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REAl. ESTATE
have more builders siding Willi cvoress

iunba, ltmt~ -ientinel

BeaUIV,
(MS) ~ For its beauty
and natural durability.
homeowners throughout the
south have always turned to
cypress ~ for good reason.
Born and bred in the
swamplands of the southeastern U.S .• with its constam heat. humidity and torrential rains. cypress is the
wood of choice where
longevity and great looks
really count: on your
home's exterior.
In addition to superior
performance outside, naturally beautiful cypress siding possesses .a rich grain,
texture and color that complemems any architectural
style, from rustic to traditional to post-modern.
Anthony Morace, a business owner in Carrier,
Miss .. en larged hi s small
vacation camp on the banks
of the Bogue Chitto River
near Franklinton, La:, to a
three-story, 2,800 square-

foot full-time home .
Wrapped in beveled
cypress outside, anJ finished with tongue-andgroove paneling inside.
cypress was a natural choice
for Morace's Dutch colonial -style home. "I looked at
other woods initiallv, but I
remembered what my father
had said. He used to work in
a sawmilL He always told
us that cypress would last
for years and years. That
sold me."
One century-old Florida
bungalow, a neglected eyesore slated for demolition,
got the makeover of its
dreams from a nationally
known remodeler. The
meets
resu lt ? Hi story
today's contemporary fainily as The Renewed
American Home, the firstever renovated showcase
·home featured at the
International
Builders'
Show in Orlando. Cypress

was the wood of choice
back in 1909 when the
home was built ~ and it
still is today.
Located in Florida's historic Lake Eola Heights
District. the structure had
fallen into disrepair, and
came close to being razed. ·
But the Orlando hi storic
preservation board, arguing
its historic significance,
won out, and nationally
known builder Stephen
Gidus. pre sident of PSG
Construction. bought the
home and went to work. He
replaced· the aged cypress
siding in the cenrury-o ld
structure with new cypress
siding, . and built cypress
·
fencing on site.
Gidus has always · been
sold on cypress ' performance · in the tropical
Florida climate. "Things
here ~re always moist and
damp, and coupled with
humidity, we have the

,

Result of writers' battle
over DVD, Internet profls
also likely to impact
actors, directors, A2

Sunday, November 4,_2007

Proud to·be apart ofyour life. •

relentle ss sunshine . We feel
that cy press holds up better
than any other wood product in withstanding the ele-

Subscribe today • 992-2155 or 446-2342

ments."

One of the reasons
cypress has such staying
power is because of what's
in side: cypre " heartwood
co ntains 'grmvn in the
wood ' preservative oil,
cypressene, which makes it
extremely resistant to decay
and insects, and an ideal
candidate for both siding
and fencing .

ne
Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
!ill CENTS • Vol. 57, :'-io . 7;1

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0BITUARIFS
· Page AS
• Madge E. Baird

•'

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INSIDE
Reasons to list with

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'Events for tlie 'Day

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.Local:Jwrl.sts for 7fo{Ufily 'Dwmu:ing Itkas
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• Russian naiionalists
stage anti-immigrant
march in Moscow.
See Page A2
• Long-term care
comes home week.
~Page A3

• Quartet to perform at
Ariel. See Page A3 .
• Home Heatth Care
month observed.
See Page A5
• Holzer agency
provides home health
care. See Page A5

WEATHER

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··.Away~--~- ~

· · ··· ·

Details on Pap A8

INDEX
2 SECI10NS- 16 PAGES

Russell P. ·Clarke,
Over 30 Years Esperience

Calendars

A3

Classifieds

B4-6

Comics

B7

Annie's Mailbox

A3
A4
As

;Editorials
Obituaries
Sports

Weather

Rutland
awards
walking
trail bid.

Officer: Debra L. Chevalier,
Pomeroy, James L. Parker,
Pomeroy, and Karen R.
Smith, Racine; Columbia
Trustee: Gary Carr, Albany,
and Marco Jeffers, Albany ;
Columbia Fiscal Officer:
Mary Wingo, Albany.
.
Lebanon Trustee: Dale C.
Teaford, Sr.,
Portland,
Charles
R.
Lawrence,
Portland; Lebanon Fiscal
Officer: Sherry BeegleWilcox, Portland; Letart
Trustee: Christopher Tod
Wolfe, Racine; Letart Fiscal
Officer:
Joyce
White,
Racine, Joey Jarrell, Racine;
Olive
Trustee:
Roger
Barnett, Reedsville, Randy
Boston, Reedsville; Olive
Fiscal Officer: No candidate
filed.

Orange Trustee: James
Allan Watson, Coolvi lle,
Lewis F. White, Reedsville;
Orange Fiscal Officer: Osie
M.
Follrod,
Pomeroy,
Deborah
J.
Watson,
Coolville; Rutland Trustee:
Joe Bolin, Rutland; Rutland
Fisal Officer: Opal L. Dyer,
Rutland; Salem Trustee:
E.
Johnston,
Cecil
Langsville, Richard Helton ,
Langsville, Jack L. Ervin ,
Langsville; Salem Fiscal
Officer:
Bonnie Scott,
Langsville, Cheryl Ann
Wells, Vinton.
Salisbury Trustee: John
Hood, Pomeroy; Salisbury
Fiscal Officer: Marilyn
Anderson,
Middleport;
Scipio Trustee: Randy
Butcher; Pomeroy, Scipio

Fiscal Officer, no candidate
filed; Sutton Trustee: Mike
Jacks, Syracuse, Carl Salser,
Racine, Larry Ebersbach,
Syracuse; Sutton Fiscal
E.
Officer:
Kenneth
Wiggins, Racine.
Village offices
Middleport Mayor: Mike
Gerlach; Middleport Village
Council: Shawn Rice, Julia
A. Proctor; Pomeroy Mayor:
John Musser, Victor C.
Young Ill. Pomeroy Village
Clerk -Treasurer:
Kathy
Hy"sell; Pomeroy Village
Council: Shawn Arnott,
Ruth Spaun; Racine Village
Clerkffreasurer: David H.
Spencer; Syracuse Mayor:
Eric D. Cunningham, Dencil
R. Hudson II ; Syracuse
Village
Clerk-Treasurer:

ENJOY WHILE IT lASTS

B Section
A8

© ooo: Ohio Valley PubU.hJn&amp; Co.

RUTLAND ~ Rutland
Village Council recently
approved an estimate from
Randall Burchett for phase
one of the village's walk. tQil
J.ni.
. . ~··
.
The estimate came tn at
$11,377 for a rortion of the
walking trai · measuring
I ,020 feet long by four feet
wide. The village received
grants from the Sisters of
St. Joseph Charitable Fund
and an Ohio NatureWorks
Grant for the project.
Phase one of the trail
begins at the end of
Vennari Park next to the
Hysell property and ends
where the cabin used to sit.
The second phase ~ "11 I LI
st.art next to the Rt 11. 1rl ·
Church of lhr 'J C~ L&lt; ucne
and follow ' he village
property bordcT along the
field and emerge next to
the Tilli s' property. The
third phase of the trail
would be placed behind the
Rutland Civic Center and
through the fireman's park.
Councilman
Lowell
Vance, who was appointed
to the Parks and Recreation
Committee, reported to
counci I that Burchett
hoped to have the work
completed by Nov. 15,
weather permitting.
Vance gave hi s report at
the most recent meeting of
Rutland Village Council.
In other council bu siness:
Council canceled all village cell phone service
with Alltell. The village
had a contract for a bag
phone for street department
employee
Ray
DeWitt and a cell phone
for Police Chief Jeff
Miller.
Resi&lt;lent Paul Searls sent
a certified letter to the village about the tree in his
front of his house between

Please see Trail, As

Judy A. William s, Debra
Hood. Sharon S. 'Cotterill:
Syracuse Village Council :
Bobby J. Ord. Dorothy A.
Amberger: Rutlanu Mayor:
Lowell Vance , April Burke.
No cand idates filed for
Syracuse Board of Public
Affairs . Racine Mayor,
Racine Village Counci l,
Racine Board of Public
Affairs, or Rutland Village
Council.
Schuol Boards
Eastern Local School
Di stri ct (2 ): John C. Rice,
Reedsville, Sheila J. Taylor.
Pomeroy, M. Adam Will,
Pomeroy.
Meigs Local
School
District (3 ): Roger Abbott,

Please see Election, AS

Syracuse public
meeting set for
distress grant
BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT®MYDAILY~ENTINEL.COM

BY BETH SERGENT

Sh01ulal.~ud.c:rmilt,

740-416-7476

'""'·"'.'dail.'"'"lind.,·um

BSERGENT®MYDA1LYSENT1NEL.COM

Realtor

~

BY BRIAN

BREEOOMVDAILYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY -Tuesday's
general election ballot
includes candidates for
township trustee and fiscal
officer, village mayors and
council members and members of local boards of education.
Tax levies in some communities also appear. Poll s
will be open from 6:30 a.m.
until 7 p.m.
Township offices"
Bedford Trustee: John
Dean, Pomeroy; Bedford
Fiscal Officer, Barbara
Grueser, Shade; Chester
Trustee: Elmer Newell,
Pomeroy,
Larry
Life,
Racine ; Chester Fiscal

many amenities; Hickory

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MONDAY, NOVEMBEI{ 5, :!007

General election tomorrow includes townships, villages

close to 1 acre Middlep.or t.

10 Windows For

City, county say
Cincinnati riverfront
development
finally moving, AS

Beth Se,.ent/photo

Students at Southern Elementary soar on this swing set. enjoying the nice weather
while It lasts. This wee!&lt; temperatures are expected to get eyen cooler as the days
get shorter and recess moves indoors.

SYRACUSE - Syracuse
has scheduled its first of
three
public
meetings
required to recetve · a
$300,000
Community
Development Block Grant
for improving residential
communities:
The first meeting is at 7
p.m., Dec. 3 at the Syracuse
1 Community Center and is
"designed to get input from
residents as to how the
money, if received, should
be spent.
The community decides
where the money is spent by
filling out surve ys which
asks residents to pick from a
variety of projects the
money can be spent on such
as sidewalks. paving, recreational
facilitie s,
etc.
Beginning lomorrow the surveys will be at local· businesses, the village clerk's
office or can be picked up at
the public meeting.
Money ·spent on community projects, such as
improvements
at
the
Syracuse
Commun ity
Center. can be counted
towards the $ 150.000 match
required for the $300,000
grant.
Mayor
Eric
Cunningham recently reported the Meigs County
Commissioners will commii
$20.000 to the village to be·
applied to tl\e CDBG match.
Syracuse plans to apply
for the funds in the spring of

Please see Meeting, AS

ACS program in need of cosmetologists
BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYOAILYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY . ~ The American
Cancer Society is in need of local cosmetologists to volunteer their time for
its "Look Good ... Feel Better" program.
·
The program is a community-based,
free, national service that teaches
female cancer patients beauty techniques to help restore their appearance
and self-image during chemotherapy
and radiation treatments.

The 'ACS' Meigs County Advisory
Board hopes to get the program implemented locally but is in need of cos- .
metologists to volunteer their time for
clients. There is a one-time training
session required which can be taken in
Gallia or Athens Counties. Call local
advisory board mernber Courtney Sim
at 992-6626 for more information.
The program consists of different
components including a group program, one-on-one salon consultations
and self-help materials.
The group program consists of val-

unteer beauty professionals leading
small groups, usually consisting of six
to 10 women, through practical,
hands-on experience. Women learn
about makeup techniques, skincare, ,
nail care, and options rel.ated to hair
loss such as wigs, turbans. and
scarves. Each group program participant receives a free kit of cosmetiq
for liSe during and afler the workshop•
The one-on-one salon consultation~
are for patients who ate unable to

Please see ACS, AS

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�The Daily Sentinel

NATION •

RLD

rageA2
Mopday, November 5,

2007

RESULT OF WRITERS' BA1'11E OVER DVD, INTERNET
PROFITS ALSO LIKELY TO IMPACT ACTORS, DIRECfORS
•

BY GARY GENTILE
AP BUSINESS WRITER

LOS ANGELES - Hollywood
writers were had at the bargaining
table Sunday in a last-mtnute push
to avoid a strike a~ainst TV networks and 111ovi'e' st udios over
writers' share of profi ts from
DVDs and the Internet.
The banle has broad implications for the way Hollywood does
business. since whatever deal is
struck by the Writers Gui ld of
America will likely be used as a
template for talk's with actors and
directors. whose contracts expire .
next June.
"We 'll get what they gel."
Scree n Actors Guild President
Alan Rosenberg to ld The
Associated Press.
Negotiators were meeting with a
federal med iator Su nday evening
in hopes of avoidi ng a strike that
writers had set to begin 12:0 I a.m.
Monday.
The guild announced sweeping
plans to picket every major studio
in Los Angeles starting at 9 a.m.
Monday, along with Rockefe ller
Center in New York, where NBC
is headquartered.
The Alliance of Motion Picture
and Television Producers previ ously called a writers· stri ke "precipitous and irres ponsible."
Producers believe progress can
· be m~de on other issues but "it
makes absolutely no sense to
increase the burden of this additional com pensat ion," said J.
Nicholas Counter, the producer's
chief negotiator.
The guilds have been preparing
for these negotiations for years,
hiring staff with extensive labor
union experience. and developing
joint strategies and a harder line
than producers have seen in
decades.
"We have n't shown particular
resolve in past negotiations," said
John Bowman, the WGA's chief
negotiator. ''The sea change is that
this is an enormously galvani zing

AP photo

People load picket signs into vans at the Writers Guild of America headquarters Sunday, in Los Angeles .
Hollywood writers were back at the bargaining table Sunday in a last-m inute push to avoid a strike against TV
networks and mov1e studios over writers' sha re of profits from D~ s and the Internet.
issue, and two, that the new regime
at the guild actually has a plan, has
an organi zation and a structure to
respond to something."
The writers are the first union to
bargain to r a new deal this year.
Their cont ract expired Wednesday.
In past years, actors have almost
always gone first, although the
Directors Guild of America, which
is seen as the least aggressive of
the three guilds, has sometimes
taken the lead. Whatever deal was
struck tirst was usually accepted
by the others.
The gui lds are aware that if writers fail to win concessions involving DVDs and the Internet, actors
may have to take up the fight.

"This is an issue that touches
every member of this guild and
every membe r of the Screen
Actors Guild as well," saft:l Carlton
Cuse, executive producer of the
ABC drama "Lost."
Consumers are ex pected . lo
spend $16.4 billion on DVDs this
year, according to Adams Media
Research. By contrast, studios
could generate only $158 million
from selling mov1es online and
about $194 million from selling
TV shows over the Web, although
those numbers are expected to skyrocket in coming years.
Studios argue that it is too early
to know how much money they
can .make from offering entenain-

Russian nationalists stage
·anti-immigrant march in Moscow
BY MANSUR MIROVALEV
ASSOC IATED PRESS WRITER

. holiday by laying !lowers at
the monument to Moscow's
17th century Iiberators, told
MOSCOW - A white the military cadets and prosupremacist from Texas lift- Kremlin youth group memed his black cowboy hat bers who accompanied him
into the air as he stepped that there are people in the
forward to add ress thou- world seeking to split
·sands of Russian national- Russia and divide up its natists at a rally Sunday in ural resource wealth.
Moscow.
"Some believe that we are
"I' m taking my hat off as too lucky to possess so
a sign of respect for your much natural wealth, which
strong identity in ethnicity, they say mu st be divided,"
nation and race." ·said Put in said , · speaking near
Preston Wiginton , 43, the monument on Red
exposing his close-cropped Square. "These people have
head to a freezing drizzle . , lost their mind,'' he added
"Glory to Russia," he said with a smile .
in broken Russi an . as the
Pro-Krerhl in
you th
crowd of mostl y you ng
groups
and
the
liberal
Russian men rai sed thei r
right hands in a Nazi salute Yabloko party also held raland chanted "w hite power'" lies Sunday, in part to
counter the · nationalist
in Engli sh. .
·
\
Al!!out 5,000 nationalists march .
"This holiday is a gift for
'turned out for the Russian
the
mo st reactionary and
March, held for the third
year on National Unity Day. dangerous group - the
Yabloko
a holiday the Krem lin creat- nationalist s."
deputy
chairman
Sergei
ed in ~005 to replace the traditioflal Nov. 7 celebration Mitrokhin told a crowd of
of the 1917 Bolshevik ri se abou t 1.500.
Thousands
of . proto power.
Kremlin
yo_u
th
actl vtsts
The Kremlin has tried to
give the holiday historical marched through central
sign ificance by tying it to Moscow and gathered near
the 1612 expulsion of Red Square to sew together
Polisli ;md Cossack troops a "blanker of peace," symwho hrietly seized Moscow bolizing harmon y among
at a time of political di sar- Russia 's numerous ethni c
.
groups.
ray.
The nationalists, who
But extreme nationali sts
have seized on the holidav. were kept away from the
retlecting a ri se i~ xenopho- city center, marched along
bia. More than 50 people an embankment· of the
have heen kill ed and 400 · Moscow River to a small
injured in et hn ically moti- square. waving banners that
vated attacks thi s year, read "Russians, stand up,"
according to the Sova rights "Russian order or war," and
'Tolerance is AIDS."What
center.
Rights activists say the united the marchers was
extreme nationalist senti- their opposition to nonwhite
ments are a natural out- migrants from the Caucasus
growth of the Kremlin 's and Central Asia.
"Russia will be whi te,"
attempts to rebuild a strong
said Alexander Belov,
Russian state .
Preside nt Vladimir Putin , leader of the Movement
who ce lebrated ·Sund ay's Against lllegal Mi gration.

His last name, based on the
Russian word for "white," is
a nom de guerre.
"Our ultimate goal is our
race and nation . Nation
above all," he said, rephrasing the Nazi slogan
"Germany above all."
A top immigration official
down played the significance ·or the Russian
Marches.
"This is just an outbreak
of national identity feeliflgs,
which is noticeable worldwide, and it has affected
too,"
said
Russia
Vyacheslav
Postavnin,
deputy director of the
Federal Migration Service,
the lnterfax news agency .
reported.
In the first Russian March
in 2005, thousands marched
through ce ntral Moscow,
·some
shouting
"Heil
Hitler." The march horrified
many Muscovites, and the
following year it was
blocked by police
"The first Russifln Marc h
was unexpected good luck.
the second one was about
overcoming the resistance
of the authorities, and the
third one is already a new
Russian . tradition," said
Koristantin Krylov of the
nationali st ·Russian Social
Movement.
· City authorities approved
Sunday's march but ordered
it held on the river embankment away from the city
center. Hundreds of police
lined the route .
Nationalist marches also
were held in other Russian
cities.
In St. Petersburg, about
500 people rallied at
Revolution Square in front
of the Winter Palace. Police
detained 12 men who
attempted to break into a
Chinese restaurant, the
Regnum news age ncy
reported.

ment on the Internet, cell phones.
iPods and other devices.
Hollywood uni ons have long
regretted a decision made in 1984
to accept a small percentage of
home video sales because studi os
said the technology was untested
and that costs were high. Writers
only get about 3 cents on a typical
DVD retailing for $20.
·The guilds have tried and failed
for two decades to increase video
payments, even as DVDs have
become more protitable tor studi os
than box office rece ipts.
Unions say they won't make the
same mistake when it comes to the
lmemet.
"I think we all understand what a

crucial time in history this is,"
Rosenberg said. "We really feel if
we can't get a fair formula in new
media, we' ll dig ourselves into the
same type of hole we 've been in
with DVDs.~·
The first casualty of the strike
would be late-night talk shows,
which are dependent on current
events to fuel monologues and
other entertainment. Daytime TV,
including live talk shows such as
·"The View" and soap bperas,
which typically tape about a
week's' worth of shows in advance.
would be next to fee l the impact.
The strike would not immediately impact production of movies or
prime-time TV programs. Most ;
studios have stockpiled dozens of
movie scripts, and TV shows have
enough scripts or completed shows
in hand to last until early next year.
The actors' union has urged its
members to join the writers' picket
lines ·during their off hours.
·
If ·a writers strike lingers and
actors show support. producers
could try and undermine the writers' position by seeking a more
favorable deal with directors.
Writers and directors have
clashed in . the past, mostly over
writers ' feelings that directors take
too much credit for a movie and ·
neglect the contribution of writers;
In 2004, the directors' union settled its contract first and backed ·
down from demands for a higher
share of profit from the lucrative
DV D marketpl ace . .Writers and
actors then had little choice but to
. accept a similar deal.
"This is a bare knuckle fight and
a chess game," said Jonathan
Handel, an entertainment lawyer at
the Los Angeles l&amp;w firm of
TroyGould.
"If producers do reac h a deal
with the DGA, it would be to cut
the legs right out from under the
strike. Then the focus shifts to .
SAG."
The DGA said it has not yet
scheduled contract tal ks but was
clos~IX monitoring developments. ,

BY THE BEND

The Daily Sentinel

Community Carendar
Public meetings

POMEROY Meigs
County Cancer Initiative,
regu lar meeting . noon. conference
room,
Meigs
County Senior Citizens
Center. new members welcome, bring own lunch.
RACINE
Racine ·
Chapter l 34; OES installatio n of officers, 7:30 p.m.
Refreshments .

·Wednesday, Nov. 7
POMEROY
The
Meig s County Board of
Health. re gular meeting. 5
p.m. , Meigs Count y Health
Department, third and fin al
public reatling of prormed
sewage treatment syqem
rule s, public co mments
accepted.

Thesday, Nov. 6
REEDSVILLE - Oli ve
Township Trustees, 7:30
p.m., Olive Township
Garage.
PAGEVILLE Scipio
Township trustees will meet
at 6:30p.m. at the Pageville

Thesday, Nov. 6
TUPPERS PLAINS
Eastern Music Boosters. 7
p.m., band room.
POMEROY
Drew
Webster Post 39, 7 p.m. at
the post home.
MIDDLEPORT
Midd leport Community
Association. 8:30 a.m.,

Clubs and
organizations
Monday, Nov. 5

BY KATHY MtTCHEU

ThursdaY., Nov. 8
TUPPERS PLA INS
VFW Post 9053 will meet at
7 p.m . at the hall. Mel
served at 6: 30 p.m .

Other events
Sunday, Nov. II
RACINE - "Honor the
Veterans,'' I0:40 a.m ..
Racine
First
Baptist
Church. veteran s of the
armed forces invited to the
service meant to show
appreciation for those who
have served America, din - ·
ne.r served immediately
afterwards .

The French Chorders Quartet

cruise as well as by those at
numerou s community and
private events around the tri state area. ,Featured guest
entertainers for the French
Colony show will be ,;The
Treblemakers", the French
City men's barbershop
group, and its quartets. A
singing valentine will be
awarded as a door prize. The
show will climax with a

patriotic tribute to the · USA
and to those who have
served as defenders· of our
safety and freedom.
Tickets are available from
any French Colony Chorus
member and from the Ariel
Theatre box office through
the evening of the performance or until sold out. A
limited number of tickets tor
the post-show "Afterglow"

party are al so available from
the ladie s of the chorus.
For more intormation
about the show, abo ut joining the chorus, or to book
the choru s or quartet for
community or private events
and holiday parties, ca ll
Suzy Parker nt 740-9925555 or Bev Alberchinski at
' 740-446,2476.

Long-term care comes home week
COLUMBUS
Governor Ted Strickland
declared Nov. 4 -10 as
''Long-term Care Comes
Home Week in Ohio" to recognize imd celebrate the
contributions of countless
Ohioans who give their time
and their heat:ts to care for
Qthers.
· "We know that. most
Ohioans. if given the choice ,
would prefe r to receive the
care they need in the ir own
homes and communities,"
said Governor Strick land .
"Family caregivers and dedicated, hard-working home
care workers make this
choice a reality."
: Nearly 80 percent of all
long-term care in Ohio is
p,rovided at home - most by
friends and family members ,
with the support of paid
direct care workers.
Additionally, Ohioans are
living longer. Each month in
Ohio, 12,000 people celebrate their 60th birthdays.
Currently, there are about 2
million Ohioans age 60 and
older - a number expected to .
grow to 2.8 million in the
next 12 years. While older
people are living longer and
generally healthier lives,
tbey also are living with and
mana~lng more long-term,
chrome illnesses.
"Home care isn't just about
caregivers providing care to
those who need it - though
that certainly is a large part

of it," said Barbara E. 'Riley,
director of the Department
of Aging. "Families, agencies and the aging network
are all necessary compo'
nents. Fami ly members provide the bulk of care, home
care aides and age ncies help
fill in gaps or provide services fa mily cannot. Aging
networ~ services. such as
caregive r support. tran sportation, meals-on-wheels.
adult day se rvices and more.
round out the system and
truly bring long-term care
home ."

If you are providing care
for a loved one, or feel vou
need assistance for yourself.
your Area Agency on Aging
can he lp you ide ntify
resources and match se r-

2007

Biological father may not be savior
Peoples Bank.

Quartet to perform at Ariel
GALLIPOLIS The
French Chorders Quartet,
composed of SuZy Parker,
baritone, of Syracuse,. Sue
Priest, bass, of Gallipolis,
Bev Alberchinski, lead, of
Gallipolis,
and
Nan
Heiskell, tenor, of C heshire,
will be performing in the
French Colony Chorus show
at 8 p.m., Nov. 17, 'at the
Ariel Theatre in Gallipolis.
Members of the local
chapter of Sweet Adelines
International, the chorus will
present an evening of barbershop harmony.
The
French Chorders, who are
currently training with internationally reknowned coach
Sharon Babb to prepare for
the show and upcoming holiday events, will sing
"Sentimental. Journey" and
"I Enjoy Being A Girl".
· The
French
Colony
Chorus and the French
Chorders appeared as featured entertainment to guests
from around the United
States and Canada aboard
the River Explorer Burge
cruisin); the Ohio and
Kanawha Rivers this past
summer.
Their talent and versatility
in. varied song stylings were
laUded by audiences on the

Monday, November 5,

ANNIE'S MAILBOX

town hall.
ALFRED
Orange
Township Trustees. 7:30
p.m. ·home of the fi scal officer, Osie Foll rod .

Monday, Nov. 5
RUTLAND - Rutland
Townshi p Trustees meet in
regular sess ion . 5 p.m., fire
station. Bid s for carport will
be opened.
LETART
Letart
Township Trustees, regular
meeting, 5 p.m., offi .ce
building.

PageA3

vices to your situation
through a free long-term
care consultation . Call 1866-243-5678 to be connected to the agency servi ng
your community. Vi sit
www .go ld en buc keye .com
for more information.
November is National
Family Caregiver Month to
recogni ze the hee care they
provide loved ones -- care
valued al more than $300
billion nationwide and $ 10
bil lion in Ohi o.
Novem ber is also National
Home· Care and Hospice
Momh to celebrate the contributions these informal
care givers make to the longterm care system by saving
states and indiv·iduals money
over institutional care. The

Citizens of Middleport

Ohio Department of Aging
joined
with
Governor
Strickland to create Longterm Care Co me s Home
Week and emphasize that
home care is multifaceted
and truly possible only when
individuals, professionals.
agencies and networks work
together. ·

AND MARCY SUGAR'

Dear Annie: l,anr 16 years
old, and my mother I"' ' saw·
lit to tell me that th.e man I
thought was my father is
aclllally my stepfather. Now.
to understand my dilemma.
you also ha ve to realize that
my real dad never did anything nasty to my mom. She's
j ust hitter for getting preg-

nan t when ·she was young.
However. my stepfather is
about the worst man I\e ever
met.
He's sel ti sh and abusive.
but really only to me, not to
the daughter he had with my
mother. So my question . is,
shouldn't I be allowed to
know my biological father?
I'm 1old he Iives in the same
city, and I've never even seen
a picture of him.
This shouldn 't be my
mother's decision, and it has
nothing to do with her husband. I think it's my right to
meet my father if I want to,
isn't it'' - Sick of Being
Fatherless in Louisville,
Ky.
Dear Louisville: We
know this information must
be difticult to process, and
the problems you are having
with your stepfather make it
more complicated. First,
understand that your biological father might not be the
savior you think he is. He
may have abandoned you r
mother· when she Was pregnant. He may have another
family and no interest in a
relationship with you. If you
think he is going to "resc ue"
you from your current situation, you could be very disappointed. Second, if your
stepfather is abusive , he
should be reported to the
authorities.
· You cannot force you r
mother to give you information if she is unwilling. You
may have better luck if you
approach it with less hostility. Please discuss this with a
trusted adult -- perhaps your
· school counselor, a relative
or a close family friend, and
ask them to intercede for
you.
Dear Annie: I have a
problem with my 56-yearold daughter, "Mary lou ."
She Iives out of state. but we
call each other every weekend and are very close. I confide in her a lot . Howeve r. I
made !he mistake of telling
her how much money I have
in a savings account. Now
she wants some of it as part
of her inheritance. When. I
declined, she hung up during
our conversation.

My hushand and I are over
75 and retired. Do you think
I should give in'' - Simi
Valley, Calif.
Dear Simi Valley: We
don't like the way Marylou is
puni shing you over money.
It's petty and greedy, and it is
tempting to write her off completely. But we also know you
love her and don't want the
relation ship to suffer. We
assume you are planning to ·
give Marylou an inheritance
anyway. If you need the
money in this savings account
lor yourself and your husband, you should not promise
it to anyone . .
You can , however, assuage
Marylou by telling her that
whatever is left will go into
your estate and be distributed
to your heirs. meaning she
would get some as part of her
inheritance (whether she
deserves it or not).
Dear Annie: This is for
"Losin g
Myself
in
Louisiana," the woman who·
let herself go because her
husband is continually
involved with porn and it
makes her feel worthless.
Her hu sband is a sex
addict. I know because I
li ved with one for years. She
needs to realize ·that a sex
addict can also be having
$exual relationships outside
of marriage that could .be
putting her ·health in serious
jeopardy. Please encourage
her to be tested for HIY.
After I gave my husband
too many chances. 1 had to
leave him. I am happier, disease-free and amazed at how
much my self-worth has
gone up. There· is a lot of literature on the subject at the
library and online, and I also
recommend she contact Sex
Addicts Anonymous (saarecovery.org) for her husband. - Carol in Rockford
Dear Carol: Thanks for
the suggestion. We also recommend COSA (cosa-recovery.org) for you and · any
spouse of a sex addict. The
address is P.O. Box 14537,
Minneapolis, MN 55414.
Annie's Mailbox is written by Kathy Mitchell and
Marcy Sugar, longtime editors tJ/ the Ann Landers column. Please e-mail your
questions to anniesmailbox@comcast.net, or write
to: Annie's Mailbox, P.O.
Box 118190, Chicago, /L
60611. To find o•t more
about Annie·~· Mailbox, and
read features by other
Creators Syndicate writers
a11d cartoonists, visit the
Creator~· Sy11dicate Web
page at www.creators.com.

R•Eiact

John F.
ser
Mayor of Pomeroy
JOHN F. MUSSER , current. Mayor of Pomeroy. A lifetime rc~id L'Il l nf Meigs County and has lived in
the same house on Mulberry Hts, since 1965 . A veteran of th e Vil• tnam Ww· and a member of Drew
Webster Post #39, American Legion. He has been married to his wik Dnnie _for 45 years and th ey have
one Son and Daughter-in-law and three grandchildren. He served on Village Council for eight years from
1992 ro 2000. having been Presiden1 of Cou ncil all" eig h1 years. Hr has served as Mayor since 20Q].

Our town is working to be more
efficient and return to a sound
financial basis. We all need ito
vote for the tax levy to continue
that effort. Thank You.

instrumemal in Pomeroy's Downtown Rev italization Prnjcc t having ser'Jed as Chairman during.
the project Chairman of Pomeroy's Historic Preservm ion District -;incc 1992. Was Chairman of rhe Mural
project whkh i~ located nn Sycamore St Wrote 'grams for Lhe Amphilheater. Bnat Dock Projecl, Walking
Path Project , Promt: nndc, Cops Fast Grant. Linle League Bnschall Fi eld Refreshment Stand and the·
Playground equipment a1 Water Works Park . Chairma n of 1he Delta Queen Visi t to Pomeroy and
supe rvised the insta llation of all1he period sty le street lights in t)lr downtow n area.

Pa id for by Mike Gerlach , candidate for Mayor
· 453 Grant St. Middleport, Oh

He has served as Prcsidcm of the Pomeroy Merl'hams Associa1ion for the pa st several years. He is
curren1ly on 1he Mei gs County Chamber of Commerce Board. the ~cig.s Co unt y Commu ni1y
lmprovemem Corponui on Board and the Farmers Bank Board . In ·J994. he wa~ named Meigs County
person of the Year and ~· as honored hy the Southeastern Ohio Rcgionul Counl'il. He hus spukcn at various
schooJ.~ on local goYcrnrncnt issue~ a.s well as helping i~ncas..: fin anl"ial litcnu:y for st udents. Several
year.; ago. he served on the Meigs High School Strategic Pl anning Commi-.s1on .

••tgs lfellaess t:eater and the
••lgs County Cardiovascular Program
Fun Run/Walk (3.5 miles)

SATURDAY, NOVEMBER fO
Registration 8:00 a.m. - Starts 9:00 a.m. '
· Pomeroy Walking Track

Hewn ~

During 1he past four ye ars. he ~~ ~ bee n instrumen tal in lhe fo llo_win!! projerts: Pomeroy\ Water
Filtration System. Repairin g I he Mechanic SJreeJ Park . repa irin g slips on Laurel St.. Hig h St. and Linl:uln
Drive . Worked to secure funding fur guardrail and pavi(l g L1nitm Tc.rrace. He is L"Ll rrcmly working on a
gram that wili puw al l of Bccl.'h Gmw Ccmcte1:y. Martin St.. Pl easa lll Ridge Road . PeauKk Avt'.. and 7-A
· to Ihe corpomtion Limit~ . Has worked to secure fundin g for a sidcwnlk pmjl'l"l in st:vcral lm:alions in
Pomeroy (thi s is currcmly underway). Work ed 10 sc(·urc fundin g to dcm()lish 14 di lapidated houses in
Pomeroy 0 -A. Nyc Ave., Lau rel St .. Spri ng Ave. , Fisher Sr.. Condor St.. Li ncoln Ht s. an d C\•le St).
For the past fiftt: cn y.car~. he has dcdica1ed his life for the heucrmc m of our community and has
endcav!Jrcd to makL• this Vi llage. as well as Nkigs C'ouiny. a hrn cr plan• in whi ch tu liH~ . Si nn .· llJ72 . he
ha~ ope ratet..l a husiness in downtown Pom eroy and has pan icipmell in ma) Mercha nt p rujecl ~ . He ha~ not
and will nul pl an~ rolitiral signs on our hemuiful walk ing path. rega rd l e~s tlf the outcome.
If ycu want to keep qualified lcmkrship. I a-.k yt\ u to fl' -cit'l:l JOH~ F. MUSSER Fur M ilynr Of The
~illagr Of Pom eroy On Nrl\' elllhl'l" h . 2007 '

..

To pre-register &amp; for more infomation
C.lltht Meip Wtllness Center 740.992-2161 ext. lll
Paid for by candidate. 515 Mulberry Heights, Pomeroy

�The Daily Sentinel

NATION •

RLD

rageA2
Mopday, November 5,

2007

RESULT OF WRITERS' BA1'11E OVER DVD, INTERNET
PROFITS ALSO LIKELY TO IMPACT ACTORS, DIRECfORS
•

BY GARY GENTILE
AP BUSINESS WRITER

LOS ANGELES - Hollywood
writers were had at the bargaining
table Sunday in a last-mtnute push
to avoid a strike a~ainst TV networks and 111ovi'e' st udios over
writers' share of profi ts from
DVDs and the Internet.
The banle has broad implications for the way Hollywood does
business. since whatever deal is
struck by the Writers Gui ld of
America will likely be used as a
template for talk's with actors and
directors. whose contracts expire .
next June.
"We 'll get what they gel."
Scree n Actors Guild President
Alan Rosenberg to ld The
Associated Press.
Negotiators were meeting with a
federal med iator Su nday evening
in hopes of avoidi ng a strike that
writers had set to begin 12:0 I a.m.
Monday.
The guild announced sweeping
plans to picket every major studio
in Los Angeles starting at 9 a.m.
Monday, along with Rockefe ller
Center in New York, where NBC
is headquartered.
The Alliance of Motion Picture
and Television Producers previ ously called a writers· stri ke "precipitous and irres ponsible."
Producers believe progress can
· be m~de on other issues but "it
makes absolutely no sense to
increase the burden of this additional com pensat ion," said J.
Nicholas Counter, the producer's
chief negotiator.
The guilds have been preparing
for these negotiations for years,
hiring staff with extensive labor
union experience. and developing
joint strategies and a harder line
than producers have seen in
decades.
"We have n't shown particular
resolve in past negotiations," said
John Bowman, the WGA's chief
negotiator. ''The sea change is that
this is an enormously galvani zing

AP photo

People load picket signs into vans at the Writers Guild of America headquarters Sunday, in Los Angeles .
Hollywood writers were back at the bargaining table Sunday in a last-m inute push to avoid a strike against TV
networks and mov1e studios over writers' sha re of profits from D~ s and the Internet.
issue, and two, that the new regime
at the guild actually has a plan, has
an organi zation and a structure to
respond to something."
The writers are the first union to
bargain to r a new deal this year.
Their cont ract expired Wednesday.
In past years, actors have almost
always gone first, although the
Directors Guild of America, which
is seen as the least aggressive of
the three guilds, has sometimes
taken the lead. Whatever deal was
struck tirst was usually accepted
by the others.
The gui lds are aware that if writers fail to win concessions involving DVDs and the Internet, actors
may have to take up the fight.

"This is an issue that touches
every member of this guild and
every membe r of the Screen
Actors Guild as well," saft:l Carlton
Cuse, executive producer of the
ABC drama "Lost."
Consumers are ex pected . lo
spend $16.4 billion on DVDs this
year, according to Adams Media
Research. By contrast, studios
could generate only $158 million
from selling mov1es online and
about $194 million from selling
TV shows over the Web, although
those numbers are expected to skyrocket in coming years.
Studios argue that it is too early
to know how much money they
can .make from offering entenain-

Russian nationalists stage
·anti-immigrant march in Moscow
BY MANSUR MIROVALEV
ASSOC IATED PRESS WRITER

. holiday by laying !lowers at
the monument to Moscow's
17th century Iiberators, told
MOSCOW - A white the military cadets and prosupremacist from Texas lift- Kremlin youth group memed his black cowboy hat bers who accompanied him
into the air as he stepped that there are people in the
forward to add ress thou- world seeking to split
·sands of Russian national- Russia and divide up its natists at a rally Sunday in ural resource wealth.
Moscow.
"Some believe that we are
"I' m taking my hat off as too lucky to possess so
a sign of respect for your much natural wealth, which
strong identity in ethnicity, they say mu st be divided,"
nation and race." ·said Put in said , · speaking near
Preston Wiginton , 43, the monument on Red
exposing his close-cropped Square. "These people have
head to a freezing drizzle . , lost their mind,'' he added
"Glory to Russia," he said with a smile .
in broken Russi an . as the
Pro-Krerhl in
you th
crowd of mostl y you ng
groups
and
the
liberal
Russian men rai sed thei r
right hands in a Nazi salute Yabloko party also held raland chanted "w hite power'" lies Sunday, in part to
counter the · nationalist
in Engli sh. .
·
\
Al!!out 5,000 nationalists march .
"This holiday is a gift for
'turned out for the Russian
the
mo st reactionary and
March, held for the third
year on National Unity Day. dangerous group - the
Yabloko
a holiday the Krem lin creat- nationalist s."
deputy
chairman
Sergei
ed in ~005 to replace the traditioflal Nov. 7 celebration Mitrokhin told a crowd of
of the 1917 Bolshevik ri se abou t 1.500.
Thousands
of . proto power.
Kremlin
yo_u
th
actl vtsts
The Kremlin has tried to
give the holiday historical marched through central
sign ificance by tying it to Moscow and gathered near
the 1612 expulsion of Red Square to sew together
Polisli ;md Cossack troops a "blanker of peace," symwho hrietly seized Moscow bolizing harmon y among
at a time of political di sar- Russia 's numerous ethni c
.
groups.
ray.
The nationalists, who
But extreme nationali sts
have seized on the holidav. were kept away from the
retlecting a ri se i~ xenopho- city center, marched along
bia. More than 50 people an embankment· of the
have heen kill ed and 400 · Moscow River to a small
injured in et hn ically moti- square. waving banners that
vated attacks thi s year, read "Russians, stand up,"
according to the Sova rights "Russian order or war," and
'Tolerance is AIDS."What
center.
Rights activists say the united the marchers was
extreme nationalist senti- their opposition to nonwhite
ments are a natural out- migrants from the Caucasus
growth of the Kremlin 's and Central Asia.
"Russia will be whi te,"
attempts to rebuild a strong
said Alexander Belov,
Russian state .
Preside nt Vladimir Putin , leader of the Movement
who ce lebrated ·Sund ay's Against lllegal Mi gration.

His last name, based on the
Russian word for "white," is
a nom de guerre.
"Our ultimate goal is our
race and nation . Nation
above all," he said, rephrasing the Nazi slogan
"Germany above all."
A top immigration official
down played the significance ·or the Russian
Marches.
"This is just an outbreak
of national identity feeliflgs,
which is noticeable worldwide, and it has affected
too,"
said
Russia
Vyacheslav
Postavnin,
deputy director of the
Federal Migration Service,
the lnterfax news agency .
reported.
In the first Russian March
in 2005, thousands marched
through ce ntral Moscow,
·some
shouting
"Heil
Hitler." The march horrified
many Muscovites, and the
following year it was
blocked by police
"The first Russifln Marc h
was unexpected good luck.
the second one was about
overcoming the resistance
of the authorities, and the
third one is already a new
Russian . tradition," said
Koristantin Krylov of the
nationali st ·Russian Social
Movement.
· City authorities approved
Sunday's march but ordered
it held on the river embankment away from the city
center. Hundreds of police
lined the route .
Nationalist marches also
were held in other Russian
cities.
In St. Petersburg, about
500 people rallied at
Revolution Square in front
of the Winter Palace. Police
detained 12 men who
attempted to break into a
Chinese restaurant, the
Regnum news age ncy
reported.

ment on the Internet, cell phones.
iPods and other devices.
Hollywood uni ons have long
regretted a decision made in 1984
to accept a small percentage of
home video sales because studi os
said the technology was untested
and that costs were high. Writers
only get about 3 cents on a typical
DVD retailing for $20.
·The guilds have tried and failed
for two decades to increase video
payments, even as DVDs have
become more protitable tor studi os
than box office rece ipts.
Unions say they won't make the
same mistake when it comes to the
lmemet.
"I think we all understand what a

crucial time in history this is,"
Rosenberg said. "We really feel if
we can't get a fair formula in new
media, we' ll dig ourselves into the
same type of hole we 've been in
with DVDs.~·
The first casualty of the strike
would be late-night talk shows,
which are dependent on current
events to fuel monologues and
other entertainment. Daytime TV,
including live talk shows such as
·"The View" and soap bperas,
which typically tape about a
week's' worth of shows in advance.
would be next to fee l the impact.
The strike would not immediately impact production of movies or
prime-time TV programs. Most ;
studios have stockpiled dozens of
movie scripts, and TV shows have
enough scripts or completed shows
in hand to last until early next year.
The actors' union has urged its
members to join the writers' picket
lines ·during their off hours.
·
If ·a writers strike lingers and
actors show support. producers
could try and undermine the writers' position by seeking a more
favorable deal with directors.
Writers and directors have
clashed in . the past, mostly over
writers ' feelings that directors take
too much credit for a movie and ·
neglect the contribution of writers;
In 2004, the directors' union settled its contract first and backed ·
down from demands for a higher
share of profit from the lucrative
DV D marketpl ace . .Writers and
actors then had little choice but to
. accept a similar deal.
"This is a bare knuckle fight and
a chess game," said Jonathan
Handel, an entertainment lawyer at
the Los Angeles l&amp;w firm of
TroyGould.
"If producers do reac h a deal
with the DGA, it would be to cut
the legs right out from under the
strike. Then the focus shifts to .
SAG."
The DGA said it has not yet
scheduled contract tal ks but was
clos~IX monitoring developments. ,

BY THE BEND

The Daily Sentinel

Community Carendar
Public meetings

POMEROY Meigs
County Cancer Initiative,
regu lar meeting . noon. conference
room,
Meigs
County Senior Citizens
Center. new members welcome, bring own lunch.
RACINE
Racine ·
Chapter l 34; OES installatio n of officers, 7:30 p.m.
Refreshments .

·Wednesday, Nov. 7
POMEROY
The
Meig s County Board of
Health. re gular meeting. 5
p.m. , Meigs Count y Health
Department, third and fin al
public reatling of prormed
sewage treatment syqem
rule s, public co mments
accepted.

Thesday, Nov. 6
REEDSVILLE - Oli ve
Township Trustees, 7:30
p.m., Olive Township
Garage.
PAGEVILLE Scipio
Township trustees will meet
at 6:30p.m. at the Pageville

Thesday, Nov. 6
TUPPERS PLAINS
Eastern Music Boosters. 7
p.m., band room.
POMEROY
Drew
Webster Post 39, 7 p.m. at
the post home.
MIDDLEPORT
Midd leport Community
Association. 8:30 a.m.,

Clubs and
organizations
Monday, Nov. 5

BY KATHY MtTCHEU

ThursdaY., Nov. 8
TUPPERS PLA INS
VFW Post 9053 will meet at
7 p.m . at the hall. Mel
served at 6: 30 p.m .

Other events
Sunday, Nov. II
RACINE - "Honor the
Veterans,'' I0:40 a.m ..
Racine
First
Baptist
Church. veteran s of the
armed forces invited to the
service meant to show
appreciation for those who
have served America, din - ·
ne.r served immediately
afterwards .

The French Chorders Quartet

cruise as well as by those at
numerou s community and
private events around the tri state area. ,Featured guest
entertainers for the French
Colony show will be ,;The
Treblemakers", the French
City men's barbershop
group, and its quartets. A
singing valentine will be
awarded as a door prize. The
show will climax with a

patriotic tribute to the · USA
and to those who have
served as defenders· of our
safety and freedom.
Tickets are available from
any French Colony Chorus
member and from the Ariel
Theatre box office through
the evening of the performance or until sold out. A
limited number of tickets tor
the post-show "Afterglow"

party are al so available from
the ladie s of the chorus.
For more intormation
about the show, abo ut joining the chorus, or to book
the choru s or quartet for
community or private events
and holiday parties, ca ll
Suzy Parker nt 740-9925555 or Bev Alberchinski at
' 740-446,2476.

Long-term care comes home week
COLUMBUS
Governor Ted Strickland
declared Nov. 4 -10 as
''Long-term Care Comes
Home Week in Ohio" to recognize imd celebrate the
contributions of countless
Ohioans who give their time
and their heat:ts to care for
Qthers.
· "We know that. most
Ohioans. if given the choice ,
would prefe r to receive the
care they need in the ir own
homes and communities,"
said Governor Strick land .
"Family caregivers and dedicated, hard-working home
care workers make this
choice a reality."
: Nearly 80 percent of all
long-term care in Ohio is
p,rovided at home - most by
friends and family members ,
with the support of paid
direct care workers.
Additionally, Ohioans are
living longer. Each month in
Ohio, 12,000 people celebrate their 60th birthdays.
Currently, there are about 2
million Ohioans age 60 and
older - a number expected to .
grow to 2.8 million in the
next 12 years. While older
people are living longer and
generally healthier lives,
tbey also are living with and
mana~lng more long-term,
chrome illnesses.
"Home care isn't just about
caregivers providing care to
those who need it - though
that certainly is a large part

of it," said Barbara E. 'Riley,
director of the Department
of Aging. "Families, agencies and the aging network
are all necessary compo'
nents. Fami ly members provide the bulk of care, home
care aides and age ncies help
fill in gaps or provide services fa mily cannot. Aging
networ~ services. such as
caregive r support. tran sportation, meals-on-wheels.
adult day se rvices and more.
round out the system and
truly bring long-term care
home ."

If you are providing care
for a loved one, or feel vou
need assistance for yourself.
your Area Agency on Aging
can he lp you ide ntify
resources and match se r-

2007

Biological father may not be savior
Peoples Bank.

Quartet to perform at Ariel
GALLIPOLIS The
French Chorders Quartet,
composed of SuZy Parker,
baritone, of Syracuse,. Sue
Priest, bass, of Gallipolis,
Bev Alberchinski, lead, of
Gallipolis,
and
Nan
Heiskell, tenor, of C heshire,
will be performing in the
French Colony Chorus show
at 8 p.m., Nov. 17, 'at the
Ariel Theatre in Gallipolis.
Members of the local
chapter of Sweet Adelines
International, the chorus will
present an evening of barbershop harmony.
The
French Chorders, who are
currently training with internationally reknowned coach
Sharon Babb to prepare for
the show and upcoming holiday events, will sing
"Sentimental. Journey" and
"I Enjoy Being A Girl".
· The
French
Colony
Chorus and the French
Chorders appeared as featured entertainment to guests
from around the United
States and Canada aboard
the River Explorer Burge
cruisin); the Ohio and
Kanawha Rivers this past
summer.
Their talent and versatility
in. varied song stylings were
laUded by audiences on the

Monday, November 5,

ANNIE'S MAILBOX

town hall.
ALFRED
Orange
Township Trustees. 7:30
p.m. ·home of the fi scal officer, Osie Foll rod .

Monday, Nov. 5
RUTLAND - Rutland
Townshi p Trustees meet in
regular sess ion . 5 p.m., fire
station. Bid s for carport will
be opened.
LETART
Letart
Township Trustees, regular
meeting, 5 p.m., offi .ce
building.

PageA3

vices to your situation
through a free long-term
care consultation . Call 1866-243-5678 to be connected to the agency servi ng
your community. Vi sit
www .go ld en buc keye .com
for more information.
November is National
Family Caregiver Month to
recogni ze the hee care they
provide loved ones -- care
valued al more than $300
billion nationwide and $ 10
bil lion in Ohi o.
Novem ber is also National
Home· Care and Hospice
Momh to celebrate the contributions these informal
care givers make to the longterm care system by saving
states and indiv·iduals money
over institutional care. The

Citizens of Middleport

Ohio Department of Aging
joined
with
Governor
Strickland to create Longterm Care Co me s Home
Week and emphasize that
home care is multifaceted
and truly possible only when
individuals, professionals.
agencies and networks work
together. ·

AND MARCY SUGAR'

Dear Annie: l,anr 16 years
old, and my mother I"' ' saw·
lit to tell me that th.e man I
thought was my father is
aclllally my stepfather. Now.
to understand my dilemma.
you also ha ve to realize that
my real dad never did anything nasty to my mom. She's
j ust hitter for getting preg-

nan t when ·she was young.
However. my stepfather is
about the worst man I\e ever
met.
He's sel ti sh and abusive.
but really only to me, not to
the daughter he had with my
mother. So my question . is,
shouldn't I be allowed to
know my biological father?
I'm 1old he Iives in the same
city, and I've never even seen
a picture of him.
This shouldn 't be my
mother's decision, and it has
nothing to do with her husband. I think it's my right to
meet my father if I want to,
isn't it'' - Sick of Being
Fatherless in Louisville,
Ky.
Dear Louisville: We
know this information must
be difticult to process, and
the problems you are having
with your stepfather make it
more complicated. First,
understand that your biological father might not be the
savior you think he is. He
may have abandoned you r
mother· when she Was pregnant. He may have another
family and no interest in a
relationship with you. If you
think he is going to "resc ue"
you from your current situation, you could be very disappointed. Second, if your
stepfather is abusive , he
should be reported to the
authorities.
· You cannot force you r
mother to give you information if she is unwilling. You
may have better luck if you
approach it with less hostility. Please discuss this with a
trusted adult -- perhaps your
· school counselor, a relative
or a close family friend, and
ask them to intercede for
you.
Dear Annie: I have a
problem with my 56-yearold daughter, "Mary lou ."
She Iives out of state. but we
call each other every weekend and are very close. I confide in her a lot . Howeve r. I
made !he mistake of telling
her how much money I have
in a savings account. Now
she wants some of it as part
of her inheritance. When. I
declined, she hung up during
our conversation.

My hushand and I are over
75 and retired. Do you think
I should give in'' - Simi
Valley, Calif.
Dear Simi Valley: We
don't like the way Marylou is
puni shing you over money.
It's petty and greedy, and it is
tempting to write her off completely. But we also know you
love her and don't want the
relation ship to suffer. We
assume you are planning to ·
give Marylou an inheritance
anyway. If you need the
money in this savings account
lor yourself and your husband, you should not promise
it to anyone . .
You can , however, assuage
Marylou by telling her that
whatever is left will go into
your estate and be distributed
to your heirs. meaning she
would get some as part of her
inheritance (whether she
deserves it or not).
Dear Annie: This is for
"Losin g
Myself
in
Louisiana," the woman who·
let herself go because her
husband is continually
involved with porn and it
makes her feel worthless.
Her hu sband is a sex
addict. I know because I
li ved with one for years. She
needs to realize ·that a sex
addict can also be having
$exual relationships outside
of marriage that could .be
putting her ·health in serious
jeopardy. Please encourage
her to be tested for HIY.
After I gave my husband
too many chances. 1 had to
leave him. I am happier, disease-free and amazed at how
much my self-worth has
gone up. There· is a lot of literature on the subject at the
library and online, and I also
recommend she contact Sex
Addicts Anonymous (saarecovery.org) for her husband. - Carol in Rockford
Dear Carol: Thanks for
the suggestion. We also recommend COSA (cosa-recovery.org) for you and · any
spouse of a sex addict. The
address is P.O. Box 14537,
Minneapolis, MN 55414.
Annie's Mailbox is written by Kathy Mitchell and
Marcy Sugar, longtime editors tJ/ the Ann Landers column. Please e-mail your
questions to anniesmailbox@comcast.net, or write
to: Annie's Mailbox, P.O.
Box 118190, Chicago, /L
60611. To find o•t more
about Annie·~· Mailbox, and
read features by other
Creators Syndicate writers
a11d cartoonists, visit the
Creator~· Sy11dicate Web
page at www.creators.com.

R•Eiact

John F.
ser
Mayor of Pomeroy
JOHN F. MUSSER , current. Mayor of Pomeroy. A lifetime rc~id L'Il l nf Meigs County and has lived in
the same house on Mulberry Hts, since 1965 . A veteran of th e Vil• tnam Ww· and a member of Drew
Webster Post #39, American Legion. He has been married to his wik Dnnie _for 45 years and th ey have
one Son and Daughter-in-law and three grandchildren. He served on Village Council for eight years from
1992 ro 2000. having been Presiden1 of Cou ncil all" eig h1 years. Hr has served as Mayor since 20Q].

Our town is working to be more
efficient and return to a sound
financial basis. We all need ito
vote for the tax levy to continue
that effort. Thank You.

instrumemal in Pomeroy's Downtown Rev italization Prnjcc t having ser'Jed as Chairman during.
the project Chairman of Pomeroy's Historic Preservm ion District -;incc 1992. Was Chairman of rhe Mural
project whkh i~ located nn Sycamore St Wrote 'grams for Lhe Amphilheater. Bnat Dock Projecl, Walking
Path Project , Promt: nndc, Cops Fast Grant. Linle League Bnschall Fi eld Refreshment Stand and the·
Playground equipment a1 Water Works Park . Chairma n of 1he Delta Queen Visi t to Pomeroy and
supe rvised the insta llation of all1he period sty le street lights in t)lr downtow n area.

Pa id for by Mike Gerlach , candidate for Mayor
· 453 Grant St. Middleport, Oh

He has served as Prcsidcm of the Pomeroy Merl'hams Associa1ion for the pa st several years. He is
curren1ly on 1he Mei gs County Chamber of Commerce Board. the ~cig.s Co unt y Commu ni1y
lmprovemem Corponui on Board and the Farmers Bank Board . In ·J994. he wa~ named Meigs County
person of the Year and ~· as honored hy the Southeastern Ohio Rcgionul Counl'il. He hus spukcn at various
schooJ.~ on local goYcrnrncnt issue~ a.s well as helping i~ncas..: fin anl"ial litcnu:y for st udents. Several
year.; ago. he served on the Meigs High School Strategic Pl anning Commi-.s1on .

••tgs lfellaess t:eater and the
••lgs County Cardiovascular Program
Fun Run/Walk (3.5 miles)

SATURDAY, NOVEMBER fO
Registration 8:00 a.m. - Starts 9:00 a.m. '
· Pomeroy Walking Track

Hewn ~

During 1he past four ye ars. he ~~ ~ bee n instrumen tal in lhe fo llo_win!! projerts: Pomeroy\ Water
Filtration System. Repairin g I he Mechanic SJreeJ Park . repa irin g slips on Laurel St.. Hig h St. and Linl:uln
Drive . Worked to secure funding fur guardrail and pavi(l g L1nitm Tc.rrace. He is L"Ll rrcmly working on a
gram that wili puw al l of Bccl.'h Gmw Ccmcte1:y. Martin St.. Pl easa lll Ridge Road . PeauKk Avt'.. and 7-A
· to Ihe corpomtion Limit~ . Has worked to secure fundin g for a sidcwnlk pmjl'l"l in st:vcral lm:alions in
Pomeroy (thi s is currcmly underway). Work ed 10 sc(·urc fundin g to dcm()lish 14 di lapidated houses in
Pomeroy 0 -A. Nyc Ave., Lau rel St .. Spri ng Ave. , Fisher Sr.. Condor St.. Li ncoln Ht s. an d C\•le St).
For the past fiftt: cn y.car~. he has dcdica1ed his life for the heucrmc m of our community and has
endcav!Jrcd to makL• this Vi llage. as well as Nkigs C'ouiny. a hrn cr plan• in whi ch tu liH~ . Si nn .· llJ72 . he
ha~ ope ratet..l a husiness in downtown Pom eroy and has pan icipmell in ma) Mercha nt p rujecl ~ . He ha~ not
and will nul pl an~ rolitiral signs on our hemuiful walk ing path. rega rd l e~s tlf the outcome.
If ycu want to keep qualified lcmkrship. I a-.k yt\ u to fl' -cit'l:l JOH~ F. MUSSER Fur M ilynr Of The
~illagr Of Pom eroy On Nrl\' elllhl'l" h . 2007 '

..

To pre-register &amp; for more infomation
C.lltht Meip Wtllness Center 740.992-2161 ext. lll
Paid for by candidate. 515 Mulberry Heights, Pomeroy

�'

0

The Daily Sentinel

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

(740) 992-2156 • FAX (740) 992-2157
www.mydaiiysentinel.com

Ohio Valley Publishing

Co.

Dan Goodrich
Publisher

Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager-News Editor

Co ngress sl1all make no laiV respecting an
t'stablishment of religion, or prohibiting the
free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom
of speech, or of the press; or the right of the
people peaceably to assemble, and to petition
the Gor•i'rt~ment for a redress of grievances.
-The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution.

TODAY lN HISTORY
Today is Monday. Nov. 5, the 309th day of 2007. There
are 56 days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History: .
On Nov. 5, 1605, the "Gunpowder Plot" failed as Guy ·
Fawkes was seized before he could blow up .the English
Parliament.
On thi s date:
In 1857. muckraking journalist Ida M. Tarbell was born
in Erie Countv, Pa.
In 1872, suiTragist Susan B. Anthony defied the law by
attempting to vote for President Ulysses S. Grant. (She was
convicted by a judge and fined $100 but never paid the
fine.)
In 1912. Woodrow Wilson was elected president, defeating Progressive Party candidate Theodore Roosevelt and
incu mbent Republican William Howard Taft.
In 1940. President Franklin D. Roosevelt won an
unprecedented third term in office as he defeated
Republican challenger Wendell L. Willkie.
In 1968, Richard M. Nixon won the presidency, defeating
Vice President Hubert H. Humphrey and American
·
Independent candidate George C. Wallace.
I.n 19~7, Supreme Court nominee Douglas H. Ginsburg
admitted using marijuana several times in the 1960s and
70s, calling it a mi stake. (Ginsburg ended up withdrawing
his nomination.)
Ten years ago: The House overwhelmingly approved a
bill calling for the most far-reaching changes at the Internal
Revenue Service in 45 years.
Five years ago: In midterm elections, Republicans won
control of both houses of Congress and claimed a majority
of the governors' races . Securities and Exchange
Commission Chairman Harvey Pitt resigned under pressure
after a series of political missteps that had embarrassed the
White House. Randy Johnson won his record-tying fourth
straight National League Cy Young Award.
One year ago: Saddam Hussein was convicted and sentenced by the Iraqi High Tribunal to hang for crimes against
humanity. Saying that he was a "deceiver and liar" who had
given in to his dark side. the Rev. Ted Haggard confessed
to sex ual immorality· in a letter read from the pulpit of the
New Life Church in Colorado Springs, Colo. Rockwall
County, Texas, prosecutor Louis "Bill" Conradr Jr. killed
hjt'nself.as .police tried to serve him with an arrest warrant
allegi ng he had solicited sex with a minor online. Marilson
Gomes dos Santos of Brazil became the first South
American to win the New York City Marathon, finishing in
2:09.59; defending champion Jelena Prokopcuka of Latvia
won the women's race in 2:25:05. Former Turkish Prime
Minister Bulcnt Eccvit died in Ankara at age 81.
Thought for Today: "Imagi nation is the only key to the
fut ure. Without it none exists- with it all things are possi ble."- Ida M. Tarbell , American journalist (1857-1944).

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR

NIO

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Monday, November 5, 2007

Monday, November 5, 2007

Funny thing happened
recently. Or. rather. it didn't.
A hunk of juicy news broke .
hit the wires and fe ll with a
thud into media oblivion .
No one cared.
And what diu no one care
about'1 Let me qmJte from
·the origina l Reuters story:
"A nxiou ~ not to repeat mistakes of past Middle East
peace-making. Secretary of
State Condoleezza Rice has
turned to former presidents
Bill Clinton and Jimmy
Caner for tips ahead of her
own .
conference
(i n
Annapolis) this year."
Wait a minute . Rice has
turned to BiU Clinton, who
famously told Yasser Arafat,
''You have made me a failure." and whose wife. of
course, is running for president as the anti-Bush? And
to Jimmy "Day 444 of the
Hostage Crisis" Carter, who
can't stand the Bush administration almost as much as
he can' t stand' Israel? The
last time these two ex-presidents got together, the y
sealed a de al with Kim
Jong-11 that , in exchange for
a promise to eschew nuclear
weapons, delivered nuclear
technology to North Korea.
·She's turning to them for·
tips''
Rub your eyes in bewilderment, but there's more:
"Other sources of advice
have been· former U.S.
negotiator Dennis Ross and
ex-secretaries of state James
Baker, Henry Kissingerand
Madeleine Albright." The
names to cause special dis-

Diana
West

may here are James "(expleti ve) the Jews" Baker, aQd
Made lei·ne "running wi ld
after Arafat" Albright. (Not
that Denni s Ross. who
, never met a peace process
he couldn't draw out. or
Henry Kissinger, who may
be regarded as the original
architect of the U.S policy
that has consistently barred
Israel from total victory
over her enemies. exactly
inspire confidence.)
So let 's recap. Rice is
"reachin g out," as her State
Depao1ment spokesman put
it in New Age diplo-speak,
to living legends of failed
U.S. policy in the Middle
East, including among them
some of the most hostile
criti cs . of her own Bush
administration , the war on
terror; Israel or all of the
above . Thi s is at least
bizarre enough to raise a
few questions.
Or am I bein g harsh'' Hah.
For decades, American
Middle East policy has been
set according to a Big Lie:
that two sides, Jew and
Muslim, were equally
desirous of peaceful coexistence. This is demonstrably
false . Only Israel desires

(Diana West is a colum·
nisi far The Washington
Times. She is the author of .
· "The Death of the Grownup: How Americas Arrested
De velopment Is Bringing
Down
Western .
Civilization." She can be .
contacted
: via .
dianawest @verizon.net.) ·

I:ULLAR'i CLI~ON

ON ·nu: SU~lOCT
OF \Ll£GAL
lMM\G~sand

.

.

ALL BUSINESS.~ Corporate :auditors take a
tough stance valuation of risky mortgage debt
intensified into a full-blown
credit crisis as lenders all
around tightened their bor·
rowing standards and .mortgage default rates soared,
especially on subprime
loans.
That has led investors to
become more nervous about
buying any ri sky credit
products, all but shutting
. down many corners of the
debt market.
Such events have left the
natio n's commercial and
investment banks struggling
to figure out how much certai n parts of their credit .
are
worth .
portfo lios
Accounting ·rul es require
them to adju st the value of
their assets each quarter b y
ass igning a price to them
based on what the marketplace commands for similar
assets, a process known as
"mark-to-market."
But right now there isn 't a
market for many of those
assets, which means bank
leqders have to re ly on
finan cial models or their
best guess work to determine what those values
might be. It 's a little like
playing darts . blindfolded:
with luck . you' ll hit what
you're aiming at.
· That 's where the auditors'
work may be most important. Withou t a market to
hase prices on, company

learned their . lesson from
the bad old days of Enron
and WorldCom. Arid if they
are holding companies' feet
to the flames on question·
able accounting moves,
that's nothing but good
news for investors.
Thi s has to do with how
companies value their risky
mortgage assets. Auditors
are collectively sayi ng they
will take a hard-line
approach to how thi s is
done. The ugly numbers
coming out from the likes of
Merrill Lynch &amp; Co . Inc.
and other bi g commercial
and investment banks prove
that message is gell ing
through.
No doubt the auditors find
themselves in a tough spot.
They are on the front Iines
of the market turmoil, having to monitor closely how
companies make sense of
what their mortgage and
other di stressed debt holdings are worth . It isn 't the
auditors job to do the math ,
jLst to make sure the companies ha ve accounted for it
properly.
·
Tha't process is very dilfi·
cult right now. Starting in
the middle of the summer: managers
must
make
the collap.sc in the housing assumptio ns , tel calculate
and mortgage markets their valuations, such as the

percent of mortgages that
will default or forecasts for
interest rates.
It's up the aud,itors to
make sure those assump·
lions are based on reality,
notes Edward Ketz, associate professor of accounting
at the Smeal College of
Business at Pennsylvania
State University and coauthor of a new book, "Fair
Value Measurements."
"The auditors have to do
this. as a matter of self-interest and survival," Ketz said .
"They need to cover their
own positions by getting the
bad news on the books
sooner rather than later."
Helping to guide the auditors through this process is
the newly formed Center for
Audit Quality, which was
created earlier this year with
the intention of being the
voice of the auditing profession. It has about 800IJUb·
lie-company auditing firms
as members, including
indu stry leaders Ernst &amp;
Y
o
u
n
g
,
PricewaterhouseCoopers,
Deloitte and KPMG.
The Washin gton-based
group iss ued three white
papers in early October that
tackled some of the most
pressing issues of the day,
inCluding how to use market
prices for hard-to-trade
securities and when to
account for losses on oft~
balance sheet investment
vehicles. The goal of the
~-·-

papers was to remind mem·
bers of the existing accounting standards and guide
them on how to apply them.
"It's a complex ·marketplace right now," said
Cindy Fomelli, the center's
executive director. "It is
important for our profession
to be proactive· and bold in
carrying out our responsi·
bilities as auditors ."
The auditors' tough
stance has been noticed ..
Merrill Lynch last week :
reported a big~er-than- ~
exJ?Ccted $8.4 b11lion in ·.
wntedowns, of which $7.9
billion was linked to mortgage-related securities. On
Oct. 5, the investment bank
had initially said it would
.take $4.5 billion in writedowns when it announced
earnings later in the month.
Merrill executives s·aid
they got that much bigger
number by deciding to go
with a valuation at the more
"conservative" end of the
range they had established
weeks before. Company
officials cited their more .
"conservative" approach 12 ,
times during a conference
call with analysts, acc.ording to a transcript provided
by Thomson Financial
StreetEvents.
That sounds like the com- .
pany's managers found
some religion when it came
time to account for such ·
losses, surely preached to :
them by their auditors.

--- -

-·--·

-

- ···

---

---·

Local Briefs
..

Election day luncheon set

POMEROY - God's NET Youth Center will hold an
election day soup and sandwich luncheon at the Mulberry
Community Center. Hours are I0:30 a.m. - 2 p.m. and the
luncheon is open to the public.

'Honor the Veterans' planned
RACINE- The Racine First BaP,tist'church will present
"Honor the Veterans" starting at 10:40 a.m., Sunday. All
veterans of the armed forces are invited to come and share
in what organizers hope will be a "special service. " The
event is meant to show appreciation to all who have served
America. A dinner will be served immediately following
the service.

from PageA1
attend a group work shop, a
free, one-time, individual
salon consultation with a
volunteer
cosmetologist
may be available in their
area. These trained beauty
experts help each patient
address her specific skin,
hair, and related appearance
needs.
Self-help materials can
be obtained free of charge
by request through the
"Look Good ... Feel Better"
toll-free number, 1-800395-LOOK ( 1-800-3955665).
The free self-help materials include a 30-minute
video entitled "Just For
You: A step-by-step guide to
help you look j;OOd feel better during cancer treatment,"
a step-by-step
instructional booklet and an
evaluation form. The videotape features cancer sur-

vivors and volunteers discussing appearance-related
side effects of cancer treat·
mcnt, as well as detailed
skincare information, "how
to" makeup tips, wig information , and pointers on
·head coverings. The companion booklet also covers
. nail care. ·
Free self-help material s
are al so available for men
by calling 1-800-395LOOK.
Visit
the
''Look
Good .... Feel Better" web site
at www.lookgoodfeelbetter.org. The program is
offered through a collaboration between the Cosmetic,
Toiletry, and Fragrance
Association Foundation , the
National
Cosmetology
AssoCiation and ACS .
Good ... Feel
"Look
Better" is salon and product
neutral. Volunteers and program participants do not
promote apy cosmetic product line or manufacturer.
All cosmetics used in the
group program have been
donated .

village wishes to move village offices into the cabin
to save on ut ility bills at
the Rutland Civic Center.
from PageA1
Council agreed to pay
the village insurance prethe sidewalk and the street. mium
which
cos ts
Searls felt · the village is $2,394.60.
responsible for any damMayor April
Burke
age caused by the tree to reported $3 28 was collectthe his house . Council ed in fine s from mavor's
decided to check with the court in August, while $278
village solicitor to find out was
collected
in
who th e tree actually September.
belongs to.
This article was based on
Fiscal Offi cer Joyce the minutes or co uncil 's
Frye asked if anything had most recent meeting and
been done to the cabin in are subject to change.
order to prepare moving
Council will next meet
village offices into the · in a special meeting at 7
structure. Vance said he'd p.m., Nov. 20, due to elecspoken to Burchett about tion day falling on it s reg·
f1xing the water leak. The ularly scheduled meeting.

Trail

\/Rl\f9&lt;1; Um!S!;S

GALLIPOLIS - Holzer Home Care
is a Medicare-certified home health
agency that has served Southeastern
Ohio and Mason Co unty in We st
Virginia, for more than 30 years .
The agency has provided . medical
service to thousands of patients with
compassion, caring.and clinical ex~el ­
lence, consistently receiving the hi ghest marks for quality of care and patient
satisfaction. Emma "Sally" Owens,
former patient and 72-year-old resident
of Meigs County, attributes her wonderful home health experience to the
staff of Holzer Home Care.
Owens suffers from diabetes, and as
a result, had her left leg amputated
below the knee. Later, she also had
surgery to remove three toes from her'
right foot on which a wound developed
after the surgery. While in the hospital,
Owens' physician recommended she be
discharged with home health care.
"I didn't know anythi ·g about home
health," said Owens. ''I thought I could
take care of myself, but soon ·realized I
needed help. I wanted a local agency
apd chose Holzer Home Care. I am
glad that I did and knew most of the
nurses as if they were my own kids."
While a patient of Hol zer Home
Care, Owens utilized a wound VAC, a
devi~e that uses negative pressure to
promote healing by converting an open
wound to a closed wound. It is used by
forming an airtight seal over the area
resulting in the removal of excess fluids, increased blood flow, and wound
closure.
·
Owens' primary care nurse, Lisa
Gilland, RN, visited three times a
week. Gilland said, "The wound VAC
gave Sally wonderful results. While in
the home, we also recorded her vital
signs, performed blood work, and
administered injections as prescribed

Mad,ge E. Baird, 92, Gall ipolis, died Saturday, Nov. 3,
2007, m the Holzer Medical C!!nter. She was precet;Jed in
death by her husband, former Gallia Count y Sheriff Oscar
C. Baird.
. Funerar services will be I p.m. Thursday, Nov. 8, 2007,
m the Good News Bar.tist Church with Rev. Clifford Curry
officiating. Burial w;ll be in the Gravel Hill Cemetery,
Cheshire. Friends may call from 5-8 p.m. Wednesday at the
Cremeens Funeral Chapel. The body will lie in state at the
church one hour prior to the funeral service. Expressions of
sympathy may be sent to the family by visiting www.cremeensfuneralhomes.com.

ACS

Election
from PageA1
Pomeroy, Todd Cullums,
Pomeroy, Barbara Anderson
Musser, Pomeroy, Norman
R. Humphreys, Pomeroy,
Larry D. Tucker, Pomeroy.
Southern Local (2):
Dennie E. Hill , Racine,
Jimmie L. Freeman, Racine,
Gary D. Evan s, Racine,
John Hoback, Racine.
·
Issues

-~ - · -

The Dail y Sen tinel • Page As

Holzer agency .provides home health qtre

Madge E. Baird

2000. And from . Albright,
probably best remembered
for clacking down a long
corridor In high heels to
· implore a miffed Arafat to
return to "the table" - and
a lot of good that did,
demeaning the United
States in the process.
And what about Carter?.
Despite Camp David where credit belongs to
Anwar
Sadat
and
Menachem Begin - this is .
downright nuts. It's not just :
that the ex-president has·
called the Bush administration that Rice works for the
worst in history. (After all,
he's also called Kim Jong-11
a "vigorous and intelligent .
man.") But in an all-tooactive
post-presidency..
Carter has behaved outrageously - · from efforts to
thwart international support
for George Bush (the father)
in the first Gulf War, to
recent statements in support·
of the terrorist group Hamas- that you have .to wonder
how Rice could even pick ·
up the phone to call him.
And then what would she
say? And, finally, why?
Too bad no one cares I{)
find out.

peaceful coex istence with
the Arabs; the Arabs only
desire Israel's annihilation.
That 's why the "peace"
American policy continually chases can never be more
thai) a "process" - a
process, in fits and starts
that comes closer to its own
hideous conclu sion with
every successive administration. For what can put an
end to such a lie-based
"process" but the end of
Israel itself?
Certainly, the long, wearing process has degraded
the very concept of Israel the idea of inviolable sovereignty, borders, capital even identity. It was a long
way from "Gaza, Never!" to
"Gaza, Take it!" - but not.
of course, too long for the
peace process. · It's been a
long way from "Jerusalem,
Never'" to "Jerusalem, It
might be negotiable," and
now the next stage in the
process looms in Annapolis.
And there's always a next
stage. But the longer the
peace process goes on, the
more vulnerable Israel
becomes to Arab conquest
- and the more vulnerable
the 'concept of Israel
becomes to the next stretch
of peace process.
So, Condi is looking for
"tips" from Bill Clinton,
who wound down his
administration so obsessed
with the "peace process" in
the M.iddle East - a legacy
to trump his impeachment
- that he barely noticed the
USS Cole attack on Oct. 12,

www.mydailysentinel.com

Obituaries

Rice tapping US. policy failures for Mideast suaess?

Lerters to the editor are welcome. They should be less
tlw n 300 words. All leuers are subject to editing, must be
Bv RACHEL BECK
AP BUSINESS WRITER
sig111:d. wul include address and telephone number. No
u11si;;ned /etten will be published. Letters should be in
NEW
YORK
good lasle, addressing issues, not personalities. Letters of
thanks to. organizations and individuals will not be acceJJt- Corporate auditing firms are
edfo r publication.
showing signs that they

J

Pagei\4.

Meeting

..

by her physician." Owens added, "It
was like going to the physician's office
without leaving my home."
Owens' wound healed with no complications: however, an . additional
wound developed later on her foot in
another location as a result of her diabetes. Owens' physician recommended
she have her foot amputated. "I did not
want to have another amputation as I
felt I would not been strong enough to
handle it," she said. Having a positive ·
outcome with the first wound, Owens
decided not to give up. Holzer Home
Care placed the wound VAC on
Owens' new wound. Once again, she'

exper ienced a wonderfu l outcome.
"It 's so nice· to see a good ou tcome with
someone who appreciates it as much as
Sa lly," sard Gilland.
When asked where Owens. would be
without Holzer Home Care she replied,
"I wouldn't be in my home. I would be
in a nursin g home or not here at all. I
feel Holzer Home Care saved my life."
Holzer Home Care provides skilled
nursing, home health aide services,
physical therapy. and speech therapy to
patients of all ages who require skilled
care. are essenti ally homebound. and
have a physician's referral. No prior
hospitalization is necessary.

Home Health Care month observed
.

.

POMEROY - More than
II million Americans .receive
home-delivered health care
from home health care
providers.
Last week in their honor,
Holzer Home Care, Holzer
Hospice and Holzer Extra Care
joined the National Association
for Home Care and Hospice in
celebrating November as
National Home Care Month
and National Hospice and
Palliative Care Month.
On Thursday, the Meigs
County Commission pro·
claimed this month as a time .
for celebrating home health
care services and encouraged
all citizens to learn more about
the home health and hospice
concepts of care.
National. themes for the two
celebrations are "Home Care:
Submitted photo
Compassionate Health Care
Delivered to Your Doorstep," Commissioners Jim Sheets. left , and Mick Davenport sign a proclamation designating
and "Hospice:
Love in November as Home Health Care Month , as left to right, Vi cki Nottingham, RN , directo r,
Holzer Extra Care; Sharon Shull, RN, BSN , director, Holzer Ho spice; and Ho lzer Home Care
Action".
"Caring for the sick, elderly employees Martha Me adows, HHA, and Sharon Stewart. RN .
and dying in their homes is added, 'To have reliable health- care and the home care services and terminally ill patients and
truly a privilege for us," .said care, respite and suppon ser- available in their local commu· their l~m1 ilies . Holzer's cm-eConnie Carleton, RN, BSN, vices 24 hours a day, seven (7) nities. Thi s year in particular it giving tew11 offers assi slt:lll~l!
Director of Holzer Home Care. days a week, in patient homes is in oportlll)t that people let their ranging li·01n help with daily
Sharon Shull, RN , BSN,
living to advanced medical
Director of Holzer Hospice, requires caring people like our elected ofticials know how vital treatment, along with palliative
stated, "Home Care and staff who tndy are 'the heart home healthcare providers are care tor those with life-limiting ·
Hospice professionals, volun- and soul of healthcare in to their community.
Hol7.er Home Care·. Holzer illness.
teers, and modem medicine America.' "
In addition to recognizing the Hospice and Holzer Extm Care
make it possible for people to
stay in their homes. regardless work of home care providers, embrace the mission of provid~
./!
of their condition."
National Home Care Month ing comprehensive in-home
~
~
•'
...
Vicki Nottingham, RN, serves to educate the public health and support services to
w
'
-,
'
' ~
· Manager of Holzer Extra Care, about issues affecting home the area's disabled, chronically

• Orange Township, additional 1.5 mill, live years,
fire protection . ,
Town ship,
• Chester
replacement of two mills
and increase of one mill,
five years, fire protection.
. • Chester Township, additional one mill, five years,
road improvements.
• Middleport
Village,
additional three mills, five ·
years, current expenses.
• MiddlE rt Vill~ ge,
renewal of on mill, five
years, fire prole tion.

Trussell will be helping to
organize the meetings and
will prepare the grant application.
from PageA1
Also discussed at council' s
recent meeting:
·
2008. In recent years both
Southern Superintendent
Middleport and Pomeroy Tony Deem discussed the
have received the grant. many grants Southern has
More recently, Pomeroy used recently received, including
the grant to replace side- · a federal grant to battle aleowalks, demolish condemiled hoi and substance abuse in
homes and purchase fire young people as well as
equipment. Syracuse ,cannot mentor "at risk" students.
rece;ve any of the funds until Grant personnel Roberta
Pomeroy expends all of its t l'Jill , Cara Bullington and
grant money next year. If Michelle ~vans were also at
Syracuse is awarded the the meetmg to help. butld
grant it will have two years to, commumty support fur the
spend the money.
programs.
.
·' Meigs County Grants
Police . Ch!ef Shannon
Administrator Jean Trussell Sm1th satd ht s depanment
recentlY. spoke to Syracuse will ,hold a " P~Iice Safety
Council about the grant at 1ts Day for kids dt Carleton
most
recent
meeting. School though the date has

Submitted photo

Emma "Sally" Owens, -eenter, poses for a picture with Tina Neigler, R.N., left.
and Lisa Gilland, R.N .

'A'·

-

"'

-:::-

• Letart Township, renewal of one mill, five years,
cemetery maintenance.
· • Olive Township, additional 2.8 mill s. five years.
road maintenance .
• Pomeroy
. Village,
renewal of 1.9 mills, five
years, road maintenance.
• Rutland ..Township, addi·
tiona! 2.16 mills, five years,
road mai ntenance .
• Rutl and
Town ship,
renewal of one mill , five
years, cemetery maintenance.
not been set yet. The event
will be simil ar to "Fi re
Prevention Safety Day."
Counci Iwoman Donna
Peterson reported she had
heard compliments from residents who liked seeing the
police cruiser in the vi llage
and patrolling the back
streets.

Symphony to Wfld music to
manufacturing in multimedia show
SPRINGFIELD (AP) People who come to the symphony hall will soon see
molten metal, stamping
machines and truck-building.
But the structure is not being
converted ·- it is hosting a
multimedia concert that
salutes America ·s manufac·
turers.
The Springfield Symphony
Orchestra concens will feature an entire program of
modem American music
while images of two dozen
manufacturers plaJ' out on
screens above the orchestra in
this western Ohio city.
Titled "A merican Made :
The Art of Manufauuring."
· the conce rt s at Kuss
Auditorium on Nov. I0 and

·~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~·

.Elect

Nov. II will featu re the likes
of compose rs
Leonard
Bernstein, Aaron Copland ,
John Williams and John
Corigliano, who won an
Oscar in 1999 for hi s score to
"The Red Violin." With the
footage flashing overhead.
the music will see m more
like a mov ie soundtrack.

Your Vote and Influence Is Appreciated
Thank-You
Paid for by Candidate, 121 Fairtane Dr. , Middlepon . OH

·~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~·~~~·~~~·~··~··

r~:R rr rR\11 \G IJtl~IJ. 'l"lU

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Sat., November 1o

'

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0

The Daily Sentinel

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

(740) 992-2156 • FAX (740) 992-2157
www.mydaiiysentinel.com

Ohio Valley Publishing

Co.

Dan Goodrich
Publisher

Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager-News Editor

Co ngress sl1all make no laiV respecting an
t'stablishment of religion, or prohibiting the
free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom
of speech, or of the press; or the right of the
people peaceably to assemble, and to petition
the Gor•i'rt~ment for a redress of grievances.
-The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution.

TODAY lN HISTORY
Today is Monday. Nov. 5, the 309th day of 2007. There
are 56 days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History: .
On Nov. 5, 1605, the "Gunpowder Plot" failed as Guy ·
Fawkes was seized before he could blow up .the English
Parliament.
On thi s date:
In 1857. muckraking journalist Ida M. Tarbell was born
in Erie Countv, Pa.
In 1872, suiTragist Susan B. Anthony defied the law by
attempting to vote for President Ulysses S. Grant. (She was
convicted by a judge and fined $100 but never paid the
fine.)
In 1912. Woodrow Wilson was elected president, defeating Progressive Party candidate Theodore Roosevelt and
incu mbent Republican William Howard Taft.
In 1940. President Franklin D. Roosevelt won an
unprecedented third term in office as he defeated
Republican challenger Wendell L. Willkie.
In 1968, Richard M. Nixon won the presidency, defeating
Vice President Hubert H. Humphrey and American
·
Independent candidate George C. Wallace.
I.n 19~7, Supreme Court nominee Douglas H. Ginsburg
admitted using marijuana several times in the 1960s and
70s, calling it a mi stake. (Ginsburg ended up withdrawing
his nomination.)
Ten years ago: The House overwhelmingly approved a
bill calling for the most far-reaching changes at the Internal
Revenue Service in 45 years.
Five years ago: In midterm elections, Republicans won
control of both houses of Congress and claimed a majority
of the governors' races . Securities and Exchange
Commission Chairman Harvey Pitt resigned under pressure
after a series of political missteps that had embarrassed the
White House. Randy Johnson won his record-tying fourth
straight National League Cy Young Award.
One year ago: Saddam Hussein was convicted and sentenced by the Iraqi High Tribunal to hang for crimes against
humanity. Saying that he was a "deceiver and liar" who had
given in to his dark side. the Rev. Ted Haggard confessed
to sex ual immorality· in a letter read from the pulpit of the
New Life Church in Colorado Springs, Colo. Rockwall
County, Texas, prosecutor Louis "Bill" Conradr Jr. killed
hjt'nself.as .police tried to serve him with an arrest warrant
allegi ng he had solicited sex with a minor online. Marilson
Gomes dos Santos of Brazil became the first South
American to win the New York City Marathon, finishing in
2:09.59; defending champion Jelena Prokopcuka of Latvia
won the women's race in 2:25:05. Former Turkish Prime
Minister Bulcnt Eccvit died in Ankara at age 81.
Thought for Today: "Imagi nation is the only key to the
fut ure. Without it none exists- with it all things are possi ble."- Ida M. Tarbell , American journalist (1857-1944).

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR

NIO

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Monday, November 5, 2007

Monday, November 5, 2007

Funny thing happened
recently. Or. rather. it didn't.
A hunk of juicy news broke .
hit the wires and fe ll with a
thud into media oblivion .
No one cared.
And what diu no one care
about'1 Let me qmJte from
·the origina l Reuters story:
"A nxiou ~ not to repeat mistakes of past Middle East
peace-making. Secretary of
State Condoleezza Rice has
turned to former presidents
Bill Clinton and Jimmy
Caner for tips ahead of her
own .
conference
(i n
Annapolis) this year."
Wait a minute . Rice has
turned to BiU Clinton, who
famously told Yasser Arafat,
''You have made me a failure." and whose wife. of
course, is running for president as the anti-Bush? And
to Jimmy "Day 444 of the
Hostage Crisis" Carter, who
can't stand the Bush administration almost as much as
he can' t stand' Israel? The
last time these two ex-presidents got together, the y
sealed a de al with Kim
Jong-11 that , in exchange for
a promise to eschew nuclear
weapons, delivered nuclear
technology to North Korea.
·She's turning to them for·
tips''
Rub your eyes in bewilderment, but there's more:
"Other sources of advice
have been· former U.S.
negotiator Dennis Ross and
ex-secretaries of state James
Baker, Henry Kissingerand
Madeleine Albright." The
names to cause special dis-

Diana
West

may here are James "(expleti ve) the Jews" Baker, aQd
Made lei·ne "running wi ld
after Arafat" Albright. (Not
that Denni s Ross. who
, never met a peace process
he couldn't draw out. or
Henry Kissinger, who may
be regarded as the original
architect of the U.S policy
that has consistently barred
Israel from total victory
over her enemies. exactly
inspire confidence.)
So let 's recap. Rice is
"reachin g out," as her State
Depao1ment spokesman put
it in New Age diplo-speak,
to living legends of failed
U.S. policy in the Middle
East, including among them
some of the most hostile
criti cs . of her own Bush
administration , the war on
terror; Israel or all of the
above . Thi s is at least
bizarre enough to raise a
few questions.
Or am I bein g harsh'' Hah.
For decades, American
Middle East policy has been
set according to a Big Lie:
that two sides, Jew and
Muslim, were equally
desirous of peaceful coexistence. This is demonstrably
false . Only Israel desires

(Diana West is a colum·
nisi far The Washington
Times. She is the author of .
· "The Death of the Grownup: How Americas Arrested
De velopment Is Bringing
Down
Western .
Civilization." She can be .
contacted
: via .
dianawest @verizon.net.) ·

I:ULLAR'i CLI~ON

ON ·nu: SU~lOCT
OF \Ll£GAL
lMM\G~sand

.

.

ALL BUSINESS.~ Corporate :auditors take a
tough stance valuation of risky mortgage debt
intensified into a full-blown
credit crisis as lenders all
around tightened their bor·
rowing standards and .mortgage default rates soared,
especially on subprime
loans.
That has led investors to
become more nervous about
buying any ri sky credit
products, all but shutting
. down many corners of the
debt market.
Such events have left the
natio n's commercial and
investment banks struggling
to figure out how much certai n parts of their credit .
are
worth .
portfo lios
Accounting ·rul es require
them to adju st the value of
their assets each quarter b y
ass igning a price to them
based on what the marketplace commands for similar
assets, a process known as
"mark-to-market."
But right now there isn 't a
market for many of those
assets, which means bank
leqders have to re ly on
finan cial models or their
best guess work to determine what those values
might be. It 's a little like
playing darts . blindfolded:
with luck . you' ll hit what
you're aiming at.
· That 's where the auditors'
work may be most important. Withou t a market to
hase prices on, company

learned their . lesson from
the bad old days of Enron
and WorldCom. Arid if they
are holding companies' feet
to the flames on question·
able accounting moves,
that's nothing but good
news for investors.
Thi s has to do with how
companies value their risky
mortgage assets. Auditors
are collectively sayi ng they
will take a hard-line
approach to how thi s is
done. The ugly numbers
coming out from the likes of
Merrill Lynch &amp; Co . Inc.
and other bi g commercial
and investment banks prove
that message is gell ing
through.
No doubt the auditors find
themselves in a tough spot.
They are on the front Iines
of the market turmoil, having to monitor closely how
companies make sense of
what their mortgage and
other di stressed debt holdings are worth . It isn 't the
auditors job to do the math ,
jLst to make sure the companies ha ve accounted for it
properly.
·
Tha't process is very dilfi·
cult right now. Starting in
the middle of the summer: managers
must
make
the collap.sc in the housing assumptio ns , tel calculate
and mortgage markets their valuations, such as the

percent of mortgages that
will default or forecasts for
interest rates.
It's up the aud,itors to
make sure those assump·
lions are based on reality,
notes Edward Ketz, associate professor of accounting
at the Smeal College of
Business at Pennsylvania
State University and coauthor of a new book, "Fair
Value Measurements."
"The auditors have to do
this. as a matter of self-interest and survival," Ketz said .
"They need to cover their
own positions by getting the
bad news on the books
sooner rather than later."
Helping to guide the auditors through this process is
the newly formed Center for
Audit Quality, which was
created earlier this year with
the intention of being the
voice of the auditing profession. It has about 800IJUb·
lie-company auditing firms
as members, including
indu stry leaders Ernst &amp;
Y
o
u
n
g
,
PricewaterhouseCoopers,
Deloitte and KPMG.
The Washin gton-based
group iss ued three white
papers in early October that
tackled some of the most
pressing issues of the day,
inCluding how to use market
prices for hard-to-trade
securities and when to
account for losses on oft~
balance sheet investment
vehicles. The goal of the
~-·-

papers was to remind mem·
bers of the existing accounting standards and guide
them on how to apply them.
"It's a complex ·marketplace right now," said
Cindy Fomelli, the center's
executive director. "It is
important for our profession
to be proactive· and bold in
carrying out our responsi·
bilities as auditors ."
The auditors' tough
stance has been noticed ..
Merrill Lynch last week :
reported a big~er-than- ~
exJ?Ccted $8.4 b11lion in ·.
wntedowns, of which $7.9
billion was linked to mortgage-related securities. On
Oct. 5, the investment bank
had initially said it would
.take $4.5 billion in writedowns when it announced
earnings later in the month.
Merrill executives s·aid
they got that much bigger
number by deciding to go
with a valuation at the more
"conservative" end of the
range they had established
weeks before. Company
officials cited their more .
"conservative" approach 12 ,
times during a conference
call with analysts, acc.ording to a transcript provided
by Thomson Financial
StreetEvents.
That sounds like the com- .
pany's managers found
some religion when it came
time to account for such ·
losses, surely preached to :
them by their auditors.

--- -

-·--·

-

- ···

---

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Local Briefs
..

Election day luncheon set

POMEROY - God's NET Youth Center will hold an
election day soup and sandwich luncheon at the Mulberry
Community Center. Hours are I0:30 a.m. - 2 p.m. and the
luncheon is open to the public.

'Honor the Veterans' planned
RACINE- The Racine First BaP,tist'church will present
"Honor the Veterans" starting at 10:40 a.m., Sunday. All
veterans of the armed forces are invited to come and share
in what organizers hope will be a "special service. " The
event is meant to show appreciation to all who have served
America. A dinner will be served immediately following
the service.

from PageA1
attend a group work shop, a
free, one-time, individual
salon consultation with a
volunteer
cosmetologist
may be available in their
area. These trained beauty
experts help each patient
address her specific skin,
hair, and related appearance
needs.
Self-help materials can
be obtained free of charge
by request through the
"Look Good ... Feel Better"
toll-free number, 1-800395-LOOK ( 1-800-3955665).
The free self-help materials include a 30-minute
video entitled "Just For
You: A step-by-step guide to
help you look j;OOd feel better during cancer treatment,"
a step-by-step
instructional booklet and an
evaluation form. The videotape features cancer sur-

vivors and volunteers discussing appearance-related
side effects of cancer treat·
mcnt, as well as detailed
skincare information, "how
to" makeup tips, wig information , and pointers on
·head coverings. The companion booklet also covers
. nail care. ·
Free self-help material s
are al so available for men
by calling 1-800-395LOOK.
Visit
the
''Look
Good .... Feel Better" web site
at www.lookgoodfeelbetter.org. The program is
offered through a collaboration between the Cosmetic,
Toiletry, and Fragrance
Association Foundation , the
National
Cosmetology
AssoCiation and ACS .
Good ... Feel
"Look
Better" is salon and product
neutral. Volunteers and program participants do not
promote apy cosmetic product line or manufacturer.
All cosmetics used in the
group program have been
donated .

village wishes to move village offices into the cabin
to save on ut ility bills at
the Rutland Civic Center.
from PageA1
Council agreed to pay
the village insurance prethe sidewalk and the street. mium
which
cos ts
Searls felt · the village is $2,394.60.
responsible for any damMayor April
Burke
age caused by the tree to reported $3 28 was collectthe his house . Council ed in fine s from mavor's
decided to check with the court in August, while $278
village solicitor to find out was
collected
in
who th e tree actually September.
belongs to.
This article was based on
Fiscal Offi cer Joyce the minutes or co uncil 's
Frye asked if anything had most recent meeting and
been done to the cabin in are subject to change.
order to prepare moving
Council will next meet
village offices into the · in a special meeting at 7
structure. Vance said he'd p.m., Nov. 20, due to elecspoken to Burchett about tion day falling on it s reg·
f1xing the water leak. The ularly scheduled meeting.

Trail

\/Rl\f9&lt;1; Um!S!;S

GALLIPOLIS - Holzer Home Care
is a Medicare-certified home health
agency that has served Southeastern
Ohio and Mason Co unty in We st
Virginia, for more than 30 years .
The agency has provided . medical
service to thousands of patients with
compassion, caring.and clinical ex~el ­
lence, consistently receiving the hi ghest marks for quality of care and patient
satisfaction. Emma "Sally" Owens,
former patient and 72-year-old resident
of Meigs County, attributes her wonderful home health experience to the
staff of Holzer Home Care.
Owens suffers from diabetes, and as
a result, had her left leg amputated
below the knee. Later, she also had
surgery to remove three toes from her'
right foot on which a wound developed
after the surgery. While in the hospital,
Owens' physician recommended she be
discharged with home health care.
"I didn't know anythi ·g about home
health," said Owens. ''I thought I could
take care of myself, but soon ·realized I
needed help. I wanted a local agency
apd chose Holzer Home Care. I am
glad that I did and knew most of the
nurses as if they were my own kids."
While a patient of Hol zer Home
Care, Owens utilized a wound VAC, a
devi~e that uses negative pressure to
promote healing by converting an open
wound to a closed wound. It is used by
forming an airtight seal over the area
resulting in the removal of excess fluids, increased blood flow, and wound
closure.
·
Owens' primary care nurse, Lisa
Gilland, RN, visited three times a
week. Gilland said, "The wound VAC
gave Sally wonderful results. While in
the home, we also recorded her vital
signs, performed blood work, and
administered injections as prescribed

Mad,ge E. Baird, 92, Gall ipolis, died Saturday, Nov. 3,
2007, m the Holzer Medical C!!nter. She was precet;Jed in
death by her husband, former Gallia Count y Sheriff Oscar
C. Baird.
. Funerar services will be I p.m. Thursday, Nov. 8, 2007,
m the Good News Bar.tist Church with Rev. Clifford Curry
officiating. Burial w;ll be in the Gravel Hill Cemetery,
Cheshire. Friends may call from 5-8 p.m. Wednesday at the
Cremeens Funeral Chapel. The body will lie in state at the
church one hour prior to the funeral service. Expressions of
sympathy may be sent to the family by visiting www.cremeensfuneralhomes.com.

ACS

Election
from PageA1
Pomeroy, Todd Cullums,
Pomeroy, Barbara Anderson
Musser, Pomeroy, Norman
R. Humphreys, Pomeroy,
Larry D. Tucker, Pomeroy.
Southern Local (2):
Dennie E. Hill , Racine,
Jimmie L. Freeman, Racine,
Gary D. Evan s, Racine,
John Hoback, Racine.
·
Issues

-~ - · -

The Dail y Sen tinel • Page As

Holzer agency .provides home health qtre

Madge E. Baird

2000. And from . Albright,
probably best remembered
for clacking down a long
corridor In high heels to
· implore a miffed Arafat to
return to "the table" - and
a lot of good that did,
demeaning the United
States in the process.
And what about Carter?.
Despite Camp David where credit belongs to
Anwar
Sadat
and
Menachem Begin - this is .
downright nuts. It's not just :
that the ex-president has·
called the Bush administration that Rice works for the
worst in history. (After all,
he's also called Kim Jong-11
a "vigorous and intelligent .
man.") But in an all-tooactive
post-presidency..
Carter has behaved outrageously - · from efforts to
thwart international support
for George Bush (the father)
in the first Gulf War, to
recent statements in support·
of the terrorist group Hamas- that you have .to wonder
how Rice could even pick ·
up the phone to call him.
And then what would she
say? And, finally, why?
Too bad no one cares I{)
find out.

peaceful coex istence with
the Arabs; the Arabs only
desire Israel's annihilation.
That 's why the "peace"
American policy continually chases can never be more
thai) a "process" - a
process, in fits and starts
that comes closer to its own
hideous conclu sion with
every successive administration. For what can put an
end to such a lie-based
"process" but the end of
Israel itself?
Certainly, the long, wearing process has degraded
the very concept of Israel the idea of inviolable sovereignty, borders, capital even identity. It was a long
way from "Gaza, Never!" to
"Gaza, Take it!" - but not.
of course, too long for the
peace process. · It's been a
long way from "Jerusalem,
Never'" to "Jerusalem, It
might be negotiable," and
now the next stage in the
process looms in Annapolis.
And there's always a next
stage. But the longer the
peace process goes on, the
more vulnerable Israel
becomes to Arab conquest
- and the more vulnerable
the 'concept of Israel
becomes to the next stretch
of peace process.
So, Condi is looking for
"tips" from Bill Clinton,
who wound down his
administration so obsessed
with the "peace process" in
the M.iddle East - a legacy
to trump his impeachment
- that he barely noticed the
USS Cole attack on Oct. 12,

www.mydailysentinel.com

Obituaries

Rice tapping US. policy failures for Mideast suaess?

Lerters to the editor are welcome. They should be less
tlw n 300 words. All leuers are subject to editing, must be
Bv RACHEL BECK
AP BUSINESS WRITER
sig111:d. wul include address and telephone number. No
u11si;;ned /etten will be published. Letters should be in
NEW
YORK
good lasle, addressing issues, not personalities. Letters of
thanks to. organizations and individuals will not be acceJJt- Corporate auditing firms are
edfo r publication.
showing signs that they

J

Pagei\4.

Meeting

..

by her physician." Owens added, "It
was like going to the physician's office
without leaving my home."
Owens' wound healed with no complications: however, an . additional
wound developed later on her foot in
another location as a result of her diabetes. Owens' physician recommended
she have her foot amputated. "I did not
want to have another amputation as I
felt I would not been strong enough to
handle it," she said. Having a positive ·
outcome with the first wound, Owens
decided not to give up. Holzer Home
Care placed the wound VAC on
Owens' new wound. Once again, she'

exper ienced a wonderfu l outcome.
"It 's so nice· to see a good ou tcome with
someone who appreciates it as much as
Sa lly," sard Gilland.
When asked where Owens. would be
without Holzer Home Care she replied,
"I wouldn't be in my home. I would be
in a nursin g home or not here at all. I
feel Holzer Home Care saved my life."
Holzer Home Care provides skilled
nursing, home health aide services,
physical therapy. and speech therapy to
patients of all ages who require skilled
care. are essenti ally homebound. and
have a physician's referral. No prior
hospitalization is necessary.

Home Health Care month observed
.

.

POMEROY - More than
II million Americans .receive
home-delivered health care
from home health care
providers.
Last week in their honor,
Holzer Home Care, Holzer
Hospice and Holzer Extra Care
joined the National Association
for Home Care and Hospice in
celebrating November as
National Home Care Month
and National Hospice and
Palliative Care Month.
On Thursday, the Meigs
County Commission pro·
claimed this month as a time .
for celebrating home health
care services and encouraged
all citizens to learn more about
the home health and hospice
concepts of care.
National. themes for the two
celebrations are "Home Care:
Submitted photo
Compassionate Health Care
Delivered to Your Doorstep," Commissioners Jim Sheets. left , and Mick Davenport sign a proclamation designating
and "Hospice:
Love in November as Home Health Care Month , as left to right, Vi cki Nottingham, RN , directo r,
Holzer Extra Care; Sharon Shull, RN, BSN , director, Holzer Ho spice; and Ho lzer Home Care
Action".
"Caring for the sick, elderly employees Martha Me adows, HHA, and Sharon Stewart. RN .
and dying in their homes is added, 'To have reliable health- care and the home care services and terminally ill patients and
truly a privilege for us," .said care, respite and suppon ser- available in their local commu· their l~m1 ilies . Holzer's cm-eConnie Carleton, RN, BSN, vices 24 hours a day, seven (7) nities. Thi s year in particular it giving tew11 offers assi slt:lll~l!
Director of Holzer Home Care. days a week, in patient homes is in oportlll)t that people let their ranging li·01n help with daily
Sharon Shull, RN , BSN,
living to advanced medical
Director of Holzer Hospice, requires caring people like our elected ofticials know how vital treatment, along with palliative
stated, "Home Care and staff who tndy are 'the heart home healthcare providers are care tor those with life-limiting ·
Hospice professionals, volun- and soul of healthcare in to their community.
Hol7.er Home Care·. Holzer illness.
teers, and modem medicine America.' "
In addition to recognizing the Hospice and Holzer Extm Care
make it possible for people to
stay in their homes. regardless work of home care providers, embrace the mission of provid~
./!
of their condition."
National Home Care Month ing comprehensive in-home
~
~
•'
...
Vicki Nottingham, RN, serves to educate the public health and support services to
w
'
-,
'
' ~
· Manager of Holzer Extra Care, about issues affecting home the area's disabled, chronically

• Orange Township, additional 1.5 mill, live years,
fire protection . ,
Town ship,
• Chester
replacement of two mills
and increase of one mill,
five years, fire protection.
. • Chester Township, additional one mill, five years,
road improvements.
• Middleport
Village,
additional three mills, five ·
years, current expenses.
• MiddlE rt Vill~ ge,
renewal of on mill, five
years, fire prole tion.

Trussell will be helping to
organize the meetings and
will prepare the grant application.
from PageA1
Also discussed at council' s
recent meeting:
·
2008. In recent years both
Southern Superintendent
Middleport and Pomeroy Tony Deem discussed the
have received the grant. many grants Southern has
More recently, Pomeroy used recently received, including
the grant to replace side- · a federal grant to battle aleowalks, demolish condemiled hoi and substance abuse in
homes and purchase fire young people as well as
equipment. Syracuse ,cannot mentor "at risk" students.
rece;ve any of the funds until Grant personnel Roberta
Pomeroy expends all of its t l'Jill , Cara Bullington and
grant money next year. If Michelle ~vans were also at
Syracuse is awarded the the meetmg to help. butld
grant it will have two years to, commumty support fur the
spend the money.
programs.
.
·' Meigs County Grants
Police . Ch!ef Shannon
Administrator Jean Trussell Sm1th satd ht s depanment
recentlY. spoke to Syracuse will ,hold a " P~Iice Safety
Council about the grant at 1ts Day for kids dt Carleton
most
recent
meeting. School though the date has

Submitted photo

Emma "Sally" Owens, -eenter, poses for a picture with Tina Neigler, R.N., left.
and Lisa Gilland, R.N .

'A'·

-

"'

-:::-

• Letart Township, renewal of one mill, five years,
cemetery maintenance.
· • Olive Township, additional 2.8 mill s. five years.
road maintenance .
• Pomeroy
. Village,
renewal of 1.9 mills, five
years, road maintenance.
• Rutland ..Township, addi·
tiona! 2.16 mills, five years,
road mai ntenance .
• Rutl and
Town ship,
renewal of one mill , five
years, cemetery maintenance.
not been set yet. The event
will be simil ar to "Fi re
Prevention Safety Day."
Counci Iwoman Donna
Peterson reported she had
heard compliments from residents who liked seeing the
police cruiser in the vi llage
and patrolling the back
streets.

Symphony to Wfld music to
manufacturing in multimedia show
SPRINGFIELD (AP) People who come to the symphony hall will soon see
molten metal, stamping
machines and truck-building.
But the structure is not being
converted ·- it is hosting a
multimedia concert that
salutes America ·s manufac·
turers.
The Springfield Symphony
Orchestra concens will feature an entire program of
modem American music
while images of two dozen
manufacturers plaJ' out on
screens above the orchestra in
this western Ohio city.
Titled "A merican Made :
The Art of Manufauuring."
· the conce rt s at Kuss
Auditorium on Nov. I0 and

·~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~·

.Elect

Nov. II will featu re the likes
of compose rs
Leonard
Bernstein, Aaron Copland ,
John Williams and John
Corigliano, who won an
Oscar in 1999 for hi s score to
"The Red Violin." With the
footage flashing overhead.
the music will see m more
like a mov ie soundtrack.

Your Vote and Influence Is Appreciated
Thank-You
Paid for by Candidate, 121 Fairtane Dr. , Middlepon . OH

·~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~·~~~·~~~·~··~··

r~:R rr rR\11 \G IJtl~IJ. 'l"lU

Paul Bub Williams
Sat., November 1o

'

7:00pm

Hooray for Hollywood
Nov. 24th
7:30pm
Box OHice: 428 2nd Ave.
Gatttpotls, OH {740) 446·ARTS

Choices Expo:
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~lifl 'i'·
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Nov. 6 - 4-8 p.m . .
Nov. 7 - 8 a.m. - 1 p.m.
Comfort Inn
700 Pike St. Marietta

.... ~4
y

Free Admission!
Exhibits • Free Food • Door Prizes • Mini Sem inars • Live
Entertainment • Free &amp; Reduced· Ra1e Blood Test1 ng • D1saste r
Readiness • Fall s Preventoon
Aging -lriendly Homes • Fire Safety • Energy Efficiency

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Salisbury Townsh~p Fiscal Officer
(Clerk)

~

For More Details: 1·800·331 ·2644
or www.areaagency8.org

f7"i:'\
A. .
aaa
8 · Area Agency on gmg
'0LJ
.
Sl·n·iu)"

in O hin '~ ·~th L' Il~ . ll ••d.. l ll ~ \ki):' . 1\ l o iHLIC .
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sl' ll iUJ"\

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�I

LOCAL. STAT

The Daily Sentinel

OU chosen for global communication project
ATHENS
Ohio
University has been named
a partner in a multimilliondollar effon that will affect
the way agencies, media
and ci tizens use communication to improve health
and development worldwide.
The United States Agency
for
International
Development
(U SAID)
recently announced that the
university was selected as
one
of seven
North
American partners in the
new Pannership for Health
and
Development
Communication to be led by
Academy
for
the
Educational Development
(AED). The program will
work throughout the developing world, with a major
focus on Africa.
The three-year partnership will focus on chal lenges in health communication, including family
planning arid reproductive
health, HIV I AIDS prevention , .maternal and child
health, tuberculosis, malaria
and avian influenza. It also
will address issues involving the environment, civil
society, and democracy and
governance. The partnership, which has a funding
ceiling of $175 million, may
extend an additional two
years.
"This is· not just about
US AID funding public-edu-

PageA6
Monday, November 5,

2007 ·

Recount procedures,
paper jams wony Cuyahoga
elections officials

ca tion cam paigns," said and the research and desig n Obrego n, director of the
Margare t Parlato, senior firm IDEO. Overseas part- Communi ca ti on
and
vice president and director ners include Soul City and · Development
Studies
of the AED Global Health, Social Surveys in South Progra m in the Center for
Population , and Nutrition Africa. Straight Talk in Internati onal St udi es. "This
CLEVELAND 1AP) - Elections official' in Ohio ·s most
Group. "Our task is to help Uganda. and th e Center for · al so will require advocacy populous county remain concerned about reeount procedures
countries incorporate very Media Studies a nd New effort s to engage po licy- heading into Tuesday's local election .
•
powerful communication Concept
Current rules governing Ohio recounts are based on a 2005
Inform atio n and deci sion-makers to sllpapproaches into the way Systems, both in India .
directive issueu by then-Secret;p)l of State Ken Blackwell. But
port project acti vities."
they fight some of their . "As t;te unive rsity and
Faculty from the Scripps that directi ve doesn 't say how to address the pracucal and legal
most difficult battles -- capacity-building partner of College of Co mmunication issues that come with re-creating a paper trail if ballots are .
whether it is HIV/AIDS , this consortium, we expect and
the
Ce nt e r
for damaged or the county\ new electronic voting machines have ·.
rapid P11pulation grow th , to pl ay a substantial role." Inte rnational Studies will it paper jmn.
·
·
pollution
or
con fli ct said
"We
need
to
ti
aure
something
out
quickly."
said
Jane
Plutte
n~
·
contribute. Mould said fac. Davia Mould , associate
be twee n different ethnic dean for research and grad- ulty from o ther colle ges the county 's elections director. " We have a presidential election .
groups."
uate
studies.
"Ohio may be called upon as addi - looming. und the lust preside ntial election resulted 111 a countyThe program will build Uni versity has a great net- tional needs are identi lied.
.
wide recount."
ca pacities in local media, work of partnerships with - " Programs in 'the Scripps
After paper jams and unreadable ballots emerged as a prob, ·
advertising and research universities in the develop- College of Communication !em in the county, Blackwell's office suggested repnntmg bal- .
tlrms, universities and non- ing world· and alumni in have long been known for lots from the_memory cards inside touch-screen machmes. But :
governmental
organizamany countries. We hope to the ways in which they county elections officrals questioned whether that w~s legal ·
tions. It al so wi ll work with
,
.·
work with many of them in serve local. national and and asked in September 2006 for a new policy.
government agencies to
A
few
months
later,
Jennifer
Brunner
was
elected
to
replace
,
the projects we ' ll be und~r­ international communities,"
strengthen relations with the
Blackwell.
She
has
yet
to
address
the
issue,
spokesman
Patrick
.
taking."
said Scripps College of
media and improve the
·
Most of the funding for Communication
Dean Gallaway said.
effective use of strategic
If
Tuesday's
election
requires
a
recount
and
unreadable
ba!comm uni cation to influence projects will come from Gregory Shepherd . "Our lots become an issue. the board wtll call the secretary ot state s ·
change and improve prac- USA ID country missions, service to others and our office for guidance. Platten said.
·.
tices at a population level. so Ohio University 's tasks research and creative activi- · Platten was selected in June to run voting in the county that ·
As the primary university will depend on individual ty for others distingui shes is the nation's 15th largest election j urisdiction with more than
partner, Ohio University country needs. One of the us from other programs . I million voters.
will work with universities, goals of the project is to This grant is, in part, recogThe county has had difficulties adapting to electronic voting .
government ministries and effect posit ive change even nition of our experti se oand since the May 2006 primary. Nearly I0 percent of official bal- .
reputation in thi s regard.
development agencies to after the project ends.
lots in that election were destroyed, blank. illegible or other"Capacity-building activi" It al so fits well with the wise compromised, a stljdy ordered last year by county com- ·
provide training and skills
in health and development ties will focus on the devel- longstanding rpission of missioners found.
opment of technical compe- Ohio Universi ty to serv). the
communication.
The county had two recounts this year in small municipal ·
Other North American tencies within govern ment underserved. from rural 'elections, but the recounted votes did not match the oflicial
to
Latin results in either case, oftlcials said.
partners include CARE institutions, local organiza- Appalachia
tions,
and
university
and
America,
Africa
and
International, lnternews , the
Recounl~ rely on paper records produced by the county's .
University of Washington's training. iustitution s in an Southeast Asia," Shepherd new electronic voting machines. Titose records, which resem- .
HIY/AIDS
Unit,
the ··effon to ensure that techni- said.
ble the tapes in cash registers, are sometimes difficult to read.
Ohio University so far has
Communication for Social cal capacities will be susPlatten has said she is working closely with the county's votChange Consortium, the tained beyond the life of the received $20,000 to cover ing machine vendor, Nonh Canton-based Diebold Inc's
Communication Initialive, project,"
said
Rafael project stan ~ up costs.
Premier Election Solutions, to reline electronic voting.
Other counties using Premier's touch-screen machines have
had successful recounts, company spokesman Mark Radke
said. Most problems with paper jams have been alleviated by
teaching poll workers how to load the paper, he said.

·Cuyahoga Valley National Park

.officials combat flooding in park
AKRON (AP) - Storm- ·
Paved surfaces from sub- zonmg to their building
water · runoff has regularly urban
and commercial . codes, developing village
flooded streams and has development don't let rain- and city rules about how far
sometimes washed away water soak into the ground. houses can be from streams
roads, bridges and irails in Instead, the water runs off in and looking into using wetCuyahoga Valley National increasing volumes and at lands to control runoff.
"We ' re not out to stop
Park, and park officials are increasing speeds into the
worried that a lack of s.torm- 33,000-acre parks' 29 small development," said park
ecologist · Kevin Skerl. " We
water management in sur- streams.
rounding communities will · The water sweeps quickly are .appealing to communionly make the problem . through-the park, which lies ties' sense of shared responworse.
between Cleveland and sibility."
Storm-water rules limit
Heavy rains have · hit the Akron, causing erosion,
park and surrounding com-· reducing water quality and runoff from new developmunities three times in the dogging channels and cui- ments, but · not existing
past five years, causing an · vcns with sediment, which development, leaving many
communities Y(ithout guideestimated $6 million in dam- ·exacerbates the flooding.
age in the park, park
In response. park officials lines for storm-water conSup~rintendent John Debo
are trying to persuade com- tainment, Debo said.
in
Summit,
said.
munities
. The edges of the park have
"Flooding,
flooding , Cuyahoga. Medina and changed dramatically in the
flooding" is the biggest Ponage counties to improve past 50 years, Skerl said. In
problem facing the park, he their storm-water manage- 1959, 39 percent of the land
said.
ment by adding conservation that is now within or imme-

diately bordering the park
was developed, and 26 percent was farn1ed. In 2000, 64
percent was developed, and
only 2 percent was farmed .
. A park study of 14 nearby
communities found that the
population of those communities grew by I 0,000 people
between 1990 and 2000.
Between 2000 and 2003, the
14 communities averaged 41
new houses a year.
The former national recreation area was designated a
national park in 2000.
Education and cooperation
by park oflicials are stm1ing
to pay off. Nineteen of' 32
communities closest to the
park have adopted setback
ordinances to limit developme nt · along streams, for
example.

Southern reports honor roll
RACINE - The Southern
Local School District recently released its honor roll for
the first nine weeks.
Seniors, all A's, Morgan
Brown, Lindsey Buzzard,
Erin Chapman, Sarah EIDebaja, Courtney Ginther,
Ashley Weddle.
A and B honor roll,
Bonnie Allen, Teddy Brown,
Ryan
Chapman,
Tyler
Circle,
Ericka
Cogar,
He&lt;jther Cundiff, Stephanie
Cundiff, Abigail Jenkins,
Krystle Marler, Whitney
Wolfe-Riffle,
Kaylyn
Spradling, Deidra Sprouse.
Juniors, all A's, Merri
Collins, Chris Holter, Drew
Hoover, Emma Hunter.
Jaiine Warner.
A and B honor roll, Brad
Brown, Brody Flint, Bryan
Harris,
Tosha
Jones,
Brittany Meldau, Chelsea
Pape, Samantha Patterson,
April Richards. Weston
Robens, J.D. Whittington.
Sophomores, all A's,
Michael Manuel , Breanna
Taylor, Lynzee Tucker.
-A and B honor· roll,

Taylor Deem, Cheyene
Dunn, James Evans, Kris
Kleski , Jon Powell , Cyle
Rees, Dustin Salser, Dustin
Smeck, Mac Wood, Katie
Woods.
·
Freshmen, all A's, Eric
Buzzard, Zachary Manuel.
A and B honor roll. Eric
Cundiff, Trevor Flint, Joey
Forester, Bobbi Harris ,
Sarah Matthews, Chat!ey
Pyles,
Sara
Reitmire ,
Braxton Thorla,
Adam
Warden, Tyler Wolfe.
Eighth grade, all A' s,
Andrew Ginther, Hope
Teaford.
·
A and B honor roll,
Martina Arms. Emily Ash,
Alison Brown, Cierra Curan,
Harley Hamilton, Amber
Hayman,
Katelyn
Hill,
Marcus
Hill,
Kelsey
Holsinger, Chelsea Holter,
Miranda Holtc:r, Morgan
McMillan, Emma Powell,
Andrew Rosebe rry, Olivia
S.earls, Abbie . Williams,
Natalie Wood.
Seventh grade, all A's,
Shelby Pickens, Stefanic
Pyles.

Visit us online at
www.mydallysentinel.com

Your online source for news
Tornadtll!$ •JWaysmove !Orwairl

Elect Jimmie L. Freema·
. n·
'

Southern Board ·of Education ·
Graduate So11thern Hlp School and Ohio Univenity
Army Vetera• of Operation Iraqi Freedom
Member America• Legion Post li02, VeterAn! of Foreign Wan Post9921i, Pomeroy-lbcine F&amp;AM

A and B honor roll , Ryan Schenkelberg, Tristen
Timothy
Elam , Austin Wolfe.
John so n, Jennifer McCoy.
Jaclyn Mees, Adam Pape,
Joe Smith.
Sixth grade, A and B
honor- roll , Ryan Daughtery,
Darien
Diddle,
Sarah
Eakins, Jordan Huddleston,
Baylee Hupp, Lacey Hupp,
Katie
Jenkins, · Nathan
Leamond, Taylor McNickle,
Jamie
0' Brien, Casey
Pickens, Braden Spencer.
Fifth grade. all A's,
Bethany Theiss.
A and B honor roll ,
Reliable and Dependable
Sophie
Ashley
Baker,
Guinther, Addie Hayman,
Your influence and support will be appreciated.
Jacob Hoback, Caitlyn
Holter, Bradley McCoy,
Kevin
Perry,
Chais
Paid for
the Candidate
Rodriguez, Cassie Roush ,

VOTE FOR

JOEY JARRELL
FOR CLERK OF
LETART TOWNSHIP

Jeff Bassett
acre/ Jleart
Catfi.o[ic Cfi.urcfi.

Annual Fall Bazaar
1bUJ'11dav•Novemher 8th

Dinner Begins at 4:JG
$8.00 Adults

$4.00·6 to 12

S and under •·ree

Meno-Crtamed b11ked chkbn or h~t~m'
lluownwdtt ooudk!s, mashed poi•IOl'fll &amp; gra-·."'
Mn-tn bt-ans, coiH~w,
&amp; dt#&gt;.'~crt.

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Home Loan Specialist

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Holrt. lsi UOO.OO, lnd U9Q.OO
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·

www.peoplesbancorp.com
jbassett@pebo.com

C

BY FO

BY MADLEN READ
M' BUSINESS WRITER

. 304-674-4406
Toll Free 800-374-6123
Fax 740-373-8874
Cell 304-210-7016

2007

NEW YORK - A month
after foretelling a better future
for Citigroup Inc., Charles
Prince has no future of his
own at the nation 's largest
fmancial institution.
'
Instead,
former
U.S.
Treasury Secretary Roben E.
Rubin, oitce co-chairman of
Goldman, Sachs &amp; Co., will
be chairing· the beleaguered
bank, which may take until
well into next year to get back
on track after makihg bad bets
on debt. Sir Win Bischoff.
chairman of &lt;;:iti Europe and a
inember of the Citi management and operating c~rnmit­
tees , will serve as interim
CEO.
. Prince 's widely expected
departure from the positions
of chief executive and chairman came Sunday at an emergency meeting of Citi's board,
at which the .. company also
decided to take $8 billion to
HI billion in writedowns. Citi
already took a hit during the
third quaner of $6.5 billion
from asset writedowns and
other credit-related losses.
"It was the honorable

URY SECY RUBIN

course. given the losses we are · souring home mongages. At
now announcing," Rubin said that time, Prince said the
of Prince's resignation in an bank's earnings would return
interview with The Associated to nonnal in the fourth quarter.
Press.
But
when
Citigroup
Prince, 57, joined former released its third-quaner
Merrill Lynch &amp; Co. CEO results two weeks later, the
Stan 0 ' Neal, who resigned write-downs and credit costs
from the investment bank last exceeded $6 billion, and Chief
month, as the highest-protlle Financial
Oftlcer
Gary
ca~ualties of the debt crisis
Crittenden indicated the outthat ha' cost billions at other look going forward wasn't as
tinancial institutions as well.
upbeat as Prince had predictPrince became chief execu- ed.
tive of Citigroup in October
Citigroup wasn 't alone in
2003. Many shareholders crit- its third-quarter turmoil.
icized him openly for much of When borrowers. with poor
hi s tenure, as Citigroup's · credit stopped paying their
stock lagged its peers while mortgages, many banks not
Prince executed what was only had to take losses on
called an umbrella model of those subprime mongages,
corporate organization, with they also saw instruments in
several separate lines of busi- their ponfolios backed by
ness. Shares closed Friday at mortgages plummet in
$37.73, about 20 percent value.
below where they were when
But Citigroup's stumbles
Prince became CEO.
were particularly grievous,
Prince 's position looked given the bank 's size, histoespecially shaky after the ry and CEO, who had been
· company on Oct. I estimated telling shareholders for
that th.ird-quarter profit would years to give his strategy a
decline about 60 percent to chance. Even in October,
some $2.Q billion after seeing Prince said in a call to ananearly $6 billion in credit costs ly sts: "I think any fairand write-downs of overly minded person would say
leveraged corporate debt and that strategic plan is work-

in g."
The umbrella model that
Sanford I. Weill created and
Prince touted looked like a
giant mess compared to its
conglomerate counterpart
JPMorgan Chase &amp; Co. now Jed by Weill's fo.rmer
protege, Jamie Dimon .
JPMorgan's
writedowns
were smaller, and strength
in a~set management, security services, card servi'Ces
and commercial banking
units made up for weakness
in other areas .. Having cut
costs and built up cash
reserves in previous quarters , the bank was better
prepared for a tough lending
climate.
Meanwhile, Citigroup's
expenses outweighed rev enues. it botched its fixed
income trading operations,
al)d its cash-to-debt ratio
dipped.
The anger toward Prince
was so intense that during a
conference call last month,
Deutsche Bank analyst
Mike Mayo told Prince that
investors wanted a significant change in management.
His supporters, though ,
argue that he was dealt a

tough hand when hi s prede- to navigate the ti ght credit
cessor. Weill gave him the markets.
reins, and that matching the
Bisc hoff, 66, was the
hefty profit gains Gitigroup
chairman o f the British
saw in the 1990s would be
investment bank Schroders .
difficult for any CEO.
Weill was a fairly popular PLC , then joined ';alomon
le ader, building Citigroup Smith Barney Inc .. a subthrough various mergers sidiary of Citi , when it
and acquisitions ov.er the acquired Schroders. He
course of about 20 years
began his current position in
into the huge conglomerate
that it is today. When he May 2000.
"There' s no change of
stepped down as chairman
in 2006 and handed the strategy that we see, actualposition to Prince, Weill .ly, goin g forward ." Bischotl' •
now a board member - got said in an interview Sunday,
two standing ovations from
DOting that the company :
shareholders and a big blue
pi ans to focus on interstill
banner from employees that
national expansion, at least .
read, "Thank you, Sandy! "
Prince, whose compensa- until a new CEO is chosen.
tion came to nearly $25 milIt was not known whether
lion last year, is leavi ng Bischoff was in the running :
under a much darker cloud.
to replace Prince as CEO. ·
Rubin, 69, after 26 years
at Goldman Sachs, became Before Sunday's meeting, ·
.President Bill Clinton's many ideas for Prince's
chief economic adviser in replacement were floated by .
1993 before leading the industry watchers; one
Treasury Department. His name that has come up
experience steering the U.S.
often is John Thain, who
economy . during
the
MeKican and Asian finan - was once president of
cial crises could come 111 Goldman Sachs and is now ·
handy as Citigroup attempts CEO of NYSE Euronex.t.

7 Europeans released in Chad, return with French president after detention in. kidnapping case
.

· BY TOM MALITI

detained
included
six Paris. Friends arid family
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER
French charity workers, greeted the three journalists
three French journalists and on the tarmac with excited
. N'DJAMENA, Chad ihe crew of the plane that hugs. The journalists spoke
Seven Europeans among 17 the gtoup planned to use to only briefly to the media,
detained for over a week in take the children to France. saying they would hold a
an alleged attempt to kidnap The crew .was made up of news
conference
on
lb3 African children were Spaniards and a Belgian Monday.
released Sunday and left the pilot.
-One of the three, MarieqJUntry
with
French
The six charity workers Agnes Peleran, briefly
President Nicolas Sarkozy. . have been charged with kid- defended the character of
. It was the second time · napping and are still in the charity's workers, who
since taking office in May detention. The other four- are still detained in Chad,
that the French leader has three Spanish crew and the
"They're idealists but not
intervened in a major inter- Belgian pilot of .the plane criminals," she told LCI
riational legal dispute.
are being held on accessory television.
The Europeans - among charges. _
Earlier, Deby said in Chad
them nine French citizens
Sarkozy met with Chad's that he acted in his own
- were arrested Oct. 25 leader, ldriss Deby, trading volition when he freed the
wherr a charity calling itself back slaps and cheek kisses,
seven.
Zoe's Ark was stopped from before leaving Chad on his
"There is no pressure on
flying the children to official jet with the three
Chad, nor on President
Europe. The group said the · French journalists and four
c)lildren were orphans from flight
attendants
from Deby," he said.
Later Sunday, French
Sudan's · Darfur region Spain.
television
channel M-6
"They are free . It's over.
where more than 200,000
aired
a
documentary
raising
have died in conflict since It's the end," said Jean- ·
2003. It said it intended to Bernard Padare, a lawyer further suspicions about
how the charity group operplace them with host fami- for the group.
lies.
The French president's ated, made mostly with
However,
France's plane landed Sunday night footage shot by one of the
Foreign Minfstry and others at a Spanish air force base freed journalists who flew
have cast doubt on the outside Madrid,' where home with Sarkozy.
The footage, shot by camgroup's claims. Aid workers Sarkoiy and the flight crew
eraman
Marc Garmirian of
who interviewed the chi!- members were greeted by
the
Paris-based
Capa Presse
dren said Thursday most of Spanish Prime Minister
agency,
shows
one charity
them had been living with Jose
Luis
Rodriguez
adults they considered their Zapatero and relatives of worker haphazardly screening children brought by tribparents and came from vii- the flight attendants.
al
elders to the group's cen!ages on t.he ChadianThe group then continued
Sudanese border region .
on to France, landing at a ter in eastern Chad.
. The
17
originally military air base outside Speaking through transla -

tors, she demands neither
details nor even the most
basic documentation or verification.
Asked if she could be
mistaken on even the most
basic facts such as
whether the individual children were Chadian or
Sudanese or whether they
were indeed orphans - she
readily acknowledges she
could be wrong.
In other scenes, the charity workers wrap the children's heads and limbs in
gauzy bandages, dousing
some of them with iodine to
make them look, in the
words of one worker, like
t'war casualties.''
The footage comes to an
abrupt end when Chadian
authorities nab the charity
workers.
Zoe's Ark maintains its
intentions were purely
humanitarian and that it had
conducted · investigations
over several weeks to determine the children it was taking were orphans.
During more than four
years of fighting in Darfur,
thousands have fled across
the border into Chad to
escape the fighting. Aid
workers have said most of
the I 03 children had been
living for years in Chad and
they had itot yet determined
whether they were indeed

Kurdish rebels releq:se 8 Turkish soldiers ahead of key diplomatic talks
mountain hideouts along the
Iraq-Turkey border.
: ASSOC IATED PRESS WRITER
Turkey wants Washington
to take specific measures to
: ISTANBUL, Turkey Kurdish rebel s released stop the group from using
eight
Turkish
soldiers the ungoverned border
Sunday on the eve of a region as a staging area for
meeting
between
the attacks in its decades-long
1'urkish prime minister and war for political autonomy
P.resident Bu sh 'aimed at for Turkey's Kurdi sh minor&lt;(Verting a cross-bo~der ity.
The PKK has killed more
offensive against guerrilla
than 40 Turks in cross-borbases in nonhern Iraq.
. The soldiers' plight had der raids in the past month.
Turkey has ruled out talks
featured daily· in Turkish .
qewspapers,
and
their with the PKK, and has disrelease removed a key missed past overtures by the
sOurce of domestic pressure rebels as attempts only to
on Prime Minister Recep improve their image or to
Tayyip Erdogan to send undercut the Turkish mili troop s into neig hboring tary and political pressure.
"I cannot see any kind of
Iraq.
: But Turkey was unlikely link between the release of
tb ease demands for tough the soldiers and the eradicaaction against the rebel tion of PKK in northern
Kurdistan Workers' Party, Iraq" that Turkey is pressing
known as the PKK, which is for.. said Yalim Eralp, a for·believed to have several mer Turkish diplomat.

BY C. ONUR ANT

•.,. ,

"Neither will anyone in the
state institutions."
Even as news of the
release spread, skirmishes
between the two sides continued, with a village guard
employed by the government and two Kurdish
rebels killed in the border
town of ·ldil, state-run
Anatoli'a news agency
reported.
Still, release of the soldiers gives Bush leverage to

push Erdogan to negotiate
with Massoud Barzani, the
president of tlle autonomous
Kurdish region in nonhern
Iraq, said Huseyin Bagci,
who teaches international
relations at Ankara's Middle
East Technical University.
" Now Bush will say,
'Don't attack Barzani, he
made this release possible,"' Bagci said. "Turkey
will have to negotiate with
Barzani."

·Vote For-

ICatu!a R. Slllitk
'.
6 reare Erpori'""" "'Clerk, (Fitlllll Officer)
,.~

c••,,., ro,,,,,;, •

a, The Condldalo

THAHIC Y'OU
Kof'tn R. l•itll 466 I 0 fine1•r lt. RHirtt. OH

'"'" for

&amp;

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Letart Cemetary
Renewal Levy

.,
li,
I

Help keep the cemetaries beautiful

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'

from Darfur.
the pilot and the rest of the
A repon in Le Parisien crew were not freed Sunday.
· In Brussels on Sunday,
daily Sunday quoted men
who identified themselves Belgian Foreign Minister
as the fathers of several of Karel De Gucht said he
the children as saying the would send a top diplomat
charity workers offered to to Chad to learn more about
educate their children.
the Belgian pilot's record.
They "talked about a new · On Saturday, the head of
school that had been built ... Zoe's Ark, Eric Breteau,
and ·(said) our children told judicial officials in
could be educated there," Chad that the journalists
said a man quoted by the and the Spanish flight crew
paper who was identified · had nothing to do with the
only as Adberahim. He said group's activities.
three of his children were
The episode comes at a
among those taken by the sensitive time in Chad's
·relations with Europe. The
group.
Earlier this week, Sarkozy · European Union is planning
had harsh words for the to deploy a peacekeeping
charity, saying its workers force in Chad and Central .
"were wrong to do what African Republic composed
they did."
largely of French soldiers.
A turning point in the case The 3,000-strong force is to
appeared to come on help refugees along the two
Thursday, when Deby said nations' · borders · with
on state television that he Darfur.
In July, Sarkozy' s thenhoped the journali sts and
members of the flight crew wife Cecilia helped broker
would be freed soon - dis-. the re lease of five Bulgarian
tinguishing between them nurses and a Palestinian
doctor held for more than
and the charity workers.
Deby told reponers that eight years in Libya. They
the Belgian pilot is 75 years were accused of deliberate- ·
old with health problems, ly infecting hundreds of
and that his case would be children with the AIDS
treated as a humanitarian virus in a hospital where
matter. It was not clear why they worked.

VOTE FOR
CHRISTOPHER T. WOLFE

Letart Township Trustee
Your support is appreciated

Your Vote
&amp;

Influence Is Appreciated
For

•••Jacks
As Your
Sutton Township Trustee

Chester Twp~ Fisc:el Officer

Your Vote

For

P.O. Box 37

Monday, November 5,

Cm .ROUP CEO PRINCE RESIGNS, REPLACED AS

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PageA7

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reid fur tty1hr t•ndkbtt , P.o . Bo11 JllC.S)TEllte, 011

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ER C.
NEWELL
'

Chester Township
TRUSTEE

�I

LOCAL. STAT

The Daily Sentinel

OU chosen for global communication project
ATHENS
Ohio
University has been named
a partner in a multimilliondollar effon that will affect
the way agencies, media
and ci tizens use communication to improve health
and development worldwide.
The United States Agency
for
International
Development
(U SAID)
recently announced that the
university was selected as
one
of seven
North
American partners in the
new Pannership for Health
and
Development
Communication to be led by
Academy
for
the
Educational Development
(AED). The program will
work throughout the developing world, with a major
focus on Africa.
The three-year partnership will focus on chal lenges in health communication, including family
planning arid reproductive
health, HIV I AIDS prevention , .maternal and child
health, tuberculosis, malaria
and avian influenza. It also
will address issues involving the environment, civil
society, and democracy and
governance. The partnership, which has a funding
ceiling of $175 million, may
extend an additional two
years.
"This is· not just about
US AID funding public-edu-

PageA6
Monday, November 5,

2007 ·

Recount procedures,
paper jams wony Cuyahoga
elections officials

ca tion cam paigns," said and the research and desig n Obrego n, director of the
Margare t Parlato, senior firm IDEO. Overseas part- Communi ca ti on
and
vice president and director ners include Soul City and · Development
Studies
of the AED Global Health, Social Surveys in South Progra m in the Center for
Population , and Nutrition Africa. Straight Talk in Internati onal St udi es. "This
CLEVELAND 1AP) - Elections official' in Ohio ·s most
Group. "Our task is to help Uganda. and th e Center for · al so will require advocacy populous county remain concerned about reeount procedures
countries incorporate very Media Studies a nd New effort s to engage po licy- heading into Tuesday's local election .
•
powerful communication Concept
Current rules governing Ohio recounts are based on a 2005
Inform atio n and deci sion-makers to sllpapproaches into the way Systems, both in India .
directive issueu by then-Secret;p)l of State Ken Blackwell. But
port project acti vities."
they fight some of their . "As t;te unive rsity and
Faculty from the Scripps that directi ve doesn 't say how to address the pracucal and legal
most difficult battles -- capacity-building partner of College of Co mmunication issues that come with re-creating a paper trail if ballots are .
whether it is HIV/AIDS , this consortium, we expect and
the
Ce nt e r
for damaged or the county\ new electronic voting machines have ·.
rapid P11pulation grow th , to pl ay a substantial role." Inte rnational Studies will it paper jmn.
·
·
pollution
or
con fli ct said
"We
need
to
ti
aure
something
out
quickly."
said
Jane
Plutte
n~
·
contribute. Mould said fac. Davia Mould , associate
be twee n different ethnic dean for research and grad- ulty from o ther colle ges the county 's elections director. " We have a presidential election .
groups."
uate
studies.
"Ohio may be called upon as addi - looming. und the lust preside ntial election resulted 111 a countyThe program will build Uni versity has a great net- tional needs are identi lied.
.
wide recount."
ca pacities in local media, work of partnerships with - " Programs in 'the Scripps
After paper jams and unreadable ballots emerged as a prob, ·
advertising and research universities in the develop- College of Communication !em in the county, Blackwell's office suggested repnntmg bal- .
tlrms, universities and non- ing world· and alumni in have long been known for lots from the_memory cards inside touch-screen machmes. But :
governmental
organizamany countries. We hope to the ways in which they county elections officrals questioned whether that w~s legal ·
tions. It al so wi ll work with
,
.·
work with many of them in serve local. national and and asked in September 2006 for a new policy.
government agencies to
A
few
months
later,
Jennifer
Brunner
was
elected
to
replace
,
the projects we ' ll be und~r­ international communities,"
strengthen relations with the
Blackwell.
She
has
yet
to
address
the
issue,
spokesman
Patrick
.
taking."
said Scripps College of
media and improve the
·
Most of the funding for Communication
Dean Gallaway said.
effective use of strategic
If
Tuesday's
election
requires
a
recount
and
unreadable
ba!comm uni cation to influence projects will come from Gregory Shepherd . "Our lots become an issue. the board wtll call the secretary ot state s ·
change and improve prac- USA ID country missions, service to others and our office for guidance. Platten said.
·.
tices at a population level. so Ohio University 's tasks research and creative activi- · Platten was selected in June to run voting in the county that ·
As the primary university will depend on individual ty for others distingui shes is the nation's 15th largest election j urisdiction with more than
partner, Ohio University country needs. One of the us from other programs . I million voters.
will work with universities, goals of the project is to This grant is, in part, recogThe county has had difficulties adapting to electronic voting .
government ministries and effect posit ive change even nition of our experti se oand since the May 2006 primary. Nearly I0 percent of official bal- .
reputation in thi s regard.
development agencies to after the project ends.
lots in that election were destroyed, blank. illegible or other"Capacity-building activi" It al so fits well with the wise compromised, a stljdy ordered last year by county com- ·
provide training and skills
in health and development ties will focus on the devel- longstanding rpission of missioners found.
opment of technical compe- Ohio Universi ty to serv). the
communication.
The county had two recounts this year in small municipal ·
Other North American tencies within govern ment underserved. from rural 'elections, but the recounted votes did not match the oflicial
to
Latin results in either case, oftlcials said.
partners include CARE institutions, local organiza- Appalachia
tions,
and
university
and
America,
Africa
and
International, lnternews , the
Recounl~ rely on paper records produced by the county's .
University of Washington's training. iustitution s in an Southeast Asia," Shepherd new electronic voting machines. Titose records, which resem- .
HIY/AIDS
Unit,
the ··effon to ensure that techni- said.
ble the tapes in cash registers, are sometimes difficult to read.
Ohio University so far has
Communication for Social cal capacities will be susPlatten has said she is working closely with the county's votChange Consortium, the tained beyond the life of the received $20,000 to cover ing machine vendor, Nonh Canton-based Diebold Inc's
Communication Initialive, project,"
said
Rafael project stan ~ up costs.
Premier Election Solutions, to reline electronic voting.
Other counties using Premier's touch-screen machines have
had successful recounts, company spokesman Mark Radke
said. Most problems with paper jams have been alleviated by
teaching poll workers how to load the paper, he said.

·Cuyahoga Valley National Park

.officials combat flooding in park
AKRON (AP) - Storm- ·
Paved surfaces from sub- zonmg to their building
water · runoff has regularly urban
and commercial . codes, developing village
flooded streams and has development don't let rain- and city rules about how far
sometimes washed away water soak into the ground. houses can be from streams
roads, bridges and irails in Instead, the water runs off in and looking into using wetCuyahoga Valley National increasing volumes and at lands to control runoff.
"We ' re not out to stop
Park, and park officials are increasing speeds into the
worried that a lack of s.torm- 33,000-acre parks' 29 small development," said park
ecologist · Kevin Skerl. " We
water management in sur- streams.
rounding communities will · The water sweeps quickly are .appealing to communionly make the problem . through-the park, which lies ties' sense of shared responworse.
between Cleveland and sibility."
Storm-water rules limit
Heavy rains have · hit the Akron, causing erosion,
park and surrounding com-· reducing water quality and runoff from new developmunities three times in the dogging channels and cui- ments, but · not existing
past five years, causing an · vcns with sediment, which development, leaving many
communities Y(ithout guideestimated $6 million in dam- ·exacerbates the flooding.
age in the park, park
In response. park officials lines for storm-water conSup~rintendent John Debo
are trying to persuade com- tainment, Debo said.
in
Summit,
said.
munities
. The edges of the park have
"Flooding,
flooding , Cuyahoga. Medina and changed dramatically in the
flooding" is the biggest Ponage counties to improve past 50 years, Skerl said. In
problem facing the park, he their storm-water manage- 1959, 39 percent of the land
said.
ment by adding conservation that is now within or imme-

diately bordering the park
was developed, and 26 percent was farn1ed. In 2000, 64
percent was developed, and
only 2 percent was farmed .
. A park study of 14 nearby
communities found that the
population of those communities grew by I 0,000 people
between 1990 and 2000.
Between 2000 and 2003, the
14 communities averaged 41
new houses a year.
The former national recreation area was designated a
national park in 2000.
Education and cooperation
by park oflicials are stm1ing
to pay off. Nineteen of' 32
communities closest to the
park have adopted setback
ordinances to limit developme nt · along streams, for
example.

Southern reports honor roll
RACINE - The Southern
Local School District recently released its honor roll for
the first nine weeks.
Seniors, all A's, Morgan
Brown, Lindsey Buzzard,
Erin Chapman, Sarah EIDebaja, Courtney Ginther,
Ashley Weddle.
A and B honor roll,
Bonnie Allen, Teddy Brown,
Ryan
Chapman,
Tyler
Circle,
Ericka
Cogar,
He&lt;jther Cundiff, Stephanie
Cundiff, Abigail Jenkins,
Krystle Marler, Whitney
Wolfe-Riffle,
Kaylyn
Spradling, Deidra Sprouse.
Juniors, all A's, Merri
Collins, Chris Holter, Drew
Hoover, Emma Hunter.
Jaiine Warner.
A and B honor roll, Brad
Brown, Brody Flint, Bryan
Harris,
Tosha
Jones,
Brittany Meldau, Chelsea
Pape, Samantha Patterson,
April Richards. Weston
Robens, J.D. Whittington.
Sophomores, all A's,
Michael Manuel , Breanna
Taylor, Lynzee Tucker.
-A and B honor· roll,

Taylor Deem, Cheyene
Dunn, James Evans, Kris
Kleski , Jon Powell , Cyle
Rees, Dustin Salser, Dustin
Smeck, Mac Wood, Katie
Woods.
·
Freshmen, all A's, Eric
Buzzard, Zachary Manuel.
A and B honor roll. Eric
Cundiff, Trevor Flint, Joey
Forester, Bobbi Harris ,
Sarah Matthews, Chat!ey
Pyles,
Sara
Reitmire ,
Braxton Thorla,
Adam
Warden, Tyler Wolfe.
Eighth grade, all A' s,
Andrew Ginther, Hope
Teaford.
·
A and B honor roll,
Martina Arms. Emily Ash,
Alison Brown, Cierra Curan,
Harley Hamilton, Amber
Hayman,
Katelyn
Hill,
Marcus
Hill,
Kelsey
Holsinger, Chelsea Holter,
Miranda Holtc:r, Morgan
McMillan, Emma Powell,
Andrew Rosebe rry, Olivia
S.earls, Abbie . Williams,
Natalie Wood.
Seventh grade, all A's,
Shelby Pickens, Stefanic
Pyles.

Visit us online at
www.mydallysentinel.com

Your online source for news
Tornadtll!$ •JWaysmove !Orwairl

Elect Jimmie L. Freema·
. n·
'

Southern Board ·of Education ·
Graduate So11thern Hlp School and Ohio Univenity
Army Vetera• of Operation Iraqi Freedom
Member America• Legion Post li02, VeterAn! of Foreign Wan Post9921i, Pomeroy-lbcine F&amp;AM

A and B honor roll , Ryan Schenkelberg, Tristen
Timothy
Elam , Austin Wolfe.
John so n, Jennifer McCoy.
Jaclyn Mees, Adam Pape,
Joe Smith.
Sixth grade, A and B
honor- roll , Ryan Daughtery,
Darien
Diddle,
Sarah
Eakins, Jordan Huddleston,
Baylee Hupp, Lacey Hupp,
Katie
Jenkins, · Nathan
Leamond, Taylor McNickle,
Jamie
0' Brien, Casey
Pickens, Braden Spencer.
Fifth grade. all A's,
Bethany Theiss.
A and B honor roll ,
Reliable and Dependable
Sophie
Ashley
Baker,
Guinther, Addie Hayman,
Your influence and support will be appreciated.
Jacob Hoback, Caitlyn
Holter, Bradley McCoy,
Kevin
Perry,
Chais
Paid for
the Candidate
Rodriguez, Cassie Roush ,

VOTE FOR

JOEY JARRELL
FOR CLERK OF
LETART TOWNSHIP

Jeff Bassett
acre/ Jleart
Catfi.o[ic Cfi.urcfi.

Annual Fall Bazaar
1bUJ'11dav•Novemher 8th

Dinner Begins at 4:JG
$8.00 Adults

$4.00·6 to 12

S and under •·ree

Meno-Crtamed b11ked chkbn or h~t~m'
lluownwdtt ooudk!s, mashed poi•IOl'fll &amp; gra-·."'
Mn-tn bt-ans, coiH~w,
&amp; dt#&gt;.'~crt.

,,u

Home Loan Specialist

Point Pleasant; WV

Holrt. lsi UOO.OO, lnd U9Q.OO
Jrd, 4th, !lh $100.00

Uoor Prize~

t.:v~ry

tl.alf I lour!

f 'ancy .'itntu/1 • (,amcl

-~-

Nvli8itJII&amp;'

·

www.peoplesbancorp.com
jbassett@pebo.com

C

BY FO

BY MADLEN READ
M' BUSINESS WRITER

. 304-674-4406
Toll Free 800-374-6123
Fax 740-373-8874
Cell 304-210-7016

2007

NEW YORK - A month
after foretelling a better future
for Citigroup Inc., Charles
Prince has no future of his
own at the nation 's largest
fmancial institution.
'
Instead,
former
U.S.
Treasury Secretary Roben E.
Rubin, oitce co-chairman of
Goldman, Sachs &amp; Co., will
be chairing· the beleaguered
bank, which may take until
well into next year to get back
on track after makihg bad bets
on debt. Sir Win Bischoff.
chairman of &lt;;:iti Europe and a
inember of the Citi management and operating c~rnmit­
tees , will serve as interim
CEO.
. Prince 's widely expected
departure from the positions
of chief executive and chairman came Sunday at an emergency meeting of Citi's board,
at which the .. company also
decided to take $8 billion to
HI billion in writedowns. Citi
already took a hit during the
third quaner of $6.5 billion
from asset writedowns and
other credit-related losses.
"It was the honorable

URY SECY RUBIN

course. given the losses we are · souring home mongages. At
now announcing," Rubin said that time, Prince said the
of Prince's resignation in an bank's earnings would return
interview with The Associated to nonnal in the fourth quarter.
Press.
But
when
Citigroup
Prince, 57, joined former released its third-quaner
Merrill Lynch &amp; Co. CEO results two weeks later, the
Stan 0 ' Neal, who resigned write-downs and credit costs
from the investment bank last exceeded $6 billion, and Chief
month, as the highest-protlle Financial
Oftlcer
Gary
ca~ualties of the debt crisis
Crittenden indicated the outthat ha' cost billions at other look going forward wasn't as
tinancial institutions as well.
upbeat as Prince had predictPrince became chief execu- ed.
tive of Citigroup in October
Citigroup wasn 't alone in
2003. Many shareholders crit- its third-quarter turmoil.
icized him openly for much of When borrowers. with poor
hi s tenure, as Citigroup's · credit stopped paying their
stock lagged its peers while mortgages, many banks not
Prince executed what was only had to take losses on
called an umbrella model of those subprime mongages,
corporate organization, with they also saw instruments in
several separate lines of busi- their ponfolios backed by
ness. Shares closed Friday at mortgages plummet in
$37.73, about 20 percent value.
below where they were when
But Citigroup's stumbles
Prince became CEO.
were particularly grievous,
Prince 's position looked given the bank 's size, histoespecially shaky after the ry and CEO, who had been
· company on Oct. I estimated telling shareholders for
that th.ird-quarter profit would years to give his strategy a
decline about 60 percent to chance. Even in October,
some $2.Q billion after seeing Prince said in a call to ananearly $6 billion in credit costs ly sts: "I think any fairand write-downs of overly minded person would say
leveraged corporate debt and that strategic plan is work-

in g."
The umbrella model that
Sanford I. Weill created and
Prince touted looked like a
giant mess compared to its
conglomerate counterpart
JPMorgan Chase &amp; Co. now Jed by Weill's fo.rmer
protege, Jamie Dimon .
JPMorgan's
writedowns
were smaller, and strength
in a~set management, security services, card servi'Ces
and commercial banking
units made up for weakness
in other areas .. Having cut
costs and built up cash
reserves in previous quarters , the bank was better
prepared for a tough lending
climate.
Meanwhile, Citigroup's
expenses outweighed rev enues. it botched its fixed
income trading operations,
al)d its cash-to-debt ratio
dipped.
The anger toward Prince
was so intense that during a
conference call last month,
Deutsche Bank analyst
Mike Mayo told Prince that
investors wanted a significant change in management.
His supporters, though ,
argue that he was dealt a

tough hand when hi s prede- to navigate the ti ght credit
cessor. Weill gave him the markets.
reins, and that matching the
Bisc hoff, 66, was the
hefty profit gains Gitigroup
chairman o f the British
saw in the 1990s would be
investment bank Schroders .
difficult for any CEO.
Weill was a fairly popular PLC , then joined ';alomon
le ader, building Citigroup Smith Barney Inc .. a subthrough various mergers sidiary of Citi , when it
and acquisitions ov.er the acquired Schroders. He
course of about 20 years
began his current position in
into the huge conglomerate
that it is today. When he May 2000.
"There' s no change of
stepped down as chairman
in 2006 and handed the strategy that we see, actualposition to Prince, Weill .ly, goin g forward ." Bischotl' •
now a board member - got said in an interview Sunday,
two standing ovations from
DOting that the company :
shareholders and a big blue
pi ans to focus on interstill
banner from employees that
national expansion, at least .
read, "Thank you, Sandy! "
Prince, whose compensa- until a new CEO is chosen.
tion came to nearly $25 milIt was not known whether
lion last year, is leavi ng Bischoff was in the running :
under a much darker cloud.
to replace Prince as CEO. ·
Rubin, 69, after 26 years
at Goldman Sachs, became Before Sunday's meeting, ·
.President Bill Clinton's many ideas for Prince's
chief economic adviser in replacement were floated by .
1993 before leading the industry watchers; one
Treasury Department. His name that has come up
experience steering the U.S.
often is John Thain, who
economy . during
the
MeKican and Asian finan - was once president of
cial crises could come 111 Goldman Sachs and is now ·
handy as Citigroup attempts CEO of NYSE Euronex.t.

7 Europeans released in Chad, return with French president after detention in. kidnapping case
.

· BY TOM MALITI

detained
included
six Paris. Friends arid family
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER
French charity workers, greeted the three journalists
three French journalists and on the tarmac with excited
. N'DJAMENA, Chad ihe crew of the plane that hugs. The journalists spoke
Seven Europeans among 17 the gtoup planned to use to only briefly to the media,
detained for over a week in take the children to France. saying they would hold a
an alleged attempt to kidnap The crew .was made up of news
conference
on
lb3 African children were Spaniards and a Belgian Monday.
released Sunday and left the pilot.
-One of the three, MarieqJUntry
with
French
The six charity workers Agnes Peleran, briefly
President Nicolas Sarkozy. . have been charged with kid- defended the character of
. It was the second time · napping and are still in the charity's workers, who
since taking office in May detention. The other four- are still detained in Chad,
that the French leader has three Spanish crew and the
"They're idealists but not
intervened in a major inter- Belgian pilot of .the plane criminals," she told LCI
riational legal dispute.
are being held on accessory television.
The Europeans - among charges. _
Earlier, Deby said in Chad
them nine French citizens
Sarkozy met with Chad's that he acted in his own
- were arrested Oct. 25 leader, ldriss Deby, trading volition when he freed the
wherr a charity calling itself back slaps and cheek kisses,
seven.
Zoe's Ark was stopped from before leaving Chad on his
"There is no pressure on
flying the children to official jet with the three
Chad, nor on President
Europe. The group said the · French journalists and four
c)lildren were orphans from flight
attendants
from Deby," he said.
Later Sunday, French
Sudan's · Darfur region Spain.
television
channel M-6
"They are free . It's over.
where more than 200,000
aired
a
documentary
raising
have died in conflict since It's the end," said Jean- ·
2003. It said it intended to Bernard Padare, a lawyer further suspicions about
how the charity group operplace them with host fami- for the group.
lies.
The French president's ated, made mostly with
However,
France's plane landed Sunday night footage shot by one of the
Foreign Minfstry and others at a Spanish air force base freed journalists who flew
have cast doubt on the outside Madrid,' where home with Sarkozy.
The footage, shot by camgroup's claims. Aid workers Sarkoiy and the flight crew
eraman
Marc Garmirian of
who interviewed the chi!- members were greeted by
the
Paris-based
Capa Presse
dren said Thursday most of Spanish Prime Minister
agency,
shows
one charity
them had been living with Jose
Luis
Rodriguez
adults they considered their Zapatero and relatives of worker haphazardly screening children brought by tribparents and came from vii- the flight attendants.
al
elders to the group's cen!ages on t.he ChadianThe group then continued
Sudanese border region .
on to France, landing at a ter in eastern Chad.
. The
17
originally military air base outside Speaking through transla -

tors, she demands neither
details nor even the most
basic documentation or verification.
Asked if she could be
mistaken on even the most
basic facts such as
whether the individual children were Chadian or
Sudanese or whether they
were indeed orphans - she
readily acknowledges she
could be wrong.
In other scenes, the charity workers wrap the children's heads and limbs in
gauzy bandages, dousing
some of them with iodine to
make them look, in the
words of one worker, like
t'war casualties.''
The footage comes to an
abrupt end when Chadian
authorities nab the charity
workers.
Zoe's Ark maintains its
intentions were purely
humanitarian and that it had
conducted · investigations
over several weeks to determine the children it was taking were orphans.
During more than four
years of fighting in Darfur,
thousands have fled across
the border into Chad to
escape the fighting. Aid
workers have said most of
the I 03 children had been
living for years in Chad and
they had itot yet determined
whether they were indeed

Kurdish rebels releq:se 8 Turkish soldiers ahead of key diplomatic talks
mountain hideouts along the
Iraq-Turkey border.
: ASSOC IATED PRESS WRITER
Turkey wants Washington
to take specific measures to
: ISTANBUL, Turkey Kurdish rebel s released stop the group from using
eight
Turkish
soldiers the ungoverned border
Sunday on the eve of a region as a staging area for
meeting
between
the attacks in its decades-long
1'urkish prime minister and war for political autonomy
P.resident Bu sh 'aimed at for Turkey's Kurdi sh minor&lt;(Verting a cross-bo~der ity.
The PKK has killed more
offensive against guerrilla
than 40 Turks in cross-borbases in nonhern Iraq.
. The soldiers' plight had der raids in the past month.
Turkey has ruled out talks
featured daily· in Turkish .
qewspapers,
and
their with the PKK, and has disrelease removed a key missed past overtures by the
sOurce of domestic pressure rebels as attempts only to
on Prime Minister Recep improve their image or to
Tayyip Erdogan to send undercut the Turkish mili troop s into neig hboring tary and political pressure.
"I cannot see any kind of
Iraq.
: But Turkey was unlikely link between the release of
tb ease demands for tough the soldiers and the eradicaaction against the rebel tion of PKK in northern
Kurdistan Workers' Party, Iraq" that Turkey is pressing
known as the PKK, which is for.. said Yalim Eralp, a for·believed to have several mer Turkish diplomat.

BY C. ONUR ANT

•.,. ,

"Neither will anyone in the
state institutions."
Even as news of the
release spread, skirmishes
between the two sides continued, with a village guard
employed by the government and two Kurdish
rebels killed in the border
town of ·ldil, state-run
Anatoli'a news agency
reported.
Still, release of the soldiers gives Bush leverage to

push Erdogan to negotiate
with Massoud Barzani, the
president of tlle autonomous
Kurdish region in nonhern
Iraq, said Huseyin Bagci,
who teaches international
relations at Ankara's Middle
East Technical University.
" Now Bush will say,
'Don't attack Barzani, he
made this release possible,"' Bagci said. "Turkey
will have to negotiate with
Barzani."

·Vote For-

ICatu!a R. Slllitk
'.
6 reare Erpori'""" "'Clerk, (Fitlllll Officer)
,.~

c••,,., ro,,,,,;, •

a, The Condldalo

THAHIC Y'OU
Kof'tn R. l•itll 466 I 0 fine1•r lt. RHirtt. OH

'"'" for

&amp;

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Letart Cemetary
Renewal Levy

.,
li,
I

Help keep the cemetaries beautiful

Member FDIC ·
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'

from Darfur.
the pilot and the rest of the
A repon in Le Parisien crew were not freed Sunday.
· In Brussels on Sunday,
daily Sunday quoted men
who identified themselves Belgian Foreign Minister
as the fathers of several of Karel De Gucht said he
the children as saying the would send a top diplomat
charity workers offered to to Chad to learn more about
educate their children.
the Belgian pilot's record.
They "talked about a new · On Saturday, the head of
school that had been built ... Zoe's Ark, Eric Breteau,
and ·(said) our children told judicial officials in
could be educated there," Chad that the journalists
said a man quoted by the and the Spanish flight crew
paper who was identified · had nothing to do with the
only as Adberahim. He said group's activities.
three of his children were
The episode comes at a
among those taken by the sensitive time in Chad's
·relations with Europe. The
group.
Earlier this week, Sarkozy · European Union is planning
had harsh words for the to deploy a peacekeeping
charity, saying its workers force in Chad and Central .
"were wrong to do what African Republic composed
they did."
largely of French soldiers.
A turning point in the case The 3,000-strong force is to
appeared to come on help refugees along the two
Thursday, when Deby said nations' · borders · with
on state television that he Darfur.
In July, Sarkozy' s thenhoped the journali sts and
members of the flight crew wife Cecilia helped broker
would be freed soon - dis-. the re lease of five Bulgarian
tinguishing between them nurses and a Palestinian
doctor held for more than
and the charity workers.
Deby told reponers that eight years in Libya. They
the Belgian pilot is 75 years were accused of deliberate- ·
old with health problems, ly infecting hundreds of
and that his case would be children with the AIDS
treated as a humanitarian virus in a hospital where
matter. It was not clear why they worked.

VOTE FOR
CHRISTOPHER T. WOLFE

Letart Township Trustee
Your support is appreciated

Your Vote
&amp;

Influence Is Appreciated
For

•••Jacks
As Your
Sutton Township Trustee

Chester Twp~ Fisc:el Officer

Your Vote

For

P.O. Box 37

Monday, November 5,

Cm .ROUP CEO PRINCE RESIGNS, REPLACED AS

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and Re-Elect

~

ER C.
NEWELL
'

Chester Township
TRUSTEE

�\

'

·The Daily Sentinel

Page AS

HIO

Monday, Novembers,

munity."
But the deve loper bac ked
out , Heimlich failed to win
re-election and the pro&gt;ess.
in effect, was back at

· By TERRY KINNEY
ASSOCI AT ED PRESS WRITE R

C INC INN ATI The
vision for the dow ntow n
riverfront for decades has
been of a gleaming neighborhood of _greenspace and
hig h-rises for li ving. work, ing and enrertaining. a destination for vi si tors and
haven for young professionals and downsizin g
baby boomers.
Deal after deal was shot
down by lack of fundin g or
political in fighting. A das' ic case was the squabble
hetween ci ty and county
offi cials ove r who owns the
air ri ght s over parkin g
ga ra ges needed to lift
buildings out of the Ohio
Ri ve r tlood plain.
New cooperative agreement s among the cit y.
Hamilton County and the
master developer have put
the dream closer to fruition
than it 's ever been . But
developers still have to find
about $800 million, and
public officials another
$200 million for infrastructure, to make it happen.
"The work is not done; it
really is only beginning, in
many ways,'' Councilman
David Crowley noted as
officials approved the
enabling legislation at a
joint meeting Thursday at
the National Underground
Railroad Freedom Center. .
The center is the only
building in a four-block by
three-block area between

squ are one .

AP photo

The Cincinnati skyline is reflected in a pool of standi ng l)'ater 1n a parking lot located along
the Ohio River, July 28, 2006, in Cincinnati. City officials are working on plans to allow
developers to build on the a rea. ·
the ri ve r and the downtown
business district.
"The good new s is the
city and county appear to
be on the same page and
seem ·to he working reasonably well togethe r. which is
rare here," said Am Bortz,
a partner in Towne
Propenies, which is building other high-end housing
nearby.
The area awaiting development covers about I 8
acres between Paul Brown
Stadium
and
Great

American Ball Park , leav- "The Banks," as the area
known ,
was
ing about 40 acres for a became
unveiled a decade ago.
riverfront park.
Urban planners had · The city and county
hoped that coi1strucrioh of finally put together a group
the city 's first downtown headed by Cincinnati Reds
sport s
stadium
owner Bob Castellini in
Riverfr01it Stadium, which May 2006 to strong-arm
opened in 1970 - would the project and line up a
spur development of the master developer. Thenarea, where there was only Commission President Phil
a few bars and a produce Heimlich confidently said,
warehou se. But it remained "Now we can count on a
mostly what it still is, a sea . 50-acre mud hole becomof surface parking lots , . ing a world class retail,
even after a proposal for office and residential com-

Now, with the city and
·county agreeing to work
together and ceding certain
rights to each other, Atl anta
developers
Carter
&amp;
Associates Comme rci al
Services and The Dawso n
Co. can begin to sol ic it
designs and line up fin ancing.
Ground could · be broken
on first-phase construction
by early ne xt ·year, with
people living and working
there by the end of 2009 or
early 20 I 0. But officiars
concede the entire project
could take at least a de cade
to complete.
"We are stepping away
from TO years of disa greement and moving into I0
years of de velopment ,"
said Mavor Mark Mallory.
Finding the money to ge t
it started isn ' t a sure thing.
Bortz said.
"Clearly. it' s going to
have to be sliced into .
smaller pieces to improve
the likelihood you can find
some support for at least
the initial phase," he said .
"I don't think you ' re going
to find it all in one place .
An equity lender might say,
' We ' ll do the first building
and an option in the next
phase.' You won ' t get it all
from any one source."

2007

The city and county will
have to come up with about
$58 million for infrastructure , and tlle de·velopers
about $74 million for the
first phase. whi ch will
include about 300 apartments, some retail space
and a couple restaurants. If
the entire project is com-.
pleted , it could add 1,800
apartments and condos to
Cincinnati 's. downtown
housing market.
" I view The BankS: to
some extent, as competitive
with one or two of the
buildings we ' re doing. bui
it may be a good thing
hecause it 's bringing pea"
pie back to the urban core,''
Bortz said .
The Banks also will have
to compete with high-rise
projects across the river on
the Kentucky shore. including a similar $1 billion
mixed-use proposal by one
of the dev elopers that
walked away froni the
Cincinnati deal.
City officials believe the
project reflects a turn,
around for the city, which
appears to have stanched a
decades-long out migration
of residents and shows ~
trend of rising property val:
ues.
"No longer are we goi~
to focus on the negatives;.,
said former Councilman
Todd Ponune, now presi- ·
dent of the Hamilton
County Commission . "Thi s
city and county are turning
things around."

Hospitals' development projects track Cleveland's suburban shift · Local weather
CLEVELAND (APJ Cleveland' s two ,major hospital systems are building
medical centers in the suburban city of Twinsburg, the
latest in a series of new construction projects that mirror
the demographic shift of the
region's affluent residents.
University Hospital's $29
million center will open in
Twinsburg soon, and the
Cleveland Clinic has purchased 84 acres in the
Summit County city to build
an outpatient medical and
surgical center.
Hospitals across the country are following a similar
building plan , erecting centers that are conveniently
located off interstate highways in expensive, fast growing suburbs. The satellite centers provide routine
care, and refer patients to the
flagship hospitals for visits
to specialists or for surgery.

"The focus is on the buildings, but the key is not the
buildings but the physician
network," said Dr. Achilles
Demetriou, president of
University Hospitals. The
centers are efficient, onestop shopping for patients
who live outside the city, he
said. ·
Unive.rsity Hospitals has
spent about $1 00 million in
the past I 0 years building its
suburban centers, driven in
part by the migration of residents to locations outside
the city, Demetriou said.
Messages seeking comment about the Clinic's
growth strategy · were left
with the Cleveland Clinic .
Although the Clinic
wouldn't disclose how much
it has spent on new medical
buildings, a review of building permits and land purchases around the region by
The (Cleveland) Plain

Dealer revealed it has spent
at least $1 SO million on new
projects in the last 15 years.
Combined. the Clinic and
University Hospitals have
spent an estimated quarter
of a billion dollars erecting
new centers, and mjllions
more on medical equipment
and interior furnishings for
the facilities . The- hospitals
have a combined 33 suburban centers that are in operation, p~anned or ,~,n~~ ~
co,nstrucllon, the newspaper
reported.
In. many cases the two
hospttal systems have bmlt
their centers startlingly
close to each other. _In
Twmsburg. the two facthties will be less than a mile
apan . In Westlake , they are
an exit apan on · the interstate .
The
Clinic' s
· Beachwood facility fs just
ov.er a mile aw\(y from
University ' ~ in Mayfield

Heights, and the Clinic's
Solon center is about nine
miles from University
Hospital's in Bainbridge
Township.
"They stalk one another
geographically," said Alan
Sager, a Boston University
pubhc health pro~ess~r.
... 1;be financtal reasomng ts,
you may not get an advantage over them, but they
~,an'\.~et an advantage over
yob. '
Sager, who has studied
hospital closings dating
from the 1930s in · more
than · 50 cities, including
Cleveland , Toledo · and
C0 1 b
. d th
d. ·I
urn us, sm . e me tea
exodus to the suburbs may
be hurung urban pauents.
As facthlles sprout m more
expensive areas, they are
failing to ensure · adequate
medical care for all , he said.

Monday ...Sunny in the morning ... Then partly sunny
with a chance of rain showers in the afternoon . High s in
the lower 60s. Southwest winds 5 to 10 mph . Chance of
rain 50 percent.
Monday night...Showers likely in the evening ... Then
partly cloudy with a chance of showers after midnight
Lows around 40. West winds 5 to 10 mph. Chance of
rain 70 pe(cent.
'fuesday'...Partly sunny. Much cooler with highs in the
upper 40s . West winds 10 to I 5 mph with gusts up to 30
. mph.
.
'fuesday night... Mostly cloudy. Cold with lows in the
lower 30s. West windh 'Ho I0 mph with gusts up to 20
mph.
'&lt;l
Wednesday ... Partly sunny. Highs in the mid 40s.
Wednesday night and Thursday ... Partly cloudy.
Lows in the lower 30s. Highs in the upper 40s .
Thursday night and Friday ...Mostly cloudy. A 30
percent chance of showers. Lows in the mid 30s. Highs
•
around 50.
Friday nighi...Mostly cloLtdy in the evening .. .Then
becoming partly cloudy. Cold with lows in the lower
30s.
Saturday through Veterans Day ... Partly cloudy.
Highs in the mid .50s. Lows in the mid 30s.

Blet:l flit:IDt t:. Young Ill
as yDUI

Pomeroy ayor

I

t

•

•

Prep football/voUeybaU pairings, Page B2
Bengals lose again, Page B3
CoUege football news, Page B4
· Patriots best team in football, Page B8

The Daily Sentinel

Johnson wins third straight race
BY MIKE HARRIS
ASSOCIATED PRESS

Nash leads
Suns past
Cleveland

FORT WORTH, Texas Jimmie Johnson was caught
between his competitive
urge to win and· the bi~-picture reality that a mtstake
could cost him a shot at
another NASCAR Nextel
Cup championship.
·
·The urge to wm won - .
and so did Johnson.
The reigning Cup champion came out on top after a
dramatic side-by-stde duel
with Matt Kenseth, grabbing
his third straight victory and,
more important, wresting
the series points lead fro !I)
Jeff Gordon on Sunday at
Texas Motor Speedway.
The race with Kenseth
was breathtaking at times,
with both cars wiggling dangerously as they came off
the corners nearly touching.
"That was tough racing,"
Johnson said. "Matt was
crowding me and I was try-

ing to move him up a little
bit and we were doin g all
that at 190 miles an hour. It
was pretty intense."
The entire time Johnson
was well aware a crash
would have taken him right
out of the championship battie.
"I feel like I was doing a
good job balancing those
emotions in the car," he said.
"When I got inside of Matt
and tried for a lap or two to
get by him and he was
crowding me, I actually
backed off and let him go.
So I just checked those feelings and regrouped and then
went back after him.
"But, after seeing the
video when I was doing the
· Victory Lane interview, I
was more sideways than I
felt like I was,'' Johnson
added, laughing. " I think I
was too focused on the prize
and I was pretty crossed up a
couple of times."
Even team owner Rick

•

Hendrick was unnerved by
the side-by-side raCing.
"We've got an awful lot at
stake here," Hendrick said.
"You know Jeff was running
seventh and I thought, 'We
don't need to do this.' BJ!t I
felt like Jimmie was under
control. I was nervous and I
was wanting to hit the
(radio) button, but I didn't."
Johnson, who began the
day nine points behind
Hendrick Motorspons teammate Gordon, moved out to
a 30-point lead with two
races remaining.in the Chase
for the championship.
Gordon, a four-time
· champion, led early in . the
race, but was no factor in the
late going, struggling with
handling before managing to
squeeze out a hard-earned
seventh-place finish that
kept the points battle close
heading to Phoenix next
week.

PHOENIX (AP) - Steve
Nash scored 30 points and
had 10 assists and the
Phoenix Suns - playing
without Amare Stoudemire
- rallied from a 12-point
second-quaner deficit and
Cleveland
beat
the
Cavaliers I 03-92 on Sunday
night.
Stoudemire, the Suns'
All -Star center, was sidelined because of soreness in
his right knee. He had
anhroscopic surgery on the
AP photo
knee Oct. 2. Coach Mike
NASCAR driver Jimmie Johnson celebrates his victory in the
D' Antoni said Stoudemire
Nextel Cup Dick1es 500 auto race, Sunday in Fort Worth,
Please see Johnson, Bl
was day to day.
Texas.
•
Despite
Stoudemire's
absence, the resilient Suns
were able to overcome the
Cavs and LeBron James.
Shawn Marion· had 23
points and 12 rebounds for
the Suns. Leandro Barbosa
scored 14 points, and Boris
Diaw, who staned · in place
of Stoudemire scored 16.
Nash had 22 points in the
second half.
. James scored 27 points,
. BY DAVE GOI.DBERG
But we still played well
21 in the second half, while
ASSOCIATEO PRESS
enough to win."
Zydrunas llgauskas and
New England, which had
Drew Gooden each scored
INDIANAPOLIS - No been scoring more than 41
14
22. Gooden had
running up the score this points a game, had piled
rebounds and llgauskas 13.
week. Against the Colts, points on late in several
The 7-foot-3 llgauskas,
Tom Brady was content to games in which they were
who was being guarded by
close out another victory for ·far ahead. including last
the 6-8 Diaw or 6-9 Brian
the New England Patriots by week's 52- 7 win over
Skinner, dominated the first
kneeling down three times. Wa.shington, when they kept
half, scoring 14 points and
In what was hyped as the playing hard well into the
grabbing ·eight rebounds en
biggest NFL regular season fourth quarter.
route to the !50th doublegame ever, the Patriots
In this contest, anticipated
double of his career.
stayed on course for an since the schedule came out
Gooden, also enjoying a
unbeaten season as Brady last April. they had tv work
two-inch hei~ht advantage
threw two of his three touch- their hardest just to win
over Grant Htll, chipped in
down passes in. a four- against perhaps the only
with 12 points and 10
minute span of the founh team in the NFL dose to
rebounds, helping the
quaner Sunday to overcome them.
Cavaliers to a 45-38 halfa 10-point deficit and beat
"We had an opponunity to
time advantage over the
Super · Bowl champion do a lot of things," said runcold-shooting Suns. At one
Indianapolis, 24-20.
ning back Joseph Addai, the
point, the Cavaliers led 39The win keeps the Patriots Colts' best offensive player
27.
· (9-0) on course for the on this day wi.th 112 yards
With their huge height
NFL's first unbeaten season rushing and a 73-yard score
advantage, the Cavaliers
since Miami did it 1972 and on a short pass from Peyton
enjoyed a 35-17 rebounding
gives them the first tiebreak- Manning. ''We left some
edge in the first two periods.
er over Indianapolis (7-1) in points squandered and got
They ~so had a 12- 1 bulge
the AFC playoffs.
tield goals when we should .
in second-chance points and
"This is the first time we have gotten touchdowns. but
a 30-18 margin in points in
were ·in a . ball game late," that's the nature of the
the paint.
said Brady, whose team had game. Those guys are good.
While llgauskas and
never before trailed in the We'll see them again.'~
Gooden were manhandling
founh quaner and had beatNew England trailed 20the shan-handed and ailing
en its previous eight oppo- 10 after Manning, who
Suns. James didn't join in
nents by an average of 25 threw for 225 yards and a
the fun much. Coming off a
points a game. "There was- touchdown , scored on a 145-point effort against the
n't any Joss of confidence or yard sneak with 9 minutes
New York Knickson Friday
determination."
and 42 seconds left in the
night, he was held to six
Added New England line- game, and the crowd roarAP photo
points on 3-of-12 shooting
backer Junior Seau: "We ing.
m the half.
· 'New England Patriots quarterback Tom Brady (12) breaks away from Indianapolis Colts were going against a hostile
But on a second-and- 10
Marion was . the only defensive end Dwight Freeney (93) in the third quarter of NFL football action in Indianapolis crowd, an undefeated team,
Please see Escape, Bl
bright spot for the Suns, Sunday.
we took our hats off to them.
scorin~ 13 points. including
Phoemx's only two 3-pointers.
.
'f:he rejuvenated Suns
picked up the pace in the
third period and took a 6964 lead into the founh quarter. .Nash ignited the comeback with a 3-pointer and
BY TOM WITHERS
down play in OT to lift the
finished with I0 points in
ASSOCIATED PRESS
Browns, who until Sunday
the period. Phoenix went
had beaten teams with a ·
ahead for good SS-53 on a
CLEVELAND - Derek combined 6-24 record.
turnaround bank shot by Anderson , Jamal Lewis
Dawson, who hooked an
Diaw.
and the Cleveland Browns extra point in the first ha,f,
· James also got rolling in passed their toughest test atoned for his miss by
tlie quarter, scoring II
· kicking the game-winner
points, including a toma- to date .
They
just
might
be
for
- on second down 5:43
hawk dunk, but didn't get
into OT - to send a crov. d
much help from his team- real.
Phil
Dawson
kicked
a
of
more than 70,000 in' v a
mates and the Cavaliers
in
overfrenzy
. The Browns went
25-yard
field
goal
were outscored 31-19. Nash
made sure the Suns didn't time to give the Browns a just 4- 12 last season and
Jose the lead in the fourth 33-30 comeback win over were given little chance of
the Seattle Seahawks on · being competitive this seaperiod, scoring 12 points.
·
Notes: This was the start Sunday along with their son .
first
three-game
winning
But
here
they
are
at the
of a six-game Western road
streak since 2001 .
halfway point of the regutrip for the Cavaliers.
Lewis rushed for a lar season: near the top of
career-high four touch- the AFC Nonh and in the
·downs, the last one with playoff mix .
CoNTACI'US
Anderson was 29-of-48
2:17 remaining in regulation,
for
the
Browns
(S-3),
for
364 yards, and Kellen
1-740-446·2342 e)((. 33
who trailed 2 1-6 in the first Winslow, shrugging off a
1·740-446-3008
half and were down 27-22 painful knee, matched a
E-mail- spor1sCmydaitysenUnel.com
in the fourth quarler.
career-high with 11 catches
li~Wtl.s!Atf
Anderson,
though, for 125 yards.
brought'
them
back
, and
Lewi s scored on runs of
Bryan Walters, Sports Writer
Cleveland's
poor
defense,
2,
1, 2 and I yards on a day
AP photo
(740) 446-2342 . .... 33 .
which came in as the hi s single-game ru shing Cleveland Browns running back Jamal Lewis (31 ) picks up 34 yards on a short pas·s play
bwaltersC mydailytrlbune.com
NFL' s worst-r.anked unit, record of 295 yards was as Seattle Seahawks linebacker Kevin Bentley (57 ) gives chase in overtime of an NFL footLarry Crum, Sports Writer
made a stop - helped by a
·
.
ball game Sunday 'in Cleveland. Three plays leter, PK Phil Dawson boot!!d a 25 yard field
(7401 446·2342, .... 33
Please see Browns, Bl
review - on a fourth goal to give Cleveland a 33,30 win.
k::rumOmydailyreglster.com

-n

F••-

ad

Bl
Monday, November 5, 2007

Lewis' 4 TDs help
Browns rally for win

With election day approaching us tomorrow, I would like to "touch bases" with you and your family one last time before
you vote.
.
The followin g are just a few -of the things that make me a :·qualified" candida!e for your next mayor...
I served a four year term on 'your Village council from 2000 to 2004. In addition to council member, during this term, I
also held the position of mayor for the last seven months. I was an active member of the Village Fi ttance Committee the first
three years of my term as Councilman. Each year your village budget is hundreds of thousal)ds of dollars.
For the past four years, I have been an acti ve me,;,ber of the Me igs Local Board of Education . The school board 's budget is millions of dol lars each year. I
know how important it is to research all o'ptions before making decisions regarding budgets as large as these. ·
If elected, I promise you that I can and I will apply for any available grant monies for your village whenever necessary. Many don ' t realize that most grants
still require the village to front a percentage of their own funds in order to secure this "free money" . During my last term as council member, council
president and mayor, I worked to help secure grants for your new fire truck, your "waterworks" park and your walking pa!h, just to name three things. I just
want all of you, the voters. to know that I am full y.QUALIFIED to kee ptahs on the tax money, your tax money that is in the Village General Fund . These
fund s help your village operate. I re!tlizc that it takes more than just a calculator and a stroke of a pen to operate this village properly. It al so takes HANDSON comm itment' I know all about hands-on ~ommitment when it comes to our yillage.
Four and a half years ago. as your mayor. on many occasions I rode along with the police officers on their nightly shifts just to see how our town is
protected while we and our families sleep. Late that summer, our village was hit by a heavy rainstorm. On both Union Avenue and Mulberry Avenue, in some
places. the water stood_2 1/2 feet d ~ep . A stalled car sat with water halfway up into it. Thi s was caused tly debris run-off that had clqgged many of our street
drains. The workers with the street dept. had alread y went home Jor the day. I had them called back in . Those workers and I personally waded around in that
•
•
2 1/2 feet deep wa ter for 2 hours workin g to clear the debri s from the storm drains allowing the water to recede from roadways, sidewalks and many people 's
yards. On another occasion. one winter night our village was hit by a snow and ice storm . I drove around with out street department superintendent; Jack
Krautter, and together we moved tree limbs that were blocking our village streets, 9pening them up for you in the case of an emergency. I al so took time out
of my day three or four times a week to drive around our village looking for areas that needed attention. I would write down the· problems and the next
morning, I made sure that those things were taken care of. These are the kind of thin gs I' m talking about when I say that our village n eed ~ hands-on
commitmeht and I am ready to do that for you ~
.
·
I ask you to look bac k four years ago when I served as yo ur mayor for those seven months ... Did you feel that' you , your family, and our village were
pro perly taken care of" If so, the1. :e1's,do it again. I am ready to take on that job aga in , but. this time as your mayor for a full four year term.
In order to make thi s happen: I need your help tomorrow, each and everyone of yot1. Please take a few minu1 es out of your day and go to the poll s. Vote for
me and I prolnisc thai I wi ll make those fe w minutes worth you r whi le by taking the next fou r years of my time to work with and for you as your mayor if I
am el ected.
·
Tilank You.
Victor C. Young III
· Pd

lnside

i

�\

'

·The Daily Sentinel

Page AS

HIO

Monday, Novembers,

munity."
But the deve loper bac ked
out , Heimlich failed to win
re-election and the pro&gt;ess.
in effect, was back at

· By TERRY KINNEY
ASSOCI AT ED PRESS WRITE R

C INC INN ATI The
vision for the dow ntow n
riverfront for decades has
been of a gleaming neighborhood of _greenspace and
hig h-rises for li ving. work, ing and enrertaining. a destination for vi si tors and
haven for young professionals and downsizin g
baby boomers.
Deal after deal was shot
down by lack of fundin g or
political in fighting. A das' ic case was the squabble
hetween ci ty and county
offi cials ove r who owns the
air ri ght s over parkin g
ga ra ges needed to lift
buildings out of the Ohio
Ri ve r tlood plain.
New cooperative agreement s among the cit y.
Hamilton County and the
master developer have put
the dream closer to fruition
than it 's ever been . But
developers still have to find
about $800 million, and
public officials another
$200 million for infrastructure, to make it happen.
"The work is not done; it
really is only beginning, in
many ways,'' Councilman
David Crowley noted as
officials approved the
enabling legislation at a
joint meeting Thursday at
the National Underground
Railroad Freedom Center. .
The center is the only
building in a four-block by
three-block area between

squ are one .

AP photo

The Cincinnati skyline is reflected in a pool of standi ng l)'ater 1n a parking lot located along
the Ohio River, July 28, 2006, in Cincinnati. City officials are working on plans to allow
developers to build on the a rea. ·
the ri ve r and the downtown
business district.
"The good new s is the
city and county appear to
be on the same page and
seem ·to he working reasonably well togethe r. which is
rare here," said Am Bortz,
a partner in Towne
Propenies, which is building other high-end housing
nearby.
The area awaiting development covers about I 8
acres between Paul Brown
Stadium
and
Great

American Ball Park , leav- "The Banks," as the area
known ,
was
ing about 40 acres for a became
unveiled a decade ago.
riverfront park.
Urban planners had · The city and county
hoped that coi1strucrioh of finally put together a group
the city 's first downtown headed by Cincinnati Reds
sport s
stadium
owner Bob Castellini in
Riverfr01it Stadium, which May 2006 to strong-arm
opened in 1970 - would the project and line up a
spur development of the master developer. Thenarea, where there was only Commission President Phil
a few bars and a produce Heimlich confidently said,
warehou se. But it remained "Now we can count on a
mostly what it still is, a sea . 50-acre mud hole becomof surface parking lots , . ing a world class retail,
even after a proposal for office and residential com-

Now, with the city and
·county agreeing to work
together and ceding certain
rights to each other, Atl anta
developers
Carter
&amp;
Associates Comme rci al
Services and The Dawso n
Co. can begin to sol ic it
designs and line up fin ancing.
Ground could · be broken
on first-phase construction
by early ne xt ·year, with
people living and working
there by the end of 2009 or
early 20 I 0. But officiars
concede the entire project
could take at least a de cade
to complete.
"We are stepping away
from TO years of disa greement and moving into I0
years of de velopment ,"
said Mavor Mark Mallory.
Finding the money to ge t
it started isn ' t a sure thing.
Bortz said.
"Clearly. it' s going to
have to be sliced into .
smaller pieces to improve
the likelihood you can find
some support for at least
the initial phase," he said .
"I don't think you ' re going
to find it all in one place .
An equity lender might say,
' We ' ll do the first building
and an option in the next
phase.' You won ' t get it all
from any one source."

2007

The city and county will
have to come up with about
$58 million for infrastructure , and tlle de·velopers
about $74 million for the
first phase. whi ch will
include about 300 apartments, some retail space
and a couple restaurants. If
the entire project is com-.
pleted , it could add 1,800
apartments and condos to
Cincinnati 's. downtown
housing market.
" I view The BankS: to
some extent, as competitive
with one or two of the
buildings we ' re doing. bui
it may be a good thing
hecause it 's bringing pea"
pie back to the urban core,''
Bortz said .
The Banks also will have
to compete with high-rise
projects across the river on
the Kentucky shore. including a similar $1 billion
mixed-use proposal by one
of the dev elopers that
walked away froni the
Cincinnati deal.
City officials believe the
project reflects a turn,
around for the city, which
appears to have stanched a
decades-long out migration
of residents and shows ~
trend of rising property val:
ues.
"No longer are we goi~
to focus on the negatives;.,
said former Councilman
Todd Ponune, now presi- ·
dent of the Hamilton
County Commission . "Thi s
city and county are turning
things around."

Hospitals' development projects track Cleveland's suburban shift · Local weather
CLEVELAND (APJ Cleveland' s two ,major hospital systems are building
medical centers in the suburban city of Twinsburg, the
latest in a series of new construction projects that mirror
the demographic shift of the
region's affluent residents.
University Hospital's $29
million center will open in
Twinsburg soon, and the
Cleveland Clinic has purchased 84 acres in the
Summit County city to build
an outpatient medical and
surgical center.
Hospitals across the country are following a similar
building plan , erecting centers that are conveniently
located off interstate highways in expensive, fast growing suburbs. The satellite centers provide routine
care, and refer patients to the
flagship hospitals for visits
to specialists or for surgery.

"The focus is on the buildings, but the key is not the
buildings but the physician
network," said Dr. Achilles
Demetriou, president of
University Hospitals. The
centers are efficient, onestop shopping for patients
who live outside the city, he
said. ·
Unive.rsity Hospitals has
spent about $1 00 million in
the past I 0 years building its
suburban centers, driven in
part by the migration of residents to locations outside
the city, Demetriou said.
Messages seeking comment about the Clinic's
growth strategy · were left
with the Cleveland Clinic .
Although the Clinic
wouldn't disclose how much
it has spent on new medical
buildings, a review of building permits and land purchases around the region by
The (Cleveland) Plain

Dealer revealed it has spent
at least $1 SO million on new
projects in the last 15 years.
Combined. the Clinic and
University Hospitals have
spent an estimated quarter
of a billion dollars erecting
new centers, and mjllions
more on medical equipment
and interior furnishings for
the facilities . The- hospitals
have a combined 33 suburban centers that are in operation, p~anned or ,~,n~~ ~
co,nstrucllon, the newspaper
reported.
In. many cases the two
hospttal systems have bmlt
their centers startlingly
close to each other. _In
Twmsburg. the two facthties will be less than a mile
apan . In Westlake , they are
an exit apan on · the interstate .
The
Clinic' s
· Beachwood facility fs just
ov.er a mile aw\(y from
University ' ~ in Mayfield

Heights, and the Clinic's
Solon center is about nine
miles from University
Hospital's in Bainbridge
Township.
"They stalk one another
geographically," said Alan
Sager, a Boston University
pubhc health pro~ess~r.
... 1;be financtal reasomng ts,
you may not get an advantage over them, but they
~,an'\.~et an advantage over
yob. '
Sager, who has studied
hospital closings dating
from the 1930s in · more
than · 50 cities, including
Cleveland , Toledo · and
C0 1 b
. d th
d. ·I
urn us, sm . e me tea
exodus to the suburbs may
be hurung urban pauents.
As facthlles sprout m more
expensive areas, they are
failing to ensure · adequate
medical care for all , he said.

Monday ...Sunny in the morning ... Then partly sunny
with a chance of rain showers in the afternoon . High s in
the lower 60s. Southwest winds 5 to 10 mph . Chance of
rain 50 percent.
Monday night...Showers likely in the evening ... Then
partly cloudy with a chance of showers after midnight
Lows around 40. West winds 5 to 10 mph. Chance of
rain 70 pe(cent.
'fuesday'...Partly sunny. Much cooler with highs in the
upper 40s . West winds 10 to I 5 mph with gusts up to 30
. mph.
.
'fuesday night... Mostly cloudy. Cold with lows in the
lower 30s. West windh 'Ho I0 mph with gusts up to 20
mph.
'&lt;l
Wednesday ... Partly sunny. Highs in the mid 40s.
Wednesday night and Thursday ... Partly cloudy.
Lows in the lower 30s. Highs in the upper 40s .
Thursday night and Friday ...Mostly cloudy. A 30
percent chance of showers. Lows in the mid 30s. Highs
•
around 50.
Friday nighi...Mostly cloLtdy in the evening .. .Then
becoming partly cloudy. Cold with lows in the lower
30s.
Saturday through Veterans Day ... Partly cloudy.
Highs in the mid .50s. Lows in the mid 30s.

Blet:l flit:IDt t:. Young Ill
as yDUI

Pomeroy ayor

I

t

•

•

Prep football/voUeybaU pairings, Page B2
Bengals lose again, Page B3
CoUege football news, Page B4
· Patriots best team in football, Page B8

The Daily Sentinel

Johnson wins third straight race
BY MIKE HARRIS
ASSOCIATED PRESS

Nash leads
Suns past
Cleveland

FORT WORTH, Texas Jimmie Johnson was caught
between his competitive
urge to win and· the bi~-picture reality that a mtstake
could cost him a shot at
another NASCAR Nextel
Cup championship.
·
·The urge to wm won - .
and so did Johnson.
The reigning Cup champion came out on top after a
dramatic side-by-stde duel
with Matt Kenseth, grabbing
his third straight victory and,
more important, wresting
the series points lead fro !I)
Jeff Gordon on Sunday at
Texas Motor Speedway.
The race with Kenseth
was breathtaking at times,
with both cars wiggling dangerously as they came off
the corners nearly touching.
"That was tough racing,"
Johnson said. "Matt was
crowding me and I was try-

ing to move him up a little
bit and we were doin g all
that at 190 miles an hour. It
was pretty intense."
The entire time Johnson
was well aware a crash
would have taken him right
out of the championship battie.
"I feel like I was doing a
good job balancing those
emotions in the car," he said.
"When I got inside of Matt
and tried for a lap or two to
get by him and he was
crowding me, I actually
backed off and let him go.
So I just checked those feelings and regrouped and then
went back after him.
"But, after seeing the
video when I was doing the
· Victory Lane interview, I
was more sideways than I
felt like I was,'' Johnson
added, laughing. " I think I
was too focused on the prize
and I was pretty crossed up a
couple of times."
Even team owner Rick

•

Hendrick was unnerved by
the side-by-side raCing.
"We've got an awful lot at
stake here," Hendrick said.
"You know Jeff was running
seventh and I thought, 'We
don't need to do this.' BJ!t I
felt like Jimmie was under
control. I was nervous and I
was wanting to hit the
(radio) button, but I didn't."
Johnson, who began the
day nine points behind
Hendrick Motorspons teammate Gordon, moved out to
a 30-point lead with two
races remaining.in the Chase
for the championship.
Gordon, a four-time
· champion, led early in . the
race, but was no factor in the
late going, struggling with
handling before managing to
squeeze out a hard-earned
seventh-place finish that
kept the points battle close
heading to Phoenix next
week.

PHOENIX (AP) - Steve
Nash scored 30 points and
had 10 assists and the
Phoenix Suns - playing
without Amare Stoudemire
- rallied from a 12-point
second-quaner deficit and
Cleveland
beat
the
Cavaliers I 03-92 on Sunday
night.
Stoudemire, the Suns'
All -Star center, was sidelined because of soreness in
his right knee. He had
anhroscopic surgery on the
AP photo
knee Oct. 2. Coach Mike
NASCAR driver Jimmie Johnson celebrates his victory in the
D' Antoni said Stoudemire
Nextel Cup Dick1es 500 auto race, Sunday in Fort Worth,
Please see Johnson, Bl
was day to day.
Texas.
•
Despite
Stoudemire's
absence, the resilient Suns
were able to overcome the
Cavs and LeBron James.
Shawn Marion· had 23
points and 12 rebounds for
the Suns. Leandro Barbosa
scored 14 points, and Boris
Diaw, who staned · in place
of Stoudemire scored 16.
Nash had 22 points in the
second half.
. James scored 27 points,
. BY DAVE GOI.DBERG
But we still played well
21 in the second half, while
ASSOCIATEO PRESS
enough to win."
Zydrunas llgauskas and
New England, which had
Drew Gooden each scored
INDIANAPOLIS - No been scoring more than 41
14
22. Gooden had
running up the score this points a game, had piled
rebounds and llgauskas 13.
week. Against the Colts, points on late in several
The 7-foot-3 llgauskas,
Tom Brady was content to games in which they were
who was being guarded by
close out another victory for ·far ahead. including last
the 6-8 Diaw or 6-9 Brian
the New England Patriots by week's 52- 7 win over
Skinner, dominated the first
kneeling down three times. Wa.shington, when they kept
half, scoring 14 points and
In what was hyped as the playing hard well into the
grabbing ·eight rebounds en
biggest NFL regular season fourth quarter.
route to the !50th doublegame ever, the Patriots
In this contest, anticipated
double of his career.
stayed on course for an since the schedule came out
Gooden, also enjoying a
unbeaten season as Brady last April. they had tv work
two-inch hei~ht advantage
threw two of his three touch- their hardest just to win
over Grant Htll, chipped in
down passes in. a four- against perhaps the only
with 12 points and 10
minute span of the founh team in the NFL dose to
rebounds, helping the
quaner Sunday to overcome them.
Cavaliers to a 45-38 halfa 10-point deficit and beat
"We had an opponunity to
time advantage over the
Super · Bowl champion do a lot of things," said runcold-shooting Suns. At one
Indianapolis, 24-20.
ning back Joseph Addai, the
point, the Cavaliers led 39The win keeps the Patriots Colts' best offensive player
27.
· (9-0) on course for the on this day wi.th 112 yards
With their huge height
NFL's first unbeaten season rushing and a 73-yard score
advantage, the Cavaliers
since Miami did it 1972 and on a short pass from Peyton
enjoyed a 35-17 rebounding
gives them the first tiebreak- Manning. ''We left some
edge in the first two periods.
er over Indianapolis (7-1) in points squandered and got
They ~so had a 12- 1 bulge
the AFC playoffs.
tield goals when we should .
in second-chance points and
"This is the first time we have gotten touchdowns. but
a 30-18 margin in points in
were ·in a . ball game late," that's the nature of the
the paint.
said Brady, whose team had game. Those guys are good.
While llgauskas and
never before trailed in the We'll see them again.'~
Gooden were manhandling
founh quaner and had beatNew England trailed 20the shan-handed and ailing
en its previous eight oppo- 10 after Manning, who
Suns. James didn't join in
nents by an average of 25 threw for 225 yards and a
the fun much. Coming off a
points a game. "There was- touchdown , scored on a 145-point effort against the
n't any Joss of confidence or yard sneak with 9 minutes
New York Knickson Friday
determination."
and 42 seconds left in the
night, he was held to six
Added New England line- game, and the crowd roarAP photo
points on 3-of-12 shooting
backer Junior Seau: "We ing.
m the half.
· 'New England Patriots quarterback Tom Brady (12) breaks away from Indianapolis Colts were going against a hostile
But on a second-and- 10
Marion was . the only defensive end Dwight Freeney (93) in the third quarter of NFL football action in Indianapolis crowd, an undefeated team,
Please see Escape, Bl
bright spot for the Suns, Sunday.
we took our hats off to them.
scorin~ 13 points. including
Phoemx's only two 3-pointers.
.
'f:he rejuvenated Suns
picked up the pace in the
third period and took a 6964 lead into the founh quarter. .Nash ignited the comeback with a 3-pointer and
BY TOM WITHERS
down play in OT to lift the
finished with I0 points in
ASSOCIATED PRESS
Browns, who until Sunday
the period. Phoenix went
had beaten teams with a ·
ahead for good SS-53 on a
CLEVELAND - Derek combined 6-24 record.
turnaround bank shot by Anderson , Jamal Lewis
Dawson, who hooked an
Diaw.
and the Cleveland Browns extra point in the first ha,f,
· James also got rolling in passed their toughest test atoned for his miss by
tlie quarter, scoring II
· kicking the game-winner
points, including a toma- to date .
They
just
might
be
for
- on second down 5:43
hawk dunk, but didn't get
into OT - to send a crov. d
much help from his team- real.
Phil
Dawson
kicked
a
of
more than 70,000 in' v a
mates and the Cavaliers
in
overfrenzy
. The Browns went
25-yard
field
goal
were outscored 31-19. Nash
made sure the Suns didn't time to give the Browns a just 4- 12 last season and
Jose the lead in the fourth 33-30 comeback win over were given little chance of
the Seattle Seahawks on · being competitive this seaperiod, scoring 12 points.
·
Notes: This was the start Sunday along with their son .
first
three-game
winning
But
here
they
are
at the
of a six-game Western road
streak since 2001 .
halfway point of the regutrip for the Cavaliers.
Lewis rushed for a lar season: near the top of
career-high four touch- the AFC Nonh and in the
·downs, the last one with playoff mix .
CoNTACI'US
Anderson was 29-of-48
2:17 remaining in regulation,
for
the
Browns
(S-3),
for
364 yards, and Kellen
1-740-446·2342 e)((. 33
who trailed 2 1-6 in the first Winslow, shrugging off a
1·740-446-3008
half and were down 27-22 painful knee, matched a
E-mail- spor1sCmydaitysenUnel.com
in the fourth quarler.
career-high with 11 catches
li~Wtl.s!Atf
Anderson,
though, for 125 yards.
brought'
them
back
, and
Lewi s scored on runs of
Bryan Walters, Sports Writer
Cleveland's
poor
defense,
2,
1, 2 and I yards on a day
AP photo
(740) 446-2342 . .... 33 .
which came in as the hi s single-game ru shing Cleveland Browns running back Jamal Lewis (31 ) picks up 34 yards on a short pas·s play
bwaltersC mydailytrlbune.com
NFL' s worst-r.anked unit, record of 295 yards was as Seattle Seahawks linebacker Kevin Bentley (57 ) gives chase in overtime of an NFL footLarry Crum, Sports Writer
made a stop - helped by a
·
.
ball game Sunday 'in Cleveland. Three plays leter, PK Phil Dawson boot!!d a 25 yard field
(7401 446·2342, .... 33
Please see Browns, Bl
review - on a fourth goal to give Cleveland a 33,30 win.
k::rumOmydailyreglster.com

-n

F••-

ad

Bl
Monday, November 5, 2007

Lewis' 4 TDs help
Browns rally for win

With election day approaching us tomorrow, I would like to "touch bases" with you and your family one last time before
you vote.
.
The followin g are just a few -of the things that make me a :·qualified" candida!e for your next mayor...
I served a four year term on 'your Village council from 2000 to 2004. In addition to council member, during this term, I
also held the position of mayor for the last seven months. I was an active member of the Village Fi ttance Committee the first
three years of my term as Councilman. Each year your village budget is hundreds of thousal)ds of dollars.
For the past four years, I have been an acti ve me,;,ber of the Me igs Local Board of Education . The school board 's budget is millions of dol lars each year. I
know how important it is to research all o'ptions before making decisions regarding budgets as large as these. ·
If elected, I promise you that I can and I will apply for any available grant monies for your village whenever necessary. Many don ' t realize that most grants
still require the village to front a percentage of their own funds in order to secure this "free money" . During my last term as council member, council
president and mayor, I worked to help secure grants for your new fire truck, your "waterworks" park and your walking pa!h, just to name three things. I just
want all of you, the voters. to know that I am full y.QUALIFIED to kee ptahs on the tax money, your tax money that is in the Village General Fund . These
fund s help your village operate. I re!tlizc that it takes more than just a calculator and a stroke of a pen to operate this village properly. It al so takes HANDSON comm itment' I know all about hands-on ~ommitment when it comes to our yillage.
Four and a half years ago. as your mayor. on many occasions I rode along with the police officers on their nightly shifts just to see how our town is
protected while we and our families sleep. Late that summer, our village was hit by a heavy rainstorm. On both Union Avenue and Mulberry Avenue, in some
places. the water stood_2 1/2 feet d ~ep . A stalled car sat with water halfway up into it. Thi s was caused tly debris run-off that had clqgged many of our street
drains. The workers with the street dept. had alread y went home Jor the day. I had them called back in . Those workers and I personally waded around in that
•
•
2 1/2 feet deep wa ter for 2 hours workin g to clear the debri s from the storm drains allowing the water to recede from roadways, sidewalks and many people 's
yards. On another occasion. one winter night our village was hit by a snow and ice storm . I drove around with out street department superintendent; Jack
Krautter, and together we moved tree limbs that were blocking our village streets, 9pening them up for you in the case of an emergency. I al so took time out
of my day three or four times a week to drive around our village looking for areas that needed attention. I would write down the· problems and the next
morning, I made sure that those things were taken care of. These are the kind of thin gs I' m talking about when I say that our village n eed ~ hands-on
commitmeht and I am ready to do that for you ~
.
·
I ask you to look bac k four years ago when I served as yo ur mayor for those seven months ... Did you feel that' you , your family, and our village were
pro perly taken care of" If so, the1. :e1's,do it again. I am ready to take on that job aga in , but. this time as your mayor for a full four year term.
In order to make thi s happen: I need your help tomorrow, each and everyone of yot1. Please take a few minu1 es out of your day and go to the poll s. Vote for
me and I prolnisc thai I wi ll make those fe w minutes worth you r whi le by taking the next fou r years of my time to work with and for you as your mayor if I
am el ected.
·
Tilank You.
Victor C. Young III
· Pd

lnside

i

�'

Page B2 • The Daily Sentinel

Monday, November 5, 2007

www.mydailysentinel.com

Monday, November 5,

Browns

Prep footbaiVvolleyball pairings
Ohio football regional semifinal playoff pairings

Region 19. 1 Cots. Ready (10-1) vs. 4 Johnstown-Monroe (9·2) at Newark
White Field : 7 Fredericktown (9 -2) at 3 Wheelersbu rg (8-3) at Lancaster Fulton
Field
Region 20: 1 West Jefferson (11-0) vs . 4,West liberty-Salem (10- 1) at· Urbana
High School Stadium; 2 Maria Ste in Marion Local (11 -0) vs . 3 Cin Deer Park (92) at 1 p. m. at Clayton No'r th mont Stadium/Dudon Memorial Field
DIVISION VI
All Games at 7 p.m. Saturday unless noted
Region 21 . 1 Bascom Hopewell-Lo udon ( 1 1-0) vs 4 Mogadore ( 10-1) at
Ashland Community Stadium; 2 Norwalk S!. Paul (10- 1) vs . 3 Warren JFK (9-21
a t 1 p.m. at Medina Dukes Stadi um
Region 22: 1 McComb (10-1) vs. 4 Arlington (9 -2) at Findlay Donnell Stadium :
7 Oeftance Aye rsvllle (8-3} vs. 3 Ada (7-4) at Lima Senior Stad 1um
R . 23 . 1 N
k C th
21 vs . 4 Dp.nv1.11 e 18 -31 a1 1 ~i .m.a 1 M oun 1 vmnon
eglOn
.
e~ar . a . 19-.
Yellow Jacket ~tad1 um, 2 ~hadysrde (10-1) vs . 3 Hanr;ubal ~rver (10-1) at Mart1ns
Ferry _Purpl e Rrder ~lumn• Fr eid
.
.
Regron 24: 1 Cov1ngton (11 -0} vs. 5 Sidney Leh man (8·3} at Troy Memorral
. Stadium; 2 Springf1eld Cath . Cent. [ 11 -0) vs. 6 Mecha_nicsburg (7-4) at Sidney
Memorial Stadium

COLUMBUS (AP)- Reg1onal semifinal h1gh school footb~ ll playa!! pairings,
w1 th seed1ngs as prov1dcd by the Oh10 H•gh School Alhl et1c Associat1on
,
DIVISION I
All Game s at 7 p m _Saturday urless noted
Reg mn 1 1 Men Tor (8-2 ) vs 4 Solon (8-2) at Panna Byers F1eld, 7 Cleve
Glenv 1lle (9-2} vs 6 Youngs Boardman (8 3) at Tw1n_sburg T1ger Stadrum
Re~l on 2 1 Brun swick (1 1·0) vs. 4 To t. Whitme r (9-2) at Fremont Ross p~~l
Stadru m at Ha r mon Freid: 2 N. Canton Hoov~ r (9-2) v~ . 3 Macedonra Nordonr~
(10· 1) at Massillon Wa shmgtor1 Paul Brown Trger Sta drum .
Regro n 3. 1 Hrll1ard Darb~ (10-1)_ vs. 5 ~roveport-~adrson {8-3 ) at Upp~r
Arlington Moore hea d Memorral Stadrum: 2 Prcker1ngton Cent . \ 1 t-0) vs 3 Dublrn
Coffman (11-0\ at Gahanna Lincoln Stadiom
Region 4 1 Crn . St. Xavrer (l 1·0) vs 4 Centerville (9 •2 ) at 5 p.m . at Crncrnnatr
Paul Brown Stadium, 2 Cin Coleram (11 -0) vs . 6 Cin . Moelle! (7-3) at 2 p.m. at
Cincinnati Paul Brown Stadium
DIVISION 11
All Game s at 7:30 p.m. Fnday
Region 5 1 Warren Howland (t 1-0) vs. 5 Mayfie ld (8-3) at Sololi Stewar t Fiel d,
2 Tallmadge (10 -1) vs . 3 Parma Normandy (9-2) at Bedford Stewart Field at
Bearcat Stad1um
Region 6: 1 ·Avon Lake (11-0) vs . 4 Ashlana ( t O- t) at Brunswick Kirsh Fi eld : 2
Saturday·s regional fi nals results, state par rings , for the g1rls state hrgh school
Sylvanra Southview (10- 1) vs 6 Piqua (8-3) at L1ma Se-nior Stadium
Region 7: 1 Cols. DeSales ( 11 -0) vs. 4 Can fie ld (1 0- 1I at Canton Fawcett vo lleyball to urnament next week at Wright State Unrversity
'
DIVISION I
Stadium : 2 loursv tlle (9-2) vs 6 Dresden Tr i·Va lley (10· 1) at New Phifadelphia
Regional Finals Results
Woody Hayes Quaker Stad1um
Gin. MI. Notre Dame (23-4) del. Cin. Ursuline (19-8), 3-2; Rocky .Rive r
Region 8: 1 Ctn . Tu rpm (11-0) vs. 5 Trotwood-Mad 1son (8·3) at Centerville
Stadium . 2 Cin Ande rson (9-2) vs . 6 Day. Carroll P0- 1) at Gin. Prin ceton - Magni ficat (23-4) def. Amherst Steele (24 -3), 3-2; Cin cin nati Moth er of Mercy
·
del. Cots. Watterson , 3-1 , Mentor (26-2) del. Solon (22·5) . 3-2.
Mancuso F1etd rn Vrkrng Stad1um
State Semifinal Parring s
DIVISION Ill
Mt. I'Jolre Dame vs. Magn ificat , Friday, half hour alter first Division II semifinal;
All games at 7:30p.m. Fnday
Regi or1 9: 1 Cuyahoga Falls Walsh Jesuit (9- 1) vs 5 Cortl and Lakeview (9·2) at Mother of M ercy vs. Mentor, Fr id ay, half hour after first Divisio n I semifinal
Champi onship
Ravenna Stadium/Gilcrest Field : 2 Rocky R1ver (1 1-0) vs. Me ntor Lake Cath . (74) at La kewood Stadium
. Sa turday, 3 p.m
Region 10: 1 SUnbury Big Walnut (10-1) vs. 5 Shelby (9·2) at Lewis Ctr
DIVISION II
O te ntangy Braves Fr eid; 2 Napoleon \ 10-1) vs. 6 Clyde (10-1) at Tal. Cent. Cath.
Regional Finals Resul ts
·
Gallagher Athletic Complex
Salem (27 -0) del. Parm a Paqua Franci scan (22-5), 3-1 ; Tot. Cent. Cath. (24-4)
Region 11 · 1 Can al Fulton No rthwest i11 -0) vs . 4 Dover (8·3) at Massill on Paul del. Mansfiel d Madison (2 1-7}, 3-2: Cots. Hartley (22-5) del . Bexley (25-2 ), 3-0:
Brown T iger Stadium; 2 N ewark Licking Val ley (1 0-1.) vs. 3 Beloit West Branch Tipp City Tippecanoe (28-0) def. Bellbrook (19-8) , 3-0 State Semifinal Pairings
(9-2) at Wooster Folhs F1eld
Salem vs. Tot. Cent. Cath , Friday, 11 · a.rT).: C_ols. Hartley vs Tipp City
Region 12: 1 Cm. Ind ian Hill (9-2) vs. 5 Circleville (8-3) at Hillsboro Ri cha rds Tippec anoe, Friday, half hour after fir st semifinal
Memorial Field; 2 Canal VV mchester (W· 1) vs 6 Monroe (9-2) at Daytori
Championship
Welcome Stad iu m
Saturday, 1 p.m.
1

Regional girls volleyball results, state pairings

DIVISION IV

DIVISION Ill

All Games at 7 p.m. Sa turday
Regional Finals R9sults
Region 13: 1 Youn gs. Mooney (11 -0) vs . 4 Akron St. Vincent-St. Mary (9 -2) at
Lima Central Catholic (25-2) def. Huron (24-3), n.a. ; St. Bernard Roger Bacon
Beloit W. Branch Heacock Stadium; 2 Steubenville (11 ~0) vs. 3 Canton Cent. (19 -8) def. Versailles (24 -3), 3-0; Albany Alexander (24 -3 ) del. Franklort Aden a
Cath . (10-1) at Austintown Fitch Falco n Stadium
(23-4), n.a.; ,Qates Mills Gilmour (24-3 ) def. Indepen dence (22- 5), 3-0. State
Region 14: 1 Pemberville Eastwood (10-1) vs. 5 Genoa Area (10- 1) at Millbury
Semifinal Pairings
Lake Flyer Stadium: 7 01tawa-Giandor1 (9-2) vs. 3 Marion Pleasant (10· 1) at
Lima Cent. Cath . vs . St. Bernard Roger Bacon , Thursday, 6 p.m.; Albany
Tiffin Columbian National Field at- Frost-Kafnow Stadium
Ale~eanctSr vs. Gates Mills Gil mour, Thursday, half hour after fi rst semifinal
Region 15· 1 St. Clai rsville (1 1-0) vs. 4 Pataskala Licking Heights (10· 1) at
Championship
·
Zanesville Sulzberger Memor1al Stadium; 2 Will ramsport Westfall (11-(l) vs. 3
Saturday,
11
a.m.
Waverly (10 -1) at Ashv rlle Teays Valley Viking Stadiu m
OIVISION IV
Regio n 16: 1 Ketter1ng Aller (11 -0) vs. 5 Coldwater (10-1) at Piqua Ale~eander
Stadium/Purk Fietd; .2 Wes·t Mrlton Milton-U r:1 ion (10-1) vs . 3 Cla rk sville ClintonRegional Finals Results
Massie (10-1 ) at Ketteri ng Farrmont Roush Stadium
Jackson Center (25-3) del. Sidney Lehman (2 9-8 ), 3-0: Norwalk St . Paul (25-2 )
DIVISION v
del . Kidron Central Christian (23-5) , 3-1, Maria Stein Marion Local (26· 1) def
AU Games at 7:30p.m. Friday unless noted
Bascom Hopewell-Loudon (24-4), 3-0; Newark Ca th. (2 1-7) def '" Berlin H1land
Region 17: 1 N. LimaS. Range (11-0) vs. 4 Gates Mills Gilmour Acad. (9 -1) at (23 -5 ), 3-0. State Semifinal Pairin gs
·
Warren Hardi ng Mollenko pf Stadium: 2 Youngs. Ursu li ne (9-2) vs . 3,Apple Creek
Jackson Center vs . NOrwalk St. Paul, Fri day, half hour after second Divi sion I
Way nedal e (9-2) at Canton Cent. Cath. Klinefelter Stadium
' semifinal; Maria Stein Marion Local vs. Newark Cath., Friday, half hou r after first
Regi on 18: 1 Patrick Henry (10-1) liS. 4 Lima Cent. Ca th. (10-1) at Findlay I Division IV semifinal.
Donnell Sta dium; 2 Findlay Liberty-Bentor1 (11-0) vs. 6 Defi ance Tinora (9-2) at
Championship
Lima Bath Stadium
Saturday, 5 p.m.

Johnson
from PageBl
Johnson . who took the
points lead for good at
Texas last year on the way
to his first and only title,
said, "I do know we're racing for the championship
and now we have control of
it, I guess.'·

Kenseth w;ts one of four
drivers who moved to the
from on the final pit stops
by the leaders on lap 30 I ,
taking only two tires. Chad
Knau s, John son's crew
. chief, decided to change all
four on the No. 48
Chevrolet and his driver
came nut fifth for the restart
on lap 306 of the 334-lap
race.
"I felt like · four tires
would be better than two
with that many laps left , but
I also knew that we needed
to be the . first car ihat

Escape
· from Page Bl
from the Patriots 42 , Brady
hit Randy Moss over the top
for 55 yards to the Colts" 3
on a play in which Indy lost
Bob Sanders, its best defensive back tn injury. That set
up a 3-yard TO pass to Wes
Welker.
Rosevelt Colvin knocked
the ball loose from Manning
to force a punt on the next
series. Then Brady hit
Donte' Stallworth for 33
yards to the Colts 13 and on
the next play found Kevin
Faulk over the middle .for
13 yards and the winning
score with 3: 15 left.
The defense finished it
out. Jarvis Green knocked
the ball lose from Manning
and Colvin .recovered to
clinch the game on the
Colts' next series.
"Some victories do mean
more than others," said linebacker Tedy Bruschi, one of
a handful of Patriots who
played on all three ·of their
Super Bowl winners. "This
is one we, re going to
remember."
Coach Bill Belichick was
less enthusiastic .
"This was just a football
game against the Colts," the
Patriots coach said, "That' s
all it was."
For three quarters "just a
football game" looked like
it belonged to Indy.
It seemed to have turned
with 13 seconds· left in the
first half, when Addai took a
short pass from Manning
and raced 73 yards for a
touchdown , at least twice
fak ing ou t New Eng land
defenders who seemed as if
. they expecled ·hmt to ru n
out o( bounds to stop the
clock .

from PageBl
topped by Minnesota roo kie Adrian Peterson.
Seallle's
Mall
Hasselbeck went 30-of-47
for 31 g ya rds and two TDs
for the Seahawks (4-4),
who also got a 94-yard
punt return fro m Nate
Rurleson in the first hal f to
op~n a 15-point lead.
Bobby Engram had a
.career-high 14 catches for
139 vards and a TO for the
Seatiawks.
After Lewis' fourth TD
gave the Brown s a 28-27
lead with 2: 17 left in re gulation , they had to go for 2
becau se Daw so n had
missed an extra point in
the first half. Anderson
jammed a pas s to Joe
Jurevic ius to make it 3027.
Hasselbeck. give n plenty
of time by hi s line, then
Seattle
to
drove
Cleveland' s 2 and Josh
Brown booted a 22-yard
field goal as time expired
in regulation .
Seattle won the toss and
got the ball first in OT.
The Seahawks appeared to
pick up a crucial first
down when Hasselbeck
ran for nine yards on 3rdand-8. However, the play
was reviewed and the officials determined the quar.terback's left elbow had
hit the ground short of the
marker.
On fourth down at
Cleveland's
44,
the

BroWI)S stuffed Maurice
Morris . up the middle,
Again, the play was
reviewed, and for the second straight time the ca ll
went in Cleveland's favor
as the Seahawks came up
inches short.
Cleve land tnok over and
Anderson hit Lewis with a
scree n pass to the 2 1.
Anderson ran for I0 yards
and after another run
inside, Dawson. the only
Browns player left from
the 1999 expansion team,
came in and booted the
Browns to victory.
Hasselbeck threw TO
passes to Engram and D.J.
Hackett as Seattle took a
14-6 lead .in the second
quarter.
Burleson then · made it
2 1-6 with hi s electrifying
return . He gamb led and
decided not to call ·for a
. fair catch inside the 10,
and haul ed in Dave
Zastudi l 's punt at Seattle's
6.
From the re, he darted
right, broke left and
through a couple arm tack:
les in heavy traffi c and
was on his way. As he
crossed midfield , Burleson
faked out Zastudil , the last
Cleveland player with a
shot at stopping him , and
streaked to the end zone .
Burleson's TO return
matched Seattle 's club
record set by Charlie
Rogers
in
1999
at
Pittsburgh. It was· also the
longe st ever against the
Brow1is , breaking a 91yarder by Buffalo's Keith
Moody .in 1977.

changed four tires to get out glad I was able to gather . Third-place
Clint . Kenseth. · Busch, Carl pit stop. Newman finished .
of the pits ," Knau s said. that up and keep going,''
Bowyer, the surprise of the Edwards · and two-time fift~ and Burton held off ·
"The guys did a great job
They crossed the fini sh Chase, saw his chances for a champion Tony Stewart Gordon for sixth. .
·
getting us out there where line· exactly even -the tim- championship all but end remain alive in the Chase"We just tlat out got beat .
we needed to be." ·
today," Gordon said. "We
ing showing the difference when he had to make two barely.
Kenseth took the lead as 0.000 seconds - on lap green-llag stops because of
Kyle Busch is 339 points just weren't very good right
from Ryan Newman on the 328 and lap 332 as Kenseth, · a tire vibratioit, Ieising two behind Johnson, with from the start. There at the
restart and it tnok Johnson the 2003 Cup champion, laps and fini shing 19th, Edwards 357 back and end was the best we were all
day and night. We made the
until lap 313 to move to sec- tried desperately to hold off That left him a daunting 181 Stewart 373 behind.
Pole-winner Martin Truex most of it.
points behind Johnson.
ond. He then began closing Johnson.
The results also mathe- Jr. ' finished third, followed
" It was a di sappointing
· quickly on the No. 17 Ford
But
the
determined
matically
eliminated
six
of
by
Busch,
who
led
a
raceday,
but l' m happy for
of Kenseth ; who had a lead Johnson, who was shown as
the
12
drivers
in
the
Chase,
high
143
laps
but
fell
from
Jimmie and those ~uys.
of just over one second.
the leader on lap 332, finalI Oth-place first to seventh . on the final They did an awesome Job.":
Once Johnson caught ly got some space on including
him , the two battled lap Kenseth with two laps to go
after lt\p, bumping at least and raced away to his nine
once:
victory of the season, win"We raced a long time, ning by 0.944 seconds but he was probably ,pretty about 10 car-lengths.
confident 1 wasn ' t going to
It wa s Johnson ' s 32nd
wreck him," said Kenseth. career victory and first on
who also finished second in the 1.5-mile Texas ovaL He
Texas in April when he was led four times Sunday for a
passed on the last lap by Jeff total of nine laps.
On November 11, our nation will pause to pay tribute to the thousands
Burton. '·I didn't get him
A disappointed Kenseth
of men and women who have proudly served their country during times of
much extra room at all.
said, "He ran me down from
"I felt like I was sideway a long way back. I don't
crises and peace.
the whole ·rime. One time, know how fast he was, but I
This Veteran's Day, the Sunday Times-Sentinel will publish a very
(I) just about spun out. That W!IS steadily losing grip.
special tribute hof1oring area veterans. You cim join in our salute by
would have been bad. I'm Four tires is just too much."

Honor Our
Heroes

That gave the Colts a 13The Colts played without
7 halftime lead and seemed Marvin Harrison, their top
to be a huge momentum receiver. who missed his
.
shift.
third straight game with a
It certainly energized a knee injury. Starting left
Colts defense that was fly- tackled Tony Ugoh also was
, ing all over the field at the out and the Colts lost Tony
start of the second half. Gonzakz,
Harrison 's
Dwight Freeney and Robert replacement, with a finger
Mathi s .kept Brady under injury in the tlrst half.
pressure most of .the afterln the end, that wasn ' t as
noon and when middle line- much a factor as Brady. lie
backer Gary
Brackett threw for 153 of his 255
picked off a Brady pass in yards in the fourth quarter
the first minute of the fourth as the Patriots broke a threequarter
that
led
to game losing streak ag&amp;inst
Manning 's sneak . lr Jy the Colts, who beat them
seemed in control.
here 38-34 in the AFC title
But Brady. who had · 30 game last season and went
touchdown passes in the on to win the ·super Bowl
first half of the season. by beating Chicago.
putting him on course to
In that .. championship
shatter Manning's three- game, New England squanyear-old record of 49, final- dered an early 21-3 lead. On
ly awoke. The long pass to Sunday, though, the defense
Moss was New England's chipped in.
first gain longer than 19
"Look at our situation last
yards. lt.came on a scramble year," said Colvin, who
by Brady, who extended his grew up in Indianapolis and .
record with at least 3 TO used to make popcorn at
passes a game to start the Colts games when they flrst
season to 'nine games.
moved
here
from
Moss proved to be a key Baltimore. "We were not
throughout, finishing with 9 playing 60 minutes and we
catches for 145 yards and a turned an opportunity iqto a
touchdown, That came in fa1lure ." ,
the first quarter, when he
This time, the Patriots
easily leaped high over 5-8 failed early .. But they surTim Jennmgs to pull in a 4- vived late, when it was most
,
important.
yard TD.
Coach Tony Dungy said
Notes: Moss has 11
the Colts had prepart;d for touchdown catches in nine
Moss, knowinj! the Patriots games, tying the New
would go to h1m when they England record for a season.
needed a big play. Yet, they .,. Addai ran for 112 Yjds
were unable to contain him and had 5 catches for 14
when it counted most.
yards to become the flrst
"We didn't have the player in Colts history to go
answe~ for Randy Mo ss · mto triple figures in rushing
today," Dungy sa1d. "We and receiving in the same
had a lot of attention paid to game ... , The Colts had a
hiin trying to stop him from 13-game winning streak
catch ing the deep balls hvt going back. to last season
he caught the deep one at ended .... This was the third
the big time of the game. straight season they luld
That was reall y the play of started 7-0. They were 9-0
the ga me, got them a quick last season and 13-0 two
. "
score.
years ago.

including the veteran in your life, living or deceased, who IUls.served or is
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1969-1971
Army
VietNam

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Phone (740) 992-2155

2007

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The Daily Sentinel • Page B3

Bills RB Lynch throws, runs for score in 33-21 win over Bengals
JOHN WAWROW
ASSOCIATED PRESS

BY

Bengals WR Johnson carted off
field late in game ag~st Bills

ORCHARD PARK, N.Y.
- Who needs to de bate the
Bill &gt;' revolving door at
when
qua11erback
Marshawn Lynch showed
he can effectively fill two
positions?·
The rookie running bac k
threw a touchdown pa ss
and ran for another on consec utive fo urth-q uarter possess wn : ,
sparking
Buttalo s popgun attac k in
a 33-2 1 win over the
Cincin nati Bengals on
Sunday.
No big deal , said Lynch ,
the first-round pick who
has now helped produce six
of the BiII s' nine offensive
touchdowns this season.
"Aw, man , it was high
school. Pitch and catch
with Robert Royal ," Lynch
sa id, referring to his· 8-yard
pass to the tight end that put
the Bills up for good, 26-21
with 5:51 remaining. "1 just
wanted to make sure I got
that tight spiral on the balL"
.
AP pholo
. He was as effective as J.P. Buffalo Bills quarterback 'J, P, Losman throws under pressure from Cincinnati Bengals'
Losman, who put up big Dexter Jackson (28) during the first quarter of the NFL footbal l game at Ralph Wilson
numbers but lacked finish Stadium in Orchard Park, N.Y. Sunday.
in attempting to win back
his starting job.
everybody in this locker attempting a diving catch about thi s season. And it's
Losman went 24-of-34 room, " said Evans, who had over the middle. The game frustrating." ·
T.J . Houshmandzadeh,
for 295 yards with a touch- li season-best 165 yards was delayed for about 10
minutes
as
Johnson
was
with
a 15 -yard catch, and
down and interception in receiving. "The mi stakes
making his first start in five we made early in the sea- attended to by team train- Jereml Johnson, with a 1yard catch, also scored for
weeks . He was filling in for son, we're not making now. ers.
The Bengals continue to the Bengals.
rookie Trent Edwards, who We just have to keep it
be undone by a porous and
For Houshmandzadeh. it
sprained his right hand in a rolling."
13-3 win at the New York
The Bengals (2-6) not injury-depleted defense. was his I Oth touchdown
Jets last week.
only lost for the sixth time which entered the game reception to set a career
Losman's problem is the in seven games, they al so allowing 385 yards offense high. He also extended his
scoring streak to eight
same that plagued Edwards might have lost Chad and 30 points.
so far this season. Against Johnson, The colorful wide ·''I'm not happy about it games, the longes(to start a
Cincinnati, after Lee Evans receiver was carted off the and there's nothing .I can season since Elroy Hirsch
caught an 8-yard touch- field on a stretcher with 2 change about it," Lewis scored .in 10 straight games
down pass on the opening minutes left and then Iran s- said, "We're disappointed." , :-vith the Los Angeles Rams
possession, the Bills settled ported to a Buffalo-area
The Bengals squandered· m 1961.
for four field goals on four hospital as a precaution two leads and failed to take
The Bengals, however,
trips inside the Bengals 20 after complaining of neck advantage of Glenn Holt's were stymied by the Bills'
pain.
before Lynch took over.
100-yard kickoff return that no-name defense that limitLynch finished with a
Johnson rejoined the put them up 14-10 in late in ed the Bengals to 28 yards
career-best 153 yarcJ.~ rush- team in time for its !light the second quarter.
rushing. That included Rudi
ing, capped by a splendid home to Cincinnati after
Cincinnati's offense sput- Johnson managing II yards
56-yard touchdown run tests came back normal , tered down the stretch , on nine carries; he missed
with 2:22 'left. He helped Bengals spokesman Jack managing 22 yards and one three of the past four games
the Bills produce 479 yards Brennan said.
first down on its first three with a hamstring injury.
offense, matching their
Coach Marvin Lewis said possessions of the fourth
" It's
about
earning
most since a 49-31 loss to Johnson never lost con- quarter.
respect," linebacker Angelo
Oakland on Oct. 6, 2002.
sciousness and had move"We're just not a very Crowell said after leading
The Bills (4,4) have won ment in all extremities,
good football team," quar- the Bills with 14 tackles.
three straight and four of · Johnson was liurt when terback Carson Palmer said. "Going out ihere and beatfive to overcome an 0-3 he was sandwiched by Bills "1 don't have words for the ing Cincinnati ... and doing
start.
defenders Don.te Whitner way we feel in this locker those types of things even"It's real big. It's big for and Coy Wire while room · about this game, tually gains respect.-"

ORc;HARD ~ARK. N.Y. (AP) - Bengals receiver
Chad Johnson flew hoine with his teammates Sunday
after medical tests showed he sustained no damage to his
neck after being hurt late in Cincinnati's game against
Buffalo.
Team spokesman Jack Brennan said Johnson joined the
team for 1ts scheduled flight 10 Cincinnati after having a
CT scan of hi s neck at u Buffalo-area hospital. Brennan
said test results were normal.
Johnson was hurt when he was sandwiched by Bills
defenders Dontc Whitner and Coy Wire while attempting
to make a divi ng catch over the middle with 1:53 remaining of the Bengal&gt;' 33 -21 loss to the Bills. Johnson
dropped the ball and was face-down on the field at the
Bills 37 as the game was delayed for about 10 minutes,
Coach Marvin Lewis said Johnson had movement in all
extremities and was sent to a hospital as a precaution,
Johnson had tests immediately after he was carted off the
field and before he was loaded into an ambuP!mce about
20 minutes aft~r the .game ended,
Fellow receiver and good friend T.J. Houshmandzadeh
jumped into the 3}Tlbulance to be with Johnson. ·
A second ambulance was required to transport Johll$Qtl
after the first one experienced engine ·trouble, spitting
gray exhaust fumes as it drove onto the field,
Before being carted off, me·mbers of both team&amp;. gath7
ered around Johnson, who had his neck, immobilized: ·,,
''It looked like he was. moving his body, but he was iri
a lot of pain," quarterback Carson Palmer said. "AU
can do is pray for him and hope that it's nothing serious: .:
. Johnson was stretched out when Whitner hit him ~ross
the chest and shoulderjust after the ball arrived. · · .:.:·
~·I didn't try to hurt him or anything," Whitnerjald, '~l.'
hope he's all right..,. I ~ope he's healthy and able to .plll¥
next week. orthe followmg week!'
.
J&gt;.
The in~tial scene W\\S ~erily similar to w~~ BUls ti~~!:
end Kevm Everett sustamed a severe neck lllJUry dunng,
Buffalo's season opener against Den~er. Everett was Pfll'~'
alyzed from the neck d9wn, but has smce made a r~marb
able recovery. . .
.
.
. ·
. · "iJ;J.
He's currently able to' move his arms and legs .as tiC:,
continues the second phase of his rebabilitation'.lP
Houston. ·
.
. t&gt;'''
.. :J6hr!s~n had take~ a big hit earl~er in the game, wh~
he·w~ knocked face-firs~ at the Sideline by cornilrbl!C~
Terrenql 1)-fcGee. He finished with three catches for 4:8.
yards . .Johnson entered the g3JT!e. ranked second in the
NFL with 731 yards receiving.
·· ·
The Bills lost two players to injuries.
•
Slot rece·iver Roscoe Pairish did not return after bruis•
in~ a rig~t quadriceps late i_n ~he ~eco~d quarter. Starting
middle lmebacker John DtGtor~lo d1d not return after
sustaining a concussion in the th1rd quarter.
.· Coach Dick Jaurpq said both will f!!quire more tests.

wi\

Notes: Lynch was the
first non-Bills quarterback
to complete a touchdown
pass since RB Joe Cribbs
hit RB Curtis Brown for a
9-yard pass against Dallas
in 1981. ... Holt's return
was the second longest in
Bengals history, 2 yards
short of the mark set by
Eric Bieniemy against the

Giants in 1997 .... By converting Evans' touchdown,
PK Rian Lindell hit his
235th consecutive extra
point, · setting the NFL
record for longest streak to
open a career. The eightyear veteran passed the
record set by Tommy Davis
from 1959-65.

Owens and Romo make
it look easy in Cowboys
38-17 rout of Eagles
PHILADELPHIA (AP) - funerals in the parking lot or
Terrell Owens stuck it to the derisive chants in the stands.
Philad~lphia Eagles again.
Even the boo s lacked
· Nearly two years to the venom.
dav Owens was banished
Once the Cowbovs went
from the Eagles, the star up by 14 late in the second
r~ceiver caught 10 passes quarter, Owens·tried hard to
for 174 yards and one touch- incite the rowdies. He strut down to help the Dallas ted along the sideline, flapCowboys
dismantle pihg his arms and yelling at
Philadelphia 38-17 , on the crowd behind the bench.
Sunday night.
But the disappointed
· Tony Romo threw three , Philly faithful were too
TO passes, Marion Barber angry at their own team to
had 106 total yards and one worry about Owen &lt; anti cs.
score and the NFC East' So, they directed thei r bu(Js
leading Cowboys improved at the Eagles as they ran off
to 7-1 for the first time sinee the field.
1995,
It got uglier after halftime
• Desperately needing a vic- when Dallas increased its
tory to have any hope of lead to 28-7 on· the first
defending their division drive of the third quarter.
championship, the last-place Owens turned a short pass
Eagles (3-5) were dominat- from Romo into a 45-yard
ed on both sides. .
TD catch.
. It's the worst start for
Known for his tlamboyant
Philadelphia since Andy celebration s, Owens didn' t
Reid became coach in 1999. rub it in all that much. He
Reid had a .tumultuous· just !lapped his arms again
week, m1ssmg practice the way he used to when he
Thursday to be in court with was catching passes from
his two oldest sons. A jud~e McNabb, .
sentenced Garrett and Bntt
After Jason Witten caught
Reid to prison and likened a 20-yard TD pass to make it
Reid's home to a "drug 35,-10 in the third quarter,
emporium."
the stadium emptied. No one
Right from the start, it was wanted to stay around and
clear Reid and the Eagles watch Owel)s celebrate anywere in for a tough night.
more.
Donovan McNabb fumWhile the Eagles try to
bled on the first play from figure out how to save a seascrimmage,
and
the son that began with high
Cowboys converted it into expectations, the· Cowboys
their flrst score, a 2-yard run are getting ready for an
by Julius Jones.
important match up at the
Owens had a key 23-yard New York Giants (6-2) next
catch on third-and-6 during Sunday.
that drive, and tormented the
Romo finished 20-for-25
Eagles all night.
for 324 yards and had one
· Unlike his VISit to interception. He became the
P.hiladelphia last year, T.O.'s first quarterback the Eagles
second trip to Lincoln didn' t sack this season.
After Brian Westbrook's
Financial Field since he was
kicked off the team he 3-yard TO run tied it at 7.
helped reach the 2004 Super Romo ·tossed a !-yard TD
Bowl was merely an after- pass to Tony Curtis to give
thought·.
Dallas a 14-7 lead it never
There were no mock relinquished.

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Page B2 • The Daily Sentinel

Monday, November 5, 2007

www.mydailysentinel.com

Monday, November 5,

Browns

Prep footbaiVvolleyball pairings
Ohio football regional semifinal playoff pairings

Region 19. 1 Cots. Ready (10-1) vs. 4 Johnstown-Monroe (9·2) at Newark
White Field : 7 Fredericktown (9 -2) at 3 Wheelersbu rg (8-3) at Lancaster Fulton
Field
Region 20: 1 West Jefferson (11-0) vs . 4,West liberty-Salem (10- 1) at· Urbana
High School Stadium; 2 Maria Ste in Marion Local (11 -0) vs . 3 Cin Deer Park (92) at 1 p. m. at Clayton No'r th mont Stadium/Dudon Memorial Field
DIVISION VI
All Games at 7 p.m. Saturday unless noted
Region 21 . 1 Bascom Hopewell-Lo udon ( 1 1-0) vs 4 Mogadore ( 10-1) at
Ashland Community Stadium; 2 Norwalk S!. Paul (10- 1) vs . 3 Warren JFK (9-21
a t 1 p.m. at Medina Dukes Stadi um
Region 22: 1 McComb (10-1) vs. 4 Arlington (9 -2) at Findlay Donnell Stadium :
7 Oeftance Aye rsvllle (8-3} vs. 3 Ada (7-4) at Lima Senior Stad 1um
R . 23 . 1 N
k C th
21 vs . 4 Dp.nv1.11 e 18 -31 a1 1 ~i .m.a 1 M oun 1 vmnon
eglOn
.
e~ar . a . 19-.
Yellow Jacket ~tad1 um, 2 ~hadysrde (10-1) vs . 3 Hanr;ubal ~rver (10-1) at Mart1ns
Ferry _Purpl e Rrder ~lumn• Fr eid
.
.
Regron 24: 1 Cov1ngton (11 -0} vs. 5 Sidney Leh man (8·3} at Troy Memorral
. Stadium; 2 Springf1eld Cath . Cent. [ 11 -0) vs. 6 Mecha_nicsburg (7-4) at Sidney
Memorial Stadium

COLUMBUS (AP)- Reg1onal semifinal h1gh school footb~ ll playa!! pairings,
w1 th seed1ngs as prov1dcd by the Oh10 H•gh School Alhl et1c Associat1on
,
DIVISION I
All Game s at 7 p m _Saturday urless noted
Reg mn 1 1 Men Tor (8-2 ) vs 4 Solon (8-2) at Panna Byers F1eld, 7 Cleve
Glenv 1lle (9-2} vs 6 Youngs Boardman (8 3) at Tw1n_sburg T1ger Stadrum
Re~l on 2 1 Brun swick (1 1·0) vs. 4 To t. Whitme r (9-2) at Fremont Ross p~~l
Stadru m at Ha r mon Freid: 2 N. Canton Hoov~ r (9-2) v~ . 3 Macedonra Nordonr~
(10· 1) at Massillon Wa shmgtor1 Paul Brown Trger Sta drum .
Regro n 3. 1 Hrll1ard Darb~ (10-1)_ vs. 5 ~roveport-~adrson {8-3 ) at Upp~r
Arlington Moore hea d Memorral Stadrum: 2 Prcker1ngton Cent . \ 1 t-0) vs 3 Dublrn
Coffman (11-0\ at Gahanna Lincoln Stadiom
Region 4 1 Crn . St. Xavrer (l 1·0) vs 4 Centerville (9 •2 ) at 5 p.m . at Crncrnnatr
Paul Brown Stadium, 2 Cin Coleram (11 -0) vs . 6 Cin . Moelle! (7-3) at 2 p.m. at
Cincinnati Paul Brown Stadium
DIVISION 11
All Game s at 7:30 p.m. Fnday
Region 5 1 Warren Howland (t 1-0) vs. 5 Mayfie ld (8-3) at Sololi Stewar t Fiel d,
2 Tallmadge (10 -1) vs . 3 Parma Normandy (9-2) at Bedford Stewart Field at
Bearcat Stad1um
Region 6: 1 ·Avon Lake (11-0) vs . 4 Ashlana ( t O- t) at Brunswick Kirsh Fi eld : 2
Saturday·s regional fi nals results, state par rings , for the g1rls state hrgh school
Sylvanra Southview (10- 1) vs 6 Piqua (8-3) at L1ma Se-nior Stadium
Region 7: 1 Cols. DeSales ( 11 -0) vs. 4 Can fie ld (1 0- 1I at Canton Fawcett vo lleyball to urnament next week at Wright State Unrversity
'
DIVISION I
Stadium : 2 loursv tlle (9-2) vs 6 Dresden Tr i·Va lley (10· 1) at New Phifadelphia
Regional Finals Results
Woody Hayes Quaker Stad1um
Gin. MI. Notre Dame (23-4) del. Cin. Ursuline (19-8), 3-2; Rocky .Rive r
Region 8: 1 Ctn . Tu rpm (11-0) vs. 5 Trotwood-Mad 1son (8·3) at Centerville
Stadium . 2 Cin Ande rson (9-2) vs . 6 Day. Carroll P0- 1) at Gin. Prin ceton - Magni ficat (23-4) def. Amherst Steele (24 -3), 3-2; Cin cin nati Moth er of Mercy
·
del. Cots. Watterson , 3-1 , Mentor (26-2) del. Solon (22·5) . 3-2.
Mancuso F1etd rn Vrkrng Stad1um
State Semifinal Parring s
DIVISION Ill
Mt. I'Jolre Dame vs. Magn ificat , Friday, half hour alter first Division II semifinal;
All games at 7:30p.m. Fnday
Regi or1 9: 1 Cuyahoga Falls Walsh Jesuit (9- 1) vs 5 Cortl and Lakeview (9·2) at Mother of M ercy vs. Mentor, Fr id ay, half hour after first Divisio n I semifinal
Champi onship
Ravenna Stadium/Gilcrest Field : 2 Rocky R1ver (1 1-0) vs. Me ntor Lake Cath . (74) at La kewood Stadium
. Sa turday, 3 p.m
Region 10: 1 SUnbury Big Walnut (10-1) vs. 5 Shelby (9·2) at Lewis Ctr
DIVISION II
O te ntangy Braves Fr eid; 2 Napoleon \ 10-1) vs. 6 Clyde (10-1) at Tal. Cent. Cath.
Regional Finals Resul ts
·
Gallagher Athletic Complex
Salem (27 -0) del. Parm a Paqua Franci scan (22-5), 3-1 ; Tot. Cent. Cath. (24-4)
Region 11 · 1 Can al Fulton No rthwest i11 -0) vs . 4 Dover (8·3) at Massill on Paul del. Mansfiel d Madison (2 1-7}, 3-2: Cots. Hartley (22-5) del . Bexley (25-2 ), 3-0:
Brown T iger Stadium; 2 N ewark Licking Val ley (1 0-1.) vs. 3 Beloit West Branch Tipp City Tippecanoe (28-0) def. Bellbrook (19-8) , 3-0 State Semifinal Pairings
(9-2) at Wooster Folhs F1eld
Salem vs. Tot. Cent. Cath , Friday, 11 · a.rT).: C_ols. Hartley vs Tipp City
Region 12: 1 Cm. Ind ian Hill (9-2) vs. 5 Circleville (8-3) at Hillsboro Ri cha rds Tippec anoe, Friday, half hour after fir st semifinal
Memorial Field; 2 Canal VV mchester (W· 1) vs 6 Monroe (9-2) at Daytori
Championship
Welcome Stad iu m
Saturday, 1 p.m.
1

Regional girls volleyball results, state pairings

DIVISION IV

DIVISION Ill

All Games at 7 p.m. Sa turday
Regional Finals R9sults
Region 13: 1 Youn gs. Mooney (11 -0) vs . 4 Akron St. Vincent-St. Mary (9 -2) at
Lima Central Catholic (25-2) def. Huron (24-3), n.a. ; St. Bernard Roger Bacon
Beloit W. Branch Heacock Stadium; 2 Steubenville (11 ~0) vs. 3 Canton Cent. (19 -8) def. Versailles (24 -3), 3-0; Albany Alexander (24 -3 ) del. Franklort Aden a
Cath . (10-1) at Austintown Fitch Falco n Stadium
(23-4), n.a.; ,Qates Mills Gilmour (24-3 ) def. Indepen dence (22- 5), 3-0. State
Region 14: 1 Pemberville Eastwood (10-1) vs. 5 Genoa Area (10- 1) at Millbury
Semifinal Pairings
Lake Flyer Stadium: 7 01tawa-Giandor1 (9-2) vs. 3 Marion Pleasant (10· 1) at
Lima Cent. Cath . vs . St. Bernard Roger Bacon , Thursday, 6 p.m.; Albany
Tiffin Columbian National Field at- Frost-Kafnow Stadium
Ale~eanctSr vs. Gates Mills Gil mour, Thursday, half hour after fi rst semifinal
Region 15· 1 St. Clai rsville (1 1-0) vs. 4 Pataskala Licking Heights (10· 1) at
Championship
·
Zanesville Sulzberger Memor1al Stadium; 2 Will ramsport Westfall (11-(l) vs. 3
Saturday,
11
a.m.
Waverly (10 -1) at Ashv rlle Teays Valley Viking Stadiu m
OIVISION IV
Regio n 16: 1 Ketter1ng Aller (11 -0) vs. 5 Coldwater (10-1) at Piqua Ale~eander
Stadium/Purk Fietd; .2 Wes·t Mrlton Milton-U r:1 ion (10-1) vs . 3 Cla rk sville ClintonRegional Finals Results
Massie (10-1 ) at Ketteri ng Farrmont Roush Stadium
Jackson Center (25-3) del. Sidney Lehman (2 9-8 ), 3-0: Norwalk St . Paul (25-2 )
DIVISION v
del . Kidron Central Christian (23-5) , 3-1, Maria Stein Marion Local (26· 1) def
AU Games at 7:30p.m. Friday unless noted
Bascom Hopewell-Loudon (24-4), 3-0; Newark Ca th. (2 1-7) def '" Berlin H1land
Region 17: 1 N. LimaS. Range (11-0) vs. 4 Gates Mills Gilmour Acad. (9 -1) at (23 -5 ), 3-0. State Semifinal Pairin gs
·
Warren Hardi ng Mollenko pf Stadium: 2 Youngs. Ursu li ne (9-2) vs . 3,Apple Creek
Jackson Center vs . NOrwalk St. Paul, Fri day, half hour after second Divi sion I
Way nedal e (9-2) at Canton Cent. Cath. Klinefelter Stadium
' semifinal; Maria Stein Marion Local vs. Newark Cath., Friday, half hou r after first
Regi on 18: 1 Patrick Henry (10-1) liS. 4 Lima Cent. Ca th. (10-1) at Findlay I Division IV semifinal.
Donnell Sta dium; 2 Findlay Liberty-Bentor1 (11-0) vs. 6 Defi ance Tinora (9-2) at
Championship
Lima Bath Stadium
Saturday, 5 p.m.

Johnson
from PageBl
Johnson . who took the
points lead for good at
Texas last year on the way
to his first and only title,
said, "I do know we're racing for the championship
and now we have control of
it, I guess.'·

Kenseth w;ts one of four
drivers who moved to the
from on the final pit stops
by the leaders on lap 30 I ,
taking only two tires. Chad
Knau s, John son's crew
. chief, decided to change all
four on the No. 48
Chevrolet and his driver
came nut fifth for the restart
on lap 306 of the 334-lap
race.
"I felt like · four tires
would be better than two
with that many laps left , but
I also knew that we needed
to be the . first car ihat

Escape
· from Page Bl
from the Patriots 42 , Brady
hit Randy Moss over the top
for 55 yards to the Colts" 3
on a play in which Indy lost
Bob Sanders, its best defensive back tn injury. That set
up a 3-yard TO pass to Wes
Welker.
Rosevelt Colvin knocked
the ball loose from Manning
to force a punt on the next
series. Then Brady hit
Donte' Stallworth for 33
yards to the Colts 13 and on
the next play found Kevin
Faulk over the middle .for
13 yards and the winning
score with 3: 15 left.
The defense finished it
out. Jarvis Green knocked
the ball lose from Manning
and Colvin .recovered to
clinch the game on the
Colts' next series.
"Some victories do mean
more than others," said linebacker Tedy Bruschi, one of
a handful of Patriots who
played on all three ·of their
Super Bowl winners. "This
is one we, re going to
remember."
Coach Bill Belichick was
less enthusiastic .
"This was just a football
game against the Colts," the
Patriots coach said, "That' s
all it was."
For three quarters "just a
football game" looked like
it belonged to Indy.
It seemed to have turned
with 13 seconds· left in the
first half, when Addai took a
short pass from Manning
and raced 73 yards for a
touchdown , at least twice
fak ing ou t New Eng land
defenders who seemed as if
. they expecled ·hmt to ru n
out o( bounds to stop the
clock .

from PageBl
topped by Minnesota roo kie Adrian Peterson.
Seallle's
Mall
Hasselbeck went 30-of-47
for 31 g ya rds and two TDs
for the Seahawks (4-4),
who also got a 94-yard
punt return fro m Nate
Rurleson in the first hal f to
op~n a 15-point lead.
Bobby Engram had a
.career-high 14 catches for
139 vards and a TO for the
Seatiawks.
After Lewis' fourth TD
gave the Brown s a 28-27
lead with 2: 17 left in re gulation , they had to go for 2
becau se Daw so n had
missed an extra point in
the first half. Anderson
jammed a pas s to Joe
Jurevic ius to make it 3027.
Hasselbeck. give n plenty
of time by hi s line, then
Seattle
to
drove
Cleveland' s 2 and Josh
Brown booted a 22-yard
field goal as time expired
in regulation .
Seattle won the toss and
got the ball first in OT.
The Seahawks appeared to
pick up a crucial first
down when Hasselbeck
ran for nine yards on 3rdand-8. However, the play
was reviewed and the officials determined the quar.terback's left elbow had
hit the ground short of the
marker.
On fourth down at
Cleveland's
44,
the

BroWI)S stuffed Maurice
Morris . up the middle,
Again, the play was
reviewed, and for the second straight time the ca ll
went in Cleveland's favor
as the Seahawks came up
inches short.
Cleve land tnok over and
Anderson hit Lewis with a
scree n pass to the 2 1.
Anderson ran for I0 yards
and after another run
inside, Dawson. the only
Browns player left from
the 1999 expansion team,
came in and booted the
Browns to victory.
Hasselbeck threw TO
passes to Engram and D.J.
Hackett as Seattle took a
14-6 lead .in the second
quarter.
Burleson then · made it
2 1-6 with hi s electrifying
return . He gamb led and
decided not to call ·for a
. fair catch inside the 10,
and haul ed in Dave
Zastudi l 's punt at Seattle's
6.
From the re, he darted
right, broke left and
through a couple arm tack:
les in heavy traffi c and
was on his way. As he
crossed midfield , Burleson
faked out Zastudil , the last
Cleveland player with a
shot at stopping him , and
streaked to the end zone .
Burleson's TO return
matched Seattle 's club
record set by Charlie
Rogers
in
1999
at
Pittsburgh. It was· also the
longe st ever against the
Brow1is , breaking a 91yarder by Buffalo's Keith
Moody .in 1977.

changed four tires to get out glad I was able to gather . Third-place
Clint . Kenseth. · Busch, Carl pit stop. Newman finished .
of the pits ," Knau s said. that up and keep going,''
Bowyer, the surprise of the Edwards · and two-time fift~ and Burton held off ·
"The guys did a great job
They crossed the fini sh Chase, saw his chances for a champion Tony Stewart Gordon for sixth. .
·
getting us out there where line· exactly even -the tim- championship all but end remain alive in the Chase"We just tlat out got beat .
we needed to be." ·
today," Gordon said. "We
ing showing the difference when he had to make two barely.
Kenseth took the lead as 0.000 seconds - on lap green-llag stops because of
Kyle Busch is 339 points just weren't very good right
from Ryan Newman on the 328 and lap 332 as Kenseth, · a tire vibratioit, Ieising two behind Johnson, with from the start. There at the
restart and it tnok Johnson the 2003 Cup champion, laps and fini shing 19th, Edwards 357 back and end was the best we were all
day and night. We made the
until lap 313 to move to sec- tried desperately to hold off That left him a daunting 181 Stewart 373 behind.
Pole-winner Martin Truex most of it.
points behind Johnson.
ond. He then began closing Johnson.
The results also mathe- Jr. ' finished third, followed
" It was a di sappointing
· quickly on the No. 17 Ford
But
the
determined
matically
eliminated
six
of
by
Busch,
who
led
a
raceday,
but l' m happy for
of Kenseth ; who had a lead Johnson, who was shown as
the
12
drivers
in
the
Chase,
high
143
laps
but
fell
from
Jimmie and those ~uys.
of just over one second.
the leader on lap 332, finalI Oth-place first to seventh . on the final They did an awesome Job.":
Once Johnson caught ly got some space on including
him , the two battled lap Kenseth with two laps to go
after lt\p, bumping at least and raced away to his nine
once:
victory of the season, win"We raced a long time, ning by 0.944 seconds but he was probably ,pretty about 10 car-lengths.
confident 1 wasn ' t going to
It wa s Johnson ' s 32nd
wreck him," said Kenseth. career victory and first on
who also finished second in the 1.5-mile Texas ovaL He
Texas in April when he was led four times Sunday for a
passed on the last lap by Jeff total of nine laps.
On November 11, our nation will pause to pay tribute to the thousands
Burton. '·I didn't get him
A disappointed Kenseth
of men and women who have proudly served their country during times of
much extra room at all.
said, "He ran me down from
"I felt like I was sideway a long way back. I don't
crises and peace.
the whole ·rime. One time, know how fast he was, but I
This Veteran's Day, the Sunday Times-Sentinel will publish a very
(I) just about spun out. That W!IS steadily losing grip.
special tribute hof1oring area veterans. You cim join in our salute by
would have been bad. I'm Four tires is just too much."

Honor Our
Heroes

That gave the Colts a 13The Colts played without
7 halftime lead and seemed Marvin Harrison, their top
to be a huge momentum receiver. who missed his
.
shift.
third straight game with a
It certainly energized a knee injury. Starting left
Colts defense that was fly- tackled Tony Ugoh also was
, ing all over the field at the out and the Colts lost Tony
start of the second half. Gonzakz,
Harrison 's
Dwight Freeney and Robert replacement, with a finger
Mathi s .kept Brady under injury in the tlrst half.
pressure most of .the afterln the end, that wasn ' t as
noon and when middle line- much a factor as Brady. lie
backer Gary
Brackett threw for 153 of his 255
picked off a Brady pass in yards in the fourth quarter
the first minute of the fourth as the Patriots broke a threequarter
that
led
to game losing streak ag&amp;inst
Manning 's sneak . lr Jy the Colts, who beat them
seemed in control.
here 38-34 in the AFC title
But Brady. who had · 30 game last season and went
touchdown passes in the on to win the ·super Bowl
first half of the season. by beating Chicago.
putting him on course to
In that .. championship
shatter Manning's three- game, New England squanyear-old record of 49, final- dered an early 21-3 lead. On
ly awoke. The long pass to Sunday, though, the defense
Moss was New England's chipped in.
first gain longer than 19
"Look at our situation last
yards. lt.came on a scramble year," said Colvin, who
by Brady, who extended his grew up in Indianapolis and .
record with at least 3 TO used to make popcorn at
passes a game to start the Colts games when they flrst
season to 'nine games.
moved
here
from
Moss proved to be a key Baltimore. "We were not
throughout, finishing with 9 playing 60 minutes and we
catches for 145 yards and a turned an opportunity iqto a
touchdown, That came in fa1lure ." ,
the first quarter, when he
This time, the Patriots
easily leaped high over 5-8 failed early .. But they surTim Jennmgs to pull in a 4- vived late, when it was most
,
important.
yard TD.
Coach Tony Dungy said
Notes: Moss has 11
the Colts had prepart;d for touchdown catches in nine
Moss, knowinj! the Patriots games, tying the New
would go to h1m when they England record for a season.
needed a big play. Yet, they .,. Addai ran for 112 Yjds
were unable to contain him and had 5 catches for 14
when it counted most.
yards to become the flrst
"We didn't have the player in Colts history to go
answe~ for Randy Mo ss · mto triple figures in rushing
today," Dungy sa1d. "We and receiving in the same
had a lot of attention paid to game ... , The Colts had a
hiin trying to stop him from 13-game winning streak
catch ing the deep balls hvt going back. to last season
he caught the deep one at ended .... This was the third
the big time of the game. straight season they luld
That was reall y the play of started 7-0. They were 9-0
the ga me, got them a quick last season and 13-0 two
. "
score.
years ago.

including the veteran in your life, living or deceased, who IUls.served or is
currently serving in any bran~h of the U.S. Armed Forces.

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1969-1971
Army
VietNam

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Ad With Photo- $15.00
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2007

www .mydailysentinel.com

The Daily Sentinel • Page B3

Bills RB Lynch throws, runs for score in 33-21 win over Bengals
JOHN WAWROW
ASSOCIATED PRESS

BY

Bengals WR Johnson carted off
field late in game ag~st Bills

ORCHARD PARK, N.Y.
- Who needs to de bate the
Bill &gt;' revolving door at
when
qua11erback
Marshawn Lynch showed
he can effectively fill two
positions?·
The rookie running bac k
threw a touchdown pa ss
and ran for another on consec utive fo urth-q uarter possess wn : ,
sparking
Buttalo s popgun attac k in
a 33-2 1 win over the
Cincin nati Bengals on
Sunday.
No big deal , said Lynch ,
the first-round pick who
has now helped produce six
of the BiII s' nine offensive
touchdowns this season.
"Aw, man , it was high
school. Pitch and catch
with Robert Royal ," Lynch
sa id, referring to his· 8-yard
pass to the tight end that put
the Bills up for good, 26-21
with 5:51 remaining. "1 just
wanted to make sure I got
that tight spiral on the balL"
.
AP pholo
. He was as effective as J.P. Buffalo Bills quarterback 'J, P, Losman throws under pressure from Cincinnati Bengals'
Losman, who put up big Dexter Jackson (28) during the first quarter of the NFL footbal l game at Ralph Wilson
numbers but lacked finish Stadium in Orchard Park, N.Y. Sunday.
in attempting to win back
his starting job.
everybody in this locker attempting a diving catch about thi s season. And it's
Losman went 24-of-34 room, " said Evans, who had over the middle. The game frustrating." ·
T.J . Houshmandzadeh,
for 295 yards with a touch- li season-best 165 yards was delayed for about 10
minutes
as
Johnson
was
with
a 15 -yard catch, and
down and interception in receiving. "The mi stakes
making his first start in five we made early in the sea- attended to by team train- Jereml Johnson, with a 1yard catch, also scored for
weeks . He was filling in for son, we're not making now. ers.
The Bengals continue to the Bengals.
rookie Trent Edwards, who We just have to keep it
be undone by a porous and
For Houshmandzadeh. it
sprained his right hand in a rolling."
13-3 win at the New York
The Bengals (2-6) not injury-depleted defense. was his I Oth touchdown
Jets last week.
only lost for the sixth time which entered the game reception to set a career
Losman's problem is the in seven games, they al so allowing 385 yards offense high. He also extended his
scoring streak to eight
same that plagued Edwards might have lost Chad and 30 points.
so far this season. Against Johnson, The colorful wide ·''I'm not happy about it games, the longes(to start a
Cincinnati, after Lee Evans receiver was carted off the and there's nothing .I can season since Elroy Hirsch
caught an 8-yard touch- field on a stretcher with 2 change about it," Lewis scored .in 10 straight games
down pass on the opening minutes left and then Iran s- said, "We're disappointed." , :-vith the Los Angeles Rams
possession, the Bills settled ported to a Buffalo-area
The Bengals squandered· m 1961.
for four field goals on four hospital as a precaution two leads and failed to take
The Bengals, however,
trips inside the Bengals 20 after complaining of neck advantage of Glenn Holt's were stymied by the Bills'
pain.
before Lynch took over.
100-yard kickoff return that no-name defense that limitLynch finished with a
Johnson rejoined the put them up 14-10 in late in ed the Bengals to 28 yards
career-best 153 yarcJ.~ rush- team in time for its !light the second quarter.
rushing. That included Rudi
ing, capped by a splendid home to Cincinnati after
Cincinnati's offense sput- Johnson managing II yards
56-yard touchdown run tests came back normal , tered down the stretch , on nine carries; he missed
with 2:22 'left. He helped Bengals spokesman Jack managing 22 yards and one three of the past four games
the Bills produce 479 yards Brennan said.
first down on its first three with a hamstring injury.
offense, matching their
Coach Marvin Lewis said possessions of the fourth
" It's
about
earning
most since a 49-31 loss to Johnson never lost con- quarter.
respect," linebacker Angelo
Oakland on Oct. 6, 2002.
sciousness and had move"We're just not a very Crowell said after leading
The Bills (4,4) have won ment in all extremities,
good football team," quar- the Bills with 14 tackles.
three straight and four of · Johnson was liurt when terback Carson Palmer said. "Going out ihere and beatfive to overcome an 0-3 he was sandwiched by Bills "1 don't have words for the ing Cincinnati ... and doing
start.
defenders Don.te Whitner way we feel in this locker those types of things even"It's real big. It's big for and Coy Wire while room · about this game, tually gains respect.-"

ORc;HARD ~ARK. N.Y. (AP) - Bengals receiver
Chad Johnson flew hoine with his teammates Sunday
after medical tests showed he sustained no damage to his
neck after being hurt late in Cincinnati's game against
Buffalo.
Team spokesman Jack Brennan said Johnson joined the
team for 1ts scheduled flight 10 Cincinnati after having a
CT scan of hi s neck at u Buffalo-area hospital. Brennan
said test results were normal.
Johnson was hurt when he was sandwiched by Bills
defenders Dontc Whitner and Coy Wire while attempting
to make a divi ng catch over the middle with 1:53 remaining of the Bengal&gt;' 33 -21 loss to the Bills. Johnson
dropped the ball and was face-down on the field at the
Bills 37 as the game was delayed for about 10 minutes,
Coach Marvin Lewis said Johnson had movement in all
extremities and was sent to a hospital as a precaution,
Johnson had tests immediately after he was carted off the
field and before he was loaded into an ambuP!mce about
20 minutes aft~r the .game ended,
Fellow receiver and good friend T.J. Houshmandzadeh
jumped into the 3}Tlbulance to be with Johnson. ·
A second ambulance was required to transport Johll$Qtl
after the first one experienced engine ·trouble, spitting
gray exhaust fumes as it drove onto the field,
Before being carted off, me·mbers of both team&amp;. gath7
ered around Johnson, who had his neck, immobilized: ·,,
''It looked like he was. moving his body, but he was iri
a lot of pain," quarterback Carson Palmer said. "AU
can do is pray for him and hope that it's nothing serious: .:
. Johnson was stretched out when Whitner hit him ~ross
the chest and shoulderjust after the ball arrived. · · .:.:·
~·I didn't try to hurt him or anything," Whitnerjald, '~l.'
hope he's all right..,. I ~ope he's healthy and able to .plll¥
next week. orthe followmg week!'
.
J&gt;.
The in~tial scene W\\S ~erily similar to w~~ BUls ti~~!:
end Kevm Everett sustamed a severe neck lllJUry dunng,
Buffalo's season opener against Den~er. Everett was Pfll'~'
alyzed from the neck d9wn, but has smce made a r~marb
able recovery. . .
.
.
. ·
. · "iJ;J.
He's currently able to' move his arms and legs .as tiC:,
continues the second phase of his rebabilitation'.lP
Houston. ·
.
. t&gt;'''
.. :J6hr!s~n had take~ a big hit earl~er in the game, wh~
he·w~ knocked face-firs~ at the Sideline by cornilrbl!C~
Terrenql 1)-fcGee. He finished with three catches for 4:8.
yards . .Johnson entered the g3JT!e. ranked second in the
NFL with 731 yards receiving.
·· ·
The Bills lost two players to injuries.
•
Slot rece·iver Roscoe Pairish did not return after bruis•
in~ a rig~t quadriceps late i_n ~he ~eco~d quarter. Starting
middle lmebacker John DtGtor~lo d1d not return after
sustaining a concussion in the th1rd quarter.
.· Coach Dick Jaurpq said both will f!!quire more tests.

wi\

Notes: Lynch was the
first non-Bills quarterback
to complete a touchdown
pass since RB Joe Cribbs
hit RB Curtis Brown for a
9-yard pass against Dallas
in 1981. ... Holt's return
was the second longest in
Bengals history, 2 yards
short of the mark set by
Eric Bieniemy against the

Giants in 1997 .... By converting Evans' touchdown,
PK Rian Lindell hit his
235th consecutive extra
point, · setting the NFL
record for longest streak to
open a career. The eightyear veteran passed the
record set by Tommy Davis
from 1959-65.

Owens and Romo make
it look easy in Cowboys
38-17 rout of Eagles
PHILADELPHIA (AP) - funerals in the parking lot or
Terrell Owens stuck it to the derisive chants in the stands.
Philad~lphia Eagles again.
Even the boo s lacked
· Nearly two years to the venom.
dav Owens was banished
Once the Cowbovs went
from the Eagles, the star up by 14 late in the second
r~ceiver caught 10 passes quarter, Owens·tried hard to
for 174 yards and one touch- incite the rowdies. He strut down to help the Dallas ted along the sideline, flapCowboys
dismantle pihg his arms and yelling at
Philadelphia 38-17 , on the crowd behind the bench.
Sunday night.
But the disappointed
· Tony Romo threw three , Philly faithful were too
TO passes, Marion Barber angry at their own team to
had 106 total yards and one worry about Owen &lt; anti cs.
score and the NFC East' So, they directed thei r bu(Js
leading Cowboys improved at the Eagles as they ran off
to 7-1 for the first time sinee the field.
1995,
It got uglier after halftime
• Desperately needing a vic- when Dallas increased its
tory to have any hope of lead to 28-7 on· the first
defending their division drive of the third quarter.
championship, the last-place Owens turned a short pass
Eagles (3-5) were dominat- from Romo into a 45-yard
ed on both sides. .
TD catch.
. It's the worst start for
Known for his tlamboyant
Philadelphia since Andy celebration s, Owens didn' t
Reid became coach in 1999. rub it in all that much. He
Reid had a .tumultuous· just !lapped his arms again
week, m1ssmg practice the way he used to when he
Thursday to be in court with was catching passes from
his two oldest sons. A jud~e McNabb, .
sentenced Garrett and Bntt
After Jason Witten caught
Reid to prison and likened a 20-yard TD pass to make it
Reid's home to a "drug 35,-10 in the third quarter,
emporium."
the stadium emptied. No one
Right from the start, it was wanted to stay around and
clear Reid and the Eagles watch Owel)s celebrate anywere in for a tough night.
more.
Donovan McNabb fumWhile the Eagles try to
bled on the first play from figure out how to save a seascrimmage,
and
the son that began with high
Cowboys converted it into expectations, the· Cowboys
their flrst score, a 2-yard run are getting ready for an
by Julius Jones.
important match up at the
Owens had a key 23-yard New York Giants (6-2) next
catch on third-and-6 during Sunday.
that drive, and tormented the
Romo finished 20-for-25
Eagles all night.
for 324 yards and had one
· Unlike his VISit to interception. He became the
P.hiladelphia last year, T.O.'s first quarterback the Eagles
second trip to Lincoln didn' t sack this season.
After Brian Westbrook's
Financial Field since he was
kicked off the team he 3-yard TO run tied it at 7.
helped reach the 2004 Super Romo ·tossed a !-yard TD
Bowl was merely an after- pass to Tony Curtis to give
thought·.
Dallas a 14-7 lead it never
There were no mock relinquished.

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Monday, November 5, 2007 ·

Monday, November 5, 2007

www.mydailysentinel.com

LSU takes second place in BCS standings, others close behind
'

BY RALPH Russo
ASSOCIATED PRESS

top spot the week before Thanksgiving and
several
teams JOStle&lt;.! for the other spot over
~·.
AH AB7 CM KM JS PW
the next two weeks
It came down to Flonda and Mtchtgan and
1 Ohio Slate
25 25 23 24 25 25
21 24 25 25 23 24
2 LSU
the Gators got the votes they needed to pass
3. Oregon
24 23 24 22 22 23
the Wolveunes in the ftnal BCS standmgs,
23 19 20 23 24 22
4 Kantas
5 Oldahoma
18 18 19 '19 18 19
The outcome utdn 't sit well with Michigan
6 Ml&amp;&amp;oun
20 13 17 18 19 18
and showed the glanng flaws in the Bowl
7 West Vlrglnta
15 22 14 14 15 16
Championsh ip Senes.
8. Boston College
19 20 22 20 21 20
9 Arizona State
22 21 21 21 20 21
The system hasn 't-changed and tl1e prob10. Georgia
17 12 16 16 16 14
lem
ot trymg to chose between several wor1t Vtrglnla Tech
10 14 13 17 17 17
12 Mlchogan
12 17 11 12 13 12
thy contendet s to play in the litle game
13. Connecticut
16 15 16 15 14 15
could
come up agam 111 the cortung weeks.
14 Texas
9
6
9
2
10
3
LSU
has a BCS average of .94 1 The
15 Florida
13 10 12 13 12 8
16 HawaM
0
0
0
0
0
11
Tigers are second 111 both the Harris and
17. usc
11
16 1
1
2
2
coaches'
poll , wh tch makes up two-thtrd ot
18 Auburn
6
9
8
6
1
6
19 Virginia
14 0
15 11 10 13
a BCS average. and ate No 2 m the com 20. Boise Slate
4
11 10 0
0
5
puter rdtings.
1
7
21 Clemson
5
11
9
9
Oregon's BCS average ts .918 and Kansas
22. Allibama
8
2
6
10 7
0
7
8
23 ?em Stale
3
6
5
6
ts
at 843 The surprismg Jayhawks still
24. Tenne....
2
4
0
5
8
4
have
a btg game agamst stxth-place
25. Kentucky
0
0
4
4
0
0
Mtssmllt lett on the schedule and a possible
LSU doesn't drop a game
Big 12 champtonsht p game Wmning both
The BCS could be headmg for,, repeat of would give Kansas ' numbers a substantial
last season, when OhiO State locked up the boost.
BCS Stand:lla List

NEW YORK - LSU is tn position to play
tor .t n,tt tonal champtonshtp Oregon tsn 't
tar behmd the Ttgers .1nd unbeate~ K.msas ts
loommg
T.tk u]g au vantage ot Boston College·~
ltrst loss ot the season, the Ttgers moved
tmo second place t11 the Bowl
Ch.tmp ton shtp Senes standmgs released
Sund.ty
Unucfeated Oh10 State ( 10-0) ts sttll in
tnst. .mu cou ld lock up a second stratght
.1ppear.mce 111 the BCS nattonal ch.tmptonshtp game on Jan. 7 with victories agamst
Ill mots ,md Mtchtgan in its last two games.
LSU (8-1) has at least three games Ielt and
probably four wtth the Southeastern
Conference Utle game on Dec. I. Wmning
out could get the Ttgers a spot m the tttle
g.une at the Superdome in New Orleans.
That's no lock
Third-plac~ Oregon (R- 1) and fourt h-pl ace
Kansas (9-01 are close enoush to at least
hav e a shot at passmg the Ttgers, even if

.

Oklahoma's average IS 839. Mtssouri,
West Virgmta, Boston College, Anzona
State and Georgta round out the top I0.
In the AP Top 25, the first ftve teams are
Oh10 Stille, LSU, Oregon, Oklahoma and
Kansas.
LStJ. which has been hving on the edge
tor the past month, won another close game
Saturday. The Ttgers came from behind to
beat Alilbama 41-34
Oregon dtdn't have nearly as tough a time
again st Arizona State. The Ducks beat the
previously undefeated Sun Devtls 35-23
behmd Dennis Dixon's four touchdown
passes
Kansas route&lt;.! Nebraska 76-39 and
Oklahoma pounded Texas A&amp;M 42-14.
If all these teams keep winning, how
tmf}resstvely they go about their business
could determine which gets a shot at the
title.
.
Hawatt ts in 16th place thts week, sttll . :
four places short of where the Warriors need ··
to finish to earn an automatic bid to a big- :
money bowl game.

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Florida State topples
No. 2 Boston College

AP photo

Oh 1o State coach J1m Tressel talks to quarterback Todd Boeckman (17) and w1de rece1ver Bnan Rob1skte (80) dunng a
football game against Wtscons1n on Saturday in Columbus.

OSU has won 20 straight in Big
Ten, but has 2 tough games left
BY RuSTY MILLER
ASSOC IATED PRESS

COLUMBUS - In spite
of a I0-0 record built on an
average score of 35-10, topranked Ohio State believes
tt has been tested by ftre .
'· Being down is a good snttalton lor our team," linebacket Marcus Freeman
sa td after Saturday's closerthan-11-mtght-look 38-17
win
over
Wisconsm
"Handltn g adverstty ts
1mportan t ..
The Buckeyes ( 10-0, 6-0
B1g Ten) hdve whtttled thetr
scheu ule down to games at
home agamst lllinot s thts
Sa turday and a possible
wmner-take-all showdown
at Michigan on Nov. 17.
Oh1o State. which ascended from No. II m the preseason to Nu I as team alter
team faltered. now fmds 11
easy to locus on what's at
qake
"I JUSt tty to get better
each game - anu tsn't that
hke our team ''" quarterback
Todd Boeckman smd after
passmg tm two touchdowns
agat nst the Badgers.
There have b,een very few
close call s tor the Buckeyes
except fot thetr two most
rece nt home go~ m es . They
gave up two defens ive
touch do wns 111 the third
quarter agamst Michi gan
State on Oct 20, and had a
lew tense moments before

cementing a 24- 17 win
Then agamst Wisconsin,
they fell behind 17 -I 0 mtd·
way through the third quarter before gomg on a 28-0
streak to put the game away
That streak helped stretch
several other streaks. The
vtctory was Ohto State 's
20th in a row in conference
play to set a record. It was
Ohto State's 28th consecutive regular season wm,
sandwtched around that
ugly 41-14 defeat to Florida
m
last year's
Bowl
Championship Senes tttle
game.
The Buckeyes felt it was
good that they had their
backs to the wall agamst
Wisconsin.
"It's the first time all season where we faced adversity late," satd defenstve tackle Vernon Gholston, who
tied a school record with
four sacks. "I' m happy wtth
the way we handled tt."
The Buckeyes haven't had
to sustam a dnve, force a
punt or make a play late in a
game to win a game yet unlike LSU or Michigan or
most of the other highestrated teams. But at the same
time , they've come up with
answers when most needed
"I' ll give credit to Oh10
State. They persevered and
were able to be strol)g m the
fourth quarter, whtch won
the football game," satd
Wisconsin coach Bret

Btelema, who regrettcu that
people looking at the lm.tl
score would get the wrong
impression that the game
wasn't close
Chns Well s and th e
Buckeyes' stingy defense
were the marquee stars m
that fourth-quarter effort.
Wells, who prefers to be
P.O by hi s mck name
'Beanie," is an mstde-out
runner who I S butlt hke a
fast tank . When the offense
most needed to play keepaway with the baiL the 235pound tmlback was the central ftgure
On his first I2 carnes he
rushed for 5 I yarus without
a touchdown . On ht s last
nme ~ encompassmg hts
fmal two runs of the third
quarter and all of the fourth
-,- he ran tl mne ttmes lor
122 yards and touchdowns
of 31, 30 and 23 yards.
Meanwhile, Ohio State's
defen se - whtch has given
up only 21 more points this
year than Nebraska surrendered m Saturuay's 76-39
loss to unbeaten Kansas dominated
In the fourth quarter
alone , wtth the game still
han ging m the balance.
Buckeyes defenders were
re~ular
vtsttors to the
Wtsconsm backfield. The
Badgers lost two fumbl es
tnstde their ow n 25 and
muffed a fake punt , ran the
ball for minus-28 yards on

BOSTON (AP) - Geno
Hayes returned Matt Ryan's
third interception for a 38yaru touchdown with I :I 0 to
play on Saturday mght to
help Flonda State beat No. 2
Boston College 27-17, endtng the Eagles' run at an
unbeaten season and shaking
up the BCS standings yet
agatn
With the loss by BC (8-1 ,
4-1
Atlantic
Coast
Conference). there are three
unbeaten teams left in the
natton - Ohto State, Kansas
and Hawan - and a handful
of one-loss teams who can
argue for a spot in the Bowl
Championship Series title
game. LSU will probably
take second-place behind
Ohio State tn the BCS stanumgs when they com~ out
Sunday.
Drew Weatherforu completed 29-of-45 passes for
354 yards for Flonda State
(6-3, 3-3). hitttng Preston
Parker nine times for 93
yards and a touchdown and
De'Cody Fagg on SI X catches
lor Ill yards and a TD. Ryan
ftm shed 25 -fur-53 for two
touchdowns and 415 yards
- hts fourth career 400-yard
game, tying Doug Flutie for
the most tn school history

But his intercepllons were
costly.
Ryan was ptcked off once
in the first quarter inside the
Seminoles I0. He also threw
an interception early in the
third that allowed Florida
State to move mto posttion
for a 4G-yard field goal that
made it 10-0.
It was the second consecutive game BC trailed 10-0
before mounting a rally: The :
Eagles spotted Virgima Tech. ·
a two-score lead on Oct 25 :
before Ryan threw two
touchdown passes m the final
2: II.
Thts time, he had more
than 20 mmutes to work
With.
Ryan led BC on a fourplay, 70-yard drive over 63
seconds, hitting Ryan Purvis
for 2~ yards to the Seminoles
30 anr;j then Brandon
Robinson for the touchdown.
The teams traded field goals,
then Weatherford htt Fagg on
a 42-yard touchdown pass to
give the Seminoles a 20-10
lead.
BC got the ball back with a
chance to take the lead, but
Hayes ripped the ball free
from an Eagles' receiver on a
pass across the middle and
went easily into the end zone.

nine attempt s (thanks to
sacks) and totaled 19 vards
on 23 pldys
·
"There's defm!lely a reaSOUTH BEND, Ind. (AP)- It took 44 years and three , ;
son why they're No I,"
Wisconsm
quarterbac k overtimcs for Navy to beat Notre Dame agam.
The Mtdshipmen snapped an NCAA-record 43-game
Tyler Donovan satd. "They
Iosmg streak to the Fighting lnsh on Saturday with a 4644
have speed. streng th
victory in triple overtime
everythmg."
Katpo-Noa Kaheaku-Enhada threw a 25-yard TD pass to
They' II need all ot that as
they prepare for perhaps the Reggie Campbell on the first play of the third overtime,
two hardest games on thei r then found htm again in the end zone for the 2-point con•
vers1on.
schedule.
Notre Dame ( 1-8) cut the lead to two on a 5-yard TD run
A year ago. when Ohio
State was acclaimed at the by Travis Thomas But after a pass mterference call gave
ttme as the best team in the Notre Dame a second-chance at the 2-pmnt conversiOn,
land . tl struggled mtghuly defensive lineman Michael Walsh and linebacker Irv
belore escapmg Chdmpatgn, Spencer tackled Thomas well short of the end zone.
It was the first ttme Navy (5-4) beat Notre Dame since a
Ill , With a 17-10 VICtOty
3514 win in 1963 when Roger Staubach was quarterback
The Ilhm just seemed to
for
the Midshipmen. The Midshtpmen celebrated the long·
match up well.
Regardless now the ga me awaited vtctory at midfield, jumping on top of each other.
"Wow, what a game," Navy coach Paul Johnson said.
w!lh Illinoi s comes out, at
"I'
m so happy tor our pla)ers. Now they will have that they
least a shltre of the Btg Ten
are
the class that broke the streak and they won't have to
crow n w11l be ndmg on the
annual regular-season finale hear any more about it."
For Notre Dame, it was its school-record fifth straight
at Mtchtgan.
home
loss, ,another low point m a season of lows.
When the Buckeyes
"We lost the game. The streak doesn' t mean anythmg to
tnule(l I 7- I0 late m the third
quarter on Saturday. often- me," Notre Dame coach Charlie Weis said.
The ln sh, who could &lt;.to httle to slow Navy's offense,
stve tackle Kuk Batton sa td
the Mtdshtpmen to three-and-out late in the fourth
held
they started askmg some
quarter wtth the score tied at 28 Gre\l Veteto had the first ·
hard quest tons.
"We were JUst looking at punt of the game, and Tom Zbikowskt returned it 32 yards :
·
each other (saymg). ' Where to the Navy 3S
The
Irish
drove
to
the
24,
but
on
fourth-and-8
Notre
do you w,mt to be 111
J,m uaty? Do yo u wa nt to be Dame coach Charlte Wets decided to go for it rather than
attempt a field goal Chris Kuhar-Pitters, who earlier
111 tht s place or do you w.tnl
to be 111 that place?'" Barton returned a fumble 16 yards for a touchdown, sacked Evan
Sharpley with 45 seconds left.
s~nd "We know whete we
It was the fourth sack for Navy, which entered the game
'want to be, but we have to
execu te better 111 the ltrst wtth ftve.
Notre Dame, whtch hadn 't scored more than 20 points all
half if we wan t to get there."
season, led 21-14 at halftime, the first halftime lead for the
Irish all season.
The two teams traded touchdowns most of the day and
had JUSt traded mtSsed field goals when Kt:thar-Pitters came
up with his btg play earl y m the fourth quarter. Sharpley
&lt;~nd Pttt, however coach Jtm
dropped back to pass and was wrapped up by nose guard
Leavttt conceded the best hts Nate Frazter and defensive end Mtchael Walsh knocked the
team ca n hope tor at thts ball louse. Kuhar-Pmers scooped up the loose ball and rumpoint 1s the young program's bled mto the end zone
thm.l stratght bowl bet1h
Kaheaku-Enhada scored the 2-pomt conversion to give
Both teams were climbmg the Midshipmen a 28-2 1 lead
111 Top 25 after wmm ng thetr
The Irish responded, though, wtth a touchdown of their :
tit s! stx ga mes ol the season own as Thomas went in from 3 yards out with 3:25 remain- .
but lmmd themse lves Ill ues- mg to lie It
.,
perate need of a wm Saturday
Robert Hughes, whose brother Tony was fatally shot on
after Iosmg two strdtght 111 Tuesday, scored Notre Dame's first touchdown on a 3-yard ;
con ference play
run. Irish players, some of whom attended the funeral :
Even though the nMtchup Fnday.. swarmed Hughes. He ran over to the sideline and :
lacked some of the appc,tl got a hug from Weis.
Before the game. a moment of silence was held for :
nMny felt tt wquld have after
USF rc.Khed No 2, II w,ts Hughes ' brother and the death of Ryan Shay, a former :
still very tmportantto th ~ Bt g Notre Dame runner who dted Saturday during the U.S. ;
men 's marathon OlympiC tnals
.
E,l'l I .ICC

Cincinnati builds big lead, then holds off USF
TAMPA . Fla (AP) Cmcmnati forced etght
turnover,, score&lt;.! J I pmnts 111
the first quarter and protected
the football better than 11 had
111 weeks Sttll , the Bearcats
neeued a g.nne-endmg defenstve stop to l:iarely hold off
No 20 South Flonda
A 11twuan Gtddens scored
on " 63-y.trd receptiOn anu
tecm eted a blocked punt 111
the c nr.l mne for a second
touchdow n. helptng the
Bearc.1h (7-2, 2-2) stop a
two-g,unc lostng streak that
knocked them out of the Top
2S

-

Ben Mauk tossed three TD
passes and the Ci ncmnatt
defense
forced
eight
turnovers, mcludmg four
interceptions and a fumblt; by
Matt Grothe, who threw for
382 · yards but only one
touchdown lor USF (6-3, 13).
Mike Mickens returned an
mterceptton 79 yards for a
touchdown, and. Mauk also
threw TD passes of 16 yards
to Domintck Goodman and 4
yards to Earnest 1ackson for
Cincinnati, which led 3 I- I4
after one quarter and 38-20 at
the halt.
- -"-·-

The Bearcats. who've won
seven of thetr tirst mne lor
the first tune smce I97ti,
remamed in the race tor the
Btg East litle and a lucrat ive
spot ' 111
the
Bowl
Champtonshtp Senes alter
losi ng tw o sttatght to
Louisville and Pittsburgh
USF chmbed all the w.ty to
No 2 three weeks ago. but
consecu ti ve
losses
lo
Rutgers, Connecucut ,md
now Cincinnati thre&lt;~ten to
drop the Bul Is out ol the Top
25 altogether.
Conference g am t~ rcmatn

agamst Syr.tcusc. Loutsvtlle

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8am·4 30pm If you are
mterested tn JOintnQ our
fnendly and dedtcated staff
please stop by our front
otf1ce Man Fn
9am 5pm
and hll out an application
full t1 me and part t1me pos1·
t1ons avatlable to those qual·
1!1ed 1nd1viduals completing
the class, applicant must be
dependable (attendance IS a
must) learn players w1tt1 pos
lttve attitudes to JOm us 1n
provtdtng outstandmg, quah·
ty care to our res1dents
If you have any questions
contact Hollie Bumga~ner ,
LPN. staff development
coordtnalor (740)992·6472

ay
through Fr1day 8am-4pm
please send resume to
An
eq ual
opportunity
Appalachtan T1re Prod ucts employer FfM/DN
Attention
Greg Stover, - - - - - - - 2907
4th
A ~Jenue. Needed Base-Player for well Overbrook Center tS an
Charleston WV 253t2
established Vetera n 15yr old E 0 E and a part1c1pant of
Band 304-675 4094
the Drug Free Workplace
AVON I All Areast To Buy or - - - - - - - - Program
Sell
Shtrley Spears, 304- Now accept1ng apphcat1ons - - - - - - - 675 1429
for Bar Manager, exp Patriotic Foods Inc. Grand
r vers:
reqwred Send resumes to Open ing on Nov
12 ,
PO Box 303 Gallipolis, Oh Immediate Sales pOSitiOns
BONUSES!!
available Must have truck
45631 Attn Mike
and clean record
Call
Plus great pay, home·t1me,
DereK 304·8 12·0270 Now
benefits 100~'o PAID
POST OFFICE NOW
healthfhfe tns RegiOnal
HIRING
Run s, 1 yr Tractor Trl Exp
Avg Pay $20/hr or
Re 866·293 7435
$57K annually
Including Federal Benefits
Food Serv1ce Workers
OPEN
dishwasher, PIT on call
and OT,Pa1d Tratmng ,
INTERVIEWS
caterers Apply 1n person at
Vacat1ons-FTIPT
URG ca fetena 740-2451-866·542· 1531

The
Athens-Me1gs
Educational Serv1ce Cent~r
ha s an ANTI CIPATED positiOn opemng for a BUS DRI VER 1n Metgs County
Mm1mum of H1g h School
diploma or
equtva len t
ReqUires a Co mm erctal
Onvers L1cense (COL) wtlh
school bus classtf1ca110 n
Previo us bus expenence
and expsnence worilmg with
preschool chtldren IS pre !erred Must have the abtllty
to lift a 30 lb child Must be
Willing to part1c1pate tn drug
and alcohol testmg and
have a valtd dnvers l1 cense
as requ1red by agencys fleet
1nsurance company Th1s
posllton ISpart·t1me and has
no benefits Submit letter of
Interest resume references
to John D Cos tanzo
Sup erintende nt ,
Athens·
Me tgs ESC PO Box 684,
Pomeroy
OH
45769
Appl1ca110n
Deadline
November 9 at noon The
AME SC IS
an Eq ual
Opportunity
Employer/Provtder

W~DNESDAV

NOVEMBER 7th
Home Health Care oi SEO IS

t:OOam • 3.00pm

currently accepting apphca
tlons lor LPN s Full t1me pari
t1me per d1 em Compebt1ve

wages

TOlo\~

HNOTICI:**

InloCision
242 3rd Avenue
Gallipd1s OH

1·866·368· 11 00

toll free

'VP ro $8.50/hr FT
• Health Benefits for
FT &amp; PT employees
• Pa1d Holtdays OFF
• Vacat1on &amp; Personal
T1me after stx months

If unable to attend
please call to schedule
your tnterv1ew

1-888 IMC·PAYU
Ext 4256

www 1nfOC1Sion com
The Ohto Valley Publtshtng
Co IS seek1ng a Sports
Wnter to add to tis staff, cov
enng local athle11c &amp;\Ients
The posllton IS a full -time 40
hours a week w1th a benefit s
and 401k plafl available
Newspaper page layout
Sktlls are des1red but not
necessary Must be wllhng to
learn and be people fnendly
Send resumes to Kevm
Kelly Manag1n g Ed1lor Ohm
Valley Publtshtng Co 825
Th1rd Ave Galllpolts Oh

45631

The
Athens·Metgs
Educahonal Serv1ce Center
has an ANTICIPATED pos1·
t1on opemng for a Bus
Momtor Mtmmum of H1gh
SchOol graduate or GED
Prev1ous experience tn early
childhood setting preferred
Abdtty to lift 30 lbs Thts
pos1tlon ts part ttme and has
no benet1ts Submtl leMer of
tnterest resume and reler
ences to John D Costanzo
Supermtendent
Athens·
Mmgs ESC P 0 Box 684
Pomeroy, ' OH
45769
Apphcatton
Deadline
November 9 at noan The
AMESC
IS
an
Equal
Opportunity
Employer/Provider
Wanted someone 211.f7 to Sit
wtlh Elderly Aunt , musl have
exp &amp; be able to htt I 00 lbs
304·675 I 846

All real estate advertiSing
m th11 newspaper 1s
subtect to the Federal
Fair Housmg Act of 1968
wh1cl': makes +I 1}legal to
ed\lertJse any
preference, hm1tRt10n or
d1scrtmtnat1on based on
race, color, rehgto n sex
famtllal status or nat1onal
ongm, or any mtent1 0n to
make any such
preference, l tmltatton or
dtscnmmahon '
Th1s newspaper w1ll not
knowingly accept
advertisements for real
estate which 1s m
violation ol the law Our
readers are hereby
mtormed that all
dwellmgs adverttsed tn
thts newspaper are
available en an equal
opportunity bases

"--------"

Mtddleporl trr town out of
tlood pla1n 8 rooms 2 1!2
baths 2 garages
2 lireplaces 2 lots plenty ot star
age (740)992 4197
New home 111 GallipOi ts
2BA 28A 3 acres MIL

$82 500 Call 740 446 7029
N1ce 38R newly remodeled
New WH &amp; Furn CIA
Appltance mcluded Across
from Vmton Elem $65,000
740·245 5555 or 441 5105
Pnce reduced Bnck Ranch
Home 213br 2ba 2 car
garage all eleclnc Vtstt p1c·
tures at www orvb com code
7137 or can 304-675 4235
WALK ING DISTANCE TO

RIO GRANDE COLLEGE

2000 14x70 38A 2BA Lots

Custom built all brtck matn- of up grades on rented lol
TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY /SSI? tenance free home located 34
Kraus Beck
Rd
No Fee Unless We Wtni
1·888-582·3345

111\11,1\11
.,,..------.,

riO

HOMES
FO.K SA.I.E

0 down payment 4 bed·
rooms Large yard Covered
deck Attached garage 740·

367-7 129
2 story Home w/Aiver lot

3br 2ba, 2 car garage 304

1n Syracuse 3 BA &amp; 2 112.
BA 2 800 sq ft of ltntshed
l1v1ng space 40 year dimenSional shingles, natural gas
heat Thts muth-level home
1s 10 tmmaculate condlltOn
and has oal&lt; hardwood tnm
throughout The basement 1s
partially 11mshed and could
be used as a 4th bedroom
workout room or a Chi ldren s
play room Large famtly
room IMth 40 cabmels all
built m appliances and
ceram1c hie floor also laun
dry room w!!h 6' of cabmets
Master bedroom w1th walk
tn closet mastf~r bAth Nilh
double bowl vantty ceram1c
tile floor and marble shOwer
Bedrooms 2 &amp; 3 have large
closets matn bath has a 7

For sale by owne• 3BR
Ranch
t bdlh
Family
Room Sto veiFndge WID
3~A
2BA
180D sa tncluded Ask1ng $70 000
remodeled Ranch on I acre
Call 740 709 6139
nr~ tn ctty New ktt wl pan try
&amp; laundry rm Huge master
SUite wl FP &amp; pr1vate
entrance DR LAw/ gas FPI
Attached ca rp ort 2 car
r,1;
501:"'"-~~~~""'1
ScHoot.."i
garage &amp; pnvacy fence Nat
INSfRUl.ilON
gas Heat pump &amp; CIA Exc
Cond Ready lo move tn
Gallipolis Career College $98,500 neg 740·645-8751
For Sale SBR 2 BA 2 GOC'
(Careers Close To Home)
, r
r
Call Todilyl 740-446 4367
sq fl home \ocate:i 011
•, '
'
1 800 2I 4·Q452
Raccoon Creek 1n Gall!pohs
www gaKipOIISCaroorcollage com
1 3 acre yard With arge
Accredued Member Accred111ng
detached pole garage lor
Coi.Jil(;li to1 lnclependenl Colleges
ca r/boat slotage and pao,~ad
and Schools 1274B
'
u·shap ed dn veway Access
W~NIID
5BR , 2BA bnck style ranch to boat ramp Wrap arouna
on 36 acres at 452 Cox Rd deck and hot tuD Many
Crown C1ty Oh10 Basemen! extras call 1740) 441 8257
Georges Portable Sawmill FA DR K1t chen has fndge House
nnd 1 acre Rt 2
don t haul your Logs to the
range OIJen d1sp &amp; d1sn North approx 6 mtles from
M1ll JUSt call 304 675 1957
washer Basemen\ has FP Pt Pleasant
M&lt;l l f rre\\
and 9ft cetl1ngs wtlh 2x6 upgrades Mo' wried se:lcr
Gu1tar Player lookmg to start stud s Hea t pump 2 eRr Pnce to Sr•ll 30-l fi75 5~9 I
an ong~nal Rock Band IF attached garage new fenc Call tor df'trr Is
mterested call 740 98 5 1ng extra bldgs Bnnks - - -- - - 4416 alter'S 00 PM
Security System back deck Ra cme 'ranch home t 500
For sale by owner Call lor sq It 312 seller asststed
Appt 740-256 6075 or 740 fmancmg (7 40)4 16 3977
262 11 23
740 222 5570
)

It

\

,. '""!!\;

Shop Classifieds

(7401949 2217

320 MOiliLE HOMF.'i
fORSAU:

Plf:OFE.~Qt'..;,\L
SERVIC~

apprec1ate all Rr"1f! nlt1ES
Southern Local Sc hools
Call 74C 4o.t 1 51i l

To Do

House for sale 1n Racm.e
mea Approx 4 acres, all
professionally landscapeo
Ranch style house wllh 4
bedrooms hvmg room dtn·
1ng room kttchen large fam11~ room central atr gas heat
and 1 fi replace Addtt 1on of a
larg e t;londa room com
plet e\1,. cedar opens onto
patiO &amp; oool area Heated 1n
ground pool enclosed by pr1
vacy fenc1ng and land
scapea F1mshed 2 ca r
garage attached to house
and fn1 1shed &amp; heated 3 car
garage
unattached
Excel lent cond1flon ready to
move 111 $255 000 00 Call

1500sq ft all electnc heat
p Jmp &amp; wood burner 4BR
full stze basement, 2 car
garage (740)441·9510

2BR &amp; Master BR w/ walk 11'1
closets 2BA Ranch Style
house over 2 000 sq II
Huge kitchen lots ot cabmet
space LR . DR La undry
Room, on 1 acre of land
Asktng $115 000
080 van1ty marbl e bathtu b sep
arate shower and lmen r.los
(7 40)441· 7842
et Two covered porches Lind
3 bdr 1 ba Ranch m a bnck paver pai!O Th e 21, 2
Syracuse Oh carport plus 1 · car garage has altlc stora ge
car garage &amp; shed 740 992 cement drtveway w1th plenty
3141 or (740)442 1281
of pa rk 1ng Must see to

USWA
PreK Teacher for new part·
11me program $7 65/hr to
$1 1 30/hr dependmg on
educa110n Send resume to
Early EducatiOn Statton
2122 Jerlerson Ave

Borr ow Smart Contact
th e Ohto Otvts1o n of
Fmanctal
ln shtult on s
Office
of
Consu mer
Affairs BEFORE you refinance you r home or
obtam a loan BEWARE
of requ est s lor any large
advance pay ments of
fe~s or tnsu rance Call the
Offrce of
Consumer
Affairs toll free at 1 866
278-0003 to learn 1f the
bro ker
or
mortgage
lender
IS
properly
licensed (Thts tS a public
serv1 ce an nouncement
fro m th e Ohm Val ley
Pu bltsh1ng Company)

675·7285

Prr

5660

MONEl'

{_ ~

A local manufacturer has

Garage sa le, 3202 At
124 yellow house on left 3 An E ~Cce ll enl way to earn
Mag1 c Years Day Care
famtly sale Mon 5 &amp; Tues 6 money The New Avon
Wtnter clothm
S racusel Call Marolyn 304 882 2645 Center Inc IS now takmg
applications for a full 11me
Appalachian Tire Products a Substitute Please apply tn
company that has been tn person or send resume to
busmess lor over 60 years 20 1 Htgh St Pt Pleasant.

CLASSIFIED INDEX

r

I

OH NO phone calls please

Inside Sale at J&amp;F Auto 6
m11es out Jerrys Run Ad
Apple Grove , Lots of
Chr istmas 1tems Lots of
Used items also Nov 5th
thru Nov 10th 304-576·2635

lNG CO recommen ds
that you do bus1ness With
people you know and
NOT to send money
through th e mall unttl you
have mves t1gated the
offenng

I
I

' 1 ....;._0..____.

Mtg Welders and Patnter for
4

OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH·

MOBILE HOMES

I \11'1 Ill \II \1
..,, R\ II I._

to

IIOMI.~
IIJU SAL!,

Professionally
Clean
AHenuonJ
Homes
&amp;
Bus1 ness Local company offenng NO
poo~
Reasonable
Rates. DOWN PAYMENT
References 740-446·2262
grams lor you to buy yow
horne 1nstead of renting
11~\~1111
100°;o ftnan cmg
' Less than perlect c.red 1t
BustNIXS
accepled
Payment could be th e
01'1'0KllJNrn
same as rent
Mortgage
Locators
(7401367 0000
•NOTICE•

p.;!!W~E!-!!B~U!!-Y~U~S~E~D~.,

Wants to come home Call
\Ill 1Opm 446 8027

10

W ANTED

Asbestos rool shtngles new
FOUND 10/25 on Cherry
or used Charlene Hoefltch
R1dg e Rd In RIO Grande
740-992-5292
area Female Choc &amp; White
med1um s1ze dog (740)245 Want to buy Junk Cars call
54 16
740-388-0884

FOUND

Now you con hove borders and graphics
~
added to your classified ads
_t,~
.1m
Borders $3.00/per ad
. t!
Graphics SOC for small
$1.00 for Iorge

POLICIES Ohio Valley Pabllshlng reserves the right to Milt rejacl, or cancel any ad at any l1me Errors must be reported on the !1rst day
1
TrlbunfloS.nllnei•Fieglster will be responsible tor no more than the coet of the space occupied by the error and onlv the first Insertion We shall not be
eny kiss or expense that reeults from th e publlcatlcm or omtsston of an advertisement Correction will be made In the ftrsl llvatlable edtl1on • Box
are elways confidential •Current rate card applies • All real estate adverttsements are subject to the Federal Fa1r Hous109 Act ot 1968
'""'P'I'"'I
accepts only help wanted ldl meeting EOE atandarda We will not knowingly accept any advertising 1n v1olatlon of the law

Absolute Top Dollar U S
St iver and Gold Cotns,
Ftrewood 2yrs atr··dned cut Proofsets Gold Rtngs, Pre·
and split 98%oak,2% h1cko - 1935
uS
Currency
ry you haul.or I haul Sol1ta1re D1amonds M T S
OH HEAP Vender 949-2038 Com Shop, 151 Second

4x4'a For Sale ............ ........ .. .............. 725
Announcement .......................................... 030
Antiques............................................. .. .. 530
Apartmenta lor Rent........... . .... . . .. ...... 440
Auction and Flea Market ..........................080
Auto Parts &amp; Accessories .... ...................... 760
Auto Repair............................... ...... . .. .. 770
Autos for Sale .... ...... ............ .. ............ 710
Boats &amp; Motors lor Sate ............................. 750
Building Suppllea ........................................ 550
Buatness and BuiiUtngs ............................ 340
Business Opportunity .................................21 0
Bualneaa Training ....................................... 140
Campers &amp; Motor Home&amp; ......................... 790
Camping Equipment ................................... 780
Cards ol Thanks .......................................... 010
Child/Elderly Cars ....................................... 190
Electrlcai/Relrlgeratlon........... ........... .. .. 840
Equipment for Rent...........................:..... ..480
Excavattng ................................................... 830
Farm Equipment ........................................ 610
Farmalor Rent........... .............. .. ............. 430
Farms for Sale ......................................... 330
For Lease ................................................... 490
For Sale ...................................................... 585
Fw Sate or Trade ................... ,. ....... .. ....... 590
FruHa &amp; Vegetables .................................... 580
Furnished Rooma ........................................ 450
General Hauling................................... .....850
Giveaway .................................... ................. 040
Happy Ada .................................................... 050
Hay &amp; Grein................................................640
Help Wanted.................. ........... .......... ..... 11 o
Home lmprovements................................... 81 0
Homes lor Sate ............................................ 31 o
Household Goods ............................ ....... 51 o
Houaes for Rent ........................................ 410
In Memorlam ................................................ 020
Insurance .....................................................
Lawn &amp; Garden Equipment...................... 660
Livestock .....................................................630
Lost and Found .......................................... 060
Lola &amp; Acreage........................ ........
.. .. 350
Miscellaneous .............................................170
Mlacellaneouo Merchandlse....................... 540
Mobile Home Repair.................................860
Mobile Homos for Rent ................:.............. 420
Mobile Homes for Sate . ..............................320
Money to Loan ..........................................220
Motorcycles &amp; 4 Wheelers ...... .......... .740
Musical Instruments . .......... .. .... ........... 570
Personals ................................................... 005
Pets lor Sale........................................ .. .. 560
Plumbing &amp; Healing .... ........... ............... 820
Professional Servlceo ................................. 230
Radio, TV &amp; CB Repalr ............................... 160
Real Ealate Wantecl .....................................360
Schoolalnatructlon....................................150
Plant &amp; Fertilizer .............................. 650
,
9Huatlona
Wanted ...................................... .120
' Space .lor Rent ........................... ................. 460
Sporting Gooda .......................................... 520
SUV'a lor Sate .............................................720
Trucks lor Sale ................................. .... .... 715
Upholstery ................................................... 870
vono For Sate..............................................730
Wenteclto Buy .................................. · ..... 090
Wantecllo Buy· Farm Suppllea .................. 620
w...lecl To Do .................. , ........................ 180
Wenteclto Rant .................................... ....... 470
Yonl Sat• Galllpolla...................................072
Vonl Sat•Pomeroy/Middle .........................074
Yonl Sal• Pt. Pleasant .......................... .... 076

•

Ir

All Display : 12 Noon 2
Business Days Prior To

• All ads must be prepaid'

Description • Include A Price • Avoid Abbreviations
• Include Phone Number And Address When Needed
• Ads Should Run 7 Days

\\\flt \{I \II \I"

i

10

• Stiltt Your Ads With A Keyword • Indude Complete

Successful Ads
Should lnclude These ltems
To
Get Response...

GET YOUR CLASSIFIED LINE AD NOTICED

DisPlay Ads

Dally In-Column: 1:00 p.m.
Monday-Friday for Insertion
In Next Day 's Paper
s,u
~,.n d,;,ay In-Column: 1:00 p .m.
~:"r
For Sundays Paper

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

Or ,Fax To (304) 675-5234

992-2157

Oet.ultiru-

Word Ads

968.

Navy beats Notre Dame
for frrst time since 1963

Or Fax To

Gallipoli s 3 miles from
Galhpolts o11 SA 588 4468935 Pnce reduced
2000 Fleetwood (Wmd gate)
14x70 3br 2 bathrooms
ltnoleum floors, new bath·
rooms
good
condttlon
$14 000 no ca lls after 9pm
please 304 675 3927

New 3 Bedroom homes from
$214 36 per month Includes
many upgrades delivery &amp;
set up 1740)385-2434

OWNER FINANCING
Ntce 312 smglev.tdes
From $1 BOO down
payment
Adam (7 40) 828 2750

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

1"350

I Jll'i &amp;
L--•AiiiiliiRfii"'oii'liia.__.
2 grave lots m Chl\stus
Gardens
0~ 1 0
Valley
Memory Gardens (740)446
4383 day {7 40)256-6637
eventng
Approli 2 acre s w1 e~1sttng
281&lt;00 house founoa tt on
Al so 24x40 finiShed gct1age
Has water elec 7 sewer
Lot.: at ed 1n centenary on
Herman Rd Ask ng $55 000
Pl~as&lt;&gt; call 740 ?08-6704
Green Acres 110) Far :-n
Ltvt n Fresh Au l 1111 1es trom
t&gt;Jev. Hnv~n WV S •4 500
304 773 5881

MOBILE HOME LOT FOR
RENT 1031 Georges CreeK
Ad 4-11 11'1

!~I ·

IU'\1\L"'

10

Htll Sf:'
IUR ib.\'1

1 2BR WDSR $ 400otrro
$400 dep BB Garl1eld Hud
ok 1 3BA 2BA doublew tde
$575/mo $575 det&gt; t72 1/2
ChJthant Av+: HuJ ok 740
-1462515

2 bd House 1n Mason
Co\lered Carport Kitchen
furmshed Ga s heat No
Pets $375 per mo Dep Req
30&lt;1-675 7783

�, I

Page B4 • The Daily Sentinel

www .mydailysentinel.com

Monday, November 5, 2007 ·

Monday, November 5, 2007

www.mydailysentinel.com

LSU takes second place in BCS standings, others close behind
'

BY RALPH Russo
ASSOCIATED PRESS

top spot the week before Thanksgiving and
several
teams JOStle&lt;.! for the other spot over
~·.
AH AB7 CM KM JS PW
the next two weeks
It came down to Flonda and Mtchtgan and
1 Ohio Slate
25 25 23 24 25 25
21 24 25 25 23 24
2 LSU
the Gators got the votes they needed to pass
3. Oregon
24 23 24 22 22 23
the Wolveunes in the ftnal BCS standmgs,
23 19 20 23 24 22
4 Kantas
5 Oldahoma
18 18 19 '19 18 19
The outcome utdn 't sit well with Michigan
6 Ml&amp;&amp;oun
20 13 17 18 19 18
and showed the glanng flaws in the Bowl
7 West Vlrglnta
15 22 14 14 15 16
Championsh ip Senes.
8. Boston College
19 20 22 20 21 20
9 Arizona State
22 21 21 21 20 21
The system hasn 't-changed and tl1e prob10. Georgia
17 12 16 16 16 14
lem
ot trymg to chose between several wor1t Vtrglnla Tech
10 14 13 17 17 17
12 Mlchogan
12 17 11 12 13 12
thy contendet s to play in the litle game
13. Connecticut
16 15 16 15 14 15
could
come up agam 111 the cortung weeks.
14 Texas
9
6
9
2
10
3
LSU
has a BCS average of .94 1 The
15 Florida
13 10 12 13 12 8
16 HawaM
0
0
0
0
0
11
Tigers are second 111 both the Harris and
17. usc
11
16 1
1
2
2
coaches'
poll , wh tch makes up two-thtrd ot
18 Auburn
6
9
8
6
1
6
19 Virginia
14 0
15 11 10 13
a BCS average. and ate No 2 m the com 20. Boise Slate
4
11 10 0
0
5
puter rdtings.
1
7
21 Clemson
5
11
9
9
Oregon's BCS average ts .918 and Kansas
22. Allibama
8
2
6
10 7
0
7
8
23 ?em Stale
3
6
5
6
ts
at 843 The surprismg Jayhawks still
24. Tenne....
2
4
0
5
8
4
have
a btg game agamst stxth-place
25. Kentucky
0
0
4
4
0
0
Mtssmllt lett on the schedule and a possible
LSU doesn't drop a game
Big 12 champtonsht p game Wmning both
The BCS could be headmg for,, repeat of would give Kansas ' numbers a substantial
last season, when OhiO State locked up the boost.
BCS Stand:lla List

NEW YORK - LSU is tn position to play
tor .t n,tt tonal champtonshtp Oregon tsn 't
tar behmd the Ttgers .1nd unbeate~ K.msas ts
loommg
T.tk u]g au vantage ot Boston College·~
ltrst loss ot the season, the Ttgers moved
tmo second place t11 the Bowl
Ch.tmp ton shtp Senes standmgs released
Sund.ty
Unucfeated Oh10 State ( 10-0) ts sttll in
tnst. .mu cou ld lock up a second stratght
.1ppear.mce 111 the BCS nattonal ch.tmptonshtp game on Jan. 7 with victories agamst
Ill mots ,md Mtchtgan in its last two games.
LSU (8-1) has at least three games Ielt and
probably four wtth the Southeastern
Conference Utle game on Dec. I. Wmning
out could get the Ttgers a spot m the tttle
g.une at the Superdome in New Orleans.
That's no lock
Third-plac~ Oregon (R- 1) and fourt h-pl ace
Kansas (9-01 are close enoush to at least
hav e a shot at passmg the Ttgers, even if

.

Oklahoma's average IS 839. Mtssouri,
West Virgmta, Boston College, Anzona
State and Georgta round out the top I0.
In the AP Top 25, the first ftve teams are
Oh10 Stille, LSU, Oregon, Oklahoma and
Kansas.
LStJ. which has been hving on the edge
tor the past month, won another close game
Saturday. The Ttgers came from behind to
beat Alilbama 41-34
Oregon dtdn't have nearly as tough a time
again st Arizona State. The Ducks beat the
previously undefeated Sun Devtls 35-23
behmd Dennis Dixon's four touchdown
passes
Kansas route&lt;.! Nebraska 76-39 and
Oklahoma pounded Texas A&amp;M 42-14.
If all these teams keep winning, how
tmf}resstvely they go about their business
could determine which gets a shot at the
title.
.
Hawatt ts in 16th place thts week, sttll . :
four places short of where the Warriors need ··
to finish to earn an automatic bid to a big- :
money bowl game.

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Florida State topples
No. 2 Boston College

AP photo

Oh 1o State coach J1m Tressel talks to quarterback Todd Boeckman (17) and w1de rece1ver Bnan Rob1skte (80) dunng a
football game against Wtscons1n on Saturday in Columbus.

OSU has won 20 straight in Big
Ten, but has 2 tough games left
BY RuSTY MILLER
ASSOC IATED PRESS

COLUMBUS - In spite
of a I0-0 record built on an
average score of 35-10, topranked Ohio State believes
tt has been tested by ftre .
'· Being down is a good snttalton lor our team," linebacket Marcus Freeman
sa td after Saturday's closerthan-11-mtght-look 38-17
win
over
Wisconsm
"Handltn g adverstty ts
1mportan t ..
The Buckeyes ( 10-0, 6-0
B1g Ten) hdve whtttled thetr
scheu ule down to games at
home agamst lllinot s thts
Sa turday and a possible
wmner-take-all showdown
at Michigan on Nov. 17.
Oh1o State. which ascended from No. II m the preseason to Nu I as team alter
team faltered. now fmds 11
easy to locus on what's at
qake
"I JUSt tty to get better
each game - anu tsn't that
hke our team ''" quarterback
Todd Boeckman smd after
passmg tm two touchdowns
agat nst the Badgers.
There have b,een very few
close call s tor the Buckeyes
except fot thetr two most
rece nt home go~ m es . They
gave up two defens ive
touch do wns 111 the third
quarter agamst Michi gan
State on Oct 20, and had a
lew tense moments before

cementing a 24- 17 win
Then agamst Wisconsin,
they fell behind 17 -I 0 mtd·
way through the third quarter before gomg on a 28-0
streak to put the game away
That streak helped stretch
several other streaks. The
vtctory was Ohto State 's
20th in a row in conference
play to set a record. It was
Ohto State's 28th consecutive regular season wm,
sandwtched around that
ugly 41-14 defeat to Florida
m
last year's
Bowl
Championship Senes tttle
game.
The Buckeyes felt it was
good that they had their
backs to the wall agamst
Wisconsin.
"It's the first time all season where we faced adversity late," satd defenstve tackle Vernon Gholston, who
tied a school record with
four sacks. "I' m happy wtth
the way we handled tt."
The Buckeyes haven't had
to sustam a dnve, force a
punt or make a play late in a
game to win a game yet unlike LSU or Michigan or
most of the other highestrated teams. But at the same
time , they've come up with
answers when most needed
"I' ll give credit to Oh10
State. They persevered and
were able to be strol)g m the
fourth quarter, whtch won
the football game," satd
Wisconsin coach Bret

Btelema, who regrettcu that
people looking at the lm.tl
score would get the wrong
impression that the game
wasn't close
Chns Well s and th e
Buckeyes' stingy defense
were the marquee stars m
that fourth-quarter effort.
Wells, who prefers to be
P.O by hi s mck name
'Beanie," is an mstde-out
runner who I S butlt hke a
fast tank . When the offense
most needed to play keepaway with the baiL the 235pound tmlback was the central ftgure
On his first I2 carnes he
rushed for 5 I yarus without
a touchdown . On ht s last
nme ~ encompassmg hts
fmal two runs of the third
quarter and all of the fourth
-,- he ran tl mne ttmes lor
122 yards and touchdowns
of 31, 30 and 23 yards.
Meanwhile, Ohio State's
defen se - whtch has given
up only 21 more points this
year than Nebraska surrendered m Saturuay's 76-39
loss to unbeaten Kansas dominated
In the fourth quarter
alone , wtth the game still
han ging m the balance.
Buckeyes defenders were
re~ular
vtsttors to the
Wtsconsm backfield. The
Badgers lost two fumbl es
tnstde their ow n 25 and
muffed a fake punt , ran the
ball for minus-28 yards on

BOSTON (AP) - Geno
Hayes returned Matt Ryan's
third interception for a 38yaru touchdown with I :I 0 to
play on Saturday mght to
help Flonda State beat No. 2
Boston College 27-17, endtng the Eagles' run at an
unbeaten season and shaking
up the BCS standings yet
agatn
With the loss by BC (8-1 ,
4-1
Atlantic
Coast
Conference). there are three
unbeaten teams left in the
natton - Ohto State, Kansas
and Hawan - and a handful
of one-loss teams who can
argue for a spot in the Bowl
Championship Series title
game. LSU will probably
take second-place behind
Ohio State tn the BCS stanumgs when they com~ out
Sunday.
Drew Weatherforu completed 29-of-45 passes for
354 yards for Flonda State
(6-3, 3-3). hitttng Preston
Parker nine times for 93
yards and a touchdown and
De'Cody Fagg on SI X catches
lor Ill yards and a TD. Ryan
ftm shed 25 -fur-53 for two
touchdowns and 415 yards
- hts fourth career 400-yard
game, tying Doug Flutie for
the most tn school history

But his intercepllons were
costly.
Ryan was ptcked off once
in the first quarter inside the
Seminoles I0. He also threw
an interception early in the
third that allowed Florida
State to move mto posttion
for a 4G-yard field goal that
made it 10-0.
It was the second consecutive game BC trailed 10-0
before mounting a rally: The :
Eagles spotted Virgima Tech. ·
a two-score lead on Oct 25 :
before Ryan threw two
touchdown passes m the final
2: II.
Thts time, he had more
than 20 mmutes to work
With.
Ryan led BC on a fourplay, 70-yard drive over 63
seconds, hitting Ryan Purvis
for 2~ yards to the Seminoles
30 anr;j then Brandon
Robinson for the touchdown.
The teams traded field goals,
then Weatherford htt Fagg on
a 42-yard touchdown pass to
give the Seminoles a 20-10
lead.
BC got the ball back with a
chance to take the lead, but
Hayes ripped the ball free
from an Eagles' receiver on a
pass across the middle and
went easily into the end zone.

nine attempt s (thanks to
sacks) and totaled 19 vards
on 23 pldys
·
"There's defm!lely a reaSOUTH BEND, Ind. (AP)- It took 44 years and three , ;
son why they're No I,"
Wisconsm
quarterbac k overtimcs for Navy to beat Notre Dame agam.
The Mtdshipmen snapped an NCAA-record 43-game
Tyler Donovan satd. "They
Iosmg streak to the Fighting lnsh on Saturday with a 4644
have speed. streng th
victory in triple overtime
everythmg."
Katpo-Noa Kaheaku-Enhada threw a 25-yard TD pass to
They' II need all ot that as
they prepare for perhaps the Reggie Campbell on the first play of the third overtime,
two hardest games on thei r then found htm again in the end zone for the 2-point con•
vers1on.
schedule.
Notre Dame ( 1-8) cut the lead to two on a 5-yard TD run
A year ago. when Ohio
State was acclaimed at the by Travis Thomas But after a pass mterference call gave
ttme as the best team in the Notre Dame a second-chance at the 2-pmnt conversiOn,
land . tl struggled mtghuly defensive lineman Michael Walsh and linebacker Irv
belore escapmg Chdmpatgn, Spencer tackled Thomas well short of the end zone.
It was the first ttme Navy (5-4) beat Notre Dame since a
Ill , With a 17-10 VICtOty
3514 win in 1963 when Roger Staubach was quarterback
The Ilhm just seemed to
for
the Midshipmen. The Midshtpmen celebrated the long·
match up well.
Regardless now the ga me awaited vtctory at midfield, jumping on top of each other.
"Wow, what a game," Navy coach Paul Johnson said.
w!lh Illinoi s comes out, at
"I'
m so happy tor our pla)ers. Now they will have that they
least a shltre of the Btg Ten
are
the class that broke the streak and they won't have to
crow n w11l be ndmg on the
annual regular-season finale hear any more about it."
For Notre Dame, it was its school-record fifth straight
at Mtchtgan.
home
loss, ,another low point m a season of lows.
When the Buckeyes
"We lost the game. The streak doesn' t mean anythmg to
tnule(l I 7- I0 late m the third
quarter on Saturday. often- me," Notre Dame coach Charlie Weis said.
The ln sh, who could &lt;.to httle to slow Navy's offense,
stve tackle Kuk Batton sa td
the Mtdshtpmen to three-and-out late in the fourth
held
they started askmg some
quarter wtth the score tied at 28 Gre\l Veteto had the first ·
hard quest tons.
"We were JUst looking at punt of the game, and Tom Zbikowskt returned it 32 yards :
·
each other (saymg). ' Where to the Navy 3S
The
Irish
drove
to
the
24,
but
on
fourth-and-8
Notre
do you w,mt to be 111
J,m uaty? Do yo u wa nt to be Dame coach Charlte Wets decided to go for it rather than
attempt a field goal Chris Kuhar-Pitters, who earlier
111 tht s place or do you w.tnl
to be 111 that place?'" Barton returned a fumble 16 yards for a touchdown, sacked Evan
Sharpley with 45 seconds left.
s~nd "We know whete we
It was the fourth sack for Navy, which entered the game
'want to be, but we have to
execu te better 111 the ltrst wtth ftve.
Notre Dame, whtch hadn 't scored more than 20 points all
half if we wan t to get there."
season, led 21-14 at halftime, the first halftime lead for the
Irish all season.
The two teams traded touchdowns most of the day and
had JUSt traded mtSsed field goals when Kt:thar-Pitters came
up with his btg play earl y m the fourth quarter. Sharpley
&lt;~nd Pttt, however coach Jtm
dropped back to pass and was wrapped up by nose guard
Leavttt conceded the best hts Nate Frazter and defensive end Mtchael Walsh knocked the
team ca n hope tor at thts ball louse. Kuhar-Pmers scooped up the loose ball and rumpoint 1s the young program's bled mto the end zone
thm.l stratght bowl bet1h
Kaheaku-Enhada scored the 2-pomt conversion to give
Both teams were climbmg the Midshipmen a 28-2 1 lead
111 Top 25 after wmm ng thetr
The Irish responded, though, wtth a touchdown of their :
tit s! stx ga mes ol the season own as Thomas went in from 3 yards out with 3:25 remain- .
but lmmd themse lves Ill ues- mg to lie It
.,
perate need of a wm Saturday
Robert Hughes, whose brother Tony was fatally shot on
after Iosmg two strdtght 111 Tuesday, scored Notre Dame's first touchdown on a 3-yard ;
con ference play
run. Irish players, some of whom attended the funeral :
Even though the nMtchup Fnday.. swarmed Hughes. He ran over to the sideline and :
lacked some of the appc,tl got a hug from Weis.
Before the game. a moment of silence was held for :
nMny felt tt wquld have after
USF rc.Khed No 2, II w,ts Hughes ' brother and the death of Ryan Shay, a former :
still very tmportantto th ~ Bt g Notre Dame runner who dted Saturday during the U.S. ;
men 's marathon OlympiC tnals
.
E,l'l I .ICC

Cincinnati builds big lead, then holds off USF
TAMPA . Fla (AP) Cmcmnati forced etght
turnover,, score&lt;.! J I pmnts 111
the first quarter and protected
the football better than 11 had
111 weeks Sttll , the Bearcats
neeued a g.nne-endmg defenstve stop to l:iarely hold off
No 20 South Flonda
A 11twuan Gtddens scored
on " 63-y.trd receptiOn anu
tecm eted a blocked punt 111
the c nr.l mne for a second
touchdow n. helptng the
Bearc.1h (7-2, 2-2) stop a
two-g,unc lostng streak that
knocked them out of the Top
2S

-

Ben Mauk tossed three TD
passes and the Ci ncmnatt
defense
forced
eight
turnovers, mcludmg four
interceptions and a fumblt; by
Matt Grothe, who threw for
382 · yards but only one
touchdown lor USF (6-3, 13).
Mike Mickens returned an
mterceptton 79 yards for a
touchdown, and. Mauk also
threw TD passes of 16 yards
to Domintck Goodman and 4
yards to Earnest 1ackson for
Cincinnati, which led 3 I- I4
after one quarter and 38-20 at
the halt.
- -"-·-

The Bearcats. who've won
seven of thetr tirst mne lor
the first tune smce I97ti,
remamed in the race tor the
Btg East litle and a lucrat ive
spot ' 111
the
Bowl
Champtonshtp Senes alter
losi ng tw o sttatght to
Louisville and Pittsburgh
USF chmbed all the w.ty to
No 2 three weeks ago. but
consecu ti ve
losses
lo
Rutgers, Connecucut ,md
now Cincinnati thre&lt;~ten to
drop the Bul Is out ol the Top
25 altogether.
Conference g am t~ rcmatn

agamst Syr.tcusc. Loutsvtlle

---·--------

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~~~D

KIT &amp; CARLYLE

WANIEIJ

roBuv

I~;:~ue,

Boxer call Io
ldentoly 304·395·2601

Found Long ha1red Sprtnger
like pup on Lower Rt 7

To Do

kitncarlyle@comcast.net

Gallopolos 740-446·

to

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front paws dewclawed,
belongs to Enn &amp; Em1l y,

11A;;ew~a;,.rd;,:,;.ca;,.II.,;M,;a..;rg;;,•_P_""'I
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opemngs for Expenenced

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r.li10

r.'lll"------,IIIlO
lli10

HELP WANTED

130

wv

25550

-------Manpower IS now hmng lor
the followtng
pos111ons
Aut omobile
Produt10n
Workers 1n the Buffalo, WV
Area Benefits ava ilable Call
Today 304-757·3338

~~~~~~~v;~s:~::v=rv~~~- -M-odd-l-et-o-n -E-sla_ta_s-os_a_c_ce_p_t·
1ng app 11ca11ons 1or 0 1rec1
We provid e a comp&amp;llll ve Care Staff and LP N's II you
salary along With a benefll would l1ke to take advantage
package mcludmg major
di
K of lhls opportuml)l, you may
me ca 1 Insurance, 401
apply at 8204 Carta Or
w/proflt shann g plan pa1d
If tnleres1ed
vacatton

© 2007 b NEA I

~;::::::;-;;:::===~~~=y==~,~n~c=.~

Manufactured Equipm ent
Apply m person at 2150 - - : : : - - - - - - . . . . ,
Eastern Avenue, Galhpolls,

has an eMcellent opporlumty
lor the nght tndtvidual We
are seekmg a store manage
to oversee our pt Pleasant
tocat1on
The nght ca ndtdate Will have strong leadershiP skill s ability to bUild &amp;
ma1ntam a strong team wh1le

G 11 1 Oh 10
a lpo IS,

M nd
0

HELP WANTED

• ~._ _IIF_LP_\\\_
,\N•fE-lJ-'

Ove rbrook Centef Located
@ 333 Page St , Middleport,
Oh1o
ts
pleased
to
Announce we Will be holdmg
an STNA Class scheduled
for November. hours w111 be
8am·4 30pm If you are
mterested tn JOintnQ our
fnendly and dedtcated staff
please stop by our front
otf1ce Man Fn
9am 5pm
and hll out an application
full t1 me and part t1me pos1·
t1ons avatlable to those qual·
1!1ed 1nd1viduals completing
the class, applicant must be
dependable (attendance IS a
must) learn players w1tt1 pos
lttve attitudes to JOm us 1n
provtdtng outstandmg, quah·
ty care to our res1dents
If you have any questions
contact Hollie Bumga~ner ,
LPN. staff development
coordtnalor (740)992·6472

ay
through Fr1day 8am-4pm
please send resume to
An
eq ual
opportunity
Appalachtan T1re Prod ucts employer FfM/DN
Attention
Greg Stover, - - - - - - - 2907
4th
A ~Jenue. Needed Base-Player for well Overbrook Center tS an
Charleston WV 253t2
established Vetera n 15yr old E 0 E and a part1c1pant of
Band 304-675 4094
the Drug Free Workplace
AVON I All Areast To Buy or - - - - - - - - Program
Sell
Shtrley Spears, 304- Now accept1ng apphcat1ons - - - - - - - 675 1429
for Bar Manager, exp Patriotic Foods Inc. Grand
r vers:
reqwred Send resumes to Open ing on Nov
12 ,
PO Box 303 Gallipolis, Oh Immediate Sales pOSitiOns
BONUSES!!
available Must have truck
45631 Attn Mike
and clean record
Call
Plus great pay, home·t1me,
DereK 304·8 12·0270 Now
benefits 100~'o PAID
POST OFFICE NOW
healthfhfe tns RegiOnal
HIRING
Run s, 1 yr Tractor Trl Exp
Avg Pay $20/hr or
Re 866·293 7435
$57K annually
Including Federal Benefits
Food Serv1ce Workers
OPEN
dishwasher, PIT on call
and OT,Pa1d Tratmng ,
INTERVIEWS
caterers Apply 1n person at
Vacat1ons-FTIPT
URG ca fetena 740-2451-866·542· 1531

The
Athens-Me1gs
Educational Serv1ce Cent~r
ha s an ANTI CIPATED positiOn opemng for a BUS DRI VER 1n Metgs County
Mm1mum of H1g h School
diploma or
equtva len t
ReqUires a Co mm erctal
Onvers L1cense (COL) wtlh
school bus classtf1ca110 n
Previo us bus expenence
and expsnence worilmg with
preschool chtldren IS pre !erred Must have the abtllty
to lift a 30 lb child Must be
Willing to part1c1pate tn drug
and alcohol testmg and
have a valtd dnvers l1 cense
as requ1red by agencys fleet
1nsurance company Th1s
posllton ISpart·t1me and has
no benefits Submit letter of
Interest resume references
to John D Cos tanzo
Sup erintende nt ,
Athens·
Me tgs ESC PO Box 684,
Pomeroy
OH
45769
Appl1ca110n
Deadline
November 9 at noon The
AME SC IS
an Eq ual
Opportunity
Employer/Provtder

W~DNESDAV

NOVEMBER 7th
Home Health Care oi SEO IS

t:OOam • 3.00pm

currently accepting apphca
tlons lor LPN s Full t1me pari
t1me per d1 em Compebt1ve

wages

TOlo\~

HNOTICI:**

InloCision
242 3rd Avenue
Gallipd1s OH

1·866·368· 11 00

toll free

'VP ro $8.50/hr FT
• Health Benefits for
FT &amp; PT employees
• Pa1d Holtdays OFF
• Vacat1on &amp; Personal
T1me after stx months

If unable to attend
please call to schedule
your tnterv1ew

1-888 IMC·PAYU
Ext 4256

www 1nfOC1Sion com
The Ohto Valley Publtshtng
Co IS seek1ng a Sports
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The posllton IS a full -time 40
hours a week w1th a benefit s
and 401k plafl available
Newspaper page layout
Sktlls are des1red but not
necessary Must be wllhng to
learn and be people fnendly
Send resumes to Kevm
Kelly Manag1n g Ed1lor Ohm
Valley Publtshtng Co 825
Th1rd Ave Galllpolts Oh

45631

The
Athens·Metgs
Educahonal Serv1ce Center
has an ANTICIPATED pos1·
t1on opemng for a Bus
Momtor Mtmmum of H1gh
SchOol graduate or GED
Prev1ous experience tn early
childhood setting preferred
Abdtty to lift 30 lbs Thts
pos1tlon ts part ttme and has
no benet1ts Submtl leMer of
tnterest resume and reler
ences to John D Costanzo
Supermtendent
Athens·
Mmgs ESC P 0 Box 684
Pomeroy, ' OH
45769
Apphcatton
Deadline
November 9 at noan The
AMESC
IS
an
Equal
Opportunity
Employer/Provider
Wanted someone 211.f7 to Sit
wtlh Elderly Aunt , musl have
exp &amp; be able to htt I 00 lbs
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All real estate advertiSing
m th11 newspaper 1s
subtect to the Federal
Fair Housmg Act of 1968
wh1cl': makes +I 1}legal to
ed\lertJse any
preference, hm1tRt10n or
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race, color, rehgto n sex
famtllal status or nat1onal
ongm, or any mtent1 0n to
make any such
preference, l tmltatton or
dtscnmmahon '
Th1s newspaper w1ll not
knowingly accept
advertisements for real
estate which 1s m
violation ol the law Our
readers are hereby
mtormed that all
dwellmgs adverttsed tn
thts newspaper are
available en an equal
opportunity bases

"--------"

Mtddleporl trr town out of
tlood pla1n 8 rooms 2 1!2
baths 2 garages
2 lireplaces 2 lots plenty ot star
age (740)992 4197
New home 111 GallipOi ts
2BA 28A 3 acres MIL

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1s 10 tmmaculate condlltOn
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Bedrooms 2 &amp; 3 have large
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For sale by owne• 3BR
Ranch
t bdlh
Family
Room Sto veiFndge WID
3~A
2BA
180D sa tncluded Ask1ng $70 000
remodeled Ranch on I acre
Call 740 709 6139
nr~ tn ctty New ktt wl pan try
&amp; laundry rm Huge master
SUite wl FP &amp; pr1vate
entrance DR LAw/ gas FPI
Attached ca rp ort 2 car
r,1;
501:"'"-~~~~""'1
ScHoot.."i
garage &amp; pnvacy fence Nat
INSfRUl.ilON
gas Heat pump &amp; CIA Exc
Cond Ready lo move tn
Gallipolis Career College $98,500 neg 740·645-8751
For Sale SBR 2 BA 2 GOC'
(Careers Close To Home)
, r
r
Call Todilyl 740-446 4367
sq fl home \ocate:i 011
•, '
'
1 800 2I 4·Q452
Raccoon Creek 1n Gall!pohs
www gaKipOIISCaroorcollage com
1 3 acre yard With arge
Accredued Member Accred111ng
detached pole garage lor
Coi.Jil(;li to1 lnclependenl Colleges
ca r/boat slotage and pao,~ad
and Schools 1274B
'
u·shap ed dn veway Access
W~NIID
5BR , 2BA bnck style ranch to boat ramp Wrap arouna
on 36 acres at 452 Cox Rd deck and hot tuD Many
Crown C1ty Oh10 Basemen! extras call 1740) 441 8257
Georges Portable Sawmill FA DR K1t chen has fndge House
nnd 1 acre Rt 2
don t haul your Logs to the
range OIJen d1sp &amp; d1sn North approx 6 mtles from
M1ll JUSt call 304 675 1957
washer Basemen\ has FP Pt Pleasant
M&lt;l l f rre\\
and 9ft cetl1ngs wtlh 2x6 upgrades Mo' wried se:lcr
Gu1tar Player lookmg to start stud s Hea t pump 2 eRr Pnce to Sr•ll 30-l fi75 5~9 I
an ong~nal Rock Band IF attached garage new fenc Call tor df'trr Is
mterested call 740 98 5 1ng extra bldgs Bnnks - - -- - - 4416 alter'S 00 PM
Security System back deck Ra cme 'ranch home t 500
For sale by owner Call lor sq It 312 seller asststed
Appt 740-256 6075 or 740 fmancmg (7 40)4 16 3977
262 11 23
740 222 5570
)

It

\

,. '""!!\;

Shop Classifieds

(7401949 2217

320 MOiliLE HOMF.'i
fORSAU:

Plf:OFE.~Qt'..;,\L
SERVIC~

apprec1ate all Rr"1f! nlt1ES
Southern Local Sc hools
Call 74C 4o.t 1 51i l

To Do

House for sale 1n Racm.e
mea Approx 4 acres, all
professionally landscapeo
Ranch style house wllh 4
bedrooms hvmg room dtn·
1ng room kttchen large fam11~ room central atr gas heat
and 1 fi replace Addtt 1on of a
larg e t;londa room com
plet e\1,. cedar opens onto
patiO &amp; oool area Heated 1n
ground pool enclosed by pr1
vacy fenc1ng and land
scapea F1mshed 2 ca r
garage attached to house
and fn1 1shed &amp; heated 3 car
garage
unattached
Excel lent cond1flon ready to
move 111 $255 000 00 Call

1500sq ft all electnc heat
p Jmp &amp; wood burner 4BR
full stze basement, 2 car
garage (740)441·9510

2BR &amp; Master BR w/ walk 11'1
closets 2BA Ranch Style
house over 2 000 sq II
Huge kitchen lots ot cabmet
space LR . DR La undry
Room, on 1 acre of land
Asktng $115 000
080 van1ty marbl e bathtu b sep
arate shower and lmen r.los
(7 40)441· 7842
et Two covered porches Lind
3 bdr 1 ba Ranch m a bnck paver pai!O Th e 21, 2
Syracuse Oh carport plus 1 · car garage has altlc stora ge
car garage &amp; shed 740 992 cement drtveway w1th plenty
3141 or (740)442 1281
of pa rk 1ng Must see to

USWA
PreK Teacher for new part·
11me program $7 65/hr to
$1 1 30/hr dependmg on
educa110n Send resume to
Early EducatiOn Statton
2122 Jerlerson Ave

Borr ow Smart Contact
th e Ohto Otvts1o n of
Fmanctal
ln shtult on s
Office
of
Consu mer
Affairs BEFORE you refinance you r home or
obtam a loan BEWARE
of requ est s lor any large
advance pay ments of
fe~s or tnsu rance Call the
Offrce of
Consumer
Affairs toll free at 1 866
278-0003 to learn 1f the
bro ker
or
mortgage
lender
IS
properly
licensed (Thts tS a public
serv1 ce an nouncement
fro m th e Ohm Val ley
Pu bltsh1ng Company)

675·7285

Prr

5660

MONEl'

{_ ~

A local manufacturer has

Garage sa le, 3202 At
124 yellow house on left 3 An E ~Cce ll enl way to earn
Mag1 c Years Day Care
famtly sale Mon 5 &amp; Tues 6 money The New Avon
Wtnter clothm
S racusel Call Marolyn 304 882 2645 Center Inc IS now takmg
applications for a full 11me
Appalachian Tire Products a Substitute Please apply tn
company that has been tn person or send resume to
busmess lor over 60 years 20 1 Htgh St Pt Pleasant.

CLASSIFIED INDEX

r

I

OH NO phone calls please

Inside Sale at J&amp;F Auto 6
m11es out Jerrys Run Ad
Apple Grove , Lots of
Chr istmas 1tems Lots of
Used items also Nov 5th
thru Nov 10th 304-576·2635

lNG CO recommen ds
that you do bus1ness With
people you know and
NOT to send money
through th e mall unttl you
have mves t1gated the
offenng

I
I

' 1 ....;._0..____.

Mtg Welders and Patnter for
4

OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH·

MOBILE HOMES

I \11'1 Ill \II \1
..,, R\ II I._

to

IIOMI.~
IIJU SAL!,

Professionally
Clean
AHenuonJ
Homes
&amp;
Bus1 ness Local company offenng NO
poo~
Reasonable
Rates. DOWN PAYMENT
References 740-446·2262
grams lor you to buy yow
horne 1nstead of renting
11~\~1111
100°;o ftnan cmg
' Less than perlect c.red 1t
BustNIXS
accepled
Payment could be th e
01'1'0KllJNrn
same as rent
Mortgage
Locators
(7401367 0000
•NOTICE•

p.;!!W~E!-!!B~U!!-Y~U~S~E~D~.,

Wants to come home Call
\Ill 1Opm 446 8027

10

W ANTED

Asbestos rool shtngles new
FOUND 10/25 on Cherry
or used Charlene Hoefltch
R1dg e Rd In RIO Grande
740-992-5292
area Female Choc &amp; White
med1um s1ze dog (740)245 Want to buy Junk Cars call
54 16
740-388-0884

FOUND

Now you con hove borders and graphics
~
added to your classified ads
_t,~
.1m
Borders $3.00/per ad
. t!
Graphics SOC for small
$1.00 for Iorge

POLICIES Ohio Valley Pabllshlng reserves the right to Milt rejacl, or cancel any ad at any l1me Errors must be reported on the !1rst day
1
TrlbunfloS.nllnei•Fieglster will be responsible tor no more than the coet of the space occupied by the error and onlv the first Insertion We shall not be
eny kiss or expense that reeults from th e publlcatlcm or omtsston of an advertisement Correction will be made In the ftrsl llvatlable edtl1on • Box
are elways confidential •Current rate card applies • All real estate adverttsements are subject to the Federal Fa1r Hous109 Act ot 1968
'""'P'I'"'I
accepts only help wanted ldl meeting EOE atandarda We will not knowingly accept any advertising 1n v1olatlon of the law

Absolute Top Dollar U S
St iver and Gold Cotns,
Ftrewood 2yrs atr··dned cut Proofsets Gold Rtngs, Pre·
and split 98%oak,2% h1cko - 1935
uS
Currency
ry you haul.or I haul Sol1ta1re D1amonds M T S
OH HEAP Vender 949-2038 Com Shop, 151 Second

4x4'a For Sale ............ ........ .. .............. 725
Announcement .......................................... 030
Antiques............................................. .. .. 530
Apartmenta lor Rent........... . .... . . .. ...... 440
Auction and Flea Market ..........................080
Auto Parts &amp; Accessories .... ...................... 760
Auto Repair............................... ...... . .. .. 770
Autos for Sale .... ...... ............ .. ............ 710
Boats &amp; Motors lor Sate ............................. 750
Building Suppllea ........................................ 550
Buatness and BuiiUtngs ............................ 340
Business Opportunity .................................21 0
Bualneaa Training ....................................... 140
Campers &amp; Motor Home&amp; ......................... 790
Camping Equipment ................................... 780
Cards ol Thanks .......................................... 010
Child/Elderly Cars ....................................... 190
Electrlcai/Relrlgeratlon........... ........... .. .. 840
Equipment for Rent...........................:..... ..480
Excavattng ................................................... 830
Farm Equipment ........................................ 610
Farmalor Rent........... .............. .. ............. 430
Farms for Sale ......................................... 330
For Lease ................................................... 490
For Sale ...................................................... 585
Fw Sate or Trade ................... ,. ....... .. ....... 590
FruHa &amp; Vegetables .................................... 580
Furnished Rooma ........................................ 450
General Hauling................................... .....850
Giveaway .................................... ................. 040
Happy Ada .................................................... 050
Hay &amp; Grein................................................640
Help Wanted.................. ........... .......... ..... 11 o
Home lmprovements................................... 81 0
Homes lor Sate ............................................ 31 o
Household Goods ............................ ....... 51 o
Houaes for Rent ........................................ 410
In Memorlam ................................................ 020
Insurance .....................................................
Lawn &amp; Garden Equipment...................... 660
Livestock .....................................................630
Lost and Found .......................................... 060
Lola &amp; Acreage........................ ........
.. .. 350
Miscellaneous .............................................170
Mlacellaneouo Merchandlse....................... 540
Mobile Home Repair.................................860
Mobile Homos for Rent ................:.............. 420
Mobile Homes for Sate . ..............................320
Money to Loan ..........................................220
Motorcycles &amp; 4 Wheelers ...... .......... .740
Musical Instruments . .......... .. .... ........... 570
Personals ................................................... 005
Pets lor Sale........................................ .. .. 560
Plumbing &amp; Healing .... ........... ............... 820
Professional Servlceo ................................. 230
Radio, TV &amp; CB Repalr ............................... 160
Real Ealate Wantecl .....................................360
Schoolalnatructlon....................................150
Plant &amp; Fertilizer .............................. 650
,
9Huatlona
Wanted ...................................... .120
' Space .lor Rent ........................... ................. 460
Sporting Gooda .......................................... 520
SUV'a lor Sate .............................................720
Trucks lor Sale ................................. .... .... 715
Upholstery ................................................... 870
vono For Sate..............................................730
Wenteclto Buy .................................. · ..... 090
Wantecllo Buy· Farm Suppllea .................. 620
w...lecl To Do .................. , ........................ 180
Wenteclto Rant .................................... ....... 470
Yonl Sat• Galllpolla...................................072
Vonl Sat•Pomeroy/Middle .........................074
Yonl Sal• Pt. Pleasant .......................... .... 076

•

Ir

All Display : 12 Noon 2
Business Days Prior To

• All ads must be prepaid'

Description • Include A Price • Avoid Abbreviations
• Include Phone Number And Address When Needed
• Ads Should Run 7 Days

\\\flt \{I \II \I"

i

10

• Stiltt Your Ads With A Keyword • Indude Complete

Successful Ads
Should lnclude These ltems
To
Get Response...

GET YOUR CLASSIFIED LINE AD NOTICED

DisPlay Ads

Dally In-Column: 1:00 p.m.
Monday-Friday for Insertion
In Next Day 's Paper
s,u
~,.n d,;,ay In-Column: 1:00 p .m.
~:"r
For Sundays Paper

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

Or ,Fax To (304) 675-5234

992-2157

Oet.ultiru-

Word Ads

968.

Navy beats Notre Dame
for frrst time since 1963

Or Fax To

Gallipoli s 3 miles from
Galhpolts o11 SA 588 4468935 Pnce reduced
2000 Fleetwood (Wmd gate)
14x70 3br 2 bathrooms
ltnoleum floors, new bath·
rooms
good
condttlon
$14 000 no ca lls after 9pm
please 304 675 3927

New 3 Bedroom homes from
$214 36 per month Includes
many upgrades delivery &amp;
set up 1740)385-2434

OWNER FINANCING
Ntce 312 smglev.tdes
From $1 BOO down
payment
Adam (7 40) 828 2750

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

1"350

I Jll'i &amp;
L--•AiiiiliiRfii"'oii'liia.__.
2 grave lots m Chl\stus
Gardens
0~ 1 0
Valley
Memory Gardens (740)446
4383 day {7 40)256-6637
eventng
Approli 2 acre s w1 e~1sttng
281&lt;00 house founoa tt on
Al so 24x40 finiShed gct1age
Has water elec 7 sewer
Lot.: at ed 1n centenary on
Herman Rd Ask ng $55 000
Pl~as&lt;&gt; call 740 ?08-6704
Green Acres 110) Far :-n
Ltvt n Fresh Au l 1111 1es trom
t&gt;Jev. Hnv~n WV S •4 500
304 773 5881

MOBILE HOME LOT FOR
RENT 1031 Georges CreeK
Ad 4-11 11'1

!~I ·

IU'\1\L"'

10

Htll Sf:'
IUR ib.\'1

1 2BR WDSR $ 400otrro
$400 dep BB Garl1eld Hud
ok 1 3BA 2BA doublew tde
$575/mo $575 det&gt; t72 1/2
ChJthant Av+: HuJ ok 740
-1462515

2 bd House 1n Mason
Co\lered Carport Kitchen
furmshed Ga s heat No
Pets $375 per mo Dep Req
30&lt;1-675 7783

�Page

The Daily Sentinel _

...
Ellm View
Apartments

2 bedroom house in 3br Mobil e Home
all
Pt.Pieasant, very clean and Appliances
fu rnished.
ni&lt;:e No Pets. 304·67 5~1 386 . including Washer &amp; Dryer
304,~93-4496

House in
Syracuse. $500/month t
deposit No Pets. (304)6755332 weekends 740·591·
0265
- - - - - -- - - - - - - 3 Bedroom, 2 Bath hol]le on

nic_._'_ev_._'_'o_l._~_7_aSk
5 · tor

-

(740)446·7 101
Tammie

__
m_oo_1h-

Ashton Elementary 304576-2942

111

~

Furnished upstai rs 3 rooms
and bath. Clean. no pets.
deposit req . 740-44S.1519

bedrooms
for
Rent.
Country Senlng located In

Ashton

WV,

close

to

r............
APARTMENTS
tUR RENT

'32 Birch l ane. 2BA. IBA.

(1 ) upstairs apanment furfridge &amp;Stove included _WID
nished. 2br. ( 1) downstairs
hOOk up. $475/mon. $475
apartment. furnished . 1br. In
dep. No pets. 740-645-5785
New Haven NO PET S 304·
3BA, t .J/2 BA. 2 car garage 882-2326 or 304-882-2793

wl fenced yard in family oriented neighborhood. 5 miles
!rom town. Would consider
renting partially furnished
with utilities to construction

---------------1 &amp; 2 Bedroom Apartments
lor Rent, Meigs Coun ty, In
tow n, No Pets. DepoSII
Required, (740)992·5174 Or

workers on- a week to week (740)441 -0 110

basis. Avail. Dec.1. Call 740- 1 and 2 bedroom apart446_-_87_3_,___________ ments, furnished and unfur·

3BA, 1 bath, 2-story older
farm house on SA 554 Bidweii/RV ' schools
$5751mo plus sec dep. Pets
~ w/$575 pet
Under 15 I I,RI
'la"'e 10 13 07
Aval
d-rt
·
•
Ul
•
•
·
Call 446-3644 for applica·
lion.
- - - - -----'-----3BR, 1BA, laundry room. 65
u;ll Creek No pets 740
lVII
•
•
•
446-9523 or 446-1 443
4 Bd. Home Apple Grove,
0hlo. $400 with dep. No
pats. After 6:00 call 740698·6002.
----------4 rooms and bath, stove and
!ridge, 52 Olive, Gallipolis.
No Pets. $395/mo. 446·3945

5 Room House in Rio
Grande area. References,
· 'd e Pets. 304·675·
No ms1

7624

AHentlont
Local company offering "NO
DOWN PAYMENr programs tor you to buy your
home Instead of renting.
• 100% f
·
tnancang
' Less th an .......,.
"""' ....... cr ed't1
d
•accepte
Payment could be the
same as .rent.
Mortgage ·
Locators.
(740)367-0000

':-,;_-=----

Beautiful 3BR house in the
.
counIry. New appIaances
an d
t F hi
· t cf d
carpe · res Y pam e ~~
decorated. CIA. WID - ut1llty
room . $500/rnonth 614-595··
7'773 800_7984686
or
For rent. Three bedroom ,
one bath, eat-i n kitchen ,
separate laundry room.

(304)882-3017

and two • two bedrooms

nished, and houses in
Pomeroy and Middleport,
security deposit required . no
pets, 740-992 -22 18.
1 BR Ant in c. ... ring valley,
...,....
'"'t'
WID Hookups. (740)339 -

0362
2 bedrooms, living room .
kitchen. 1 bath , apartment
have central air. Furnished

r

01 Aed Neon, 4 cyt, 14/C,
90,000 miles. automatic.
$2600 080. 740-256-1652
or 256-1233
1998 Ford Taurus S.E.,
S):Cellent condition, pl. pw,
ale. cruise, keyless entry, ps,
riew 11res. $3995, (7 40)992·
2064
-92---Do_d_g_e--Sp-i-rit--B-30_0_0

MER!l!M'DISE ~

I

wtth couch, chairs, washer.
dryer, stove, microwave,
beds, dinning table and
chairS $400 deposit, $450 a
month call 304·882-2 523 Middleport, 1 &amp; 2 br. furleave a message and num - nished apartments, no pets,
bBf if not at home
deposit
&amp; references,
:..17_
40;_:1.:_
99'-'2'-'-0-:-1'-65_ _ _, 3 Br. $395 M.,plus uti I
Modern 1 Bedroom apt. Call
&amp;dep,no
pets,
ard
ST.,Racine.740·247·4292.
446-0390
Modern
1 BR Apt. Call 4466 rooms &amp; bath, range &amp;
3736
fridge furnished. Very Clean, - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - in town . Caii441..Q596
MO\Ie-in special during
November! $100 off deposit!
28R Apts 6 mi from Holzer.
So me utilities paid. $400/mo
+ .Oep. 740-388-9343, 9886130
$425.00. No pets. Ret. - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - required. 740-843·5264.
One Be.droom Art for re nt
Apt. for rent! 3 8d .. 1 bath. In Syracuse 992"4568 ·
Racine. $725 an utilities pd .. Partially fu rn ished apt. on
$200 Deposit Call 247-2098 2nd Ave. in Middleport, $350
or leave message.
a mo. plus utilities, deposit &amp;
ref. ph . (740)992-3987.
Apt. for Rent. No Pets. 740- leave a message must see
992 •5858 ·
to appreciate.
~===----Beautiful Apia. at Jackson Spacious second-floor apt.
Eatatee. 52 Westwood
.
overloo6&lt;ing GallipoliS City
Omte, from $365 to $560 Park and river. L.A. den,
740·446·2568.
Equal large kitchen-dining area
Housing Opportunity. This with all new appliances &amp;
institution is an Equal cupboards. 3eR, laundry
Opportunity Provider and area, 2 1/2 baths. $900 per
Apartment for rent, 1. 2
Bdrm ., remodeled, new carpet, Stove &amp; frig ., water,
sewer, trash pd. Middleport

1 Premier Whirlpool Bath
Tub as advertised on TV will
sell 10r less than 112 price.
Instruction
included.
1
Guardian Plus Generator.
runs on natural or propane
gas. Th1s generat01 1s 1deal
lor small home , camping
trailer . vacat1on hunting
cab1n 304·882-2711

_44_6_-7_82_0_ _ _ _ _

L.,--il
tuliR;,;S•.\1.~.:-.,J

sea ts 4WD. dark
$1500 080
740blue.
99000
m1 $7500 080
367-05~6
740 992 3639 eves Oflly.
96 Crown V1c. gre at cond•40 MO'toRCYtl.l:si
t•on. 127 000 m11es call 3044WHVIUR'
882-2057

TRlit:KS
FOR SALE

1989 Chevrolet Suburban
454 motor, fuel injeclion,
400 tra ns, 41D ax le ration ,
ve ry clean, inside like new,
This truck was built to Tow,
Loaded 304-675-5934
2001 Fo rd Ranger 4x.2, XLT,
Air Condition $5,000 304-

29 Serious People to Work
from home using a computer ·
Up to $500 .00 10
$ t ,500 .00
PTIFT
www.Homelncome4·U.com

t2

North

Wis.e Concre t e
Ownt:r- Ric~ Wise
- 740-992-S929 _

NO~~~~

9

.I

~ &amp;hoAFFORDABLE!

1ow.n use
apartments.
House for rent In Pomeroy. 4 and/or small houses FOR
Bd.Rm.,2 bath, air, central RENT. Call (740)441·111 1
heal. $525 per month. 740· for appfication &amp; information.
591·3486.
011 SA 141 , 38 R, 28 A,

---'---'---~-

Ellm View
Apartments

appliances, basemen1, 1 car

garage,
$500/mo
plus • 2&amp;3 bedroom apartments
deposit. ~614)226-0859
•Central heat &amp; AJC

C

MOBFOILER '!_o~

0

l\l'.l'll

1-

•Washer/dryer hookup
•Tenant pays electric
(304)882·3017

2--2Bd rm.,Hud app. homes
rent &amp; deposit required. 740·

HoME
b!PRO\'EMlNJ'S

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Unconditional lifetime guarantee . Local references furnished. Estab lished 1975.
Call
24 Hrs. (740) 4460870, Rogers Base ment
Waterproofing.

•

Advertise

tcl

in this
space

... THE

for

HAS
SOMETHING
FOR YOU!!

per
month

r

.:~

AKC reg. min• dachshuncl, 1
black female 1 black male 1
red female. vet chec ked
$300 eac h call.
304 7-73-5101
- , - - - -- - - - ' - - - - AKC Registered Femal e
Maltese. DOB 2/2212004.
$ 7oo. 740-256·8184 ask for
Leanna.

John Deere 100 Series 07
Must se ll. new $ t 600. Make
~
Goou!;
after, less than 50 hrs. 441Antique coach has just been 9193 Of 937-925-3247
upholstered in deep rasp·
WD Allis Chal mers Farm
berry color &amp; 1 antique chai r
Tractor 45 HP wl 5ft pole
in rose red 740·367-7876
type bush hog. $1750 OBO
Mollohan Furniture. New 740-367-0596
Sofa&amp;Love Seat $400
li t 1. '"l'll iU \II I I\
Queen size llippable pillow In:!"""-~----,
top onl Y $429.95. 202 Clark
A~
Chape l Rd. Bidwell, Oh 1
IUR SAIL
45614. 740-388-0173. M-F . . . . .iiiiiiiiiiiiiii;,.~
9-4 Sat 9·3
01
Hyundal
Accent
Whirlpool bath tub w/10 jets Hatchback. 5 speed trans,
$300, 6 ft .vanity $250 , 1 65,310 miles, good condi·
oommode $40, Maytag dish· tion. needs catalytic convert washer $200, Al l in new er Asking $3200. Call 740cond. PrM:ed to sell. call 441 · 709-6339.
9162

p10

Transportation
Friday, November 30, 2007 to
Sunday, December 2 , 2007
$195/persc.in (double occupancy)
$250/person (single occupancy)
Staying at Hampton Inn
Gladly accept cash, check ,
credit cards and money orders
Please make all checks
payable to PVH Foundation

. LIMITED SPACES!
\our RilfM 10 ~11'1, Drlinml li;II Ot• ·l '""-0

To make reservations please
call PVH Community
Relations , (304) 675-4340.

Ext

1492

Eleictictn Day Dinn~r
November 6
East Letart Methodist
Church
serving
Soups,

11 :00 am till ??

Hot Dogs,

deserts,

drinks ,
Dinner

$5.00

Items sold individually

i

The
Meigs County
Family and Children
Firat Council (Meigs
FCFC) Ia requesting
proposals trom a qual·
Hied Individual or von·
dar to contract tor the
Partnership
For
Succ:eaa Coordinator.
The contract period
will be November 30,
2007 thru June 30,
2008. (W~h an option
to extend the contract
tor one year, depend•
ent upon tunding). the
deadline for oubmis·
slon of proposals is
November 14, 2007 at
9:00 a .m . For Program
lhformatlon and guide·
lines contact Andrea
Osborne
FCFC
Coordinator, at (740)

992-6626 ext 61 or at
tho
Meigs
County
Health
Department,
1t2 E. Memorial Drive,
Pomeroy, OH 45769.
All s ubmissions must
be received by mail or
hand delivered by the
above date and tie . No
material&amp;
received
after that dele will be
Included In 'previous
submissions nor be
considered . The Meigs
FCFC reserves the right to reject any or all
p~oposals . The "1eigs
FCFCis
prohrblted
from discrimination on
the basis of race ,
color, natiori af origin,
sex, age, religion, polil·
leal belief or disa bility
(1 0) 31 ,(11 15, 9

7 4 2

...

Insured &amp; Bonded
740-653-9657

Soutb

West

2•
3 NT
Pass

Pass
Pass

Pass

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

"D·· ~ 1

WAX YOU#l CAll,
FllAN~?

.s-oMeTt-tiNG
~CAN'T

2

8·

'

SiAilT.

'

Windows

Racine. Ohio
45771
741}.949·22t7

• Roofing
• Decks

• Garages

29
East
Pass
Pass

30

Pass

Obi.

31

Pass

33

??

Actress Ethel Barrymore, who died in
1959, sat!!, "Th e best ttme lo make
friends is belora you need them:
When on defense, occasionally one

what ~ needed. In lhis deal, Easl took a
justifiable gamble 10 give his stde a
chancelo down declarer.
Look only at the West hand. What would

D'YA SWEAR TO
TELL TH' WHOLE
TI&lt;UTH, SMIF ?

NO FOUL.

LANGUAGE
IN MY
COURT tt

CONSARN IT, JEDGE-YO'RE TH' ONE WHO
'ULU ME TO SWEAR !!

you lead against a lreely bid three no·
frump lhat your partner has doubled?
East could see that West would probably
lead a spade and that~ rated .l obe ineffective. Assuming North and South had
soma 26 points between thent, Wesl
could not have strong spades. East
decided that

il they were going to
they needed a hea~

beat
lead

and some luck. So he doubled lhree

THE BORN LOSER
~~I"

no-

trump, which asked West to lead the first
su~ bid by the dummy.

CELEBRITY CIPHER

West, knO'Mng lhis agreement, led his

Celebrily CijNr crypll)jjnrns a~e crt~aled !rom ~taKlns by lamous people pa&amp; and PI~

with his queen and continued hearts.
South could see only eight tr~ks: three
spades, one heart and four diamonds.

UP, C.f-\1 E.F !

12% All Stock
BIG NATE
I

RE~~

SOMEWHERE

I ' l'rornot and Quality

PEANUTS

Work

I ' Ftca.;omlhlc Rates

W~'t' AM I STANDING f.tERE
IN.~E RAIN WAITING FOR

r
References Avai lahk!

V.C . YOUNG Ill

Stan ley@
740-742-2293

C all G ary

f':o

•albpolhs JBailp UI:rtbunt

t)oint t)lea•ant ~tgi•ter
The·Daily Sentinel
6unb.ap tltimtj ·i&gt;tnttn·t l
·----------- -- ---------------·-Subscriber's Name ~~~~---

nu: SCf.tOOL eus?

992-62 15
Pc)!llCroy OhiO
"fp 1rs Loc,1 EJpt&gt;r1e1 cu

COW and BOY

CORNER STONE
CONSTRUCTION
Roofing, Siding,
Soffit, Decks,
Doors, .Windows,
Electric, Plumbing,
Drywall,
Remodeling, Room
Additions
Local Contractor
7 40-367 ·0544
Free Estimates
7 40-367 ·05.36

SOMETIMES IFEEL
LIKE I'M T~YING TO LIVE
MV LIFE UP TO OT~E~S'
EXPECTI\TIONS, ~AT~E~
THAN THE ONES I SET
FOil MYSELF.

)
GARFIELD
ANC' l WISH
THeY WOUI.P!

Manley' a
Recycling

I HAVe NO
IC'EA WHAT
I'M UOINGo!

588 IIIII. • lldllt•tt. •ao ·

741H92-3114
........ fl.t.IIDI:II ..
............2:11.11

......
.,........
...............
PIYIIIG TOP iiiCIS 1111

lllllllllll:us•lllllllllmlftllll

Address _

ll!llll'tr ..... Prlceil

iJ'! MflAY..'!&gt; II ·!!'

Phone~-~
· '~~~-'------

THAT'S

OKAY,
llON. NOBOW

uoee

AUP

AUP

ABEJ. "

• BVUV

of minus 660 on any other lead.

PREVIOUS SOLUTION -"It's hard tor the guy who's been around twenty
years to be the hot guy.'·: Tony Danza

G

'~~:~~~ S@"\\4\llA-ltt.~S$
POLlAN
OAearrang1 le11ir1wor&lt;itof btnt..

Astro:-

Graph
-

'lllrthdof:

SCORPIO {Oct. 24-Nov. 22) - Steer
clear of an individual with whom vou are
presently experiencing hard fe elings.
You'll find that It won't take much to Ignite
your fuse, and it's not worth making a
scene.
SAGITTARI\JS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21 ) Even a very close friend may not want
you probing Into his or her affairs, so
keep your _natural curiosity about !hinds
under wraps. Take care to remain at a
discreet distance.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan . 19)- There
Is a strong chance you might lock horns
again wHh someone whose objectives
are totally opposite from yaurs: Instead,
handle this person and the situation with
the kldiJiove treatment.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) - Take
care not to come on In a manner thai's
too assertive with persons who are of
equal ra nk and standing. They might lake
your strong-mindedness as arrogance,
and sparlts coukflly.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) Arrangements where everyone profits
equally will work out quite well, but II
there is any Indication that you or anyone
else is getting more than lhelr share,
look out.
ARIES (March 21 -Aprll 19)--: In your
haste to resolve something. take care
that you don't move too fast for your own
good. There's a chance you could create
a bigger problem tor yourself than you'ra
solving.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) - Gel that
chip off your shoulder as quickly as possible because if you insist upon walking
around all day with it. you'll eventually
encounter someone who will be happy to
knock it ott.
GEMINI (May 21·June 20) - You're
somewhat of an opti~ gambler and
could easily pk.lnk dONn g~ money on
an endeavor you know nothing. about.
You might luck out and wi n, but the odds
are against II.
CANCER (June 21.July 22) - Should
you run up against a wall of resistan ce,
don't overreact. By using your big guns
when a popgun would suffice: you may
blow amity to smithereens, never to be
rebuilt again.
"LEO (July 23-Aug. 22)- Be sura to channel your abundance of energy productively. Rather than being 8 positive vehicle, it could tum out to be a \/ISsei of
fruitlessness with lillie to show · for all
your effort.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) - Someone
might wa n! you to parti cipate In an
expen11v. activity where you hiVI llttll
Inter-eat. Don't agrn to tag along under
durtu and Willi a perfectly gOOd day,
L IB~A (Sop\. 23·0ct. 23) -Your looting
wllh certain aaaoclatll It work might ba
weaker than you think, 10 take oare on
whoee apace you .tread. If you II'V 10 offer
lnetructlon, It might be taken •• a put·

MY Me:

low

lour otromblod
to form lour simple wordo .

I

BALIVE

I I' I I I

r

THE T E

I . I I I'

I'

"I think," the elderly gent
c ommented, "everything is
in walking distance if you

~=li~~~-:~" chuckle quoted

1-.....,-.G..,..I_l..,..G_,E_r...,.,,ner-il 1

I· I I
I --1..-...1......,1-.
'-'---'--:
j

1
-

•

1

by filling in the missing words

.• ...1-.J yo1,1 de11elop from step No, 3 below..

•

i'
i

@)

;.~;~;;;~m

FORI ,

i'

III

libe l

SCRAM·I.ETS ANSWE~S

ARLO &amp;JANIS

/J

DuNNO.

ANDrew...

Mail or drop off this coupon along
with a copy ol your photo 10 to
Ohio Valley Publishing P.O . Box 469 , Gallipolis, OH 4563t

-----~-------------------------

•

,,

I .I I I

1 1 -2 - o 7

Breezy- Human - Knock - Wholly - YOUR WAY
"Tolerance," the philosopher lectured his class, "is letting
people lind happiness in their own way instead of YOUR
WAY."

I

1\1~%
'VA,"{ f.

WOIO
GAMI

141&gt;td ~y ClAY~

~S\~I.T

•

YCPO

IEOMFBL

ot his hearts tor down one.

UK

SOUP TO NUTZ

1-\o'tJ .'. 1li.W'7 A tt'r Of

NUOA

FMRLBOP . AB

down. ·

GRIZZWELLS ·
~p

City/State/Zip _ _ _ __ _ ___

SO 't'OU CAN LEARN
HOW TO SPELL AHD
MliLTIPL'f' FRACTIONS

UK

DCK

But East shot in with his ace and cashed

the harmony.

when you pay for a 6 or 12
month subscription on your
home delivered subscription!
Here's all you
.
need to do ...
Fill out the coupon below
and drop off or mail it with a
copy of your photo ID.

YIIKBW

REKKMO

JDBEYP

By Bernice Bede O.al
Important endeavors with others could
work otJI rather well for you In the year
ahead, as long as everyone Is operating
off lhe same song sheet The moment
anyone g9ts off·key, sour notes will kill

Stanley TreeTrimming
&amp; Removal

EOAYBOB

odds against), dllclarer called tor a club.

TUe~-v.No~6,2007

TAAT PEPPEI'.MINT CAN
HELP '1'0UR SR"t N
II.EMEM&amp;ER l&gt;TUFF AND
!;OLliE Pi!.08LEMS!

"EK

.D C K N U 0 A A M F B U K A U P A B E 0 0 E K J

the rest

WHAT A DEAl!!

Senior Discount*

Today's elva: lequars z

Hoping lhat either West had the club ace
(very un6kely) or East was asleep (also

Thai was plus 200 to East-West instead

If so, you qualify for a

Each Iefier 1nll1~ Clph&amp;r stal""lds lor anolher

from the dummy, East caref~_ly overtook

TR:'I TO LIC,f-ITE.~...,

$10.50/100

by Luis Campos ·

heart jack. When declarer played low

James Keesee II
742·2332

or older?

crate
42 Poker stak&lt;
43 Identifies
44 Clock's
front
45 Swit costar
46 Er-8oldler
47 Osaka yeo
49 Give In the
middle

though, he will have to show ·partner

Owner:

Are yoll65

36
36

35 Weeps ov01
37 Vast number
38 Broke
ground
40 Student In
unlfonn
4t Packing

and do the necessary. Sometimes ,

• Room Additions

Feed

35

34 location•

contract. Then, he should ta&lt;e charge

Hill's Se lf
Storage
. 29670 Bashan Road

26

Give partner help
when he needs it

lhe contract,

• VInyl Siding
• Replacement

22
23

heeds
39 Not her
Heavy-metal 40 Magna band
laude
Old cloth
41 Horse·
Trace of
drawn vehl·
smoke
cle
Urgent re·
43 Chinese
quest
temple
Rhea
46 Faded away P.r.'H:rr
cousin
48 Comeo
Part ol
down wHh
WA TS
.Omething
Righ~ on a 50 This senora
map
51 Epoch
Ship's bose 52 Zero
(2 wds.)
53 - off
Crannies
(miffed)
monly
Forlt part
54 Devotee
tO Wizened
Omelet
55 Smelting
11 Serving ol
extra
waste
butter
Clean a fish
17 liszt opus
2.2 pound
DOWN
19 Containa
units
22 Spear, as a
Crossing a
fish
t Gorilla
creek
2 Big family
23 Ballard or
Make-3 Ricky
Starr
for_it
Ricardo
24 Eye part
Biology
4 Become
25 Centurion' s
oubjeel
popular (2
moon
Flamenco
wds.)
26 Install
shout
5 AHer a skirt
electricity
Feminine
6 Singer Tori 27 Director principle
Ephron
H.,gflve
28 Htdden val·
7 Chicle
Fostered
pt'ocluct
ley
Small taste
8 Elk
30 Doozle
Faculty
9 Fe, com·
32 Mag execs

partner will see exactly how to defeat the

2459 St. Rt. 100.·Gallipolis

J&amp;L
Construction

18
20
21

34

Aile YOU GOING TO _;:::-;\'~"-NO··~ DON'T WANT TO flNISt'l

~

16

North
1•
2t

Opening lead:

740.446.9200

--------------Seasoned Firewood, Picked
up or delivere d. OH HEAP
&amp;LAA, WV LEAP accepted.
Call Melvin Clagg. 740-441 ·
0941 or 740·645·5946

AKC Pekingnese pup. S300
Call740-256-1664

•

Dealer: North
Vulnerable : Both

(740)446-3481 .

list lor Hud·subsized, 1- br,
apartment, for
th e
elderly/disabled call 675·
6679
Equal
Hous ing
Opportunity

5 2
A 6 3

10 9 6 4

• 76 3
• KQJ98

• Pole Buildings

l!r,,ar-·"~o·u-~'EHO--~.-u-.,

Chartered Coach

Seamless Gutters
Rooling . Siding. Gutters

Hardwotd cabinetry And Furniture

30x50x1 0
Delivery

Twin Rivers Tower is acceptfng applications,for waiting

•
•

•

South
• A K 6

BARNEY

NEW AND USED STEEL
Steel Beams, Pipe .Rebar
For
Concrete,
Angle,
Channel, Flat Bar, Steel
·
G 1F
0 ra1ns,
ra 1ng
or
D~ivewav s &amp; Walkways. L&amp;l
Scrap Metals Open MOnday,
Tuesday, Wednesday &amp;
Friday. Bam-4:30pm . Closed
Thursday,
Satu rday
&amp;
Sunday. 1740)446-7300

Retail Space Appx 1,400 sq.
ft , for rent/lease. 4th Street
Point Pleasant wv 304·
6 foot Brush Hogg, 3 blades,
675-3788
like new. $800 firm 304·675I ll I(&lt; II \ "&gt;Ill"
2902

Cherokee, North Carolina

Guttering

www.tlmberereeltcablDetey.com

Com mercial buildirtg "For
Rent" 1800 square reet, off
street parking. Great loca tionl 749 · Third Avenue in
Gallipol is . Rent $300/mo. Standard Poodle. BK (F). 20
Call -Wayne (404)45£j-3802 months old, $ t 50 080
_1740)645-2404
Office space, utilities paid,
I II&lt;' I ' 11'1'1 ti · S
42~
Second
Avenue ,
,\11\ I ..., I Oth.
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631.
(740)446-4383

Casino
&amp; Tanger Outlet Mall
for Christmas
Shopping

H&amp;H

.5~-5~906;'7'7"'"'7':-:-_::·=;::=:;::;~;::;:;;;;;;:::;==;:":::(-

JET
AERATION MOTORS
Repaired, New &amp; Rebuilt In
Stock. Call Ron Evans, 1•
000-537·9528.

5 4 2
A Q 10 9 8

• J

BAD CREDIT?
NO CREDI T?
BANKRUPT CY?

_

0638 or 208·0134

•
•

Stop &amp; Compare

LUV H01,1l ~

ISHo·pCLASSIFIEDS I

IBM Camp. w/windows 95
$75. Pu ~ch bowl and cup set
!rom Topes $50. Pressure
can ner $30. Skiers Edge &amp;
Nordic Track abs $ 80. 367-

East

140-992-1611

"We Cdr" IH· I: \1
r-r111 01 11 Tull ht~l'
866 -564-8679

t5

West

JJ0987

13
14

.

Re modeling

$90

r

~

TtaiiB! for rent, 3BR, 2 BA.

Can 367-7762 or 446·4060

MONTY

• Complet e

-~~\

K7632
AKQ J

t
.. 10 5

• New Hom es

WHAT YntlPI
STYlE. ..

SIRIHI '

9

• Garages

availabl e.
Tara
Townhouse Closeouts
Apartments, Very Spacious, Ashland, KY 606-929-5655
2 Bedrooms, CJA, 1 112
I'E'Is
Ba~h. Adult Pool &amp; Baby
I'OR S,\J£
Pool, Patio. Start $425/Mo.
No Pets, Lease Ptus
Security Deposit Required,

eniir--..;.~---.,

992-5639.

ROBERT
BISSEll
CONSTIUCTION

740-416-1698

attached garage, and fenced _Em_pt_oy
__
er_.- - - - - - - - - - month. Call 446-4425, or Swim Spas Arrived• Save
yard near Pt. Pleasant.
446·2325
$&amp; 5/mth. plus deposit. Call CONVENIENTLY LOCAT- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - $$$Tiki Tubs Hot Tub Outlet.
304.53~ : 1197 .

I Hls-o?

• Q3

2006 Honda Gold Wing
$4,000 in accessor1es. Paid
$24,000 new--$19,600. Call
740-367-7 t29.

~to

1
·
5

8

SUVs

te~;~th er

IS

Phillip
Alder

All types of t:oncrete

AJC , 4DR, Auto. E..:c. Cond. 01 Dodge DuranQo Heated

99 Monte Carlo. $2500;
1997 Chevy Blazer. has
small dent in fender, S2tOO:
1997 Dodge Stra1us. $1995 ;
1986 Toyota Pickup 4x4,
$1495;
1997
Chevy
Caval•er. $2500. ~any more
great deals . KG Aut o
1740)446-8172

Wanted:

model, connection,
cha rger, ballery
cable
dual 67
I'"
motor front wheel drive used
very l ittle, $eoo. (740)74227 14 Of 740-992-0408

Pole
Barns
$6,495
Free
(937)718·1471

NEA Crossword Pu:tzle
ACROSS

2003 Dodge Dakota Quad
Cab. 4x4. auto, PW,PL, CD
player. AM/FM radio, nerf
bars. bed liner &amp; cover, low·
ing package , 4.7 liter,
PS.PB, cruise IVC. sliding
bacio; window. Going thru
Divorce sell for $14,000
books lor over $15 ,000
70 ,000 m11es 304-675..()463
leave message

95 VW Jetta 192,000 miles.

Gracious Living 1 and 2
Bedroom Apts . at Village
Manor and Riverside Apts. in
Middleport, from $327 to
$592 . 740·992·5064. Equal
Hous1ng Opportun 1ty.
Electnc Scooler. Excellent
--"-=~===---- cond111on. Made tn USA
Immaculate 1 bedroom $700. Ca ll 740-446·41 67
apartment New ca~pe! &amp;
cabinets, freshly painted &amp; GallipoliS Daily Tribune
decorated , WID hookup. issues in binders Jan · June
Beautiful country s~ «i ng . 1939, JUly · Dec 1900. Jan Must see to appreciate. June t 899 . 740-367-0638 or
$325/mo. (614)595·7773 or 206-0134
1-800-798·4686.
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Have 2 Ball Perfect Mason
Immaculate 2 bedroom 1/2 Pint Green Jars.
apartment New carp et &amp; Excellent $255., Also Have 5
cabinets. lreshly painted &amp; · TuDes of 88's Marked
decorated . WID hookup. "Winchester", Very Colorful
Beautiful country setting. $75.00.740-533-3870
Must see to appreciate .
$4001mo. (614)595-7773 or Hove round BaHeryoperated
handicapped chair 2005
1·800·798-4686
Large 2BR upstai rs apt
Large covered deck. close to
hospital. also 1BR apts. Ret
&amp; dep. required . 740-4462957

The Daily Sentinel • Page B7
BRIDGE

Seth Thomas dock. wash
stand, phonograph , scales,
glassware, glass Coke sign,
organs, 011 tamps, misc., 2
walnut • show
cases,
4197
740
992
1 ) '
miles. good cond . m.no r
Mocu.LANEOUS
~~pairs needed. 4500 080.

for Rent and one • three

www.mydallysentlnel.com

~

45MRound Oak Dinner Table
on Pedestal. Washstand
complete with towel bar,
$500 !Or both or $300 each.
Calll740)441 -061?

• 2&amp;3 bedroom apartments
2BA's, 1 22 Lower Garfield,
Gallipolis. 06posit required. 3br, • 2ba. Heat Pump. • Cenlral heat &amp; AJC
740·446-1258
Dishwasher. 1 112 miles •Washer/dryer hookup
3 bedroom House available from Pt. Pleasant (Jericho) •All electric· averaging
Now. thru May $475 rent. 304-273-6622(0)) 304-674- $50·$60/month
$300 deposit. raf req. 740- 6204 (E)
.
•Owner pays water. sewer.
trash .
441·7193 or 740·339·9713 Mobile Mome Loti lor· Rent

3 Bedroom

Monday, November 5, 2007

www.mydailysentinel.com

Monday, November 5, 2007
ALLEY OOP

'

�Page

The Daily Sentinel _

...
Ellm View
Apartments

2 bedroom house in 3br Mobil e Home
all
Pt.Pieasant, very clean and Appliances
fu rnished.
ni&lt;:e No Pets. 304·67 5~1 386 . including Washer &amp; Dryer
304,~93-4496

House in
Syracuse. $500/month t
deposit No Pets. (304)6755332 weekends 740·591·
0265
- - - - - -- - - - - - - 3 Bedroom, 2 Bath hol]le on

nic_._'_ev_._'_'o_l._~_7_aSk
5 · tor

-

(740)446·7 101
Tammie

__
m_oo_1h-

Ashton Elementary 304576-2942

111

~

Furnished upstai rs 3 rooms
and bath. Clean. no pets.
deposit req . 740-44S.1519

bedrooms
for
Rent.
Country Senlng located In

Ashton

WV,

close

to

r............
APARTMENTS
tUR RENT

'32 Birch l ane. 2BA. IBA.

(1 ) upstairs apanment furfridge &amp;Stove included _WID
nished. 2br. ( 1) downstairs
hOOk up. $475/mon. $475
apartment. furnished . 1br. In
dep. No pets. 740-645-5785
New Haven NO PET S 304·
3BA, t .J/2 BA. 2 car garage 882-2326 or 304-882-2793

wl fenced yard in family oriented neighborhood. 5 miles
!rom town. Would consider
renting partially furnished
with utilities to construction

---------------1 &amp; 2 Bedroom Apartments
lor Rent, Meigs Coun ty, In
tow n, No Pets. DepoSII
Required, (740)992·5174 Or

workers on- a week to week (740)441 -0 110

basis. Avail. Dec.1. Call 740- 1 and 2 bedroom apart446_-_87_3_,___________ ments, furnished and unfur·

3BA, 1 bath, 2-story older
farm house on SA 554 Bidweii/RV ' schools
$5751mo plus sec dep. Pets
~ w/$575 pet
Under 15 I I,RI
'la"'e 10 13 07
Aval
d-rt
·
•
Ul
•
•
·
Call 446-3644 for applica·
lion.
- - - - -----'-----3BR, 1BA, laundry room. 65
u;ll Creek No pets 740
lVII
•
•
•
446-9523 or 446-1 443
4 Bd. Home Apple Grove,
0hlo. $400 with dep. No
pats. After 6:00 call 740698·6002.
----------4 rooms and bath, stove and
!ridge, 52 Olive, Gallipolis.
No Pets. $395/mo. 446·3945

5 Room House in Rio
Grande area. References,
· 'd e Pets. 304·675·
No ms1

7624

AHentlont
Local company offering "NO
DOWN PAYMENr programs tor you to buy your
home Instead of renting.
• 100% f
·
tnancang
' Less th an .......,.
"""' ....... cr ed't1
d
•accepte
Payment could be the
same as .rent.
Mortgage ·
Locators.
(740)367-0000

':-,;_-=----

Beautiful 3BR house in the
.
counIry. New appIaances
an d
t F hi
· t cf d
carpe · res Y pam e ~~
decorated. CIA. WID - ut1llty
room . $500/rnonth 614-595··
7'773 800_7984686
or
For rent. Three bedroom ,
one bath, eat-i n kitchen ,
separate laundry room.

(304)882-3017

and two • two bedrooms

nished, and houses in
Pomeroy and Middleport,
security deposit required . no
pets, 740-992 -22 18.
1 BR Ant in c. ... ring valley,
...,....
'"'t'
WID Hookups. (740)339 -

0362
2 bedrooms, living room .
kitchen. 1 bath , apartment
have central air. Furnished

r

01 Aed Neon, 4 cyt, 14/C,
90,000 miles. automatic.
$2600 080. 740-256-1652
or 256-1233
1998 Ford Taurus S.E.,
S):Cellent condition, pl. pw,
ale. cruise, keyless entry, ps,
riew 11res. $3995, (7 40)992·
2064
-92---Do_d_g_e--Sp-i-rit--B-30_0_0

MER!l!M'DISE ~

I

wtth couch, chairs, washer.
dryer, stove, microwave,
beds, dinning table and
chairS $400 deposit, $450 a
month call 304·882-2 523 Middleport, 1 &amp; 2 br. furleave a message and num - nished apartments, no pets,
bBf if not at home
deposit
&amp; references,
:..17_
40;_:1.:_
99'-'2'-'-0-:-1'-65_ _ _, 3 Br. $395 M.,plus uti I
Modern 1 Bedroom apt. Call
&amp;dep,no
pets,
ard
ST.,Racine.740·247·4292.
446-0390
Modern
1 BR Apt. Call 4466 rooms &amp; bath, range &amp;
3736
fridge furnished. Very Clean, - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - in town . Caii441..Q596
MO\Ie-in special during
November! $100 off deposit!
28R Apts 6 mi from Holzer.
So me utilities paid. $400/mo
+ .Oep. 740-388-9343, 9886130
$425.00. No pets. Ret. - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - required. 740-843·5264.
One Be.droom Art for re nt
Apt. for rent! 3 8d .. 1 bath. In Syracuse 992"4568 ·
Racine. $725 an utilities pd .. Partially fu rn ished apt. on
$200 Deposit Call 247-2098 2nd Ave. in Middleport, $350
or leave message.
a mo. plus utilities, deposit &amp;
ref. ph . (740)992-3987.
Apt. for Rent. No Pets. 740- leave a message must see
992 •5858 ·
to appreciate.
~===----Beautiful Apia. at Jackson Spacious second-floor apt.
Eatatee. 52 Westwood
.
overloo6&lt;ing GallipoliS City
Omte, from $365 to $560 Park and river. L.A. den,
740·446·2568.
Equal large kitchen-dining area
Housing Opportunity. This with all new appliances &amp;
institution is an Equal cupboards. 3eR, laundry
Opportunity Provider and area, 2 1/2 baths. $900 per
Apartment for rent, 1. 2
Bdrm ., remodeled, new carpet, Stove &amp; frig ., water,
sewer, trash pd. Middleport

1 Premier Whirlpool Bath
Tub as advertised on TV will
sell 10r less than 112 price.
Instruction
included.
1
Guardian Plus Generator.
runs on natural or propane
gas. Th1s generat01 1s 1deal
lor small home , camping
trailer . vacat1on hunting
cab1n 304·882-2711

_44_6_-7_82_0_ _ _ _ _

L.,--il
tuliR;,;S•.\1.~.:-.,J

sea ts 4WD. dark
$1500 080
740blue.
99000
m1 $7500 080
367-05~6
740 992 3639 eves Oflly.
96 Crown V1c. gre at cond•40 MO'toRCYtl.l:si
t•on. 127 000 m11es call 3044WHVIUR'
882-2057

TRlit:KS
FOR SALE

1989 Chevrolet Suburban
454 motor, fuel injeclion,
400 tra ns, 41D ax le ration ,
ve ry clean, inside like new,
This truck was built to Tow,
Loaded 304-675-5934
2001 Fo rd Ranger 4x.2, XLT,
Air Condition $5,000 304-

29 Serious People to Work
from home using a computer ·
Up to $500 .00 10
$ t ,500 .00
PTIFT
www.Homelncome4·U.com

t2

North

Wis.e Concre t e
Ownt:r- Ric~ Wise
- 740-992-S929 _

NO~~~~

9

.I

~ &amp;hoAFFORDABLE!

1ow.n use
apartments.
House for rent In Pomeroy. 4 and/or small houses FOR
Bd.Rm.,2 bath, air, central RENT. Call (740)441·111 1
heal. $525 per month. 740· for appfication &amp; information.
591·3486.
011 SA 141 , 38 R, 28 A,

---'---'---~-

Ellm View
Apartments

appliances, basemen1, 1 car

garage,
$500/mo
plus • 2&amp;3 bedroom apartments
deposit. ~614)226-0859
•Central heat &amp; AJC

C

MOBFOILER '!_o~

0

l\l'.l'll

1-

•Washer/dryer hookup
•Tenant pays electric
(304)882·3017

2--2Bd rm.,Hud app. homes
rent &amp; deposit required. 740·

HoME
b!PRO\'EMlNJ'S

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Unconditional lifetime guarantee . Local references furnished. Estab lished 1975.
Call
24 Hrs. (740) 4460870, Rogers Base ment
Waterproofing.

•

Advertise

tcl

in this
space

... THE

for

HAS
SOMETHING
FOR YOU!!

per
month

r

.:~

AKC reg. min• dachshuncl, 1
black female 1 black male 1
red female. vet chec ked
$300 eac h call.
304 7-73-5101
- , - - - -- - - - ' - - - - AKC Registered Femal e
Maltese. DOB 2/2212004.
$ 7oo. 740-256·8184 ask for
Leanna.

John Deere 100 Series 07
Must se ll. new $ t 600. Make
~
Goou!;
after, less than 50 hrs. 441Antique coach has just been 9193 Of 937-925-3247
upholstered in deep rasp·
WD Allis Chal mers Farm
berry color &amp; 1 antique chai r
Tractor 45 HP wl 5ft pole
in rose red 740·367-7876
type bush hog. $1750 OBO
Mollohan Furniture. New 740-367-0596
Sofa&amp;Love Seat $400
li t 1. '"l'll iU \II I I\
Queen size llippable pillow In:!"""-~----,
top onl Y $429.95. 202 Clark
A~
Chape l Rd. Bidwell, Oh 1
IUR SAIL
45614. 740-388-0173. M-F . . . . .iiiiiiiiiiiiiii;,.~
9-4 Sat 9·3
01
Hyundal
Accent
Whirlpool bath tub w/10 jets Hatchback. 5 speed trans,
$300, 6 ft .vanity $250 , 1 65,310 miles, good condi·
oommode $40, Maytag dish· tion. needs catalytic convert washer $200, Al l in new er Asking $3200. Call 740cond. PrM:ed to sell. call 441 · 709-6339.
9162

p10

Transportation
Friday, November 30, 2007 to
Sunday, December 2 , 2007
$195/persc.in (double occupancy)
$250/person (single occupancy)
Staying at Hampton Inn
Gladly accept cash, check ,
credit cards and money orders
Please make all checks
payable to PVH Foundation

. LIMITED SPACES!
\our RilfM 10 ~11'1, Drlinml li;II Ot• ·l '""-0

To make reservations please
call PVH Community
Relations , (304) 675-4340.

Ext

1492

Eleictictn Day Dinn~r
November 6
East Letart Methodist
Church
serving
Soups,

11 :00 am till ??

Hot Dogs,

deserts,

drinks ,
Dinner

$5.00

Items sold individually

i

The
Meigs County
Family and Children
Firat Council (Meigs
FCFC) Ia requesting
proposals trom a qual·
Hied Individual or von·
dar to contract tor the
Partnership
For
Succ:eaa Coordinator.
The contract period
will be November 30,
2007 thru June 30,
2008. (W~h an option
to extend the contract
tor one year, depend•
ent upon tunding). the
deadline for oubmis·
slon of proposals is
November 14, 2007 at
9:00 a .m . For Program
lhformatlon and guide·
lines contact Andrea
Osborne
FCFC
Coordinator, at (740)

992-6626 ext 61 or at
tho
Meigs
County
Health
Department,
1t2 E. Memorial Drive,
Pomeroy, OH 45769.
All s ubmissions must
be received by mail or
hand delivered by the
above date and tie . No
material&amp;
received
after that dele will be
Included In 'previous
submissions nor be
considered . The Meigs
FCFC reserves the right to reject any or all
p~oposals . The "1eigs
FCFCis
prohrblted
from discrimination on
the basis of race ,
color, natiori af origin,
sex, age, religion, polil·
leal belief or disa bility
(1 0) 31 ,(11 15, 9

7 4 2

...

Insured &amp; Bonded
740-653-9657

Soutb

West

2•
3 NT
Pass

Pass
Pass

Pass

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

"D·· ~ 1

WAX YOU#l CAll,
FllAN~?

.s-oMeTt-tiNG
~CAN'T

2

8·

'

SiAilT.

'

Windows

Racine. Ohio
45771
741}.949·22t7

• Roofing
• Decks

• Garages

29
East
Pass
Pass

30

Pass

Obi.

31

Pass

33

??

Actress Ethel Barrymore, who died in
1959, sat!!, "Th e best ttme lo make
friends is belora you need them:
When on defense, occasionally one

what ~ needed. In lhis deal, Easl took a
justifiable gamble 10 give his stde a
chancelo down declarer.
Look only at the West hand. What would

D'YA SWEAR TO
TELL TH' WHOLE
TI&lt;UTH, SMIF ?

NO FOUL.

LANGUAGE
IN MY
COURT tt

CONSARN IT, JEDGE-YO'RE TH' ONE WHO
'ULU ME TO SWEAR !!

you lead against a lreely bid three no·
frump lhat your partner has doubled?
East could see that West would probably
lead a spade and that~ rated .l obe ineffective. Assuming North and South had
soma 26 points between thent, Wesl
could not have strong spades. East
decided that

il they were going to
they needed a hea~

beat
lead

and some luck. So he doubled lhree

THE BORN LOSER
~~I"

no-

trump, which asked West to lead the first
su~ bid by the dummy.

CELEBRITY CIPHER

West, knO'Mng lhis agreement, led his

Celebrily CijNr crypll)jjnrns a~e crt~aled !rom ~taKlns by lamous people pa&amp; and PI~

with his queen and continued hearts.
South could see only eight tr~ks: three
spades, one heart and four diamonds.

UP, C.f-\1 E.F !

12% All Stock
BIG NATE
I

RE~~

SOMEWHERE

I ' l'rornot and Quality

PEANUTS

Work

I ' Ftca.;omlhlc Rates

W~'t' AM I STANDING f.tERE
IN.~E RAIN WAITING FOR

r
References Avai lahk!

V.C . YOUNG Ill

Stan ley@
740-742-2293

C all G ary

f':o

•albpolhs JBailp UI:rtbunt

t)oint t)lea•ant ~tgi•ter
The·Daily Sentinel
6unb.ap tltimtj ·i&gt;tnttn·t l
·----------- -- ---------------·-Subscriber's Name ~~~~---

nu: SCf.tOOL eus?

992-62 15
Pc)!llCroy OhiO
"fp 1rs Loc,1 EJpt&gt;r1e1 cu

COW and BOY

CORNER STONE
CONSTRUCTION
Roofing, Siding,
Soffit, Decks,
Doors, .Windows,
Electric, Plumbing,
Drywall,
Remodeling, Room
Additions
Local Contractor
7 40-367 ·0544
Free Estimates
7 40-367 ·05.36

SOMETIMES IFEEL
LIKE I'M T~YING TO LIVE
MV LIFE UP TO OT~E~S'
EXPECTI\TIONS, ~AT~E~
THAN THE ONES I SET
FOil MYSELF.

)
GARFIELD
ANC' l WISH
THeY WOUI.P!

Manley' a
Recycling

I HAVe NO
IC'EA WHAT
I'M UOINGo!

588 IIIII. • lldllt•tt. •ao ·

741H92-3114
........ fl.t.IIDI:II ..
............2:11.11

......
.,........
...............
PIYIIIG TOP iiiCIS 1111

lllllllllll:us•lllllllllmlftllll

Address _

ll!llll'tr ..... Prlceil

iJ'! MflAY..'!&gt; II ·!!'

Phone~-~
· '~~~-'------

THAT'S

OKAY,
llON. NOBOW

uoee

AUP

AUP

ABEJ. "

• BVUV

of minus 660 on any other lead.

PREVIOUS SOLUTION -"It's hard tor the guy who's been around twenty
years to be the hot guy.'·: Tony Danza

G

'~~:~~~ S@"\\4\llA-ltt.~S$
POLlAN
OAearrang1 le11ir1wor&lt;itof btnt..

Astro:-

Graph
-

'lllrthdof:

SCORPIO {Oct. 24-Nov. 22) - Steer
clear of an individual with whom vou are
presently experiencing hard fe elings.
You'll find that It won't take much to Ignite
your fuse, and it's not worth making a
scene.
SAGITTARI\JS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21 ) Even a very close friend may not want
you probing Into his or her affairs, so
keep your _natural curiosity about !hinds
under wraps. Take care to remain at a
discreet distance.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan . 19)- There
Is a strong chance you might lock horns
again wHh someone whose objectives
are totally opposite from yaurs: Instead,
handle this person and the situation with
the kldiJiove treatment.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) - Take
care not to come on In a manner thai's
too assertive with persons who are of
equal ra nk and standing. They might lake
your strong-mindedness as arrogance,
and sparlts coukflly.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) Arrangements where everyone profits
equally will work out quite well, but II
there is any Indication that you or anyone
else is getting more than lhelr share,
look out.
ARIES (March 21 -Aprll 19)--: In your
haste to resolve something. take care
that you don't move too fast for your own
good. There's a chance you could create
a bigger problem tor yourself than you'ra
solving.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) - Gel that
chip off your shoulder as quickly as possible because if you insist upon walking
around all day with it. you'll eventually
encounter someone who will be happy to
knock it ott.
GEMINI (May 21·June 20) - You're
somewhat of an opti~ gambler and
could easily pk.lnk dONn g~ money on
an endeavor you know nothing. about.
You might luck out and wi n, but the odds
are against II.
CANCER (June 21.July 22) - Should
you run up against a wall of resistan ce,
don't overreact. By using your big guns
when a popgun would suffice: you may
blow amity to smithereens, never to be
rebuilt again.
"LEO (July 23-Aug. 22)- Be sura to channel your abundance of energy productively. Rather than being 8 positive vehicle, it could tum out to be a \/ISsei of
fruitlessness with lillie to show · for all
your effort.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) - Someone
might wa n! you to parti cipate In an
expen11v. activity where you hiVI llttll
Inter-eat. Don't agrn to tag along under
durtu and Willi a perfectly gOOd day,
L IB~A (Sop\. 23·0ct. 23) -Your looting
wllh certain aaaoclatll It work might ba
weaker than you think, 10 take oare on
whoee apace you .tread. If you II'V 10 offer
lnetructlon, It might be taken •• a put·

MY Me:

low

lour otromblod
to form lour simple wordo .

I

BALIVE

I I' I I I

r

THE T E

I . I I I'

I'

"I think," the elderly gent
c ommented, "everything is
in walking distance if you

~=li~~~-:~" chuckle quoted

1-.....,-.G..,..I_l..,..G_,E_r...,.,,ner-il 1

I· I I
I --1..-...1......,1-.
'-'---'--:
j

1
-

•

1

by filling in the missing words

.• ...1-.J yo1,1 de11elop from step No, 3 below..

•

i'
i

@)

;.~;~;;;~m

FORI ,

i'

III

libe l

SCRAM·I.ETS ANSWE~S

ARLO &amp;JANIS

/J

DuNNO.

ANDrew...

Mail or drop off this coupon along
with a copy ol your photo 10 to
Ohio Valley Publishing P.O . Box 469 , Gallipolis, OH 4563t

-----~-------------------------

•

,,

I .I I I

1 1 -2 - o 7

Breezy- Human - Knock - Wholly - YOUR WAY
"Tolerance," the philosopher lectured his class, "is letting
people lind happiness in their own way instead of YOUR
WAY."

I

1\1~%
'VA,"{ f.

WOIO
GAMI

141&gt;td ~y ClAY~

~S\~I.T

•

YCPO

IEOMFBL

ot his hearts tor down one.

UK

SOUP TO NUTZ

1-\o'tJ .'. 1li.W'7 A tt'r Of

NUOA

FMRLBOP . AB

down. ·

GRIZZWELLS ·
~p

City/State/Zip _ _ _ __ _ ___

SO 't'OU CAN LEARN
HOW TO SPELL AHD
MliLTIPL'f' FRACTIONS

UK

DCK

But East shot in with his ace and cashed

the harmony.

when you pay for a 6 or 12
month subscription on your
home delivered subscription!
Here's all you
.
need to do ...
Fill out the coupon below
and drop off or mail it with a
copy of your photo ID.

YIIKBW

REKKMO

JDBEYP

By Bernice Bede O.al
Important endeavors with others could
work otJI rather well for you In the year
ahead, as long as everyone Is operating
off lhe same song sheet The moment
anyone g9ts off·key, sour notes will kill

Stanley TreeTrimming
&amp; Removal

EOAYBOB

odds against), dllclarer called tor a club.

TUe~-v.No~6,2007

TAAT PEPPEI'.MINT CAN
HELP '1'0UR SR"t N
II.EMEM&amp;ER l&gt;TUFF AND
!;OLliE Pi!.08LEMS!

"EK

.D C K N U 0 A A M F B U K A U P A B E 0 0 E K J

the rest

WHAT A DEAl!!

Senior Discount*

Today's elva: lequars z

Hoping lhat either West had the club ace
(very un6kely) or East was asleep (also

Thai was plus 200 to East-West instead

If so, you qualify for a

Each Iefier 1nll1~ Clph&amp;r stal""lds lor anolher

from the dummy, East caref~_ly overtook

TR:'I TO LIC,f-ITE.~...,

$10.50/100

by Luis Campos ·

heart jack. When declarer played low

James Keesee II
742·2332

or older?

crate
42 Poker stak&lt;
43 Identifies
44 Clock's
front
45 Swit costar
46 Er-8oldler
47 Osaka yeo
49 Give In the
middle

though, he will have to show ·partner

Owner:

Are yoll65

36
36

35 Weeps ov01
37 Vast number
38 Broke
ground
40 Student In
unlfonn
4t Packing

and do the necessary. Sometimes ,

• Room Additions

Feed

35

34 location•

contract. Then, he should ta&lt;e charge

Hill's Se lf
Storage
. 29670 Bashan Road

26

Give partner help
when he needs it

lhe contract,

• VInyl Siding
• Replacement

22
23

heeds
39 Not her
Heavy-metal 40 Magna band
laude
Old cloth
41 Horse·
Trace of
drawn vehl·
smoke
cle
Urgent re·
43 Chinese
quest
temple
Rhea
46 Faded away P.r.'H:rr
cousin
48 Comeo
Part ol
down wHh
WA TS
.Omething
Righ~ on a 50 This senora
map
51 Epoch
Ship's bose 52 Zero
(2 wds.)
53 - off
Crannies
(miffed)
monly
Forlt part
54 Devotee
tO Wizened
Omelet
55 Smelting
11 Serving ol
extra
waste
butter
Clean a fish
17 liszt opus
2.2 pound
DOWN
19 Containa
units
22 Spear, as a
Crossing a
fish
t Gorilla
creek
2 Big family
23 Ballard or
Make-3 Ricky
Starr
for_it
Ricardo
24 Eye part
Biology
4 Become
25 Centurion' s
oubjeel
popular (2
moon
Flamenco
wds.)
26 Install
shout
5 AHer a skirt
electricity
Feminine
6 Singer Tori 27 Director principle
Ephron
H.,gflve
28 Htdden val·
7 Chicle
Fostered
pt'ocluct
ley
Small taste
8 Elk
30 Doozle
Faculty
9 Fe, com·
32 Mag execs

partner will see exactly how to defeat the

2459 St. Rt. 100.·Gallipolis

J&amp;L
Construction

18
20
21

34

Aile YOU GOING TO _;:::-;\'~"-NO··~ DON'T WANT TO flNISt'l

~

16

North
1•
2t

Opening lead:

740.446.9200

--------------Seasoned Firewood, Picked
up or delivere d. OH HEAP
&amp;LAA, WV LEAP accepted.
Call Melvin Clagg. 740-441 ·
0941 or 740·645·5946

AKC Pekingnese pup. S300
Call740-256-1664

•

Dealer: North
Vulnerable : Both

(740)446-3481 .

list lor Hud·subsized, 1- br,
apartment, for
th e
elderly/disabled call 675·
6679
Equal
Hous ing
Opportunity

5 2
A 6 3

10 9 6 4

• 76 3
• KQJ98

• Pole Buildings

l!r,,ar-·"~o·u-~'EHO--~.-u-.,

Chartered Coach

Seamless Gutters
Rooling . Siding. Gutters

Hardwotd cabinetry And Furniture

30x50x1 0
Delivery

Twin Rivers Tower is acceptfng applications,for waiting

•
•

•

South
• A K 6

BARNEY

NEW AND USED STEEL
Steel Beams, Pipe .Rebar
For
Concrete,
Angle,
Channel, Flat Bar, Steel
·
G 1F
0 ra1ns,
ra 1ng
or
D~ivewav s &amp; Walkways. L&amp;l
Scrap Metals Open MOnday,
Tuesday, Wednesday &amp;
Friday. Bam-4:30pm . Closed
Thursday,
Satu rday
&amp;
Sunday. 1740)446-7300

Retail Space Appx 1,400 sq.
ft , for rent/lease. 4th Street
Point Pleasant wv 304·
6 foot Brush Hogg, 3 blades,
675-3788
like new. $800 firm 304·675I ll I(&lt; II \ "&gt;Ill"
2902

Cherokee, North Carolina

Guttering

www.tlmberereeltcablDetey.com

Com mercial buildirtg "For
Rent" 1800 square reet, off
street parking. Great loca tionl 749 · Third Avenue in
Gallipol is . Rent $300/mo. Standard Poodle. BK (F). 20
Call -Wayne (404)45£j-3802 months old, $ t 50 080
_1740)645-2404
Office space, utilities paid,
I II&lt;' I ' 11'1'1 ti · S
42~
Second
Avenue ,
,\11\ I ..., I Oth.
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631.
(740)446-4383

Casino
&amp; Tanger Outlet Mall
for Christmas
Shopping

H&amp;H

.5~-5~906;'7'7"'"'7':-:-_::·=;::=:;::;~;::;:;;;;;;:::;==;:":::(-

JET
AERATION MOTORS
Repaired, New &amp; Rebuilt In
Stock. Call Ron Evans, 1•
000-537·9528.

5 4 2
A Q 10 9 8

• J

BAD CREDIT?
NO CREDI T?
BANKRUPT CY?

_

0638 or 208·0134

•
•

Stop &amp; Compare

LUV H01,1l ~

ISHo·pCLASSIFIEDS I

IBM Camp. w/windows 95
$75. Pu ~ch bowl and cup set
!rom Topes $50. Pressure
can ner $30. Skiers Edge &amp;
Nordic Track abs $ 80. 367-

East

140-992-1611

"We Cdr" IH· I: \1
r-r111 01 11 Tull ht~l'
866 -564-8679

t5

West

JJ0987

13
14

.

Re modeling

$90

r

~

TtaiiB! for rent, 3BR, 2 BA.

Can 367-7762 or 446·4060

MONTY

• Complet e

-~~\

K7632
AKQ J

t
.. 10 5

• New Hom es

WHAT YntlPI
STYlE. ..

SIRIHI '

9

• Garages

availabl e.
Tara
Townhouse Closeouts
Apartments, Very Spacious, Ashland, KY 606-929-5655
2 Bedrooms, CJA, 1 112
I'E'Is
Ba~h. Adult Pool &amp; Baby
I'OR S,\J£
Pool, Patio. Start $425/Mo.
No Pets, Lease Ptus
Security Deposit Required,

eniir--..;.~---.,

992-5639.

ROBERT
BISSEll
CONSTIUCTION

740-416-1698

attached garage, and fenced _Em_pt_oy
__
er_.- - - - - - - - - - month. Call 446-4425, or Swim Spas Arrived• Save
yard near Pt. Pleasant.
446·2325
$&amp; 5/mth. plus deposit. Call CONVENIENTLY LOCAT- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - $$$Tiki Tubs Hot Tub Outlet.
304.53~ : 1197 .

I Hls-o?

• Q3

2006 Honda Gold Wing
$4,000 in accessor1es. Paid
$24,000 new--$19,600. Call
740-367-7 t29.

~to

1
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5

8

SUVs

te~;~th er

IS

Phillip
Alder

All types of t:oncrete

AJC , 4DR, Auto. E..:c. Cond. 01 Dodge DuranQo Heated

99 Monte Carlo. $2500;
1997 Chevy Blazer. has
small dent in fender, S2tOO:
1997 Dodge Stra1us. $1995 ;
1986 Toyota Pickup 4x4,
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1997
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great deals . KG Aut o
1740)446-8172

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cable
dual 67
I'"
motor front wheel drive used
very l ittle, $eoo. (740)74227 14 Of 740-992-0408

Pole
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$6,495
Free
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2003 Dodge Dakota Quad
Cab. 4x4. auto, PW,PL, CD
player. AM/FM radio, nerf
bars. bed liner &amp; cover, low·
ing package , 4.7 liter,
PS.PB, cruise IVC. sliding
bacio; window. Going thru
Divorce sell for $14,000
books lor over $15 ,000
70 ,000 m11es 304-675..()463
leave message

95 VW Jetta 192,000 miles.

Gracious Living 1 and 2
Bedroom Apts . at Village
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Middleport, from $327 to
$592 . 740·992·5064. Equal
Hous1ng Opportun 1ty.
Electnc Scooler. Excellent
--"-=~===---- cond111on. Made tn USA
Immaculate 1 bedroom $700. Ca ll 740-446·41 67
apartment New ca~pe! &amp;
cabinets, freshly painted &amp; GallipoliS Daily Tribune
decorated , WID hookup. issues in binders Jan · June
Beautiful country s~ «i ng . 1939, JUly · Dec 1900. Jan Must see to appreciate. June t 899 . 740-367-0638 or
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- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Have 2 Ball Perfect Mason
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Must see to appreciate .
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1·800·798-4686
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Large covered deck. close to
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The Daily Sentinel • Page B7
BRIDGE

Seth Thomas dock. wash
stand, phonograph , scales,
glassware, glass Coke sign,
organs, 011 tamps, misc., 2
walnut • show
cases,
4197
740
992
1 ) '
miles. good cond . m.no r
Mocu.LANEOUS
~~pairs needed. 4500 080.

for Rent and one • three

www.mydallysentlnel.com

~

45MRound Oak Dinner Table
on Pedestal. Washstand
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$500 !Or both or $300 each.
Calll740)441 -061?

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2BA's, 1 22 Lower Garfield,
Gallipolis. 06posit required. 3br, • 2ba. Heat Pump. • Cenlral heat &amp; AJC
740·446-1258
Dishwasher. 1 112 miles •Washer/dryer hookup
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$300 deposit. raf req. 740- 6204 (E)
.
•Owner pays water. sewer.
trash .
441·7193 or 740·339·9713 Mobile Mome Loti lor· Rent

3 Bedroom

Monday, November 5, 2007

www.mydailysentinel.com

Monday, November 5, 2007
ALLEY OOP

'

�•

Page 88 • The Daily Sentinel

Monday, November 5,

www .my~ailysentinel.com .

2007

.

Police in Pakistan
clash with lawyers
protesting state of
emergency, A2

Doing it Belichicks way, Patriots the NEL's best Redmen avenge loss;
S~~R{~MC~~~ENIST
advance to title g~me
AP

.

' INDIANAPOLIS - Face
it. nobody else in the NFL is
going to come this close the
rest of the way.
The New England Patriots
did in the defending Super
Bowl champions 24-20. At
their place . O.n their carpet in
front of a hostil e crowd, even
while losing the turnover bat tle. their .composure on a few
occasions and rolling up a
franchise re&lt;ord for penalty
yards.
A perfe(l season is a nearcertamty.
So how aboul if we give
Little Bill an ·'A" on his
report card right now, Sll he
can gel a headstart on 10 the
next level , where Lombardi
and Walsh reside. Belichick
is that good. He is the first
certifiable lege nd of the freeage nt era.
Belie hick doesn '1play well
with the rest of the coaches as
it is, and it's only gr :·1g tu get
worse. It was bau enough
when he kept showing them
up, proving just how much
smarter he was.
Lately. though. he's taken
to beating them up. and even
the one team !he Pats couldn' t overpower lust its stomach when it came to crun ch
time.
"Some victories do mean
more than others;" New
England linebacker Tedy
Bruschi said afterward. ··we
tried to treat it like any other
game. This is one we ' re
going to remember."
Belichick wouldn ' t go
even that far. He answered
just about every question by
calling the Colts "a good
football team.
"What else would they be?
My God.'' he scolded one
reporter, "D id you watc h
them play?"
The final time he was
asked whether thi s win mattered more th an most,
liielichick narrowed those
steely eyes and said almost
by rote. "I don't care about
all that. This was a just a
game against the Colts.
That's all it was. The other

BY MARK WIUIAMS
SPEC IAL TO THE SENTINEL

RIO GRANDE - The
University uf R~o Grande
men's soccer team. ranked
No. 18 in the latest NAI'A Top
25 Poll. took a step 1oward a
seventh consecutive lrip tu
the
NAIA
National
Tournament, with a 3-0
shutout . victory
over
Houghton College in the
NAIA Region IX Semifinal
on Saturday afternoon al
Evan Davis Field.
Rio Grande ( 12-4-1), the
top seed in the region. scored
the only goal itwould need in
the 39th minute off a corner
kick when senior defender
Wayne Maden wen! above
the opposition to knock home
a header and give Rio the
lead, 1-0. Sophomore midfielder Jason Massie, who
AP photo delivered the corner kick .
New England Patriots quarter back Tom Brady (12) talks to head coach Bill Belichick after was credited with the first of
the Patriots beat Indianapolis Colts, 24-20 ifl the NFL football game in Indi anapolis Sunday. three assists on the day.
· Rio took the 1-nil to halfgames don't mean a thing." scarefests.
wholehearted ly into his
time.
Honestly. Bclichick. doesThen
again ,
maybe team-first sermons, cutting or
The Redmen did not waisl
n' t care about his legacy. Yet. Belichick chose · Sunday's trading them, or working
any
time in putting the game
Guys like him rarely ge t outfit because the game was them until they wish he'd
out
of
reach as they scored in
hung up worrying about the being played in a climate- gotten rid of them earlier.
the
opening
minute of the
lung hauL It's huw they get controlled dome. We' ll never
Most
imp011ant ,
the
second
half.
Freshman forso much done in such a sho11 know.
Patriots buy into Belichick's
ward
Darren
Griffiths
scored
time.
Fi~urin g Belichick out is a schemes because they work.
off
·
a
corner
kick
from
Look at the way Belichick lifet1me project. He spent
They found a way to get Massie. Senior defender
usuall y dresses. That dingy, most of his early career in Moss deep in single cover- Brendan McManus, along
gray. hooded sweatshirt h.e Bill (Big Bill) Parcell s' shad- age, coaxed a veteran Colts with Massie. was given an
favors was probably a func- ow. and during his first head- offensive line into two penal- assist on the goal.
tiona!' choice the first time he coaching stint in Cleveland, ties on the pivotal drive of the
Rio played add on with the
put it on, prompted by cold he failed to get the players fourth quarter, then put the final score of the game comweather or the snow in New there to believe in him squeeze on Peyton Manning ing in the 55th mmule when
England.
enough to bring all those bril- when it counted most.
freshman forward Ederson
Now that he's caught so liant X-and-0 schemes to
"They force you into play- Lopes scored off an assist
much flak for the outfit, it's life.
.
ing perfect ... keeping the from Massie to give ihe
become just another way for
Finally, though, he won pressure on peofle, forcing Redmen a 3-0 lead.
him to stubbornl y stick it to over enough guys in New you to · play wei for all 60 · Rio held a 17'2 advantage
the man.
England.
minutes. The last game here, on shots. Houghton (9-4-5)
Su Belichick's choice of " As capriciously as he treats the championship game" did not have a shot on goal in
standard coaching fare for many of his players, he's Colts coach Tony Dungy · the game. Rio produced nine
this one, a dark blue polo . fiercely loyal to a core of said. referring to the AFC shots on goal. Erik Lefebvre
shi11 over khak i slacks, might guys Bruschi , Mike fi nale against the Pats that totaled six saves
for
have bee n more revealing Vrabel, Tom Brady, Matt propelled the Colts to a Super Houghton while Ray Nicaise
than anything he said.
Light and others - who Bowl, "we won it in the last collected the shutout with
Maybe he figured when he police the locker room for minute.
garnenng a save.
watches highlights from the him and spread the gospeL
"They won it in the fourth
By winning the game, Rio
perfect season with hi s
He takes chances on some quarter today."
Grande avenged a September
grandkids a dozen years from guys with rough pasts Some day Belichick will 22 loss to Houghton. The
now, they won't thmk he was Randy Moss being just the look back and appreciate Highlanders edged
the
always dressed like Jason latest - and makes examples that, too.
Redmen 2-1 in that game.
from the "Friday the 13th" of others who don 't buy
Just not now.
Rio is 8-0- 1 since that loss:

Was revenge a factor in the
!iame for Rio Grande or was
1t simply about advancing to
the next round? Rio Grande
head coach Scott Morrissey
provides !he answer. "The
guys lalked about 'it, we
talked about it. we fe lt like
that when we played them
during the regular sea,son we
had about as much adversity
as a team could have, both oti
and off the field with suspensions and a lot of distractions,
they capitalized on it in . the
regular season." he said. "!
fe lt if we turned up the play
that we would be able to get a
result ."
·'I think we made it hard
work for ourselves at times,
particularly in the first half,".
Morri ssey added . "Second
half was better, but still the
performance left a little bit to
be desired from my standpoint, I think the guys can
play much better."
Rio advances to face the
winner of other semifin al
match-up between NAJA No.
4 Ohio Dominican and NAJA
No. 20 Notre Dame College:
on Tuesday night. Morrissey
knows hi s team will put forth
an exceptional pe rformanc~
to get.the win.
"We' ve got to play a lot
better Tuesday night, whoev~
er we play,'' he said. ''Both
Ohio Dominican and Notre
Dame are having outstanding
seasons, whoever it is thai
we' re going to play, it's going
to be a great game. One that I
think we' re going to have tQ
bring a little bit more to the
table Tuesday night thari
what we sh!Jwed today.
:
" I think the guys will be up
for it and hopefully we can
put in the_ performance,':
Mornssey added.
.
Ohio Dominican sustained
it 's only loss of the season to
the Redrhen , September 26, a
1-0 overtime win in which
Lopes na iled the deciding
goal. Rio and NDC played t&lt;i
a 2-2 tie at Rio Grande on
October 10.
·
Kick-off time for the game
will be determined. ,
:

I

•
Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
'""' ·"'~ dail~ " '"'"'"!.' .,,._,

I l 1 LSD\ Y. NOVI·.I\1 HER 6, :!1107

:;o CI•.N I'S • \' ol. :;-, No . - ..J •

Sidewalk project nearing co~npletion

SPORTS
• Steelers hammer
Ravens. See Page 81

8Y Bml SEJioENT
BSERGENT®MYDAILYSENTlNEL.COM

OBITUARIES
Page AS
• Robert H. Crow
• Worthy Love

POMEROY - Two years
after the search for funding
began, the sidewalk repair project in Pomeroy is. nearing
· completion.
Acconding to Mayor . John
Musser, currently workers are
completing sidewalk repair on
Mulbe!T)' Avenue and will
continue that repair upwards to
Anne Street. Once the new
sidewalk reaches Anne Street
the project will be complete
and will have expended all the
funds available for the work.
Village Administrator John
Anderson said depending on
the weather, workers could
finish the projecl by the end of
this week.
Through its Community
Development Block Grant
Community Distress progrdiil,
the. village had $73,100 to
spend specifically on side. walks, a proj~X-1 chosen by the
community through surveys.

The village has until July 2008 ·
to spend the grant money on
various · projects throughout
the village, including the
demolition of condemned
houses, improvements at the
Mulbeny Community Center,
equipment for the fire depaninent, etc., again all projects
chosen by the public.
It took three attempts to
·even get contractors to bid.on
the sidewalk project, delaying
the project somewhat.
The following ' sidewalks
were repaired: Spring Avenue
and Main Street to the comer
of Condor Street, Spring
Avenue from the comer .of
Condor Street to Wolfe Drive,
Main Street at the Dollar
General store, Sycamore
Street, Lincoln Hill, Second
Street and Mulbeny Avenue,
and the Meigs County
Courthouse rear parking lot
entr'Jnce.
DGM, Inc. of Beaver was
.• Cha~ene Hoeflich/ photo
contracted to do the repair Workers of DGM, Inc . of Beaver repair the sidewalk on Mulberry Avenue with funds from a
work.
Community Development Block Grant obtained ·by Pomeroy.

THREE INJURED IN ACCIDENT·

INSIDE
• Devotion to uncle
key tOl\etping hirn.
See Page A3
• Litera,Y members hear
historic novel review.
See Page A3
• RACO planning
holiday activities.
See Page A3
• Teachers take
trip to Amish area.
See Page A3
, • Agent advises
gardeners on soil .testing.
See Page A3
• Perspective: Muddy
primary another
.headache for Republicans.
See Page AS
• Woman pleads
guilty in case of slain
pregnant woman, to
testify. See Page AS
• Meigs honor rolls for
first nine weeks released
See Page A6

S• your local·

Group seeks to
bring live music to
those in need, A6

Republican
bean dinner
setfor Nov. 14
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
HOEFLICH@MYDAILYSENTINEL .COM

~'.

.... '•

Beth Sorgentjphoto

Yesterday afternoon three people were taken to local hospitals for treatment of injuries sustained in this car accident on West Main Street in front of Crow's KFC/Long John Silvers. The accident repo rt wa·s not complete at press
time and is being handled by the Pomeroy Police Department. Also on scene were members of the Pomeroy
Volunteer Fire Department, the Middle!;)ort Pollee Department and emergency personnel from Meigs EMS. Two
patients were transported to Holzer Medical Center and one was transported to O'Bieness Memorial" Hospital.

POMEROY - Kevin De Wine
of Greene County who serves as
the .deputy chairman of the Ohio
Republican party, will be speak "
er at the Meigs. County
Republican Par1y's annual fall
bean dinner to be held at 6 p.m.
Nov. 14 in the Meigs High
School cafeteria .
Dewine was appointed to the
created position in April to
ensure an effective tran sition to
chairman up0n the retirement of
the current chair. Bob Bennett. in
January, 2009.
As deputy chairman, DeWine
has taken an active leadership
role in the day-to-day operations
of the party, fro m candidate
recruitment and party messaging
to political strategy and fundraising . He is currently leading an
extensive audit of the party's
infrastructure, evaluating all
aspects of internal and external
operations.
.
DeWine also serves as the primary s pokesman for the Ohio
Republican Party, working
through local, state and national
media
tv
communicate
. Republican accompli shments
and counter the Democratic
Please see Dinner, A5

WEAmER

dealer for a lull line
of STIHL blowers.

ODNR announces youth hunt·
The youth deer-g un ·season is
open statewide . Hunters may
take one deer of either sex duePOMEROY - Ohio's · youth ing this season, in · accordance
deer-gun hunting season will be with existing bag and deer-zone
held Nov. l 7 and 18, according limits. Plugged shotgun s, mu zto the Ohio Department of zleloaders, handguns and bows
Natural Resources Division of are legal.
All participants rnu st wear
Wildlife.
Young hunters killed 8,315 hunter orange, possess a valid
deer during the 2006 two-day Ohio hunting lice nse and deer
season. More than 40,000 permit, and be accompanied by
young hunters are expected to a non-hunting ad ult in the field.
All other .regularly scheduled
participate in the upco ming
hunt.
More than 8,000 . youn g hunting seasons will continu e
hunters have taken advantage of during the two-day youth sea- .
Ohio' s new apprentice hunting son . However, other hunters,
li cense. This new license allows including deer-archery hunters.
novice hunters, both adulls and are required to wear hunter
youth , to sample the experience orange during. this. perlod.
of hunting under the mentorship
This year, Ohio 's deer-gun
of a licensed adult, prior tQ season runs Nov. 26 through
completing a hunter education Dec . 2, with an additional
weeke nd· Dec. 15 and 16.
course .
The appren tice li cense was Details regarding Ohio's vari developed as part of a nation- ous hunting seasons, includin g
wid~ effort called "Famili es those exclusive ly for young
Afield," designed to remove hunters~ can be fo und in the
barriers that prevent hun ters · 2007-08 · Ohio
Hunting
from passing along the hunt ing Re gulations or by visiting
heritage.
wildohio.com .

Election Day

STAFF REPORT

NEWS®MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

BG 55 Handheld Blower
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MS 170 Chain Saw
Lightweight, includes
STIHl Quickstop•
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INDEX
2

Dettwiller Lumber
634 East Main Street • Pomeroy

740-992-5500
Open 7 Days a week
stihlusa.com

Ale you ready for aSTIHL"7

SEcnoNs -

12 P AGES

- Calendars

A3

Classifieds

B3-4

Comics

B5

Annie's Mailbox

A3

Editorials

A4

Obituaries

As

Sports

B Section

Weather

A6

© aoo7 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

~·

••

Polls are open
from 6:30a.m.
to 7:30p.m. for
the 2007 general election . There
are races in
every precinct in
the county,
including village
offices, township
trustees and fiscal officers and
school board
members .
Several local tax
levies are also
proposed. Here,
Becky Johnston,
Deputy Director
of the Board of
Elections , goes
over last-minute
instruction s with
Nancy Wilford. a
poll worker in
Lebanon
Township.
Brian J. Reed/ photo

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