. 3pm
NIAL, MODIFICATION. SION, 309 SOUTH Tho goods to be aold
or apply online at www .pva!!ey.ow
f-800-861H197S
REVOCATION, OR RE· FOURTH . STREET, ara described generoly
F
0 \"0 ~~
NEWAL OF A PeRMIT, ROOM 222, COLUM· as mlacl!llaneoue per·
LICENSE, OR VARI· . BUS, OHIO 43215. A sonal &amp; houaohold. ":;;;;;;:;;;;;:;;;;~;;===:::;::=~~--..;=ANCE. WRITTEN COM· COPY OF THE APPEAL The room will be· I"
MENTS
AND MUST BE SERVED ON openad lor viewing 1mREQUESTS FOR A THE
DIRECTOR mediately prior to aoPUBLIC. MEETING RE· WITHIN 3 DAYS AFTER licitation of bldl.
GARDING A PRO· FILING THE ,APPEAL Description of IJIIOII8F(y
POSED ACTION MAY WITH THE ERAC.
as follows:
BE
SUBMITIED ANNUAL SURVEY OF Pool table, car sHI,
WITHIN 30 DAYS OF SOLID &amp; INFECTIOUS clothn, movlea, carpet
NOTICE OF THE PRO- WASTE &amp; ClOD PRO· Bay 128
POSED ACTION. AN GRAM
Nama: Greg Sellen
ADJUDICATION HEAR· MEIGS
COUNTY Addrns: 52230 Eoton
lNG MAY BE HELD ON HEALTH DEPARTMENT Road
A PROPOSED ACTION 112 E. MEMORIAL City : Portland, Ohio
IF A HEARING RE· DRIVE, SUITE A
· 45770
. . ,•If.
QUEST ' OR OBJEC· POMEROY, OH 45719 Terms of the oale will
·~~
TION IS RECEIVED BY OH ACTION DATE: be cash or cortlllld
THE OEPA WITHIN 30 11/14fl008
lund ONLY.
DAYS OF ISSUANCE FACILITY DESCRIP· Hlll'o Sell Storage
OF THE PROPOSED TION: SOLID WASTE
29625 Baohen Rd ..
ACTION.
WRITIEN IDENTIFICATION NO. : Racine, 0H 45771
COMMENTS,
RE· 53·DD·A5
(12)1 , 2, 3
QUESTS FOR PUBLIC THIS FINAL ACTION
'
MEETINGS, AND AD· NOT PRECEDED BY - - - - - - JUDICATION HEARING · PROPOSED ACTION
PubliC Notice .
REQUESTS MUST BE AND IS APPEALABLE
SENT TO: HEARING TO ERAC . PERSONS No trnpaoolng or
CLERK, OHIO ENVI· WISHING TO BE ON hunting on Jimmy D.
RONMENTAL PROTEC- OHIO EPA'S INTER· GriiiHh property. Vou
110N AGENCY, P.O. ESTED PARTIES MAIL· will bl deall wtth by
BOX 1049, COLUM· lNG LIST FOR THIS proper oulhorltlea.
BUS, OHIO 432161049 PROJECT MUST SUB· (11 '127, 28, 30, (12) 1
(TELEPHONE: 614+14· MIT A REQUEST IN
2129). . "FINAL AC· WRITING TO OHIO

0

;o

1 Sugar ami.
4 Hi-tech ·
tcan
7 He&lt;d animal
10 Malt
beveJage
11 Make
a difference

Now let's look at some books that miqht

ANI&gt; ~SIGN
l&gt;tPAtlTMff'ITS

#5548

Cell: 740-416-5047
emoll:

East
Pass

Books that might
catch your eye

:;...\
/ '"' Tt-l IS rus•Ness. lor~
1 1
""&lt;b - r:- it-If A(.(.OUf'ITING

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

Owners:

~!I

Norfib
24
Pass

Openihg lead: • Q

IIIIV R. Gable Jr.
740-41.1184

Harm.. Cdlletrr AM Fwllliu

Weat
Pa8&amp;

41 Prevailed
42 Grove

vessel

• AK9642

• A K 7

Racine, Ohio 74G-247-2019

Slatting pey $8.110/hr
FT

g 8 5 2

South

$12.251hr
after six month&amp;

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•

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Stop &amp; Compare

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YOUNG'S
CARPENTER

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9 6 3

• J 10 8 5

S 8 00
12
al. : am •
Wtappnciok your

SERVI([

Hurry In Now

e

• New Homes
• Garages

8;00 am - 4:30 pm

AVON! All Aruaat To Buy
or Sell Shirley Spears
304-675-14211

Choose to worlt with the
wot1d'olat]1881 nonproflts
and ttie mqot lnftullnffBI
conoervatlve political

-=======-======::::t

•
Weat

Mon~Fri.

"--==;;...-..1

YEAR END
TAX SALE
1911 EastemAve.

~

RV's

aume to Gallipolis Del~
Tribune ClA BOX 104.
P.O BOX 489, Galllpol~.
Oh.

lnfoCIIIon hM

Publk Notkos In Ntto!plpm.
\'our Right 10 Koow, Delio•~ Ri!J!t In v... llo...

Pomeroy, OR
(5 Poims)
New &amp; Used Tires,
We buy used tires.
computer wheel
I' ·
I' h
a tgnments , '8 t
mechanic work ,
complete service oil

crealiVoly.
to
stand
for be
long able
periods

driver's 11cenae. Send ra·

Ohio

St&lt;JI.l~j('

12111 tiB

• Q 73
., .A764
• QJ 7

Inside Fence: Sl.OOIIf

L &amp; L Tire Bam·

ean:l
machine and catculator.
•'""'icant .~.td
have
.........
IIVU
tranapottation and valid

45631

North

Inside Stoiage $400/11
Open span, $2.110111

CNA, CHHA, PCA may
apply at 1480 Jod&lt;aon

· cash

1a

•

firs~ come first

positions: Pleler ·
with expen·
once, oxceltenf customer
aeMce 8klh, be able to changes, small engine
~~
repair.
~~ wor1t
ildopetldotitl) end

Room

H II I , S r.:i f
I

...,..w........

early

munlcatioos. public rela· L - - - - - - . . . . . J portunlty Employer.

Locust

.._
·

Pl&amp;idW is In need of wages,
· SWd1tute T - ror but18tll8tlt and benefits
a1 the
Including health .lnour·
Cl11k1110od and Family anco a much motW.

lions, fund raising, grant
writing,
administrative,
management and flnancial skills. Please submit
information to: 00 Mcln· .
"tyre Park District, Gallla

coUnty Courthouse,

-

_.,~11&gt;~-~-~·OFI'ICE
~=-=::
~::-::::::::-:::::::::-~::-~
PosT
liON WINTER STORAGE

~~·:Pl:ol~ool~o;.,j;~- Mastelll
ifl sub12·00
~
,
ject areas:
English, The AMESC ~ an Equai
Tl\e Boaod ol Parlt Cern- Math ecenomlcs and
rniostoners ot the 00 soctofogy. E·mei ;,....,. Opporlunlty
Mcintyre Parlt District ~ to
jdanlckiOgalllpollaca· Employer/Provldor.
accwting lettelll ot Inter· ...,nxlllege.edu or cal The Guiding Handa 1
est

col Ameolcal1 Aa-

lnlo,

100 ·

pertn-.

Degree

Phillip
Alder

-~ · jab

ol
oppo&lt;Md 1·913-58N226.

Alhens-Meigs
Educa·
Educalia:n
tJona1 SeiVico Conle&lt;.
320 112 East Main
Gal1ipolis coroer College s 1 p
Oh
is seekinn pan-time in- tree '
omaroy,
•.•
457890014. Afll*3tlor
slructolll who posses a Deadline: Dec&gt;Otttbet 5,

ACROSS

now
awbtlan

For

hiring.
ond ' -

bon0fi1s. Appllcoo- a bod!·
~ ~ ~
cfrivenl
..,.,..., ground ~-. -~ , _
backgroood II _ _ . .:..;;;;;;~;:..-~- checks. •'I'· pretem&gt;d in 1o aerve aa 111 Educa'"The Proctorvile
traf!ic salety, law en- l1onal Aide. SaiiJy wlf
Oillerence"
torcement, or teadlilg, be based on . quallf\CI·
$1 and a deed Is all you or we wiN 1181n. Drat&gt; olf tioos end expeflo""·
need to own your dream resume at Ga•lpolil AM Submit letter of ~
ho me. Ca UNowI
oftlc8 or hut resume tiJ resume and rafaleti08S
Freedom Homes
Attn; AI at 740-35Hl537 to Jcton D. costanzo, Su-

BARGAINS
EVERY
DAY
IN THE
CLASSIFIEDS

PUBLIC

POSTAL JOBS

tionaly Oiolulbod (EO)
E&lt;U:ationaJ Aldo IDf f1e
IAeigtl loid&lt;lo - ·
Thill is a 9 """"' pool-

NEA Crossword Puzzle

BRIDGE

· - -·
r~
lion Opening IDf an Emo- $t7.89-$28.271HR.,

from $214.36 per mon111, ~
irdudes many upgradea.
delivery
&amp;
Ml·up. valid
paso
740-JSH4l4

EOE

The Daily Sentinel • Page BS

www.mydallysentlnel.com

•!!!!!!!!!1!111!!1.!!!!1•

posi- The AI• a Mllp . £du..

Han ope11 ,In ltle GattipoliB
and Metgs area. Ae11:lble
hoUrs. Must be able 10
wort&lt;
~
and
· Job entatts
cla8atoom and behind
the wheel lnalroction 1o1

~nday, December 1, 2008

ALLEYOOP

benet

5aloo

Card or Tlianks

;~::i:::::::::..::::::::::::::~

Monday, December 1, 2008

www.mydally•IIUnel.com

P1101 84 • The Daily Sentinel

PEANUTS
Quality Seamless
Gutters'
Maintenance

Stanley TreeTrimming
&amp; Removal '

Plus

Commen:ial cl Re1·idt&gt;ntial

__
---

.........,__
...

COonp4olt lloo Ceoo

Seamles,s Gu1ters
Roofing, Siding, Gu11ers
lrnwred&amp;Bonded
741).653-9657

?e-4411.-J

·--

CORNER STONE
CONSTRUCTION

J&amp;L
Construction
·.VInyl Siding
•RtPhl-1

Roofing, Siding,
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Doors, Windows,
Electric, Plumbing,
DrywsH,
Remod6/ing, Room
Additions

WtneloWa

• Roofing

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•G8reges
• Pole Buildings
• Room Addlllona

Owner:
JomnK-11
742-2332

F~'(

I' TIIINK MV EARS

J

~
~
~

~

.

COW and BOY
rM NOT WOIIIIIEO .

ABOUT'THE WOIILO'S
. PROBtiMS PJjVNf/RE.

HUMANS AfiE. S/M1f
00 WE'RE B(XN) TO ·
DEVELOP INVENTIONS
THAT Wll.L HELP

'.--. US OVERCOME ·

4/N OBSTACLES
IN Oll11'!AV.

~

YOU 1/'EAA UI&lt;E WE
010 WITM THE 11(lBQT

THIITWfl? SUPPOSED TO
M ON CI\RBON FI!OM THE
1\l~ 1\NO TlJ0.1 IT INTO
FOil HUMAN BEINGS,
llJT INSTEAD

11AN ON DIESEL

WHI~FUELED

ITS INTENSE

HATilED OF Al.L
UVINGV·

LOCIII Conlntclor

740-387...W
FNOEatl-

740-387-0538

For Remodeling and New House BuDdin&amp;

con: MARCUM CONSTRUCTION
• Room Additions • Garages • Vinyl
and Wood Siding •

Roofing • Pole
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•uW.IIICII.-D
• 47239 Riebel Road, Long Bottom, OH

740-985-4141
Cell: 740-416·1834

25+ yrars r;rprritnu Fru Eslilrtalts

I-lA! \lA!

T~\. ~!
~T

IIHT"'

own.
ARIES (March 21-Aprlt 19)- Your popularity will grow because you'll let friends
tdke lhe bows lor things pl'il)'larlty creal·
ed by you . You'll make a big deal out of
tfie .roles they play.
TAU RU S (Ap ril 2Q-May 20) - An oppor·
!unity to work once again with someone
who has proven to be a fortunate contact
will turn out successfully. This project
might even be larger than the last one.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) - When It
Comes tO somethlllg you want to accom·
pllsh that needs assistance, the wise .
thing is to piCk someone whO is smarter
than you. Don't let ego direct you other·
Wise.
CANCER (June 2 1-.July 22) - You'll
re.alizo that one ol the biggest secrets for
favorable commercial dealings Is to show
a Willingness tQ cooperate. When you do,
othem will respond in kind to ~he el(am·
pie yoU set.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) - Conditions
could take a tum for the b&amp;ttar '!"lith
regard to a recently established joint
endeavor. Both you and your counterpart
will recognize this, and take full advantage of the good circUmstances. ·
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sepl. 22) - Wilh a lot
of patience, success is Indicated at this
time. Make it a point to not prematurely
Up your hand by saving some or your
aces for the final stages when you' ll want
to go all out
LIBRA (Sept. 23·0ct 23) Gi;o'ing
everything you have will hot be readily
forgotten by those you're trying to help.
Attheugh you may not · be seeking any
pats on the back, aciomow4edgernents w11t
be forthcoming.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22)- Try to get
your pals to arrange theli- schedules to
set Up a social get·together. Ga£1c;ling
about town with your best friends w111
prov&amp; to be fl happy occasion for all.

SOUP TO NUTZ
rio\ ll£11\100~ IN ~libWtltS ..
.I THtOit&lt; :t ~ FfOto\

""-a-.;;ta;;..:.... _ ,..

Advertise
in this space for
.$64 per month

we all ·live with the
objeclil'e to be happy and lit
!hat respect we are ... rhe

.: the chuckle quoted
j-..,,. GEJNAL
.6;....;:.1...:.,1,.:.;...:.;.1'""':.,..1-I0 c~~plete
by filling In the mi$St11fJ worth

WOlll.D FREEZE ..

740-591-8044
Please leave me
· Joh§f,Yj:;Tm

Guttering

HOW CAN fliRDS

WI-lEN ITS 50 COLD?

•Prompt and Quality
Work
*Reasonable Rates
*Insured
*Experienced
References Available!
Call Gary Stanley @

Vinyl
Siding/Replacement
Windows/Remodeling
Bonded &amp; Insured
·740-992-1493 Office
740-416-833'1 Cell .
free Estimated ·
Pomeroy. Ohio

&amp;H

'

A teacher once told me thai

develop from step No. J belcw·.

E}

I' ' I' I'

l)

I

,J

:

!the! I

l'·
i

!

r

I.

l

SCRAM-LETS ANSwERS 11/28108
Gentle- Knoll - Awoke - Voiced - KNOWLEDGE
A philosopher once said, "The good life is inspired by love ..
and guided by KNOWLEDGE."

ARLO &amp; JANIS

•

�•
'•

Pqe B6 • The Daily Sentinel

www .mydailysentinel.com

'

Monday, December 1, 2008

Colts top Browns; Clayton leads Ravens over Bengals
CLEVELAND (AP) - which failed to score a TD TD, but still hit a new low in
Peyton Manning stepped up for the first time since Sept . their sunken season.·
to the podium for a 7, 2003. a 9-6 wm at
They lost their founh
postgame mterview like he Cleveland.
straight at home and will
has done so many times folAfterward,
Manning likely be without quarterlowing an Indianapolis win. could only laugh when back Derek Anderson for
But this time there were no asked to assess his perfor- their final four games.
Anderson. starting in
touchdown passes to review, mance..
no career milestones to cele'Tm sure I could, but I'd place of the injured Brady
brate, no last-minute scoring rather not,'' Manning said Quinn, sprained the media~
drive for him to detail.
with a laugh. "Our defense collateral ligament in his left
The. qu~rterbac~ wasn't won the game for us.''
· knee when he was hit by the
the star.
Manning finished 15-for- helmet of his teammate in
closing
minutes.
- The Colts had II on 21 for 125 yards. a season the
defense.
low and only the IOth time Beleaguered Browns coach
Defen sive end Robert in 172 career starts that he Romeo
Crennel
said
Mathis scooped -up quaner- was under 150 yards .
Anderson "may be in tough
back Derek. Anderson's fumAdam Vinatieri kicked a shape" and said Ken Dorsey
ble and rumbled 37 yards for 30-yard field goal as the is his starter for next Sunday
a touchdown in the fourth Colts (8-4) capped a 5-0 at Tennessee.
The Browns also lost tight
·quarter as the Colts &gt;layed in November, a month-long
the thick of the AFC playoff run that has allowed them to end Kellen Winslow, who
chase by winning their fifth rebound from a 3-4 start. went out on the first play of
. straight, 10-6 over the · They've managed to sl ide the third quarter with an
Cleveland Browns. who suf- by each time during the ankle injury and didn't
fered another demoralizing streak, . winning the five return . He declined inter.
games by a cbmbined 20 view requests following the
loss on Sunday.
Mathis ' big play nelped points. .
.
game.
The Brown s ( 4-8) held
The loss of two of his best
bail out Manning and Indy's
· high-powered
offense. Manning and Co. without a players won't help Crennel.

who may be down to his
final days for the Browns,
who are 1-6 at home and
haven't scored a touchdown
in nearly 135 minutes.
RAVENS

34, BENGALS 3

CINCINNAH(AP) -On
.a cold, wet afternoon that
turned fingertips numb,
receiver Mark Clayton had
the touch.
Clayton put a little sizzle
into Baltimore 's evolving
offense Sunday. throwing a
touchdown pass and makmg
a spectacular one-handed
catch for another during a
34-3 victory over the
Cincinnati Bengals that kept
the Ravens in the AFC
North chase.
Now that their offense is ·
coming around, the Ravens
(8-4) have it all going for
them.
. ,
Baltimore has won six of
its past seven games with its
renowned defense and an

offense coming into its own
bebind rookie quarterback
Joe Fiacco. Each week, the
Ravens give him a little
more of the playbook.
·
Against the Bengals (!10-1), they added a page for
Clayton, a former · firstround draft pick who
emerged as a dual threat on
a cold, rainy afternoon. In
the third quarter, Clayton
lined up to the left, took a
handoff frorn Fiacco and
headed fort he right sideline,
selling the play as a reverse.
Cornerback Leon Hall fell
for it , letting Derrick Mason
run free down the right sideline. Clayton's 32-yard
touchdown pass - the first
since high school - was as
easy as they c0 me.
The Ravens had practiced
the play a few of t1mes, but
never had th~ courage to put
it in a game plan .
·
Clayton's next catch was
as tough as it gets. He ran
past the stumbling Hall,

stretched out his rifht hand
and grabbed Fiacco s pass at
the 30-yard line, then completed the 70-yard play that
set the Bengals on course '
for their most lopsided loss
since 2000,
another
Fiacco
had
beyond-his-years showing,
completing 19-of-29 for 280
yards and two touchdowns.
In the past seven games, the
from
first-round
pick
Delaware has thrown II
touchdowns with only two
interceptions. taking more
chances with his' receivers.
A light mist turned the 40degree afternoon nasty and
numbing- - perfect conditions for the Ravens'
defense. They forced the .
Bengals to tie a club record
with II punts. The _Bengals
managed only s1x first
downs, matching the club
record last matched in 1992.
On 10 of their 14 posses"
sions, the Bengals 'failed to
get a first down.

HOLZER
CLINIC

Recession declared;
Wall Street tanks, A6

MEIGS • MASON • GALLIA

Printed on tOO%
Recycled Newsprint

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
·,;o l'l-.:\ IS • \ 'ol. ,;1-1, l'\o, 1112

TliESnAY , llH ' I

~liii.R

:!. :!ooH

'""'·"')dail)'cntint'i.rom

First post-election .audit set

' SPORTS
·• Anderson out for
the season. See Page Bl

BY BRIAN J. REED
BREEDCIMYOAILYSENTINELCOM

POMEROY - The Meigs
County Board of Elections
will conduct a post-election
audit at 9 a.m. Friday.
This will be the first such
audit to be conducted following a Meigs County election. The county board chose
not to participate in an audit
of primary election results .
Tbe audits are mandated by
Secrelllr)' of .State Jennifer
Brunner, and are ·conducted
statewide for the fiTSt time
this election year. Brunner

said the directive is based on cess of the general election," general election. Brunner's
feedback from Ohio ·s boards
The Secretary of State's directive
also
allows
of elections, as well as insight office has spent approximate- observers and members of
from local, state, and national ly six months receiving and the public to be present.
Boards must audit - or
elections experts. However, reviewing feedback on the
only II counties voluntarily March post-election audit hand count - precincts equal
participated in audits con- pilot proJects. Key stakehold- to fi~e percent of the countyers have included members wide votes cast for president.
ducted after the primary.
, Counties participating in and staff of Ohio's bipartisan The audit process must be
the pilot audit program "pro- boards of elections, members compJe[cJy trapsparent, while
vided invaluable insight into of the Secretary of State's keeping secure any .sensitive
this national best practice," Voting Rights Institute coun- voter information and ballots.
The audit wiII be conductBrunner said. "I am thankful cil, and other local, state and
ed by two Democrats ~nd
for the hard work anp assis- national elections experts.
The mandated audit has · two Republicans, according
tance of elections officials
and experts in crafting a . been reduced from seven per: to · Board Director Rita
Smith, Deputy
detailed statewide process to cent following the primary .to Smith:
further document the sue- five percent following the Director Becky Johnston , a

BCS polls
favorOU
over Texas
NEW YORK (AP) ~ A.
week before the final standings are released ·and the
Bowl Championship Series
is already ticking people
off.
Oklahoma - not Texas
- is headed to the Big 12
championship game with an
inside track to the national
title game by moving ahead
of the Longhorns in the
BCS standings Sunday.
Texas' victory against the
Sooners in October wasn't
enough
to
give
the
Longhorns the advantage in
a three-way ·tie between the
Red River rivals and Texas
Tech atop the Big 12 South.
And that's sure to !.eave
many in Austin dismayed.
The Big 12 had to use its
fifth tiebreaker, best BCS
rating, to determine which
team will play North winner Missouri on Saturdav in
Kansas City, Mo.
•
The Sooners ( 11-,1 ), who
los.t to Texas 45-35 in
October, barely edged the
Longhorns. Oklahoma has
a .935 1 BCS average.
Texas' BCS average is
.9223.
So the Longhorns will be
watching two teams they
beat play for the conference
title, rooting for Missouri.
Oklahoma is second in
the BCS standings behind
unbeaten Alabama. Texas is
third and Florida is fourth.
The winner of th e
Southeastern Conference
champ ionship
game
between the Crimson tide
and Gators is virtually guaranteed a spot in the BCS
national title game on Jan. 8
in Miami.
Oklahoma would earn the
other spot by beating
Mi,souri. If the Sooners
lose. i1 could open the door
for Texas to go to the
national title game. despite
not playing for its conference championship.
If voters are squeamis·h
about letting a team that
didn't win its conference
play for a national championship. maybe Southern
Cahfornia ~:ould get a shot
at the SEC champ in South .
Florida.
The Trojans are fifth in
the BCS standings with a
game to go at rival UCLA.
The Sooners were behind ·
Texas last week in the BCS
standings by a tiny margin.
The Soo1ers actually led
the. Longhorns in the polls ,
but a week ago the computers had Texas ahead of
Oklahoma.
After the Sooners' 61-41
victory Saturday night
against Oklahoma State 14th in the latest' standings
- and the Longhorns' 49-9
win over lowly Texas A&amp;M
on Thanksgiving night, the
polls tightened but the computers flipped . ·

~.

board employee. Michelle
6unce and the. board's
information
technology
coordinator. Gary Walker.
There is a "trigger" provision which requires boards
to Judit additional precinct
results if a cenain ·margin of
error is exceeded in the initial audit. The trigger for
additi onal auditing remains
the same as the pilot project.
due to su ppot1 for that standard expressed by boards of
elections.
· Audit results will be
available to the public.
Brunner said.

Christmas
parade first
Middleport
·holiday event .
Bv BRIAN

J.

REED

BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

OBITUARIES
Page AS
·.Louise Hall, 92

INSIDE
-·-

·•&lt;¥,·• ..... ~ .... r•'

:1;

Hofidatj Cookbook
Get aFREE OOaring test between
now and Christmas - get a .
FREE Holiday cookbook..
Any High
O.ftnltlon TV

Anvln..took
Appl"'-

•~ADVANCED

•

HEARING

CENTER
1122 Jackson Pike •
441-1971 or (M)O) ot.rt-•u:

~f'rrampled NY

·&lt;Worker lacked crowd ·
!raining. See Page A2
• Hemlock Grove
Grange members
win state awards.
"See Page A3
:, GCC grad hired.
'See Page A3
· • DofA holds initiation.
:see Page A3
• Holiday programs set.
See Page A3.
'
• Free health
seminar on treatments.
SeePageA3
~ Land transfers.
.See Page AS
· , $640M budget
ga,) forecast for Ohio. 1
SeePage AS

Charr.ne Hoefftctvpholo
jQhh Musser, MerchantS Association president, and Edna Weber, member, look over a stack of the limited edition
~namental glass bulbs featuring etchings of the old and the new liridges. .
•

•. , · ,

:~i~ited ·editio,;n bridgg.: J..?ulb available

· ·, .Bv CHARLENE :HOEI'UCH

. · limited edition ornamental ' glass · The 'bulbs can be purchased at
• bulbs for e~h bridge.
several . downtown
locations,
An ·emetll(d .green bulb etched including · Farmers
Bank,
POMEROY. - With the new with tbe 1928 bridge, whil~ a bur- Anderson's, The Daily Sentinel,
.Medal of Honor Bridge s®eduled to rushed gold bulb featuf!:S · t)le new . Weaving Stitches, the Ohio Vall~y
~n for traffic s_oon and the. old bridge. They sellfor $8 each or three Bank, Hartwell House, Dans,
· !V2ll Pomeroy-Mason Bridge abOut for $20. Proceeds from the bulb sale • Peoples Bank, Cla~ks , and the
fq . ~ demolished, the Pomeroy go into beautification projects in Meigs . County Chamber · of
M,erchants _Association is selling . downtown Pomeroy.
Commerce in Pomeroy.
·

WEATIIER

'" .

HOEFt,.teHciMVDAILVSeNTIIEL.Cl_dt,1 ' +

is

.

IRS seeks Meigs residents due stimulus/refund checks
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
HOEFLiCHOMYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

24 MONTHS
NO INTEREST
Nov. 28 •Dec•.29 2008
Carom &amp; Sngier furniture
•7rom. Our 9-lorru 'To 9"ours"
955 Second Ava.,ue • Gallipolis, OH
-.corbln•r~danyct..-.com

HOURI: lloii-Tj T...a.t N I PH 740 1461171 I 100 IMS4I2

Delllll on Page AS

INDEX
·· . 2 SECIIONS- 12 PAGBS

4"

Annie's Mailbox

L&gt;J

"

18,1111111
IIII·Fnl . . . .

..............,
81J919
WIDIIIIIIIII

Point Plee9nt

.

(304) 675'5ZG0

4"

Calendars
Classifieds

L&gt;J

B

3~4

Comics
.

Bs

Editorials
-Obituaries

A4
As

· ~ports
Weather

B Section

As

il) 11008 Ohio Volley Publlahlnll Co.

1

...

POMEROY - The IRS
has money waiting for 12
people in Meigs County,
according to an announcement made by Eric Erickson,
Internal Media Relations,
Ohio and West Virginia.
"Their tax refund or stimulus payment was sent to
them, and due to a mailing
address error, it was
returned to us," said
Erickson. The average · of
the checks is $545 for a total
of $6,000, be reported.
The Meigs ~ountians
with money waiting for
them are Raye Aeiker,
Clinton Faulk, Shawna
Gray;
.Dal e
Kautz,
Christopher R. Roush ,
Patricia A. Shane, William
F. Tiemeyer, and Carl E.
Will, all of Pomeroy; and
Joseph Franklin Chapman,
Langsville;
Cyrus
K.
Knotts, Reedsville; William
B . and Reca Pierce,
Y•

o:

Rutland; and Isaiah
Riffle, Middleport. ·
According to the IRS
spokesperson, the Internal
Revenue Service is looking
for Ohio and West Virginia
taxpayers who are missing
more than 7,700 economic
stimulus checks totaling
about $4.2 million and more
than 2,600 regular refund
checks totaling about $2.02
million. These checks were
returned by the U.S: Postal
Service due to mailing
address errors.
.
"Many Ohioans and West
Virginians are missing their
refunds or rebates checks
and we want to make sure
we .:an get t~eir. mon_ey into
the1r hands, sa1d Enckson.
"The process for updating
an addres.s in or~er _to
rece1ve thetr money IS qUite
s1mple. In fact, all a taxpay.er has to do 1s update
theu address once and
we'll send all checks due to
that taxpayer.''
As for the stimulus

checks, Erickson said it is · For refund checks tax paycrucial that taxpayers who ers can update their addressmay be due a stimulus es with the "Where's My
check update 'their address- . Refund ?" tool on IRS .gov.
es with the IRS by Nov. 28. It enables taxpayers to
By law, economic stimulus check the status of their
checks must be sent out by refunds. A taxpayer must
Dec. 31 of this year. The submit his or her social
average amount of undeliv- sec u~ity number, filing staered economic stimulus tus and amount of refund
checks is $538 for West shown on the 2007 return.
Virginia and $554 for Ohio . . The tool will provide the ·
The
"Where 's
My status of their refund and in
Stimulus Payment?:' tool on · some cases provide instrucIRS .gov is the quickest and tions on how to resolve
easiest way for a taxpayer to deliverv problems.
check the status of a stimuTaxpayers checking on a
~us ch~ck and receive refund over the phone will
mstructtons on how to be given instructions on
update h1s or her address. how to update their address'l'"axpayers without internet es. Taxpayers can access a
access should call 1-866- telephone
version
of
234-2942.
"Where's My Refund?" by
Regular refund checks calling 1-800-829-1954.
that were returned to the
The vast majority Qf
l~S average $763 for West checks mailed out by the
· V1rgmta taxpayers and IRS reach their rightfu l
$779 for OhiO taxpayers. owner every year, said
These checks are resent as Erickson. Only a very smaH
soon as taxpayers update
'---L- ·
their address.
Plus• sH C...u., AS

•

.

MIDDLEPORT - The
Community
Middleport
Assodation plans three
Christmas
events
this
month, beginning with the
community's
annual
Christmas
parade
on
Saturday.
The parade will begin at
4:30 p.m. at Rejoicing Life .
Church and will travel
downtown on North Second
Avenue to South Third. In
addition to the parade . the
association will offer free
carriage rides. a live
Nativity and Christmas caroling and a visit by Santa
Claus at Peoples Bank.
Tickets for the Dec . II
church tour are now· available, for $10. at Peoples
Bank, Ohio River Bear Co.,,
the Chamber of Commerce
office and Dan's in Pomeroy. ·
It will be held from 6-9 p.m.,
and the following churches
have agreed to participate:
Ash Street Cnurch on Ash
Street , First Baptist Church
at South S.ixth Avenue and
Palmer Street. Hope Baptist
Church on Grant Street,
Victory Baptist Church on
Nonh Second Avenue downtown. Bradbury Church of
Please see Parade, A5

USDA offers
loans, grants to
homeowners
STAFF REPORT
NEWS@MYDA ILYSENTINELCOM

MARIETTA - When the
furnace suddenly stops
hearin~ or the roof is leaking. it~may seem that there
is nowhere to tum especially if you. have a very limited ·
income with no rr.oney to
spare for repairs .
.
Fortunately there is help
avai lable to very low
income
homeowners
through a USDA Rural
Development Section 504
Repair Program.
It takes time to work
through the process and the
paperwork, but with the help
of a Rural Development
housing specialist, you don't
have to face the problems
alone. The specialist will visit
your home to see what health
and safety hazards may exist
Homeowners are able to
select their own licensed contractors for the repairs .
The 504 Loan Program
can be used for numerous
repairs including health and
safety
hazards.
utility
hookups and accessibility
accommodations for people
with disabilities.
Pleese

..

see Loans. A5

•

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