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                  <text>h&amp;e 86 • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

Redmen knock out Walsh in AMC qualifier
half, NAJA No 2 Rio
SPECIAL TO THE SENTINEL
Grande ( 15-2), the No. I
seed from the South
RIO GRANDE _ A flur- Division, got on the score' ry of three unanswered board on a penalty kick
goals in a six minute span in from senior mid-fielder
the second half was the dif- Conar Dawson in the 52nd
ference in the University of minute . Senior defender
Rio Grande/Walsh match- Tony Griffiths was credited
up in the American Mideast with an assist as he. was
Conference
Qualifying taken down in the box.
Tournament on Saturday Dawson would play a role
evening at Evan Davis in all three Rio goals.
Field. Rio Grande came out
Dawson scored again in
the victor by the 3-0 score · the 57th minute after receivand
will
host
the ing a great feed from· fresh,AMC/NAIA Region IX man mid-fielder/forward
Semifinals next week .
Jason Massie to give the·
After a scoreless first Redmen a 2-0 advantage.
BY MARK WtWAMS

Dawson set up junior forward Guy Heywood a
minute later for the final
tally of the game with a
beautiful assist.
Walsh ( 11-6-1 ), the No. 4
seed from the South,
received a tremendous
effort from goalkeeper Ben
Pflum, who single-handedly
kept the Cavalie.rs in the
game. Pflum recorded nine
saves.
Rio . Grande out-shot
Walsh, 13-2 with a 12-0
advantage in shots on goal.
It was the second time this
season that Rio Grande had
earned a hard fought win

over Walsh, the firs! came
on September 24 at Davis
Field with the Redmen gaining a 2-.1 decision.
Rio Grande head coach
Scott Morrissey knew the
scoring would start for his
team when they could move
the ball forward. "The first
half, I thought was fantas'ti c ,"
Morrissey
said.
." When we played these
guys a month ago, what we
didn't do was keep the ball
and the big emphasis was
keeping the ball and trying
to be sharp.'
·
"I thought the guys were
definitely every bit of that,"

.

Rio ·volleyball
closes out home
portion of schedule
SPECIAL TO THE SENTINEL

APphoto

Ohio State's Anthony Gonzalez (11) just misses hanging on to a pass· while going against
lninois' Dorone Edwards (31) during their college football game at the University of Illinois
in Champaign, Ill., Saturday.

i.

Ohio State, Michigan
get scared straight
ANN ARBOR, Mich .
(AP)- This is why coaches
plead with their players to
take it one game at a time.
· Ohio State and MiChigan
nearly had their perfect sea. sons ruined Saturday by pair
of teams with five combined
· wins. That huge game Nov.
18 between the Buckeyes
and Wolverines a.lmost lost
much of its appeal.
First.. No. 2 Michigan
withstood a furious rally by
Ball State and hung on for a
34-26 victory at the Big
House. Later, No. I Ohio
State survived a scoreless
second half and held on to
beat lllinois 17-10, the closest game of the year for the
Buckeyes.
Maybe all that hype is
starting to distract the top
t.w o teams in the Big Ten
and the nation.
."It's a reality check to all
of us," Michigan offensive
. tackle Jake Long said. "We
were close to losing, the
closest we've been all year.
We all have to refocus."
Michigan ( 10-0, 6-0)
plays at Indiana (5-5, 3-3)
next week while Ohio State
(10-0, 5-0) travels to
Northwestern (3-7, 1-5).
It's a safe bet that both the
Buckeyes and Wolverines
will take those games more
seriously after what happened Saturday.
"We've got to keep our
beads tight and just keep on
playing as 1\ te3JI1 and movmg forward," Ohio State
wide receiver Ted Ginn Jr.
said. ''We carne out and had
a dog fight. \Ye just will
come back next week and
play hard."
Michigan made a couple
of early mistakes against rhe
Cardinals (3-7), handing the
ftve-touchdown underdogs
nine points and the lead.
Mike Hart's farst fumble in
tWo years bounced through
the end zone for a safety,
Chad Henne threw an interception that was returned for
a score and Ball State had a
9-7 lead.. just the second

Rinehart was the top
defensive player" with 26
digs while Urton tallied 25
and Kari Rodgers notched
17. Yrton was huge at the
net with two solo blocks
and five block assists.
Randi Rodgers contributed 34 assists and 14
d'tgs.
Rio Grande head coach
Patsy Fields commented. on
her two departing players.
"Very seldom does someone for four years anymore," Fields said. "They
have worked hard for us,
for the four years they have
been here.
"Jessica pJayed three
years as setter for us then
we brought in someone to
take her place, she took
that very well and was
willing to do anything that

RIO GRANDE - The
University of Rio Grande
Vlllleyball closed out the
home portion of their
schedule with a tri-match
with American Mideast
Conference South Division
foe Tiffin and non-conference Pikeviile College pro·viding the action. Rio lost
the first match to the
Dragons ill three games,
30-22, 30-12 and 30-21.
The Redwomen rebounded
to win the second match
over Pikeville in three
games by scores of 30-14,
30-19 and 30-23.
Rio Grande (18-20, 4-12
AMCS) played without
sophomore middle/outside
hitter Jessica Rodgers and
her loss was felt as the
Redwomen did not have an . we ·a sked her to do," Fields·
said. "And that's the kind
answer for the strong front of person, she' s been, anyline of Tiffin .
Freshman outside hitter thing that we've asked to
Kari Rodgers led the do, she has done it for us.
Redwomen in hitting with · " She plays as hard as she
eight kills. She also totaled can possibly play," Fields
II digs on the defensive added. "She 'gives you
d
everything she's got each
enS~nior outside hitter time she takes the court."
Lindsay Urton and fresh- Fields also said that to her
man
libero
Summer knowledge, Veach has
Rinehart led the Rio defen- never 'missed a game or a
sive effort with 16 digs practice.
each. Urton also delivered
"Lindsay Urton was a
two
block
assists. project when we brought
Freshman hitter Megan ~er in," Fields said . "But
Wills was also busy on the she has had a great season
defensive end for the this year; she has really
Redwomen with II digs. risen to the occasion severJessica Veach was on the a! times for us and has
verge of double figures become a pretty nice playwith nine digs.
er for us.
Sophomore ~etter Randi . "I had no trouble out of
Rodgers tallied 21 assists. them, .she (Urton) was
It was the final home another one that anything
match for seniors, Urton she could do for the · proand Veach.
gram, she did ," Fields
Tiffin
(31-7,
13-2 added. "They were two
AMCS) also won the mid- unselfish people when it
die match of the day, came to the team, the team
knocking Pikeville College came first with them."
in three games , 30-22, 30- · Pikeville College falls to
23 and 30-21.
14-19 on the season.
Kari Rodgers and Wills
Rio will close out the
led the R.edwomen with 13 regular season on the road
kills in the win over at Mountain State on
Pikeville College. Urton Monday evening with a 7
followed. with 12 kills.
p.m. starting time.

fromPageBl
it carried over into the second half."
Rio Grande (I·{)) carried a
32-25 lead to halftime and
pushed the lead to 22 points
(49-27) with the &lt;ipening
second half spurt.
The Redmen placed four
players in double figure$ led
by sophomore guard Brett
Beucler's 24 points. The
Sardinia native soored 14 of
his game-high 24~n the flfSt
hal( He dropped·five threepointers on the night.
Sophomore
forward
Brandon I very added 13
points and seven rebounds
while sophomore center Will
Norwell and junior StJard
Travis Keefer each chipped
in 10 points each. Norwell's
10 pomts all came in the second half and Keefer nailed
three big threes off the bench
for the Red and White.
Freshman point guard
Marcus Manns distributed
six assists in his fifSI outing
at the collegiate level.
Milligan (0-1) was led by
Jeff Barnes with 14 points
and II rebounds and Zach
Dezarn also scored 14 points.
Milligan forward Adrian
. Harrison, a double figure
scorer from a year ago, was
· held to only two points
before fouling out.
Rio Grande shot a blistering 70 percent (14-of-20)
from the field· in the second
half and ended up at 51 percent (26-of-51) for the game.
The .rebounds ended up
dead even at 33 for each
team while Milligan committed one more turnover at 1918.
The visiting Buffaloes
made a run late to make the
fin:il score respectable at 7262.
"A Coach (Tony)
Wallingford coached team is
never going quit and we
knew that, they made a run
there in the last two minl!les,
but I told our guys that we're
· not going to let a bad two
minutes take awa~ from a
great 38 minutes, ' French
said.
French said he thought this
flfSt game lived U{l to his
expectations. "I thank so,"
French said.. "We had peaks
and valleys and this early in
the season you're going to
have that.
"We were pleased with our
effort, we knew we would be
a little bit jittery going out,
we showed it, but we had
flashes where we were pretty
good defensively," French
added. 'That's how we're
going to play, we had a lot
people compliment us on
how hard we played and
that's what Rio basketball is
going to be about.
"Obviously Milligan is
going to get better and we've
got to maintain what we've
got and build on it," French
added.
One area in which
Milligan excelled was at the
free throw line, connecting
on '17-of-21 attempts (81
percent).
Rio Grande will look to
make it two wins a row on
Tuesday night when it plays
:host to Ohio Chnstian
University. Ti)Hlff is set for
. 7:30 p.m. Stretch Internet
will have the play-by-play
coverage beginmng at 7 p.m.

deficit for Michigan this · off a miracle. For the first
season,
time this season, Ohio State
Michigan regained control won by less than 17 points.
behind a powerful running
"We're 10 weeks through
game and its usual swarm- it and hopefully we can learn
ing defense, going up 31-12 a lot from what we haven't
in the third quarter. It looked done as well," coach Jim
as if the Wolverines would Tressel said. "We ' II grow
cruise, but instead they gave from this game . ... We have
up a 54-yard TD pass and a guys who are more than
62-yard completion that led willing to look at themselves
'to another touchdown and with our coachi.ng staff to
the Cardinals were within find ways to gel better and
eight midway through the go from there."
fourth quarter.
Buckeyes
quarterback
With a chance to tie the Troy Smith didn't do much
game with a TD and a 2- io help his Heisman Trophy
point conversion, Ball State campaign, throwing for I 08
quarterback Nate Davis yards and no touchdowns in
threw an incomplete pass on his worst game of the seafourth-and-goal with 2:46 · son.
left. Michigan had survived.
Ultimately. though, Ohio
Well, not quite.
State and Michigan should
The Wolverines couldn't be able to brush off the close
run out the clock and Ball calls as a temporary loss of
State got a chance to throw focus and maybe even use
up a prayer from midfield on them as motivation for
the final play, a pass Ryan Saturday 's final tuneups.
Mundy easily picked· off in
Michigan defensive end
the end zone.
LaMarr Woodley said the
"I think. guys thought this Ball State game reminded
was a blow-over game," him a little bit of last season,
Henne said. " Ball State when Michigan failed to
played their hearts out and it · close out games and finished
showed if we relax. any bit, 7-5 _its worst season in two
any team can beat us."
decades.
Qhio State wasn't in quite
"Last year we lost the
as
much
danger
as game," he said. "This year,
Michigan, but the Buckeyes we won."
clearly played their worst llllllllllll!llllllll•llllllllll!ll..
half of the season in the final
~~~~~~~~~~
30 minutes against Illinois
(2-8, 1-5).
Up 17-0 at the break, Ohio
State never got its offense
going and the · Illini kept
plugging away. A field goal
with 8:54 left made it 17-3
and Illinois finally got into
the end zone with I :40 left
on Rashard Mendenhall's 3~
yard run.
.
The Illini were an onside
kick recovery away from
making pulses really pound
in Columbus, but . Brian
Robi skie grabbed the bouncing ball for the Buckeyes.
And then Ohio State had to
give it back, unable to get
one first down.
lllinoi ~ had one play to go
••
98 yards and couldn 't pnll

Attn: Varsity
Football Coaches
Be sure to send us your season statistics
alons with nominations for Associated Press
AU-District and Ohio Valley Publishing Super
25 team. Deadline for submitting this information is We'doesday, ov. 8. Fax (740-4463008), E-mail {sports@mydailytribuoe_com)
or drop them off at our Gallipolis or Po.meroy

a.ICK. ON 'lli£ UNKS

~~
n=.a.
T ,Bank

SPoRTS
.

American Legion annonnces Veterans Day service

.

• Bengals fussing, fading

BY

CtiARl£NE

HOEFUCH

at midseason.

HOEA.ICH@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

SeePageB1

POMEROY William
Balser, a past American
Legion Department of Ohio
commander, will be speaker at· the annual Veterans
Day services to be conducted Saturday, Nov. II ,
at the Meigs County
Courthouse in Pomeroy. The services by legionnaires of Drew Webster
Post 39, Pomeroy, are held
each year to commemorate
the sacrifices of veterans of

all wars and to show support for all those servicemen and women serving at
home and abroad today.
Veterans Day, form erly
designated Armistice Day,
is traditionally started with
the ringing of nearby
church bells beginning at
10:55 a.m. for five minutes. The invocation will
be offeretl by the Rev.
Jonathan Noble, pastor of
Trinity
Church,
the
Southern
High
School
Band
will
play
the
National Anthem, and Post

Commander Tom Anderson
will introduce distinguished
guests and conduct the program.
Balser of Newark , in
addition to being a past
Department of Ohio commander, is a past commander of Post 85, a past
county
commander
in
Licking County, a past
Di strict 6 commander, and
a past Department of Ohio
treasurer. He has. also
served in many capacities
with the American Legion
including being vice chair-

man of the National
Foreign
Relations
Committee in 1992 and
national security committee
vice chaim1an in 2001.
· A former school teacher,
Balser is a tru stee for
Buckeye Boys State. vice
· chairman of the National
Homeland
Security
Council , a member of the
40&amp;8 and past Chef De
Gare, along with being a
OHSAA basketball and
baseball official for the
past 37 years.
The program will include

another seleciion by the
Southern
High
School
marching band directed by
Chad DotsQn, and the Rev.
Fr. Walter Heinz .of Sacred
Heart Church will give a
prayer and benediction just
prior to the firing of rifles
in salute by the Post 39
honor guard, and taps.
Commander Anderson,
other officers, and mem bers of Post 39 are encouraging residents to come out
and be a part of the commemorative service to
honor veterans of all wars.

ELErnoNDAY
OBITUARIES .
Page AS
• Doris E. Wih
· • Kenneth Hutchison

INSIDE

~

• Cuba's foreign minister
backs off prediction of
speedy return by Castro.
See Page A2
• Supreme Court
considers Hman jailed 8
years can sue for false ·
arrest. See Page A2
• 4-Hers win
woodworking awards.
See Page A5
• 300-a.cre Calif. wildfire
backs away from homes
as crews work to contain
it. See Page A5
• Blackwell, Strickland
say they would use
Statehouse more.
SeePage AS
• Land transfers.
SeePage AS
• Woman charged in
case of escaped murder
suspect. See Page A6
• Judge refuses to move
triatfor man aecused of
killing foster son.
SeePage A&amp;

WEATHER

SubMitteoi lllho\o
Mary Arnold , technology teacher at Meigs Intermediate
School instructs Miranda Gillilan, a third grade student at
the school which recently received a state commendation.

Meigs Intermediate
receives- commendation ·
STAFF REPORT
NEWS@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

RUTLAND Meigs
lmermediate School recently recieved a commendation
from the State B.oard of
Education and the Ohio
Department of Education's
Superintendent · of Public
.Instruction for the "exemplary perforn1ance of Meigs
)ntem1ediate School during
,
Brian J. Reed/photo
the 2005-06 school year."
After weeks of election debates and' advertisements, rallies and debates, it will all be over
The certificate the school
tonight. Voters across Ohio will choose a new governor, decide a U.S. Senate race and recei'ved recognized teachdetermine the outcome of five statewide -ballot issues. Voters in Meigs County will vote on ers, staff and students for
two count)l-wide issues and elect a county commissioners. Townships a~d villages through- "advancing to the designaout the county propose tax issoes on the ballot. The county's polling locations will be open tion nf continuous improveuntil 7:30 p.m ..tonight, and with the use of new ballot counting equipment, the results are ment and for improving its
expected to be tabulated early tonight. Voters who visit the polls today need to remember performance index. by I 0 or
to bring a form of identification. New voting regulations under the Helping America Vote Act more points over the past
.
require all voters to present a photo ID, driver's license, utility bill ·or other form of ide'ntifi- two years ."
Meigs
Intermediate
cation before casting a ballot.
School's state performance
index has steadily increased
from 74.5 on the 2003-04

Old Pomeroy Junior High tumbles into history books

INDEX
12 PAGFS

Calendars

A3

Classifieds

· 83-4

Comics

Bs

Annie's Mailbox

A3

Editorials

A4

Obituaries

As

Sports

B Section

Weather

A6

© 2006 Ohio Valley Publishing C&lt;J •

•

POMEROY
The
demolition of the . old
Pomeroy Juni or Hi gh
School began yeste rday
with a large chunk of the
auditorium
gon e
by
nightfall and judging by
their first day 's work, it
won ' t
ta ke
Pullin s
Excavation long to bring
down the re st.
Pullins had the lowest
of three bids to demoli sh
the old stru cture for a
price of .$'38.840. The
price
inc ludes
the
remo va l of all concret e
pad s, in stallation o f 'backfill and finall y limes ton e
to level it off. Before
Pullins could begin the
vill age had as bestos and
other hazardous m aterials
(light fi xture•. flu orescent
tubes,
in s ul ation)
re moved
by
Win ,ton
Saunders of Ga ll ipoli•
-.

report card to 76. 1 on the
2po4-05 report card to 87 .I
on the 2005-06 report card.
This
advancement
of
achievement for all students
is what the administrations
calls " the result of the
relentles s dedication and
hard work of our teachers
and staff."
The school 's administratoin also annouced all teachers at Meigs Intermediate
are recognized by the State ·
Department of Education as
Highly .Qualified Teachers.
Meigs
Intermediate
Principal Rusty Bookman
said, "The entire teaching
staff at Meigs Intermediate
has taken advantage of
opportunities to improve
their · pedagogical skills
throu gh 'recent state initiatives such as SIRI A.
Please see Melp, AS

Asbestos out

Bv BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

office.

- -

Defense rests in coin
dealer trial without
calling witness, A6

•

2 SECllONS -

TO VIEW SPONSORS
AD,IW.E.8SllES ,
PLEASE Sl.IPPORT THFSE.I.OCAt
llliSINf.'mS WHO StllfaltT
OUR HOMm&gt;WN NEWSPAIUI

Dueling
demonstrations
continue after
Saddam verdict, A2

Redmen

Morrissey added. "We were
very, very good in the first
half, the problem was we
played side-to-side and didn't get forward like we
should have.
"We made some adjustments and it reallr, paid off
for us at halftime. '
Rio Grande will face the
winner of Houghton and
Daemen, · who play on
Tuesday, next Friday at
Evan Davis Field. Ohio
Dominican, the No. i seed
from the South, will .play
Maine-Fort Kent from
NAJA Region X in the other
semi-final match.
.

BY MARK WILLIAMS

·-

Monday, November 6, 2oo6

Beth Sergent( photo

Worke rs with Pullins ExcavatiGn brought down the auditori ~
um of the old Pomeroy Junior High School yesterday.
Pomeroy Vi llage Counc11 voted to demolish the bulld1ng and
develop t he property commercially.
which did the joh for 550.000
$4.700, the lowc,t of two Bank at
hid' for the prnjecl.
rat.: of
In September Pnmcw)
Please
Vi llagc C &lt;'unci I homm cd

1

Tim Maloney 1photo

.

Motonsts travelmg W.Va. 62 above Pomt Pleasant may have
from f-armer' I not1ced demolition work ·g01ng on last week at the old Lakin
a ri\~J inlcrc, t I hospital. Workers on the grounds said they had been work·
\ .74 1\&gt; r ,I\ 1 .ng to remove asbestos from the old buildings. A sale of the
property to Amencan Electnc Power for expansion of the
see S&lt;:hool, A5
nearby 11ver ope rations 1s pend.ng.
company·s
1
•

�..

'

.

'

· The Daily Sentinel .

·NATION •

WoRLD

Page·A2
Tuesday, Noftmber 7, :ao06

Com.munity calendar

Dueling demonstrations 'continue after Saddam verdict
BY CHRISTOPHER
BODEEN
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

BAGHDAD, Iraq - A
round-the-clock
curfew
· imposed in the capira,l ahead
of Saddam Hussem s con. viction and death sentence
· eased on Monday, with residents once more allowed to
walk the streets and side.. walks of their city. Around
· the country, jubilant Shiites
· celebrated the verdict, as
. Sunnis held defiant counter. demonstrations.
The su'rge in violence
expected immediately after
· the Sunday verdict on
Saddam ·s trial for crimes
. against humanity did not
. materialize. An Interior
Ministry spokesman credit- '
ed the round-the-clock curfew in Baghdad, which has
a mixed Shiite-Sunni popu- .
lation, and two resttve
· Sunni
provinces.
. Checkpoints were closed
· along Iraq 's border . with
Jordan and Syria, a standard
precaution taken during
domestic emergencies.
Authorities were gradual,
ly lifting . the restriCtions,
with pedestrians allowed
back · oh the streets of
Baghdad late Monday afternoon. Vehicle traffk in
Baghdad would be permitted beginning at 6:00 a.m.
Tuesday, according to
police Lt. Mohammed
Khayoun and an aide to
Prime Minister Nouri alMalila.
In mainly Shiite Hillah,
60 miles south of Baghdad,
. around 500 people marched
carrying placards and shouting slogans denouncing the
/IP .......
former dictator, who is
Palestinians
throw
eggs
Monday
at
the
building
of
the
United
Nations
in
Gaza
City
during
a
protest
against
.the
sentenc·
. accused of killing tens of
thousands of Shiites follow- ing of former Iraqi President Saddam Hussein Sunday. In the Gaza Strip city o.f Khan Younis, masked gunmen from a pre. ing 1991 uprising.
. viously unknown group calling itself Arafat's Army threatened reprisals against foreign citizens in the Palestinian territo"Yes, yes for the verdict, ries. if the death sentence against Saddam. is carried out.
which we have long been Mosul over security con- Kurds in the late 1980s.
crowds had gathered in the ousted Iraqi leader was fair.
. waiting for!" chanted . the cerns, said Ghayath alUnderscoring the widen- city on Sunday. holding
Jalal Talabani would not
crowd, largely made up of Sorchi, an official with the ing divide between Shiite aloft Saddam portraits, fir- comment on the guilty verstudents and government Piuriotic
Union
of and Sunni, about 250 pro- ing guns and chanting slo- dict or death sentence for
workers.
i&lt;.urdistan, which is led by Saddam demonstrators took gans vowing to avenge his fear it could inflame tenAt least three people were Iraqi
President
'lalal to the streets in the Sunni execution .
sions in his volatile nation.
wounded after gunfire Talabani.
city of Baqouba, 35 miles
Saddam was sentenced by
If the appeals court
broke out at a Shiite rally in
Al-Sorchi said PUK northeast of Baghdad. They . the Iraqi High Tribunal for upholds the sentences, they
· the southwestern Baghdad
neighborhood of Ami!, a activists instead distributed were dispersed-by Iraqi sol- ordering the execution of must he ·ratified by
mixed Shiite-Sunni area, gifts to families who lost diers for breaking the cur- nearly 150 Shiites from the Talabani, a Sunni Kurd, and
police Lt. Maithem Abdel- relatives in crackdowns few. · Another 400 pro- city of Dujail following a his two vice presidents, one
under Saddam. Saddam is Saddam protesters marched 1982 attempt on his life.
a Sunni Arab.
Razaq said.
scheduled
to
appear
in
court
through
Samarra,
60
miles
Iraq's
president,
whose
Talabani has opposed the
Ethnic Kurds, who like
office must ratify the death death penalty in the past,
Iraq's majoriiy Shiites suf- again on Tuesday, when north of Baghdad.
The
curfew
was
ternpenalty sentence against but found a way around it
proceedings
resume
against
fered brutal persecution
him
and
six
·co-defendants
porarily
lifted
in
Tikrit
to
Saddam if it is upheld on by deputizing a vice presiunder Saddam, abandoned
plans for a;celebration rally in ·a separate trial over a give allow residents to shop appeal, said from Paris dent to sign an execution
•
in the northern city of crackdown against Iraqi and run errands. Angry Sunday that the trial of the order on his behalf.

..

a

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

., .

-

HAVANA- Cuba's foreign minister backed away
Mond.ay from his prediction
that Fidel Castro will return
to
power
by
early
December, · leaving open
questions about the pace of
the communist leader ' s
recovery from intestinal
surgery.
Felipe Perez Roque told
The Associated Press that
Castro's recovery. was
"advancing," but declined
to guarantee that Castro
would be well enough to
attend the postponed celebration of his 80th birthdlfy ·
on Ot!c. 2. Castro turned 80
on Aug. 13 but announced .
delayed festivities when he
told Cubans of his surgery
in late July.
. Perez Roque had told the
AP in September that he
expected Castro to be {ull y
back at the helm by earl y
December. When as ked
: about the birthday celebra. tions he had said: "I have no
· questions in my mind that
. we will be able to celebrate
· his birthday in December as
he deserves."
But . in an interview
Monday, Perez Roque said
he couldn 't discuss whether
Castro would retqrn to
power so qu ickly.
"It's a subject on which I
don ' t want to speculate," he
said. adding : "The important thing is his recovery,
which he 's doing in a serious and persistent manner."
Castro has not made any
public appearances since
July 26. a few days before
he was sidelined by th e

/IP photo

Cuba's Foreign Minister Fe lipe Perez Roque speaks .during an interview with the Associated
Press in Havana, Cuba. Monday. Cuba's fore ign minister backed away Monday from his prediction that Fide l Castro will return to power by early December, raising questions about the
pace of the communist leader' s recovery from intestinal surgery.
"He looks good," the min- good lesson," he said.
surgery and ann oun ced a
While many Cubans
temporary tra nsfer of power ister said .· " I see that his
to his 75-year-old brother recovery is advancing, that g rumbl e about economic
Raul. The Cuban govern- his convalescence is satis- struggles on the island, they
ment has treated his ailment factory." .
have seemed to accept the
as a state secret, releasing
He said Castro is. in con- youn ger · Castro as their
sporadic videos and pho· stant contact with his doc- leader, albeit temporarily.
tograph s to prove he's tors and willf~!turn to power Perez Roque acknowledged
recovenng.
· "at the right moment."
that the Cuba~ government
"We are optimistic, and faces so~e di scontent and
A video released in late
October on state-run ielevi- ·happy," he said. "The only eve n said some changes
sio n showed the C uban ones who are sad are our could be on the honzon.
leader de fiantly de nyi ng epemi es, who were all pre"The Cuban government
rumo rs that he was o n his pared to celebrate (his a nd the ~dership of the
deathbed. Ye t "'me C uham death )."
. (ComJml'l'iist) party are
~aid they 'we re surprised to
Those who th ought the a wa re of, and share. these
see how fra il be still was .
Cuba n re vo lu tion wo uld worries about .. . diffic ulties
Perez Roque said he col lap; e wi tho ut Fidel wit h th e qu ality of life of the
meets with the e lder C'astrn C'as trn at the helm were people," he said. "All of o ur
frequently and ha' 'ee n hi m pro ven wrong . Perez Roque efforts are fot: u; ed in the
since the latest video.
said . "They ha ve learned a di rec tion of findi ng solu·

wars."

Supreme

Cuba's foreign minister backs off ·
prediction of speedy return by Castro
BY VANESSA ARRINGTON

Sac\t.m was found hiding
with an unfired pistol in a
hole in the ground near his
home village north of
Baghdad in December
2003, eight months after he
fled the capital ahead of
advancing American troops.
Barzan
Ibrahim,
Saddam 's half brother and
intelligence chief during the
Dujail killings, was sentenced to join him on the
,gallows; as was Awad
Hamed al-Bandar, head of
Iraq's Revolutionary Court,
which issued the death sentences against the Dujail
residents.
Former Vice President
Taha Yassin Ramadan was
convicted of premeditated
murder and sentenced to life
in prison, while three other
defendants were given up to
15 years in prison for tor. ture and premeditated murder. A local Baath Pany
·official was acquitted for
lack of evidence.
A nine-judge appeals
panel has unlimited tune to
review the case. If the verdicts and Sentences are
upheld, the execu!ions must
be carried out within 30
days.
A court official told The
Ass«iated Press that the
appeals p!OOCSS was likely .
to take three to four weeks
once the fonnal paperwork
was submitted If the verdicts a1e upheld, those sentenced to death would be
hanged despite Saddam's
second, ongoing trial on
charges of murdering thousan.ds .of Iraq's Kurdish
minoriJY.
President Bush called the
verdict "a milestone in . the
Iraqi people's efforts to
replace the rule of a tyrant
.
with the rule of law."
Symbolic of the split
between the United States
aod many of its traditional
allies over the Iraq war,
many ·European nations
voiced opposition to the
death sentences in the case,
includinf
Britain
America s closest ally.
Prime Minister Tony Blair
said Monday he opposed
the death penalty "whether
it's Saddam or anyone else."
But he said the trial "gives
us a chance to see again
what the past in Iraq was,
the brutality, the tyranny,
the hundreds of thousands
of people be killed, the

Court
considers if
man jailed
8 years can sue
for false arrest

lions to these problems."
The foreign minister is
among half a dozen officials
granted special responsibiliBY MARK SHERMAN
ties by Castro when he transASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER
ferred power. This collective
leadership, led by Raul
WASHINGTON -Andre
Castro, has been functioning Wallace faces the distinct
well, Perez Roque said.
possibility that the legal sys"For us young ones, it's tem that wrongly kept him in
not only been a privilege but jail for a third of his Jife will
also more schooling," said now tell him he waited too ·
the 41-year-old, who was long to seek compensation: ·
Several Supreme Court jusput in charge of monitoring
indicated Monday they
tices
the· budgets for Cuba's
are
inclined
to agree with
health, education and energy
programs along with Central lower court rulings that
Bank President Francisco Wallace missed a deadline by
waiting until 2003 to sue the
Soberon and Vice President Chicago polioe o~ who
Carlos Lage, who is 55.
arrested him illegally in 1994.
Though Fidel Castro has
Wallace was freed from
been a larger-than-life per- prison in 2002, after Dlinois
sonality in Cuba for mo'll courts ruled his arrest wa5
than four decades, Perez illegal, reversed his murder
Roque insisted the leader ·conviction and caused prosehas always listened to oth- cutors to drop charges against
ers and encouraged collec- him. He had been in custody
since shortly after•· John
ti~~ governing.
Haody was shot to death in
F1del has always been
1994, when Wallace was 15.
. that way - and . perhaps
He had two years in whjcli
he ' ll be even more so now," to file his civil rights lawsuit.
the foreign minister said.
The question before the jusUp until his illness, Castro tices is whether the two-year
· was known .for micromanag- clock began running wl)en
· ing projects, leading massive Wallace was . arrested in
marches along the Malecon 1994, when he was released
coastal highway aod giving from custody in 2002, or at
hours-long speeches. Perez some point in between .
Roque declined to sa
The 7,!h U.S. Circuit Coun
. Y of Appeals said Wallace
whether the ~uban Icon should have taken some
would ever agam be such an action in the two years folacu veleader.
lowing his arrest. In similar
"Whetherthings will be like cases in other parts of the
before is a very diffk ult country, appeals couns have
topic," the minister said. " And said false arrest claims can't
I don 't have the information, be filed until convictions are
or the capacity, to say."
·
nullified.

PageA3 ·

BYTHEBEND

•

The Daily Sentinel

TueSday, November 7, 20o6

ANNIE'S MAILBOX

'Mom of the Century'fallsfrom grace

Public meetings

RACINE - Son shineCircle,
6
p.m .,
Saunlay, Nov. 11
BY KAnn&gt; Miter•
but I also don't want to force from Crohn's disease for 27
Bethany/Dorcas
United
CHESTER
- Return
Tuesday, Nov. 7
AMIMucvSIIUR
them to go.
years without complaint.
CHESTER - Regular Methodist Church. Potluck Jonathan Meigs Chapter,
of
What
did bother her were
Lena
used
to
be
Mom
meeting
of
Chester for Sonshine Circle mem- DAR, I pi.m. at the
Dear Annie: My wife, the Century. Now, it's like people who made her the tarTownship
Board
of bers, churc h family and Chester
Courthouse.
"Lena."
aod I recently sepa- she died. Am I obligated to get of thoughtlessness . .
Trustees, 7 p.m., Chester friends . Meat provided.
Robert
Sherman,
greatrated
after
almost 15 years of make the boys spe~d one
Ye~. my sister was thin
POMEROY Alpha
Town Hall .
Iota Masters, 11 :30 ;t. m., great-n'ephew of William marriage aod two wonderful weekend a month With her. · from illness, not from
AKFRED- The Orange
Pomeroy United Methodi st Sherman, will be the sons. Like any marriage, we knowi~g they will be at "his" anorexia. For the lady who
Townsbp Trutees 7:30p.m.
Church. Margaret Stewart, speaker.
National have bad our_ups aod downs. house . •- ~~ Broken suggested she add a few
at the home of the fi scal
more items to her grocery
Donna Byer and Martha American Indian Heritage I love her With all my heart · Hearts m Vi~~
officer, O sie Follrod.
Dear VirgJnl!l: Probably, can, she would have loved to
aod soul. Needless to say, I
McPhail are hostesses.
Month to be observed. was flOored when Lena told so. your best bet IS to mak_e . do had her body allowed a
SYRACUSE
50
Wildwood Garden Club, Members reminded to take ~ she could no longer hve this ~ less negattve expen- diet without boundaries. A
6 :30
p .m.,
Syracuse items for ve~erans .
wtth me. .
ence or.your ~ns. Tiley are hospital staff member said,
Community Center. Judy
I. put astde any ego aod angry With therr mo~r. and "My you are a little one!" Do
Bunger to present an arti sfeelings of anger, and we tihe Is so wrapped up m herth 'nk th t
de he ~ 1
carne to amicable terms for a self aod her new boyfriend you ?1
a ma
r ee
Tuesday, Nov. 7
tic arrangement workshop.
MIDDLEPORT
separation agreement Since that she is neglectful. Still, better ·
.
.
POMEROY · Mei gs
Thursday,
Nov.
9
Lena
had
been
a
stay-atit's
best
for
them
if
Lena
The
next
ttme
you
feel
hke
Middleport Lodge 363, SWCD
Board
of
home mom since our chil- stays involved in their lives, asking a stran~er to ~rn sideR&amp;AM , 7:30p.m. Election Supervisors meet in reguPOMEROY
of. officers . All Master lar session at noon in the Informational meeting, 6 ~n were born, I told her l even a little. Get some coon- ways to see If. she II dtsapMason s
ilwited. office.
·· · '
p.m., room 202, Meigs was willing to take custody seling for your boys and for ~ar. please think first. My
Refreshments.
TUPPERS PLAINS High School, discussing·an of our boys while she got her yourself so ~I of yo~ can sister would never have gone
POMEROY - Pomeroy VfW Post 9053 will meet educational trip to Europe new business off the ground. deal with th1s mess m the up to a stranger and sa1d,
Three days after we sepa- healthiest way possible. ·
"My, it looks like you've put
American Legion Post 39, at 7 p.m. Thursday in
Dear Annie: My parents on a . few pounds. " 7 p.m ., dinner, finalize Tuppers Plains at the hall . for Julie 2007, bi,gb school rated, Lena staried seeing the
and . college credit avail- father of a boy on my sous' manied in 1969, had three Grieving in Appleton, Wis. .
plans for Veterans Day, at Meal at 6 :30p.m.
able, cal1416-1103.
Dear·Grieving: We are so
soccer ream. Everyone, kids, aod divorced in 1991.
legion hall .
MIDDLEPORT
including my sons, could see Titey later remarried in 1994 son)' for your loss. People
Eleanor
C ircle-United
what
was happening. It made and have been happy ever don't mean to be cruel, and
Wednesday, Nov. 8
Methodist Women will
the
whole
situation very since:
.
.
.
we hope you can forgive
POMEROY - . Meigs meet at 7 p.m. Thursday at
County Board of Health, 5 the Heath UM Church in
awkw~. A month later, s~
~y quesuon 1s, which them for their thoughtlessMonday, Nov. 13
p.m., conference room Middleport. Devotions by
moved mto the boyfriends anmversary should we cele- ness. Please consider some
POMEROY
Meigs County Health Nancy Cale, program by
home. She ~seen our boys brate? Can.we celebrate ~ir short-term grief counseling
Department.
Mary Byer-Hill. The pro- Supplemental Retirement only ·four times, and each 40th weddi!lg anmversary m to help you let go of your ·
ject is a food drive . Pl;mning Seminar, 6:30 time has been met with some 2009? I'm a huge fan of par- anger
Thursday, Nov. 9
She ~d not ties aod would .love to throw
A~nie's Mailbox is writ,
Hostesses are Nancy Cale p.m., Meigs Middle School type of
CHESTER . Shade and Billie Jo Krawsczyn .
a surpnse 40th. t~n by Kmlly Milch~U and
cafeteria, sponsored by ~I ~ wnte e1!00' child on
River Lodge, 7:30 p.m. at
h1s birthday. .In
she Don t Have a Clue What Th Marcy Sugar, wngtime edi·
Meigs ' County . Retired
the hall. New officers
Friday, Nov. 10
treats her boyfriends son ]let- Do
tors oiftlle A 1111 l.arukrs col,
Teachers
Association. For ter than her own.
Dear Don't Have a Clue:
.
elected.
Annual
dues
MIDDLEPORT
11• • PlttJs~ ~'ma.il Y0 'f'
teachers,
certified
.
staff
This
is
smashing
my
broThis
is
entirely
between
you
""'
payable. Oyster stew Wid9ws Fellowshp, noon,
served following the meet- Millie ' s
Restaurant, members and their spous- ken heart to pieces. I still and your parents. Which qustwns to annresma~·
love Lena and lrnow there is. anniversary do they consider box@co~t.ll": or wrut
ing. ·
Bradbury.
es. RSVP 992,3883.
a good person inside her, but . themselves to be celebrating? to: Ann~e s M~x, P.O.
I can't understand how she That's the !}umber you should &amp;x 118190, Chu:ago, IL
could do thi~ to her own chiJ, follow, even if it means ceJe, 60611. To. Jfnd
mort
dren. · Per the separation brating their 15th instead.
about A11111t s Mailbox, and
agreement, Lena bas the boys
Dear Annie: Please print rtaJl features_ by o~ller ·
one weekend a month, but this to remind people to be Cmtrors Syndicate Wnlers
they don't want to see her or kind to others. My sister and cartoonists, visit tile
spend time with her.. I would passed away three months Cr~oiors Syndicoie Well
Q.: What is the "Good · specifically for giving
Law You Can Use is a . never keep them from her, ago at age 50. She suffered pag~ 4t www.crtoiors.com.
Samaritan "law?
care to a particular indi- weekly consumer !~gal
. A.:. The
"Good . vidual in an emergency.
information column proSamaritan" law provides
l•ided by th~ Ohio State
certain protection from
Q.: Does the Good Bar Association (OSBA).
lawsuits to people who Samaritan law protect This anicle was prepared
He talked about the agree- !ems with students throwing
COLUMBUS (AP) give first atd or other doctors, nurses, and other by Cleveland attorney Three convenience stores ment with a subcommittee of glass bottles at police.
emergency care or treat- health care professionals? Harold R. Rauzi. For more near the Ohio State the Board of Trustees Friday.
"Beer bottles are lethal
ment to someone suffering
. A.: Yes, if the health infornuJtion on a variety University campus have
An employee at one of the weapons when . thrown·
an injury or sudden ill- care professional volun- of legal topics, visit the agreed to stop selling stores said it doesn't have empty, and cans don 't burt
ness . Thts statute is listed teers her/his· services at OSBA 's
W~b
site at domestic beer in glass bot- domestic beer available in you empty," Young said.
in the Ohio Revised Code, the scene of an emergency www.ohiobarorg. Articl~s ties through the end of the glass bottles, while . an
Getting glass bottles out of
Section 2305.23.
that is outside a hospital , appearing in this column school year at the universi, employee at mother store the student neighborhoods
said they still do. Employees "Could help as the university
doctor 's · office or other are intended to provide ty's request.
Q.: Under what circumThe United Daity Farmers at the third United Dairy . prepares for the ~uch-antkstances does the Good medical facility. However, broad, g~neral informa- stores near student neighbor- Farmers store near the cam- Ipated game agamst archna
professional
wlto
seeks
tion about the law. Before
Samaritan law apply?
applying
this information hoods are phasing out the pus wouldn't say whether val Michigan on Nov. 18,
payment
for
this
volunteer
A.: The care or treatglass bottles they have and they had the beer m stock.
said Douglas G . Borror,
ment must be given at the emergency care or treat- to a specific legal prob- won't reorder them, said
chairman
he
sought
the
of the trustees'
Young
said
scene of an emergency ment loses the protection lem, readers are urged to
Willie
ban
because
J.
Young,
director
of
of
safety
con,
ac;tdemic
and
student affairs
outside of a hospital , doc- · under the Good Samaritan seek advice from an attoroff
-campus
student
services.
cerns,
including
past
probcommittee.
rrey.
tor's office, or other med, law.
ical facility. The law pro- llll""""
tects volunteers who help
'·
when someone becomes
ill or is injured in places
such as on the street or
highway, in parks, restaurants, businesses, . even
private . residences . If
someone is already at a · ' ''
hospital or other medical
facility, the law does not
apply

Community
Events

School events

Other events

ctJ:ama:

fact.

the"!

l!"'

LAw You CAN USE

Ohio's 'Good Samaritan' Law Protects Volunteers

Ohio State trying to cut down on glass beer bottles

.

.

ea

· Q.:

Are there any lim.
its to the protection of the
Good Samaritan law?
. A.: The law does not
protect against lawsuits or
.'
criminal
charges
for
"Willful
or
wanton"
(intentional or malicious)
misconduct. Examples of
willful or wanton miscon- ·
duct would include stealing from an accident victim or inappropriate sexu·
al touching.
·
Also, if the person providing the emergency care
or treatment is paid or
expects to get paid for
giving the care or treatment, whether by the VICtim or someone on behalf
of the vi.c tim (such as an
insurance company), the
Good Samaritan law do'es
not provide protection:
Thi s is because a person
who is paid generally is
not considered a volun·
teer,
and the Good
Samaritan law is intended ·
to protect those wh o volunteer · in eme rge nc ies . •
The statute prov ide s one
exception to thi s notbeing paid rul e: An onduty police officer or fire
fighter who g ives emergency care or tre atment
may be cove red by the
Good Samaritan law.
The reasoning is that ,
even though the pol ice
officer or fire fighter is
'
'
being paid by the department for working a shift
(or re sponding to a call ~alhpoh~
out in the case of vollmteer firefi ghters), payment
is not be ing . p rov ided

"'

Place Y

~"Ad· Ia

..

17,

.

'

19ail!' m:rtbutte
(740) 446-2342

The Daily Sentinel
(740) 9,92-2155

'

.

'

•

..

•

�.=The Daily Sentinel

PageA4

.OPINION

This looks to be a classic
six-year-itch election
(740) 992-2156 • FAX (740) 992·2157
- bad for the party hold-.mydllllysenttnel.com
ing the White House tempered
by
· some
Ohio·Valley Publishing Co.
Republican
structural
l advantages.
Jim Freeland
Sine~ 1946, the average
Publisher
net loss for the president's
party in his sixth year in
Charlene Hoeflich
office is 31.5 House seats
•
and six Senate seats General Manager-News Editor
double the 15 seats
Democ rats need to take
the House and just 'what
they ' d need for control of
Congress shall make no law respecting an
the Senate .
- establishment of religion, or prohibiting_the
That level of loss for the
free exercise tlureof; or abridging the freedom of GOP this year is by no
speech, or of the press; or the right of the peo- means out of the question .
fact, some analysts
ple peaceably to assemble, .and to petition the In
think Democrats could
Government for a redress ofgrievances.
pick up 40 seats, though
they add that smaller
- The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution numbers ·are possible. I
' --------------~--------------- think GOP losses will be
on the smaller end 'of the
range .
The pattern of sixthToday is Tuesday, Nov. 7, the 311 th day of 2006. There are year elections is that mis54 days left in the year. This is Election Day.
takes pile up- often , bad
Todl!y's Highlight in History:
mistakes - damaging the
On Nov. 7,1917, Russia's Bolshevik Revolution took place president's popularity and
as forces led by Vladimir Dyich Lenin overthrew the provi- driving the public into a
sional government of Alexander Kerensky.
mood for change.
On this date:
So
in
1946. with
In 1874, the Republican Party was symbolized as an ele- President Harry Truman's
. phant in a cartoon drawn by Thomas Nast in "Harper's approva,) at 33 percent,
Weekly."
Democ rats lost 45 House
In 1893, the state of Colorado granted its women the right to seats and 12 in the Senate.
· vote.
In the recession year
, In 1916, Republican Jeannette Rankin of Montana became 1958, President Dwight
the first woman elected to Congress.
Eisenhower's popularity
In 1940, the middle section of the Tacoma Nanuws Bridge
sunk
to . 52 percent - for
· in Washington state collapsed during a windstorm. ,
him, that was low - and
In 1944, President Roosevelt won an unprecedented fourth
the GOP lost 48 seats in
term in office, defeating Thomas.E. Dewey.
.
In 1972, President Nixon was re-elected in a landslide over the House and 13 in the
Senate.
Democrat George McGovern.
In 1966, Vietnam War
In 1973, Congress overrode President Nixon's veto of the
War Powers Act, which. limits a chief executive 's power to weariness sent President
Lyndon
Johnson's
wage war without congressional approval.
Ten years ago: The U.S. liquor industry voted to drop its approval rating down to
. decades-old v.oluntary .Qan on broadcast advertising. 44 percent · and the
. , Thousands of Communists marched through Moscow to marl&lt; Democrats lost 4 7 House
, the 79th anniversary of the Bolshevik revolution. A Nigerian seats and four in the
-Boeing 727 jetliner crashed en route to Lagos, killing 142 peo- Senate. After Watergate in
ple. NASA's Mars Global Surveyor blasted off from Cape 1974, President Gerald
Canaveral, Fla., on a mission to map the surface of the Red Ford was at 4 7 percent
approval and the GOP lost
Planet (It went into orbit around Mars the next year.)
Five years ago: The Bush administration targeted Osama bin 49 seats in the House and
Laden's multimillion.OOIIar financial networks, closing busi- four in the Senate.
The past two sixth-year
. nesses in four states, detaining U.S. suspects and urging allies
midterms
were aJIOmalies.
to help choke off money supplies in 40 nations. At the White
· Ronald
House, President Bush and British Prime Minister Tony Blair, President
allies in the war on terrorism, confidently offered back-to-back
pledges of victory, DO' maner how long it took. More than 15
months after a Concorde crashed outside Paris, two of the
,world's only supersonic jetliners returned to the skies.
One year ago: President Bush, iri Panama, defended U.S.
interrogation practices and called the treahnent of terrorism
· suspects lawful, saying, "We do not torture," A suicide bomber
blew up his vehicle at a checkpoint south of Baghdad, killing
four American s&lt;ildiers. ·
. Today's Birthdays: Evangelist Billy Grahani is 88. Opera
· singer Dame Joan Sutherland is 80. Actor Barry Newman is
'68. Siqger Johnny Rivers is 64. Singer-songwriter Joni
Too many of my fellow
Mitchell is 63. Singer Nick Gilder is 55. Actor Christopher reporters are running so
· Knight (''The Brady Bunch") is 49. Actor Christopher Daniel fast on the treadmill of the
· Barnes is 34. Actors Jeremy and Jason LOndon are 34. Actress 24-hour news cycle that
Yunjin Kim ("Lost") is 33.
. they spend. vast time and
Thought for Today: "It's not the voting that'~ democracy- space on the Foleys and
,it's the counting." - Tom Stoppard, Czechoslov~,bom Madonnas, but they do not
British author and dramatist.
.
follow up on the increasmg daily horrors inflicted
on black Africans in
Darfur. A sterling exceptioil is Scott Pelley of ,
, Letters to the editor are welcome. They should be less CBS' "60 Minutes" on the
than 300 words. All letters are subject to editing, must be network where Edward R.
' signed, and include address and telephone number. No Murrow and his team of
un5igned letters will . be· published. l.eners should be in "Murrow's boys" set stangood ,taste, addressing issues, not personalities. Letters of dards for what used to be
· thanks to organizations and individUflls will not be accept- models of true, historic
mvestigative journalism.
, ed for publication.
(Pelley has received the
Edward R. Murrow Award
from the Radio and
Television
News
•
Directors.)
(USPS 213-960)
Reader Services
On Oct. 22, during
. Ohio Valley Publishing
"Searching
for Jacob" on
Co.
Comlc:Hon POlley
"
60
Minutes,"
Scott
Published every aftemoon. Monday
Our main concern in all stories is to
Pelley went on a long,
through Friday. 1i1 Coun Street ,
.. be accurate. If you know of an error
dangerous journey to find
Pomeroy, Ohio.
Second-class
in a Slory. callllle newsroom at (740) postage paid at Pomeroy.
a boy whose schoolbooks
992·2t56.
were discovered in the
Member: ·The Associated Press and
the Ohio Newspaper Association.
ashes of his destroyed
Poa:tm~~atwr: Send adclress correc- I · home in an obliterated vilOur 1111oln number Ia ·
tk&gt;fls to The Dally Sentinel. 111 Cour1
!age in Darfur. Pelley saw
(740) 992-2156.
Str~t. Pomeroy, OhiO 45769 ·
those notebooks, includDepar1ment extensions are: ,.
mg pages of the ABCs in
Subscription Ratea
Arabic, in the Holocaust
By canier or motor route
Memorial
Museum in
News
One month
'10.27
D.C.
Washington.
Editor: Charlene Hoeflich, Ext. 12
One year
'123.24
To find 'Jacob, if he was
Dally
!lbo
~ : Brian Reed, Ext . 14
alive, Pelley traveled
still
Senklf
Citizen
1'8181
flel&gt;oner: Beth Sergent, Ext. 13
One month
'9.24
7,000 miles into areas of
One y. .r
'103.90
genocide where he was
Advertising
should reml In IKMwloa
forbidden to go not only
10 the Daily · No sub'
by the war criminals headOutSide Sates: Dave Harris, Ext 15 cinla
scription by mail permttt~ in areas ·
ing
Sudan's government
OUtside Sllln: Breooa Davis, Ext 1e where home earner service is avail·
but
also
by our own State
Cf!IIIJCirt:,: Judy Clari&lt;: Ext. 10
able.
Department . On thi s VOY., age to the scorched earth
Mall S~rtptlon
General Manager .
of the village of Hangala,
lnekle Meigs County
Chartene Hoeflich , Ext. 12
. 13Weel&lt;s
'32.26
once the home of Jacob,
26-'6-4 .20
Pelley had the protection
52 Weel&lt;s
' 127.11
of armed rebel s who ha ve
e"'"""'
formed
the
National
newsOmydaitysentinel.com
Outside Meigs County
Redemption
Front.
13 Weel&lt;s
'53.55
Since
the
Uni ted
Web:
2e Weeks
' 107.10
Nation
s
and
United
States
52 Weeks
'214 .21
www.myda•lysenhnel.com
are frozen voyeurs of this

TODAY IN HISTORY

Reagan's approval still
was in the 60s - though a
month after the elections,
the Iran-Contra scandal
brought it down to 47 percent - and the GOP lost
eight Senate seats, though
ju st five in the House.
And in 1998, GOP
threats
to
impeach
President Bill Clinton
kept his approval rating at
66 percent and Democrats
ended up gaining five
House seats and held even
in the Senate·.
This year, of course, the
Iraq disaster is at least as
much
a liability to
President
Bush
as
Vietnam or a recession
was in the past, and possibly as much as Watergate.
BJ!t on top of that, Rouse
Republicans have proved
the adage that power corrupts - and they've been
running things for only 12
years, not 40.
Bu·s h 's approval rating
is below 40 percent Rea!ClearPolitics.com' s
average of the latest polls
is 38.5 percent - and the
generic
Congressional
ballot shows that the public favors Democratic
candidates . for Congress
by a margin of 53 .5 percent to 38.5 percent.
The average of latecampaign generic polls is
his.torically a highly accu'
rate predictor of the
national vote for House
candidates.
In
1994.
Republicans won 54 percent . of this vo(e and
picked up 52 House seats.
And the latest Pew
Research Center poll
offers yet more evidence
that a big wave is about to

crash on the GOP. All hard fot Democrats to
~inds of swing voters who capture more than eight or
helped Republicans win nine this year.
the 2002 elections have
And in the current
defected in droves to the Congress, · Republicans
Democrats .
have only three incumThey include working bents representing dismoms, who split evenly in tricts that · tilt heavily
2002 and who now favor Democratic and only 17 in
Democrats , 52 percent to districts that tilt even
34 percent, as well as slightly
Democratic,
indepyndents, seniors and whereas ·in 1994 , the GOP
Midwesterners, all of ousted 34 Democratic
whom
tilted
slightly incumbents, 27 in GOPRepublican in 2002 and
wllo now favor Democrats leaning .districts.
by 16 points.
The Senate terrain also
Moreover, once-solid favors
Republicans.
Republican groups are Democrats should, win
muc!J less solid now. Men two GOP seats in states
favored the GOP by 12 .that Kerry carried in 2004
points in 2002, but they Rhod.e Island and
do so by only 4 points · Pennsylvania
and
now. Motheys · with chil- another seat in a state that
dren haye gone from 23 he barely lost, Ohio. But
percent pro-GOP to 3 per- Bush won in the . four
cent
pro-Democratic. states where Democrats
Southerners , suburban- need to pick up three seats
ites, people with' incomes to take over - Missouri,
more than $100,000 and which Bush won 53 perrural residents all are cent to 46 percent;
drifting away from the Montana, where he won
GOP, too.
59 percent to 39 percent;
And yet, if a wave is Virginia, where he won 54
crashing, Republicans do percent to 45 percent; and
have some structural bul- Tennessee, where he won
· warks .to weaken its force. 57 percent to 43 percent.
· Meanwhile, the . GOP
'The key one is terrain;
others are mon~y. the candidates and commitGdP
· voter-turnout tees have been able to rely
machine and the virtual on $46 million more than
absence of a positive Democrats and its vaunted
Democratic message.
"72-hour program" to get
As
the
nonpartisan out the vote, which ' outDemocrats'
reform group FairVote has · stripped
reported, there are far efforts in 2004 .
fewer competitive seats
. D e. m 0 c r a t i c
- especially open seats
- in these elections than Congressional Campaign
there were in 1994, mean- · Committee
Chairman
ing that a 54-point Rahm Emanuel (Ill.) told
Democratic
advantage me that he'd match his
should net far fewer GO"I:V operation against
House seats. .
anything the GOP could
The 1994 elections fea- mount.
tured 52 open seats, 37 on
Bottom line, I figure
what
basically
was that Democrats will pick
Republican turf, while in up 25 House seats and
2006 there are 30 open five Senate soots. It'll be a
seats and only II of them wave, but not a tsunami.
in
Democratic-leaning
(Morton Kondracke is
districts. Republicans won executive editor of Roll
22 open seats in 1994; Call. the newspaper of
FairVote figures it will be Capitol Hill.)

Scott Pelley:Journalist if the ·year

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR

The Daily Sentinel

Nat
Hentoff

genocide because they
honor the sovereignty of
Sudan, which refuses to
allow U.N. troops to enter
and end the mass murders,
these rebels are now
killing Sudan's murderous
forces and being killed by
them ,_ adding to the
rivers of· bl.ood. (For more
on this deeper abyss of
terror in Darfur, there is
the front-page story (Oct.
23) in The New York
Times on the National
Redemption Front by
another explorer-reporter
of the old school, Lydia
Polgreen.)
Searching for Jacob ,
Pelley found that the survivors of Hangala are in
the Oure Cassolii refugee
camp, where someone
named Jacob had applied
for a ration card three
years ago . Pelley found
Jacob 's teacher ("He is
one of our best students"),
who brought him to Jacob,
With a translator, ·Pelley
showed Jacob . the notebooks found in the ashes
of Hangala. " All of this is
mine," said Jacob, and
told of what happened to
hi s familY. after the
Janjaweed - the Sudan
government's hired rapists
and killers - . had burned
down Hangala.
"Some were kill ed,"
said Jacob, "and some of
them ran away. We don't
even know where they are
right now. We are so distributed we never go t the

www.mydailysentin~l.com

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

Tuesday, November 7, 2oo6

2006.
bottom
line:
A
•wave'
broken
by
storm
walls
The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

Tuesday, November 7, 2oo6

chance to sit together and Khartoum bridges . are
think of whom we have being built, office towers
lost and who is ·still here, are popping up, supermararid .our I ives before."
kets are opening and'
Pelley showed Jacob the flatbed trucks hauling
ABCs lesson used to teach plasma TV's fight their
the
alphabet.
"This way through thickening
belongs," he said, "to my traffic."
,
younger brother. He was
Investments are pouring
scared by the bombing (by into Gen. Omar Althe Sudan government's Bashir's Sudan from the
planes) and when the United Arab Emirates
Janjaweed attacked , he .(even though all the
ran. Nevertheless, he was corpses in Darfur are of
ki'lled."·
black Muslims), China,
· "How old was your India,
Malaysia
and
brother~"
Kuwait. And a Coca-Cola
''Almost 4 years old."
factory is thriving in
"He never had a chance Khartoum.
Meanwhile,
· to have a schoolbook," the
U.N. 's
High
Pelley said.
Commissioner for Human
"He never even entered Rights (New Republic,
·school yet," Jacob added, Oct. 20) " is urging the
As this section of ''60 government of Sudan to
Minutes" was coming to order an independent
an end, Pelley told us: investigation into recent
"Jacob was glad to see his military attacks ."
books again, but he asked
Gee ~ maybe Sudan's
us to take them back to
dictator,
Gen . AI-Bashir,
the museums (they have
also been in Los Angeles' will invite Jacob to testify
Museum of Tolerance) for as to what he saw as his 4the whole world to see. year-old brother was murWe took the books but we dered by the Janjaweed
before he ever went to
left Jacob as he was schooL
one of more th an 2 milAnd the world' s civilion refugees who can' t go
lized
nations, including
• home again and have no
ours
,
refuse
to combine
future bere . As we headed
out, Sudan 's government forces to go into those
had launched its new killing fields lest they dis offensive in this African respect the augu st murderholocaust - what may be ous sovereignty of Gen.
its final solution for the Al-Bashir.
In· the next Janjaweed
people of Darfur."
But from Khartoum, the raid on Jaco b's refugee
capital of Sudan , a front- camp , he m ay join his
page Oct. 24 story by The yo.unger brother.
New York Times' Jeffrey
(Na t Hentoff is a nationGenleman was headlined: ally renowned authoriry
" War in Sudan? Not on tlje First Amendment
Where the Oil Wealth and th e Bill of Rights and
Flows. "
author of many books,
Th e report .continue s: including " The War on
"While one of the world's th e Bill of Rights and the
worst humanitarian crises Ga(hering
Resistance"
continue~ some 600 miles ( Seve11
Storie.r Press,
away m Darfur. across 2003}.)

•

Obituaries

Local Briefs

Doris E. Wilt
MIDDLEPORT - Doris E. Wilt, 86, Middle~. died
Monday Nov. 6, 2006 at Overbrook Center in Mtddleport.
Arr3;ngements will be announced by the Middleport Chapel
of Ftsher Funeral Homes.
On-line contlolences may be sent to www.fisherfuneralhomes.com.

WOODBINE, N.J. - Kenneth Karl .Hutchison 69,
Woodbine, N.J., died Thursday Nov. 2, 2006, at the
Meadowview Nursing Home in Williamstown, N.J.
He was born June 18, !937, in Ravenswood, W.Va., the
son of the late Leon Hutchison and June Goodwin Jeffers.
He is survived by a sister, Doris Jeffers of Columbus; half
brothers, Lonnie Jeffers and Val (Victoria) Jeffers of '
Huntington, W.Va; stepmother, HazeJ·Hutchison of Racine;
several aunts, uncles and cousins.
Funeral was held at I p.m. Monday, Nov. 6, 2006 at the
Middleport Chapel of Fisher Fufteral Home. Burial was
beside his grandparents in Ravenswood Cemetery iR
Ravenswood .
·
Friends were invited to call one hour prior to the service
at the funeral home,
·
·
On-line condolences may' be sent to www.fisherfuneral· ·
homes.com.

4-Hers win woodworking awards

Election dinner .
being held
SALEM CENTER - The Salem
Township Volunteer Fire Department
Firebelles are serving an election day
~p luncheon at the fire house, II
a.m. to 6 p.m. Menu includes soup,
sandwiches and pie, Emergency
phone number stickers will be available.

SWbiillltecl plloto

300-acre Calif. wildfrre
backs away from homes as
crews work to contain it
RIALTO, Calif. - A wind- could bring the blaze back to
driven wildfire scorched more life.
"There is a danger of sparks
than 300 acres of brusb on
Monday, torChed an industrial and embers blowing downyard and fooced the evacuation wind that could restart things,"
said Steve Hansen, a
of two schools, officials said.
'The blaze 60 miles east of spokesman for the San
Los Angeles had threatened Bernardino County Fire
I00 bomes earlier in the day, Department
but firefighters corralled the . No injuries were Dl)Xllted.
fire enough to call off firefight- 'The cause was under investigaing aircritft within . several . tion.
The fire began Monday
hours, fire officials said.
'The fire was 30 percent con- morning and burned fiercely
tained by the afternoon, but . for a time on vacant land across
firefighters remained on edge a street frOm a .neighbort!ood,
because the erratic wind, prompting officials to urge sevwhich was gusting to 40 mph, eral businesses to evacuate.

Beth Seflent/plloto

.

Drivers might have noticed something missing from the old
Pomeroy Junior High School yesterday, namely the auditorium which'tame down quickly with, the rest of the building to
shortly follow.
,

School
from j:»age A1
months to finance both
asbestos removal and the
demolition.
The village plans to
market the property commercially for economic
development. It has been
estimated that if the
building was tom down
it would free up j u ~t
over one acre's of · avai 1able space in the busi-

•

ness di strict worth poss ibly $1 ~0.000. Back in
2004 council voted to
g iye
the
Community
Improve ment Corporauon
first option on the propeny.
The building WM built
.in 1929 and has been
passed from the village
to the Meigs Local
School District back to
the village in the 1990's.
Whether considered a.n
eyesore or a piece of
history the building will
soon only be found in
· history books .
•

RACINE - ,Southern Elementary
PTO will be selling hooded sweat shirts '
and pants and T-shirts at the Hill's,
Citgo in Racine, 9 to I p.m. Friday,
weather pennitting. For more informalion call Jennifer Hoback, 949-2169.

Road closed

TOPS meetings

"Honor the Veterans" at 7 p.m. o'n
Saturday, Nov. II at the legion halL
The guest speaker will he Rep, Jimmy
Stewart (R-Meigs) and the program
will be perfonned by the Southern
Elementary third grade. Enduring
Freedom Support Gro'!P· Racine Area
Community
Organization.
Refreshments serve(j following the
program. All veterans will be honored
during the pro~ram which is open to
the public.

Campaign kick-off

GREAT BEND - Valley Belle
Road in Lebanon Township will be
CHESHIRE Cheshire TOPS closed indefinitely from the Nease
POMEROY -United Fund for .
(Take off pounds sensibly) meets at Hollow Road intersection to County Meigs County will kick off the 2007
10 a.m. each Monday at the DAV Road 35 due to an unsafe bridge. ·
campaign at 6 p.m. on Nov. 14 at the
building. Weigh-in begins at 9 a.m.
Riverbend· Ans Council building.
For more information call Janet
Mark and Teresa Porter are the camThomas (740) 367-0274 or e-mail ·
paign
chairmen.
Janet Thomas 590@hotmaiLcom
POMEROY
-.Sacred
Hean
Church will hold its annual fall bazaar
Thursday in the social hall. Dinner
will be served beginning at 4:30 p.m.,
POMEROY -Meigs County
with drawings and games to follow.
Community Drug Coalition will meet
at 7 p.m. on Thursday at God's NET
ROCKSPRINGS .- Meigs Middle
in Pomeroy. Parents, neighbors, conSchool will have ·a Veterans Day
Assembly at 2:30 p.m. this Friday in
cerned citizens, law enforcement officers . and service providers are welthe school gym. Local veterans are
invited to attend and a reception will
come. There will be a guest speaker.
RACINE - The Racine American
be held for veterans at 2 p.m. in the
Information is available by calling
school cafeteria.
Legion will present the program Fenton Taylor at 992-3300.

Church bazaar

Drug coalition

Veteran's Day
assembly

Legion honors
veterans

Blackwell,
Strickland say
they would use ·
Statehouse more

Sunday the Pomeroy Carpenter's Local ,650 honored winners of Meigs County's 4·H woodworking categories with an
awards ceremony at the Local's hall in Pomeroy. ·The winners and their families were invited. The winners of carpen·
ters" tool boxes, hammers or measuring tapes were as fol·
lows: In "Measuring Up" - David Frank, grand champion;
Levi Smith, reserve champion; Andrew Ginther and Joyce
Weddle, honorable mention; "In Making the Cut" - Kelsey
Myers, grand "champion; Eddie. Hendricks, reserve champion; -"In Nailing it Together" , KodyWolfe, grand champion;
Whitney Thoene, reserve champion; and "In Finishing It Up"
- Morgan Werry, grand champion.

T·shlrt and pants
for sale by PTO ·

lAND TRANSFERS ·

. POMEROY
-Meigs
County Recorder Kay Hill
reported the following
transfers in real estate:
Julie Howard, Brian
COLUMBUS ,(AP) - . · Howard, to Jacquelyn B.
Wltether Republican Ken Harsh, Jerry A. Harsh,
Bl~kwell or Democrat !~ deed, VIllage of Pomeroy.
Stockland IS elected ,Ohio s
Community
Action
next. ,governor, he II be Program· to Timothy Ryan
movm on down- 29 florn:s. Hawthorne, deed, Qlive.
Both C31ld1dates say they 11
Antiquity Baptist Church
~e more ~se of the gover- to Tu.ppers Plains-Chester
~or s office m.the Statehouse Water District, . right of
mstead of settmg up quarters way, Letart. ·
m the warren of offices on the
Patrick
D.
Wood,
.30th floor of the Rtffe Center deceased, to Lori Ann
Clutter, Danny Lee WilL
across the!.treet.
The R1ue has ·been the certificate, Chester.
home office for the three ~ovAcreage
Investments,
emors who have served, SIJ?CC Inc. to J .J. Detweiler
1988, when .the bmldmg Enterprises, deed, Scipio.
named
former Speaker
Kathryn Eileen Robson,
Vern Riffe opened. Govs. deceased, to Clarence
Richard Celes~. a Democrat, James Robson, Donald
an~ ~epubhcans George Gene Robson, Judith Marie
Vomovtch . and . Bob Taft Robson, Teni Sue Cochran,
rarely used the Cml War.era Lisa Kay Robson, Richard
Statehouse office. , .
Lee Robson, Patricia Ann
It usually IS the se~:mg. for Robson Quintette, certifinews conferences, bill Sign- cate, Bedford.
Ashley Renee Brooks to
mgs ~ Yl 81 ~ fro~ out-of• .
state digrutanes. Its rucked Aaron L
Laudermilt,
mto ~ .northwest corner of Michele T. Laudermilt,
the building under the Senate deed, Scipio.
wmg and across the rotunda . Meigs County Board of
fromthe House..
County Commissioners to
Stockland S3ld he would Meigs County Community
pack up the Riffe office and Improvement Corporation,
move It to. tl_1e Statehouse, deed, Salisbury.
w~ he S3ld !t belongs.
Robert
L
Reeves,
'Ted doesn t want to be Marjorie Reeves, to Robert
closec:J off on~ 30th floor of Reeves, Jr., deed, Chester.
~ .~~~~~se, 'd sf.Hkdu~
Lester Marion Ohlinger,
31 ey 531 · he
eJ
Lester
M.
Ohlinger,
the l;OVell!or oug t to ~ deceased, to Carolyn L.
worki~g 10 the people s Ohlinger, affidavit, Sutton.
house.
,
Warren N. Boyd, Jr.,
Blackwell wouldn t move Rodney F. Boyd, Sandra J .
lock, stock and veto pen, but Boyd, to Sandra J. Boyd,
he would like to use the office Warren N. Boyd, Jr.. deed,
~than the currently
Columbia.
Charles Butterworth to
I told both Gov. VoiiiOVICh
and Gov. Taft that ~ thought Joseph N. Ryan, Peggy J.
the old governor s office Ryan, deed, Columbia.
should~u~morethanJUSt
James W. Hayman, Jean
sy.mbohcally,
Blackwell L. Hayman, to Victor
;;ruct. adding that lhl: move James VanMeter, Melissa
'would close the physical~ Marie. VanMeter, deed,
be~een the governor and
·Lebanon.
,
Le~sl3;rure and pe~ the
Bruner Land Co. Inc. to
msl:ltutJOnal gap, too. · . .
James R. Jamison , deed,
Before the $120 mllhon Orange.
.
renovanon of the Statehouse
Sharon Manley, John
tllat was .completed 10 l996, Manley, Anna Mae Hysell,
~~din~ was divt~ mto to Anna Mae Hysell , deed ,
,u
~roon;s: var- Village of Pomeroy.
1ou~ mem rs 11
goverJack
L.
Frederick ,
no~i~ s:re:e:!~:~:ion, deceas~d, to Gloria Kay
which restored the building to Fredenck,
affidavit ,
it$ original design, the gover- Rutland.
rtor:s office consists of 3 per~
Mehssa Scyoc, Troy G .
sonal offi a Cabinet room Scyl?c , Melissa . Scyoc, to
a recepti~ area and a fe~ Mehssa
Scyoc;
deed ,
the
rooms
Ohve.
_
0
r
·
Mi_ke Conley. Michael
Conley, Cindy Conley, to
ABN Amro Mortgage
Group, sheriff's deed ,
.
Lebanon.
Timothy D. Clark, Dawn
from Page A1 .
Clark, to Timothy D. Clark,
OMAP. OSCI and graduate deed, Olive.
Pat Fields to TP:cwo.
level college coursework.
Our teachers are committed right of way, Sutton.
Edna ~arsons to TPto professional developCWD,
right of way, Letart.
ment.''
James E Evans, Delira C.
Currently, 85 percent of
the teaching staff at Meigs Evans. to TP-CWD, right
Intermediate possess at least of way, Bedford .
Dayton Spencer. Sarah E.
·a master's degree.
"This high level of com- Spencer, to TP-CWD. right
mitment to the teaching pro- of way. Chester.
Arc hie
Rose,
Debra
fession and pursuit to
improve student achieve- Rose, to TP-CWD. right of
ment makes it a pleasure to way. Chester.
Marguerite F Stearns to
be the principal at Mejgs
Delbert
H . Stearns. affiIntermediate." Bookman
davit. Orange .
added.

for

an:·

Meigs

Delbert H. Stearns · to
Delbert
H.
Stearns
, Revocable Trust, deed,
Orange.
James E Evans, Debra C.
Evans, to Richard J.
Weisenmuller,
Somjit
Weisenmuller, Rickey J.
Weisenmuller,
deed,
Bedford.
·
Shirley Poling, Virgil
Poling, to Nicole A. Mount,
deed, Village of Pomeroy.
John W Ohlinger, Wendy
J. Ohlinger, to Kathy L
Dyer, deed, Scipio.
Robert G. Davis to Kyle
Lind Davis, deed, Chester.
Charlene
Doczi
to
William Dwayne Doczi.
Cindy Marie Doczi, deed,
Rutland.
Gary George to Rorie
Shayne Bradshaw, deed,
Salem.
Monongahela Power Co.,
Marietta Electric Co. , to
Columbus Southern Power,
assignment of easement.
Ruth A. Millho~e. Larry
E. Mill hone, to Dorothy
Stout, deed. Orange.
.
William A. Dugan to
Joann
Dugan,
deed,
Columbia.
Rutland Post American
Legion to Ronald James
Plemmons,
Sr. ,
Oscar
Wayne Franklin, Ronald
James Plemmons, Jr., deed,
Rutland.
Myrtle Clark, deceased,
to Betty Sue VanMatre ,
certificate, Rutland.
Sara Williams to Ohio
Power Co., easement,
Salisbury.
Clarence
James
Williams, Cathrine Jill
Williams, to Ohio Power
Co., easement, Salisbury.
Ruth A. Graham, Robert
G. Graham, . Robert G.
Card,
to
Columbus
Southern Power, Bedford.
Donald L. Spencer, Don
Spencer,
Sedonia
A.
Spencer Morgan, Richard
L Morgan, , to Columbus
Southern Power, easement,
Chester.
Mike
Spencer,
Sue
Spencer, to Columbus
Southern Power, easement,
Chester.
Phyllis
Spencer
to
Columbus Southern Powe r,
easement, Chester.
Rickey E. Lunsford,
Jeanette
Lunsford , to
Columbus Southern Power.
easement, Salisbury ..
Frances S. H11l to
Columbus Southern Power.
easement, Chester.
.
Anthony Land Co., Ltd .,
Countrytyme ALC Ltd .. to
Columbus Southern Power,

easement, Letart.
Marvin T Hill , Jennifer
J. Hill , . to Columbus
Southern Power, easement,
Sutton.
Suzanne
Sayre
to
Columbus Southern Power,
easement, Sutton.
Jeffery H. Lundy, Andrea
D . Lundy, to Detwiller
True Value Lumber, affidavit, Village of Pomeroy.
Jack L Ritchie, Sherry
Ritchie, to Joseph · L
Roush, Robert L Ritchie,
J.r., deed, Sutton.
R,egina Erlewine, Harold
Erlewine·, to Southern Ohio
Coal Co., easement, Salem.
Tracey L Fletcher to
Greenpoint Credit Corp.,
sheriff's deed, Columbia.
Ray M. Weaver, Ina J.
Weaver, 'to Gregory Light,
Cheryl Light, deed, Olive.
Gatling Mineral LLC to
Rivervista Mining LLC.
deed, Sutton.
Gatling Mineral LLC to
· Rivervista Mining LLC,
. deed. Sutton.
Gatling Mineral LLC to
· Rivervista Mining LLC,
deed, Letart/Lebanon.
Larry
B.
Morris.' '
deceased , to Harold E.
Rose, Mollie D. Rose,
deed, Rutland.
,
Ralph E. Trussell, Jean
Trussell , to Stephen K.
Carson,
Rosanna
R.
Carson, deed, Chester.
Charles William Cornell
to Patsy K. Cornell, agreemen!, Sutton/V1l)age of
Syracuse.
Harry W. Hayman to
Diana R. Hayman, deed,
V1llage of ~1ddleport . ,
JJ . Detwetler Enterpnses
to M1chaei A. M1lano,
Mana
M1lano,
deed,
Scipio.
Paul . John
Shaffer,
deceased,
to
Goldie
Shaffer, ,
certificate,
Lebanon.
Floyd
Cummin.s,
deceased,
. to . Addte
Cummms, affidavit, Letll}'t.

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wl1h sped•l ~~ Artel Jr Idol:
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428 Sec. Ave. Gallipolis, ?H
7
740-44&amp;- ARTS (2787

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Thursday November 9th
Dinner Begins at 4:30
$7.00 Adult~ $3.00 Under 12
Mena: Creamed Baked Chicken or Ham
Honwmade Noodles, Mashed I'CitatOIS
&amp; Gravy, Green Beaas. Coleslalll'
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PageA6

OHIO

The Daily Sentinel
'

Tuesday, November 7,

Defense rests in coin dealer
trial without calling witnesses
BY JOHN S£EWER
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

Local
'i'aesday ... Showers likelyin the morning ...Then rain
in the afternoon. Highs in
the lower 60s. South winds
· a'round 5 mph. Cllance of
rain 80 percent.
Tuesday night...Cloudy.
Rain in the evening ...Then a
slight -.c;hance of rain after
midnight. Lows around 50.
Southeast winds around 5
in
th'e
mph
evening ...Becoming light
and variable. Chance of rain
80 percent.
Wednesday ... MI)stly
cloudy. Highs in the mid
60s. Light and variable
winds.
Wednesday
night...Partly cloudy. l:x&gt;ws
in ·the upper 40s. West

winds around 5 mph.
Thursday ... Partly cloudy.
Highs in the upper 60s.
Thursday night through
Friday night ... Mostly clear..
Lows in the mid 40s. Highs
in the upper 60s.
·
Saturday and Saturday
night...Partly cloudy with a
40 percent chance of showers. Highs in the mid 60s.
Lows in the mid 40s.
Sunday ... Partly cloudy.
Highs in the upper 50s.
Sunday
night...Partly
.cloudy with a 40 percent
chance of showers. Lows in
the mid40s.
Monday...Mostly cloudy
with a 40 percent chance of
showers. Highs in the lower
60s.

TOLEDO (AP)- A former
GOP
fundraiser
charged with stealing from a
$50
million rare-coin
investment that he managed
for the state rested. his case
Monday without calling any
witnesses.
''Your honor, the defense
rests,"
said
William
Wilkinson, an attorney for
Tom Noe.
Noe, once a go-to man for
the party, has pleaded not
guilty to charges of theft,
money laundering, forgery
and corrupt activity. His
attorneys say the deal with
the state allowed him to use
the money as he wanted,
. Ltd. - 30.24
ACI-34.35
including to pay off busi-·
AEP-41.39
NSC .- 51.99
ness debts.
AIIID-18.18
Ollk Hll Anlncllll - 26.79
AP photo
Prosecutors spent three
AIIHIId
61.23
OVB-25.15
weeks presenting evidence Judge Thomas Osowik, center, listens to defense lawyer John Mitchell, left, and prosecu88T-43.00
that accused Noe, 52, of tor Jeff Lingo during the tri!ll of Tom Noe at the Lucas County Courthouse in Toledo, --21.57
Petri~ Ill- 2t.1S
stealing more than $2 mil- ·Monday. Noe, a former GOP fundraiser charged with stealing from a $50 million rarEK:Oin tloll &amp; - . - 33.H
Papaleo - 83.28
lion from the investment investment that he managed for the state, rested his case Monday without calling any wit- loillUSJ'IIIf - 57.06
CENX-39.28
and spending it on his. busi- nesses.
Paemlar - 14.20
Ct.asz;Aoll- 8.13
ness and himself.
ROckwell - 61.30
Noe,
in
a
'separate
case,
.
allowed
him
to
borrow
the
coin
dealer
violated
his
Ctlezmtzc Sllopl- 14.22
· The ·scandal has been an
Roc:ky 8oota - .1 S.07
money from the investment pleaded guilty earlier this City Moldlz\C - 3US
embarrassment for Ohio's agreement with the sto te.
.
Slln
- 173.15
The Ohio· Bureau of fund or loan it to others. He year to funneling $45,000 to Col-18.38
ruling Republican Party,
WI:IM1rt -47.49
and the trial has put a spot- Workers' Compensation said the bureau gave Noe Bush's · re-election cam- OG-13.78
wendy's - 34.88
light on their troubles in the gave Noe $25 miilion in · wide authority to· managp paign and .was sentenced DUPont - 45.91
WGIHIIolltOft -17.51
week's leading up to the 1998 to invest in rare coins,. the investment and that ·h~ . last month to two years and f'.l lhnl Maeul- ;37
followed by another $25 spent millions buying other three months in federal USB-33.71.
election Tuesday.
collectibles, such as histori- prison. He won't begin thaJ; G11211iltt - 18.77
Dilly atock reports the
Closing arguments in the million in 2001.
4 p.m. daalzc quelwl: afthe
cal
documents· and rare sentence until after the State Gli:tzllll Elecbk: - 31.27
Democrats say he got the
case will take. place Tuesday
plevloua dar's UlllilaC ·
- the same day Ohioans money because of his polit- paintings.
GKIIILY - S.IS
charges are resolved.
The
bureau
knew
in
1999
ical
connections.
The
scantiona,
pzowklalll 11r Snzltll
will elect a new governor
Federal prosecutors oould ....., DavtdiOn - 69.31
that
the
contract
·with
Noe
dal
has
permeated
campaign
and other statewide officeFlnallc:lat
Advisors of
have sought a stiffer penal()' , . . . _47,65
advertisements and debates allowed him to use the in that case if they thought • .... -21.92
holders.
Hllll8rd Lyons 111 Ganlpolla.
money as he saw fit , and the state money had been •-.
Democrats are poised to for state offices.
Prosecutors say Noe that no one from the bureau
lake back the governor's
used for the donations.
office for the first time since . loaned the state's money to objected, Wi.lkinson said~
The investigation into
1990 and could sweep the friends and spent it on him- The fund wi II end up shOw- Noe's coin investments
five statewide races based self and his coin business . . ing a profit because of all
Noe borrowed some of the investments in . col- have led to separate ethics
on recent polls.
charges against Taft, who
Before the defense rested, the state's money to pay off lectibles, he said.
Prosecutors have not said pleaded no contest last year
Common . Pleas Judge business loan~ and to prop
Thomas Osowik denied the up his coin business when whether he used the money to failing to report golf outattorneys' request to dismiss sales were slow, former to make campaign contribu- ings and other gifts. About a
to Republicans, dozen others, including
tions
all charges against Noe. employees said.
CHILLICOTHE (AP) Correctional
Reception
including
President Bush some of Taft's aides, also
WiLkinson
said
during
the
Wilkinson argued that prosof
a
man
who
Center
state
prison
in Orient
A
friend
were charged.
ecutors failed lo show that trial that Noe's contract and Gov. Bob Taft.
escaped .from jail while . south of Columbus awaiting
awaiting a death penalty trial in the April 2005 shoottrial ha~ been ch~ed "":ith ing death of Chillicothe
d~stroymg letters dtscussmg police officer Larry Cox.
hts ~scape. .
. .
. Parsons escaped from the
. Tma Rapp of Chtlhcothe Ross County Jail July 29
was in Ross County Jail and stayed on the -loose for
Monday_ on a $50,000 bond almost three months. He
Fugitives List" and featured after bemg charged Fnday was captured Oct. 20 after
CHILLICOTHE (AP) ture of John Parsons.
Crime Sioppers.
Police caught Parsons
The final decision about . on an episode of "America's w1th ~o fe!ony ~unts of owners of a Chillicothe-area ·
Authorities received more ·
than 500 tips during a three- sleeping in a shac'k behind a · how the money is distrib- Most Wanted."
tampenng wilh evtdence.
lumberyard told police
Following his capture,
month search for an escaped Chillicothe lumberyard on uted could be made in midR,app destroyed corre- about someone living in a
.
inmate, and now local and Oct. 19, almost three November, FBI special Parsons ·was taken to a spondence between herself
and
·
John
Parsons
that
shack
on
their
property. ,
federal officials must decide months after his brazen agent Michael Brooks said: prison in Orient on a parole
detailed
how
Parsons
would
Th_e
next
day.
Parsons
Parsons eluded authorities violation. His murder trial
which tips deserve the escape from the Ross
coust~,
Edward
Woolum,
of
escape,
according
to
Ross
reward money.
County Jail.
for 83 days before being was moved to Cincinnati County assistant prosecutor . Chtlhcothe, was charged
The groups that con- · The owners of the !urn- captllred.
Before
he and scheduled to begin Matthew Schmidt
He wilh two counts of obstruc·
tributed to the reward of up beryiud, who called authori- . escaped, he was awaiting March 30.
would not say how· many tion o~ justice after authoriHe has pleaded not guilty letters were involved how lies satd he helped Parsons
to $125,000 - including ties after suspecting some- · trial on charges he killed
the FBI, the U.S. Marshals, one might be living in the Chillicothe police officer to aggravated murder, many were destroy~d or · while he was on the run. He
aggravated robbety, escape how they were destroyed.
local law enforcement and shed, will be considered, Larry Cox in April 2005.
has pleaded not guilty.
c;ommunity groups - are· but so will other tips that
The escape garnered and other charges, Ross
His
mother,
Debra
Schmidt said prosecutors
sifting through the tips to · offered legitimate informa- national attention, with County Prosecutor Scott do have other letters that Flesher, 54, also has been
determine which substan- tion, said Randy Davies, Parsons being added to the Nusbaum said. Prosecutors weren't destroyed.
accused of helping him after
tially contributed to the cap- president of Southern Ohio FBI's
"Most
Wanted will seek the death penalty.
Parsons, 35, is in the · he escaped.

Local Stocks.

Woman charged
in case of escaped
murder suspect

Authorities deciding how to
divvy up Parsons reward money

Man sentenced to prison for
killing woman, 5-year-old boy
MOUNT GILEAD (AP) miles north of Columbus, on free," Dora Cooper 'said.
19-year-Qld man looking Jan. 17, 2005.
"That's exactly what .I hope.
A jury trial on 16 counts, That way he can't ever hurt
, for money to pay for drugs
was sentenced to 40 years to including six counts of aggra- soniebody else's family."
li~ in prison for killing a vated robbery, was scheduled
A judge ruled last year that
woman and her 5-year-old son to start on . Mo~Y- Staats
while llurl&lt;larizing their home. also told detectives that he Staats, 17 at the time of the
· Samuef Staats pleaded stole $2,000 and two bags of murders, would stand trial as
Friday in Morrow County marijuana from Cooper.
an adult. In Ohio, the death
Cooper· s mother, Dora, penalty does not apply to
Common Pleas Court to two
counts of aggravated murder a~ked Staat~ during the senthose younger than 18 at the
for shooting Diana Cooper, tencing h&lt;iw he could kill her
27, and her srin, Cameron daughter in front. of the little time of the offense, Morrow
County Prosecutor Charles
Bateman, in the head at their boy. He had no response.
"I .do11't think
he'll
ever
be
home in Iberia, about 50
'
. Howland said.
~A

Mild 11 J. Sih•, DO, FACC, is now
schedulinc appointments at die Meigs
Medical Clinic,
Dr. Silver is board-certified in internal
medicine and specializes in interventional
cardiology and peripheral vascular disease.

Judge refuses t~ move trial for
man accused of killing foster son
CINCINNATI • (AP) -A
judge ruled Monday that a
man accused of killing his
developmentally disabled
foster son will stand trial in
Hamilton Counly on charges
of misleading police and
inducing panic to cover the
child's ~l"ying.
. Judge Patrick Dinkelacker
of Hamilton County Common
Pleas Coun denied David
Carroll Jr.'s requesl to move
his trial to another county.
Carroll's attorney' had
argued th"l lhe notoriety of .
the case and pretrial publicity
surrounding the dealh of 3•

year-old Marcus Fiesel would kel and packing lape and
prevent lheir client from get- leaving him in a closet while
they went 10 a family reunion
ting a fair trial .
in
Kentucky in August. He
Carroll, and his wife, Liz
Carroll, also are schaluled to wa' dead when the Canolls
stand trial in neighboring returned two days later,
·
Clennont County on charges of l)Uthotities 'Say.
, The Carrolls are accused of
murder, kidnapping, felonious
a&lt;;Sauh and child endangering. telling authorities that the 'boy
Clennont County is where wandered off Aug. 15 after
Liz Carroll fainted while she
police believe the child died.
Dinkelacker said he would was 01i an outing Wilh Marcus
reconsider the request to and other children in an
move the trial if problems AndeMn Township Part in
arise during jury selection Hamilton County. Hundred'
of area residents joined law
next year.
The Carrolls are accu,,O of enforcement officials in a
wrapping the child in a blan- f()ur-day ..carch for the boy.
•

Dr. Silver is the medical director of O'Bieness Memorial Hospital's

-.

81

·The Daily,. Sentinel

2006

catheterization laboratory at the Cornwell Center in Athens. He is
associated with MidOhio Cardiology and Vascular Consultants with
·offices at the Meigs Medical Clinic, the Cotnweii.Center in Athens,
and in Columbus. Prior to becominc affiliated with MidOhio, Dr. Silver
was on the Cleveland Clinic medic~ st.tff.
•

Tuesday, November 7, 2006
The~n

Top 'IWenty Five
The top 25 teams In The Associated
Press' preS8BSOn college basketball
poll, witll first-place votes in parentheses, 2005~ recOrds, total points
based on 25 points for a first-place ,
vote through one point for a 25th-place
and Jasl year's final ranking:

PYli

1. Florida (63)
2. N. Carolina (9)
3. Kansas
4. Pittsburgh
5. LSU

Roc. Pts

33-6
23-6
25-6
25-6
27-9

1, 788
1,704
1,636
1,407
1,399

11
10
12
16
19

6. UCLA
7. Ohio St
8. GeorgetOwn
9. Wisoonsin
10. Arizona

32· 7

1,394 t7

26-6 1,391 6
23·1 0 1,271 23

19·12 1,197-

20..13
1r. Aiabama
18·13
12. Duke
32·4
13. Texas A&amp;M
22·9
14. Memphis
33-4
15. BoS1on Co.
28-6
16. Marquette
20·11
17. Washington
26-7
18. Connecticut
30-4
19. Creighton
20-10
20. Syracuse
23-12
21 .Texas
30-7
22. Kentucky
22-13
23. Georgia Tech 11·17
24. N011ada
27-6
25. Tennessee
22-8

1,1571,106 1,051 1
888
811 4
772 , t7
554
487 17
399 2
384
387 21

386

9

332
262
212
203

20
18

Xavier 99, FlOrida St. 65, Loulsvile
62, Villanova 37, llllncMs· 31, Hofstra ,
24, 4rl&lt;ansas 20, San Diego St. 19,
DePaul 16,.1 ndlana 16, Oklahoma St.
13: Virginia Tech 8, Bucknell 6,
Michigan 6, Houston 5, SOuthern Gal
5, Kansas St, ·4, Akron 1,. BYU 1,
George Mason 1, Missouri St. 1.

Oregon 1.

·

Florida
looks to
defend title
BY JIM O'CoNNEU
ASSOCIATED PRESS

Bob Knight needs II victories at Texas Tech to put
the ultimate stamp on his
coaching career.
Bob
Huggins is back on the
bench at Kansas State, looking to re-establish his. .
And the Florida Gators
have five reasons to believe
ther can repeat their dom inatmg nati'onal ·championship run, in the form of
all rerurning starters.
A lot of f;~miliar faces will
dot the . landscape of the
2006-07 college basketball
season. But as George
Mason showed last season,
it's never a predictable ride.
A few old favorites will
be missing from the mix,
too. This will be the first
season in decades without
John Chaney and Eddie
Sutton coachmg teams, but
it will mark the return of
Bobby Cremins, back from
retirement,
and
Todd
Bozeman, whose long
NCAA suspension finally
expired.
Ron Everhart, meanwhile,
try to keep the Duquesne
program moving forward.
After a night that changed
most of his players' lives,
the Dukes start the season
with .only a handful of guys
in uniform.
College basketball will
start, as usual, with l!arly
season tournaments that are
loaded with ·power teams.
Next comes conference
rivalries,. followed by a
month of madness to deliver
a national cliampion.
All five starters from-the
Florida team that won the
title in Indianapolis in April
are back, a rare fact in age
of underclassmen heading
for the NBA.
Please see Florida. 82

CoNrACfUS

HEALTH SYSTEM

I

maker in his chest.
"The medical people here
will tell you it 's a miracle I'm
alive:· .said the 77 -year-old,
who coached Michigan from
1969-89. "How many guys
you know ·had a heart attack
36 years ago and are sti II
· alive~ Name one."
NOTEBOOK
Schembechler watched the
Wolverines' narrow 34-26
prophetic. He had two heart win over Rail State last
attackS and two qlladmple Saturday from the press box.
bypasses before more cardiac A loss by the Wolverines to
problems a couple of weeks the 33 1/2-poinl underdogs
~go that reqmred. surgeons to might have been enough to
Implant a defibnllator-pace- . push the old ~oach over the

BY -lARRY CRUM
LCRUM@MYDAJLYREGISTER.COM

-MASON , W.Va.
Anyone whh said Wahama
would be in the playoffhunt,
let alone riding an eight
game winning streak and sitting among the elite in the
state, ~fter week 1wo of the
high school toothall season
probably would have been
met with a little laughter.
Wh0·s laughing now.
The White Falcons, who
suffered an uncharacteristic
losing season last year while
missing the playoffs for the
first time in four years,
looked as if they were
doomed 10 repeal that fate
when they. started the 2006
·campaign with two straight
losses while averaging just
94 yards per game.
Those losses. howe ver.
quickly came to an end the
very next week when
Wahama go1 on track with a
dominating 49-12 win over
Eastern arid ever 'ince then
the White Falcons have been
soaring.
After losing the first two
games of the season by a
combined score of 26-7 to
Ohio powerhouse teams
Waterford and FederalOVP tile
Wahama's Derek Veazy celebrates a touchdown during a Hocking (who finished a
comb ined 16-4) Wahama
game against Buffalo earlier in the season.

S»2!1t..Sll!ll
Bl'lld Sherman, Sports Editor
(740)4&lt;4f!.2342, .... 33
bshermanO mydaitytribune .com

Lany Crurn, Sports Writer
(740) 446·2342, .... 33
tcrumOmydailyregister.com

Aahley Sl\lw, Sports Writer
(7401 446·2342, ""'· 23
sportsO.mydallytrlbune.com

hear on commercial radio.
"What the hell is that?"
Schembechler said of the
~roup .

RARE DOUBLE: Only
once before - and even then
not in the last century have two Big Ten teams gotlen off to 10-0 starts like No.
I Ohio State and No. 2
Michigan.
The only other time was in
in 1904 when Michigan .was
10-0 and Minnesota 13-0.
The Big Ten has never had·
two schools with 1.1-0
records in the same season.

Seven forced turnovers
couldn't push Wahama to a
week one victory, as
Waterford limited ·wahama
to just 44 total yards of
offense to take a 12-0 win.
One week later it was the
Lancers t~m. snapping a 16game losing streak to. the
White Falcons wilh another
poor offensive outing as .
Federal Hocking took a 14-7
victory to push the Red and
White to an 0-2 start.
Sitting in a hole only two
· weeks into the season,
Wahama refused to lay
down and showed it with a
week three hammering of
exploded over its next eight cross-river team Eastern 49games, averaging 32 points . 12 -then came the ftrst real
per game while only giving test of the season.
.
up 11 points per contest
South Gallta brought 1ts
since week two.
hopes of an undefeated seaAnd all that success has son to Mason in week four
equaled one thing for the and Wahama showed it was
Bend Area squad - a return ready for the fight, giving
the Rebels their first loss of
trip to the postseason.
An incredible season by the. season, a 28~8 setback,
Derek Veazy, who is among whde South Galha went on
the state's leading scorers to fmtsh 8-3 on the year.
with 123 points on the seaWahama then fired off
son, has helped spark the three · straight convincing
Falcons success, along with wins: a 28-6 victory over
Mason County
strong play from Brenton fellow
Clark and Kns Gtbbs.
school Hannan, " 28-13 win
But atter only two weeks over Class AA school Clay
of play, things looked bleak
for the .northern Mason
Countians.
Please see Soaztnc, 82

Bengals fussing,
fading at midseason
BY JOE KAY
ASSOCIATED PRESS

CINCINNATI
T.J.
Houshmandzadeh flings hi s
helmet Carson Palmer
openly berates a receiver.
Chad Johnson grouses all
over again about not getting
enough passes thrown his
way.
The· Cincinnati Bengals
seem to be falling apart.
A 26-20 loss in Baltimore
on Sunday left the defending
AFC North champions with
a two-game deficit in their
division, a break-even
record and a list of personal
grievances that grows with
each loss.
The only constants are the
fussing and the fading.
Coach Marvin Lewis
talked around . his 'team's
problems Monday, trying to
move on t.o the second half
of a season that has been

nothing like what the
Ben gals (4-4) expecled.
There's still a chance to
reach the playoffs.
"Our guys understand .,
what's ahead of us," Lewis
said.
If they can't get beyond
the festering frustration, the
future won 'I be much prettier than the past.
Four losses in the las1 five
games have brought out the
worst in the Bengals.
Players are openly secondguessing the play calls and
their collective toughness.
losing their cool during
games and grousing afterward about how things have
turned out.
'Sort of like the Bungles of
old.
Only a few players made
themselves available in lhe
locker room Monday after
Please see Bengals. 82

APphoto

Cincinnati Bengals head coach Martin Lewis. center, reacts as he watches the action in the ·
final minute of their football game against the Baltimore Ravens in Baltimore Sunday..

This week_'S powers are last week's flops
BY DAVE GOlDBERG

rNP Scorellne (5 p.m.·1 a.m.)

E"fnttll- sportsOmydailysentinet,com

edge.
As for the band, which
calls itself "The Best Damn
Punk Band in the Land," il
has four members, each of
whom wears scarlet windbreakers, glasses, shortsleeved white shirts and
black ties - just like Woody
Hayes.
Judging from listings on a
tongue-in-cheek Web site www.deadschembechlers.co
m - the group's songs
include . "Bomb Ann Arbor
Now" and several other
graphic · titles you'll never

Flyfug high: Wahama soaring
heading into return to playoffs

ASSOCI4TED PRESS

Fox- 1-740-4&gt;\8-3008

,

COLUMBUS (AP) What's brewing today \\jth
the 2006 Ohio Sfate
'Buckeyes ...
BUCKEYE BUZZ: Glenn
"Bo" Schemhechler appreciates the irony that there's a
punk-rock band called the
"Dead Schemhechlers."
"Holy smokes, · 1 couldn't
believe it," a smiling
Schembechler told The
Columbus
Dispatch.
"They're all dressed like
Woody. I think it's crazy." ·
The real Schemechler
almost made the band's name

Othors rwcelvtng : Wic!ltta St
181, S. Illinois 131 , Gonzaga 129.

1-740-446-2342 ext. 33

O:BIEO
NESS .

Bo Schembechler the punk-rock connoisseur

New commissioner R,oger
Goodell prefers the term
"competitive balance" to
parity.
How aboul mediocrity?
This was the week for
whatever term you prefer.
For us, 'it's the latter.
In eight of the 13 games.
underdogs won straight up,
topped by Miami, 1-6 entering
Sunday,
handing
Chicago its first loss. Two
other lowly teams, Hnuslon

and Cleveland. beat the
spread on the road. They
certainly scared the highly
rated Giants and Chargers
even if they didn't beat
them.
With all lhal ,. one team
now
stands
out:
Indianapoli s. So what if the
Colts can '1 'lop the run ·~
When you go on the road
and beat Demer antl Ne\\
England in consecutive
weeks, you are dearly the
NFL's best team. something
'also reflected by an 8-0
record for . the second

So. ~he wee~end that was
What stands out? Ronnie
and what it all meant:
Brown running for 157
Miami 31, Chicago 13: No yard' against Ihat defense.
more comparisons with Ihe which is fas1 ra1her than big.
'85 Bears, who played dur- ' Jason Taylor. revertmg to his
ing a time when. there were old lorm, "returning an intertruly . out&gt;landing 1eams. ception for a touchdown and
Thai Chicago team had to sacking Rex Grossman to
compete in . the NFC with force · a fumble. Grossman
Bill Wabh' ' 49er,. Bill re,ertin£
to
his
Parcells· Gianls, Joe Gihh' · Ari :nna7Monday ·
night
Redskin' and olher quality · form . throwing three inter,itlc,. Thi' Chicago 1eam cepllons .
not. ··
A' for the Chicago
almo'l lo't in Ariz&lt;;na. then
wa'
torn
up
at
Soldier
Field.
defen,e.
Mike Brown is out
Some
thin g&lt;, .
ne\ er
chan ge. Except. the Colt' where 11 11 a' 'upposetll)
in,·i1Kthk . hy J 1-t&gt; team.
Please see Flops, 81
hope . itl'lhc l''""c.t,on.

straight )Car
"Don 't bring that up again.
Go away'" team presidrm
Bill Polian said in the team's
locker room in Foxborough
afler Indy's n -20 win. He
wa' ~miling.
So wa&gt; Pcvton Mannini!.
remi nded thai dunng J rai~ ­
;ng camp he 'u~ge&gt;ted the
team wamed "In lh und~r
the i'adar'· thi' ,,a,()Jl. He
,hruggcd and 'nid: "I guc"

l•

�1\.lesday, November 7, 2006

'

Page 82 • The Daily Sentinel

www.rnycLIIIysentlnel.com

Tuesday, November 7, 2oo6

www.mydailysentinel.com

~ribune

National Scoreboard
PRo.FomBALL

W L T Pet PF
Seattle
5 3 0 .625 165
St. l ouis
4 4 0 .500 180
San Francisco 3 s 0 .375 143
Arizona
1 7 0 .125 134

-FoolbaiiLeog,.

AME~ANCONFERENCE

Eut
New England
N Y. Jets
Buffalo
Miami
Indianapolis
JacksonvM!e
Tennessee
Houston

WLT Pel
6 2 0 .750
4 4 0 .500
3 5 o .375

PF
187
160
124

PA
114
193
163

W L T Pel
8 0 0 1.00
5 3 0 625
2 6 0 .250
~ 6 0 .250

PF
232
175
120
131

PA
173
11 4
216
196

W L TPei PF
6 2 0 .750 171
4 4 0 ·.500 175
2 6 0 .250 133
2 6
.250 1n

PA
111

North

Baltimore
Cincinnati
Cleveland
· PittSburgn

-t

o

168
171
176

W L TPeiPFPA
Denver
6 2 0 .750 141 98
san Diego
6 2 o .750 248 134
5 3 0 .625 183 169
Kansas City
Oakland
2 6
.250 92 164
NATIONAL CONFERENCE

PA
177
197
238
196

Sundoy"o Games

Miami 3,1. Chicago 13
Detroit 30, Atlanta 14
Washington 22, Dallas 19
N.Y. Giants 14, Houston 10 !
Bu11alo 24. Green Bay 10
Kansas City 31 , St. Louis 17
Baltimore 26, Cincinnati 20
Jacksonville 37, Tennessee 7
New Orleans 31, Tampa Bay 14·
San Francisco 9 , Minnesota 3

2 6 0 .250 133 158
South

SOn Diego 32. Cleveland 25
Indianapolis 27 , New England 20
Open: N.Y. Jets, Arizona, Philadelphia,

I

I

o

Carolina
Washington

7 6 2
6 4 4

. Philadetphia
Dallas
Washington
·
·
:
•

New Orleans
Atlanta

Carolina
Tampa Bay

Chicago

Minnesota
Green Bay
Detro~

!

l
I

4 4 0 ,50() 130 135
3 5 0 .375 162 200
2 6 0 250 162 203

• PRo HOCKEY

I

16 48 53
16 47 48

1

3
4

1
1

19 47
19 38
4 6 3 11 34
( 7 1928

St.lo ui~

Columbus
Chicago

fell

: N.Y. Giants

9
9

Nashville

Detroit

Green Bay at Minnesota, 1_p.m.

Kansas City at Miami. 1 p.m.
'
San Francisco at Detroi1 , 1 p.m.
W L T Pel PF PA
6 2 0 .750 194 144 Houston at Jacksonville, 1 p.m.
4 4 0 .500 206 160 I N.Y. Jets at New .England, 1 p.m.
4 4 0 .500 223 164 San Diego at Ci ncinnati , 1 p.m.
3 5 0 375 162 190 Washingto n at Philadelphia, 1 p.m.
Denver at Oakland, 4:05 p.m.
South
St.
Louis at Seattle. 4:15p.m.
WLT Pet PF PA
6 2 0 .750 198 159 !' New Orleans at Pittsburgh, 4:15 p.m.
5 3 0 .625 167 164 Dallas at Arizona , 4:15p.m.
4 4 0 .500 137 163 Chicago at N.Y. Giants, 8:15p.m.
Monday, Nov. 13
2 6 0 .250 .102 173
Tampa Bay at Carolina, 8:30p.m.
North
'
W L T Pet PF PA I
7 1 0 875 234 100

W L OTPtsGFG...
11 3 3 25 62 47

Cenhl Dlvltlon
W L OTPts GF GA

Uondoy'o Game
Seattle 16. Oakland 0
Sunday.-· 12
Buffalo at Indianapolis. 1 p. m. ·
Banimore at Tennessee, 1 p.m.
Cleveland at Atlanta. 1 p.m.

I

Allanta

39
31
44
39

4 9 0 8
35 ~7
Northwoll Dfvlolon
W L OT Pts GF G...
10 3 0
8 7 1

Minnesota

Vancouver

Colorado
Edmonton

7 5 2
7 6 0
4 7 2

Calgary

20
17
16

14
10

41 27
40 · 38
46 43
38 ·36
34 39

Pacific Division
W L OTPts GF GA

' Anahei m
Dallas
1 San Jose
Los Angeles
Phoeni~

11 0 4 26 53 35
11 3 0 22 43 26
10 5 0

20

4 9 3
4 10 0

11
8

46 34
36 48
38 63

Two points for a win, one point for over-

time loss or shootout loss.

Nattonol ttoc:key Le111ue
EASTERN CONFERENCE

Sunday'•

Gamel

Joel

Bengals
fromPageBl
meeting with their displeased head coach. Their
comments a day earlier had
said it all.
In the past two weeks,
running back Rudi Johnson
has complained ' about
being left out of the game
plan. right tackle Wi I lie
Anderson has questioned
the team 's manhood, and
Chad
Johnson
has
promised big games, then
failed to deliver.
Johnson, the Pro Bowr
receiver, has only two
touchdowns this season,
and was · seething after
being held to four catches
for 32 yards against
Baltimore.
" All you can .do, as an
individual, is go out and
make plays and give your
best effort," Johnson said
expletiveslaced
in
an
postgame intervie.w. "Also,
. you have to be given
opportunities to make
plays. Four for 32 - that's
ridiculous. You ' ve got to be
kidding me.
Lewis said Monday he
had talked to Johnson
about the outburst. but
declined to go into detail.
No one wanted to talk
about Palmer 's Outsofe

machine in the locker room
Monday. lt"s a contraption
he has become fam iliar with
in the past few weeks. Team
doctors have not told him
how long he ' II be out, but
Bodden
is encouraged
because his latest injury
doesn't feel as severe as his
first sprain.
Bodden got hun Sunday
when Browns rookie lines
backer D ' Qwell Jackson
rolled up on his legs while
trying to make a tackle.
Bodden was replaced by
Jereme Perry. wh" was
signed from the practice
squad on Oct. 3 when
Bodden got hun the first
time.
Perry .Played on the oppos

~ite side of Ralph Brown,
who· was subbing for Daven
Holly. He was hospitalized
last week with an midisclosed illness and Browns
coach Romeo Crennel chose
not to activate Holly.
The Browns are already
without cornerback Gary
Baxter, who tore both pine!Jar tendons on Oct. 22
against Denver and is out
·for the season.
Crennel said right. tackle
Ryan Tucker could return to
the club this week.
Tucker is being treated for
an undisclosed illness on an
outpatient basis and has not
been with the Browns for
two weeks . After missing
two practice s, . he playtd

Flops

character outburst after
Chris He nry made no
attempt to catch a desperae
tion pass at the end of the
fromPageBl
game . Henry watched
Chris McAlister intercept (foot) and Brian Urlacher
the pass, then merely hurt his foot against Miami.
touched him with his hands
· So NBC"s marquee game
instead of trying to wrestle this week, Bears at Giants,
the ball away.
now lacks some of its glame
Palmer, who usually our and could lack the two
keep s hi s feeling s under biggest defensive names.
control , yelled aQd ges- · New
York 's
Michael
ture-d at the receiver as they Strahan also has a foot
walked off the field . ·
injury and is out two to four
"We talked·. · we handled
weeks.
it ," was all that Palmer
would say about it.
Washington 22, Dallas
It didn't end there.
19: Blame this one on
Hou s hmandzadeh Parcells and Jerry Jones.
yanked off hi~ helmet and .
Jones brought in Terrell
angrily slammed it to the Owens, who incurred a 15°
ground after the officials
yard penalty for an ends
decided not to call pass
zone celebration by mocks
interference on a ball
thrown his way in the clos- . ing himself falling asleep in
ing
minutes. meetings. lben he dropped
Houshmandzadeh got a 15°. a long, sure TD pass. Then
yard penalty for unsponse Jones held court in the locks
· er room - . is he the coach?
manlike conduct.
Then, Hou shmandzadeh - and talked about his 4-4
refused to acknowledge the. team. two games behind the
Giants in the NFC East.
obvious.
Yes. the ending was
"We're
better
than
Baltimore ,"
he
said , crazy: a missed field goal
"They' re not ~;letter than us. · by Washington 's Nick
They beat us, but they Novak leading to Troy
know they ' re not better Vincent's block of Mike
Vanderj agt's attempted wins
than us.'"
Actually, the Ravens are ning kick, leading to Sean
two games better in the Taylor's return, a 15-yard
standings. And, the gap is face mask call on Dallas'
growing , along with the Kyle Kosier, and a 47-yard
winner by Novak.
gripes.

Hanrahan~

on one..year contracts.

I Agreed to terms' with Rt1P Jerrnalnl van
BuNn, RHP T.J. NaN, RHP Colby Lewis.
I RHP
FeiD&lt; Dlaz. RHP Eduafdo Valdez,

onmi~Jeague~t

-

Ottawa at Attanta, 1 p.m.
Tampa Bay at Pittsburgh, 7:30 p.m.
N.Y. Rangers at Florida. 7 30 p.m.
E~nto n at Detroit, 8 p.m,

_,.._

0

r

0

~Coo-D.C."'
, 12. .... Yadr; 1

saturday. Oct. 21 : D.C. United 1.

New

Gallia

'lbri&lt;O

Sunday. Oct. 29: -'~bot&lt; 1. D.C. UnlleO
1. tie .

I New

County

OH "-'-~

z·

1 2.NRII ' 42
England advances on penal1y kict&lt;s

ARIZONA CARDINALS- Signed LB ' 4-2
Gerald . Hayes to a five..year contract Sunday, Oct. 22: Chicago 1, N$M
eldension and L8 Monty Belsel 1o a one· England 0
year contract Ptaoed LB James Danlng , Sa1urday. Oct. 28: N- England 2.
on injured reserve.
Chicago 1
· 'tRANSA€TIONS
DENVER
BRONCOS-Signed . DT
Demetrin. Veal and LB Nate WebSter to
W1111m Oonta•a
Mondlly's Span. Trwnuctlono
contract extensions.
· .
C ldo.., F&lt;: IMMI 4
NEW YORK JETS- Waived TE Zach , Colorado advances on penatty kicks 5-4
BASEBALL
A_n.._
Hilton. Signed OL Na'Shan ~rd.
S01urday, Oct. 21 : FC Dallas 2. Colorado
BOSTON RED SOX- Named Duane . PHILADELPHI"' E...GLEs-signed DE , 1
I Gustavson, Laz Gutierrez, Tony Guizo, Trent Cole to a Jive-year contract elden· saturday. Oct. 28: Colorado 3, FC Dallas
1 Edgar Perez and Josh Loggins area
sion through the 2013 season.
I 2
HOCKEY
·
scouts; ~ie Romero coordinator. Latin
I America operations; Jose Zapata manNationel Hockey LMgue
'tO' , n 3. CD Cbtyu; use a
ager and Ne!son Paulino bench coach of ANAHEIM DUCKs-Recalled D ian Sunday. Oct. 22: CD C111vaa USA 2,
1 its Dominican SUmmer League team; Moran and LW' Stanislav ChistOY lrom Houston 1
and Rtcard Petit scout tor venezuela.
Portland ot the AHL.
Sunday, Oct. 29: HOUston 2. CO Chtvas
DETROIT
TIGERS-Named
Matt "'lUNTA THRASHERs-Reassigned G USA 0
·
.
Walbeck manager tor Erie of the EL, Tom Dave Caruso to Chicago of the .I.HL
COLORADO AVALANCHE-Assigned
1 Brootcens manager for West Michigan of
COli,_ tel ChllfltiiOI. .
th9 Mictv.rest League, Murray Cook East RW Dawid Svagrovsky to Arizona of the
1 Coast scouting crosschecker and Mike
CHL
Eaolom
Sunday, Nov.
5: New England 1. O.C.
Rojas minor league catching COQrdinator, DALLAS STI\RS~easslgned D Matt
·united 0
TEXAS
RANGERS- Named
Ron · Nickerson to Iowa o11he AHL.
· WashlnQ!on manager.
'
'·
LOS ANGELES KINGS...:Piaced C
Derek Armstrong and LW Jeff Cowan on
w.•m Coufll•a
NetloneiLNg""
CHICAGO
CUBS- Named
Ivan injured reserve. Recalled LW Noah Sunday, Nov. 5: Houston 3, Colorado 1
1 DeJeSus special assistant to ttre manag- Clarke and RW Tim Jackman from
IlLS Cup
, er.
Manchasier of AHL
PJ-IILADELPHIA PHILLIEs-Reinstat.d NASHVIUE PREDATDAS-Rou8igned At Frisco, TeJtas
SS Alex S. Gonzalez from the 'IOluntary F Alexander Radulo¥ to MI'-'Me ol the Sunday. Nov. 12: New England vs.
Hous1on. 3:30p.m.
AJ.iL
1 retired list.

E·DIIII

classified@ mydailytribune.com

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In One Week With Us
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TO Place

against Denver on Oct. 22
but hasn 't been at the team's
facility since.
·
· Crennel said just having
back the popular Tucker. a
I Osyear veteran, will be a
boost for the Browns,
"He was one of the guys
who was elected captain."
Crennel said. "The guys on
the team have a lot of
respect for him and his
knowledge. I think him
being around will be helpful
to a lot of the guys.''
•
If Tucker does return,
Crennel doesn't know how
long it will take him to get
back into the starting lirieup.
"We' ll have to evaluate
where he is in his conditione
ing," Crennel said.
But none of that might
have happened if Parcells
·hadn't decided to go for a 2s
point conversion after his
team took a 6° 5 lead early in
the second quarter. lf he'd
simply kicked and every
thing played out the salue,
the Cowboys would have
been up 20-19 in the final
minute. There would have
been
no
need
for ·
Vanderjagt' s try.
" I go by the chart,"
Parcells said. Come on,
Bill, you"ve never been a
guy to "go by the chart."
and almost all coaches now
know y(lu don't go for a 2°
poi mer early in the game. It
can haunt you later, and .it
did.
One other thing. How
·.much longer will Tuna tole
erate "the player?" Or toler$
. ate Jones, who brought him
in?
Parcells is 65. His facial
expressions
and
his
demeanor say this is his last
year.
.So does going by the
chart.
0

played catch-up all day.
Can't do that against the
Broncos' defense; it leads to
turnovers, of course.
New Orleans 31, lllmpa
Bay 14: The Saints are seris
ous. Consider Marques
Colston making II catches
for 123 yards and a touche
down. Consider Reggie
Bush having II rushes for
minuseS yards. Colston now
has 700 yards receiving,
fourth in the league. At mids
season, who's- the offensive
rookie of the year? The seve
enth-round
pick
from
Hofstra or the second overs
all pick from Southern Cal.
And Drew Brees, signed
as a free agent, went 24sofs
32 for 314 yards and three
touchdowns. Who's second
to Manning in the MVP .
race? Why not Brees?
New York Giants 14,
Houston
10:
Mario
Williams had another sack
for the Texans and now has
4 1/2 in his last five games.
Maybe the Texans weren't
so dumb after an when they
chose him No. I over Bush.

Denver 31, Pittsburgh
20: A simple stat · explains
Detroit 30, Atlanta 14:
why the NFL will hav.e a
new champion this season. .Michael Vick, · seven TD
Pittsburgh now has · 24 passes in his previous two
turnovers, one more than it games, threw for 163 yards
had in 16 games last year. and had two interceptions
Six came Sunday, when the and one TD. Yes, he ran for
· Steelers went down 14s0 in 80 yards, but produced just
less than four minutes and two TDs against one of the

Dhlo VOlley •
Publllhing I I I I WM
1110 llgllllo edit,
lljlcter- any
8CIIIanydmo• .
Muat

.. 1110

·normalcy with as few as
eight players, including
~alksOns, avaiJaJ5Je for pracs

nee.

"'Ibere 's no question trom

a basketball perspective
we' ve taken a major blow
and it's going to be a major
obstacle to overcome,"
Everhart said.

'Iliis season's tournament
will end in the Georgia
Dome, and it's a safe bet the
Final Four teams will come
from the power conferences.
It never will be a sure thing
again. though, after George
Mason's run last season that
included wins over former
national champions Nonh
Carolina. Michigan State and
Connecticut.
A team from the Colonial
Athletic Association, a mids
major confermce, made its
way into what had be the
realm of the sport's power
leagues.
1be midsmajors will never
be looked at the same.
'

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NFL' s worst defenses, 1be
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team. Or a mediocre team.
Kansas City 31, St.
Louis 17: Herm Edwards
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Os2 start, although they play
in a division with Denver
and .San Diego. No wonder
that every spring the Chiefs
try to get the owners to
expand the playoffs by two
teams.
Damon Huard,
who
started all five wins, threw
just 15 times against St.
Louis on Sunday, but had
three TD passes. · That's II
TDs and one interception
for the season, second in
passer ratjng only · to
Manning. Edwards says
that when Trent Green
recovers from his concuss
sion, he' II be the starting
QB . Green, who like
Huard was a career backup
until he · finally got a
chance, is likely to remain
injured for a while.
Huard and the Chiefs are
the perfect symbols of this
year's NFL.
With Green hurt. tackle
Willie Roaf retired and a
historically weak defense,
they were expected to be
mediocre. Right now, they
are better than that. ·
For this week, at least.

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Soaring·

to end the season and put
Wahama into the postseason
. where they have · had no
shortage of success over the
fromPageBl
years,
.
. Now all that is left is for
County and a dominating Wahama to continue its
40s 18 homecoming victory streak when Notre Dame (7°
over rival Buffalo.
· 3) travels to Bachtel Stadium
.Then came the stretch that for a Saturday afternoon ron$
would determine just how test. And with the quality
strong the White Falcons teams the White Falcons
really are.
have seen this season, they
First came a matchup with should be ready for anything.
Matewan and the highly
Satwday's contest will be
toted running of Paul the eighth playoff appear·
McCoy,
but
Wahama ance for coach Ed Cromley,
knocked him down in a 31° who is in his 12th season at
12 win to spark a string of the helm of the White
struggles for the Tigers.
Falcons with a record of 87 ·
The White Falcons then 46 (:528), including two final
met up with fellow playoff four Class A finishes.
bound team Parkersburg
Wahama 's will host Notre
Catholic and cruised to a 27 ° Dame I ;30 p.m. Saturday at
6 win followed by an easy Bachtel Stadium. Gates will
27sJ3 win over Wut County open at noon.

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ca,;:,::;... (7!2~ To446~~42

Coo--

per. Knight stayed true to his Temple after compiling 741
"Chances are those guys because there's not."
would have been firsHo)Jnd
florida will be trying to be ways by suspending his best wins in 34 seasons. He's
draft picks," Florida coach the fir st repeat champion player. Jarrious Jackson, for replaced by Fran Dunphy,
Billy Donovan said . "But since Duke in 1992, and the not maintaining academic who won 10 Ivy League
fromPageBl
they came back for the right team expected to be its main standards. Jackson returned championships. three Big 5
reasons, and I think they challengers are UCLA and to practice Sunday. but his · city series titles and · went
Florida wasn ' t a team
to be celebrated for LSU - both of which were status for the season opener 310°163 in 17 seasons at
many expected to win it all need
in the Final Four last season on Saturday night against Penn.
what they· ve done." ,
last season, having lost its
as well as Kansas, North Sam Houston State remained
Cremins, who won 324
It shouldn 't be the players
starting backcoun when
Carolina,
Pittsburgh
and
unclear.
games and led Georgia Tech
doing the celebrating, howe
Anthony Roberson and Man
Ohio State, a team just the . The irnpendins record dido to one Final Four before
ever.
Walsh opted to leave early
n't change Kntght's ways retirin~ in 2002. returns to
"lt"s the pinnacle of a pros opposite of the Gators.
for the NBA. That left three gnim when you get to the
The Buckeyes had what and it won 't affect his plays coaching this season at the
sophomores as the core of point. But for me, my focus was considered the nation's ers.
College of Charleston.
the team that was wasn't
·
best
recruiting
class
led
by
7;
One
of
th~
coaches
Knight
Bozeman is the new coach
needs to be on this season
ranked at ti}e start of the seas . and what's going on right foot I Greg Oden. who will will go against in the Big 12' at Morgan State, returning in
son.
now." he said. '"If our guys' not be available until January this season is Huggins, who the fiTSt season he is eligtble
A 17 ?game winning streak minds are flyin~ around at after offseason wrist surgery. returns to the bench at after serving an eightsyear
to open· the season brought 30,000 feet. thmking that
Knight needs 10 wins to Kansas State after sitting out ban from the NCAA over
them to the country's attens they· re the best thing since reach 879 for his career and last season follow ing his dis· recruiting violations when he
·tion and the Gators ran , shot sliced bread and w alking tie former North Carolina missal after 16 successful but . was the head coach at
and defended their way to a around with that kind of aJTOs coach Dean Smith for No. I stonny seasons at Cincinnati. California.
No. 3 seed and a title run. gance. I guarantee our team on the allstime list in men's
He is one of six new
But perhaps no one haS a
Most people thought Joakim wi ll be humbled very, very college basketball. Knight coaches in the conference, tougher comeback road than
Noah, AI Horford Corey quickly. But m the same will pass Smith ·s Di vision I including Sean Sutton, who Duquesne. Five Dukes plays
Brew~r ·- three of Florida's time, I don' t want them to mark with his II th victory.
replaces hi s father, Eddie, ers were shot in an on-camOne of the most controvert who retired from Oklahoma pus incident in September
top scorers and its top three lack confidence. I don't want
rebounders would be them to play in fear. I don't sial coaches in the sport's Statt;, two wins shy of 800 in ~d the program will spend
heading for the NBA
Its first season under
want them to think there's a history for his success. his 36-year career, •
integri
ty.
and
yes.
that
ternChaney
retired
from
Everhart trying to return to
Not so.
big targe t on our back

Florida

Coi....ICI Stw;llfttwll
(1Wo-lot 'II 'I
llclcn - )

I RHP John Hall. RHP Winston ,t.breu.
I RHP Jim Mograne, LHP Mika Blcsik,
RHP Billy WMe, RHP Chris Michalak. C
· Juan Brito, C Danny Ardoin , INF Joe
I Thurston. INF Alejandro Machado, OF
Darnell McDonald and OF W~ Lydon

Browns suffering through more injuries
BEREA
(AP)
Cornerback Leigh Bodden's
second high ankle sprain of
the season has put a bigger
strain
on
Cleveland ' s
stretchedstOs the-! i m its
defensive secondary.
Bodden, who missed two
games earlier last month
with a badly sprained right
ankle, is likely to miss a
couple more games after
injuring his ·left ankle in the
first quarter of Sunday's
loss to the San Diego
Chargers.
"Ifs frustrating and disaps
pointing," Bodden said.
"because I had finally gots
ten back out there."
Bodden carried around a
p&lt;&gt;nable electrical stimulus

.....,...._- ,...,.,._

' -tovich. RHP Tim Redding and RHP

- Sentinel -

CLASSIFIED

PRo SoccER

I terms wittliNF Josh Wilson. OF Mlohael

. -IOodoy'so-o

TampaBav
· 7 7 1 15 50 44
Florida
6 7 2 14 41 49
WESTERN CONFERENCE

Carolina
·1

Dlvlolon
L OTPts
4 1 15
5 1 15
6 1 ~5
6 2 14
10 1 7

S o u - Dlvlllon

I Denver 31 , Pittsburgh 20
1

WASHINGTON NATIONALS-Agreed to

Buffalo 4, N.Y. Rangers 3. OT
GF GA I
Monclay'IGamel
Atlanta 5. Boston 3
41 33
Washington 4, Ottawa 3, OT
32 38
Toronto 4, Philadelphia 1
50 51
Tampa Bay 5, N.Y. Islanders 1
38 45
29 57 ' Vancouver 2, Dallas 1
Anaheim 3. Pi1tsburgh 2 . OT
NonhiHt Divlllon
Tllelday"loW L OT Pts GF GA
Carolina at New Jersey, 7 p.m.
Buffalo
12 1 1 25 63 39
Edmonton at Montreal, 7:30p.m.
Toronto
9 5 3 2158 57
Los Angeles a l Colontdo. 9:30p.m.
Montreal
7 3 3 17 43 '37
Dallas a1 Calgary. 10 p .m .
5 •7 1 11 40 34
Ottawa
Minnesota at San Jose, 10:30 p.m .
4 6 2 10 32 48
Boston
AUonttc
W
PlltSburgh
7
New Jersey
7
N.Y. Rangers
7
N.Y. Islanders
6
Philadelphia
3

-1
I

The Daily Sentinel • Page 83

r~~~

II

0

1

4 Bodroom- 2 -

·..

L~ARN

TO DRIVE

www.comiCI.COift

Complete Car ·

Cleaning
' FINt.NCING AVAilABLE"

~-------

• JOB PLACfMENf' '

Caregiver to sit ~ elderly
Overbrootc Aeri'ab· Genter,
woman 2-3 times a· week in 333 Page St., Middleport,
ALUANCE
home .. ReferenCes &amp; experi·
Ohio, 45760. will be holding
TRACTOA·TAAILEA
ence required. (740)441 an
STNA
closs . In
TRAINING CENTERS
16n.
November. Hours wiH be
6pm. Tul1&lt;ey giveeway every Training 1"1 Wytheville, Virginia lii!!~~~~;;ji!!~IJ Bern-4:30pm. H you are
Doolgn ~2 yr.
interested In joining our dadhour. Jim (JC) Cowan
Auctioneer WVI 1674
1°800·334° 1203
monuflctui10G-.,
lca1ed staft. pleate stop by
_.,_
A·~t~
-. alllllnoMrttCtOrtral~ .com
ex.,... ....nce. u1~ our fron1 offtce Mon.·Fri..
lcn.owledge. Appty •
iam·Spm, and fill out an
· 100WOAKERS NEEDED
application. Full.flme &amp; n....._
2150 Entwn AftAssemble cr8.1ts,
,.....414'• For Solo ............................................ 725
GllllpoHa, ..OhiO or
time JX)61tk&gt;ns IIWilabkt to
WOOd ftems.
llll&gt;mtt ,....,.. 10 SFS
those qualified Individuals
An......-- ........................................... 030
To $480/wk
Truck s.., Inc. P.O.
C0!111lle1ing the class. No
Aport.....ta for Rent., ...,....... , ....••.... , ....... 440
Materials provided. ·
Boz 711, Gallpolll.
phone
calls
please.
Free Information pkg. 24Hr.
OH 45631 .
OverbroDic Rehab. Cenler Is
Auction IIICI FIN Meri&lt;M..•••.....•••••.....••.•..••.080

sign on bonus. 888·288·
9348 e)(!. 14 . (740)418·
1398.

•r=~:;;;-,
flirt A

~-

Opportunlty ......~..........................210
.......... Trelnlng ...................................... l40
c....,. &amp; llolor ~ ........................... 710
c.np1nsJ Equlpl;•;t ........,•. ,.... ~ ..•.....•••...••.. 710
c.rda Cll "lltlinlca .......................................... 010
Cllltdo'Etdertr c... ,........,.•...•......,,.......... 180
E==~lllon

Blleal

E;;.,..,lt for

. . . . . . ,.. . . . ,.. . MO

:.:................................. 480

EIICIIVIIIIIII ..·······-.,······.......,. ...................... 830
F - Equlplllllll.... .......:..................... - ••••••110
. . _ fDr Alnt.....•......•.•.....•••....,.................430
F.-tor Slle .............................................330
Pol' "-••••••••,.•••••••••••••••o••O"Oo•••••••••••••••••••oo•41Q
For Selo,....................................................,:.515
For S.te or T'radi ................~ ........................S10
l'lvlta &amp; ~ .......................,.............580
Fumt.lllll Rooma................. ..........,.,........450
a.-.1 Hlullng ....,..................................... .ISO
CltwMW It ......................................................MO

MO

~ Ads. .••.............,,.,_ .............. ;..............OIO

-·-ota.,.,. . . . ,. . .... .

tt.y &amp; o..tn,., ...........,,... ...................., •.....•

ttetp w. ..............,................................ 1IO
Home

2br, very olea·A, newly Earn $1 00·$200 plus free the drug-tree workplace proremodeled, laundry· room . pictures In one dly. lrMte -""-m_._ _ _ _·~-w/washer, dryer, all kitchen your friends to your home b

po111tca1 organizations

port-limo pooltlon. 2·3 years to wor1&lt; In 1 .stan ·IIICUft M·
experience, proficient In !dentiel environment for
Word / Exceii Accountlng rf)llaa. Must be axperlonced
Software , usage Payroll In mtnu planning . Mut1
Preparation..
AClCOuntl poso
physical
trolnlng
Payable.
' Acco unts requirement Coli 1740)379Reeolvablo, lr)ternat. Sond 9063 bel-n 9-3 mon-1r1.
muma to: TSC31 c/o Ponl
~saantReg'~er200Moln - -- - - - - -

,_

Help wanted at Darst Group
Home, wortc:ing will elderty,
heaVy li1tlng Involved. 740992·5023.

R&amp;J TRUCKING
Leading The Way

Enjoy 1 p-onal
wort&lt; lf1V1ronment u

R&amp;J Tru'*lng ,_Hiring 11
o u r - - · WV

MIU:
....-r

Fu1"11mo

Terminal. For Aegionll
Hauii·Oump Otv. 1 )llllr

•Wookly poylbonul

•Pakl trolnlr"Q
•Pa.ld vacationland

OTR

verffllb4e eJq).

. holldlyt

Coli 1oB00-462·93B510k 1or
_ _ _ _Ko;:.nt____
Rooklprlngo Rahablli11tlon
Contlrlolooklng1oLdediCIIad compa11lono"' S1ato
Tilted Nu~ng Aeslltlnta.
Compo1Hivo
hllhh
.·and dental benefits, and
401K mlllble. we like
pride In our 1aclllty and rool·
dents ond need great loom
playeR to lOin ua. H lfOU

wa-.

Rookoprlngs Rehlbllltetjon
Center, 36759 Rodcoprir"9'
Road,
Pomero11,
Ohio
'
45769. EJCtendlclre Heatth
oe-' - .. Inc. Is an equal
~viUAII

r10

Jk~

.

Orl'olnuNriY

Allrool _

_.,.

r r•• II
Fair -1111 Act"' 1111
lnthll,...

oubloctw1ho , _

- - "lllogol to
iidtutiw "tinY

r

p;ui14UIOII, ltmltltto!' or
dllcrlmlnlillon biMd on

- l l-o l· tollllon,_"'_
arlgln, or •ny Intention to

-""'-

p; ...I'IIIOit llmllltton or

Borrow Smort Con1act
h
Ohio 01 ·· ·
o1

d*rtmlnetion...

1e
Financial

VIIIOn
lnatltution'a
Tllophone
lntervlawor. ~leo
o1 Consumer
l
011•
refl
exoellent computer
com· Affairs IEF .., you
•
municltlon skill&amp;, ttJD·tlme, nance your home or
no bene1111, $10 per hour · obtain 1 loan. BEWARE
after 4 training. $8 of requnts lor any Olrgo
per hour &lt;1Jrlng ·1rainlng. In advance. poyments o1

Thl1 nn•p~per will not
Onowlngly -

adw.,11wn•ntl tor rt~•l
. . - whkm tt tn
Ylolldon ofthlllw. Our
-

w-......,....................

~--...,•• .,..... .,.................................... 005

loc.lttd In Pomeroy, Ohio.
We oft I compettt!ve Alary
at:
ecale, an excellent b8neftt
SFS Truclt-_
paautge and l aupporUve
2150-work
erntlroment.
Gatllpollo, OH.
ln1ereated
candkSates
Nophono-~.
should
opply
to:
RockiPrlngs Rehibllltlt!On
Mag ic, Yea r s- Oay ca re ·
center, 36759 Aookaprtngs
Center Inc. Now taking
0 hio
Pomeroy,
applications lor a Full-Time Road,
45769. Eldendicare Healln
Substnute. Send resume to
Strvlces, Inc. is an ....... 1
20 1
High
St.
Pt.
......,...
opportu nity employer that
Pleasant WV 25550
encou rages
workplace
- - - - - - - - ~ _.,, MJF ON
Retail Mangerial Personnel ..,ve ......, .
Nov
posjlions. Sand resumas to Slgn-ups,6·7pm
~ c/o Galll&gt;olis DaUy 7,8. 9.&amp;10.
BOhr
Tribune. PO Box 469, Underground, 40hr Surface.
G all~is. OH '45631. MU&amp;t Trut* Driver, annual retrain.
ha\18 valid driwrs ltoenee, Class starts Nov ,3, 2006.
auto Insurance and drug test 1st 25 Sign·ups get class
required .
more 1nfo 52-4·7203

-opplyln-

.,. horoby

that o11
-lingo ocllo~loodln
this ,.. r r r .,...
•nlllble 01'1 . , ..,_,

·Consumer

A11alro 1oll1ree at 1-86&amp; '::-::::::~~':'~"~·~
278 -0003 to loam H !he .,c.--~
mortgage brotcer
or ,.."'_' brief~: tri·level . 2 car
~
1 da
18
1
...,.__r
....__ ....._.__,
en r
proper Y attached gsrage, 3-4BR,
ll'IDIKl.ll.-liUr-4
licensed. J'TioW. Is a public
, ......
2ba, wooded 1.3 acres.
seMce announcement 5769 SR 588. (740)4-46·
o.tll~aMI
CoMIIgl
from the Ohio Valley 7157.
(cOr..,. Close To Horne)
PL.t&gt;ishlng Company)
Gall Today! 7~~7.
House and Lot for Salel 3
• HI00-214-0452
Br., 2 Bath home on approx.
-.~reerooHege.oom
~
3 acre. W/new root. h8a1
Accredlt!Ml Member Acc•edltlng
SERvi&lt;:Es · pllmp, S.S. Side by side and
•Council
nd Schooll
.
air filtration. electric he at,
br 12748
lrdepelllitnl
CotiiiQIII --..
TURNED DOWN ON
wl stand by propane 11re

j

. . . fDr Sllo --····································-········550

Plumlllntl &amp; Helllllll····""'"'"'""""·'"·······.... ;....,820

Prul nlunlil Servlc:es ................................. 230

s..-

Auto damage appraiser. FaM
resume to (61 4)471·3648
AVON ! All Areas! To Buy or
Sell. Shirley Spean.. 304·
675-1 429.
-------'-CHRISTMAS CASH: Driver
neededlightdutymuatknow
Mason County cash pay
weekly (30-4}675~

eo.

want to become 8 member
o1 our health cere team.
pleaSe stop by Rockspr1ngs

'

1

L.~------··
SOCIAL SECURITY fSSI?
No Fee Unless We Win!
1:88&amp;-582·3345

ri1.,--l
i li i i i i oo•I
'lloP.mi

FOR SAlE

Rthabllfto1ion Can1er a1 1• 112 St
38 IBeth All
36759 Rocksprings Road,
ory, r.
·

Pomeroy, Ohio 45769 and fill
oul an oppllcotoo 1or thl
plasses.
EIC1endicare
Health Services, Inc. II an

electric, Alvertront property
on Bud&lt;1own Road?, Latart..
Porch &amp; Oed&lt;.
4Q.S4 9
2
_2_53_._ _ _ _ _ _

equal opportunity empklyer 2 bedroom, 1 bath, nice
........1 ..,.......,,,.nACI. wO~"'"ct
u .. .... .......... . _ _
,...,._
starter home.
SH~, 800
••11· -... lty MIF ON
~'"'

·

ll'r------,
11111
Ms:n •APIIXX!

L , .- - - - - - ·

I

o&gt;ML

ntce country

Daytime
(740)388·0000 ,
Evening
(740)388·8017 .
Cell (740)645-6150: 6. 14&amp;

16 wide's to choose from.
For Sale or rent.

1996
1-'xSO mObile home.
3

Bedroom, 2 beth, all electric.
Rent $450 montn, $400
deposh references required.
SAle 1or $13.000. Cell 740992-6878.
Galllpol~

{304)675~9

3 bedroom. 2 battl. wtttt fireplace . ..Ox60 barn . Rio
Grande aru.. on 8 fla t aces.
51 20 .000 . 17401709• 11 66 .

Amos and Son'a Trash 3-&lt;4 bedroom on 2 acres.
Service, FirewooP I Em Owne r financing available.
Hauling. Re.asonab4e Rates. $89,000, $8,000 down
Heap Accepted. (740)388· 5566 .36 mon tn (740)2560371
1&amp;86.

Ferry.

95 Noms

14x80, 3br, 2ba, already
setup or can be moved
$7.900 (304)633-6536
Great used 3BR hOniil only
$9,995. WIU help with dehvery. Call (740)365-7671 .

1-

fMs or lneurance. Call ffie

j

MoBiu:FOR"~

nice Home. Cali for pricing.

II"NNatigattd tha

of

j

2003 16x80, Fleetwooel,
3BR, 2BA. vinyl sidirlg, shin·
gle root. central air included,

ofllring.

ontce

112 acre lot at 130 BulaviHe
Pike.
Gallipolis.
OH
$135.000. (740)446-4782.

shingled roof ,

•NOTICE•

CAU.lOOIIYI

Hln-4134247
.a1230I

In rear. car lot on side. All on

$149.000 080 (304)675·
setting. $57.000. (740)256·
4235 or (304)593-3220
8801.

OHIO VALLEY PUBliSH·
lNG CO. reoommends
1ha1 you do business with
people you know. and
NOT 'to aend money
thrnugh lhe mal untl you

hive

Very nice 3BR , bath,
upstairs. turnished 1BR apt.
downstairs. Furniture store

· kitchen . dining room, liVing 2001 , 16x80, 2acres. tOX16
room, family room,2 car building, applianCes slay,
garage
Price reduced

c.wr

lluelcal ~ ....................,...... -..... 570

....

Eomuptoii,-

House koope ra i L au nd qt opponuntty employer that
encourages
wortq&gt;laoe
&amp;Qu.
Rocksprings Is
dlverolty. MIF DN .
accepting applications for
full and part time houseFlocksprings rehabilitation
keepe~ and laundry aides. Oenter provides residents
We are also accepting with outstanding nursing
resumes for management. cara and rehabilitation eerv·
~ply or send resume to :
Ices helping them return to a
Rocksprings Rehabill1atlon lite of independence at " - - - -- - - Canter. 36759 Rocl&lt;sprlngo home. We currently have Nursing Aaslstant C&amp;aasas
Road, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769 opportunities 1or RN'I and beginning the month of
LPN·s (RN ·s worl&lt;lng 12 November, 2006. 11 you
Local
Manulociuror
hour shifts) 41 our hocll~ enjoy elde rly poople and
looking lor ....do&lt;s.

U\ 111c ck........- ...........................................630
Loll Mil Found •••••••••••••••.•• ••••••.•• ••••••, ......... oeo
Loll a Acrugo ................., ...............;........ 350
Mlecet'-S.. .......................................... )70
11._,_. ..__IM........,, .....•.......540
llalllla HDmo Ropltlr...................................850
Mobile..,_ lor Alnt ...............................420
lloblla ..,_ lor S.le..........•••.•....••,.....,...320
Money to La..n,............................................220
llolorc~Jn &amp; 4
740

Ylfll Site- GllllpOIII.......,............................072

1undralslng can 1or

An ExoeMent way to earn
· ._-:;u.
r., now r·
money. The New Avon.
lng. For applicatiOn end free
goyernornent job ln1o. call
Call Marilyn 304-B82·264S
Amertcan Aoaoc. ot lobor 1·
=~ 913-599-8042. 24/hrs. •ITl'·
seN.
have theae qualifications, Pomei'O'J, Jtart ~mediately,
please
apply
to: call Mark 801J..556-3583

eeo

· YMI &amp;.11 PcaMot/Midclt ......................... 074
Ylfll Site-Pt. PloMinl ............................... 071

FEDERAL

~·

Street Poln1 Pleasant, WV
25550
POSTAL JOBS hi
::..:;:.:,:.._ _ _..:__ _ 515 67-•~ 19'111

' - • • ••• •••••••••••u•••••••••••••••u•••-• ••"' ""' """"130
.._, • OMien Equtpn.~t ......•..•.;............

•••• to Aent ...................................,........ 470

a glamour picture party. Call
1740)525-1163 1or ln1orma·
~on.
Experienced COOK needed

Beauti1ul Ranch Style Home
3114
17~7375.
on 2 112 acres. MUS1
to
L......I::I.:!.::::!:='-..J appreciate.
2br, see
2ba.

We ranew NM membom11ps and make

oppllonces, pantry. gas
heat. CA (304)675-4022
(304)593·5903
"Adc.m.:.in-latr-ot-11111
- -A-sols-ta-nt

2615 112 Jacl&lt;son Ave.
Pt Pleasant, WV

changes in our OO!Jnlrl.

601~~9
I~§R~~Eii&amp;i&amp;l an E.O.E. &amp; a po~nt ol
-------- "

.IIO
ttc~~..-lar ·s.ll ............................................ 310
HtMiehold Oood8 •.....•••.....•••......••..•,•.•....•. 510
- l o r Alnt .......................................... 410
In llz:noa6an,. ............., ............................... 020

Rlldlu, 1V &amp; CB Repllr .•..•....••••..•.. ,............ t50
111111 Ellttlt W....-c1.,................................... 360
Scl-'a tnstructlon .................................... 150
Seld. ~ &amp; Fertltlar .............................. 650
SlluMIOnS w.nllld,. .................................... l20
fDr Rent .......,.,................................... 480
Sportt."1g Oood8 ........................................... 520
SUV"s fDr Solo,....................: ..,..................... 720
Trucka fDr Sole ••••..••....,............................. 715
Uph0tl11ry ...................................................170
y - For Sllo...............................................730
Wwn•d Ia Buy .............................................010
W.Md \U Buy- Form Supplln .................. 620
W.,..... To Do ..., ..•• ,.................................... 110

••
1 1

Join forces with US to
help-brtng about

Arllkl&lt;*·····-····..····.. ····································530

8ulldlnge ............................. 340

Beautiful Home on Cedar St
Wrap·around porch. 38Fl.
1.5Ba, furnished kitchen.
DR. LA . Den. FP, OUI·bulkl·
ing, $118.000 (740)446·
_46_3_9._ _ _· - -- -

e
wash
by , hand
Speech Language patholo~
omplete
wash
job
·gist FT/PT/PRN, Well&amp;1onl jspoiCIIII $5.00 oft. Exterio
Jack9on ...... Exc. salary &amp;
ash job $3.00 oil
benefits. flexible schedule &amp;

CLASSIFIED INDEX ·

.......... -

(740)828-27~0

• CDl TRAINING•

Hsndeison
Community Cen1er
Thursday N9110mber 9111.
6pm. Cash Draw beginning
and end o1 Sale.
Thursday Novomber 16111,

A. Ropltlr .................................................. 770
Auto. lor Slle-...........................................,710
~ &amp; llolots lor Solo ................,. ••,. ..... 750
lultcllng Supptloa........................................550

rnyrnktlweethome.com
Locators

' FUU·TIME CIJioSSE8 '

Auction

Auto P - &amp; A-110.'1111 ......................... 760

S4UJJ
__,_

Ray &amp; Son•a

NEA.Inc.

Now

2006 Clayton sin·

gleiNidls starting at $199.M
per month. Trade-tns wei·
comes. Cell (740)385·2434.
SaOI or rent: 1971 2 bed·
room, gas heat, near Holzer,

Gallipolis. $3.400. remed ~ .
(740)678·2109.
- - -- - - - Still Available ... 1999 t 4x70
Moblle Home, 3 Bedroom. 2
Bath. Located in Cheshire.
$, 9.000 080. (740) 416- ·
4911

i

-:::--:--:--.,

l.ms &amp;
'"--..iAiiCIIFAiiiiiGEiiiitllilr

place and outside s1orage ·
building. tn pri'llate setting, 6/~q o1 acre. 106 TeKas Rd .,
located on Forest Run Gallipolis. Call (740)532·
Road. Racine. Ohk&gt;. Call 7723 or (740)237-00n.
740·949·2658

~nly).

(evemngs

Mobitl Home Lot tal' rent
near Vmton Call (740}441·
Log Home · sale or lease. A 111 1
Br . 2 112 balh. 6 acres. - - - - - - - pond , Crew Road. $260,000 Mobile Home lo11n Johnson
. 816-669·0758.
Mobite Home Par1t: in
- - - - - - - - Gallipolis.
OH. Phone
Prime property 00 4 corner (740)446·2003 or (740t"6·
lot5 in Syracuse, Oh, gbrealt 1409.
nelghbOrhoed. well
u11 -----~-house wl5 rooms &amp; bath
Trallar lot for rent 100x100.
upstairs and family room $100 8 month 1304)675·
with brick fireplace / bu~ 4874
stove insert and bedroom 1n llr-=~-=~--,
EsrA'JE
finished baSement. house
n 1.._1L,_..
hlili hardwood floors &amp; 1.~--•"iiiiM
ii"iii
~. . .
beautllul WOOdwork. kttchen •
appliances buitt 1n. patiO and Need to sell your home ?
screened &amp; glassed sun· Lite on paymentS. divo&lt;ce.
porcn, shade &amp; lrutt tree&amp; . JOb transter or a death? I
&amp; berriei, reason· can buy yow hOme. All cash
ably priceD. SO's John and quid&lt; doemg. 740-4 t&amp;
VanMeter, (7.-0)247·2229
3130

j

"apes

REAL

�Tuesdly, November 7, 2006
ALLEYOOP

r

•

www.mydallysentlnel.com

The Daily Sentinel • Page B5

ACROSS

Phillip
Alder

740-985-4180

12

•RENTALS •SALES
•SERVICE •FREE DELIVER\!
•MONTHLY OXYGEN VISITS

N
•
•

t

Weill
• Q6
• K QJ t

MONTY

rfamihJ ··l31d8:1

·t
•

&amp;· MEDICAL EQUIPMENT

•

$450/dop. You handle utili·
ties, we handle ya.O wo11&lt;.
~o pets inside or out.
•2&amp;3 bedroom apartments
' (740)446·3870
•Central heat &amp; AJC '
a ·BOR • 2 tl2 baths, 2 car
garage, all appliances· dose •Washer/dryer hookup
to Holzer ~ospital. $750 •All electric· averaging
$50·$60/month
; month. (740)441-0310

"Middleport's only
Self·Sior•p•

trash

(304)882-3017

~

llf1fl

PAYMENT"

: grams for you to buy

New je UW rumthut
291 Lincoln Street Middleport. OH

very nice n8'Niy remolded 2
be:droom
garage
apt
washer,
Dryer
•&amp;

Kim BW-Owner

Manor
and
Riverside
Apartments in Middleport.

; • Less than perfect credit From $295--$444. Cal 740• accepted
992-5064. Equal Housing
' • Payment could be the Opponunities.
: sarile as rent.
-"-----~· Mongage
Locators. Immaculate '2 bedroom
(740)367..0000
apartment in the country.
For Rent :l&gt;r, House, base· New carpet &amp; cabinets,
mont. fenced in bad&lt;yarO, lreshly painted &amp; decorated,
near SChool. $500/month WID hookup. Be&amp;Uflful coun·
call (304)675 _4061 _{Setty) try senlng. Must see to
or (304)675·3165
appreciate. $399/mo. No
pets. (6t4)595-n73 or 1Pretty 3BR House tor Rent. 800.. 798-4686.
•
Cedar Str. Central Heat/air, In Gallipolis, dean, upstairs,
9
FP. S6 5+Util and dep. Call 2 bedrooms, 2 bath, dish(740)446-4639.
10
5500
washer, W hookup,
·
·
·
te
Roomy home· 10 min. frttn depos1t,
re ranees.
( 40"'"
hospital, extra clean. new :..7__:,.......
__
-9209
__
· ___
Ref
&amp;
carpet. No pets.
deposit $500 per nlo. Large 2nd ftoor ~~nt.
2nd Ave, 1 -rqom,
1740""'·2801 .
""'
screened back porCh, no
· ed . 5300
Smal 1 bedroom hom&amp; on pets, newly pe•nt
. .Linootn Street, Middleport. monthly, water!l:rash .'"cld '
304-576-2000.
all electric. soc.deposn
required . . Call (740)446·
M&lt;BLE lb.tl;s 2928.
POIIRENr • . N
2BR
rt
t5
ew
apa men ·
1BR furnished mobile homo. Washer/dryer
hookup,
stove/refrigerator included.
Private
lot
wlcarport. Also, units on SA 160. Pets
Ref/dep required . $400 mo.
Welcome! (7&lt;t0}441·0194.
(7&lt;t0}446-4782.
-~-"---'----- .
Nice 2 bedroom apt. stove,
2
14 70
2
" bedroom, bath, K
refrigerator, paid water,
450
newly remodeled. $
washer/dryer _ h6okup,
450
month,
$
dep.
o
slt,
In
Centenary
Gallipolis. Call (302)682·
·Rd · No pets ·
(740)446·9442 after 5;00.

I

i

71 4

~~~1.------

2 bedroom, AIC, porch &amp;
awning. Very, very nice, no
polS. In Gallipolis. (740)448'
2003, (740)448· 1409 or
(740)446-21&gt;92
, 3 Br. trailer, 1 112 bath.
Asking $425 per month plus
dopos~ 740-243-5811 ask
for J.R.

r

·--f.iiORiiitilb:NTiiiii--'

t and 2 badroom apan·
moots, furnished and unfur·
nished. sacurlty deposit
required, no pets, 740-992·
22t8.
-------1 bedroom upstairs apt.
beside Washington School.
$400/mo.$300/dop. No pets,
off street parking. Water
iocludod. (740)446·3870
2brapts 6 milesfromHotzer.
, Water,sewer,trash included.
', $425/mo•dep. 682·9243or
. 968.£130

r:~~~;:J

Thompsons Appliance &amp;
Repeir-675·7388. For sale,
re-conditioned automatic
washers &amp; dryers, refrigera·
tors, gas and tNectrlc
ranges, air oondillonals. and
wringer washers. Will do
repairs on majOr brands in
shop or st your homa.

i

Ii

1,;,------··

--

LlvFsmac.

*KIEFER · BUILT *VALLEY
*BISON *NORSE a UVESTOCK TftAILERS *LOADUAX
*GOOSENECK,
DUMPS
&amp;
UTILITY
"ALUMA · 'ALUMINUM
Poodles, Tea-cup &amp; Toy, tiny TRAILERS *B&amp;W GOOse.
Chihuahua. male. Snuggle NECK
HITCHES.
your lap babies Into tho holl- CormldiMI
Equlp-.1
days. (740)446·9428
f!44&amp;:2412

Ir

AI\~

~

MUSICAL
INs11lUMENTS

- -·

I

Allatla Hay call after 5;00 pm
Casino keyboard CTK·59t (304)675-2443
wntl Slsnd. $100. (740)367.- - - - - - - - H•
0
lctu
13x17
of-5041
.
· ave P r
u"'
Hay tor Sale BOO·Bales:
35th
president
John
I
Square bales, Alfalfa &amp;
Fitzgerald "Jack" Kennedy Fender Bass Guilar, wamp
and brother R~ Frards (304)675·8859
OrcharO grass, 3rd culting,
never wet Taka all or part.
"""""'' Ken'"""' , .....,_
_,
~, ......--FIUJITS &amp;:~
$t .65
Bale
Phone.
on
same ..picture,
nice,
v~~·D•
75
1
304
5086
'"'
~-~·~
( 16 '
52 000
(7
-.,....r,
.
56
Kiwi ond Tumipa, Virgol's
MI!DIIAMillS
Berry Patch, East of
AUIDi

j

MotaiANDisE

I~e::acuso=:;.·----~ riO
~

FOR SALE

riO.

40Qe)( runs great with

-g...

I'OR SAlE

~ ~8

-------For s~~
o~ c-•~= HD ·-·it
~"~
black, lowered 2", tots of
. chrome, some extras.
$10,500 or 090. Call for
more details 740·992-6878.

j

I

I'------··

"NAnl\fiable~

2006

Cars!
Police
F
Impounds from 5500 I or
listings BOD-559-4086 M3901.
$5001

-----~--

Auro
o,_ &amp;:
A~
~

I

304 7~5~-6440:;:;:::~~~lllj:~::.

CAMPDtS&amp;

MmottlloMls

r..,.;liiiiitiiiOiiiiiiiiiil.&lt;

AN' M'l' MONE'I''S

ON YOU!!

Hours
:00AM
• S:OO PM
7
&lt;41 mo. pd
111 1

::;:===~~:::
,T
MLM
·a
a1

qean_ing
. ServJce

New Homes· Decks- Roofing
Siding • Foundations
Sidewaiks
Lowest Prlce~J'
No Job Too Small
1-74o-&amp;98-Q890

·~=

Doberman puppies, AKC,

exce~nl blood line, female
all col- ~~~~~~~~

••u~~~;~
-~
NOTICE TO TAXPAY· year 2006 muat be
ERS
Reference: made In acconlance
5715.17 Ohio AO.IIed w~h s.ctlon 5715.11of
Code
the Ohio ReviMd
Th•
Meigs County Code. Thea com·
Ilooud of Revlalon , _ plolinta muet be flt.clln
compleled Ita work of the County Aud~or•
· toquellutlon . The ,.. Ofllcl on or t.lore!M
return• for ,.. year 3111 dey of lbrch
2006
~Move
been 2007. All complaints
......, .nd the valua- fllecl with the county
lions completed and Auditor will be '-'d
era . open for public by the -rd of
ln&amp;f*'llon In the office Revision In the IMnner
of the Meigs County provided by s.ctlon
Auditor, Second Floor, 5715.15 of the Ohio
CourlttouH, S.Cond Revised Coclo.
sn.t. PonNtOf, Ohio. Morr T. lj'W-HIII
Complaints
aplnat Meiga County oudltor
the volulllons, •• (1 0) 27, 21, 30, 31 , (11)
..,.bllahed for ta• 1, 2, 3 , 5, &amp;, 7

ADVERTISE
.Y,QUR

FOR S.W:

ors,
male
&amp;
.(7.0)669-{)()89

Help Wented

Help W•nted

1980 150 Ford Pick-up 302

eng 4X4, 5 speed. Run's
good $800 DO. 740·742·
3902 .

BUSINESS
JN THE "
CLASSifiEDS
~--~

~

Certification

~RPlATE.S!

r::;::::::::::':"

--r~

[)lto~t-IE.!l-!

:::;;:;;~;~
ACE
TREE1iSERVICE
ConDm
~-

available

at

:BIG NATE

Cowboy
milia
5 Twisted
&amp; Bualnass
VIP

'"

YJadn11d.y, Nov.

Coblo......,

yon""'-~

Athens

It's a, cycle where you can do some
extraordinal)l things just by trying. Now is

'PO!Nif... ~

Polft.IK.

the time to get thoee Innovative Ideas or
inventions you \'a been unable lo promote to the lnarketplace. CI&amp;Yem&amp;ss w~l

~

For mqre information call :
or apply in person Monday thru Friday

ALL ABOUT YOU
'675·1411

Bam - 4pmat:

20% off thru November 20th

304-675· 7400 .

8 Spllnllh

linger

from the

PEANUTS

11ft

CELEBRITY CIPHER

PREVIOUS SOLI.ITION - 'The one thing sure aboul ~itics is that what goes
up comes down and wllat goes down olten COI!les up.' - A&lt;hard M. Nixon

A FIER•(" Wllo\T'S A SUPPER
EXPLOSION, llE
DIS~ DOIN6 ON
F~OM T~E COCKPIT! TilE RUNWA't' ?!

I I PI I 1
GENEAT

Rooldendoi•COI1llllel"doi•Genen1Cunb ......
Painting • Doors • Windows • Decks
• Siding • Roofing • Room Additions • Remodeling
WI/ 031t12 • Plumbing • Electrical 740-W70H 31244
• Accoustic Ceiling
7&lt;10-U~U

new you.

liberat8 yourself from tasks lhal take
streng'tl and muscle, and concentrate on
engaging In activities that call for mental
gymnastics.
AQUARIUS (Jan . 20-Feb. 1 9) - You're
always a resourceful indivklual, but your
ingenuity for acQuiring what you 'want or
need is remartcabty keener th8n usual.
When you're strongly motivated, the
sky's the limit
PISCES (Fab. 20-Meoch 20) - Don,
think you can keep under wraps those
leadership qualities that you have a tendency to hide. At th&amp; least prowcation,
you·• be 11\Sble to keep them from soar·
ing to the surface. ·1
ARIES (March 21-Apri l 19) - Although
you· are usually quite pragmatic, It might
be wlser to pay heed to your hunches at
this time. Those Intuitive flashes you're
lik:el)' to ge~ will be right on ,the mark.
TAURUS (Apri120-Uay 20) - Try to avail
yourself of any Invitation you get where
yOu 'll have an opportunity to meet new
people . An individual among the gather·
ing could tum out to be someone who'll
interest you.
GEMINI (May 21 -June 201 - Break our
of the mold when It comes to your work
and take on a project you'w been reluctant to tackle for fear of failure. You have
the brainpower to do whatever is need·
ed.

,...

SUNSHINE CLUB
•

Tree Service

.s,..,

Top • Remcmal • Trim
Grinding
• Bucket TI'IICk

David Lewis
740-992-6971

CANCER (June 2h.luly 22) -

GARRELD

'
1 JUeT
CHE!CI&lt;W. ..

NOMATTI=,PI

WHAT YOU~I
STYLE. ..

.

CARPENTER
SERVICE

My nci~hborhood bas 8
resident

SEAL IT
CONSTRUCTION
Pointing
Gutters· Decks- FM.

Remodeling
For Fut Courteous
Servit.e
Free Estil!uttes &amp;

V C YOUNG Ill
a:...

Alfonlable Priees,
Call Dennis Boyd

t.:: F

ITo&lt; •

1

"" ' ' • '

'

'I 1

~

) 1,.-- '{ ''

'

t

740-992-1189

'.

(!Touch. Everyone

thinks she spreads cheer
~

wherever she - ·-···- .
, C,..plore th~ chuckle Quoltd

G)

by filling ir. the rninir-o ....ords
you dcvtll&gt;p from )l~p No. 3 below.

&amp; PRII~l

NUM6ERf D

1

lT Tl fiS IN ~QUARf $

E)'
SCRAMU!T:S

11 t610h

Cornea -· Valet - &amp;!try - Ncpln:w - PARENT
Motl1cno friend. '"E1·cry youn~ person siK,uld learn to
takr criticism
'
'

hecau~ · onc

ARLO &amp;JANIS

Sp11lled

discussions may be the order of the day.
You'll find It C!Uite satisfying to eMpress
SOf¥ of your more fervent beliefs, but
you also could learn sornethlng in the
procaas.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) - Should you be
confronted by aome Chlllengaa, you'll
not withdraw. Instead, you'll ttnd them
quite stimulating •nd will ~tn}oy bllng
I'MOUI'CIIUI In ·Order to get tht blbr of
thtni'.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sopt. 22) -You ohould
be •ble to take everything In atriO.
becauee you're cle¥tr enough to tldju1t
to oondttlontt"
Where tnlnga come
out to your •Mntage.
.!BRA (s.p!. 23-0ct. 231- Not only will
you M l'tlmlrklbly adept It juggling lev·
tl'l l pro}ecta, but you'l l •110 be COUrtl•
geoua enough to bi'MIC fi'H of lnhlbitlona
that ueu•lly hold you back.

SOUPTONUTZ

Kooftng • Sjdillg •

HAS
SOMETHING
'-FOR YOU!!

,.

2

CAPRICORN ('Dec. 22 -Jan. 19) -

Cornerstone ·
Construction

1!1\': B

woros bo·

low fO rcrm four simple WOtth.

ntoaty.

FEAII.ING

.70 Pine Street • Gallipolis
446-0007

,

''

lngntdllnl
8o 11Upin6
S2 Slz. .bove
51

(2 wds.)
32 Refs coli
meet
34 Val: h6 54 Prior to

....,! ·

9 Plltce to
.._
10 VIolin pat!

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23·Dec. 21) - To
your credit, .you'll be qutte resourceful in
" handling matters that you wish to bring to
a conclusion . When you apply yourself.
your ckwer ways will wrap things up very

&amp; MEDICAL EQUIPMENT

I•

W&lt;J

50 Custard

A.s a result, you'll find yourself eld:remely
. popular. Pals will be vying for attentiOn

~ •"""".)..:"t"1"'ft~4":....

S!Teet

Point Pleasan~

ollerlng
Billy the 31 Justliko

30

48 Sculplunt
.ncl dance
41 DNdiOclcad

SCORPIO (Oct. 24·Nov. 22) - Vou'll
break down those barrters that usually
hold you back from betng just yourself.

• Home Oxygen
• Portable Oxygen
• Homefill System
• Helios System

••• TilE
Licensed Massage Therapy at

IN leevea
· 21 S&amp;l

411 - . ·
. .toodn

sell.

We Deliver To You!

~

a. 2006

By Bomloo- Oool

IIPillS

171RMidSinlt•QIM6polia,otf

required. Training or one year experience
For more information call :

26511~
'l7 Interpret

7 c.bll

four scrombltd

ToD-~i'rtm;i: reev.~~:~

trw.•Hiutlng•Stii~~J~Qrlndlna

YOUNG'S

Mercy Hands

RcMMI"

4

onllrl
c
-'

~y

~

required. Flexible scheduling.

cOlor ,

25 " King of tho 45

chann.l

38Murky
39 lne brave
mamer

polts
44 Judlclol

T~~::~~, S©"R~lA-~~~s·
GAMI
_ _ __:._ t410o4
CU.Y l. POllAN.:.·_;;.._ _ __
ORearrange latters cf lht

~~:i:[i=~:!~::::~=j

not ,

23 SQuirrel

2 lloilt'l 3 - boK

wave

is now accepting applications for

1011 Vlilnd

r.:::.~
.....

37 "'rinoco
Flow"

K

1-740-992-61%

Pleasant Valley Home Health and Private
assistants.

36

Nlll ·

J:~r.•. 42a-

22 Sign

Boot uppers

anexcuw

WOlD

0

nulling

WORI&lt;.. ~1"\E. FO!&lt;:.

mP~\1~ 1

pW~LL U:'&gt;E. Tfl.t: &amp;5T

Full
details
are
www.brldgotoday.c6m.

NURSING ASSISTANTS
Duty

Pass
All pass

final club.

r
1--

~

$.1W.IW.. ~E.. FROM

rt\OW \::lOE.S TAAT A.FFEt.T~

..

r--=-======-"'

and ,;;;;::.;,
10 go
$500. Call (740)636·1244.

35
East

Monthly Plms

-----c---:-

i

r BRUT~ JUS\ C.N.ll.t&gt;-f\E'S ":!

~;::"';":•:;n~;'"~':-:;:::

I

i

THE BORN LOSER

&amp; ....,.....,
o-~~-~
Daily, "'
~· or
neeN)',

Jtl ·2·11l1

;._pi

' •

.

~~~-

19

w..-. ••

com "*II
40

the•

Dependable
FuUy Insured

18 fl. Hi lo camper, great
~~
condition, w/ refrig, stove ,
Awl--.
oven, micro, furn , AJC, bath,
~aaps 4. Call anytime, ~ no
----~--- answer. !save mossaga will West Shade Barber Shop
t994 Chevy Suburban, 4· return call (740)448-399t .
Owned &amp; operated by
h 1 drl
od 11
Chn's P"~er
w oe
vo, go
res, P/U Truck Camper, fold .
~·
ctaan inside and out $1 ,500
. 17 )TS. experience.
firm (304)675-J295
- n. like naw, only weighs
--~----- 965 lbs. Furnace, Rolrldg,
First Barner Shop on
1994 0ooge caravan , 19'10 Range, Sin~ $1 ,900 Firm _TexasRoadoffRoute7
Econotlne Van (304)576• (304)67~
740·985·3616
2934

j\;s .,

DOWN

. 3t Chlly

by LUll Campos
spade queen. But you cannot draw
Celebrl!y Ci!Nr ~ •• Cf8Uid kom~lltioRsb'j !III'QJS peopil!, put and lfnenl.
' trumps and return to the dummy to run ·1
e...n 1et11r 11
U~~~ 1or ~ro~~~e~.
those diamonds. You need a later
Today's clve: HOJJO/sF
dummy entry. wllich has to be the spade
three. lead a middle spade to the
"DNWZGBWZD · D WOUNVB 'GP DBWRTP
boarO's king and caSh the ace. dropping
a middle spade. Then start the dia·
WZDXD GMOG OTT. GMZ HNNTD DVZ
moods, th-ng ckJbs. East ruffs tho
fourth diamond, but you overrull and
NX GMZ DOWZ DBAZ . " - · KTOSA.Z
lead the carefully preserved spade two
to rummy's three. This ·allows you to
WKANXOTA.
cash the laSI diamond, discarding your ·

A•·-'able
uUI.u

1999 Cadillac Seville LSL. •ri!!\O,..._;.u"""~----,
STOCK TRALERS *LOAD- e~~:cellent condition $8,200 ·
DUM~:!.
SPACE
Ul&lt;8 new, Eleclric Hospilal MAX
'GOOSENECK, (304)675-7961 or (304)675Dlt'ROVD&amp;NFS
t.~--oii'ORiiitilb:NTiii-_.1 Bod. $500 (304)87~132 DUMPS &amp;
UTILITY 1200
'
'
or (304)675-6963
'ALUMA
'ALUMINUM ---~---IIASEIIENT
Commercial building "For
TRAILERS 'II&amp;W CJOOSE. 2000 Ford Ranger Supercab
WATEIIFROoFlNG
Rent" 1600 square feet, oil NEW AND USED STEEL NECK
HITCHES. 4 Dr., 4X4 Auto $6995.00. Uncondltooat tllotlmo !Jlar·
• New Homes
slraet periclng. Great toea· Steel Baams, Pipe Rebar · CarmlcbMI
EqulpmOnt t 999 Chevy SD Ext. Cab antes. Local references fur·
. , Garages
tionl 749 Third A1100uo in For
COncrete,
Angle, (740)446-2412
4X4 Auto $6895.00. River nished. Estoblishod 1975.
Gallipolis. Rent "Negoliat&gt;te" Channel, Flat Bar, Steel - - - - - - - - view Motors, 2 blocks above Call 24 Hrs. (740) 446·
' Complete
Call Wayne (404)456·3802 &lt;lrallng
For
Drains, John Deere tO ft. No Til Drill McDonaiCIS, Pome"''/, Ohio 0870, Rogers easamont
Remodeling
-------~ Driveways &amp; Walkways. L&amp;L for
rent.
Carmichael (740)992-3490
Waterproofing.
Downtown
Commercial Scrap Metals Open Monday, Equ~eni (740)448-24 t2 . - - - - -- - Retail space for Rant. $400/ Tuasday, Wednesday &amp; - - - - - - - - 2001 Chevy Blazer, very - - - - - - - month.
Upstairs Office . Friday, 8am-4;30pm . Cloood John Ooere Mint Excavator/ good condition , loaded . Mr. Rx It: Complete hom&amp;
Stop &amp; COf!ipare
Suites for Rent $1251 month Thursday,
Saturday
&amp; Tractor Losdor Backhoe/ 5-4,950 . (304)675·7998 or remodel ing, all major &amp; '~~••••••'
you pay the Utilities. Call Sunday. {140)446-7300
Skid Steers. Carmichael (740)«1-8.241
minor repairi around the ,..
(703)528-o617
Equipment (740)446-2412
house. 24hr. Emergency
Now wocid cool&lt; stoVe, never - - - - - - - - 20Dt
Plymouth
Neon, Service (304)674-6538
had a fire 1n it. Cost $1 ,995, New John Deet'e Compact&amp; 64,000 m11es, 4 cyl., auto,
6 lids. hlgl1 back. wlwarming and 5000 Series Utility trac· $2.900 090. (740)256-1233
MoluullloME • I
ovens, water tank, white tors 00% Flxtd tor 31
'I'RtJo\s
lb.PAa
' .
"----~~
porcelain w/nid&lt;:el trim. month• through John
SAlE
$1 ,500 (304)675-2508
Deere Credit Carmichael
FOR
2 bedroom, 1 bath, ll&lt;!'My
For sale : Antique furniture .
E 1 nt (740\.d"~ 2412
led c1osa
1
Wall , Mount Vent Free QU pma
,.-..·
•
romodo '
to town, g.
(740)245·5165 or (740)645- - - - - - - - 2001 ForO F150 Super Crow ya.O. vary private. Call lor
7965.
Natural Gas 'Hea,ter $80 auallty JOhn Deere Hit)' FX4 4X4 RarS King Aai'\Ctl appointment
( 40}«t7
- - - - - - - - ii
(304;p)6;,;7.;~.;;;,;36;;.._ _..., Equtpment for less-round Edition. 4.11 the QPiions + 9972 _Referenoes &amp; deposit
26 Yean Experience
Stcwe, refrigerator and mis~
balers, square baklrs &amp; NNI tires &amp; Syn. OiL LOW required . $450imonth. water
ce,l laneous hOusehold turnl·
POll c ... .,.
mowet" conditioners 04.7% m606211es. $17,900 (a&lt;M)n3· Included.
lure nems. 740·992.0031 or L~---iiii""""i;;:O.,_.j Fixed for 48 months throug,
740-416·7254.
~
.
'
- - - - -- - John
Deere
, Credit.
Used Furniture Store, 130 1 male, 1 female Chinese Carmichael
Equipment 97 Chevy 5·10 reg . cab. V6,
Sha Pa'1 lor sate 3
old
ut AC 94k m'les
$3 500
8 0
1
'
Bulavllle Pike (7-40)«6r'
yrs. · (7 40 ~412 ·
'
'
'
·
Ca" (740)645-7009.
:::---. (740)446-t663.
4782, Gallipolis, OH. Hrs 11· - - - - - - - 5 IM-S) We bu- used mat· AKC 0 ~-- T .
shols
4x4

pr8 ;;;;;u;-l

.....

33 lyrtc pDHt
34 Forward&amp;~

Walch

winder
15 Jockpot

eros..,.

1

Your thrsa clt.t&gt; losers must be discarded
on dummy's diamond wtnners. You must
also find an opponent with the doubleton

Rick- Jr.· OWner

1990
Pontiac
Sunblrd
ConvertitlJe' . Bladc-126,000
mlies • $ 1, 100 or Bast offe r·
Call 74().992 _1082 .

buy (hyph.)
HI-tach
ICIIII

Hornefs

Avallablt
Nerf Bars, 03 Chevy
ColoradO El&lt;1, cab, tactory;
like new. . $250 Firm

Trenamlt1ed 13

60 Ave.

ues.

I. Lo_,..,..,,,u

• lots of extra's · 3,800 74o-

dltion $300 (304 )675-2508

r

r«J4 WHmDS
MoroRcvaD'

~

6ft, WICI&lt;or Swing, good con·

4o)m· ;6

2000 Chevy Silverado reg.
cab, 4.3 automatic, 4x4,
Short bed, Reese hltOO. nurt
bars, al001. wheets with new
tires, 72,700 miles. $9,500.
(740)379-9885 or (740)6455402.
· •

. .~~--&amp; I

fl.(

• --

H1 ll s Self
Stmage
29670 Bashiln Road
· Racine, Ohio
45771
740-941-2217

Full blooded Australian
Shepherd puppies. Reds, tr·
colors &amp; red merre. Farm
family
raised
$150.
(740)446-4228.

1997 Longaberger Hamper
Ba kot ith protecto and
,
s
w
r
lid. EMcellent condition. Commercial buildiRg "For
$300 (304)675-6822
Sole" t 600 square taat, off
street partdng. Great locaBody by Jake ABscissor tioo! 749 Third Avenue in
exercise machine. New Galipolis· Price -·Condltoo. (740)339-2237
Now roof! Motivated Sollorl
Call wayne (404)456-3802.
Twin Rivers Tower~ accept· Candy vending machine for
ing applications for waiting sale. Non-electric. G.ood
condition. $t50 080. Call
list for Hud-subslzod, 1· br,
apertment, call 675.£679 (740)446-2342 ext. 26.
~~;...~~;..;.;--,
Equal Housing Opportunity
FARM
JET
"~--~
AERATION MOTORS
"--oi"""'iiiii.........,iiiiito'_.l
Upstairs 3 rooms &amp; bath.
pertially lumlshod. No pets. Repaired, Now &amp; RelluiR In "
Reference
&amp; · deposit Stock. Call Ron Evans, 1· 'KIEFER BUILT 'VALLEY
required. (740)446-1519 . 800;5-37-9528.
'BISON "HHRSE &amp; LIVE-

3 rooms &amp; bath , stove,
refrlgerator, utilities paid.
Downstairs, 46 Olive St.
. $-&amp;50 ' month, no pets.
: (740)446-3945.
· Apartment for rent, 1·2
· Bd
odeled
rm ., rem
• new carPet. stove &amp; · frig., water,
sower, trash pd. Middleport.
.. 25 00
No pets
Rei
74Q.643-sie4
. tresses. Call ""·'

;ui~ed

I

BARNEY

i
I

3BR, 2ba, dlllwide, no pets
rei. required . Close · to
RV.H.S. $475 month, $475
d~. (740)367-7025.

APAKIMIM'S

••

740-79+97!1
7441-367-7442

pro· Gractous.llving. 1 sind 2 bedyour room apmnments at Vilta~ ' - . . -

' horne instead of renting.
; • 100% financing

.,.

Outlet

IOihorN

Metro NoZI 59

Bridge Today arrives monthly not In your
mailbox but In your lnbox - tt Is aant by
e-mail. SO, buy a ring binder and some
loiJse.taal paper, and away you go.
Tile content ~ aimed at duplicate play·
ers, but there are Instructive sectlons In
addlllon to tournament ropons .
This deal, de$Cribed by Pamela
Granovenar, editor Mmfthaw's INHe, was
teksn lrom Terence Reese's bool&lt; called
'llaster Play" In tho Untted Stotss and
"Tho Expert Game" In Britain. You are
South, in lour spades. West lasds tho
heart king. You duck, take tho hoart·jack
continuation with your ace, and play your
&lt;Iamond. Wast ju"'4&gt;S In with !'Is ace,
cashes the heart queen, ahd exits with a
club, COYered by tho queen, king and
ace. N-ng tho rast of the trtclcs, how
would you oontiooo?
North opens 'with one no-trump, promls·
tog 15-17 points, ond South rnakas an
otd-lashlonod 111reo-spede jump to show
a five&lt;ard sun with Bl loaSI game val·

OPEN

FoiRent: 121B.1f2HoggSt

28

From the-mail
to the Internet

All Calls Returned ·

Klmmy's Furniture

;_
9_10_1_
. - - - - - - Dishwasher 1 year lease No .
,
AMnttonl
pets References required
, Local company offering "NO Call675-4030 for application
' DOWN

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

740-992-5458
Leave Message

992-3194
or 992·6635

Pass

58 Comm~d

24 Souwnlr

A I 54

Opening lead: •

GOOD lOCATION
IN MIDDlEPORT

10x10x10x20

•Owner pays w~er, sewer,

. 3644.
. 4bedroomhouse1 .5miles
• from Holzer. $750 monttl,
~ references and security
, deposit required. (740)388-

Middleport. OH

57 Billting
malal'lll

30G,..n

, Wool Nordt
I NT

3•

17 NoniiRNI
18 Once
21

Dealer: North
Vulnerable: Neither
S..tb

combol

56 Very, to
Yvatte

n....ed

JB742

•

55

20-V«e

• A72
• 3

70 Pine Street • Gallipolis
740-446-00071bll Free 877-669·0007

rhrof
o.vcll'llme
BN[Ion, In

53

1&amp; Lemony

111te

Soul~

FOR SALE
MillEY'S
IDFSTIUIE Building With Or
97 Beech Street
Without Business

EllmView
Apartments

13 Trtg fiJncllon
14 Many ulot

East
• 10 g s
• 963
• 9' 2
• KJ 97

A875
10 6 2

50 "Vogue"

u-a

chllrge cord

11-07-o&amp;

AK3
10 I 5
K Q J 10 6
Q3

•

'

~ 3IIR home· SR 554, Bidwell·
.. SS751mo· .sec. dep. refer·
~ enoes, all elec. f7 40)446-

47 lh•lcall
Mra.

8 b t to fiN 48 SuMce

for you"
Interior Only

: rat. (740)245·5378.

numeral

4 RcMid f811y

11 Augmom

"'Iilke the p8ln out
p~~inling·iet us do it

: 3 bedroom home, 1 acre, 5
~ mi. S. of Gallipo~s. Sec. dep.,

41 Mllglvlnga

43 ukiN•dim

1 Sundlol

t:::::::::~J!~~

Apt. for rent 2 or 3 Sr.. No
Pets. 740·992-5858.

2 bedroom house, White
'. Avenue.
$450/mo,

NEA Crosaword Puzzle

BRIDGE

A Hidden "Tteasure. Largest
apartments in the area.
Newly renovated, brand new
$t~l 4 Bodroom HUOI everything, starting at $425
4% down. 30 yea,. 0 8%. Call today before tMy ere all
For listings 800·39t ·5228 gone.
Laurel Commons
. Old F254
Apartments (304)273-3344

~aT was f'tr&gt;BI!BL.'I
...,., F!lLlLi...

da". UICI'. will be a PARENT."

�•

•

•

•

Page

'

B6 • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

Bucks sunive, hope

Tuesday, November 7, 2006

Gizmos and Gadgets is created by Michael Underhill

I

Redwomen close out
season with solid victory

they have learned from
· their close call, Bt

at Mountain State, B6

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

ami the only
one who worl&lt;s
.round here

Meigs voters give Strickland 69 percent of vote

SPORTS
Micro slots&lt;D in the containment suit®allow the hungry
Piranha to remove unwanted stubble from the toughest
beard, with asmooth chewing action. Smooth
as the slick side of atadpoles·tail. ·

The environmentally
safe way to shave !
To advertile ill tbls 8p8Ce Clll
The Dally Sentinel

992-2155

Gizmos ~ 6ad~ets

CLISIIRDID

HIDDEN !N THE CLASSIFIEDS

• This year's 'Newt'
has special twist.
. See PageB1

Brian J. Reed/photo

OBITuARIES

FISHMATIC SHAVER

J.

Dann for Attorney GeneraL
D~rnocrat Charlie Wil son
also carried Meigs County
POMEROY
-When · in his bid to succeed
Governor-elect
Ted Stri ckla nd in the U.S.
Strickland
ran
for · House. He defeated Chuck
Congress in
19'!2 , H Blasdel and carried the Sixth
Rep ubli ca n friend told him Congressional District. ,
he co uld neve r win Meigs
State
Re p .
Jimmy
County.
On
Tu esday. Stewart. R-Albany, won in
Me igs County voters g a ve Meigs County over Debbie
Strickland 69 percent of Phillips. an Athens City
the vole, he lpin g elect Council
member
who
Ohio's first Democra ti c relied . heavil y
on
governor in 16 years.
Strickland's e ndor se ment
Strickland ha s been pop- in her campaign. At press
ular in Meigs County since time, the race for the 92nd
he was first elected to the House District haq not
Congressio nal sea t, wi.n· been settled.
ning every election here .
In the only contested counHis popularity with Meigs ty race, Democratic County
County's independent e\ec- Commi'ssioner
Mick
torate also 'g ave his fellow Davenport was easi ly reDemocrats a boost . All but elected. by a 63-percent marone Democrat on the state gin ·and
4,758
votes.
ticket won in Meigs R
bl'
E
E s
Counry yesterday. Only
epu tcan mest . pencer
received 2,823 votes.
State
Auditor
Betty
Local unofficial results,
Montgomery,
a by race, were:
Republican. carried Meigs
in her race against Marc
Please see Voters, AS
BY BRIAN

REED

BREED@MYOAtLYSENTINEL.COM

Page AS
•c Dori~ Wilt, 86

At Meigs County Democratic Headquarters, all eyes were on the television set, as
Governor-elect Ted Strickland gave his victory speech from Columbus, Strickland and all but
one of his fellow Democrats carried Meigs County in the statewide electiori ..

misSile

INSIDE
• Girl Scout Diary.
See Page A2
. • Syracuse church
opens again.

tevv rejected
BY BRIAN

-..=P.,.;A2 .

• A~!)U~ n;lf~fllOrial
service. · See Page A2
• Seniors plan trip to
Oglebay Festival of
Lights. See Page A3
• Meigs County Court
News. See Page A6

v

wider turn wider ellipse

Using the ellipses I
taped around my head
last week, we i:an see
how a head changes
as it turns.

· Note: how when a face is looking straight
at you, the ellipses form a perfect ·t~
Also note that ifthe head is only turning
side to side the h_orizontal ellipse
remains a jtraig.hHine- ·

Can you help Gadget find t.he cheese, :
. two flags and her bowlrng ball? · •

•the

handle is pulled
~will the sign tilt left
~;@or right@ 1

• Meeting to organize
educational trip to
Europe. See P~ge A3

WFATIIER

Details on Pace A&amp;

Each column, row and square must use #s 1,5,3.&amp; 9, plus the
diagonals must add up to the~ shown.{diagonals can repeat

INDEX
2 SllC110NS- 12 PAGES

•·

®IJ®B
SMART
GAMES

-~0®

BO®
Not really
that new

0
EACH SYMBOL STANDS FOR A LffiER •

Calendars
Classifieds

~O®O~(t)UC&gt;~O*

DECIDER MOUSE

Annie's Mailbox

•

A3
A3
B3-4

Comics

Bs

Editorials

A4

Obituaries

As

Sports
Weather

B Section
A6

© 2oo6 Ohio Valle}' Publishi~g Co.

,.

J.

REED

BREED@&gt;MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY Meigs
County voters approved a
50-cent telephone line fee
for 911 service and readily
approved a one;mill levy
for the health department in
Tuesday's general election,
while voters in Middleport
defeated a levy for operating ex:penses that village
officials claimed was vital
to the operation of village
government.
The 911 issue was
approved 4,441 to 3,149.lt
will allow the county to
C()llect 50 cents a month
' on a,ll regular telephone
lines in the county. It is
expected _ to' generate
$37,000 per year for a new
911 emergency service. ·
Meigs ,is now the only
county in the state without
a 911 plan· operating or in
the planning stages.
Meigs
County
Commissioners first proposed the fee in last
November 's general election, but it was defeated.
They have based their proposal on the 911 system in
Vinton County.
Yesterday's passage of
the iss ue will also allow
commissioners to tap into
a $29,000 reserve for E911 service collected from
Meigs County cellular
telephone customers and
now being he ld in escrow
by the state.
The health department
levy generated around
$230,000 for general health
operations last yeat. ·
Middleport voters defeat·
ed the proposed three-mill
operating expenses · levy
renew!ll, 379 to 329 - 54
percent. but approved the
renewal of a two-mill , five year levy for the fire depart·
ment, 498 to 210.

Cha~ene

Toney Dingess, who designed the pJograms which will serve as .tickets for the holiday walking tour of Pomeroy Churches,
reviews its contents with Sandee Mills, chairman. The tour is sponsored by the Pomeroy Merchants Association.

to11r tickets on sale
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
HOEFLICH@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY - Tickets went on sale
today for the Pomeroy Me rchant.'&gt;
Association ·s "Christmas Along the
River" church walking to ur to- take
place on Dec. 10.
Sandee Mills, chairman, announced
that tickets will be sold at several
do.wntown
businesses
in cludi ng
Farmers Bank, Weav in g Stitches,

The Fifth
Annual "Keep ·
Your Fork" 5K
Race is set
. for Nov. 25
at Meigs
High School
for runners
and walkers
Other levy results:
ages six and
• Syracuse, additional two
older. The
mills for two 'years for
race raises
police protection: 169 for,
scholarship
165 against.
money in
• Syracuse, renewal of
memory of
one mill for five years for
Brandi
current expe nses: 224 for,
Thomas (pic109 against.
tured ) who
• Racine, replacement of
1.7 mills for five year; for · was a cross ..
current expenses: 183 for, · country runner for Meigs
75 against.
Kigh School.
• Rutland . additional two
Submitted
photo
mill'&gt; for five years for

Clark's Jewelry Store. Hartwell there wi ll be a 20- minute Christmas
House, The Fabric Shop. Anderson ' s pro gra m. Rcl'rcshments will be
Furniture·, and Dans. The ti ckets are $5 served in the Bethany building of
for those 13 and up and $ 1 for c~ildren · Trinity Church. Those with special
12 and under.
need s are e ncouraged to drive from
The ti ckets for the tour whic h will chu rch to churc h.
begin at 4 p.m . incl udes visi ts to al l of
The chu rches included on the walk the ch urches in gro ups led by leaders in g tour are Pomeroy Baptist Churc h.
in top hats carrying lighted lanterns.' Grace Episcopal Churc h. St. Paul's
Each group will have th e o,ame Iemler Ll1theran Church. Tril)ity Federated
for' the entire tour. At each of the
churche\, decorated f(&gt;r the holidays.
Please see Tour, AS

'Keep Your Fork' 5K Race raises
scholarship funds, memories
BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGE !\I T@ MYDAI L~ S E N T I NEL

POMEROY -

and v.·alkcr"

.

·'

ag~ . .

COM

Rtmner'

:-.ix J ear'

and uldcr are ne.:d eJ for the
Fifth Annual "Keep Your
Fork" SK Race "hich this
year takes place&gt; on
Salllrdav, No\'. 25 with a
course that begin~ at Mcig:...
Hi gh Sch&lt;;&gt;t&gt;L
Race day .registration wi ll
he fn1111 9-JO::lO a.m. with

..

Please see Issue, A5

Hoeftlchjphoto

~­

,..

~

• &lt;

f

•

the race bl.!ginning at II ;J.Jll.
Participants arc a'keJ to
ani\e at lca't 30 minute'
before the· ' tart time. The
cntr~ fee i' $ 1n with all pro·
ceeds going Hl\1 ard' the
Brandi Thoma' ~1cmorial
Schoial'&gt;hip ~uno \1 h1ch bcncfih t\1dg' ~raduatc'~ \\ hn

participated in high school
no" country and tmck and
field who now attend or plan
to altenJ college.
La'l ~ear·, race had I go
en trants and pnn ·ided two
~1.000
'cholar,hips to
loc a l 'lullen".
This year the first 125
c nu·,mts wi 11 receive a free .
commemorative T-' h irt and
plaque' will be awarded to
th e top three male and
kmalc fini,hcr&gt;. Medals
fur fiN p\a,·e and ribbom
lor . 'ccond through fifth
place' wi II t&gt;e "" arded in
ca.:h of the following
maletremal~ age group~:
,i\·13: i.&lt;-17: 18-22: 23~') : 30-3\l:-'O-.&lt;Y: 50-59; 60

Please see Race, AS

.

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