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'

Bush, Pelosi talk
cooperation, A2
www.mydailysentinel.com

Thursday, November 9, aoo6

- USOstyle

Bob Stewart Band
headlines benefit concert

Page 86 • The Daily Sentinel

.Dinner

GALLIPOLIS - Gallia
County
Chamber
of
Commerce will host a benefit
concert at the Ariel-Dater
Perfonning Arts Centre .on
Saturday at 8 pm. Saturday,
featuring the Bob Stewart
Band from Athens, aceotding
to J .R. Sauer, who is chairing
the event for the chamber.
"Sponsoring this event are
Bob Stewllrt
.
. Holzer Clinic and Holzer University, on guitar; Greg
Medical Center," Sauer Bikowski, a paramedic for
said . "It provides a unique SEOEMS , on bass; aJJd
OpPOrtunity for the public to Johuny Ortman (Dr. John
enJOY ;~ great concert by the Ortman), a practicing phySi'
Bob Stewart Band. and at cian inAthens,on hannonicil.
the same time, support the
"I
"all Jik t0 1
Gallia County Chamber."
especl y
e
p a~
for folks who pay close atte~~·
Bob Stewart, a journalism tion . to the lyrics and
professor at Ohio University, melodies, folks who like io
has been playing guitar since think a little, and at the end of
he was 9 years old' and writ· the show, want to hum some
ing songs since he was 14. sweet tunes," Stewart said . .
H ed hasardbee!l desc ribed ~ ""!!
His greatest hope is to linger
o1 $11
smger1songwnter. . in the mind of his audience.
H1s first CD was released
in 2004, and his most recent,
Tickets for the concert will
" A Million Miles Away be.$10 each, and are on sale
from Home," was issued in now at the ·c hamber office,
August of this year. His caJI 446-05%, or the Ariel,
strongest musical mfluences phone 446-ARTS (2787).
are James Taylor, John Prine
"We hope to fill the Ariel
and
Bruce
Cockburn.
Theatre
on Nov. 11," Sauer
llelh~
In 2002, he OQ!anized his said. "The Bob Stewart Band
This Saturday and Sunday, the River City Players will perform their upcoming dinner theater production of • Sentimental
band.
Members include will have an appeal to a 'varJourney, : a tribute to all veterans that goes back to the time and music of the USO. The show also features 1940s-era
Elliott
Abrams,
a professor of ied iiudience and provide an
costumes and dance routines. Tickets for the shows are only available at Middleport Department Store. Tickets will not
anthropology
at
Ohio evening to remember."
be sold at the door and include a catered meal. Dinner begins at 6 p.m. and the show is at 7 p.m .

..

RIO GRANDE - A tradi- addition, families give gifts
tional Indian festival featur- to children and visit with
ing dancing,. music and food each other on the holiday.
for all ages will be held at the
This is the flft:W· year that
University of Rio Grande/Rio Rio · Grande has held a
Grande Community College Diwali celebration, and the
on Sunday, Nov. 12.
event has been very popular.
The festival is the Diwali . Families with Indian roots
Celebration, and it will begin are invited to the celebraat 3 p .m . in the Berry Fine tion, but all area residents
and Perfonning Arts Center. are also invited.
Dr. Krishna Kool, dean of
The event will feature outstanding entertainment pro- . the College of Professional
vided by an Ol}lanization out Studies at Rio Grande ,
of Columbus, great Indian explained that the festival is
food and plenty of area resi- always a fun event , but the
dents enjoying tiie celebration. celebration will be extra
Known as the Festival of special this year because of
Lights, the Diwali celebra- the entertainment.
The entertainment will be
tion is very much like how
Christmas. is celebrated in provided by Chinmaya
America. The Diwali cele- Mission, Columbus. During
bration has its roots in reli- the program, the group will
gion , and families in India present a tribute of devoand around the world cele- tion-filled music and dance
brate the holiday together.
that will portray the course
In India, people put lights of the Ganges River in India,
on their homes and set off and how it has influenced
firecrackers for Diwali. In countless ancient cities and
'

pilgrim centers, shrines and
temples. The river, which is
called the Ganga River in
India (but is referred to as
the Ganges River in the
west), is a holy . river in
India. The river is an important pan of the Hindu religion and the Indian culture.
During the presentation,
the musicians and dancers
will showcase the eclectic
mix of various dance fonns
in the Indian culture, and
will tell the story of the
Ganges River.
. Kool explained that the
presentation will be entertaining and moving to audience members whether they
know anything about the
Indian culture or the Hindu
religion or not.
After the program, those
at the celebration will continue in the Davis University
Center cafeteria, where a
traditional Indian meal will
·b e served featuring foods

• Cavs finish on Bulls.

J. REm
•

POM EROY
- Meigs
County.
Commissioners
approved a resolution in sup~ of state funding to ass1st
m site preparation for the J?fO:
posed American Munic1pal
!&gt;ower - Ohio pow~ plant
in Letart Township.
The resolution approved
at Thursday' s meetmg suppons funding through the
Ohio
Department
of
Development's Job Ready
Sites program. The competitive program, approved
by , voters. creates types of
sites .o r facilities that do
not exist or are not available in sufficient quantities
within the state.
Those sites are said to
offer an immediate, economy-shifting impact in com- ·
munities. The pro~r~m
funded by $!50 mllhon m
bonds issued by the state.
Grant recipients will receive
up to $5 million per project
site, up to 75 percent of the
total project cost. Funds may
be applied to a number of
aspects of site development.
The . AMP-Ohio. plant,
which
provide electric-

!s

such as Basmati rice, lentil
soup, Indian vegetables ana
.a variety of desserts, such as
GALLIPOLIS
will be · more than just an
mango cheesecake ;
Celebrate "Autumn in the average concert. Specialty
"Everybody loves it ," Country," a live concen fea- ·
KooI sa1"d a bout th e mea1.
turinl! local vocalists "Paul sound, live camera feeds
The Business Marketing " Bub"'' Williams and Chase and a big-screen projection
Association in the Evans . Likens, on Friday, Nov. 10 system will be incorporated
School of Business at Rio at 8 p.m.
into the show to provide an
Grande is helping to proWilliams, j&gt;&lt;&gt;pular local
mote the Diwali celebration country mus1c performer, arena-style concert feel. .
this year,.Kool said.
has performed numerous
Tickets for the show are
Tickets for the dinner at times at the Ariel as opening · available in advance, as well
the Diwali celebration cost act for major recording as at the door for $7 for
$15 for adults and $10 for art!sts such. as Emerson adults and $5 for students.
. children ages 6- 12. Children Dnve and. J1mmy Wayne.
.
.
.
who are 5 years old ·or He has also headlined. his The Anel box office IS open
younger will be admitted to own performances.
.
Tuesday through Friday
the dinner for free.
Chase Likens recently from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m., as
For more information . on won the firSt-annual Ariel Jr. well as 90 minutes prior to
getting tickets to the dinner, Idol talent competition . In
· or for infonnation on the addition to winning a $250 performances.
Diwali celebration, call cash prize, he won the
Doors will open for seat. Heather Hartley at 245- · opportunity to open the ing at 7:15p.m :
7373; Brenda Loucks at Nov. 10 concert . .Likens'
For information, or for
245-7267 or (800~ 282- resonant voice is a pleasant
7201; or Dr. Shrikant surprise to audience mem- ticket purclwses, guests may
Vaidya in Point Pleasant bers .
call the Ariel box office at
W.Va., at (304) 675-5001. · "Autumn in the Country" (74()) 446-2787.

Page AS
• James 'Ike' Eiselstein ·
• Judith M. Hemnann
• Ethel M. Nicholson

INSIDE

· Shakespeare
play slated

-onP.AB

'·

INDEX
2 SI!CnONS -16 PAGF.S

Friday reception opens eXhibit

Annie's Mailbox
.
Buckeye Edition
Calendars

'

Classifieds
'

Comics
Editorials
Faith • Values
Movies

NASCAR
Obituaries
Sports
Weather

,,

AS
BS
AS
Bs-6
B7
A4
A6-7
As
B3
As

B Section

AS

© •oo6 Ohlo valley Publlshtnc eo.
,,.

will

-

J. -/pllotoo

Meigs County Commissioners Jim Sheets and Mick
Davenport, pictured with Lora Rawson and Raina Garber of
the Holzer Tobacco· Use Prevention program, declared. Nov.
16 as the Great American Smokeout, encouraging smokers
to stop smoking on that day in an effort to give up the habit.
ity for wholesale to villages Hospice Month.
and cities which are mem• Approved payment of
bers of AMP-Ohio 's net- the county's share of public ·
work, is expected to create assistance expenditures for
600. constQJction jobs and 2006, totaling $ 146,787 ,
150 full -tinie jobs once con- and the county's share of
struction is completed.
child welfare expenditures,
Commissioners also:
totaling $36,450.
:. Signed proclamations
• Authorize4 closing the
for the Great American Department of Job and
Smokeout on Nov. 16, and · Family Service from 10 a.m.
declaring
November until . 4:30 p.m. on Dec. 8,
Nation! Home Care and for an employee in-service.

Connie Halley, Vicky Nottingham, Paula Eichinger, Ambe~
Koren ahd Shawn Rayburn of Holzer Hospice, Holzer Extra
Care and Holzer . Home Health Care, joined County
Commissioners Jim Sheets and Mick Davenport in declaring November National Home Care and Hospice Month in
Meigs County.
·
• Approved a $700 appro- Beegle
for . a
Law
priations adjustment for the Enfi&gt;rcement Block Grant
Board of Elections.
from Ohio Criminal Justice
• Approved appointment Services in the amount of
of Jody Walker of Vinton $ 20 '()()().
County to replace . Don B.
• Recessed until I 0 a.m. on
Cotner on the Rio Grande Monday for payment of bills.
Community College Board
Present
were
of Trustees: .
Mick
Commi ssioners
' • Approved a grant appli- Davenport and Jim Sheets
cation from Sheriff Robert · and Clerk Gloria Kloes.

Flu shot. Pomeroy prepares for the holiday season
clime
set for
Monday
e

•..Millions of
acetaminophen
pils recalled.
See Page A2
• Peebles plans grand
opening for Nov. 16.
SeePage AS
• Plastics factory
ordered again to
reduce emissions.
See Page AS
• A Hunger For More.
. See 'Page A6
• Ministers christen
home of N.C.-based
Christian broadcast
. ~ter. See Page A6
• Bradford to host
Mission speaker.
S.. Page AB
• Scouts showing
increasing membership.
See Page AB
.

SwampJeuce
slates show

Solo guitarist
plans concert

BY BlttM

BREEDCtMVOAILYSENTINELCOM

·SeePageB1

'Autumn in Country' at
·Ariel Nov. 10

Auditorium on the campus
of
Ohio . University
Southern in Ironton Ffiday
at 7:30p.m.
This is the second . RIO GRANDE - The
GALLIPOLIS - Ariel
Jr. Theatre will hold audi - Lawrence County Concen English Honor Society prelions for the upcoming play Series performance of the ~- sents
Shakespeare's
" Beauty and the Beast," 2006-07 season ' sponsored·' " Merry Wives of Windsor"
directed by Kim Vanco.
by the Ironton Council for today, Friday and Saturday
Auditions will be held on the Arts .
at 7:30 p .m . in the Bob
stage Sunday, . Nov. 12 · As. long as Sean Beavers Evans
Farms
Hall
from 2 to 4 p .m ., and can remember,. he has Auditorium
at
the
Monday, Nov. 13 from 6to been fa sc inated by the UniversityofRioGrande/Rio
8 p.m .
sound . of the guitar. He Grande Community College.
The director and staff are began taking classical guiAdmission is free.
seeking youth actors to fill tar lessons at an early age
For more information ,
various roles. Nine roles and began winning high contact .Dr. Elizabeth '
are available for teens and school guitar competi - Brown at 245 -7385 .
pre- teens. One role is tions.
He earned his bachelor of
available for a child, age 810. There will be no roles music degree in g uitar perfrom
the
for extras in this produc- forman ce
Submlttwd photo
Uni versity of Texas at
"Harbor at Night" by Ruthe Pearlman is one of the entries in the · Accessible Expressions
tion.
Ohio " exhibit on display at the French Art Colony now through Nov. 30.
"Beauty and the Beast" is Austin . Beavers moved to
POINT
PLE ASANT,
a non-musical, and a non- Florida in 1999 and won
first
pri
ze
in
the
2000
W.Va
.
The
marquee out
Dj_sney ve rsion of t'he classic tale. The production is Florida Music Teachers front says: " You want rock ·
Colleg iate and roll. You got it."
scheduled ·to perform Jan . Assoc iatio n
GA LLIPOLI S The . play through. Nov. 30 .
Local sponsors for this
Artist . compe titio n. In
Swa mp Jeuce. a southern
26-28, 2007.
show are the · Gallipolis
· Contact the Ariel-Df ter 200 I , he earned his master heavy ·. metal rock band , French An Colony is cur- Admission is free .
rentl
y
hosting
"
Accessible
A
reception
ce
lebrating
Hall at 446-27R7 for more of mu sic degree in guitar will be play ing fo r the secRotary Club, and Bob's
Ex
pression
s
Ohio."
.
This
.
the
opening
of
this
exhibit
performance from Florida o nd strai ght weekend
information.
Marl:et and Greenhouses Inc.
Saturday at the · State touring visual an exhihition will be held Friday from 5
State University.
Gallery hours are from 10
celeqrates O hi o's artists until 7 p .m . The public is
He has perfo rmed at .var- Theater in Point Pleasant.
a.m. until 6 p.m. Tuesday
with di sabilities by show- welcome to attend .
ious venues in the U.S. and Doors open at 6:30 p .m .,
The Dhio Arts Council thro ugh Friday, and from I
casing profess ional, emergand the show starts at 7 ing and youth art ists. ,
in South America.
helped fund this program until 5 p.m. on Sunday.
Admi ss ion is $8 for p.m. Tickets are only $5.
This show is made possi- with state tax do llars to
More information about
IRONTON
Sean adults, and $7 for seniors
Swa mp Je uce promises ble by VSA of Ohio. which encourage
eco nom1c
Beavers. an internationally and full -tim e stuUe nts. to rock th e theater, having foc uses on promoting the growth,' educational excel- the FAC and its upcoming
acclaimed solo guita ri st , Tickets are avai lable at the · won the Battl e of the creative power in people · lence and cultural enrich- events can be found by callwi ll perform in Bowman door.
Bands in Hun tingto n.
wi th disabi lities. It is on dis- ment for all Ohi oans.
ing 446-3834.

"'"' · m"""'~"·"tim·l.•·nm

Commissioners in support of AMP-Ohio development grant .

SPORTS

Entertainment Briefs
Auditions set
for production

I Ril l \) . '\0\ I . ~IBFR 10.2006

l I '\ 1:-- • \o l .) «&gt; . '\ o. fiX

.

Rio hosts Diwali celebration on Sunday

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

•
.)&lt;&gt;

Newsman Ed Bradley dies
- of leukemia at 65, A2

BY CHARLENE HOEFUCH

. .

HOEFLICHiiiMYDNLYSEI'ITINEL.CQM .

8\'Brnt

S~T

BSERGENT@MYOAILYSENTI NEl.COM

POMEROY ·.. The
Meigs County
Health.
Department announced its
annual flu shot clinic for
those aged 65 or older and
those with chronic health
problems has been rescheduled for this .Monday
despite receiving only 40
percent of its vaccine shipment, creating a first come;
first served system to get
the vaccine out to those at
high risk during flu ~son .
Monday' s clinic will be
held from 9-11 a.m. and 1-3
P·'P· at the Meigs County
Health Department wherr
200 pneumonia shots will
· also be available.
The shots are free to those
who bring their Medicare or
Medicaid cards to the clinic.
For others the influenza
shots are $15 and the pneumonia shots are $27 with
payment due at the time the
shots are administered.
The Meigs County Health
Department (MCHD) originally ordered I ,000 does of
influenza vaccine from the
Ohio Depar(inent of Health
(ODH) and now it appears it
will only be receivmg 400.
The MCHD has been told
there was a miscommunication between ODH and the
vacCine
manufacturers
which resulted in the
· reduced shir.ment.
Sherry Wllcoll, director of
nursing for the MCHD, said
in addition to the 400 does
from ODH the health
department purc hased I 00
doSes of influenza vaccine
from a pri vale company
bringing the total to 500
,doses for Monday's clinic.
This year all attendees to
tht: clinics . are asked to
bring photo identification
that shows Ohio residency.
These photo !D's can also
be used, if desired, for
"swipers." Swi pers are an
electronic product that can
quickl y document and track
the di spensing of vaccines
and other med ication s

.

Plase see Flu shot. AS

POMEROY - Greenery adorns the
period light poles ·which line down. town streets in Pomeroy, caroler figures are in place on the parking meters,
and Christmas merchandise is showing
up everywhere as Pomeroy prepares
for the holiday season.
The Pomeroy Merchants Association
is spearheading a movement to make
the village more festive and appealing
to shoppers. Something new this year
will be Christmas displays on the stage
and two gazebos on the parking lot.
Sunday afternoon at 2 p.m . the
work of decorating the structures will
begin . Trinity Church members and
any volunteers who come will decorate the stage where Santa will visit
with youngsters twice on Saturday
afternoons in December. The Sacred
Heart Church congregation will decothe gazebos while the
rate one
other one will be prepared for the hol idays by -Pomeroy United Methodist
Church members.
·
Small white lights will be added and
Christm~s banners hung on the period
light poles to enhance the wreathes and
other greenery on each one. .
The kickoff fo~ the holiday. season is
on Nov .. 26 when Santa comes to town
in a parade chaired by Toney Dingess.
The lineup will be at I p.m. and the
parade will move out at 2 p .m. Again
this year residents are encourage to
enter co stumed 'a.nimals in the parade.
Judging will take place on Court
Street and the animals will be photographed with Santa.
.
A Christmas concert by the Big
Bend Community Band will be presented, Santa will visit with the children and have their pictures taken at
Peoples Bank.
·A&gt; a part of the kick off . to
Christmas, merchants wi II host open ·
house hours .from noon to 5 p.m. The
day will mark the beginning of sever- ·
al activities sponsored by the
Pomeroy Merchants Association. A
.
Cllalleno Hoelllcll/ pllotO
church tour will be held on Dec. I 0,
It' s beginning to look a lot like Christmas in downtown Pomeroy. Here George
candy, cookie and craft contests will
Wright,· vice president of the Mercha nts, As sociation, pre pa res to hang a
Christmas
ba nner.
· ·
Please see Hollct.ys, AS

·or

Racine well development shows.promise
Bv BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYDAILVSENTI NEL.COM'

RACI NE Tentative
resuils show development
of new water well five in
Raci ne is showing promise
with testing completed yesterday though the official
results are forthcoming.
The village has recently
installed two new water
wells both of which were

designed for 500 gallons per
minute (G PM ) but well fo ur
had ended up with 250 GPM
and ·the other, well five, for
125 GPM . Well five ini tially
had no GPM but wa' developed to 125 GPM .
With the approva l of
council representatives from
RLM Engineering completed funher te,ting done to
determine if well five\
GPM could be increased by
J

adding che mi cal s to remove
both clay. v ines and other
fine materials. Mayor J .
Scott Hill sa id residents
may've noticed a decrea~
in !heir water pressure during the 1es1i ng process that
ended ye,terday. The village
aho purc ha&gt;cd water from
Tuppers
Plaim-Chcster
Waler Di,lrict tn help me~!
consumer demand during
the proce".

Hill said the new water
treatm ent plant is regulated
for 250 GPM though it can
expand 10 500 GPM . Hi'll
added that at thi' time with
all of the village\ well s
running they produce 750
GPM. more than enough to
m.eet the plant\ needs.
The development of well
live wa' discu,;.ed at the
Please see Radne. AS

'

�·N ATION •

The Dail
. y Sentinel

Newsman Ed Bradley
dies of leukemia at 65
BY FRAZIER MOORE
AP TELEVISION WRITER

., NEW YORK Ed
Bradley, the award-winning
television journalist who
broke racial barriers at CBS
News and created a distinctive, powerful body of work
.during his 26 years on "60
Minutes," died Thursday.
He was 65.
Bradley died of leukemia
at Mount Sinai hospital,
CBS News announced.
He landed many memorable interviews, including
the Duke lacrosse players
accused of ~ape, Michael
Jackson and the only . TV
interview with Oklahoma
City bomber Timothy
McVeigh.
Bradley "was tough jn an
interview, he was inSistent
on getting an interview,"
said former CBS News
anchor Walter Cronkite,
''and at the same time when
the interview was over,
when the subject had taken
a preny heavy lashing by
him - they left as friends.
He was that kind of guy."
With his signature earring
and beard, Bradley was
"considered
intelligent,
smooth, cool, a great
reponer,
beloved and
respected by all his colleagues here at CBS News,"
Katie Couric said in a specia! repon.
Bradley's consummate
skill~ were recognized with
numerous awards, including
four George Foster Peabody
awards and 19 Emmys, the
latest for a segment on the
reopening of the 50-yearold racial murder case of
Emmett Till.
Three of his Errimys came
at the 2003 awards: for lifetime achievement; a report
on brain cancer patients;
and a report about sexual
abuse m the Roman
Catholic Church. He also
won a lifetime achievement
award from the Natiorral
Association
of
Black
Journalists.
Bradley joined
"60
Minutes" in 1981 when Dan
Rather left to replace
Cronkite as anchor of "The
CBS Evenin" News."
His reporting ability was
matched by his interviewing
finesse. When he spoke
with McVeigh in February
2000 at the federal prison in
Terre Haute, Ind., the convicted bomber told Bradley
that he was angry and bitter
after fighting in the Gulf
War. In · December 2003,
Jackson said he had been
"manhandled" when arrest•ed on child molestation
charges a few weeks earlier.
"Ed could get people to
say the damndest thing
because he put them at
ease," said former NBC
News anchor Tom Brokaw
said Thursday. "It was like
talking not to a reporter, but
.talking to a!l interested
counselor of some kind. ...
He had this wonderful .way
of stroking his beard and
saying, 'Well, what do you
mean by that?"
. Though he had been ill
and had undergone heart
bypass surgery about a year
ago, he remained active on
"60 Minutes." In one of his
last reports, an investigation
of the Duke case that aired
last month, he broke new
ground with the first inter. views with the accused.
"Th.e first time I really
under§tood that he was ill,
on the air; was a couple of
weeks ago," said fellow "60
Minutes" correspondent
Mike Wallace. "He was narrating a story, and his rich
voice wasn't there anymore.
It was just thinner."
Born June 22 , 1941 ,
Bradley grew up in a tough
section of Philadelphia.
·where he once recalled that
·his parents worked 20-hour
days at two jobs apiece. "I
was told, 'You can be anything you want , kid,"' he
once told an interviewer.
"When you hear that often
enough, you believe it."
After graduating from the
hi stori cally black Cheyney
(now
State
College
Cheyney .University of
Pennsylvania). he launched
his career as a jazz OJ - he
was a lifelong jazz fan and new' reporter for a
Philadelphia radio ' tatiOil in
1963. He moved to New

•

AP pllolo/l""" P. Flo, 'CBS

This photo which was suppliecl by CBS shows CflS
News Correspondent Ed
Braclley in 2004 in New
York. Braclley cliecl Thursday
of leukemia.
York's WCBS radio four
years later.
· He joined CBS News as a
sttinger in the Pans bureau
in 1971 , transfening a year
later to the Saigon bureau
during the Vietnam War. He
was wounded while on
assignment in Cambodia.
He was named a CBS Ne"(S
correspondent in early 1973
and . mqved
to
the
Washington bureau in June
1974. He later returned to
Vietnam; covering the fall of
that country and Cambodia.
Cronkite recalled first
meeting
· Bradley
in
Vietnam: '·He seemed to be
fearless, an incredibly smart
reponer in getting the srory."
After Southeast Asia,
Bradley returned to, the
United States and covered
Jimn;ty Caner's succes~ful
campaign for the . White
House. He followed Cjlrter
to Washington, in 1976
becoming CBS ' first black
White .House· correspondent
- a prestigious position
that Bradley didn't enjoy. ·
He
jumped · from
Washington to doin¥ pieces
for "CBS Reports,' traveling to Cambodia, China,
· Malaysia and Saudi Arabia.
It was his Emmy-winning
1979 piece on Vietnamese
boat refugees that eventually landed him on "60
Minutes."
The latter piece still resonates for Wallace. "I'll
never forget the picture of
Ed picking up a man who
was about to drown," he ·
said. "... If Bradley told a
story, you could be sure it
was accurate, and at bottom
it was done with integrity."
"60 Minutes" producer
Don Hewitt, in his book
"Minute by Minute," was
quick to appreciate Bradley
after he arrived at the show.
"He's so good and so savvy
arid so lights up the tube
every time he's on it that I
wonder what took us s0
long,;, Hewitt wrote.
Bradley recently served
as a radio host for "Jazz at
Lincoln Center," where he
won one of his four
Peabody awards.
Wynton Marsalis, artistic
director of Lincoln Center's
jazz depanment, .called
Bradley "one of our definitive cultural figures, a man of
unsurpassed curiosity, intellige'nce, dignity and hean."
Accepting his- lifetime
achievement award from
the black journalists associ-.
ation, Bradley remembered
being present at some of the
organization's first meetings in New York.
•

WoRLD

,

PageA2

www.mydailysentinel.com

The Daily Sentinel • Page A3

Friday, NQvember to, 2006

BY JENNRR LOVEN
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

WASHINGTON
President Bush and House
Speaker-tO-be Nancy Pelosi,
• perllaps the biggest loser and
winner on Election Day,
pledged over lunch Thursday
to bury the hatchet and cooperate. When possible.
At the White House,
where Bush had invited
Pelosi for lunch, presidential aides joked that there
was no crow on the menu
for Bush to eat.
Bush ate a little anyway,
and he saluted Pelosi, not
only as Tuesday's victor but
as the first woman who will
ascend to · the position of
House speaker, next in line
to the p{esidency after the
vice president.
"The elections are. now
behind us, and the congresswoman's party won," Bush
said. "But the cltallenges still
remain. And therefore, we're
going to work together to
address those challenges· in a
consl:r!Jcti ve wa('
Said Pelosi, like Bush all
smiles: "We both extended
the hand of friendship, of
partnership to solve the problems facing our country."
She ·was accompanied by
Rep. Steny Hoyer, the
House's
second-ranking
Democrat. Bush was accompanied by ·a stony-faced
Vice President Dick Cheney.
The president and his
guests sat down for a makeoice luncheon of pasta salad .
and chocolate in Bush's private -dining room off the
· Oval Office.
Later in the day, Bush
telephoned
· Senate
Minority Leader Harry
Reid to congratulate him
on the Democrats' takeover

*

In H(morof

CW2BrentW. ·
Hanson

.,.,...
PreSiclent BIJsh, right, gestures while meeting with Democratic House Leader Nancy PeloSi
of C31if., in the Ovi!l Office of the White House in Washington Thursclay. '
in the Senate as well. The not ignore the differences the president's side. "We've
switch in power in that that they debated so hotly . made histOI)'. Now we have
to rnake ~s.:'
chamber · became sure before the voting.
For his plllt, Bush has sald
Wednesday night, w)len
Pelosi has made clear ihat
enough votes were counted · House Democrats will lhat he 'II listen ro all sugw confirm the defeat of move immediately on their gestions on Jraq, -except for
Virginia GOP Sen. George agenda, much of it opposed those that inVolve pullil)g
Allen. Reid, ' likely to be by Bush, which includes troops out before the mismajority leader in the new cutting student loan interest sion is complete. He also
rates, funding embryonic says he still wants oongresCongre~s. was getting his
own meeting with Bush at stem cell research, authoriz- sional approval for W3f-()IJthe White House on Friday. ing the federal government terror tools that Democrats
Meeting reporters in -the to negotiate lower drug have vigorously questioned.
As Bush's press secretary,
Oval Office, · Pelosi and prices for Medicare patients
Tony
Snow, put it, echoing Bush shook hands for the and imposi11g a national cap
cameras. The president and on industrial carbon dioxide what Bush said a day earfier, the White House's intenthe woman whose party emissions.
She also has said that the tion is to cooperate but
beat his .this year leaned forward in their silk-uphol- election
results
mean "don't trim back on your
principles."
stered seats. They promised Democrats not only want Bush and Pelosi have met
cooperation in a govern- but expect- Bush to make a
ment that, come January, ' change of direction in Iraq . dozens of times before. But
"I look forward to · work- with both just'getting accuswill be divided between a
Republican White House ing in a confidence-building tomed to new roles with
and a Democratic Congress. way with the president, rec- each other, aides to both
Though ·the two sought to ognizing that we have our said it was more of a tone- .
show they were putting the differences and we . wi II setting · session than a time
barbs in the past, they did .debate' them," Pelosi said at for brass-tacks negotiating.

Feb . 2001- Current
USAnny
Operation Enduring
Freedom

Love, Mom, Cluul,I.Auren
In Honor and in Memory
of all living and deceased
members of Drew
Webster Post #39
American Legion,
Pomeroy, Ohio
State of Ohio
We're proud of you.
Guido, The Casci and · ·

.

~~ft-~

~.

In Honor of

Health
Commissioner
Larry Marshall
US Navy
&amp; Army (Retired)

From Meigs Count)' Health
Dept. Staff

.,

In Honor of

In Honor of

Dallas Hill

Carl1)11 Teaford

1942- 1945
Anny

GM 3/C Gunners Mate
1943·1945
Navy

WW,II
Love, Your Famil)'

WWII
Love, Your Family

In Honor of
In Honor of

Lt.JG
Chad E. Hanson

Cpl. Clarence
Frank

Feb. 2004- Current
US Coast Guard
Operation Enduring
Freedom ·

113153 - 12117154
Army Artillery
Korean
Love, Louise- Wife

Love, Mom, Brent; Lauren

In Honor of

Howard C.
Birchfield
1943- 1946
Navy

WWII
Love, YqurFamily

•e

Millions of acetaminoph~pills ·re~alled
Bv ANDREW BRIDGES

· tul'llect up metal in

rough!~ · has any chance of recurring,

200 pills of the 70 million It
passed through a metal detecWASHINGTON
tor, according to the FDA. ·
Check ):OUr medicine cabi.Consumers w~o take ~y
net: M1llions of bottles of of the contammated ptlls
the widely ilsed pain reliev- C?uld have mino~ stomach
er acetaminophen - some discomfort or possible cuts to
sold as long .as three years the mo.uth an.d throat, th. e
ago .- . are being recalled FDA d addi th th
k
S3l •. • ng at ens
because they may contain
metal fragments.
of senous mJury was remote.
The recall affects I I milAcetaminophen is best
lion bottles containin~varv- known as the drug in prod.
-,. l!cts· sold under the Tylenol
mg quantities of 5 -mil- brand. But it is available in
ligram
acetaminophen typically less expensive
caplets made by the Perrigo generic versions. The drug,
Co. The pills were sold along with aspirin and
under store lmlnds by WalMart, CVS, Safeway· and ibuprofen, is one of the ·
.
most widely used pain
more t han 120 ot her maJOr relievers available without a
retailers, the Food and Drug
Administration said. At doctor's note .
least two chains _ . CVS
The recall does not affect
Coip. and StlperValu Inc. _
Tylenol. Nor should the recall
started pulling the pills from cause a shortage of acetastore shelves Thursday.
· minophen, the FDA said.
There were no immediate
The retatl market for the
reports of injuries or illness. pain relievers is worth more
The contaminated pills than $2 btlhon . a year,
included metal fragments accordmg to Pemgo. The
ran~ing in size
from company says it is the
"microdots" to jlortions of world's largest manufacturwire one-third of an inch er of store-brand nonprelong, the FDA said. The scription drugs.
FDA could not describe furKevin . Vincen·t, 44, of
ther the type of metal.
Arlington, Va., said his wife
Perrigo discovered the buys store brand acetametal bits during quality- minophen and he wanted to
control checks done after- find out more about the
the company-discovered its · problem.
"If it 's not something that
equipment was wearing
down prematurely, the FDA
said: Agency officials
declined to say whether the
metal found in the ·pills
caused the damage or
resulted from it.
A company investigati?n
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

then I really wouldn't
worry," he said.
The 129 retailers that
could potentially be affected by the recall include
Wal-Mart Stores Inc., CVS,
,Safeway
Stores
·and
SuperValu. They typically
sell the Perrigo· made pills
under their own or other priv.ate labeki.
CVS will stop selling its

own brand of 500-rnilligram
acetaminophen caplets and
pull bottles from store
she! ves
nationwide,
spokesman Mike DeAngelis
said. SliperValu also began
removing the pills from its
Albertsons, Cub Foods. and
other stores, spokeswoman
Haley
Meyer
said.
Messages left Thursday
with the other chains were
not immediately returned.

Q-afts &amp;Coldfks
.ft1mltlves &amp;.llome Dl .oW'

In Honor of
In Memory of

Sp4 Kevin L.
Grady
1992- I995
3664th Army National .
Guard

Love, Mon &amp; Dad

&lt;

E4Steven E.
Grady
1989- 1995 Navy
1995- 2004
National Guard
Gulf War

Love, Mom &amp;·Dad

In Memory of
In Honor of

1966- 1968
Army 10 I st Airboume
Vietnam .

I 995 Still Active
Army
Bosnia- Iraq 2 times

Renr.o Menc:hini US AAI! WWII
Paul Casci US Navy WWII
Gemma Casci US Waves WWII
Bruno Casci US Army WWII
Robert Casci US Army WWII
John Strickland US Armyy
Korean
Lyle Hysell US Arm) WWII

Love, Wife- Ca_thy

Love, Dad and family
in Ohio

Love, Guido. rhe Casci 's,
The Strickland's &amp; the Hysell 's

Iri Honor of

Sp4 PaulL.
Gradv
"

.

Staff Sargeant
William S. Hall

••-

•'

••
~
.

3562nd- .
I'

,

•

·•

Gll111~ OM:

7...., . . . .

'()wMI':

J-_, ....,.

In Honor of

GRAND PRIZE DRAWING

· Captain Sidney B.
Edwards (DeCeased)

Saturday 11th at s:oo .
On every $20.00 or more purchase,
one entry per customer.
$100.00 Gift Certificate from
INSPIRATION OF FAITH

1954- 1977
USMC
Vietnam

In Honor of

Thomas C. Hill
196.6- 1968
Marines
Vietnam

Love, Yow family

Love, Wife Saruiy

r7amifv I•G'@MI

"We Cm'e for You ·
'
like Family".
&amp; MEDICAL EQUIPMENT
• Home Oxygen
• Portable Oxygen
.• Homefill ~ystem
• Helios System
• Pulse Oximetry

• Hospital Beds
• W~eelchairs
• C-Pap
• Nebulizers
• Much More!

24 HOUR EMfRGENCY SfRVICE

,.. ,.m....

'

IJf call for more illfo11N11ioll.

•

In Honor of

Denny Evans

"Spy"

1968- 1971
Army
Vietnam
Love, Linda, Mom ,

Kerinit "Buzz" Buzzard
8/63 - 9/66
Army - Vietnam

Children arui

DIS1flint to: ~1At111m 0/uo aJt4 }ldm, Mlloa mtd CMIU Uwuitsit WV.
l.MaJ/y Otlned
Slop b)' our slwwroo11

and Operated.

In Honor of

•

•

Lave, Kelly, PFC Josh,
Kerbi, Brad, JC,

In Honor of

PFC
Josh Buzzard
5130/06 - Present
Marines
New Marine

Love, Mom, Dad and the
rest

Edward W.
Durst
1966- 1968
Army
Vietnam

Love , Your Family

PFC John
Stanley
8/2004- Currently ·in Iraq
'
Army
Operation Iraqi Freedom

Love. Mom, Dad &amp;

�I

PageA4

OPINION

The Daily Sentinel

•'

Friday,Novemberto,aoo6

Ethel Nicholson

dren. The Republican con- ing about public morality. .
Talk about bad timing.
gressman also stayed in the They argue that only ·'
On the day after former
(740) 992·2156 • FAX (740) 992-2157
closet, thus helping conser- squeaky-clean people Congressman Mark Foley
www.mydallysentlnel.com
vatives and the dreaded like Jimmy Carter, Mother
entered an alcohol rehab
Religious Right in their bat- Teresa, the Dalai Lama and
program , his beleaguered
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
tles against gay rights.
staff received a package.
the pope - have the right
Terry
•
GOP
leaders
are
being
With reporters watching,
to make pronouncements
Mattingly accused of hypocrisy by about hot issues. Everyone
they unpacked a framed
Jim Freeland
those who claim that they else is supposed to keep
copy of one of his most
Publisher
ignored reports of Foley's quiet or they will . be
famous pieces of legislation
indiscretions
in order to accused of hypocrisy.
"
a
bill
requiring
a
crackCharlene Hoeflich
down on sex ual predators,
Meanwhile. the word retain the services of a
The .problem is that sin,
General Manager-News Editor
including those who exploit "hypocrite" has a slightly charismatic legislator in hip and thus hypocrisy, is part
minors online.
'different meaning when . South Florida, where it of the human condition.'
And all the people said: used in news reports about would be hard to elect an Anyone who believes any"Hypocrite 1"
the sins of politicians, ordinary Republican.
thing struggles to live up to
Congress shall ma~e no law respecting an
• Republicans are calling
"It's hard to talk abOut the , preachers and other· comestablishment of religion, or prohibiting the
hypocrites those beliefs in the harsh
Foley story without talking munity leaders. When jour- . Democrats
about hypocrisy," said jour- nalists talk about "hyp- because they screamed light of day.
free exerdse thereof; or abridging the freedom
There are even times, .
nalist Jeremy Lott, referring ocrites" we are usually about Foley's actions but
of speech, or of the press; or the right of the
to the congressman's spec- referring to people · who have not, in the past, react- argues Lott, wJ:ten a little
people peaceably to assemble, and to petition
tacular fall after discovery publicly condemn an act ed as strongly to the !JUes- hypocrisy may do some
of his explicit digital mes' that they practice in secret. tionable affairs of powerful good. Take, for example,
, the Government for a redress of grievances.
sages to teenaged male The classic example is the Democrats. The classic case the faithful who fail to
minister who preaches farn-· focuSed on the late Rep. notice that a bride is preg~
- The First Amendment to the U;S. Constitution Capitol pages.
Studds
·. of nant as she walks down the
"I mean, Mark Foley's a ily values while committing Gerry
church aisle. · Everyone
Massachusetts,
who
hypocrite, the Republicans adultery with .the church
·
remained in office after the knows, but pretends not to
are
hypocrites,
the organist. ·
Democr-ats are hypocrites
Then there is the common revelation that he had a know, because the bride and
and lots of journalists are antihypocrite, which LOtt homosexual relationship groom are doing the right
Today is Friday, Nov. 10, the 314th day of 2006. There hypocrites, tO\). Right now, defines as a person who, at with a teenaged congres- · thing.
are 51 days left in the year.
I can't think of .anyone in every opportunity, loudly sional page.
"It's a good thing when
Today's Highlight in History:
• Republicans are calling sinners continue to oppose
the Foley affair who isn 't · condemns the actions and
On Nov. 10, 1775, the U.S. Marines were organized being accused of being a beliefs of those whom he some journalists hypocrites
sin, even if they ~ still
under authority of the Continent.al Congress.
hypocrite by somebody and considers hypocrites. But claiming they also received struggling with sin in their
On this date:
·
lots of the antihypocrites here is the key. The true tips about Foley's actions
In 1871, journalist-explorer Henry M. Stanley found are being hypocritical, too." anti hypocrite vents his rage but sat on the story for own lives," he said.
"Sometimes, hypocrisy is
Scottish missionary David Livingstone, who had not been
It helps to define your on an entire class of people months until they were able . what allows sinful people to
.heard from for years, near Lake Tanganyika in central
tenus, which is what my - usually moralists, clergy to pile fuel on this pre-elec- be decent while they try to
Africa.
tion bonfire. Then there are
colleague
at or religious believers In 1919, the American Le 'n opened its first national former
the
gay-rights activists who do what's right."
and
then
proudly
uses
his
GetReligion.org
does
in
his
convention, in Minneapolis.
(Terry Mattingly is direcIn 1938. Kate Smith first sang Irving Berlin's "God book " In Defense · of disgust as a way to rational ;.. may or. may not have used tor of . the Washington
the media to yank Foley out
(Nelson ize his own behavior.
Bless America" on her CBS radio program, which aired Hypocrisy"
The
Foley
drama
offers
a
of
the closet in order to help Journalism Center at the
Current).
Lott
starts
with
Thursdays.
Council · for Christian
l n 1954, the Iwo Jima Memorial was dedicated by the American Heritage spectacular cast of hyp- De.mocrats take control of
and Universities
Colleges
Congress.
Dictionary, which , in its ocrites.
President Eisenhower in Arlington, Va.
leads
the
Many of these people are · and ~
- Foley gets the "hypIn 1969, the children's educational program "Sesame most recent edition, defines
"hypocrisy" as the "pro- ocrite" verdict because of practicing what Lott calls GetReligion.org project to
Street" made its debut on PBS.
In 1975, the ore-hauling ship Edmund Fitzgerald and its fessing Of beliefs or virtues his highly public W()rk on the "saint or shut up" strat- study religion and .the
· that one does not possess.'·' behalf of exploited chil-. egy when it comes to talk- news.)
crew of 29 vamshed dunng a stonn m Lake Supenor.
In 1982, Soviet leader Leonid I. Brezhnev died at age 75.
· In 1986, Camille Sontag and Marcel Coudari, two
jstahler®dispatch .com
Frenchmen who had been held hostage in Lebanon, were
released.
Ten years ·ago: A bomb ripped through a · crowd of
mourners in a Moscow cemetery, killing 14 people and
wounding neatly 50. The .Bosnian Serbs' new military
commander (Major General Pero Colic), was- sworn in, a
day after General Ratko Mladic, a war crimes suspect, was
Jismissed.
One year ago; A suicide bomber killed some three dozen
people at a Baghdad restaurant frequented by police. Ellen
Johnson-Sirleaf, a fonner finance minister of Liberia,
claimed victory in the country's presidential election. Chris
Carpenter of the St. Louis Cardinals won the National
League Cy Young Award.
Today's Birthdays; Actor Russell Johnson is 82. Film
composer Ennio Morricone is 78. Actor Roy Scheider is
74. Blues singer Bobby Rush is 72 .. Actor Albert Hall is 69.
Lyricist Tim Rice is 62. 'Actress Alaina Reed-Hall is 60.
Rock singer-musician Greg Lake (Emerson, Lake and
Palmer) is 59. Actress-dancer Ann Reinking is 57. Actor
Jack Scalia is 55. Movie director Roland Emmerich is 51.
Actor Matt Craven is 50. Actor-comedian Sinbad is 50.
Actress Mackenzie Phillips is 47. Author Neil Gaiman is
46. Actor Michael Jai White is 42. Country singer Chris
Cagle is 38. Actor-comedian Tracy Morgan is 38. Actress
Ellen Pompeo ("Grey's Anatomy") is 37. Rapper-producer
Warren G is 36. Rock singer-musician Jim Adkins (Jimmy
fjrrrr
Eat World) is 31. Actress Brittany Murphy is 29. Rapper
Eve is 28. Rock musician Chris Jannou (Silverchair) is 27.
Actor Brvan Neal is 26. Actress Heather Matarazzo is 24.
Country singer Miranda Lambert is 23. Actor Josh Pr-ck is

RUTLAND - Ethel M. Nicholson, 80, of Salem St.,
Rutland, passed away Thursday, Nov. II , 2006. at Pleasant
Valley Hospital in Point Pleasant, W.Va.
She was born April 2, 1926, in Rutland Township, Meigs
County, to the late Verlin Jacks and Bertha Harris Jacks
Dutton. She was a homemaker affiliated with the Rutland
Church of Christ and a former member of Rutland
friendly Gardeners.
. She is survived by two sons, Michael C. (Bonnie)
Ni~holson of Elyria and William R. (Carolyn) Nicholson of
Middleport; two brothers, Jerry L. (Linda) Jacks of
Langsville and Verlin K. Jacks of Kansas City, Mo.; five
grandchildren: Ryan (Rachelle) Nicholson of Wesl Salem,
Bridgit Nicholson of Elyria, Matthew C. Nicholson of
Seattle. Wash .• Miranda Sranger of Lancaster, and William
Joseph (Jodie)·Nicholson of Middleport; three great grand- ·
children; Wyatt J. Nicholson, Parker Gallogly and Emma
Nicholson; and sever.al nieces and nephews.
Besides her parents, she was preceded in death by her
husband, Ernest C. Nicholson; three sisters: Sarah Ann
"" Estep, Niellie Ferguson and Bonnie Sayre; and a granddaughter, Charity Diane Nicl:)olson.
Services will ·be' held at 1 p.m. on Saturday, Nov. 11, 2006,
at Birchfield Funeral Home in Rutland with Doug Shamblin .
officiating and burial following at Miles Cemetery in Rutland.
· Friends may call for 5 to 8 p.m. on Friday evening at the
funeral horne.
.

111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

Judith M. Heu amann .

TODAY IN HISTORY

FRAZEYSBURG
Judith M. Herrmann, 68, of
Frazeysburg, Ohio died at 12:05 a.m. Thursday, Nov. 9,
i006 at her horne.
. Born June 22, 1938 in Charle~ton , W.Va., she was the
daughter of the late Thomas and Beulah (Mace) Stewart
and was a homemaker. Mrs. Hemnann moved to the
Frazeysburg area in 1986 and was a member of the Calvary
Christian Church for o many years and was fonnerly
· employed at the CCC Bakery. She was currently a member
of the' Kingdom Harvest Church of Newark.
·
· Surviving is her husband, Weqdol W. Herrmann, whom she
married June 11, 1961; three sons, Todd Herrmann and Brent
Hernnann, both of Pasadena, Calif. and Scott (Tracey)
Herrmann of Granville, Ohio; two daughters. Melanie
Hernnann and Melissa (Donald) Harper, both of
Frazeysburg; four brothers, Charles (Diane) Stewart of
P.hoenix, Ariz., Tom (Dottie) Stewartof Overgaard, Ariz.,
Fred Stewart of Orlando. Fla. and Michael (Shirlel) Stewart
of Piason, Ariz.; one sister, Janet (Kenneth) Plum o Ferndale,
Wash.; ten grandchildren and several nieces and nephews.
Calling hours will be '2 to 4 p.m. Sarurday, Nov. 11 , 2006
at the Frazeysburg Chapel of Vensii-Orr &amp; Chute Funeral
Horne, 11 0 West Third Street.
Funeral services will be 2 p.m. Sunday, Nov. 12, 2006 at
the Rutland Free Will Baptist Church it) Rutland near
Pomeroy with the Rev. James Holbrook officiating . Burial

El\T

STRATEGY

w.

·.

.

.

Thought for Today: "It is a srupidity second to none, to
busy oneself with the correction of the world." - Moliere,
French dramatist (1622-1673).

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR
Letters 10 r!re editor are welcome. They should be less
than 300 words. All letters are subject to editing, must be
signed, and include address and telephone number. No
.unsigned lerters will be published. Letters should be in
f!.Ood raste, addressing issues, not personaliries. Letters of
rha11ks to urgani~arions and individuals will not be accepted for public,ation.

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Grateful
for hospitality
Dear Editor:
Mere words cannot convey the depth of my grati"
tude. As a vexillologist, or
flag enthusiast, I was honored by the invitation to join
the finest horsemen of three
countries and 23 states as
their flag bearer.
Galloping across the beautiful Ohio hillsides for days
my
favorite
with
Swallowtail flag snapping
above my head embodied
dreams long unfulfilled.
Carrying the U.S. Colors in
the Pasadena New .Year's
Rose Parade pales beside the
days spent in your rriidst.
A multitude of faces leap
to mind upon reflection .
Searching for water on that
grueling first day that tested
both man and steed was
fruitless unti I appeared a
nameless angel who filled
·buckets. Time and again we
turned a .&lt;mrner to find ·
refreshments offered freely.
Meal after ·meal you. the
incredible people of Ohio,
gave of your generosity
including the sweetest roast
com and the line't pecan pie
I've ever enjoyed.
Why do we spend thousands of dollar&gt; on our
mounts, weapons and uniforms? Why do we spend
thousands more. travelin g
across an entire country to
attend Morgan's Raid? We
who are drawn to history
strive for tho&gt;e moment'
when time's veil draw' back.

however briefly, to let us ed more than words can say.
live, to feel at one with those
We are proud.to work with
who carne before us. How such a group of dedicated,
frequently those moments caring individuals. The speflowed together as we spent . cial thing about the Holzer
t~e days in·column along the Horne Health Service lines is
acrual routes and stayed in that we work well together,
their campsites. Were it not and always focus on keeping
for all those who opened the patient the center of all
their lands and hosted us, we do.
Holzer Horne Care has
thi·s raid could not have been
been providing wonderful
made.
To all the angels I met, and home health s.ervices for
there were so many of them , over 35 years. Holzer
bless you for your wann Hospice has been operawelcome . and many kind- tional for the pa~t 12 years.
nesses to thi s California Holzer Extra Care, which
Yankee. So. Ohio, when.next offers personal care and
you are in Sonoma, Calif.. homemaking services, is our
binhplace of the California newest home health service
Republic and the raising of line, and has been providing
the Bear Flag, call or come excellent services since
into the Flag Emporium and 1998. All programs are well
we'll do lunch , my treat.
known in the community.
Andy Dutsoil
We appreciate all of you at
Sonoma, Callf
Holzer Home Care, Holzer
Extra Care, and Holzer
Hospice for the commitment
you
make
to
our
patients/clients, as well those
of you who choose Holzer a~
your provider of choice for
Dear Edilor:
Throughout the month of your home care needs .
Sharon Shul~ RN
November. members of the
Director,
Holzer Hospice
home care community
VICki
Noltingham,
RN
across the United States will
Director, Holzer Extra
celebrate National Home
Care
.Care and Hospice Month.
Connie Carleton, RN
Each nurse, therapist and
Director,
Holzer Home
aide provide.s the best care
Care
po~sible for our patients,
each office staff member
contributes to keeping our
agencies running smoothly.
and the manager' do a
tremendous job. Without
each or these people , we
Dear Editor:
would not be the success that
On March 8, due to a
we are. You are all appreciat- blood clot, my left leg was

. Celeb(ating
hospice

Kindness
of olhers

amputated above the knee. ,
I spent 43 days as a hospi:
tal and rehab patient before
being released in April.
Shawn Rayburn of Home
Health was very instrumental in preparing me for a
prothesis.
I received my prothesis
MiJ.y 12 and started rehab .at
Holzer Clinic in Gidlipolis
May l5. For the next two
weeks, Dr. Black and his
staff of nurses and aides
cared for me and taught me
to walk with .assistance of
my walker.
Upon completion of my
rehab there, I started rehab at
the Pomeroy Holzer Clinic.
Once again I was blessed
with great therapy led by
Joanie Anderson assisted by
Cheryl Thomas.
In addition many strangers
have aided me and my wife
Ann. Total strangers have
helped Ann get my wheelchair from the vehicle and
others have helped her put it
back into the vehicle since it
is too heavy for her.
I have attended two Meigs
high School football games
and at both, Pomeroy volunteer firemen have pushed me
up the embankment so that I
could get a good view of the
game. It is this kind of attention Ann and I receive wherever we go.
This letter is self-explanatory and it comes from my
heart. God bless you all.
DickRilpe
Porm!roy

will be Miles Cemetery in Rutland.
For additional information, or to sign our Online
Memorial Guestbook, please visit www.vocfh.com and
click "obiruaries".
The Hemnann family is being assisted locally by the
Birchfield Funeral Horne.

James R. 1ke' Eiselstein
POMEROY - On Nov. 6, 2006, James R. "Ike"
Eiselstein went home to inform the Lord how heaven
REALLY should be managed, management being his forte
in life, (next to being an excellent cook!) His brilliant fight
with cancer concluded.
,
He started his life as the third son of Gerald and. Anna
Eisel stein in Chester, Ohio, in 1930..Graduated from South
High School in 1948. From there he went on to work at
Frecker's and Gray Drug Stores. He was a Master Sergeant
in the Army, serving his country from 1948-1957. He served
during the Korean Conflict which taught him one of his
great passions in life -cooking. It was while on R &amp; R that
he would observe the Japanese while they cooked. In June
of 1949, he started what would become his 'life's career.
Employed at Ohio Bell for 34 years and II months, he started as a mail boy and ended his career as a District Manager.
Those who knew him then fondly referred to him as "Ike."
He was a member of the American Legion in Columbus,
London and Pomeroy and Telecom Pioneers. His.hobbies
were many. He loved hunting, fishing, buying and selling
properties, and his family. He was a self-proclaimed expert
oq the Civil War and helped with research that dealt with
that topic as it pertained to Southern Ohio. I've never met
anyone who could work a crosswC:&gt;rd puzzle like he could.
And he could tell the best stories of "The Old Days." But
his cooking was his claim to fame. Every dish he ever prepared was perfection!
He i~ survived by his only daughter Beth (Scott) Howes
of Baltimore, Ohio; his only grandchildren and love of his
life, Erica and Cole Howes, also of Baltimore; his beloved
brother and cherished friend Jack (Carol) Eiselstein of
Columbus; baby sister Ruth (Larry) Linkous also of
Columbus; favorite uncle and beloved friend Willard
Moore of Middleport; numerous nieces, nephews and more
friends than you can count.
·
·
He is preceded in death by his parents, Gerald and Anna
Eiselstein; his wife of 43 years, Alberta (Clark) Eiselstein;
older brother Charles (Gertrude) Eiselstein of Columbus;
sister Anna Lee Garcia of Texas; and infant brother Gerald
Eiselstein, Jr.
The family ~uests that ·in lieu of flowers, donations be
made to the Rtverside Methodist Hospital Foundation
Supporting Continuing Educational Opportunities for Nurses,
3535 Olentangy River Road, Columbus, Ohio,.43214.
Service will be held at I p.m. on Sunday, Nov. 12, 2006,
at the Pomeroy Chapel of Fisher Funeral Horne. Officiating
will be the Rev. Jim Corbitt.
Burial will be in Chester Cerneiery and military. services
will be conducted graveside by Post 9926 VFW of Mason,
W.Va. and American Legion Post 140 of New Haven, W.Va.

Plastics factory ordered· Local Briefs
again to reduce emissions Correction RCP performance
COLUMBUS (AP) - A
southwestern Ohio plastics
factory has received a sec. ond order from the state to
reduce emissions of suspected cancer-causing agents.
The Ohio Environmental
Protection Agency said
Wednesday that plastics
maker Lanxess Corp. must
decrease its output of acrylonitrile. butadiene and
other chemicals from its
plant in Addyston, about 20
miles west of Cincinnati.
The plant first was told to
reduce
emissions
in
December. but the company
appealed, protesting that the
state did not first detennine
its order was practical and
not too expens1ve.
An environmental review
commission agreed last
month with the company,
which had announced plans
to spend $4 million to halt
emissions. A company official says more will be spent.
Cancer rates are considerably higher than nonnal in
Addyston, a village of about
1,000 people, a study by the

The Daily Sentinel• Page As

www .mydailysentinel.c:om

Obituaries

Even hypocrisy occasionally has its place

The Daily Sentinel

Friday, November 10,2006

Peebles plans grand
opening for Nov. 16
STAFF REPORT
NEWSIPMYDAILVTRIBUNE.COM

GALLIPOLIS
On
Thursday, Nov. 16, the section of the Ohio River Plaza
that fonnerly housed Kroger
will no longer be empty. .
The incoming department
store, Peebles, will hold a
four-day grand opening eel'
ebration for the entire
Gallipolis community, starting with a ribbon-cutting
ceremony at 8:45 a.m.
The celebration will continue through the entire
weekend . All Peebles
shoppers can enjoy a 15
percent storewide discount
with a Grand Opening
Shopping Pass.
. On Thursday and Friday,
the first 150 customers · to
arrive at the store, age 16
and older, will receive free
gifts; a canvas tote bag on
Thursday and a coordinating
compact umbrella on Friday.
On Saturday and Sunday,
customers · will receive a
$10 Reward Card good on a
future purchase at Peebles,
and all shoppers who visit
the new store at any J?Oint in
the four-day festivities can
register to win one of three

$500 Peebles gift cards.
The store offers one-stop
shopping convenience with
apparel for the entire family,
plus shoes, accessories,
Jewelry and horne gifts. all
under one roof
· Shoppers will be able to .
fmd their favorite braild
names,
including
lzod,
Reebok, Sag Harbor, Rafaella,
&lt;;:larks, Liz Oaibome, Chaps,
Levi's, Carter's. Nike and
many more.
Peebles customers also
have access to a store
branded credit card and a
VIP Rewards Program .
Peebles credit card customers eam VIP rewards,
such as invitations to exclusive savings events. free gift
wrapping and more, based
on annual purchases.
Cardholders also receive
bonus saving coupons · via
mail. Additionallv, Peebles
offers a · special discount
program for its customers
age 50 and over.
Peebles has a reputation
for bringing style, selection
and value to neighborhoods
and small communities
across the New England,
Mid-Atlantic, Southeastern
and Midwestern states.

For the Record
Marriage licenses
POMEROY - Marriage licenses were issued in Meigs
County Common Pleas Court to Dennis Matthew Waver,
39, Point Pleasant, W.Va., and Melissa Dawn Dunlap, 27,
Gallipolis Ferry, W.Va.; David Alan Park, 28, and Rebecca
Fay Sizemore, 25, both of Middleport; Timothy Duane
Clark, 35, and Belinda Marie Bailey, 33, both · of
Reedsville; Zachariah Ray Smith, 21, and Heather Dawn
Westfall, 26, both of Reedsville; Kenneth Michael
Currence, 30, Middleport, and Michelle Nicole Roush, 25,
Pomeroy; and Charles Daniel Ellis U, 24. and Jessica Leigh
Deremer, 25, both of Pomeroy.
.

Divorce
POMEROY -A divorce action was filed in Meigs
County Common Pleas Court by Debbie K. Lee , Pomeroy,
against Todd L. Lee, Tuppers Plains.
A divorce was granted to Keith Mattox from Heather
L. Mattox.

Ohio Department of Health
RUTLAND- The River City Players will be performing
has shown. However, the
study neither implicated nor their USO-themed show tonight and Sarurday night at Meigs
exonerated the plant.
· Elementary School, not on Sunday as reported yesterday.
POMEROY -Actions for dissolution of marriage were
The EPA said airborne
filed in Meigs County Common Pleas Court by Tracy Lynn
levels of .butadiene have
Buckallew, Racine, and Alexander Joseph Buckallew,
decreased since the first
order, but current levels of
POMEROY- Veterans Day services will be conducted Belpre and Michael L. Chancey, Racine, and Vicki S.
acrylonitrile in Addyston at the Meigs County Courthouse at II a.m. Saturday by Chancey, Racine.
would increase the risk of Drew Webster Post 39, American Legion. In the event of
cancer to one in 10,000 rain, the services will be held at St. Paul Lutheran Church
bridge now under construcover 'a lifetime, I 0 times
in the social room.
tion,
are still available from
higher than nonnal for an
downtown
merchants,
urban area.
Farmers
Bank,
Peoples
from
PageA1
"It doesn't matter what it
allow
for
more
efficient
vacCounty
Bank,
and
the
Meigs
takes. The company has to
cine
administration
according
Chamber of Commerce.
operate . in such a way
be held on consecutive
to
the
MCHD.
The
health
Proceeds from the sale are
they ' re not creating an addiSaturdays in December.
department
is
encouraging
all
for
doli.·ntown
from
PageA1
tional risk to the people who
. Residents are reminded used
residents participate in the that glass ornarn.ents featur- Pomeroy beautification.
live around this facility,"
EPA spokeswoman Heather given to individuals. All "swipers" program that it ing etchings of the old
Lauer said. "It's very rare infonnation is kept confi- believes will prepare Meigs Pomeroy-Mason
Bridge
! \ .
County for possible erner- opened in 1928, and the new
that we declare a company a dential and secure.
•
nuisance." ·
Swipers will first be used gency measures.
Wilcox
said
if
there
is
Residents .have long been during this year's flu vaccine
concerned that chemicals clinics and if successful any vaccine left from
released by Pittsburgh-based information will be electroni- Monday's clinic the vacLanxess and its predeces- cally stored in order to access cines will then be offered to
sors posed health threats. it in the event of a natural dis- the general public.
Further , questions should
The Three Rivers School aster or bioterrorism event.
11110 "BUB \\1LLIAMS"'
be
directed to Wilcox at the
Such
occasions
may
require
District closed an elemenwith spe&lt;lal guest Aoiel Jr Idol:
tary school across the street mass vaccination clinics and health department at 992Chase Likens
the electronic system would 6626, ext. 32.
from the plant last year. '
IIIII BOB STEWART BAND:

Dissolution

Veterans Day services

Holidays

Flu shot

-..,I

'' .
I

•,

"

1

7

A!!~!·
, acoustic Jau

Racine.
from PageA1

•

recent
Racine
Village
Council meeting as was
ihstallation of six inch down
Spout drains at the new
water treatment plant' which
· was not included in the
engineer's design.. Roses
Excavating will put in the
drains for $2,840 which
council approved. The village hopes to find a grant to
reimburse the amount.
. Hill announced the instal lation of restrooms at Star
Mill Park is progressing
towards a spring completion
date. The project will cost
roughly $2 1,000 with all
state pennits having already
been filed. The Racine Park
Board has been " raising
funds for the majority of the
project's costs.
Also discussed were cornplaints of open burning
within village limits. Racine
Police Marshal Curtis D.
Jones said he had received
several calls about residents
burning leaves. Open burning is illegal within village
corporation limits in dhe

state of Ohio. Council said
they would ask ·Street
Commissioner John :Holman
about scheduling a leaf pickup and would announce it in
The Daily Sentinel.
Jones also requested the
purchase of two vests for
officers Kevin Dugan and
Randy Smith. ,Council
agreed to purchase up to
two vests and coats for paid
officers in the department
which will be paid for from
the Law Enforcement Trust
Fund in the amount
$1,360: Clerk-Treasurer
Dave Spencer said he would
file an amended certificate
for the appropriation .
Councilman Tom Reed
who works with the Racine
Parks and Recreation Board

of

brought up the idea of a
family event held in conjunction with the Racine
Fall Festival such as a biking tour and/or race during
peak autumn color times.
Resident Dwayne Wolfe
approached council about
getting the $11.50 trash fee
taken off his water bill
becau se he and his wife
recycle to cut down on
refuse and don "t set out
trash for pickup. Council
said it could · not make
exceptions to the ordinance
which says all residents will
be charged · the trash fee
because in making the
exception it left the: door
· open for.others !O get the fee
taken off, others who might
possibly clump tras-h into

other people's dumpsters or
the village dump truck.
Council said these incidents
took place before the ordinance was in place. Wolfe
said people like he and his
wife should be encouraged
to recycle.
All council members were
present for the meeting.

11/12 Auditions: Beauty and ,thc
Bea..t i2-4 em!
t 1/13 Auditions: Beauty and the

-

Beast!6-8em!
tIllS Ol)io VaU.y You(h Orchotra·
Ml!!t!l
11125 USO • ASentimental Journ&lt;y
~nttd B,, The River City Pla)'ers

The Ariel-Dater Hall
428 Sec. Ave. Galli~~lis, OH
740-446-ARTS 2787)

1:15,3:15 &amp; 7:15
Sponsored by Holzer Cancer Center

United We Stand
To honor our own
This Veteran's Day, the staff of
.Fisher Funeral Homes celebrates
America's past, present, and future
by honoring those men and women
who served in our .
U.S. Armed Forces.
Because of their bravery and
.
'
·courage, the American
spirit unites us from within.
'

· volunteers who helped at the headquarters,
made phone calls and worked so hard for the
Republican Party. We thank all of you who voted
for our Republican candidates and ask for your
continued support.
. Sincerely
Dale q,lbum .
Meigs County Republican
Committee President

590 E. Moln • Pomoroy, OH 45769
264 s. Second Ave. • Mlddlepon, OH 45760
740-992·5141 or 740-992-5444
Your pr.p/lrurfng '.-IMI•I

.,

�PageA6

November
FAITH • VALUES
Veil or not to veil?
A Hunger For More

The Daily Sentinel

Friday,

things' he's doing in the preThere are few things more
sent, nor even by the good
difficult for Jesus' church to
things he will do in the
navigate than the troubled
future. He is simply saved by
and turbulent waters of a
God's grace though faith in
leader's moral and/or spiriPastor
Jesus. "God raised us up
tual downfalt. Sadly, such
Thom
· with Christ and seated us
downfalls have occurred
Mollohan with Him in the · heavenly
throughout the history of
realms in Christ Jesus, in
the church, and wi II again
order that in the coming ages
until Jesus returns. On the ·
He might show the incompaone hand, it is quite true that
rable riches of His grace,
into the hands of pastors,
one
who
.sows
to
please
his
expressed in His kindness to
ministers, elders. teachers,
nature, from that us in Christ Jesus. For it is by
deacon's, and other church sinful
nalllre will reap destruction; · grace you have been saved,
leaders, great responsi bility
the
who sows to please through faith - and this not
has been entrusted. Along the one
Spirit, from the SJ?itit
with that responsibility will reap eternal hfe" from yourselves, it is the gift
of God - not by works, so
comes tremendous account- (Galatians 6:7-8 NIV).
that no one · can boast"
ability ... to other people,
It may surprise some that a (Ephesians 2:6-9 NIV).
certainly. but most especial" pt~rdllel can be found in the
If you have not personally·
ly to the One from Whom Scriptures. David, great hero
entered
into a relationship
such trust is gramed.
and shepherd under the Great with God through His Son,
The developments that Shepherd of the people of
unfolded last week revolving God, .also experienced a Jesus, Who died to take the
around
a
well-known major moral compromise that penalty for your sin, it is time
Christian leader · literally he had thought could be cov- to tum to Him knowing that
brought me to tears, though I ered up. In 2 Samuel II , the the love He showed in dying
had !jot personally followed Bible records his adultery and for you, is sufficient to save
his ministry very closely. the terrible extent to which he you. If you have turned to
The despicable nature of Ted went to hide it (namely, mur- Him in faith and He is now in
Haggard's sin, the web of . der). ·But God sees every- fact your Lord, "remember to
lies woven to hide it and the thing. Accordingly, He sent be self-controlled and alert.
. apparent extent to w,hich His servant, Nathan, to con- Your enemy, the devil,
such sin contradicted what front this man to whom the prowls around like a roaring
he taught and stood for, kingdom had been entrusted lion looking for someone to
implies
a
profound (2 Samuel 12). Nathan's dec- devour. Resist him, standing
hypocrisy that impacts the laration, "You are the man!" firm in the faith, because you
whole Christian community. r;mg in David's earS like bells know that your brolhers and
" ... Men ought to regard 1\S tolling death. When he real- sisters throughout the world
as servants of Christ and as ized indeed. that nothing can . are undergoing the same kind
those entrusted with the be hidden from the eyes of of sufferings" (from 2 Peter
secret things of God ... He God and that He does truly 5.:8-9 NIV).
" ... By the grace given me
will bring to light what is measure our hearts as well as
hidden in darkness and will judge our actions, David sur- . I say to every one of you:
expose the motives of men' s rendered his web of deceit Do not think of yourself
hearts" (I Corinthians 4:1- and confessed, "I have sinned more highly than you ought,
but rather think of yourself
2, 5b NIV).
against the LORD."
with
sober judgment, in
With an avalanche of
Your reaction to Pastor
heart -ache and humiliation Haggard's downfall might accordance with the mea. crashing down around his range from anger to sheer sure of faith God has given
family, friends, and church astonishment, from tears to you" (Romans 12:3 NIV). ·
And if, as a Christian, you
family, threatening to engulf maybe even delight in his
their sense of trust, · hope, disgrace . . But . don't be have found yourself swal·~nd identity, it is all too
deceived ... the unveiling of lowed up in the struggle with
clear that our hope as mes- this man's sin does not nulli- the darkness .of discouragesengers of the hope that can fy the message of the Gospel, . ment or temptation, rememonly be found in . Christ it underscores it. " ... Because ber that 'The God of all grace,
Jesus will suffer a massive qf His great love for us, God, Who called }'OU .to His eternal
bruising in the matter of · Who is rich in mercy, made glory.in Christ, after you have
perceived integrity. Some us alive with Christ even suffered a little while, will
will wonder that if such when we were dead in trans- Himself restore you and make
compromise can be found in gressions (sins) - it is by you strong,· finn, and steadone who has emerged as an grace you have been saved" fast. To Him be the. power for
influential leader, "Can the (Ephesians 2:4-5 NIV).
ever and ever. Amen" (2 Peter
message itself be trusted?"
Let it be said that one is 5:10-11 NIV).
If you have fallen into
"Do not be deceived: God not saved for the good things
cannot be mocked. A man he's done in the past; neither compromise, know that the
reaps what he sows. The is he saved by the . good best policy is to "come

Islamic leaders pushed to
shape ancient question

clean" with God. While
there may be very real consequences to such a fall, God
can restore you to an unfettered relationship with
Bv BRIAN MURPHY
Himself. "If we clitim to be
AP RELIGION WRITER
without sin, we deceive ourselves and the truth is not in
ATHENS, Greece
·us.lfweconfessoursins, He Earlier this year on an
is faithful and just and will Arabic Web site, a Muslim
forgive us our sins and puri- woman scholar posted an
fy us from all unrighteous- open letter to the Islamic
ness, If 'we claim we have world. "Take off the veil.
not sinned, we make Him sister,"
began
Elham
out to be a liar and His Word Manea, a professor of
has no place in our lives. My Yemeni descent who now
dear children, I write this to works in Switzerland.
you so that you will not sin.
Her opinion was not new
But if anybody does sin, we - that head scarves and
have One Who speaks to the other coverings for women
Father in our defense are not mandated by the
Jesus Christ, the Righteous Quran or Islamic tradition.
One. He is the atoning sacri- But the essay's impassioned
fice for our sins, and not tone quickly grabbed attenonly for ours but also for the tion. Supporters hailed it as
sins of the whole world" (I ·a timely manifesto against ·
John I :8-9, 2: I NIV) . .
Islam's conservative tide .
Ted Haggard's family and Traditionali sts scorned it as
former church will never be the ramblings of a Muslim
the same. The world may blinded by the West.
never quite forget the sin and
Both sides could agree,
betrayals uncovered last · however. that despite all its
week. But the hope for a child cultural t\l'ists, the question
of God who has fallen into the of the veil is a religious one,
snares of sin is that there is and one that's stubbornly
always an open door to start hard to pin down - just
over again with the Savior.
what does Islam demand?
·"Have mercy on me, 0
With no central Islamic
God, according to Your theological authority
unfailing love; according to such as the Vatican for
Your great compa~sion blot Roman
Catholics
out my transgressions. Wash Muslims are left to.imerpret
away all my iniquity and Quranic passages, sift
cleanse me from my sin. For I through stories about the
know my transgressions, and Prophet
Muhammad,
my sin is always before me ... known as hadiths, and study
Create in me a pure heart, 0 competing religious edicts
God, and renew a steadfast over the various coverings.
spirit within me. Do not cast They range from fashion·me away from Your presence able head scarves to the
or take Your Holy Spirit from shroud-like burqa and the
me .. . The sacrifices of God full-face veil called a niqab,
are a broken spirit; a broken which may only show a
and contrite heart, 0 God, woman's eyes.
You will not despise" (Psalm
"It's· become such · a
.;1: 1-3, 1()..11, 17 NlV).
charged' topic," said Manea,
· (Thom Mollohan mul hi.1 a researcher on politics and
family have ministered in Islam at the University of
· southern Ohio the past II Zurich. "I received hate
years. He is the pastor of mail and e-mails with very
Pathway
Community threatening tones. But. on
-Church which meets on the other side, messages
Sunday mornings at the supporting my views also
Ariel Theatre. He 100y be were overwhelming ...
reached for comments or
In the West - panicularquestions by e-mail at pas- ly Europe - the· veil has
torthom@pathwaygallipo- been drawn into hot-button
·
lis.com).
debates such as immigrant
integration and · worries
about radical Islam. In
many Muslim countries, it
can represent a potentially
executive
officer
of life-shaping decision for
Inspiration Networks, said women ih which the veil is
"most secular television increasingly seen as a polittoday has gone beyond the ical statement against perbounds of good entertain- ceived injustices to Islam.
ment and good informa"There are so many prestion into what the Bible sures now to decide whether
would describe as spiritual the veil is tight or wrong,"
darkness."
said Tarafa Baghajati, a

leader of the European
Network Against Racism in
Brussels,· Belgium. "The
problem is that it's an
impossible task."
Credible cases have been
hui It in.several directions.
Those supporting the veil
often cite a hadith from
S~hih Bukhari, a ninth-century theologian. that urges
women to "cover themse l ve~··
in public. The
Quran. too, contains sections that tell women to
seek modesty and "draw
their cloaks close around
them" (Surah 33, verse 59)
and "draw their veils" over
their chests and necklines
except around their . ~us­
hands and close relallves
&lt;24:3 i ).
Some prominent Islamic
voices, including Egyptianborn cleric Sheik Yusef elQaradawi , say some form of
Islamic coverings is supported by Muslim law and
s;ustoms. But most don't go
beyond advocating some
variation of head scarves
and body-covering clothing.
Fill' fewer leaders - outside ultraconservative bastions such as Saudi Arabia
and Afghanistan - believe
Islam requires veiling a
woman's face and hands,
saying that both are exposed
during prayer and that a
woman· s face should not be
covered during the Hajj, or
pilgrimage, to Mecca.
But many other Islamic
scholars find flaws in any
demands for the veil, which
is often called by the Arabic
term "hijab."
They believe the phrasing
in the Islan1ic texts are too
vague to make it a religious .
requirenient and reflects the
cultural norms of the seventh-century
life . of
Muhammad and later centuries - in the same way
that the Bible and Jewish
sources offer guidance that
is now widely· considered a
matter of personal choice,
such as a passage in I
Corinthians
that
says
women should cover her
head during prayer.
"The · hijab these days
goes beyond religion into
politics, culture and social,"
said
Ahmed
Nazeer,
Institute of
American
Islamic History and Culture
in Concord,· Calif. "These
pressures are all coming
down on Muslim women to make a statement in favor
of the one vision of Islam or
another."

Ministers christen home ofN.C.-based Christian broadcast center
CHARLOTIE. N.C. (AP)
- Big names in television
evangelism gathered to
break ground for a new
·broadcast center for the
Charlotte-based Inspiration
Networks, which is building
a $98 million complex in
South Carolina.

f

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in
Lancaster
Pat Robertson of the campus
Christian
Broadcasting County, S.C.
They condemned comNetwork, Rodney Parsley
of the World Harvest mercial television as evil.
"Television has become
Church in Columbus, Ohio,
and pioneer televangelist America's drug of choice,
Rex Humbard were among an electronic Valium,"
the people who came Nov. Parsley said.
David Cerullo, chief
5 to what will be a 93-acre

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10,2006

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The Gift of Mercy
The dictionary defines mercy as kind or
compassionate treatment of an offender.
Fwthennore, it denotes CQI11JJaS-'&gt;ion w~

personally been offended in some wuy;
however, remember that we are always in

need of God's grace. 'When we reflect on
lhe grace of mercy. we usually lhink ooly
about the act of fcqh·eness; however,
supporting &lt;'heB and being cbarilable lo
thof.e in ne.td. are also exprtt'iions of

.Sure/\ r.;ondne.u and men:&gt; .~hall {tJ//ow ml:'
u1'1 rl1e Ja_
\ '_f (Jf m_\ life: wlli I t~·il/ fh..·e/1 m
tl1e hnust' nf tht&gt; 11mJ /Orr'l't'r
-· N&lt;lN

K.J.V PsaUJn 2),6

mercy. Be1ng thankful for the many
blesstngs which God has given to us. and
then being able to share these with the less
fontTnate is the noblest form of
Con1pass.ion; but mott importantly it is
doing His will and sharing His love.

Director of Marketing and Admbsion ~

Athens. Pomeroy or'Parker&lt;burg

1-740-667-3156

"Still small enough to clUe"

333 Page Street
(740) 992-6472
Middleoort OH
Fax (740) 992•7406
H om~

6 am - 8 pm

i11mo.1:1J/wrt

Mif[ie's 1(estaurant
740-949-2210

Homemade Desserts Made Daily
Hume Cuoked Meab &amp; DaiiJ' Special.~
Open 7 days a \~o. e-ek

·A Home Bank for
Home People"

740-992-7113
'

uardrail, Fence &amp;

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sign erection

(74{))992·6451

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Hills Self Storage
29670 Bashan Rd.
Racine, OH

740-949-2217

P.O Box 683
Pomero Ohio 45769-0683

Sizes available 5x 10 to t 0 x 20

Karl Kobler 1D
Certifltd Publjc A«01111lant

The Hppliance man

email: kkebl« @charter.net
618 E. Main Street
Pomeroy, OH 45769
740-992•7270

74Q-985-3561
992-1550

WORS1THP GOD THIS ·WEEK

I

10:45 a.m .. Sunday Evrning. 6:00p.m.,
Pastor: Don Wallm

Church ot J""' Chrtsl Apootolk
VanZandt and Ward Rd ., Pastor: James
Miller. Sunday School - 10:30 a.m.•
Evening~

7:30pm.

RJm-\'aBty
River Valley Apostolic Worship Center.
873 S. 3rd Ave .• Middleport. Rev.
Michael Bradford. Putor, Sunday, 10:30
a.m. Tues. 6:30 prafer. Wtd. 1 _pm Bib1e
Study
.

l!'.mtallluel Apostelk 'llht11taCle Inc.

Loop Rd off New Lima Rd. Rmland,
Services: Sun 10:00 a.m. &amp; 7:30 p.m ..
Thurs. 7:00p.m .. Pastor MartyR. Hun~

Assembly of. God .
Liberty A...,bly ot God
P.O. Box 467. Dudding Lllne , .Mason,

W.Va., Pastor: Neil Tennant. Sunday.
Services- 10:00 a.m. and 1 p.m.

Baptist

If ye abide in Me, and My
words abide i11 you, ye slt,a.ll
ask what ye will, u11d it shall
be done unto you.
Jolm 15:7

P~1or: Mike Harmon . Sunda.}' School

9:~

to 10:30 am, Wol'!lhip service 10:30
to II :00 am. Wed. preaching 6 pm

C1rpe11ter Bapll!tt Chun:h
Sunday School
9:30am. !'reaching
Service !0:30am. Evening &amp;rvi.l:f
7:00pm, Wednesday B1ble Study 7:1X) pm ,
Interim Preacher- Floyd Ross
Chtshl~ Baptist Church
Pastor: Steve Little. Sunday School: 9:30
am, Mornin g Worship: 10:30 J'ffi .
WMne§day Bible Study 6:30pm: choir
practO: 7;30: )'outh 'and Bible Buddies
6:30p.m. Thurs. I pm book snxJ.y

Hopt Baptld Chun:.h (Soothem)
570 Gr.tnt St., Middlepon. Sunday YChool
- 9:30a.m., Worship - II a.m. and 6 p.m ..
Wednesday Senrice - 7 p.m. Pastor: Gary
Ellis
Rutllnd First Baptist Church
Sunday School - 9:30 asn., Worship 10:45 a.m.
Pomeroy Flnt Baplist
Pastor Jon Brockert. East Main St ..
Sunday Sch. 9:30am. Worship 10:30 am
First Southem Baptist
41872 Pomeroy Pike. Pastor: E. Lamar
O ' Bryant. Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.,
_Wo~h _ip - 8:1~ a.m., 9:45am &amp; NXI p.m. ,

Wednesday Service~ - 7:00p.m.

Flnt Ba.. IJI Chun:h
Pastor: Billy Zuspan 6th and Palmer St..
Middleport, Sunday School· 9:1.5 a.m.,
Worship • 10:1.5
7:00 p.m.,
Wednesday Smice- 7:00p.m.

a.m ..

Flntllopdot
Pastor: Joteph Godwin. interim putor ,
Sunday S~hool - 9:30 a.m ., Worship • ·
10 :~0 ~.m., 7:00 p.m.: Wednesday
SerVices -1:00 p.m.

s........ .......
Pastor: Jottil Swanson, Sunday School •
IOa.m., Worship - lla.m., 7:00 p.m.
,Wednesday Service•- 7:00pm,
Mt.Uoloo8apdst
Pastor:· Dennis Weaver Sunday School- .
9:4S a.m., Evening - 6:30 p.m.,
Wednesday Sen•ices · 6:30p.m.

-lehm llapdsl c•urdl
Great Bene!. Route 124, Racine •. OH.
Pastor: FA:! Carter. Sunday School • 9:)0
a.m., Sunday Worship - 10:30 a .m.,
Wednesday Bible Study-7:00p.m.

Old JldJMI ~ WIIIBa!&gt;dsl Church
28601 St . Rt . 7, Middleport. Sunday
Servicr - 10 a .m .. 6:00 p.m ., Tutsday
Servicei -6:00

525 N. 2nd St. Middleport, Pastor: James
E . Keesee. WorshiP · ·IOa .m., 7 p.m ..
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

Fallh 8apdst Cborth
a .m ., Worship - 11 a.m .. 6 p.m ,
Wednesday Service~ - 7 p.m.

FOft!lt Run.lapUst· Pomt:roy
Rev. Joseph Woods. Sunday School ~ 10
a.m.,Woohip - 11 :30a.m

Mt.Moriohlla.. isl
r Founh &amp; Main St., Middlepon. Pa ~tor:
Rev. Gilbert Cnig, Jr.• Sunday School 9:30 a.m.. -worship - 10:45 a.m .

Antiquity Baptist
Sund"ay School - 9:30 a.m ., Worship -

KEBLER BUSINESS ·
SERVICES
Arcounting. IR.1 's'\ 4Rollo\'er~. 8onds1•
MutJUJI Fund.~. Anru1ifltr'. Lnng Tt'mT Ct1rt

Karl K~hler , lll , CPA. Regis1ered
Reprtsentaii\'Cof H.O. Vcslln,estmcnt
Services'" Xcunlles offered through H D \'es1
investment Sen ices''\ Memhcr SJPC Ad\'i ~ l)
5(!'V1Ces offered through H D Vc~t Ad\ hOI')
Servicess-o. Nnn-banl ~U~Jd1a n e' 11f \\ ell~o
F&amp;rg o &amp; Compan.,, 6~33 North State HWY ltll
4th Aoor. lrvtng TX. 750311 ( 9 7~) ~70-fltliJl

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Sales • Service • Parts
All Makes
Ken and Adam Youn
MEIGS FAMILY EYECARE, LLC
A. JACKSON- BAILES, 00

507 Mulberry Heights
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769 . l'ii:'.
(740) 992-3279
~
Tol Free 1-877-583-2433

190 N Second St.

Middlepon. OH

.. 74D-992-6128
Local source for trophies,

olaaues t-shirts and more ·

KEBLER
BUSINESS SERVICES
.4.u Accounting &amp;

Financial Sen-ice~ Firm
(, )XE. Ma1n Street • Ptmwwy

17-+0)992-7270

Somd Heart Colholk: C~Urth
161 Mulberry Ave .•. Pomeroy, 992-5898,
Pastor: Rev. Waller E. Heinz. Sat. Con.
4:4.5-5:1Sp.m.; Mass- 5:30' p.m.. Sun.
Con. -8:4.5-9:1.5 a.m ... Sun. Mass • 9:30
o.m., Daily Mass - 8:30a.m.

Church of Christ
w- Chon:h otChriot

33226 Children's Horne Rd . Pomeroy. OH
Contact 740--441-12% Sunday morning
10:00, Sun .morning Bib le stud y:
following WOI'Ship, Sun. eve 6:00 pm.
Wed biblr study 1 pm
Hemlock Grove Christian ~reb
Minister: Larry Brown. Worship - 9:30
a.m. Sunda)' School - 10:30 a.m.: Bible
Stud~ ;; 7 p.m.

Pomeroy CbUrth ot Chri~

,

Ratland Chard or God
Pastor: Ron Heath. Sunday Worship - 10
a.m.. 6 p.m .. Wednesday Servicrs - i
pm.
SyracuJt First c•urch of God

Apple and Second Sts., Pascor: Rev. DAvid
Ruuell, Sunday School and Wo~h ip· 10
a.m . Evening Services- 6:)0 p.m.,
Wednesd-.y Services - 6:30 p.m.

OJ. White Rd . off St. Rt . 160, Pastor: PJ .

Chapman. Sunday School - 10 a.m ..
Worship · II a.m .. Wednesdl!.)' Services. ·•
p.m.

Congregational
Trinity Cbun.-h
Second &amp; Lynn. PoiD('roy, Pa~tor : Re''·
Jonathan Nob~. Wo~h i p 10:25 a.m..
Sunday School 9: 15 a.m .

Episcopal
G1'1M.'1'! EpM:upal Chun:h
326 E. Main St., Pomeroy. Sunday School
nd Holy Eucharist 11:00 a.m. Rev.
Edward Payne

212 W. Main St.. Sunday School • 9:30
Wednesday Scroices- 7 pm .

Pomeroy Westside Churc:h of Christ
33226 Children's Hom e Rd .• Sunday
School- II a.m .. Worship - 10a;m., 6 p.m. ·
Wednesday Sen·ices ,- 7 p.m .
\tiddleport· Church or Christ
5th and Main . Pastor: Al Hart son ,
Chi!drens Director; Sharon Sayre, Tetn
Dim:1or: Dodger ·v~ughan. Sunday Schocl
"- 9.:30 eLm., Worship- 8: l5 , 10:30 ll.m., 7
p.m .. Wednesdf!y Services - 7 p.m.

Keno c•urdl of Christ
Worship • 9:30 a.m., Sunday School 10:30 a.m., Pastor-Jeffrey Wallace, l stand
3rd Sunday

BearwaUow Rklp Churth ol Christ
Pastor:Bruce Terry. Sunday Scttool -9:·) 0
a.m.
Worsttip - 10:30 a.m .. 6:30 p.m .
Wed~ay Services - 6:30pm.

Zion Cbur&lt;h ot Christ
Pomero)'. Harrisonville Rd. (Rt.l4J).
Pastor: Roger Watson. Sunday School 9:3_0 a.m., Worship - 10:30 a.m .• 7:'00
p.m .. Wednesday Services- 7 p.m.

1\a_. Plain CbUrth

of Chrlll
lnttrument.al, Worship Service-- 9 a.m .•
Communion • 10 a.m .. Sunda)l School 10:1.5 a.m., YOU:tll- .5:30pm Sunday, Bible
Study Wednesday 7 pm
Bndbuey Churdl otC..ut
Minister: Tom Run)'on, 39.5.58 Bradbury
Road, Middleport, Sunday School - 9:30
a.m.
Wonhip- 10:30 a.m.

Dan,·ille Holiness Churth
31057 State Route 325. Langf&gt;vlle. Pa!Jfor.
Benjamin Crawford. Sunday sc~l - 9:30
a.m., Sunday worship - 10:30 a.m . &amp; 7
p.m., WedneWy prayer servil:f- 7 p.m.
Calvary PiiCTtm Chapel
Harrisonville Road, Pastor: Charles
McKenzie. Su~day School 9:30 a.m..
Wrohip - II 'a.m .. 7:00 _p.m .. Wednr~day
Servi'-'e- 7:00p.m.

Rose ot Shu-on Holiness Chun:h
Leading Creek Rd., Rutland , Pastor:·Rrv .
Dewey King, Sunday school - 9:30 a.m..
Sunday worship -7 p.m .. Wednesday
;nyer meeting- 7 p.m.
Pine Gro"e Bible HoHnts:s ChUn::h
112 mile off Rt. 325, PaSior: Rev. O'Dell
Manley, Sunday School - 9:30 a.m ..
Worship - J0:3o a.m.. 7:30 p.m ..
Wednesday Service-7:30p.m.

Wesleyan Bible Hollo&lt;ss Chun:h
75 Pearl St .• Middleport. Pastor: R1ck
Bourne, Sunday School- 10 a.m. Worship
-10:45 p.m.• Sunday E''e. 7:00 p.m ..
Wcdncadl.y Service-7:30p.m.
H,..U Run Communll)' Churth
Putor: Rev.l...arry Lemley; Sunday School
- 9:30 a.m .. Wonhip - 10 :45 am .. 7 p.m ..
Thundly Bible Study and Youth -7 p.m_.
LMtrtl ClllrFne Methodist Churd

Pastor: Glenn Rowe. Sunda)' School 9:30 a.m., Wo_rship • 10:30 a,m. and 6
·p.m.,WediJesday Service~ 7:00p.m.

Bndfonl Cb111&lt;h ot Chrbl
Comer of St. Rt. 124 &amp; Bradbury Rd ..
Minister: Dou&amp; Shamblin. Youth Minister:
Bill Ambergrr. Sunda)' School ·9:30am.
Worship - 8:00 a.m., 10:30 a.m., 7:00
p.m.,Wednesday Services -7:00p.m.

Hkkoey Hils Chun:h uiC~risl
Tuppers Plains. Pastor Mike MooR , Bible
class. 9 a.m. Sundly: worship JO 11.m.
~ Sunday; worship 6:30pm Sunday; Bible
class 7 pm Wed.

The Church of Jau•
St. - Rt . 160, 446·6247 or

Dexter Churtb of Christ
Sunday school 9:30a.m., Sunday wol'$bip
- IO:JO a.m
Tht. Chotth tA Christ of
lntefsection 7 and 124 W. Evangelist:
Dennis Sargent, Sunday Bible Study 9:30a.m .• Worship: 10:30 a.m. and 6:30
p.m .• Wednesday Bible Study· 7 p.m.

Pomero'

Christian Union

Hllrifonl Ch.n:b ot~bo
Cbriollaa Unlon
Hartford, W.Va .• P11stor:Oavid Greer,
Sunday. School - 9:30 a.m.. Worship 10:30 a.m .. 7:00 p .m., Wednesday
Services -7:00p.m.

St. John Lutberu Chun::h
Pine Grove,,Yiorship • 9:00a.m .. Sunday
School - 10:00 a.m. P11~tor: hme~ P.
Bnody
Our Saviour Lutheran Chun:h
Walnut and Henry Sts., Ra\'emwood,
W.Va., Pauor: David Ru sse ll. Sunda}
School- 10:00 a.m., Wor~hip • II a.m.

Comer Sycamore &amp; Second Sr .. Pomeroy,
Sun. School-9:45a.m .. Worship- 11 a.m.

United Methodist
Graham Unlttd loldJtocHsl
Worship- II a.m . Pastor: Richard Nease
lkchld United Methodist
New Haven. Richard Nease. Pastor.
Sunday worship 9:30 a.m. Tues . 6:.\0
prayer and Bible Study.
M~. Olive United Metbodlst
Ofli 114 behind Wi lk6iville. Pastor: Rev.
Ralph Spires. Sunday School - 9:30am ..
Wouhip- 10:30 a.m.. 7 p.m., Thur.oday
Services • 7 p.m.

•

Mtfp Coopn-ative Parish

Northeast Clu!&gt;ter. Alfred . Past nt: Janr
Beattir. _Sunday School - '!J:30 a.m..
Wmhip - 11 a.m., 6:30p.m.

c,_

ML Moriall Cburdl o( God

Pastor: Jane Beanje, Worship - 9 a.m..
Sunday School - !0 a.m , Thurnlay
Services- 7 p.m.

....
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............ z
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740-594-6.l33
1-800451-9806

MIIU-M44

Davls-Qulckel Agency Inc. If ye abi.de.in Me, and My Brogan-Warner
Full line of
INSURANCE
Insurance words abide in you, ye shall
SERVICES
·
Products+ ask what ye will, and il shall
F1nanoial
214 E. Main ·
be done unto you.
Serv~CE~s
992-5130
ENCIES Inc .
John 15:7
Pomeroy
BNI Quickel
992-&amp;&amp;n

White Funeral Home
Since 1858
9 Fifth Street
Coolville, Ohio
'

740-667-3110

u!ili
ANDERSON
rt:N ERA L HOME

114Lal,. S1m&lt; •PO Boxl'lt
Nfw H1vei. W\- 251.65
J_, H......_, Ucmol Fu- Dimi&lt;W

H&lt;idi s. AICienoo. Fomlooucbll'uncnll'llllninc

Chester Churth of' the Naz.arene
Pastor: Rev. Herbcn Grate, Sunday School
- 9:30 am .• Worsttip - II a.m., 6 p.m .•
WednesdaY-Services · 7 p.m. ·
·
Rutland ChUrth of the Nazarene
Sunday Scttool - 9:30 a.m .. Worship 10:30 a.m .. 6:30 p.m .. Wednesd11y
Services · 7 p.m. Rev. Mike Clark

Rctebvillt

Worship : 9:30 a.m ., Sunday School •
10:3(1 a.m., First Sunday of Month- 7·00
p.m. service

'l'upptrs Pl.ains St. Paul
Pa!;tor: Jane Beauie, Sunday School - 9
a.m .. Worship - 10 a.m .. Tuesday Services

Other Churches

-7: 30p.m.
A~bury

Ctntral Cluster
(Syracu~). Pastor: Bob Robinson.

Syrlk'USt' Community Chur1'h
2480 Sewnd St .. Syra~'use. OH
Sun. Sc hool 10 am. Sundy nigl11 6JO prn
Under lhe di~1ioo of Dan &amp; fa11h
Ha}ma11
A New Beginning
(t"ul Gospel Chun-hJ Harri son,·ille.
Pa~tors : Bob and Kay Mlirshall.
Sunda}' Servi~-e. 2 p.m .

Sunday Schoo1 ." 9:45 a.m., Worship- 11
a.m.. Wednesday Sen.·ices - 7:30p.m
Enterprise

·Pastor: Arhmd King . Sunday School 10:30 a.m ., Worship - 9:30 a.m.. Bible·
Stud)' Wed. 7:.\0

Flatwoods
Pa~tor :

KeiTh Rader. Sunday School - 10
a.m.,Worship - 11 a.m.

A.mazlng Grace Community Church
Pastor: ~ayne Dunlap. State Rt. M 1,
Tuppers Plain~. Sun. Worship: 10 am &amp;

Forest Run

6:30pm .. Wed. Bible Stud:y 7:00p.m.

Paswr: Bob Robinson. Sunday School ~ 10
a.m .. Worship-9a ..m.

Oasis Chrlsi:lan t'ellowshlp
(Non-denomiiUitlon al fellowo;.hip~
Meeting 10 ttte Meigs MK!dlr Sc hool
Cafc1eri" Pa.~1or: Chris Stewan
10:00 am- Noon Sunday: lnfonnal
Worship. Ch1ldrcn 1s m1mstl)

Heath ( \1iddteport~
Pastor: Brian Dunham. Sunday School 9:30 a.m .. Worship - 11 :00 a.m.

Minmwi.lk
P,astor: Bob Robinson. Sunday School - 9
a.m .. Worship - 10 am.

Community or Christ
Ponland-Racine Rd .. Past&lt;."JT: J1m l'mlh t!.
Sunday' School - qi]{l a.m .. \\.'or~h1p 10:30 a.m.. W~ne sda y Service~ - 7:00
p.m.
Bethrl Worship Center
39782 S.R. 7. Rcedsv11Jc. OH 4517~. 1.'2
mile nonh of Eastern Schools on SR 7. A
Full Gospel Church. Pastor Roh Rarher.
Associate Pastor Karyn Davi s. Youth
Pastor Suz:ie Francis. Sunday ~t:r\'i~.:e•
10:00 am worship. 6:00 pm Fam1ly L1fc
Classes. Wed. Home Gel! GrJJups 7:00
p.m .. Outer Limits Cdl Group aT The
church 6:30 pm to 8 :.~ pm

Pe.orlChapd

Sunday School·· 9 a.m .. Worsttip - 10 a.m.

Pomeroy
Plistor: Brian Dunham . Worship - 9:.30
a.m., Sunday School- 10:35 a.m.
Ra&lt;k Spring&gt;
Pastor: Keith Rllller. Sunday School · 9:15
a.m., Worship - 10 a.m .. Youth
Fello~hip , Sunday- 6 p.m.

Rutland
Pastor: Rick Bourne, Sunday Scttool 9:30a.m .. Worship- 10:30 a.m.. Thursda:y
Services- 7 p.m.

Ash Stl'ff't ChuKh
398 Ash St.. Middlepon-Pasior Jeff Smith
Sunday School - 9:30 a-112-- Morning
Wonh ip · !0:30 a .m. &amp; 7:00 pm.
Wednesday Ser,•i ce - 7:00 p.m .• Youlh
Service-7:00p.m.
Agv.pt Life CeDter
'' Full-Gospel Church", Pastors John &amp;
Patty Wade, 603 Second A,·e. Mason. 773~017, Service time: Sunday 10:30 a.m .,
Wednesd11y 7 pm

Salem Center
Pastor: William K. Marshall. Sunday
School - 10:15 a.m.. Worship - 9:1.5 a.m.,
Bible Study: Monday 7:00 prri

Snowville
. Sunday ·School - 10 ;u.l • W&lt;Jrs'hip - 9 a.m.

lldhany
Pastor: John Gilmore. Sunday School · 10
a.m .. Worship - 9 a.m .. Wednesday
St!rviccs- 10 a.m,

Abundant Gnc:t R.F. I.
923 S. Third St., Middlepon. Pastor Teresa
Dni1 , Sunday 5ervice, 10 a.m .,
Wod.nesday 5ervice, 7 p.m.

Carmei-Sunon

Blessed are the pure
in heart; for they
shall see God.
Matthew5:8

School - q il..m Wt'lr,hlp lier\Ji.':t'
I0 a m 2nd and 4th Sundl1\.

Sund~y

.

.

Carleton lntertlcnnmlnatioBal Churrh
Kmg~bllr) Roi!d. Pa•tnr. Roben Vancr.
Sunday School - Q:]O a.m . WMhlp
Service ]0:]0 am . Evrn1ng Senicr 6
p.m.

Frmlom Golpel Mi.Wn
Bald Knob . on Co . Rd . 31. Pastor Rev ..
Roger Willford . Sunday School - 9:30
a.m. Worship- 7 p.m.
Whitt's Chapt'l Wesle)'BI.I
Coolvil le Road , Pa~10r: Rc1•. Phillip
R1denour. Sund.t) Sctt~&gt;OI - 9:30 a.m..
Worsttip · 10:.'0 a.m., Wcdnt':idl!y Sen it:e
" 7 p.m.

Fain it"' Bible l:hurch
Letan . W.Va Rt. 1. P:~ ,tor: Brian Ma;.
Sunda~ Srh~•l 9 :30 a n'1 . Wor,hlp - 7:00 ·
p.m.. Wi!d nesd.J ~ Bibl'" Stuth 7:\lJ p.m.
t'ailh Fl&lt;llow~blp Crusade l'nr t :hrl!it
PJ ~tur : Re1 Fmnl-.ltn Dicl-. e 11~. Ser"i,·e:
Frida~. '7 p.m.
C11l var~·
Pmncro ~

Bible Church

P a~ t or ; Rt'l'.
Bladwood. Sunday School - 'HI! a.m..
Wor\lll]J IU:30 11 m . . ?. 3U p.m ..
Wed n..:~d&lt;~ y $cr\'iCl' - 7:30 p.111

P1 l.e, C1) , Rd ..

Stln:f'li\'ill(' Community Apo!itolie
Church
Pa~tor:

Way11e R. kwdt.

Suntl&lt;~) .,.,ur~ll1p

- fi:Oil p.m . We dne•d u~ · fd)ll

r.m. H1hlc

Stutly
K"joicing Uft' Church
5011 N. !n1l o\1c .. Mu.Jdleporl. l'u•t or·
MLI-.e Forcman.I';Hm l:.mcritu~ Un&gt;.rc11~·c
Foreman . Wor~h 1p - IQ :fHl am
Wednrsdr1y Sen kc~ - 7 p.m.

Clifton TaOCrn~de C'hunh
'
C[ifton . W.V11 ., Sunday SchiKJI · 10 a.m.,
Worship - 7 p.m . Wedne,day Sl'n ice - 7
p.m.
N"" l:irr \ ' lctor~ Ct'n trr
.H73 George~ Cr~:e l-. Road. Gallipuh~o. OH
Pa~olor: Bill Stotlcn. SunJ:~~ Ser\I(C" - 10
a.m. &amp; 7 p rn . \J.-'ednc~odil~ · 7 p.m &amp;
Youth 7 p.m.

.

Full (;DSpt'l ChuKh

or tilt' LivlnR Snior
Rt.J:\8 , Antiquity, P:ll(Wr: Je,~e Morrio.
Services: Saturdll) 2:00p .m.

Salem Community Chur(tt
W.Va.om Ue1•ing
' Road. Pastor: Charles Roush .1.'04) 675·
2288. Suryday ~chool 9:30 affi. Sunday
evening sen ice 7:00 pm. Bibly Study
Wednesda y service 7:00pm
BllC~ of":'e~! · Columbia.

Hobson Chrlsllan Fellowship Church
P11.stor: Her\Chel White·. Sundiay School10 am. Suntlny Church se.mce - 6:30pm
Wec!nesd11y 7 pm

Carmel &amp;. Bashan Rds . Racine, Ohio,
Pastor: John Gilmore. Sunday Scttool 9:30 a,m .• Worship- 10:45 a.m .. Bible
Study Wed . 7:00 P:m.

Faith FuU Gospel Chun:h
Long Bonom, Pastor: S!eve Reed , Sunda~·
Scttool - 9:30 11.m. Worsttip · 9::\0 11.m.
and 7 p.m .• Wednesday- 7 p.m .. Friday ·
fellowship service 7 p.m.

Pastor: John Gilmore. Sunda)· School - .11
a.m .. Worship- 10 a.m.

Harriso1vlll~ C•mmunlay Chul'(h
Pastor: Theron Durham, Sunday - 9:30
a.m'. ond 7 p.m.. Wednesday- 7 p.m.

Houge of HeallnK Ministries
St. Rt. 124 Lanas,·llle, OH
Full Gospel. Cl Pastors Roben &amp; Robertn
Mu sser. Sunday School 9:30 am, ,

PastQr: Bill Mar§hall Sunday Scttool 9a .m .. Worsttip - 10 a.m .. 1st Sunday
every manrh e\·ening !iervice 7:00 ' p.m.:

Mlddltpon Community ChuKh
575 Pearl St., Middlepon . Pa ~t or: Sam
Anderspn. Suilday School 10 a.m ..

Worship 10:30 am - 7:00 pm. Wed.

Wednesday- 7 p.m .

Evening- 7:JO p.m.. Wednesday Service 7:30p.m.
·

Ea&amp;tLellri

· Lutheran

Church of God
Mile Hill Rd .. Racine, Pastor: James
Sanerfield. Sundiy School -. 9:45 a.m ..
Wednesday Services - 7

Pomeroy Church or lbe Nuare:nt
Pastor: Jan Lavender. Sunday School 9:30 a.m., Wonhtp · IO:JO am . and 6
p.m., Wednesday Services- 7 p.m .

Sunday Srhool - 9:30 a.m., Wor:s,t11p10:30 a.m. ,

4~6-7486,

Sunday School 10:20-1 1 a.m ., Relief
Society/Priesthood 11 :0.5- 12:00 noon,
Sacrament Service 9-10 : 15 a .m.,
Homemaling meeting, lst Thun.- 7 p.m

SC. Paul btheran Chun:h
Roedmle Church oiChrtA
Pastor: Philip Stunn. ~unday School: 9:30
a.m .. Worship Service: 10:30 a.m .• Bible
Study. Wrdnesday. 6:30p.m.

Pastnr: Denzil Null, Wonhip - 9:30 a.m.
Sunday School· 10:30 a.m.

Latter-Day Saints
Cbrifl of Latkr-O.y Saints

Sunday Schoo_! - 9:30 a.m., Worship and
Communion· 10:30 a.m., Bob J. Wetry.
Mini§ttr

Joppo

Holiness
Community Chu.rtb
Pastor: Steve Tomek, Main StreCt.
Rutland. Sunday Worship- 10:00 a.m..
Sunday Service-7 p.m.

a.m .. Worship- 10:30 a.m .. 6 P:m..

your light so shine bef&lt;Jrel
, that they may see
lg&lt;lOd works and glorify
Matthew 5:

Wednesday Services- 7 p,m.

pm.

Church or God. ol Propllccy

Catholic

Rutland Churclt or Chrlll

lEather in heaven.''

MIDDLEPORT
TROPHIES &amp; TEES

Rudud Fno WIR Bopdoo
Salem St .. Pastor: Jamie Fortner, Sunday
'School - 10 a.m ., Evening • 7 p.m.,
WediiCsday Services. 7 p.m.
Socood.llop4bt ChUrth
Ravenswood, WV, Sunday School 10 am' Morning worship II am l:.vening - 7 pm,
Wednesday 7 p.m.

Pqtville Fn=ewill Baptist Church

Railroad St.. Mason. Sunday School - 10

\Varm f neii(J/,

some form of punishment is expeacd or
de$m•ed. The gifi of mercy is lnlil' a gift
from God and when v.re show kindness
and me~cy toward someone we are
reflecting God.Si love. Thr: Holy Spirit is
ah-.·a)'s present whenever the grace of
mercy is extended to another. :and ttm.e
that receive compassion cannot help but
feel the lov~ ·o f God. Jesu.~ said, "Blessrd

are the mCrciful, for they will obtain
mercy." (Matthew 5:7) Being merciful is
not always easy, especially if we have

Michelle Kennedy

The Dally Sentinel •'Page A7

www.mydallysentlnel.com
'

\'ldoey Bapli$1 ln&lt;lepmdenl

ARCADIA NURSING
CENTER
Coolville, Ohio
Located less than 30 minutes from

Friday, NOvember 1o, 2006

Hilhliclc lbptitt ChuKh
St . R(. 143 just ofT Rt. 7, Pastor: Rev
James R. Acree, Sr.. Sun~ay Un ified
Service, Worship - 10:30 .11.m .. 6 p.m.,
Wednesday ~ices -7 p.m.

lhe sponsors of this church page do so with pride in our community
Blessed are the pure .
in heart; for they
shall see God.
Matthew 5:8

•

Rodne

Pastor: Kerry Wood . Sunday School · 10

Faith Valle)' Tabernacle Church
Bailey Run Road. Pastor: Rev . Emmetl
Rawson. SUnda) Evening 7, p.m..
Thur!iday Sm1cc- 7 p.m.

a.m.. Worship - 1! a.m.Wednesclay
Sel'\'ices 6 pm: Thur Bible Study 7 pm

CoolviHe United Methodist Parkli
Pastor: Helen Kline, 'coulvdlr Church.

Syracuge Mission

Main &amp; f1fth St., Sun .' School - 10 am .,
Worsh ip - 9 a.m., Toe~. ServiL't!~- 7 p.m.

1411 Bridgeman St .. Syracuse. s'undu)

Schnol - 10 a.m. benmg - 6 p .m ..
Wdin!'!iday Sen·ice- 7 p.m.

Bethel ChUI"('h
468C, Sunday School - q
a .m. Worship - · !0 a.m .. WedneM.l&lt;~ y
Servi~s- 10 a.m.
Town~hip..Rd ..

Har.rl Community t:hun::h
Off Rt . 114 . Pastor: Edsel U &lt;~rt. Sur'l(ia}
School- 9.30 a.m. Wor~hip - 10:30 il.m ..

·uo p.m.
Hock....... Chun:h
Grand Street, Surxiay School - 9:30 a.m..
Worship- 10:30 a.m .. Pastor Phillip Bell

Dym·iiW Communit)' Church
Su nday School - •uo a.m . Wor'hlf'l 10:30 a.m., 7 p .m.
Morse Chapel Ch11rrh
Sunday ~chool - !0 a. m., Wor~hip - II
a,m., Wednesda~· Ser\'icr- 7 p.m.

Thrdl Chun:h
Co. Rd . 6~. Sunday School-9:30a .m.,
Worship - 10:.30 a.m.

Nazarene

FMlth Gospel CIJUKh
Long Bottom. Sunday Scht&gt;ol - 9:_:10 ~-m _,
Wnnhip - 10:45 ll .ni .. 7 JO p 111 ..

Mk141epor1.Church or tht Nizare:nt
Pastor: Allen Midcap. Sunday School 9:30 a.m ..Worsttip - 10:30 a.m.. 6:30
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m., Pastor:
Allen Midcap

p:m
·..

Wedne~a~· 7 : ~

p.m.

Mt. Olh·e Community Church
Pa swr: Lawrence Bu~h . SunJa~ s~·hool 9:30a.m.. E'•eninp. - 6:30p.m.. \\'edneda~
Sen·ice - 7 p.m.
Full Gospel Lighthouse
33045 H1 land Road . Pomero}. P:aMor: R CI~
Huntrr. Sunday School 10 a.m.. E'cmng
7:30p.m.. Tuesda) &amp; ThuTh . 7:30pm .

Reccls,·ille Fellowship
Church of the Naz.arCne. Pastor: . Sunday

School · 9:30a.m .. Wohhlp - 111:4' a.m..
7 p.m . Weclne-.da~· Str\'icc, · 7.p.m .
Syracuse Omrc~ of thr Naurrar
PaStor Mike Adlins , Sundc.y Sch(l()l - &lt;UO
11 m .. W1,1Nhip - 10:30 a.m.. 6 p m .

Restoration Christian FelloW511Ip
9365 Hooper Road. Athens. Pastor·
Lonnie Coa_t&amp;. Sunday Worship 10:00 am.
Wednesday : 7 pm

Ser\'ice 7:00 pm

Pentecostal
PenletO!ital Assembl~·
St. R1 124. Racine . Tnrnado Rd Su[!da~
School - 10 ,a.m.. Evenin~ - 7 p.m ..
Wednesda} Sen·ic:es- 7 p m.

Presbyterian
·Harr!SOnl'ille Presbyll"rlan Church
Pil,tor: Rolx·n (\u\.0., Wor-...hrp - 9 ct .l'n .

Pa~tor : J aml'~ Sn~dcr. St~ndll;.

Srh ,. ,1 0

a.m . WOJP•htp "Cll'll'e 11 -tun .

Seventh-Day Adventist
Se'•en1h-Day Ad\'t:ntist
Mu!tlt•rr:- Ht~ .. Rd .. Pnmcrn~. S:uun.l~y
S..:T\i,·t&gt;, Sutol'oulh S(lltit•l - :! p.m ..
Wor,h1p - 3 p.m

United Brethren
:\lt. Hermon United Hn•thrt'n
In Christ Chun·h
Tl.''a~

CCimmuni t) .'t&gt;-*1 1 Wt.::l-.ham Rd.
l'u.,TCir: .Pell'l' M.tntndale. "'und:~ I S,'h0&lt;'1 9: .'11 a·. m.. \1.-tlr,hl)) - IO:JO :~ . m .. 7:00
p.m.. Wedn,·~day S&lt;'n ~~- c~ · 7:00 p.m.
Youlh' gnlllp llli.'O:ttn~ :!11d ,\: .. lh ·Sund:L&lt;'S
7 fl -111
Eden Llnttr-d Rn.'lhrcn in Christ
StUll' Rt'Utc 1~-t. hetl'o l't'll R..:etl.,lille' &amp;:..
Hndmt:p•m . Suntlu: s,·htlPI Ill .1 .m..
Sunda~ Wm,h tp II :(1(1 ~ m \\'&lt;'d tk.',tb~
Sen· 1~·c:,
7: 1KI p m .. r~,Tor \1 ..\dum
W1ll

South Bethtl Community Churc:h
Siher Ridge · Pu~Tor Lmda Dame~ood.

ROCKSPRINGS
!francis Florist
your light so shine before
REHABILITATION CENTER men,thatther mar see'your,
Mci g. . Count~ ·.., Olde..,J Fltlrt..,I
,A
The care you dtsmt , close.lo 1romt good works and glorifr vow· ••.,., 3!i2 East Main
Pomeroy.
Oh
36759 Rocksprings F:\d .
Farher in hral'en ...
Pomeroy, OH 45769
Matthe11 5:16

W

740-992-6606

·swiSHER &amp; LOHSE
PHARMACY
We Fill Doctors'
Prescriptions

992-2955

74Q-992-2644

or God so lol'ed tile world
l1e gare his only
ll!eROIIen SOil. ..
John3:16

Pomeroy

"So I strive always 10 keep
my com.cience clear before
God and man ."

Acts 24:16

t § JLll "'''mdyh.·lp
rmtrr:t _1/{! urjamtly
Su p prc~\ln n

• E\!mgut.,hcr' • Spnn\..Jr r,
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M11 erace is Sufficient
for thee: for mY ·
streneth is made
Perfect in weakness.
11 Cor. 12:9

Office SeiVice &amp;Supply
137-C N. 2nd Ave .
Middleport, OH
992~376

�•
•

BYTHEBEND

The Daily Sentinel

Today's Forecast
FMIC&amp;Sl for Frklloy, Nov. 10

caring that she is limiting "get over it and move on." I thought his fixation would
her son's independence and Larry says Barbara is "his go away after the wedding;
AND MARCY SUGAR
maturity and dama~ing his choice," and therefore, Alex but it got worse. I had to gel
Dear Annie: I desperately aM!ity to sustain lovmg rela- needs t.o accept her. I dis- on the scale every day so he ,
need advice concerning my tionships. She is being self- agree. How can I make him could check my weight. Ito
understand?- Darla
would buy clothes for me
husband of 10 years. "Stu" ish, jealous and possessive.
You
can
kill
her
with·
Dear
Darla:
You
cannot
just
to make sure I stayed
is 50 years old, and I am his
"get
over
the
same
size. He belittlel:l
kindness,
telling
her
how
force
someone
to
fourth wife. (I know - that
should have been a clue.) wonderful she is, asking it" or accept a person who me constantly and daily
The major problem is the what you can do for her, has hurt his mother and asked if I went to the gym.
"apron strin~s:' have never seeing her often, calling destroyed his home life. It was abusive.
By the way, I was, and
been cut. I d1dn 't just marry daily. This might soften her This takes time. Pushing
my husband. Apparently, I up enough that you . are no Barbara on Alex will only still am, a size 6. "Not Thin
longer a major.. threat. . You make him resent her more, Enough" should run and
married my mother-in-law.
also
can totally avoid her, and some of that resentment never look back. I had plenStu receives money ·and
Stu will not back will carry over to his feel- · ty of red flags and I ignored
but
since
gifts from his mother and
does not share. He talks you up, this will hurt your ings for Dad, who is being them. -Southern Indiana
.,ear Indiana: Thanks
about me to her, negative marriage. Or you can ask an insensitive clod.
to
go
withyou
for
coun·
If
Dad
has
any
sense,
he
for
"weighing in." We're
Stu
things and outright lies. In
seling.
saying
you
need
his
will
tell
Alex
that
Barbara
sorry
you had to learn your
her eyes, I ·can do nothing
right, and she holds grudges help to work on some. .wotild like to rneet hi (!I, and lesson the hard way, but ~
for things ·I didn't know I issues, and hope the coun- to let them know when he's appreciate your 'writing to
selor will make Stu under- ready. Dad should ~tay warn others. · ·
·
was supposed to be doing.
stand
how
Mama
is
under·
involved
in
Alex's
life,
Annie's
Mailbox
is
writ·
I've talked to Stu about
without Barbara, allowing lim by Kathy Mi!chell and
this, but nothing changes. I mining his marriage.
Dear Annie: My good his son the time to forgive Marcy Sugar, wngtime edi·
have lost respect for him ·
and am at the point of pre- friend , "Larry," had an affair, his father and be able to tors of the Ann Landers
tending I don't have a moth- divorced his wife and is now meet his new partner with a column. Please e-mail your
questions to anniesmail·
er-in-law at all. How do I with the Other Woman. I'll more open heart.
Dear Annie: I read the box@comcast.net, or write
deal with this? - Second call her "Barbara." ·
Out of loyalty to his letter - from "Not Thin . ·to: Annie's Mailbox, P.O.
Marriage in Texas
mother,
and his own anger, Enough in Texas," whose Box 118190, ' Chicago, IL
Dear Texas: Stu's relationship with his 'mother Larry's son refuses to meet fiance was fixated on her 60611. To find out more
seems normal to him, and he Barbara. "Alex" is 17, and I · weight. You told her to run about Annie's Mailbox,
and read features by other
doesn't understand that it is feel he has the right to from him.
decide
not
to
meet
the
perI
wish
I
had
asked
for
Creators . Syndicate writers
wrong for him to put Mom
before you. His mother, of son who interfered in his · advice when I met my ex- and cartoonists, visit the
course, encourages this parents' marriage. Larry and weight-watcher six years Creators Syndicate Web
attachment, not realizing or Barbara say Alex needs to ago. Instead, I married him. page at www.creators.com.

'
'

*Columbus
65" I 44"

Friday•.• Mostly sunny in .in the mid 50s. Lows in the
the morning ... Then becom- mid 30s.
Monday... Partly cloudy
ing partly cloudy. Highs in
the upper 60s. East winds with a 40 percent chance of
around 5 mph ... Becoming rain showers. Highs in the
south in the afiernoon. - _ mid 50s.
Friday
night ...Partl y
Monday night and
cloudy in the evening ....Then Thesday... Mostly cloudy
mostly cloudy with a chance with a 40 percent chance of
of showers after midnight. showers. Lows in the lower
Lows in the lower 50s. 40s. Highs around 60.
Thesday night ... Mostly
Southwest winds 5 to I0
mph. Chance of rain 50 per- cloudy with a 50 percent
chance of showers. Lows 'in
cent.
Veterans Day...Showers. the upper 40s.
POMEROY - In obser- shopping
trip
to Wild Horse Cafe at 6 p.m.
Wednesday ••. Mostly
Cooler with highs in the mid
50s. Temperature falling into cloudy with a chance of vance of Faith Promise. Parkersburg were enjoy- on Dec. 4. There will ·be an
ornament exchange and
the upper 40s in the after- showers and thunderstorms. Sunday a representative of able.
secret si-s ters will be
It
was
reported
that
milithe
Grundy
Mountain
·noon. West winds 10 to 15 Highs in the lower 60s.
revealed with new names
care
packages
have
Mission
will
be
the
speaker
tary
mph with gusts up to 30 mph. Chance ofrain 50 percent.
Wednesday night. .. Mostly at Sunday services ill the been mailed out. Council being drawn.
Chance of rain 90 percent.
It was decided that curdecided that the college stuSaturday night.;.Mostly cloudy with a chance of Bradford Church of Christ.
rent
officers will continue
Announcement
of
the
dents
will
be
sent
packages
cloudy · with a 20 percent showers and thunderstorms.
for
another
year. The meetchance of rain showers. Lows around 40. Chance of guest speaker and a potluck in January. A collection is
dinner to follow were made now being taken to buy ing opened with prayer
Muth cQOler with lows in rain 40 percent.
at
this week's meeting of items needed for fruit bas- requests and praises with
Thursday ... Mostly
the lower 30s. North winds
the
Lydia Council held at kets, a holiday project. Charlotte Hanning giving
cloudy with a 40 percent
5 to 10 mph.
Sunday and Sunday chance of showers. Highs in the church. Fall !\Ctivities Money is to be given to prayer. Officers' reports
were given, plans made to
· 11lghL.Mfistly clear. Highs the mid 50s.
- · were -discussed and 'it"-Nft~ie..Wffi-: ..
noted that the hayride at the · The a1_1nual Christmas sent cards to the sick and
Shamblins and ·ttte -y.nuth party will l)e held at the · shuti ns, and the recipient of

·Bradford to host Mission .speaker

--·""*' • ·

Stpcks_
. -

PG-13.68
DuPont - 47.25
Federal Mogul - .40
USB- 3~.85
Gannett - 58.70
General Electric 35.29
GKNLY- 5.75
Harley Davidson -

71.40
JPM- 47.24

-·
Scouts showing increasing membership

the sunshine basket decided.
Kathy Dyer was .hosiess
for the month of November.
Megan Dyer had a. reading
from the book "Making
Memories." Hanning read
Colossians 2:6-7. Attending
were Misty DeWees, S!lerry
Smith,
Paula
Pickens,
Charlotte Hanning, Neva
Chapman, Jane Hysell,
Phyllis
'3aker,
Sherry
Shamblin, Suzie Will, Christi
Will, Carolyn Nicholson,
Becky Amberger, Diana
Max well and the hostess.

'

... _,_, ...

'

ACI-34.90
AEP -41.30
Akzo- 56.91
Ashland - 64.43
BIG- 21.30
Bob Evans - 33.98
BorgWamer - 57.78
CENX-39.96
Champion - 6. 79
Channing Shops 14.09
City Holding - 38.34
Col- 57.92

Kroger - 22.25
Ltd.- 31.58
NSC- 52.61
Oak Hill Rnancial 26-70
OVB-25.15
BBT -43.06
Peoples - 28.85
Pepsico - 62.69
Premier - 13.85.
Rock-11 - 62.80
· Rocky Boots - .1 4.04
Sears -174.80
Wai-Mart - 46.39
Wendy's - 34.76
Worthington -17.57
Dally stock reports are'
the 4 p.m. closing
quotes of the previous
day's transactions, provided by Smith Rnanclal
Advisors of Hilliard . ,
Lyons In Gallipolis. •

I

--...!.•- ..._._

lo.·

"' .' _..,,
..,.!;.,.-..,:,,, ~- "-

--.......-;..- ...

-

· ~·.;..tt. l.,,fi:Ji~ -

HUNTINGTON, W.Va.- tools through the sponsor-Tri-State Area Council, BSA ship of the Fall Round Up by
completed October as the Heiner's Bakery. We have
only council in Area IV of the been able to inform more
Central Region, BSA that has parents about how they may
shown membership growth involve youth in the
for the last two consecutive Sco1,1ting program," said
years. Area IV includes !!II Scout Executive Ray Franks.
Scout councils with offices in · He noted that this year's
Ohio and West Virginia. For Fall Round Up chairman is
this year the council is one of Tim lrr, anchor for WSAZthree councils in Area IV TV. Under his leadership
experiencing growth, ~ven the Fall Round Up team
thought the youth population with more than 75 volunteers has signed up 850
in the council is declining.
"One reason for our coun- additional youth in the procil experiencing growth for gram since August.
two consecutive years is the
Tri-State Area Council ,
council has been able to pur- BSA has been ranked eighth
chase . additional marketing of the 92 councils in the

Central Region, BSA for efficient use of professional time
recruiting more than 212
youth this fall per professional on the council staff. The
council staff recruits more
youth per professional than
areas such as Charleston,
W.Va.; Wheeling, W.Va.;
Parkersburg, W.Va.; Dayton;
Columbus and Cleveland.
Tri-State Area Council,
J!SA serves Mason, Wayne,
Lincoln
and · Cabell
Counties in West Virginia;
Meigs. Lawrence and Gallia
Counties in Ohio; and
Carter, Lawrence, Boyd and
part of Greenup counties in
Kentucky.

Community Calendar
-

Public meetings

Planning Seminar, 6:30
p.m., Meigs Middle School
cafeteria. sponsored by
Thesday, Nov•. 14
Meigs County . Retired
POMEROY - Bedford Teachers Association . For
Township Trustees, 7 p.m. .teachers, certified staff
town hall, regular meeting.
inembers and their spouses.
RSVP 992-3883.

Church events

Friday, Nov. 10
LONG BOTTOM
Sarah Connor and New
Images will sing at 7 p.m. at
the Faith Full Gospel
Church, Long Bottom.
Saturday, Nov. 11
RACINE Weekend
meeting at Red Brush
Church of Christ, 7:30 p.m.
Saturday and I0 a.m. and 6
p.m. on Sunday. Denver Hill
of Foster, W.Va .. speaker.
Sunday, Nov. 12
SYRACUSE - Services
will be held at 6:30 p.m. al
the Syracuse Community
Church on Second Street.
Special singi ng will be by
Sid and Carol Hayman.
Sandra Wise, Joe McCloud.
and Martie Shon .

. Other events .
Monday, Nov. 13
POMEROY
·
Supplemental Retirement

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

NASCAR, Page 83

Scoreboard, Page B4
Buckeyes, Page B8

Friday, November 10, 2006

BY KATHY MITCHEU

57" 141"

J~Dcal

Inside

Shes married to her mother-in-law

City/Region
High I Low temps

MICH

'

Friday, November 10,2006

ANNIE'S MAILBOX

Local Weather

'

Page AS

Clubs and
organizatiC?ns
~

Saturday, Nov. 11
CHESTER
- Return
Jonathan Meigs Chapter,
DAR. I p.m. at the Chester
Courthouse.
Robert
Sherman,
great-greatnephew
of
William
Sherman, will be the speaker. National
American
Indian Heritage Month to be
observed. Members reminded to take items for veterans.
Sunday, Nov. 12
POMEROY
~
Alcoholic; Anonymous 12step study, 7 p.m., Sacred
Hean Church.
Thursday, Nov. 16
POMEROY - AA open
discus~ ion. 7 p.m .• Sacred
Heart Church.
Saturday, Nov. 18
POMEROY - AA Big
Book 'tudy, S p.m., Sacred
Heart Church.

It's Time To Gear Up For...
Operation Christmas Child
•

{The Shoebox Ministry)
Big Country 99,
WBGS the Ministry Station,
k-92 The Frog, ESPN 1390,
JOY-FM 88.1 and
Bob's Market &amp; Greenhouses,

We t~anlc all who
participated in 2005 that
enabled the Tri-~ount., to
send over 2800 boxes!

Inc.
- Invite you to participa.te in
llll opportunily t'o ,make a

difference in the lives of
young boys and girls throughout
tlu• u·orld in war font countries. -

DROP-OFF LOCATIONS:
WBYG/WBGS/JOYFM
in Point Pleasant, WV
WVYk/WMPO on
Bradbury Road· in
Middleport, Ohio
Bob's Market in
Mason or Golli..-u.

*
*
*

pressive

BY GARY CLARK
SPORTS CORRESPOND,ENT

MASON, W.Va. 1- The
Waharna White Falcon football team has come a long
way since the beginning of
the high school football season nearly 12 weeks ago.
· The Bend Area team dropped
its opening two contests to
Waterford and
Federal
Hocking and ·for many the
Falcons season was written
off right then and there.
Week 3 and a home date
with the Eastern . Eagles

turned 'the Falcons' fortunes
around, and etght games
later, the. fifth-ranke:d ~ason
County team 1s ndmg an
eigh~-gatll~ ,winning streak
and 1s awa1tmg a first round
playoff encounter ·with

Clarksburg Notre' Dame.
The
Fighting · Irish
advanced to the post-season
Class A playoff party after
snapping a three game losing
skid late in the season with
back-to-back wins in the finaJ
two regular season affairs.
Those two triumphs enabled
Notre Dame to climb to a
12th place finish among the
· Class A ran kings and a I :30
p.m. Saturday afternoon date
with the White Falcons in the
opening round of the postseason.
One of those two late sea-

son wins was a 21-12 victory
over unbeaten and highly
ranked Clay- Battelle and
that triumph alone vaulted
Notre Dame into the 16-team
playoff field. The Irish
opened the year with five
wins in succession beginning
with a .48-0 whitewash over
Hundred. Victories
over
Valley
Wetzel
(35-8),
Cameron (42-26), Gilmer
County
(42-19)
and
Madonna (18-5) followed
before a rough three game
stretch.
Buffalo knocked the Notre

on

Dame gridders from the
unbeaten ranks with a 30-6
loss with Class AA Oak Glen
extending the Irish skid with
a 12-0 setback. A 32-21 loss
to 16th ranked South
Harrison dealt the Notre
Dame squad a severe blow as
far as the playoffs were concemed but consecutive wins
over Clay Banelle (21-12)
and Doddridge County (2712) regenerated the Notre
. Dame season. .
Fighting Irish coach Sam
AI varo is expected to bring
his Notre Dame air show to

line

the Bend Area with his high- ·
ly touted junior quarterback
Preston Musgrave (5-foot-11,
170 pounds) leading the way.
Mus grave has thrown for just
under I,700 yards on the season and to COI)lplicate things
for the Waharna defense even
more the junior signal caller
spre&lt;!ds his passes around to a
number of Irish receivers.
"Preston works hard at not
locking on to just one receiver and that helps him to find
the open receiver," Alvaro

Please see Wahama, B2

Cavaliers beat rival Chicago Bulls
BY ToM WITHERs
ASSOCIATED PRESS

CLEVELAND
LeBron James only stayed
on the floor as long as
needed.
James, accused of quitting
on his team too early in his
previous game·, scored 19
points with a season-high 12
assists to lead the Cleveland
Cayaliers past the Chicago
Bulls 113-94 Thursday
night.
Drew Gooden added 20
points in three quarters,
Anderson Varejao had a
career-high 15 and Sasha
Pavlovic 16 points in a season-high 25 minutes· for the
Cavaliers, whose bench
went 21-of-30 from the field
and
helped
Cleveland
bounce back from an nvertime loss on Tuesday to the
Atlanta Hawks.
·
Following that game,
James took some heat for
walking off the court while
there was still about 10 seconds left on the clock. The
Cavaliers were . down by
nine points at that point, but
that didn't seem to matter to
critics who felt James
should have played hard
until the final horn.
Against the Bulls, James
took a leisurely walk to
Cleveland's bench with 5:12
:left. By then, the Cavs had
built a 24-point lead and
&lt;:oach Mike Brown decided
lo give rookie Shannon
:Brown some playing time.

Cleveland recorded 38
assists ~ 23 after halftime
and the NBA's best
rebounding team outboarded Chicago 47-30.
· Kirk Hinrich had 20
points and 11 assists and
Andre Nocioni 15 for
.Chicago, which trailed by
only 12 entering the fourth.
But Cleveland opened the
final period with an 11-2 run
and pushed its lead to 20
when Pavlovic drained a 3pointer with 7: 17 left.
Pavlovic, who had played
just eight minutes all season, later fed Varejao underneath for a dunk and the forward's free throw put the
Cavs ahead 103-79.
Leading by 13 at half, the
Cavaliers made 8-of-12
,field goal attempts to start
the third and opened 69-53
lead when' Larry Hughes
knocked down a 3-pointer
from the top of the key.
Gooden scored 12 points 8 on jump shots - in the
period, helping Cleveland
take an 80-68 lead into the
final 12 minutes.
Coming off ·an inexcus~
able overtime loss to the
Hawks, in which they
missed 10 free throws in the
fourth quarter and OT, the
Cavaliers started strong and
built a 12-point lead by the
end of the first quarter.
Then, with a lineup of
Pavlovic, Donyell Marshall,
Eric Snow, Gooden and
James- a group that hadn't
,played together all season

AP hot

0
.
.
, ·
· .
.
P
_ Cleveland Cavaliers' LeBron James (23) works aga1nst Chrcago Bulls Luol Deng from Sudan 1n thefrrst quarter of an NBA
basketball game Thursday In Cleveland.

- Cleveland extended its
lead to 18 points before the
Bulls pulled within 52-39 at
·halftime.
Notes: The Bulls have lost
five straight to Cleveland ....
Hall of Farner Cheryl

Miller. perhaps the greatest
women's player in history,
said the uproar about James'
perceived walk-off · was
absurd. "It's ridiculous,"
said Miller, a sideline
reporter for TNT. "You

don't put 'quit' and LeBron
.in the same sentence." ... ·
Cavs F Donyell Marshall,
who went .over the 10,000point plateau on Tuesday,
joined Cliffo{d Robinson,
Sam Perkins and Scottie

Pippen as the only NBA
players to get at least I 0,000
points, 5,000 rebounds, 750'
3-pointers and 750 blocks:
Marshall is in his 13th season. The other three played
17 seasons apiece.

Rutgers' big victory blurs National Title picture
· Greg Schiano said.
ASSOCIATED PRESS
Leonard went 26 yards
with a pass in the flats to get
·PISCATAWAY. N.J.
Rutgers into Louisville terriRutgers ariived - · and tory and Ray Rice broke a
kicked No. 3 Louisville right 20-yard run to get into fieldout of the national chainpi- goal range. Ito missed a 33onship scramble:
yarder with 18 seconds left,
The program that once set but Louisville was offside
the standard for college foot- and Ito got another shot ball futility jumped into the and it was perfect.
title picture Thursday night · The ·final play, appropriby rallying from a big deficit ately, was a sack of Brian
for a 28-25 victory over the Brohm by a Rutgers' defense
Cardinals.
that proved worthy of the
Ori his second chance; No. 2 ranking in the country .
)eremy Ito kicked a 28-yard
"We were totally out of
tiebreaking field goal with sync in the second half, and
B seconds left and the sec- that . can't
happen,"
ond consecutive primetime Louisville coach Bobby
:showdown between Big East Petrino said. "Some of our
unbeatens went to No. 15 goals are still out., there, that
Rutgers '(9-0, 4-0).
we can reach. We' re going to
: "This is the new Rutgers,"
need some help."
:sai(j Scarlet Knights fullback
After the game. Rutgers
Brian Leonard, the fifth-year
fans
flooded the field and
:SCnior who was a redshirt
freshman on a l-11 · team. swarmed the players.
, "It's so awesome with
"This is a dream of mine."
· Just a week ago, it was 44,000 fans on this field
Louisville (8-1, 3-1) cele- right now, all Rutgers fans,"
brating the biggest win in Leonard said.
There are now four unde:school history, a 44-34 victory over West Virginia that feated teams in the country
·vaulted the Cardinals into - . No. I Ohio State,. No. 2
't he thick of the national Michigan. No. 14 Boise
State and - it's probably
championship race.
· This time, it was Rutgers ' hard for many to believe Rutgers.
.
tum to party.
Rice, the Heisman Trophy
·. The Scarlet Knights shut
out
the
high-scoring' candidate, yes the Scarlet
Cardinals in the second half, Knight~ even have one of
erased an IS-point deficit those, ran for 22 times for
and got the ]}all with 5:28 131 yards and two touchleft in the fourth quarter at downs.
Brohm, who looked like
their own 9.
"You don't come back the the Heisman contender last
way we did tonight unless week. went 13-for-27 for
you have believers," coach 163 yards with a TO and an
r

BY RALPH D. RUllO

AP photo

Rutgers' Jeremy Ito (1) celebrates his field goal with 13 seconds left to put Rutgers ahead
of Louisville, 28 -25. in NCAA football action Thursday.
interception . He also was
sac ked five times, twice
each by Jarnel Meekins and
Devraun Thbmpson.
When Schiano took over
at Rutgers in 200 I the program was as bad as it got in
'

.

college football. and it didn 't
get much better in the former Miami assistant's first
few · seasons.
The Scarlet Knights won
three games in Schiano's
tirst two years and 12 his

first four, before finally turn ing it around last year with
seven victories and a bowl
bid.
This season, off to their
bes t stan 1976, the next step
for the Scarlet Knights was

to show if !hey could compete with the nation's best.
The answer: Absolutely.
L!&gt;uisville jumped out to a
25-7 lead in the first half
.behind Brohm and a I 00yard kickoff return by
JaJuan Spillman and it
looked ·as if the Cardinals
were on their way to a BCS
boosting romp:
·
But laughingstocks no
more, the Scarlet Knights
came charging back to tie it
in the fourth quarter behind
speedy tailback Rice and a
relentless pass -rush.
Rutgers gave the 2,000
fan s packed into the temporary stands behind the south
end zone something to go
j:razy about when Kenny
Britt reached high from a
pa~s over the middle and
broke free for a 67-yard
reception r~ht in their direction . Loui sville's William
Gay caught Britt from
behind and stripped the ball,
but it bounced right back to
the Rutgers· receiver, who
covered it at the 4.
And if that wasn 't enough
momentum
to
sw ing
Rutgers' way, Ri ce's 4-yard
TO sweep on the next play
surely was. The 2-point conversion cut it to 2~-22 with
4:42 left in the third quarter.
After struggling early to
slow down Brohm and the
No. 2 offense in the country.
Meekin s and the hard-rushing Scarlet Knights held the
Cardinals wj thout a fir st
down for the first 26 minutes

Pluse lee Rutprs, B2

�•

Friday, November 10, 2006
Page B2 •

The Daily Sentinel

,.

www .mydailysentinel.com

The Daily Sentinel • Page 83

Fliday, November 10, 2006

www.mydailysentinel.com

LeBron learns ·the camera ·never, ever blinks
Bv JIM LITKE
ASSOCIATED PRESS

•

floor.
Like more than a few
players on more than a fe w
Being tabbed the "next nights, he started toward the
Michael Jordan" is great for tunnel before the final
as long as it lasts. There's fat buzzer sounded. All James
contracts and sneaker deals, has heard since - beyond
commercials by the dozen, endless replays of an astonan invite inside every velvet ished Hawks' announceP
~ope and endless adulation. chirping, "What a great
f If' any or all of those sport he is'" - is how he let
things don 't trip you up, everyone down.
The li st starts with his
well , there's always the
cameras. Always. as LeBron teammates and fan s and
. James should know by now, extends .on up to NBA comthere will be cameras.
missioner David Stern ,
· One caught the kid who who's caught in the throes
would be king walking off of an etiquette campaign
the floor Tuesday night in that would make Miss
Cleveland with about 15 Manners blush.
seconds of overtime left in a
Please.
: game against the Atlanta
"Anytime someone does. Hawks. James just had n' t have anything to 1alk
missed a 3-point shot, the about, they ' re going · to
Cav s already were nine question anything . that you
behind, and the Hawks were · do," James said before tipheaded the other way up the off Thursday night at home

against the Chicago Bull s.
He was still in a defiant
mood.
"Say if we were winning
the game and I did the same
thing that I did when we
lost. Would it have been
mentioned?" James added
without waiting for an
answer. "I don't think- so."
What he did offends oldschool sen sibilities, ho
doubt. We like to tell kids to
keep hustling to the end of
every game, no matter how
bitter. Fine. But it's another
thing to lecture a professional who just fini shed playing
47 tough minutes in a tough
loss, knowing there are 75
more games and whoknows-how-many postseason series left to play.
It's hardly a reason to take
someone whose precociousness - on and off the court
- has invited comparisons

to Jordan. Magic Johnson few opponent s out there
and Oscar Robertson and who resent the "Kin g
suddenly demote him to James" tre atm e n~otaccorded
Randy Moss' classroem.
him at ev.ery turn . But he's
Not that James felt slight- handled the spotli ght as
ed: "Randy Moss is a guy capably as defenders since
who has been unfairly treat- his junior year of hi gh
ed sometimes
but he's school , and that's without
one of the best players in the _ the benefit of even one seagame."
son on campus, let alone
Unlike Moss, however, with some):10dy like Dean
James has been a model' cit- Smith in his corner.
izen. His talents have been
Smith's imprint was all
tempered by humor and a over Jordan , but .never
well-developed sense of moreso than in teaching him
diplomacy that make it easy what it meant to.be a profesto forget he's still two sional. Long after he segued
months shy of hi s 22nd from North Carolina into the
birthd~y . James'. instincts NBA, there were plenty of
have carried him this far nights on the road wh en
without so much as a serious Jordan laid out the suit he'd
hiccup.
be wearing the next day for
, He' s big-timed a team- no more than an hour or so
mate or two, hasn' t hesitated then tried it on with differto let the Cavs front office ent shirts and ties, always
know his op1mons · on making sure the colors coerthings, .and yes, there are a dinated and everything fit.
00 0

just so.
Like the rest of us, Jordan
can be vain. But that wasn' t
the point of the exercise, at
least not entirely.
He reasoned .the walk
from the hotel to a waiting
bus, or from the bus to the
locker room, might be the
only time somebody stuck
on the other side of the gantlet would ever see him up
close. If Jordan was about
anything back in the day, he
was about making sure
everybody got their money's
·worth , each and every time
they laid eyes on him ..
That's a lot to ask from
anybody. But maybe not
from . somebody
with
enough game , charisma and
smarts to wear the "next
Michael Jordan" tag for as
long he ·desires.'

Is luster off Bears-Giants? Penn State says Paterno
BY DAVE GOLDBERG
ASSOCIATED PRESS
Chicago's loss to Miami last
week took little Juster off
Sunday night's confrontation
in the Meadowlands with the
Giants.
Or did it?
This game, the first shifted
to prime time by the NFL
under the new .flexible scheduling format, was supposed to
be the best chance for the
Bears to lose. Whoops! The
Dolphins, who entered last
week's game, 1-6, beat

a

0

IR

Chicago 31 -13 last Sunday,
cooling down all those talking
heads and talk-show callers
comparing these Bears to their
1985 counterparts.
'But there's still a lot at stake.
The Qiants have won five
straight and at 6-2 are tied
with New Orleans for the second-best record in the NFC. A
win here and they have a shot
at home-field advantage in the
NFC, although .that's a long
shot - they have a much
tougher schedule and a myriad
of injuries, especially at. wide
recei yer,
where Amani

Toomer is out for the season,
and at defensive end, where
Michael Strahan is the latest
casualty:
The Bears had a similar
injury to a defensive star last
week when Brian Urlacher
·went out late. But it turned out
to be a sprained big toe on his
left foot, ~hich might not keep
him out Sunday.
The emotional toll on the
Bears is something else.
"EverybOdy is pretty upset
and disappointed about the
way we played," defensive
back Nathan Vasher said.

10: MFC SbOWIIOWIIIr B•rHIIIIIS

Chicago losi to th~ DolphinS last Sunday, cooling down all ttte talk con\parlng these Baars to tttelr t985
counklrparts. New York can pull Into a tie with Chicago for the best racord In the NFC with ~ vlC!OfY·
~K1GMATCHUPS
· ~

STORVUNE

0

&amp; •
at N.Y.GIIInts W ·
San Otego 6 •
at Ctnclnnott W
$1. ~Ia
• at s.ttte
New Orleans
at Pittsburgh

.Q..

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W

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w..hlngton A
at Phltc.tphla W

'

The' Giants have woo five SII'Bight (6-2);'tled with 5aiqts,lor the second
best record in the NFC. Glaftta;'t7-111
The Chargers have problems. But fewer than the Bengals.
Chargers, 28-26
Despite three aflalght losses, the Rams can get bae1&lt; In the 'NFC W08l
race with a win, Seahawb, 22-11
·'
If Pittsburgh wins it$ eight remaining g~es, it might
defend ~s title. One? Steetera, 24-23

get~ chance to
.

Philadelphia Is 7.0 off bYe weeb.under ARly Reid . ......, 27-17 .''-\• · ·

·
.
· •
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DaUas a
AAJ The Cowboys are unpred. ictabl~ enough to lose this then beat Indy
at Arizona W .., next week. Cowboys, 31-23 .
·
Kanul City a L ':i mon fluard •larted his ca'"r with the Dolphins. He wasn't very

otii!Mit W
· BU!Ialo A
at lndtanapoHs •
N.Y. Jets e-.::A
at- England 'W

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good there. Dolphlne, 15-13

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.

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£i.J Willis McGahee won't play, neutralizing Buffalo's only edge here.

-

CoHs, 34-10 ·
..t.6 Belichick will pound Dillon and Maroney this week the way he didn1
.,- last week. Patriots, 28-17

C.

Denver ~

If the Raiders. couldn't score-last week_in Seattle ... Broncos, 19-(1

at Oakland . . ~
Houston

A. •

Texans won 27·7 at home last month. J....,., 27-7

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Cleveland is consistently competitive' Atlanta Is consistentty confustng.

at hckaonvttle W
Cleveland

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Falcons, 2Q-13
McNair is getting be118rcNow he comes home. Ravena, 20-9
etTen.-....,.,.
··
BaHimo!e

·Green Bay
Favre has never played well in the Metrodome. Vlklngi, 19-16
at Minnesota . . . .
. .

Sen FI'MICIIco
· at Detroit
Monday

Tampa Bay
at Carolina

The 49ers falter on the road. Again. Llono,31-1S

W ,.,
•
.6 The Panthers. like the Eagles, 4SB the bye week to wake up.
,

•

Rutgers
from PageBl

Wahama
fromPageBl
said earlier in the week .
"We've had a couple of our
receivers hurt and are just ·
now getting everybody bac~
and we hope that will add to,
our offensive •weapons.
We're probably as near I 00
percent health wise as we've
been all season . added
Al varo."
Notre Dame primarily

.

- Dave Goldberg • AP

Bv GENARO C. ARMAS
ASSOCIATED PRESS

STATE COLLEGE, Pa.Joe Paterno declared himself
"out" for Penn State 's next
game Saturday, designating
longtime assistant Tom
Bradley to make any tough
calls in the school's first
contest without the coaching
icon since 1977.
Better make the right decisions, though, Tom: Paterno
undoubtedly will be watchmg.
Heeding his · doctor's
advice, Paterno told his stllff
Thursday that he would not
be at Beaver Stadium for
Saturday's game· against
Temple. The 79-year-old
coach had surgery Sunday to
repair a fractured shinbone
and two tom knee ligaments
in his left leg, injuries sus· tained in a sideline collision
in a loss last week to
Wisconsin.
His left leg fitted with a
temporary brace, Paterno
spoke with his assistants
Thursday morning during a
meeting at his Mount
_Nittany Medical Cente.r
room..
"You guys · know what
You're doing and what I
want enough that I don't
need to be there creating a
huge distraction Saturday,"
he told them, according to a
team statement . "Enough on
me; let's get back to foot. ball."
Paterno remained in good
condition Thursday and was
described by a team
spokesman, Guido D'Elia,
to be in good spirits, his

recovery from surgery pro- weeks until Paterno can
ceeding well .
again put weight on the left
, Paterno is. eager to check leg.
out, though he won't be
"Let's take a look at the
released until team doctor big picture of what could lie
·Wayne Sebastianelli is satis- ahead
get the next two,"
fied with the prowess of his Paterno told his staff.
recovery. So it s unclear
Bradley, th.e team's
whether Paterno will watch defensive coordinator, and
his squad Saturday from offensi ve
coordinawr
home or from his room at Galen Hall will oversee
the hospital, just down the · their units. The school, didn't name an acting head
street from the stadium.
'!fle coach "just realize~ coach, though Bradley, an
he s got to be .proact1ve, assistant to Paterno for 28
D'Eii~ said, ''t~at i,n this years , will make any tough
cond1t1on 11 wasn t sale to be decision s come game-time.
out and about." ,,
.
"If a game decision needs
· So Joe~a and h~s ~oiled- up to made beyond that, talk it
khak1s will be mtssmg from out and if you can't agree,
the Penn State s1delme tor Tom will be the tiebreaker·
the first time since 1977, because he has been around
when he missed a game aftec the longest," Paterno said.
h1s son, Dav1d, was mvolved
The architect of Penn
in an accident. Paterno also State's stingy defense, the
.m1ss~d a game as ~n ass1s- outgoing and energetic
t~nt m 1955 after hts father Bradley is a whirl of activity
d1ed.
. . . , on the sidelines, his arms
At least one thmg hasn t .often waving wildly.
c~anged ; Paterno wants . to
1-je might be con sidered.
wm.. .
.
the top internal candidate to
H1s s1ghts are set on a take over the Nittany Lions
New Year's Day bo\111 game once Paterno steps down.
m Flonda, a de'~tmat1on that Paterno who turns 80 next
Penn State can hkely lock up
!.
.
if they beat Temple on month, 1s under contract for
Saturday, and Michigan another two years.
State in the regular-season
Team d?ctor 'Yayne
flnaleonNov. I8 ,Adeci sion Sebasuanelh has sa1d he
on whether Paterno can ex peel Paterno to return
coach against the Spartans next year. Paterno's S!)n and
from a coach' s box high· quarterbacks coach, Jay,
above ·Beaver Stadium will said earlier this week that
be made next week .
his father has every intenDoctors have said Paterno tion of returning in 2007.
might be allowed to coach
Paterno has 360 career
from the sidelines for a bowl wins, four behind Florida
game as long as hi s recovery State's Bobby Bowden for
is going well and he can stay the top spot among major
off his feet. It might be. six college coaches.
oo.

Blue Jackets double up Blues, get rare -victory
ST.

: of the second half.
When Ito nailed a 46-yard
field goal with I0:17 left in
the fourth qu'arter, the game
was tied at 25, the cannon
behind the south end zone
boomed and the record
crowd of 44,111 was in a
white-towel wavi ng frenzy.
Students started lining up
outside Rutgers .Stadium
more than four hours before
kickoff for the most importllnt college football game
' in New Jersey since, well ,
maybe the ..first one was
played between Rutgers and
Princeton in 1869. Never
before had Rutge,rs played
in a game matching ranked
teams.

, .

Panthers, 17-10

will not coach. Saturday

LOUIS (AP)
Columbus coach Gerald
Gallant
felt
sati sfied,
Rostislav Klesla considered
himself lucky, and Rick
Nash was relieved.
All that followed a rare
Blue Jackets victory.
Klesla scored his first two
goal s of the season for
Columbus during a wild second period that featured six
goals, five power-play
opportunities and some
ragged play from Blues goaltender Manny l.egace. It all
worked out for the Blue
Jackets, who won 4-2 over
St. Louis on Thursday night.
"We got some breaks ,
there's no doubt about that,"
Gallant said. "But you make
breaks by working hard and

having a good team game. ·
We came out and played our
best team game of the year."
Columbus (5-7-I )" struggled in its first five road
games this season, going I -4
and giving up 19 goals.
Pascal Leclaire stopped 24
shots and the Blue Jackets
had their best offensive flurry of the season.
They scored three unanswered goals in just over five
minutes with Klesla starting
and ending the barrage with
two ·somewhat fortunate
goals. He netted his first after
he left the penalty box, taking a pass from Dan Fritsche
and scoring a breakaway
goal that tied it at 2. His sec·
ond goal came on a lazy shot
that slowly slid into the left

side of the net past J;...egace.
Legace received mock
"I di.;ln ' t even see it go in," cheers when he made an easy
he said. "They said nobody save · with 3:46 left in the
tipped it; so it was pretty period. He was replaced
luck:,:. We got the two-goal Curtis Sanford at the start of
lead and that was huge." ·
the third.
The Blue Jackets entered
" I just had a horrible secthe game with only 27 goals pnd period,'' said Legace,
through their ftrst 12 games. who faced 21 shots. "I let the
Legace's poor play helped guys down ." •
that total rise.
, Bill Guerin gave St. Louis
Aside from failing to stop (4-7-3) a.l-0 lead at 1:18 of
Klesla's two shots, Legace the second, but Nash tied it
allowed a short-handed goal just under 2 · minutes later
to Dan Fritsche and escaped with his first goal in over a
further damage on his month. His power-play tally
biggest gaffe of the game. He .came on · hi s third shot in
tried to send the puck around about 15 seconds during the
the boards behind his own shift and ended a nine-game
net but it stayed in the comer. · drou ght. He hadn't scored
He had to scramble back to since Oct. 9 against Phoenix .
the crease to stop two point- .Keith Tkachuk restored the
blank Columbus shots.
Blues' advantage at 8:12

runs from an offensive formation that utilizes fou r
wide receivers to take· full
advantage of Musgraves'
arm. Senior Ju&gt;tin Shaw (510, 185) is the team's top
receiver with d.unior Shawn
Swiger (5· 1 ; 200) the
Fighting Irish's leading
ground gainer. "We're not
one dimensional in what we
do, said Al varo . "Swiger
can run the football. He had
'181 yards on the ground in
our fi nal · regular season
gatne."

The remaining wide-outs
include seniors John Martino
(6·2, 170) and Paul Veltri (6·
2, 188) along with junior
Chris Stanton (6:2, 202).
The junior dominated offen·
sive line includes the lone
senior in Benjamin Angotti
(6-1, 205) in addition to
juniors Patri ck Allen (6-4
190), Willie Romano (6-4
230), Joseph Angotti (6·2,
225) and Michael Barnes (510, 195).
Wahama running back&gt;
Derek Veazey and Kris

Gibbs have the attention of
Alvaro and the Notre Dame
defense. " From the films
I' ve seen Wahamahas a pair
of quality running backs in
No. 28 (Gibbs) and No. 34 .
(Veazey)," Alvaro said .
"We'll have to be aware of
those two gentlemen's presence at all times and play
good, hard-nosed defense if
we are to go down there and
brin ~ back a win ."
K1ckoff time for the fi rst
round pl ayoff encounter is
scheduled for I :30 p.m.

tog on to www.mydailysentioete·om
•

before Columbus went on its
run with three goals in a span
of 5:09.Despite getting hit in
the face with a high stick
from
Klesla, Tkachuk .
pushed the puck past
Leclaire and gave St. Louis ·a
chance to add to it as' Klesla
went to the penalty box . ,.
After the Blues failed to capitalize, the Blue.Jackets took
over from there.
Notes: Klesla hadn't
scored in 10 games. Blues
D Barret Jackman (knee)
played for the ftrst time in 1-1
games and earned an assist
on Tkachuk's goal.
SJ.
Louis scratched D Dennis
Wideman (hand) for the second consecutive game . C
Dallas Drake . (lower b9dy)
missed his ftrst game.

Special Valarana Pre1antallon alii PM
Mualc of By gone ara1 6D'a 70'a 80'1 90'1

•

llulahll!'*

·Arizona 'ltavel200,
2 p.rn .•SetulllaY

~.

miles). 312 taps/miles.
• When: Sunday, Nov. 12
• Laot , _.. winner: Kyle Busch
• ~ r.canl: Ry•n Newman, Dodge, 135.854 mph, Nov.

"Think Tony Stewart is maldfC a .

th1"81ike this: 'Maybe 1 can1
win tne championShip, bVt I'm
still the best driver out here."
1&gt; Kevin Harviok's Busch Series .
viciDry was his ninth, ..tlich
leaVes him just one Silt of Sam
Ard's all-time record, set In 1983.
1&gt; the Craftsman 1luck Sene&amp;
championship race has dl..in !he past 1\\0 races. Todd Bocline only finished 14th at Te&gt;&lt;as,
but he stietched his lead from B7
to 137 points &lt;M!&lt; Johnny Benson. who finished 31st
1&gt; Stewart still has plenty of Incentive. If he wins the final two
races, he will achieve a career
best for victories In a seeson.
Stewart won six times In 2000
and has equaled hts victory to-·
tal of 2005, when he won his
second championship.
1&gt; NothlfC reveals just how domf
nant Stewart was at TeiC8s more
than the fact that his final lap at
TeiC8s was !he fastest run by
any driver all day. Stewart pulled
tiNII)' from Jimmie Johnson by
turning the 339th lap at
187.188 mph.
• Stewart's vlc!Dry was the 22nd
of the season for Chevrolet,
·matchifC tlle moderrH!ra (1972·
~resent) record for victories by a
manufacturer in a single season .

Chevrpklt drivers took !he top six
finishing positions al TeXas and
have combined to win seven of .
the eight Chase races to date.
1&gt; Juan Pablo Montoya suggested
that he might wait un~l next
season to make his Nextei Cup
debut. He.hlld been expected to
debut In the seaS&lt;Jn finale at
Homestead-Miami Speedway,
and it stili may happen . An appearance at Homestead would
seem fitting since the area hes
a huge Hispanic population.
1&gt; Montoya and Sam Hom ish Jrc
are scheduled to comP.,te in the
Busch·Serles race this week at
Phoenix. Both, of course, are Indianapolis SOD winners. That's
unprecedented for the Busch
Series . .

I&gt;WIIo'sllal

- Tony Stewart has as
many top-five
finishes (15)
as any driver,

yet he can fln·ish no better

than 11th In
points. ...
Jimmie Jo.~n- ·
son's had a victDry and three
second-pii!Cle finishes In !he
past foUr-s.

.,: -~ 110t- .leff Burton
MS fallen from first to sey.
anth In the Chase In a sj!an of •
three races .... f'lnishetl of
38th ilnd 33rd have ended
1\asey Kahne's title 11opes.

the hearts of Buddy Baker and
Caie Yarborough and would have

similarly met with the approval of

Dale Earnharnt, Glenn ·Fireball '

Roberts. Curtis Turner and Joe
Weatherly were they stilfaround
to see it. Stewart renewed his
membership in the Hard Chargers

Tony Stewart, Pontiac,118.132 mph, Nov. 7, 1999.
I.Mt - k: The Dickies 500 was
Club. Stewart led 278 out of 339
delayed by rain by nearly an hour, laps. The final lap of the race,
took 3 hours, 46 minutes . 11 sec- whenStewart might have figured
onds to complete and went into
to be at a disadvantage, was his
overtime, but Tony Stewart would fastest. At the time, his Chevrolet
probably have won it had it been had only two relatively fresh tires,
,., 10, or 100, or 1,000, laps. Stew- ha lf as many as the one driven by
• R- record:

1personal statement with his
daztlfng perlormance In the,
Chase he lsn1 in? Thou&amp;h Stewart isn1 Sll)'ing it, it goes sO!lte'

art's orange Chevrolet matched

his mood at Texas Motor Speedway. •It was loose all day long,'
said Stewart, · but it was loose in

fast-c losing Jimmie Johnson. The

No. 20 zipped around the 1.5-mile
track at 187.188 mph , and John·
son was fast-closing no more.

• Race: Casino Arizona·

NC

28053 .

Subllll)' Fmh 500

150

22

• Where: Phoenilc International Raceway, Avondale,

Ariz. (1.0 miles), 200
laps/ miles.
Ariz. (1.0 miles), 150
• When: Saturday; Nov. 11. laps/ miles.
• Laet year'•·winner: Carl • When: Friday, Nov. 10
Ect.vards
• l.alt yoor't wtnnor:
Todd Bodine
• Quall')lo!ll : K)1e
Busch, Chevrolet. 133.B19 • Qualifying record: Branmph, NOv, 4, 2004.
don Whitt, Toyota,
131.200 mph. Nov. 11.
• R- record: Jeff Bur·
ton, Ford, 115.145 mph, 2005.
Nov. 4, 2000.
•-Race record: Kevin Harel.att week: Kevin Harvick, Chevrolet, 108.014
vick con tinued his domimph, Nov. 8, 2002.
nation of the series. win• LMt : At TMS,
ning for the ninth tirrle .
Cl int Bowyer drove a
this season In the O'Reilly Chevrolet to victory, his
Challenge at TeKas Motor fi rst in the series , in his
Speedway.
third career start.
)

TERRY LABONTE

NEXTEL CuP SERIES

v

•

E
R

s

I

u

I

s

Harwick

Riggs

Kt¥1n Har¥lck

n.ScottRigge
Contact from behind by Harvick
sent Riggs into the wall hard. and at
the 11ery least. it cost Riggs a top-fi ve
fini sh. "He wa s bloeking all over the
place. he got loose. I got in the back
of him and spun him out .~ said Harvick. A. post-race fracas will probably
result in disciplinary action against
one or more of Riggs· crew mem-

Two-time former
champion Terry
.Labonte retiring
with quiet dignity

bers.
NASCAR This Week's

Dutton elves

Monte
htstake: ·Yet another

frustrating week for Riggs, Who drove
a fine race and, for the umpteenth
time, saw it all come to naught in the
final moments."

By Monte Dutton
NASCAR This Week

JUSTIN, Texas .!.. Terry Labonte
brought his career to a close in his native state. Even though Labonte- and
younger brother Bobby -left Corpus.
Christi, Texas, in 197g, they have always considered themselves Texans,
right up tQ,the moment Terry selected
Texas Motdr Speedway as the site of
his final race.
.
The first of Labonte's 22 victorieswas the 1980 Southern 500. The DickiesSOO was the 84Sth race of his career. He finished in the top five 182
times and led 7,035 laps. No driver in
NASCAR history ever won two championships with as great ·a span of
years between them. Labonte drove a
Chevrolet owned ·by Billy Hagan to
the Winston Cup championship in 1984
and came back in 1996, driving' for
Rick Hendrick, to win a second title.
"I really feel like I've been awful
fortunate to be able to compete in this
sport for as long as I 'have and been
able to win a couple of championships
and some races," said the soft-spoken
Labonte, who turns SO on Nov. 16. "To
do the things we did were really spec.ial. Now I'm kind of moving on and
doing something else. I'm not sure
what that's going to be exactly yet."
'Few drivers have ever been as popular among their peers . Most would
consider the rise of Jeff Gordon as the
most important factor .in th,e success
of Hendrick Motorsports, but Hendrick himself puts just as great a
stake in the hiring of Labonte in 199!1.
"He's the statesman ," said ,Hendrick, "He'll stand up and tell the guys
why this is important. I don't care if

Kulwicki's litar ne.tlng

bright,

110-"·
Alan Kulwicki's entire Cup career
cons isted Of only 207 rac es, but he
won five of them and pulled off one
of the m·ore improbable cha iT'rionships in h1story in 1992. The
sport lost a true champion when Kulwicki perished at age 38 in a pla!'le
crash on April!, 1993.' He won the
first race at PhoeniMlnternationar
Raceway on Nov. 6, 1988, w·inn1ng
over Terr y Labonte by a whoppmg

18.5 seconds.

VIckers' win at Talladega
llgllts a fire,under - e

CIA Stock Photo

I was very disappointed ... at Talladega. (Brian) Vickers should have
not won tt\at race the way he did. ,
Me and four old ladies get together ...
at my house every race day.... Jeff
Gordon said (Earnhardt) Jr. bu mps
hard . He should talk. We saw h1m do

Terry La-.eltiS In a Ntltel Cup car fur the last tllne.on Sunday In lite Dickies 500 at
..., Motor SpeedW8J. Labollte, a TUIIS native, finished his canter wlllt 22 victories.
.

'

you're Jeff Gordon, Dale Earnhardt
Jr. or Matt Kenseth, If Terry Labonte
walks up in the room and says something, he doesn't show up much and he
doesn't say much, but when he says
something, you know he's thought
about it and he means it. He's been really good for our org811ization."
Labonte, of course, seemed mildly
embarrassed by all the compliments
that greeted his retirement. In typical
fashion, he deflected attention with

his understated but pointed ·sense of
humor. .
..
Referring to his final race, Labonte
said, "Yeah, I think, if I need a caution,
I'm going to throw some roll-bar:rubber out the window because I figure,
what the heck, they can't suspend me.
If they fine me, I'm not coming back
anyway, so I don't have to pay that"
Contact Monte Dutton at
hmduttonSO@aol.com

it when he took car 17 (Matt

Kenseth) out by driVing the same
way. I don't care for a crybaby.... ·
{Mark Martin ) is a good man and w11i
be missed by us.

Clara Sandoro
Lmdsay. Calif.

Thanks for taking the time to
write, and we hope you and your
friends continue to, enjoy watching
rlie races on 1V.

Fan fave Martin says goodbye - sort of __...,. once again
By Monte Dutton
NASCAR This Week

2.
3.
4.
5.
8.

Todd Bodine
Johnny Benson
David Reutimann
Ted tAusgrave
Riel&lt; Crawford
Ron Homadllll

T. David Starr
I. Jacl&lt; Sprague

9. Terry COOk
10. Mike Skinner

3.406
· 137
· 165
. 262
· 336
· 338
· 347

· 379
- 401
· 420

c J Juf::; .:.~J ).r, .E.:S&gt;l:fs )

having almost all the races in
that series won by drivers who
•
also compete regularly in Cup.
JUSTIN, Texas - Mark Mar"We could spend a lot of time
tin said the experience of com- Closing the deal-lnterna- talking about this," said Earnpeting full time for the final tiona! Speedway Corporation, hardt, "but I think you're altime has been overwhelming.
previously involved in a part- ready seeing the effect of Cup
"I think the fans have made nership at Chicagoland Speed- drivers running in the series
it the year of my career," he way, has announced an agree· for that long of a time because
said, "that along with being ment that would result in ISC of the effect on the guys who
able to savor a great opportlini- acquiring an additional 37.5 are 'Busch Series regulars .'
ty and having a percent ownership in Raceway When I was racing in the Busch
shot at the Associates, .the track's owner- Series, I had great cars, but
championship, ship group..
there were other .guys in 'the
making
the , The $69 million deal would series that had no Cup re. Chase one more give ISC 100 percent of Motor- sources whatsoever who also
time and the · sports Alliance and 75 percent had great cars and could comtime I've been of Raceway Associates. ISC pete and win.
able to spend will also exercise its right to
"I don't 'know what you're
with the com· purchase the minority part- ·supposed to do about it. How do
petitors and sa- ners' 25 percent interest in the · you tell a guy he can't do it,
vor all this time and all this his- track, with the tran'sactions that he can't race in the series?
tory."
.
likely to close early next year. It's tough."
Though no deal has been finalized, Martin may end up
•
driving occasional Craftsman
Not a bad perspective
Back in charge - Crew chief
Truck ,Series races next year
with the Wood Brothers. Pro- Dale Earnhardt Jr. twice won Roy McCauley, suspended for
vided everything remains as is, the Busch Series championship two races by NASCAR due to a
it means Martin would com- before he m.oved up to· Cup . shock-absorber irregularity at
pete in 20 Cup races in a Now he owns a team that com- Lowe's Motor Speedway, was
Chevrolet while competing in a petes regularly in the series. back to head, Kurt Busch's
He's well·aware of the effecl of teamthis week.
Ford in trucks.

•

1

'

1538. Gastonia,

CUP SERtES

5, 2004.

. Casino Al1lllna 150,
8 p,m.,l!1day

L

·-@&gt;

NASCAR This Week, cto The Gaston Gazette. P.O. Box

• Alice: Checker Auto Parts SOD (k) a really, really fast way." The 29th • R-: Arizona Travel200
• Where: Phoen ix International
victory of Tony Stewart's career
• Where: Phoenix InternaRaceWll'l. Avondale, Ariz. (1.0
was one that undoubtedly warmed tional Raceway, Avondale,

CRAFTIMAII TIIUCK 5£RIEI

Sonny's Bar and Grill
Fooo
Pomeroy. OH "'~........ ~a
November 11, 2006 8 PM

If you have a queatlon .ar a comment, write:

NEXTE L

Choalcet AU!ll ~
5001&lt;, 3 p.m., SUildi!Ji"

000

"Tile Hlglle•t o.g,.. ot llr.otllerllood"

'

'' Ntxt.IC!p .

·oo

Honoring our heroes

DJCorey

~

Alltlme$~ '

1-- - - ' - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - '- - ·· - - - - -· - -

~

"It's been about the toughest
two weeks I've ever experienced," said McCauley.
"I've really learned that I
don't make a good absentee
crew chief, armchair quarter ·
back, or whatever you want to
call it."

•

Point
Earnhardt spoke
glowingly of the Chase, though
he took a devastating hit here.
"It's exciting," he said. "I
was really critical about having the Chase and bringing in
that point system, but it's done
what it's intended to do. It's
made the season really excit ·
ing from start to finish.
"It's fun to be battling for the
~ hampionship with 10 guys and
just feels more prestigious t.o
me, as fa r as the way it rolls
out throughout the season and
how we crown a champion with
this system. It's feels more exciting to me."

•

championships in 1984 and
1996, took the opposite stance.
"You've really taken a lot of
advantage away from some
guy who's really had a tremendous beginning of the sea son,
and now he can face losing the
championship with just a couple of bad races," he said.
"Then a guy can win the cham·
pionship by just slipping in the ·
top 10, never won a race, and
he can still never win a race
and win the championship...
Owner Rick Hendrick
'
agreed.
"I'm not a big fan of the
Chase," he said. "I never ha\·e
been I don 't know that it'~ a
real clear·cut indication of who
the best team was all year long.
"It's good for the sport. It's
good for TV. It's good Yor the
fans if everybody likes it, but I
thin k they ought to pay more
point s to win because I think
that's what it's all about. A guy
who wins four or five races, or
two in the Chase, ought to have
a pretty good spread."
Contact Monte Dutton
at hniduttonSO@aol.com

Counterpoint
Terry
Labonte, who won Winston Cup

•

--------·--·--

--

'

-

-.,

-

-~---

•

�PRo FOOTBALL

Southeastern Ohio Athletic League

Na!Uon.. Football L. .gue
AMERICAN CONFERENCE
E11t
'
WLT Pet PF PA
New England 6 2 0 .75C 187 114
N.Y. Jets
4 4 0 .500 160 193
Buffalo
3 5 0 .375 124 163
Miami
2 6 0 .250 133 158
South
W L T Pet PF PA
Indianapolis 8 0 0 1.000232 173
Jacksonville 5 3 0 .625 175 114
Tennessee
2 6 0 250 120 216
Houston
2 6 0 .250 131 196
North
W l T Pet
PF PA
Baltimore
6 2 0 750 , 171111
Cincinnati
4 4 o .500 175 16e
Cleveland
2 6 0 .260 133 171
Pittsburgh
2 6 a .2 50 177 176

North Dlvlllon

·
ALL

PF

W-L
.....8·3
.... .4-6 .
..... 4-6
.....3-7
..... 1·9

...316
... 187
••. 232
... 125
... 149

W·L
..... H
.....9-2
.....6-5
..... 6-5
.....3-7

ALL
PF
...287
... 331
... 294
...356
... 250

Po\
..147
.. 224
.. 258
.. 344
.. 450

South Division
SEOAL
w.t. PF
Chillicothe ....... ~ ............5-2 ... 228
Gallia Academy . . . '.............5-2 ... 213
Ironton ......................4·3 ... 194
Jackson ......................4·3 ... 256
Portsmouth ...................2-5 ... 145

PA
.. 162
.. 123
.. 157
.. 163
..204

Po\
.. 234
..170
..247
..230
..288

Slturday, Nov. 11
AI Peden Stadium, Athtna
Clallia Academy vs. New Albany, 1 p.m.

Friday's resuha
Westlall42, Ironton· 35
Bishop Watterson 18. Chill~othe 7
Saturday'• resuha
Gall1a Academy 14, Fairtield Unjon 9
Waverly 26, Jackson 20 OT
Hilliard Davidson 38, Logan 8

Tri·Valley Conference
Olllo Division

lVC
W-L
PF
PA
W-L
Nelsonville-York ...•.•...•....._.5.() ... 157 .. 59
.. 9-2
Wellston ......................4-t ... 122 .. 69 .... .7-4
Vinton County ................3·2 ... 115 ..
5-S
Meigs ........................2-3 ... 88 ...84 .... 7-3
Alexander . . . . . .
.. ........ 1-4 ... 80 ... 157 ..... 3-7
Belpre ........................0-5 ... 45 ... 148 ..... 2·8
Hocking Division

89 .....

ALL
PF
•. ·.380
... 244
... 182
...267
... 190
... toe

PA

.. 171
.. 251
.. 172
.. 155
.. 285
.. 229

lVC
W·L
Federal Hocking .. . . .. .. .. .. .. 5.()
Tnmble ........ .. . .......... . .4·1
Watertord .
. .. .. .. ......3-2
Southern ............. ... ......2-3
Miller ......................... 1-4
Eastern .......................o-5

ALL
PF
PA
W-L
PF
PA
... 142 ..20 ...... 9-2 ... 237 .. 84
... 100 ..45 ...... 7-3 ... 214 .. *I
. .. 150 ..82 ...... 7-3 ... 232 ..150
...97 ... 129 .....6-4 : .. 212 .. 174
... 45 ... 102 ..... 1-9 .. .73 ... 212
... 27 ... 183 .....o-10 •. 89 . , .:jBO

Wett
W' L T Pet PF
Denver
6 2
.750 141
'I San Diego
6 2 a .750 248
Kansas City
5 3 0 .625 183
Oakland
2 6 0 .250 92
NAnONAt CONFERENCE
e..t
W l T Pet PF
6 2 0 .750 194
N.Y. Giants
. Philadelphia 4 4 a .500 206
4 4 0 500 223
Dallas
Washinglon
3 5 0 .375 162
south
W l T Pet PF
New Orleans 6 2 0 .750 198
Atlanta
5 3 0 .625 167
440 .500 137
Carolina
Tampa Bay
260 .250 102
NortiJ
.
W L T Pet PF
Chicago
7 1 0 875 234
4 4 0 .500 1 3°
Minnesota
3 5 0 .375 162
'Green Bay
2 6 0 .250 162
Detroit
We at
W L T Pet PF
Seattle
5 3 0 .625 165
St. Louis
4 4 0 .500 180
San Francisco 3 5 0 .375 143
Arizona
1 7 0 125 134

Friday, Nov. tO
All teams eliminated
Saturday, Nov. 11
All teams eliminated

Friday's results
Martins Ferry 41. Wellston Q
Saturday's resutts
Col. Academy 55, Nelsorrville-York 21
Johnstown Monroe 30, Fed Hock 0

Independents
W-L
Wahama ......................8·2
South Gallia .. .. . . .
.. ....8-3
Hannan . . . . . . . . • . . . .
. .....2· 7
Friday's results
Danville 51 , South Galli a 20
Wahama 27, Wirt County 13
Saturday's resutts
Van at Hannan, late

ALL
PF
Po\
... 265 .. t14
... 239 .. 195
... 85 ... 278
Slturday, Nov. 11
Notre Dame at Wahama, t :30 p.m.

\

o

PA
9~

134
169

164
PA
144
160
164
190
PA

159
164
163
173
PA

100
135
200

203
PA
177
197
238
196

Sunday't Games
BuHalo at lnQianapolis. 1 p.m.
Baltimore at Tennessee, 1 p.m.
Cleveland at Atlanta , 1 p.m .
Green Bay at Minnesota, 1 p.m.
Kansas City at Miami, 1 p.m.
San Francisco at Detroit, 1 p.m.
Houston at Jacksonville, 1 p.m.
'N Y. Jets at New England, 1 p.m
San Diego at Cincinnati, 1 p.m .
Washington at Philadelphia, 1 p.m.
Denver at Oakland, 4:05p.m.
St. Louis at Seattle, 4:15p.m.
New Orleans at Plnsburgh. 4:1 5 p.m.
Dallas at Arizona , 4:15p.m.
Chicago at N .Y. Giants, 8:15p.m.
Monday's Game
Tampa Boy at Carolina. 8:30 p.m.
Sunday, Nov. 19
Buffalo at Houston , 1 p .m .
Chicago at N.Y. Jets, 1 p.m.
Minnesota at Mlaml,. 1 p.m.
Atlanta at Baltimore. 1 p.m.
Cincinnati at New Orleans , 1 p.m.
Oakland at Kansas City, 1 m .
New England at Green Bey, 1 p.m.
St. Louis at Carolina, 1 p.m.
Pittsburgh at Cleveland. 1 p.m.
Tennessee at Philadelphia. 1 p m.
Washington at Tampa Bay, 1 p.m.
Seattle at San Franci~o. 4.05 p.m
Detroit at Arizona, 4:05 p.m.
indianapolis at Dallas , 4:15p.m.
San Diego at Denver, 8.15 p:%.

p

Cardinal Conference
CARD
ALL
W·L
PF
PA
W·L
PF
PA
Poca .
.. .. .. ..
.. .5-1 ... 179 .. 88
.. .7-3 ... 263 .. 170
Wayne
.. .. ........ 5·1 ... 161 .. 62 .....8-2 ... 261 .. 119
Logan . ,. ........ . .............3·3 ... t42 .. 133 ..... 4-6 ... 189 .. 250
Sissonville .....................3-3 ... 60 ... 114
Herbert Hoover .......... , ......2-4 ... t38 .. 164
Point Pleasant.... ... .....
.. .. 2-4 ... toa .. 173
Winfield .................... .1-5 ... 95 ... 134
Friday's results
Winfield 28, Herbert Hoover 22
Hurricane 28, Poca 0
Wayne 41, Logan 20
Point Pleasant 41 , Sissonville 0

.....6-4 ... 152 .. 177
.....5-5 ... 243 .. 231
.....3-7 ... 198 ..312
.....3-7 ... 140 .. 189

Friday, Nov. 10
Sissonville at Scott, 7:30p.m.
Roane County at W~ne •. 7:30p.m.
Saturday's Nov. 11
Webster County at Poca, 1:30 p.m.

Friday, November to, aoo6.

MANHATTAN, Kan.
Bob Huggins knows what
some people say about him,
and yeah, it bothers him.
The low graduation rates.
The players who ran afoul
of the law. The DUI. The
perception he and his
Cincinnati program skirted
the bounds of respectability.
He has a wife and two
.daughters, and he's not a
heartless jerk. Of course it
gets to him. But for those
who think he took the
Kansas · State job to make
one big mea culpa, well,
they don't know any more
about Bob Huggins than
they do the stories that follow him.
"You do thi s for as long
and you take as many bullets as I've taken - people
who know me know who I
am and what I do," he said.
"It's probably too far down
the road to worry about
(other peoples') perception.
It's not going to change."
Kansas State knew exact·
ly what it was getting -.
good and bad - when 11
hired Huggins last March.
People,. might criticize his
combustible persona on the
eourt and the way some of
liis players conduct them·
selves off it, but they still
want to be pan of the show.
With 14" straight NCAA
appearances and a Final
Four in Huggins· 16 years at
Cincinnati,
expectations
around Kan,as State have
w~red.
He hasn't even
coached a real game yet, and
the Wildcat s already have
sold out their season tickets
and Iured one of the best
recruiting cla,seo; in the
country
All
eyes
are
on
Manhattan, and not the one
in New York .
"We· re on a different level
now, no di&gt;ubt about it." said
David Flores, the assistant
atjllettc director in charge of
c6mpliance.
"Coach

Huggins and the staff under·
stand that scrutiny that
they're going to get. Coach
is OK with it, and we are,
too. because we will continue to recruit · prospects the
right way."
Huggins sat out last year
after being run · out at
Cincinnati, the program
lle 'd built into a powerhouse
and the place his family
considered home. But he's
adapted well to Kansas
State, even giving up his
trademark black for purple.
Once a juggemauc with
four Final Four appearances
from 1948 to 1964, the
Wildcats
llave
been
mediocre, at best, in recent
years. They haven 't even
been to the NCAA touma·
ment since 1996, and the
campus on the top of the hill
is practically invisible in the
shadow of that other state
school 90 minutes away
down Interstate 70.
" I was a little excited
about tile whole situation,
getting a coach in here that's ·
had a great history of win·
ning," said Canier Manin,
the Wildcats' top returning
scorer. "He's rushing us,
and I tllink that s what each
one of us guys needs to
improve."
Hi s new administration
loves him, too. Season tickets are sold out for the first
time since 1982-83, includ·
ing 25 people woo paid
$4,400 for the privilege of
sitting 'courtside. Big-ticket
suites will be added to
Bramlage Coliseum next
year, bringing in even more
revenue.
.
After five years of chasing
a schoolwide apparel deal
with Nike, the school finally
-has it thanks to Huggins, a
longtime Nike guy. And
after years of being ignored,
people across the country
are talkine about the
Wildcats again.
"I knew that there would
be interest, I knew our fans
would be excited," athletic
director Tim Weiser said.

Monday, Nov. 20
N .Y. Giants at Jacksonville, :30 p m.

NASCAR
NASCAR Nextel Cup Selie• Points
Driver
Pta.
Wlna +11. Jimmie Johnson 6157 5
+1 .
2. Matt +&lt;enseth
-17
4
-1
3. Dale Earnhardt
-78
1
+1
· 4. Denny Hamlin
-80
2
-1

A

.,

County
OH I.Y...~

E-mail
classified@mydailytribune.com

In One Week With Us
R.EACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS
PLUS YOUR AD NOW ONLINE

Websjtes:
www.mydailytribune.com
www.mydailysentinel.com
www.mydailyregister.com

l\egtster·
(304) 675-1333

PRO HOCKEY

I

I

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

I

OhioVottoy
Publllhlng rotOfVH
the rtglrt to ecllt,
ratoct or cancol any

ld 11eny ttme.
Muol B
Re.IOf'IICI on lhe firs
ol publication en
e Trlbune-S.Ontlnel
toter
witt
aponolbte lor n
Errora

then the COlt

~:

1

~

«

Box number ecle ar
!ways confldentlol.

n,

Cincinnati may have had
some of the best teams in
the country. but the Bearcats
were seen as the NCAA version of the Bad 'Boys.
Several players were arrest·
ed or suspended for .a vari·
ety of offenses, from domestic violence to punching a
police horse named Mr.
Mike Codv. In 1998, the
'chool was' put on probation
for that ominous lack of
· institutional control.
And in the 1990s, the
team\ graduation rate was
one of the worst in the country.
Wci,cr agreed to meet
"ith Hu gg in; but told
Fogler not to expect much .

"I asked harder, more difficult questions of him than
anyone I've interviewed ,"
Weiser said. "What I realized is this is not what I
thought Bob Hug~ins would
be like .... It wasn t so much
what he said but how he said
it. The pe~spective he had."
Weiser did his own back·
ground chec.ks, going to
people he respected such as
Texas Tech coach Bob
Knight and asking their
thoughts on Huggins . He
also went to the NCAA
·headquarters
in
Indianapolis, to see for him·
self if ther:ewas any basis
for the cn11c1sm of Huggm~
an.? his methods. ·
. I have !lever. ~ver been
mterested m wmnmg at ali
costs," W~iser ~aid. "I don't
constder 11 a VICtory ~nless
you do 11 by the_ rules. . _
But everythmg ~e1ser
saw and heard convmced
h1~ Hugg1~s had done
thmgs the rtght way. And
that he was the nght coach
fo~ Kansa~ State. "
.
. Su~~ •t s a nsk, ,We•ser
sa1d. (But) I haven t seen
any evidence that this is
anything but the right move
for us."
Although it's obvious
Huggins' forced departure
from Cincinnati still stings
-lle lapses into "we" when
he talks about the school _
he
didn't
come
to
Manhattan for redemption.
He'll explain those gradu·
at ion rates and anything else
if you ask, but he's not
going to campaign for his
image. It's left to his players
to talk about their punish·
ment sessions with strength
coach Scott Greenawalt if
they mi ss class or mandatory st udy halls. or break
Huggins' rules.
At 53, lle ·remains the
same tough, aggressive
coach he always was, and he
doesn't see a reason to
change. This, after all, is the
same guy who suffered a
massive heart attack in 2003
and was back coaching two

weeks later, never missing a
practice. With a career
record of 567-199, he's seventh in wins among active
Division I coaches.
"We're going to do what
we always do'. We're going
to work, and go out and
recruit," he said. "We're
going to try and bring in the
best players and the best
guys that we can bring in." ·
He-'s already started.
Bill Walker, one of the top
high school players last
year, will join the basketball
team when he becomes eli-.
gible next month. Michael
Beasley, a 6-foot-10 for~
ward who is considered the
top prep prospect, signed
. Wednesday as pan of what
some called the No 1
recruiting class in the c~un~
try. ·
·
And the Wildcats are still
in the running for O.J ;
Mayo, who teamed with;
Walker to win consecutive
Division III state . champi~
unships at North College
Hili High
School in
Cincinnati.
.. 1 th 1'nk h • ·
rti t
.
e s m a pe ec
spot. I thtnk. the people out
there are gom_g to . be ve~:
ve!Y ~appy Wl!h him, too,
S3id Ju~ Denmson, the ath·.
Jette dtrector and football
coa~h at Walsh Umyerstty m
Ohto and a fnend of
Huggins' from their days
togetl)er at Akron.
"He ' s a good person, "
De~nison . added.
" He
beheves m . the academ1c
process. A lot of people
tllmk that's not true, but
nothmg could be further .·
from .'he. truth. He hkes to
see llts kids succeed, on the
court arid in the classroom."
Asked if . the year away
taught · h1m
anything,
Huggins smiles.
"All I can do is the best I
can, and I try to do that all
the time," he added. "I'm
like a lot of people, I've fall·
en short. On numerous
occasions. But you try to do
the 'best you can."

'

rite car

All Dlaplay: 12 Noon 2
Bueln. . . Dap Prior To

In Next lhly"a Paper
Sunday In-Column: l:oa p . m ..

Publication
Sunday Dlaplay: 1:00

For Sundaya Paper

Estol

This
niWllpope
cepts only het
ontecl 1d1 meottn
DE otondlrdo.

Perennial Cat Shelter
"luke" 1·2 year old,
neutered male. Would love a
life outdoors. Call (740)6457275 .

1§)

r

pUppies

Huskey mix. all gray. ready
in 2 weeks . 740-985-3957
or985·3839.
-------Two Female Cats, spayed
and dBCiewed, 5 yrs. okt,
sisters, shots up·to·date,
heahhy, all accessories:

.

www.ga!Hpo!iscaree!Colle(le com

0

KonH privot. ond group 3 bedroom, 2 bath, with fire-

lnllrllctlon. Boalto, unl·
forme, auppHea, Don
Blntanga'a Martlll Arta
Centor,
(740)982·5715
Open Dilly

CLASSIFIED INDEX
4x4'1 For Sale .............................................. 725
AMOUncement ........................................... 030
Antlques ..................................................: .... 530

:::~~~~.:~!;k;n:·::::.:·::.:·::.: : ·:.::·::.'.'.'.'.=

~~~~=:~

@$

Auto Rep~lr.................................................. 770
'Aulollor Slte ........................ :..................... 710
ao.ts&amp;MotorstorSite ............................. 750
BuHdlng Supplles ........................................ SSO
340
B ..
~ neea 10n d B u lldlltynga ...., ...... .................. 210
Ulllllll pportun .................................
Bualnest Tralnlng ....................................... t40
~-pera &amp; Motor Homeo
·790
.....,
...,.......................
Camping Equipment ................................... 780
C..SS Of Th1nk1 .......................................... 010
Chllci/Eklerly Care ....................................... 190
Elactrlca11Refrlgeratlon ............................... 840
Equipment lor Rent. .................................... 480

B

Excevattng ........, .......................................... 830610
- Equipment........... ....... .. ..... .....,,,,,.......
·
F·
-•••
Ferml for Rent. ............................................430
flnnl for Sate ............................................. 330
.
490
For Leise................................................... ..
For Slle ........................................................ 585
For s.le or Trlde......................................... 590
Fruits • Vegetables ..... :................ ............... 580
Fumlahed Rooms........................................ 450
Haullng,..........................................850
: Glwewey ........................................., ............ 040
Ada .................................................... 050
J! ... "

IGIOIII'•I
IHIIJI!trv
Hey •

Grain.......................................................
WInted .................................................110
lmprovementa ................................... 810
HomM for Sllte .....,...................................... 310
510
Hou ~-ld Goods
410
H
lo R nt
In
....::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::020

fHc.m.

-N . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

~~m ~

trllurence ................... :................................. 130
Lawn 1 Garden Equlpment ........................ 660
LIYM!ock......................................................630
Loltaf)d Found ........................................... 060
Lots &amp; Acruga ............................................ 350
tllacellaneou• .............................................. 170
"I
••n
"' aceII1neoue March 1 ndlae.. ..........................
"obi'- Home Repair
860
111
..
•...................................
,Moblta Hames tor Rant............................... 420
Ue Homes for Sale......................~ ..... :... 320
to Loan ............................................. 220
""
Motorcycles &amp; 4 Wheeters •••• :..................... 740
570
Mu.lcallnalrumen._
PariOn.l. ., .............................. ,.................... 005

••oney

ut...................................

Pete for Sale ................................................ 560
Plumbing &amp; Heatlng .................................... 820
Proteulonal Servlces .................................230
adto, TV &amp; CB Repair ..............:................ 160
Real Eabltl Wanted .....................................360
SChoOlS lnsti-ucFttonll·l·· ............: ...........;;;;,,,,.,615050
"-~
~-nt &amp; art zer ..............................
~'r-ae
SttuaUone·wanted ....................................... 120

TO DRIVE
·•uu. ""'cv.ssesco TRAINING·
• FI~At.C~NG AY,t.IWLE"
·-"" PIXEME"T"

ALLIANCE
TRACTOR· TRAILER

II- o

t,.,_~

liil
·
~~~~:::::~;======~~=====::.,
~
I
Ho.P
IID.P
~ott'f

~

1116

11110

WANIID

.

,

11116

W~1m

t.,.- - - - - - - '

'*' * * * * '* * '* * • * '*'

Ambrosia Machine Inc.
' Expenenced Welder &amp;
M h ·
d d
nl
ac lnlst nee e · ta ng

s

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

Box . Golllpollo,
'uu
OH 45831.
Earn $1()()..$200 plus free
pictures in one deY· Invite
your friends to your home lor
a glamour picture party. Cat
(740)525-4163 for lnformatlon
Experienced
COOK
needed
to
·-·k ·,n a staff
secure
res-

·~

&lt;
'dontial

8nvironment

tor

~al:n~u~~~n~~~~~~:

'

Previous ~~::~m man·
t
expertence
~:qe;;:~. Local restaUrant,
salary &amp; benefits equallo
expenence. send resume
to: Dally Sentinel, PO Boo'
729·25, Pomeroy
h
45769

Monday-Friday

TrueD tor Sale ............................................ 715

An Excellent way to earn
money. The New Avon .
H~p wanled at Darst Group
Call Marilyn 304-882-2645
Home, WOfi(ing with elderty.
heavy lifting 'nYOived. 740Auto damage approiser Fax 992·5023 .

Vana For Slte ...............................................730 ·
Wented to Buy ............................................. 090
Wanted to Buy· Farm Supplteo .................,620
Wentecl To Do .............................................. 180
Wented to Rent............................................470
Yerd Site- G11Hipoll1....................................012
Yerd Slte-Pomaroy/1Aiddte ......................... 074
Yerd
Pteeunt... ............................. 076

Sate-Pi.

i

:s=~--

""**~*""*

Mol-

r.s

a mano·

tacturer ~automotive ports
In Southern Ohio that speclal~os In robotic apptica·
t1ons for machining, we have
an opentng for a Pull lime
maintenance person. You
will need years experience
5
In a manufacturing setting
worl&lt;ing with PLC's, electric
applications and general
machine
maintenance.
Interested parties should
apply at YSK Corporation: 1
Colornot Drive Chillicothe
; November•
Ohio tne' week of
13 between the hours of
Bam and Jpm. No phone

___
F_E_D_E_R_A_L__ - - - - - - - MCHS looking for Team
POSTAL JOBS
Members lor IMlnings, mid·
$15. 67-$26.1~r... now hir- mghts and week-ends. HS
lng. For application and free diploma or GED. current ctigovernen:-ent job into, can ver's license and experience
American Assoc. of Labor 1- worl&lt;ing wnh homeless pre·
913-599·8042, 24/hrs. emp. tarred. $5.15 per hr., 40 hrs
w!benefits.
serY.
-------Full Time Assistant.
Housing
Treatment
Monday-Friday. Some bene· Coordinator; HS diploma or
fits. Send rssume tO Early GED; current driver's lteense
Education StatiOn 2122 and at least fi\18 years expe·
JefferSOn Ave. P1. Pleasant, rience working w/homeless
WV 25550
and housing of homeless.
;.;.:...,H:;:a.:.n:,:ds-on-:-::W:::o'::'rk-:,no:-• Day Shift, 40 hr5. wk.
.

SUV'slor Sllle ..............................................720

Upholstery ................................................... 870

1

R&amp;D contractor seeks to
hire skilled, innovati\IEI and
outgoing professionals for
FIT employment. Eftective
00111 and written commurHcation Is a must. Vast experierlce with AutoCAD and
Mecharucai Desktop, 3+·yrs

..

Appllcati~ns

1 3648
,;res..:.u:..me..:...to_l:_61-.4;,l4..-7 .,
--.=·--:.-~:;;;:--;;;;---,

Fl N 0 A JOB
IN THE CLASSIFIEOS

~",:~~· =~~ ~:~

wv

25701

wv
R&amp;J

Leadt'ng The Way
R&amp;J Trucldng now Htnng at
our New Haven, WV
Terminal. For Regional
Hauls-Dump Dtv. 1 year
OTR
Calli

-~~~9365exp.

sklor

2515 112 .Jaclcson A\10.
Pt Pleasant wv
. ~;..:·.7"73.75

:::::

~;!
"-:'":v~~==·
~

~~~~ ~V

r--,·--:.~-r--,

.._.......

~~~gectll:~a:ern::
AIII'NI lltltlldvertillng
In this newspaper 11
subject to the F..:lenll
F•lr Houttno Act of 1He
wtdch m•k• It lll9l1o

Retail Mangeria.l Personnel
poshkms. Send resumes to
Box lilll! Clo Galllpol~ Daily
Tribune, PO Box 469,
Golllpolis, OH 45631. Must
have valid drtvers tk)ense,
autoinsuranceanddrugtest ·I - -......,__ _
..
req:C:::ui:.::'Od:::.,.~---•NOTICE•
-Sign-ups,e. pm
·
Nov
OHIO
VALLEY
PUBLISH·
7
lNG CO. recommends
1' B'9 ' &amp;10 ·
80hr that yoy do business with
people you know, and
Class starts Nov 13, 2006. NOT to send money

8dvwti• " any
p,.,.noe, tlmllltion or

L.,-.0

dl~erlmhWion ~

religion, Ma
rtmlllll a111us or n~tlonet
origin, or any Intention to
ma~ke any such
preterenc., limitation or
dltcrlmln.tlon."
Thil. niWIPiplr wiH not

through tho m.,l until you

~:~inginvastlgated

knowingly~

advert!Mments tor re.l
esu.le wnlch 11 tn
vlolttion of the 11w. Our
'rnderw sre hereby
Informed that all
ctw.lllngs advertised In

Jhe

Spooch Language pathoto- :;::::;;:==~
gist FTIPT!PRN, Wellston/
Jeck&amp;on area. Exc. salary &amp;
MONEY
benefits, flexible schedule &amp; 1,--•TO~loA!-~N;.
'
sign on bonus. 888 -288·
9348 ext. 14, (740)418· . .- - - - - -..
**~OTI"'E**
1398.
,.
...

i

The

Middleport

Pollee

OeApplp~rt~ent ~iso· accte~ng

1
':;;J!~~rJ
L
...

-

·~-

~·

on

~.color,

~=1':7·a=a~~!~:

Super 8 Motel now accept·
. .~·ieal,·- ~ pa• time
100 ....,....
""'"']""' ,,
Desk Clerk. Must be abla to
work weekeOOS, holidays
and floating lhifts. Apply in
person, no phone calls.

tocators.

•••

'1111

a ..

4 Bedroom- 2 Bath
• ...
......

..wl
I

~;~:=507

~·
a
and dayshlft. For' more infor_ _ __:Ka=-.:n'-=--~ motion call Beverly Halley

got dass
181 25 s-n-ups
·•
more inlo 524-7203

160 000 00

2nd St 3 - bedrooms, 2 baths 2 car
m,rnklwlelhome.cam
garage pool, Big loll .Make
(740)828-2750 ,
Offers!! 527 .500 . 1_888 •306 •
7575ProportyPros.
Very · nice 3BR, bath,
upstairs, tu'rn•shed 1BR apt
Beautiful Home on Cedar St. downstairs. Furniture store
wrap-around porch. 3BR.
In rear. Car lot on Side. AN on
t.5Ba , furnished &gt;ltchon,
,12 acre lot at 130 BulaV!IIe '
DR, LA, Don. FP. out-build· Pike.
Gallipolis,
OH
ing. $118,000 (740)446· $135,000. (740)446-4782.
4639 ·

~e

TRUCKING

Upcoming certified nursing years. Contact Tammy at
assistant dass. Must have a 7.o-«6·7239.
high schoOl diploma or GED
to apply. Applica~ons may
be p;cked up at La&gt;in
Hospital, Monday ttfru
Frldoy, 8.00 am- 400 pm.
Applicat ,ons must bO tu[J1ed

..

I

Cleaning

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

carolroingmfoomdeililesslotoroechpotldsHrotvon
·
Rang'ng in ego 9 years. 21

In no ~te' than 11122/06 at
close ol buo,noss. E.O.E

Ray &amp; Son'• • Less then perlect crod~
accepted
Complete Car
• Payment could be the
same as renl.
Mortgage

Hor:ne IS equipped wlttl heating, cooling, water. and ali
electric . utilities.
some
kitchen appliances are
included. For more intorma·
110n call 740·985·33~ S(daytime)
or
740 _992 .
Pnce
2071 (evening).

:.$:.:::::·:::.:...::·:.__ _ __

hOme instead of renting.
• 100%financing

local Physician's Office to
wash
by hand
start as soon as 'possible. ~omplote
wash
job
Sand resumes, Through ~I $S.OO oft. ExteriO
t1/15/06,toBoxEBI5,200 ~Osnloll$3.00otl
Main Street, Point Pleasant,
25550

lcatlon&amp; r !spa c rs
Send resume, cover letter AppUcations may be picked
and 31trs. of reference to:
up at the Midd~~~ Pol~
Oe,
·n MpalddrtmiOepontrt~t
ace .
SC•C MCHS
~"~ 540 Fifth Ave
Transitions for Youth seeks
HEOuntEington,

cou".

~anye $~· h ac~s~e~r

beth. Perfect credit not
required Payment $525 .
Appra ised $70,000
74o367-7129.
:::..:.:.::::..__ _ _ _
Attention!
George's Portable Sawmill. local company offering "NO
don~ haul your Logs to the DOWN PAYMENT" pro Milljustcall304-675·1957. grams tor you to buy your

citiZOf!Shlp requirecl. Email
cover letter and resume to
ujobSOutroninC.c:om or fa.IC
to 1-866-231 _2567

2
certificate.
are
1 Cllilllpolla. : , - available at the
uldlng
No pllonecolllplllle.
Hand School, 8323 .North
SA 7, Choshira, Ohio
45620. Tho Gallla County Maotc-Years-Daycare·
Board of MR/DO is an Equal 'Center Inc. Now taking
Opportunity Employe~.
applications for a Full-Time
Substttuto. Send resume to
Doolgn Engt--2 yr.
St
Pt
201 . High
monullcturing dMign
Pteasant,WV 25550
expertonco. Autocad
lmowlodgo. Apply .ot

Public Notice: Rill Eltote
Auction By
bank or
seller order. 824 Canon St,
S.Oint .&amp;.lblna. .WV 2br. 1ba,
1,900st+ family.
7825 Lynn Ave, Hamlin,
WV
3br, 1ba, 1,200sf+, sin·
gle family
16 Burt!- Addition,
Point Plolunt, WV. 2br,
1ba, 1,325st+. Open1ng
B1ds;
Sl.OOOfea.
Inspections: 1-4pm, Sun.
Nov 12th &amp; 2hrs prior 10
sale. All properties sell:
3·00pm Nov 13th at 624
GarrOII St. 5aint Albans. WV
Visit wil6amsauction.com, or
call 800-801-8003.
WI/
Dean C. Williams broker
RE111 61. Carlyle Millard,
Diversified Marketing. Inc.
broker Re«~:184 , Carlyle
Mtllard AUCM3-05

available
(740)286·5255 Ranch style home on 2.6
.. 8
1740)418 2421
auer
acres overlooki'lg the beaudays. pm;
tlful Ohio River in Long
SBR, 3 .5 baltl ranch home. Bottom, Ohio located at
3,100+ sq. ft. Hardwood 61818 SR 124. This six
floors, fireplace. deck., 2·car room house includes 2 5

Elderly Care.
I have
RefBrences &amp; Experiences.
Call Beverly (304)675•1084
80,,.1me
__,_.,._:,...:__ _ _ _

Gu&lt;l'ng fiend School and
Galice
Workshop. lf'Local
Uanuhlcturer
Qualifications: Current bus
looking for wek6era.
driver physical, abs1ract,
PIMIIippfy tn .,..._.,
COL with .Class B endorse·
ot:

....,...":7'"""'"""'~"':"11

Jadl;son. Up to 65 acres

"-"1L

garage, LA. Family room , bedrooms. one full bath and
Ktr
25
a three quaner bath. 1421
square ieet of ltvmg spa919
00
Come atq with us during
e~gs
IQ
c
· with full finiShed basement
149 000 740 16 765
the wlntw. 2 females, 2 $ • ·
-4 -4 ·
and an attached two car
males or a couple. (304)675- About $3000 down 812 S. garage. AIBO includes a 32'
6183.
3rd. Ave. ~..Middlepan. Totally x 40' heated metal outside
remodeled. 3 bedrooms, 1 build ng with concrete floor.

~

pass
phus1cal
training
requ irement Call (740)379· calls accepted.
Accountont Our company 9083 belwoon 9-3 mon·fii
1t 1t 1t 1t 1t 1t 1t 1t 1t

in Chillicothe. Ohio ,. look·
mg tor an Accountant to
work,ng a mahufacturing
setting. Your expenence in
f1xed assets. journal entries,
budgeting and some cost
accoun11ng plus a wide
range of general accounting
will be ideal for this positiOn.
, d
A b h
1
ac eors
agree or
proven equivalent work
experience are requ1red .
Our compiny benefit pado.·
age includes m8dical1 dental. 401k. plus others. Send
resume to: Accounting Dept
PO Box 645, ChilliCOthe. OH
45601

To Do

recent telated experience,
dear background and US

Truck SMo, Inc. P.O.

~nglorGoodRent,.............................................460520 ~;~:9 P;;~our~ (~~;~
u

ol!nsu'r~~nce and

WANIID

of MA/DD 1ransporting end proof
enrollees
who
aHend passadrugTest ·

1·800·334·1203

************

•

AVON! All Areas! To Buy or IMAC, Temporary positions. MECHANICAL DEStGNER
Sell
Shirley Spears, 304- Sensitive
situation
for Huntington, WV lrM

2150 Esotem Av•
G1lllpoUs, Ohio or
oul&gt;mll- to SfS

100 WORKERS NEEDED
A
bl
fts
ssem e era '
wood items.
To $480/wk
Materials prOIIIdecl. ·
Free Information pkg. 24 Hr.
_ _8
_0_i-4_2_8_·484_'l_ _
2br. very clean , newly
rem od eled , 1e.un dry- room,
wlwashe•. dryer. all kitchen
appliances, pantry, gas
heat, CA (304)675·4022
(304)593-5903

u.,.. .... , ......,..,....
ama..r ..-..~ ... r.u

FORH~~

I

"-------.,1

c 2006 by NEA,Inc.

www.comlcs.com .

TRAINING CENTERS
Trai1in5l inWyttlaville, Virginia

-•lllllrlCIIolldoctradeo oc.n

0371
-------Seasoned fire wood , Oak
., ... it. "'"
and Hickory ...,.
,..,u hau 1
or I haul- Take HEAP 740949-2038.

\

;~n~~~~::mfi:::

LEARN

Auto P•rta &amp; Acceasorles ......,................... 760

8ale"

Good income producing
properties. Great locationl
1 Priee(s) are NegotiatMe.
Motivated
Sellerl
In
Amos and Son 's Trash Gallipolis. Call
Wayne
ser.&lt;ce, Firewood &amp; !'xtra (404)456·3802.
Hauling, ReasonatMe Rates, :.:5::•cr::.o.::s::w.:hh::3::B:_R_br-,d&lt;-ho_m_e
Hoop Accepted. 1740 1388 • full basement, 5 m1. E. o1

I

r-

~ For

•

roBliY

llo.PW.AN'I1ID •

4 rental houses

l.,~,rA.I'\Rt

r:,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
•

place, 40x60 barn. R1o
Grande area On 8 flat aces.
$120,000. 17401709·1166

Inti• u~ ··~~

I

1110

3 bedroom home for sale on
0) B
land contract. 17 4 3 88228.

and5choollt 2748.

WAN1ll&gt;

Avenue, Gallipolis, 740-446·
2842
·
.
Buying Junk Cars,Truc:ks &amp;
Wrecks, Pay Cash J 0
Salvage
(3041773·5343
(304)674-1 374
c.
W_a_
m_t_
o -b- ne_w_a_nd
_o-!
d

2 bedroom. 1 battl. nice
starter homo.
$19,800
(304)675-6349

Aocredltetl Member Accre(tl11ng
Courlcll 1cr IndepenDent Coleges

1!&gt;~1tl4 •If." '

~

I.

HoMEs

1,--·FOR-·SAJE--_.J

ca-

Plus $100 tor care(food) tn junk cars/tr~s!vans. 740· -fi7'-5-·l-429'-.- - - - - unarmed security officers.
good home. 740.992 -6919 · 416 _1594 or 740 _41 s- 1588
Certffied Sua DrivtM'
84/hour
work-week.
1.o1rr AND
Apprmume.tely $954./per~
Wanted cars any cond. or
week. Apply wl1h )mac on
fixable. (740)388·8228
Applications are being Wednesday No\1-15 from 9·
..,
acc:epted for Certified Bus 5 .at Bossard library,
LOST
Black and White
Drivers •tor a full-t1me pos1- Gallipolis, OH in the Swttz:er
Border Collie, New HaVen
tion and substitute positions donterences Room. Must
Heights area. Answers to
withtheGalliaCountyBoard have a valid drlver's license

·
r

rlO

GoiNpolll
COIIIgo
(Careers Close To Home)
Call Todayl 740-446-4367,
1·800-214·0452

NO, I'M\ rJol ~•1114 fo
1''-1 'io 1'Alo~ YotJ! I · l..t~

__(.~

riO

I

~UCilON

kltncar1yle@comcalll.net

YARDSAJE-

r

SC1tooLs

1

Absolute Top Dollar: U.S. ·
Silver and Gold Coins,
Proofsets, Gold Rings, Pre1935
U.S.
Currency,
Solitaire Dtamonds- M.T.S
Sibenan Coin Shop, 151 Second

~~~~~~~~~T~ippe:r.~C~a~II~(304~)8B~2-~82~4~0

~

Jm

YARDSAU:

con have borders and Qraphlcs .

addedtoyourdasslfledads
Borders $3.00/per ad
Graphics SOC for small
$1.00 for larQe

Thuraday for Sundays

Lw--oi'oi'OUNDiiii
' .._ ...

;

~

• Altlld1 must be pnlpald*

AUCilON

Six
Real

Dally 1n-co1umn1 1:00 p.m.
Monday-Prlday for JnMrtlon

Free to good home, very L--·G·AWI'OI.IS·--_.J
good natured dog. Very play·
ful~ loves people. Please call Wanda Halley's yard sale.
(740)446-4177.
indoors· dal~· 9:00 to 6:00,
---~--_;_- 27 Henson Rd., Addison
Greylblaclc Tabby cot, f~ed, 740 3/r7-7076·.
deciaV{ed, house broke, liii~:;.;,;;;;:.::~--..,
updated shots; groat with
AND
kids. (740)992-7093.
FLf.A 1\f_ARKET

1

1

Display Acls

~,_ _ _ _ __.J

GMAWAY

Now you

Worcl Ads

Kittens. 8 weeks old to give
Auction
Henderson
away. Utter box trained, no
Community Center
fleas, ll&amp;ry tame (740)645·
Thursday November 9th.
5037.
6pm. Cash Draw begimirJJ
and end of Sale.
ThUrsday Nowmber 16th,
6pm. Turl&lt;oy givoaway every
hOur. Jim (JCJ Cowan
AuctioneerWVM 1674

--11

,
I

r

r

\\\411 \t I \II '\h

•POLICIES•

COLLEGE
BASKETBALL

Kansas State coach Botl Huggins communicates with his
team during their college basketball game against
Washburn Un iversity in Manhattan .
"But what I didn '1 realize
was just how deep that quiet
desperation within our fan
base was.
'.'It ,wasn 't untilla~t season
when I started getting a
sense of that. I watched our
fans convince th emse lves
that clo;e losses were OK.
That really scared me," he
added. ''I'm not interested in
close lo;&gt;e&gt; and moral victories."' .
Still, Weiser wasn ·, exactly eager when . good friend
Eddie Fogler ;uggested he
consider Huggins to be the
new
basketball
coach.
Weiser never had met
Huggins, but he'd heard the
stories.

Gallia

I

AP photo

•

CLASSIFIED

·

Back in purple, Huggins starts ~ver at Kansas State
BY NANCY ARMOUR
ASSOCIATED PRESS

Qtrtbune- Sentinel-

"
Frldly'I5. Kevin Harvlck
-105 4
+1
Edmonton at Columbus, 7 p.m.
: 6. Jeff Gordon
-157 2
+1
Ottawa at Pittsburgh , 7:30p.m.
7. Jeff Burton
-184 1
-2
ThurMo¥'1 Spoo1a lNriiiiCIIono ·
, a. Kyle au sci"!
·-233 t
+2
Nash11llle at Detroit, 7:30p.m.
IAIIIALL
; 9. Mar&gt; Martin
·253 0
·1
N.Y. Rangers at Atianta , 7:30p.m.
Amol1clnlMglll
10. Kasey Kahne
-290 6
-1
Florida at Buffalo, 8 p.m. •
CLEVELAND INDIANS-.&amp;.g'"d to
........................... .
St. LouiS at Chlclgo. 8:30p.m.
I terms
wtth C Mike Aoee on a minor
•
Anaheim at Calgary, 9:30 p.m.
league
contract.
11 TonyStewart
-1669 5
S.Otunlly'o oamoo
DETROIT T1GER8-Nomed Joff
1 12. Carl Edwards
-2026 0
Ottawa at Boston, 1 p.m.
Jonu bullpen coach and Lloyd
13. Greg Biffle
-2328 I
Pittsburgh at Carolina: 7 p.m.
McClendon hilling
I 14. Casey Mears
·2395 o
Buffalo at Philadelphia, 7 p.m.
TEXAS R.&amp;.NGERs-Named Bobby
I 15 Kurt Busch
-2433 I
+I
MontrHiat Toronto, 7 p.m.
16 Brian VIckers
-2481 1
Jones manager for Oldahoma at the
·1
N .Y. Rangers at Washington, 7 p.m.
J7. Clint'Bowyor
-2522 0
+I
PCL.
Atlanta at Tampa Bay, 7:30p.m.
18. Ryan Newman • ·-2621 0
-I
Nollanollougue
•
Florida at New Jersey, 7:30p.m.
19. Bobby LabOnte ·2712 0
Colorado at Nashville. 8 p.m.
1 CHICAGO CUBS-Agi'Md to term•
·2786 0
with RHP Wade Miller ori a one·yea(
San Jose at Phoenix, 9 p.m.
1 20 Scott Riggs
' 21 . Martin Truex Jr ·2786 0
Calgary at Vancouver, 10 p.m.
contract.
•
22. DaleJarrett
·2835 0
Minnesota at Los Angeles, 10:30 p.m.
ANGELES
CODGERsLOS
23 Jamie McMurray ·2853 o
+1
Sundlly'a O.mea
Announced OF J.D. Drew elected toter·"
24 Elliott Sadler
-2860 0
·I
Edmontqn at St.louis, 2 p.m.
mlnate his contract.
•
· 25 Reed Sorenson ·2914 0
ColumbUs at Chicago, 7 p.m.
FOOTBALL
26. Jeff Green .
·3053 0
+I
Minnesota at Anaheim , 8 p.m.
,
Nat1anot Football! LHgue
·
_,.
27 Dave Blaney
-3077 0
·~ DETROIT LIONs-Placed DE Jamei
28 JJ. Veley
-3118 0
' +1
ECHL
Hall and RB Brian Calhoun on Injured
+1
29 Joe Nem&amp;Chek ·3132 ' 0
AMERICAN CONFERENCE
reserve. Signed DE Corey Smith and'
30. Robby Gordon ·3154 0
·2
North Dtvl•lon
RB
Avelon Cason.
31 Ken Schrader
·3275 0
W L OL SL PtsGF GA
SAN FRANCISCO 49ER8-Piacecl
32 Kyle Pelt)!
·3396 0
+1
ToledO
5 2 0 0 10 18 18
LB Bobby IWUOhukwu on tha pract1co
33 Sterling Martin -3415 0
·1
T-renton
5 2 0 0 10 30 28
squadAnjurecl list Slgnecl LB Ru5S8,1
34 David Stremme ·3531 0
I Roading
3 2 0 3 9 2827
RabO to the practk:o squad.
35 Tony Ratnes · ·3751 0
Cincinnati 4 4 o a 8 24 18
HOCKEY
'. Johnstown 4 5 0 0 8 32 33
Nlllonol Hocby ~
I Oayton
2200479
DETROIT REO WING5--f'tacecl ~
Wheeling 2 6 0 0 4 2536
Jason Williams on InJured reserve.
South
Dlvl1lon
Nahonal Hockey league
Rocollecl F Brad Norton from Grand
W L OL SL PtsGF GA
EASTERN CONFERENCE
,
·
.
I Gwinnett 6 1 1 1 14 45 30 RapidS ol the AHL.
Atlantic Division
NASHVILLE
PRED.&amp;.TORSW" L OT Pis GF GA I Charlotte 5 2 0 0 10 31 20
Asslgnod D VIctor Uchovatiw to Now
New Jersey
9 5 1 19 37 41
Florida
5 3 0 0 10 24 20
Mexico or the CHL
' N.Y. Rangers
8 6 1 17 54 54
S~ Carolina 5 3
0 0 10 33 37
NEW JERSEY DEVIL5-Asslgned 0
4 2 1 0 9 2824
' Ptttsburgh
7 4 2 16 44 37 . Texas
David Halo to Lowell o11he AHL.
N y Islanders 7 6 2
16 ~·41 46
Columbia 3 3 1 2 9 33 35
PHILADELPHIA FLYERs-.&amp;.sslgno&lt;j.
' Phtladelphta
3 111
7
30 so I Augusta
4 4 ·o o 8 29 36
C Matt EIMson and C Ryan Potulny I&lt;&gt;
Pensacola 1 8 0 0 2 24 40
Northeast Division
W L OT Pts GF GA
Philadelphia of the AHL
NATIONAL CONFERENCE
TAMPA BAY LIGHTNING-Acqulre&lt;l.
Buffalo
12 1 1 25 63 39
W.ot Dtvlolon
C Daniel COrso 1rom Philadelphia lo• ·
W L OL SL PtsGF G/1
Toronto
10 5 3 23 64 61
Idaho
7 1 0 0 14 31 23
RW Darren Reid
Montreal
8 3 3 19 46 39
VANCOUVER CANUCKs-Rocall~
onawa
s 8 1 11 44 39 VIctoria 4 4 0 1 9 33 35
Alaska
4 3 0 0 8 2620
0 Nathan Mciver from Manitoba of ttla
Boston
4 7 2 10 36 54
Phoenix
4 6 0 0 8 30 36
Southent Division
AHL.
3 4 0 2 8 24 31
w · L OT Pts GF GA Utah
WASHINGTON CAPITALs-Recalled
PecHtc Dlvlalon
12 3 3 27 67 51 1
0 John Erskine tram Hershey of th(
1 Atlanta
W L OL SL PtsGFGA
Carolina
8 6 3 19 55 56 I
AHL.
6 2 0 0 12 33 22
1 TempaBay
&amp;7 1175~ 47 I Fresno
COLLEGE
Stoclcton
5 0 0
I 11 20 11
Washington
6 5 4 16 4 7 53
FRAMINGHAM STATE-Named Ton(
1 Florida
6 7 3
15 44 53 Las Vegas 3 o 2 3 11 26 27
Kelley 1ootball coactl, effective lor th'
Bakersfield 4 3 0 1 9 Z7 33
WESTERN CONFERENCE
2007 season.
/'
Lolig Beach1 7 0 1 3 24 36
Central Dlvlalon
MARYLAND-Agreed to terms wllK
WLOTPtsGFGA
Gary Williams, men's basketball coach ~
NO"(E : Two points are awarded .tor a on a two·year contract extenslon1
; Detroit
10 4 1 21 41 31
Nashville
9 3 1 19 47 39 win , one point for an Ollertlme or through the 2Q10.11 season.
shootout loss
'
5 7 1 11 32 41
1 Columbus
Thuraday'a Game
St.Louis •
4 7 3 11 36 48
Victona 6, Fresno 3"
Chicago
4 9 1 9
36 49
Frtdlly'a Garnes
Northwest Dlvltlon
Wheeling at Cincinnati
WLOTPtsGF GA
C&lt;Mumbla at Florida
10 4 0 20 42 30
Minnesota
I Vancouver ' 8 8 I 17 40 44 cnarlolte at Johnstown
Thtlf11d1Y'I College
Colorado
1 6 2 16 51 49 1 Dayton at Trenton
MojorScorH
7 7 1 15 40 42 1 Reading at Toledo
Edmonton
TOURNAMENT
South Carolina at Augusta
5 7 2 12 37 40
' Calgary
2K Sports COllage Hoops Classic
Gwinnett at Texas
Pacific Division
Fl,.tRound
,
Alaska at Utah
WLOTPtsGF
Chicago St. 98, St. Bonaventure 95
Stockton at Idaho
12 0 4 28 59
, Anaheim
Texas 103, Alcorn St.
Long Beach at Bakersfield
12 4 0 24 45 29
sOconcl Round
1 Dallas
Phoen1x at Las Vegas
San Jose
12 5 0 24 56 36
Cont. Michigan 71, Brown 58
Saturdtly'a Qamea
1 Los Angeles
5 103 13 45 60
• Michigan ~t1l6, vounga1own St. 61
Phoenix
4 110 · a
36. 64
Toledo at Johnstown
.
EXHIBI110N
Dayton at Trenton
I
•
Georgia COllege 78, Mer"'" 70
Augusta at Charlotte
I
Two points tor a w1n, one polnl ·for overMcNeese St. 61, Spring Hill 60
Wheeimg at· Cincinnati
lime loss or shootout loss.
N. Illinois'
St. Francis, Ill. .47
Cotunlbia at Florida
UCF 102, St. Leo 54
South Carolina at Pensacola
Wedneaday'a Games
W. Illinois 86, Missouri Baptist 69
Gwlnnett at Texas
Atlanta 5. Ottawa 4
Thurwdly'o Women'l Book-11
Tampa Bay 4, Pittsburgh 3, OT
1 Alaska at Utah
llojOrScorH
1 Stoclcton at Idaho
N.Y. Rangers 4, Florida 3, SO
TOURN,.MENT
1 Detroit 3, Edmonton 0
·Las Vegas at Bakersfield
P-oonNIT
Thursday's Gamea
PhOenix at Long Beach
. Flm Roul&gt;&lt;l
Fresno al VICtoria.
Toronto 6, Boston 4
lona 66, St John's 56
Carolina 5, Wa5hlngton 0
. Sunday'• o • .,.• .
N.C. State 78, High P!&gt;lnt48
I · Augusta at South Carolina
N .Y. Islanders 3. Philadelphia 1
Purdue 67, Belmont 43
1 Fresno at Victoria
New Jersey 2, Chicago 1, SO
Stanford 88, Loyola Marymount 61
Columbus 4, St louis 2
./ Johnstown at Reading
EXHIBITION
Dallas 1, Phoenix 0
Stockton at Idaho
Harding 69; Llpocomb 62
Las Vegas at Long Beach
Anaheim 6. Vancouver 0
Tennessee Tech 79. Tusc;ulum 62
San Jose 7. Los Angeles 3

ooacn.

The Daily Sentinel • Page 85

www.mydallysentlnel.com

TRANSACTIONS

HIGH SCHOOL FOOTBALL
SEOAL
W-L
PF PA
Logan ...................... 7.() ... 256 .. 33
Marietta ...................... .4·3 ... 152 .. 151
Zanesv&lt;lle ......... .. ...... . .. 3-4 ... 172 .. 161
Warren ....................... 1-6 ... 78 ... 276
Athens . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Q-7 .. 72 ... 334

PageB4

SCOREBOARD

The Daily Sentinel

Friday, November 10, 2006

--"

rMoB~s~

I

2001 t6•1l0 Fleetwood, 3
bedroom, 2 bath, very nice.
Priced to sell. (740)44 10955.
2003 16x80, Fleetwood,
3BR, 2BA, Vlnyl siding, shin·
gle roof , central air included,
nice Home. Call tor pricing.
Daytime
(740)388·0000,
Evoning
(740)388·8017,
Cell (740)645-6150. 6, 14 &amp;
16 wide's to choose from .
For Sale or rent. 1996
l4K80 !'nobile home. 3
Bedroom. 2 bath , all eleCtric.
Rent $450 month, $400
deposit references required.
Sale lor 513,000. Call 740·
992-6878.
Gallipolis Ferry

95 Norri!S
1

this newsp1pe' 1 ,.

14x80, 3br, 2ba, a ready
!letup or can~· be moved
$6,900 (304)633-6536

IVMIIblt on •n IQUII

Great used 3BR home only

L:~op~po:rt:"":'ly::bo:•:•~·~

-

$9,995. Will help with deliv·
ery Csll (740)385-7671

COzy bnclc tr,·lavel, 2 car

Borrow Smart Contad
1 ~e Ohio Division of
Financtal
Institution's

attached garage, 3·4BR.
2ba, wooded 1.3 acres.
5769 SR sse 1740)446·
7157.

New 2006 Clayton sln·
glewides starting at $199.84
per month Trade-ins wei·
comes. Call.(7 40)385-2434.

Sale or rent 1971 2 bw:i·

278 """"3 to learO if the
~
mortgage
broker or
lender
is
properly

House and Lot for Sale! 3
Sf., 2 Bath home on appro~~:.
3 aCfe. Wmew roof, heat
pump, S S. Side by stde and
air tihratlon, electric heat,
wfstand by propane tire
place and outside StQ.raga
b ld'
I
t
tt
Ul lng. n prlva e se ng,
located On Forest Run

licensed. {This is a public
service ann ouncement
lrom tho ()h ;o Volley

only).

Office of Consumer
Affa1rs BEFORE you refinance your hOme or
Obtain a loan. BEWARE
ofd·requests for enyt Ia~
a Yanes paymen s a
fees or msurance. Call the

~;!f~ 101~1freeC~r"~~a~:~

1

~

~NAL
.,.....~,

4911

: R74o~a:•;_d9.~9R-a~~'n5e~·-O_o,~lov-·e~,c~ga_lsl ~·r:::·::·~~~~&amp;~::::
· ""

~P:u:bl:,sh:'ng
::Comp:::a:n:yl=~

r:

room . QaS heat, near Holzer,
Gallipolis. $3.900. rented lot
(740)678·2109.
'-SI-iii.;_A_va_i_labl-e-..-,-99_9_1_4~x70~
Mobile Home. 3 Bedroom. 2
Bath. located in Cheshire.
$18,000 OBO. (740)416-

I
•

AC11£AGE

Log Home . sale or lease 4
Br , 2 112 bath 6 acres MDbllt Home lot tor
pond. Crew Road. S260.000 near Vmton. Call (740)441 :..:.8:.::6:.::·668=-.0::.7:..~8:____ 1111

,_.,t

1

TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY /SSI?

New Haven. Ban&gt; owned. 3
to-&lt; bedrooms. Formal
Dining. $35 ,000
M'ke

No Fee Unless we Wi n'
1.888·582·3345

Stacie. Old Colony GMAC
Real Estott 1304l542-588B

-------·--------------

�Friday, November 10, 2006
•

Friday, November 10, 2006
ALLEYOOP

www.mydallysentinel.com

The Daily Sentinel • Page 87
NEA Cro&amp;~word Puzzle

BRIDGE

ACROSS

Phillip

Alder

hI \I \I "

t•
$148/mo! 4 Bedroom HUD!
4% down, 30 years ~ 8%.
For listings 800·391·5228
elCI F254

•RENTALS •SALES
•SERVICE •FREE DELIVERY
•MONTHLY OXYGEN VISITS

"Take the pain out
painting·let us do it

for )'Ou"

Interior Only

GOOD lOCATION
IN MIDDlEPORT

10x10x10x20

3 bedroom home, 1 acre, 5 Gallipolis. Call !302)682·
mi. S. of Gallipolis. Sec. dep.. 7141 ·

:.:re:::.
f.:::.(7:.:40:::1:.:245.:.:..:·5:.:3:::.78:.:·_ _ _
3 Bedroom house in
Pomeroy $450 plus deposit
and utilities. No Pets. 740·
992·5228.
-'---------,:3br Home in Mason, Total
Electric,
No
pets,
$425/month. $300/deposit
~(304~)~
__-_38_~
________

2 bedroom, AJC, porch &amp;
awning. Very. very . nice, no
pets. In Gallipolis. (740)446·
2003, (740)446·1409 or
(740)446·2692
-------3 Br. traile r. t 112 bath.
Ask1ng $425 per monlh plus
deposit. 740-243-581 1 ask
f~
orJ_.R_.___________

3BR home- SR 554, Bidwell·
$575fmo· sec. dep. refer·
ences. all elec. (740)4-46·
3644.

3BA. 2ba, dblwide. no pels
ref. required. Close to
R.V.H.S. $-475 month, $47:5
dep. (740)367-7025.

nt Home ' MotfiH
3br, tba · Coury
Lt " Joh
Board Ad. Letart, close to M b1• e o~e 0 •np k~
1
1
Power Plant (304)675·2484
e . orne
ar
In
(304)593-t481
Galhpolts, OH . Phone
0
'
(740)446-2003 or 1740)446·
3br, House for Rent 1409.
$350Jmonth. $300/deposit,
c
Two bedroom trailer $400.00
No Pets, all (304)593-6341 a month. Electric included.
or (3041674-5839
Responsible 101 own heat
Atlenllonl
bill. 740-843-5546.
Local company offering "NO jir;_;.;;.;;,;,;;,;;;.;;.__..,
OCWN PAYMENT' proAPAR'I'I\IENfS
grams tor you to buy your Lw--FORiliiiiiRoo'ililiiio-.,1
home instead of renting .
-,
• 1bo% financing
t and 2 bedroom apart·
• Le ss than perfect credit ments, furnished and unfur·
. hed . secunty
.
deposn.
accepled
n1s
• Payment could be the required, no pets, 740.992·
same as rent.
2218.
Mortgage
locators.

°.

(740)367:0000
Bidwell area, Clean 2br,
$400/monlh,
includes
R.f/Dep.
Wa1.'/.ewer.
required. No Pets (304)5764037

rm$30ett10 ~encply apdet. UliliMs
·
mo.. us posit.
1' 111oor, 2 bedrm, rg . &amp; ret
furn, iaundry rm. L rm &amp; 0.
rm. clean, $400.mo + dep. &amp;
utllrties. (740)441-0596
pd1

Clean &amp; Nice 2dr. Central 1BR hi-level, close to hospi·
Heat.
Efficient. tal. $400 mo. dep &amp; ref
require&lt;;~ . (740)446-2957.
Convenlenlly located , Ref. .
0 ep., N0 Pel5 · (30416 75 • 2 bedroom apartmen1 in
16:.:2_;__ _ _ _ _ _ . Centenary, all utilities paid
:5:::.
For Rent 3br, House, base· except eleclric· $325. Call
mont, fenced in backyard, (740)256·1135
near school. SSOO/month - - ' - - - - - - call {S04)
•
~(BettYl 3 rooms &amp; bath. stove.
or (304)675 _3165
refrigerator. utilities paid.

675 4061

Downstairs, 46 Olive St.
House tor rent , Pomeroy, no $450 month, no pets.
pets. 740-992-5858
(740)446-3945.

•2&amp;3 bedroom apartments
•Central heat &amp; AIC"
•Washer/dryer hookup
•All electric· averaging
$50-$60/month
•Owner pays water, sewer.
ti-ash

11\\\'-l ' lll~l \IH \
NEW AND USED STEEL
Steel Beams, Pipe Rebar '"r"'to;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
Allin&gt;
For
Concrete,
Ahgle,
(304)882-3017
Channel, Flat Bar, Steel ..___PORiliiiiiS.w;iiiiiiiio-.,1
Grating
For
Drains,
Driveways &amp; Walkways. l&amp;L $500!
Cars!
Police
Scrap Metals Open Monday. Impounds from $5001 For
Tuesday, Wednesday &amp; listings 800-55~ x390t
Friday, Bam-4:30pm. cl&lt;ised
Pontiac Sunbird
Thursday,
Saturday
&amp; 1990
Convertible • Blaclc-t26,000
Gracious living. , and 2 bed· Sunday. (740)446-7300
miles· $1 ,100 or Best offer·
room apartments at Village
Rasponsible Call 740-992-1082.
Manor
and
Riverside WANTED:
ApartmeniS ·In Mlddlepon. party to take' on s~aill , 199, ·Lumina Z-34, white,
From $295·$444. Call 740· monthly payments on H'IJh $t,
995 or$t,OOO-n
9~2-5064. Equal HolJsing DefinitiOn B1g Screen TV. 1· t
F'1reb'1rd re d, sharp,
993
•
.
Opportunities . .
800 398 3970
·
$2,995 or $t,200 00wn
Immaculate 2 bedroom WANTED:Responsible party 1993 Corsica white, $1.495
apartment in the country. to take on small monthly or $600 down
'
New carpet &amp; cabinets, payments on High Definition 199, lumina, good w0f1&lt; car
freshly. painted &amp; decorated, Big Screen TV. HKXJ-398· $695 or $250 down
WID hookup. Beautiful coun· 3970
1997 Kia car red, 5 speed,
fry setting. Must see to
$1,995
01' $700 down
~
appreciate. $399/mo. No ;
FOR.-~?....
1983 GMC chop top show
pets. (614)595-7773. or 1- ....._
~
• truck $3,495
800-798-4686.
1981 VW lruck diesel, about
- -- - - - - - - - t mele, t tamale Chinese 50 miles per gaQon $t ,300
In Gallipolis, clean, upstairs, Shar·Pei for sale, 3 yrs. old. 1978 Corvette 25 yr
2 bedrooms, 2 bath, dish- Cali (740)645·7009.
Anniversary, good shape
~asher, WID hookup, $500,
$7,695
.
deposil.
reterenc~s. AKC Choc&lt;&gt;lete Lab pups (740)44S'8t72 or (740)709- '
( 7401446 • 92~.
$250. (740)245·5296.
1124.

e

r

I

2006 400ex runs great with

992·3194
or 992·6635

k&gt;ts of extra's 3,800 7'40·
339-0008

"Middleport's only

For Sala:
t999 2",
HD lots
softtail
black,
lowered
of
chrome, some e~etres.
Sto,500 or oso, Call tor
m01e delails 740-992-6878.

t8 ft. Hi Lo camper, great
condition. w/ refrig, stove,
oven, micro, furn, AJC, bath,
steeps 4. Call anytime, if no
answer,. leave message wiU
return call (740)446·3991 .

P/U Truck Camper, fold
down, like new. only weighs
965 lb~ Furnace. Retrtdg.
Range, Sink. $1 ,900 Firm
(304)675-6440

~~;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
r·O
H
.
OME
IMI'IIovJiMENTS

Doberman puppies, AKC,
•~&lt;:&lt;&gt;Meru blOOd line, all 001ors, male &amp; female
(740)669.0089

°

SO

Nice 2 bedroom apt. stove, Golden Retriever pu~es. 6
refrigerator, paid water, ·weeks ··old, has been
washer/dryer
hookup. wormed
$225. each.
(304)n3 5164
(304)674
Centenar~ Rd. No .pets,
•
or
•
(740)446-9442 afte' 5:00.
_57B_t_ _ _ _ _ __:_

t999 CheYy
Ext. Cab Mr. Fix II: COmplete home
4X4 .Auto $6895.00. River re modeling, all major. &amp;
view Molors, 2 blocks abOve minor repairs around the
McDonalds, PomerO'j, Ohio house. 24hr. Emergency
(7 0)992 3490
4
•
• Service (304)674-6538
200t Ch
Bl
Poodles. Tea-cup &amp; Toy, tiny
evy azer, very
Twil) Rivers Tower is accept· Chihuahua, male. Snuggle good condition, loaded.
ing applications for waiting yourl•,.,bablesin1otheholi· $4,950 (304)675-7998 or
lis1 for Hud-subsizod, I· br, days. ~(7 , ,,. 0 , 28
(r40)44.1•824 t
01
apartment, catl 675 -6679 i.-:;.:;.·;,;;:.~;.;,;;.;;~.;;;;_...,.
Eaual Housirig Opponunlty
M
2001
Plymouth
Neon .
INwR~
64,000 miles. 4 cyl., auto.
Upstairs 3 rooms &amp; bath,
·
$2.900 OBO. (740)256·1233
partial~ furnished. No pets.
Dod S
Reference
&amp;
depoSi1 Eplphone Sheraton 11. 2002
ge trauss 59,000
required. (740)446-1519
Electric Guitar w/ case, like miles, runs great, new tires,
new. $500 {304)895-3828 53.800 bBO. 2003 Dodge

r

r

I
~----~~~~iit:Eiiilr;.,_.i
i
lbNr
FOR

FOR SAlE

I

Eagles Club 2171
•

Presents

Paul Doeffing.er
Saturday,
.Nov. 11th
8:00pm-??

Come and enjoy
TURKEY DINNER
Ladies Auxiliary
Post #9053
Tuppers Plains, Ohio
Synday, November 12th
11:30- 2:30
Adults $6.50
Children $3.50
Carryout Available
Winter Rental Space Available
at the Mason County Fair
Grounds $8 per foot ·
Now thru April 1, 2007 Contact
Wayne See (304) 675-5463

Mizway Tavern
Karaoke Every Wed &amp; Fri Night
Hog Roast 4 pm
Sat. , Nov. 11th
Fun for every one but the hog .

Help Wanted

Help Wanted

0

OB/PEDS MANAGER
Pleasant Valley Hospital is currently
seeking an 08/PEDS Manager. A
minim~m of three years experience in an
acute care setting (preferably Obstetrics).
Previous m'anagement/sup~rvisory
experience preferred. WV RN license, BSN
preferred.
Holidays, heakh insurance single/family
plan, dental plan, life insurance, vacation,
long term disability an.d retirement.
Send resumes to:
Plusant Valley Hospital
C/0 Human ReliOurces
1520 Valley Drive
Point.Pleasant. WV 25550
or fax to (304) 675-6975
or apply online at:
WWIII.pvalley.org
AA EOE

'

PUBLIC NonCE
·
NOTICE:
Ia hereby
given 1M! on llondiJ,
November 13, 2006 It
10:00 a.m., a public
Hie wHI be held at 211
W.
Second
St.,
Pomeroy. Ohio. The
Farmort Bank and
Savlngs Company Ia
aolllng lor cash In
hind or certtltecl check
the following _collllerII:
.
1997

C

o

Ford

b

•

Dealer: East

Vulnerable: Norlh·South

WW'liV.tlmbet'oCJ'Hkeabtnuey•.,...,

740.446.9200

29670 Bashan Road
Racine , Ohio
45771
740-949-2217

1A59 s~. Rt 160 • GaHJpolls

LO'""II'tl
• .T
.M Qid
LM

Oeaning
Service

New Homes - Decks • Roofing
Siding ·.Foundations
Sidewalks
Lowest Prices
No Job Too Small
1·740·698-Q890

TfAGHf~S

2•

Pass

2•

ALL SUNSMINE
AN' LOLLYPoPs!!

PSST !! DON'T YOU
B'LEEVE A WORD

OF THAT

II

-,\1 r r.---

" .1 ~

-v--

-

1
"'

\

THE BORN LOSER
/

IH\I&gt;o.~

full deal, then claim lhat the .-mlng atBut · one
snowflake does not make a blinard. At
the table, South bid a reasonable two
no-trump, which ended the auct;on. West
guessed lucidly, leading a spade.. Laler.
East unblocked his club queen at the key
moment, and the contract went down
two. If West starts wi1h the diamond jacit,
declarer wins one spade, two diamonds
and five clubs.
Strangely, the panelists were not told if
two hearts was forcing (my preference),
or nontorcing but encouraging {the
ma}ority chQice), or an effective signott
(an unpopular treatment). If the bid is
forcing, SoUth must insist On game. tf it is
encouraging. he rriust at klast invite
game. And il it is a· signoff, he would
probably pass, but might raise to th ree
hearts.
No-llunip does look tempting, bul perhaps raising hearts ls "preferal:!le
because partner will normaMy have a
six·card suit. Note that to defeat four
hearts, EaSt must lead a diamond, and
when declarer tries to duck a spAde,
. West must go in with his eight and shift
10 a 1ru.rnp 10 prevent a spade ruff.
Full details are available
www.aus·
•tra!ianbridge.com.

OFTQI

/

1-ND
I \o.IIU...

&amp;.E.t&gt;&lt;

9-.'&lt;1\

~It&gt;...

~(:,"-1~,

AstroGraph
_......_,

!=:1·:7:40:·:99~l=-6=i~%=~
Ac·r mrr s.·rn"'cE
1
r:~~trr

Complete Tree Care

IMPOITS
Athena

20Y..,.f~~
INSURED
Frwbllmltn

f'Mne: (140)441·n87

We Deliver To You!

West Shade Barber Shop
Owned &amp; opcra1ed hy
Chris Parker
17 yrs. experience.
F1rs1 Barber ShoR on

148•992-1m
Stop &amp; Compare

East

It
Pass

8t

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

~ ...~.~&gt;:"i"''li'!M!':IAA"':""•

PEANUTS

&amp; M-=DICAL EQUIPMENT
70 Pine Street • Gallipolis

446-0007

~

!1 :~

El

Cornerstone
Construction

Residfnlialo C ommercial • General Contractina:
Pain ling • Door.. o Wi ndows o Decks ·

Siding • Roofing • Room Additi ons • Remodeling
WV 038992
o Plumhing • Electrical
740-367.0&amp;4(
OM 38244
, • A(.:'l.:uustic Ce iling 740·339-3412
o

:SUNSHINE CLUB

• Stump Grinding

' • Bucket Truck
26 \'ears Experience

David Lewis
740-992-6971

1FALP47VXVF174847
Public Notice
1998 Chevy Blazer
tGNCTt8W1WK19695 NOTICE OF LIEN SALE
7
.
· The personal property
1996
Plymouth and contonte of thaloiV o y a g a r lowing storage units
2P4FP253TTR580241
will be" auctioned lor
2000
Jeep
Grind sale to 'llltlsfy the lien
C h e r o k e a of Hartwell Storage.
1J4G248SOYC344275 The Hie will be held at
The Farmers Bank and the H1rtwall Storage
Savings
Company, Facility, 34055 Laurel
Pomeroy,
Ohio, Cliff Rd., Pomeroy,
reMnres the right to Ohio on November 30,
bid at this sale, and to 2006 at10:00 a.m .
withdraw 1he above Unh .,06
collateral prior to sale. Joe Brown
Funher, The Farmers Box 175
Bank and Savings Albany, Ohio 45710
Company reserves tho (11) 10, 17
right to reject any or all

Nortb

Monthly Plans
. Available

C" '"'";

Free

Advertise
in this
space
for
554 per
month
YOUNG'S

CARPENTER
SERVICE

,~rd

« RSYP
Part of

11

Flliry-t~~~e

lwavy

4 Feat-food
chlln
7 !!"~ng

42 Dupe
48

~=:..
mountains

47

=
Anlde-

oquant

13 Ocean fish

~~ Anotomtcal

14 Elev.
15 Rip apart
16 Fall to

pe911ge
52 BNIICh

ollahoot

Include
Popular cat
Sundae topP,lng
·- -Man
Fever"
Comic-strip
queen
Piquancy

53 - de
17
Janeiro
t9
55 Trwvl
7 Entire
33 CJviar,
eKtent
actually
Fountain
8 Curly-tailed 35 Sports
20
coins
dog
oltlclal
56 Clio's year
37 Rowing out ·
21
57 Veldt grazar 9 Arms up
58 Finish a "I" 12 Hunches
40 Major
13 SWeethearts
ar1ery
23
59 Army off.
Z6 Dryden
60 Travel on· t8 Promising 41 OUapidated
work
powiler
22 Speak
42 Math flgUJ8
28 Slater of
highly of
43 Put forth
Hellos
DOWN
23 Last letter
effort
28 Banned bug
24 Geological 45 Gold brick
1 Quiet!
period
46 Sprlngllke
IPIIY
30 Groom's
2 Embraces 25 RCA
48 IItie
attendant
3 Sherpa's
number
of
34 Ho-llum
sighting
27 Census Into 49 .Joule
• feeling
fractions
4 Cause-and· 29 Designer
36 Give
ellect lew
label
50 Ice palace
5 Pulled a
31 Monopolize 54 Monsieur's
1aslallnce
38 Pizarro's
scam
32 Use poor
affirmative
6 Fires
judgment
quell

. ,. the-tab!e action is best_.

~OW!

Top • Removal • Trim

a

:;j~~~~~~~:!:!~~!:J
11.

'THAT'$ LIF&amp;, ..IUGHAID
E\I'RY DAY CAN'T 8E

Aft'ordable

Tree Service

collateral will be aokl
"aa la·Where Ia", with
no
erpreued
or
Implied
warrenty
given.
For further lnlormatlon, or lor an -wolntmont to Inspect collataral, prior to Hie date
contact Cynclle or Ken
at 740-992·2136.
(11)8,9, 10

BARNEY

·-

Dependable
Fully Insured
&amp; Bonded
Daily, Weeki)', or

Top•1rim•Coblo_,.,
Cr~nw • tt.ullng• Stump OrlndlrlU
171JRind·Sfr11toGIIIIJJOIIt, OH
Rick Jotmaon Jr.· Owner

41

Australian Bridge is a bimonthly largepage-format magazine .contain ing the
usual mix of tournament reports, instruc·
tton and quiues, including a bidding
competition with answers based on the
opinions ot an expert panel. ('rho B1idge
World, Bridge Magazine and New
Zealand B1klge also have this feature.)
Loot&lt; at the South hand and !he auction.
What would you rebid?
Some bidding-panel moderators show a

\

JONES'

bids tubmmed.
The above detcrlbed

se,.,n,.,,e.

''""J"

• New Homes
• Garages
• Complete
Remodeling

HAS
SOMETHING
FOR YOU!!

/ ·

How
ENG/..ISH

&amp; ~~·

1/1411 mo. pd

West

From the lands
Down Under

IT'S AN INCOMP/..Erf

ll"';JJI ' ..........
Hours
7:00AM - 8:00 PM

Soutb

.Opening lead: t J

0 11

Hardwood Cablnetry And FurnHure

53

I AK 3
.AK10873

• Kim Bias·Owiler

' .,

J 9 2

• J 9

TIGFfTS

Hi ll's Self
Storage

• A Q
.tQt096 5
• Q 54

7 53

South

AVoiP

Klmmy's furniture
Outlet

ROBERT
BISSUL
CUS111CT111

Muat1ng - - - - - - - -

r

I"

740-9850:l616

iiiitiiia;;;;;;;~~~AIIM;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; eg ~ I

1.,~- EQu!PMINri i li i i l i i t;,. ,l

:::======::::
'===========-;:====~
NOW OPfli

Texas Road off Rou1c 7

Neon 39,000 miles, runs
great, rlew tires, $3,600
OBO. (740)256-1233 or
'-(7_4.:;012:.:56::..:...·903=-"t._ _ __
86 Ranger truck, auto, 4 cyL
98 Neon Sport, auto, priced
to sell. (740)388-8228.

Commercial building 'For
Sola" t600 square teet, off
street parking. Gree1 locotl0l11 749 Third AYIInue In
Gallipolis. Price "Negotiablo"
New roof! Motivated Seller! 98, 4·door, blACk Honda
Call WftYriO (404)456-3802. Accord EX, Moonroot, CD,
Leather, e)(cellent Condition.
Downtown
Commercial
$6,500 call (304)675-56Bs
I \ 1\ ' I ... I I I II "
Retail space for Rent. $400/
month.
Upstairs Office
\ I I \ I " I• l• ' '
Suites for Ren1 $1251 month
you pay the Utilities. Call
(703)528-06t7
200t Ford Ft50 SUper Crew
FX4 4X4 Rare King Ranch
'KIEF'EA IUILT 'VALLEY Edilion. All the Oj)lions +
"BBSSN 'HORSE l LIVE· flros &amp; Syn. Oil. LOW
STOCK TIIAILERS 'L~D- miles. $t7 900 (304)773MAX
'GOOSENECK, 6062
' ·
DUIIPS
&amp;
UnLITY .:..:.:_::.__ __c_ __
7 piece oak bedroom sui1e
'ALUMINUM 2003 Chev Sllve1ado, SWB,
InCludes new springs and 'ALUMA
TRAILEftS
'B&amp;W
OOOSE· 4.8, 5-speod,Z71, 4x4, rod,
mattro&amp;S.
$650.
Call
NECK
HITCHES. many other oplionS . . 12.600
(740)44t -8299.
c.nnlchool Equljlmonl mHos. Trucf&lt; like new condi·
. _40..:.)'..:.'~1-24_1_2_ _ _ _ tion,
$t4,500 (304)675Thompsons Appliance &amp; (7
3219 or 1304)593-5988
Repair-675~7388. For sale, John Oeere t 0 ft. No Til Drill
re-conditioned automatic
tor
rent.
Carmichael
washers &amp; dryers , refrigera·
Equlpmenl (740)44S:~4t2: •
tors, gas and electric
ranges, air condttloners. and John Deere Mini E~ecavator/
wringer washers. Will do Tractor Loader Bactc;hoe/
repairs on major bra{lds In Skid Steers. Carmlct'laet
shop er at your home.
Equipment (740)446-24 12

Commercial building "For
Rent" 1600 square feet, off
street parking. Great toea·
tionl 749 Third Avenue In
Gallipolis. Rent ~Negotiable~
Call Wayne (404)456·3802

•

1411-.l&lt;i1-1442

Nerf B~rs. 03 Chevy
Colorado ElCI, Cab, tae1ory,
like new.
$250 Firm
304 675-6440

1994 che_vy Suburban_. 4·
BASEMENT
wheel. dnve. good fires,
WATERPROOFING
clean mslde and out. $1,500
firm (304)675-1295
UnconditiOMI Uletime guar·
antee. local r91erences furNew 2BR apartments. Full blOOded Beagle pup· 1994 Dodge Caravan, 1990 nished. Establishe,d 1975·
washer/drver
h--•
Econoline Ven (304)576· Call 24 Hrs. (740) 446·
\,1\lf\up, pies. Call (740) 441-t4t6.
870, Rogers Basement
stove/re1rigerator Included. Futl blooded Lab puppieS 2934
Also, unns on SA 150. Pets $tOO. Choc. &amp; Yellow. 2000 Foro Ranger Supercab Waterproofing.
Weloome! (740)441-0te-4.
(7-40)441-0931 .
4 Dr., 4X4 Auto $6995.00. - - ' - - - - - - -

Large
One
Bedroom
Apartment in Point Pleasant .
$49 slmontt'l includes all
Utnities (304)675·5819

All Calls Returned

Eut
• KJ I

• J 2

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

740-992-5458
Leave Message

Seii-Storace"

t ·\~m: l ,.n::;~~~~F·

•

FOR SALE
Building With Or
Without Business

Middleport. OH

2 bath,
2 bedroom,
includes
$425/mo.
water/trash, '!\'aSher/dryer,
storage building. Located on
SA 554 toward Cheshire. No
3 BOA + 2 1/2 baths, 2 car _Pe_l_s._(7_40
_1_36_7_-0_2_55_ __
garage, all appliances- close 2 bedroom, 2 bath, 14x70
to Holzer hospital. $750 newly remodeled. $450
month. (7.40)44,·0310
month. $450 deposit, 1n

WeRt

.QIG98 &lt;

70 Pine Street • Gallipolis
740-446-0007 Toll Free 877-669-0007

97 Beech Street

29 19 Maple Ave. 3br. 2ba,
basement. garage. No pets
inside or out. $550/month,
$550/dePoS!t.
(304)6752515

.6

&amp; MEDICAL EQUIPMENT

740-985·4180

2 bedroom home in Eureka.
$350 mo. $350 dep. No pets,
re1erences required . Call
(740)384-2560.
•

North
11-10·06
... A 7 2
• K 10 8 6 4 2
• 8 7 4

P•-•

a..htul

10 Blue or

r7amibt •·ttldM•

"

1

38 Castle

Saturday, Nov. 11, 2006
By Bernice Bede 0.01
In the year ah8e.d, take· care that ~ny
·gambles or llyers you take are well-cal·
culated pnes and that you can afford to
suffer a loss, should onct occur.
OthefWise, .stick to sound and sure ways
to advance your rinancial picture.
SCORPiO {Oct. 24-Nov. 22) -'11someone
disappoints you greatly, do not show
your anger or verbalize what you thi nk.
Doing so would only make others think
you 're the jerk.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21)- You
might find yourself in e. ticklish position.
where you'll see good re ason to tell oth·
ers something you know was told to you
in confidenc:Q.
CAf.'AICOAN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) - It will
turn out to be a grave mistake it you bor·
row money in order to dO something fun
with friends. Momentary gratificatiOn
won't be \lo'Q rlh the difficulty you 'll have in
paying it baCk.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. , 9) Although you'll expect others to live up to
their promiseS. there's a good chance
you won't be any good at living up to yoUJ
. commitments. Remember. you'll only get
• back what you give.
PISCES (Feb. 20-Merch 20)- You 'd bel·
ter keep P,Bce with your duties and
responsibilities because, If you fall
~hind. it might be impossible to make
up for lost time, and your job could 'Eind
up being OIJ the line.
ARIES (March 21 -April 19) - It's best
· not to count on anyone to be there for
you, because even those who are usual·
ly around aren't likely to move a muscle
on someone else's behalf. You ere lotatly
on your own .
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) - II won't
maner how many people you seek out
tor their opinion concerning somethinQ
tt1al is bothering you, because it isn't like·
ly you 'll want to recognize good advice
from bad.
GEMINI {MaY 21-June 20) - Forgo tak·
ing on a proJect that calls tor both mental
and muscular power to do a good job.
Unfortunately, you'll either be all thumbs
or you won't be ab'le to figure out which
end Is up.
CANCER (June 21-July 22) - If you
come home from shopping with noth jng
of .subStance to s~ow ror ya;ur empty wal·
let, don't ble.me the stores. It's apt to be
just old-fashioned bad judgmsnt that's at
fault.
LEO (Ju~ 23-Aug. 22) - Beforo you can
go anywner-e, you'll have to clean up the
raft of obltacles you lift 11ntwn ·around.
which Ia·now blocking your path. It's belt
to '1'011 up your sleeves and get to work.
VIROO !Aug. 23-Sept. 22) - You mlgh1
get an Interesting invitation but bt unable
to accept It Mc&amp;use of a pmloua com mitment. II you try to get out or 11, your
Image will autt.r.
UBRA (Sopt. 23-0ct. 23)- E""n mougl\
your comp11alonata tnatlnct1 "may urga
you to make a toan to a fr11nd who you
know it a poor pr01pecl:, follow your
common Hnll or autt.r ttla 1011 you
know will 1n1u1.

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
n aealed m QUOUilOOs by famous people, pasr am p~esent
EadlletlfsinlM(;IflherstaMs tor another. ,

~ c~ crypiOQrams

Today's clue: Heql!Bis K

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BRDWAF

KFSSFL

DWI. "

ZWAR

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VWRVFLRFJ .
PW

WIS

JLFYYFJ

NESA
SABA

GBTHWXEVA

PREVIOUS SOLUTION ~ "Music means ilself." - Eduard Hanslicl&lt; '· Rock
music is junk lood lor the soul ." - Al~n Bloom

T~~~:~:~T S@\\Jl}A-fl£~~s

O~.,ouonge

let!ers ·of fhe

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SCRAMLETII I I~'~"'
Unfair- Yours- Pnuch -Clause· VOURSELF
"If ~011 fail1hr ftrsC tim• try again,.. p;unp5 told me. I
thin); you should stop nfior the second try, thcit 's no sense
making a fool of YOURSELF.

ARLO &amp; JANIS

H~Y.' ~ CtLI. PHOUt
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New Gar1ges
Electrical ' Plumbing

Roofing &amp; Gutters
VInyl Siding &amp; P1lntlng
P1tto 1nd Porch Dec::ks

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V.C. YOUNG Ill
99.!·621 ~
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Room Addition• &amp;

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liilti by CLU R. POlllN _.;,__ _ __

SOUP TO NUTZ

~•modtting

SAF

Too EilRL'( n,R
Q&lt;RisTM•s Cllflol.7 "

�Page B8 • The Daily Sentinel

Friday,Novemberl0,2006

www.mydailysentinel.oom

LMNG

ALONG THE RivER
'

.
Sharing the love:
Adoption brings jov to fam~ies, Cl

· Travel &amp; Destinations:
Ski fanatics find something to do
e:.tery month of the ~r. D 1 .

a
An inside look at this week's game

• The Uma New.s pho&lt;os

•
Hometown News fur Gallia &amp; Meip counties

'

'Other' Big Ten teams won't bowl you over
Big Ten
Owenlll
Telms
W L Pet. W L Pet.
Ohio St8te 6 0 1.000 10 0 1.000
MiChigan
WISCOOSin

Penn State

Pun:lue
Indiana
Iowa

6 0 1.000 10 0 1.000
6 1 .857 9 . 1 .900
4 3 .571 6 4 .600

·3 3 .500 6 4 .600

3 3 .500 5 5 .500
2 4 .333 6 4 .600

MiChigan Stl
Minnesota 1
N'YoeS!em -1
IUinois
1

5 .167 4 6
5 .167 4 6
5 .167 3 7
5 .167 2 8

.400
.400
.300
.200

· 1-·.... ;·1' ··,,.,J1 t •':' .:,:,
• ...•11f r··:..:-·

~,

Woroonsin at Iowa, noon

Minnesota at MichifPn State, noon
Purdue at Illinois, noon
Ohio SL at Northwestern, 3:30 p.m.
Michigan at Indiana, 3:30p.m.
Tiimple at Pe(ln State, 3:30 p.m.

COLUMBUS - Things
haven't been this good at
the top of the Big Ten in a
long time. ..
· Ohio State and Michigan are
No. 1 and No.2 in the oollege
football polls and also in the
more-impartantBowJCham·
pionship Series.standings.
The last time two Big Ten
football teams held the two
top positions in the polls was
in 1985, when Iowa was No. 1
and Michigan was No. 2.
You have to go back 30
years, to early in the 1976 sea·
son, to find the last time the
Buckeyes and Wolverines

and the Little Eight - wheri
most of Ohio State and Michigan's Big Ten glimes were
about as competitive as a
game of Scrabble against a
pre-schooler.
But the Big Ten finds itself
419·993·2087
in the position of not being
were in the top two spots. For sure it will be able to fill the
seven bowl slots for which it
two weeks in September of
that season, Michigan was No. has contracts.
1 and OSU was No. 2.
Barring an improbftble colThings aren't quite so great lapse by Ohio State at
for the other teamS in the Big Northwestern on Saturday
Ten, except for onoe-beaten
or by Michigan at Indiana,
W.soonsin, though.
the winner of next SaturIt's not as bad as the 1970s . day's OSU-Michigan game
..... the days of the Big Two.
will play in the BCS national

avo

Purdue ............. ................... 419.7

Ohio State ..........................398.9

WISCOOSin ....... .....................384.3
lowa ............. .......................377.0
Miehigan ..............................372.6

Alook at some of the key match ups in
Northwestern's T)'Tell Sutton (833
Saturday's
game
between
No.
1
Ohio
yards)
will be a marked man for OSU's de·
Rushing Offei 158
!?tate"(10.0,
6·0
8igTen)
and
Norttlwest·
tense.
The Wildcats-rank last in the Big
Miehifjln ..............................193.2
em (3· 7, 1·5 Big Ten) in Evanston, Ill.: .
Ten in scoring, passing oftense and total
WISOOilSin·............................ 183.6
offense, so there are feW
Qurterblcks
Ohio State ..........................174.3
options
other than
11Nnois .................................. 173.6
Ohio State's Troy Smith had h1s least·
their
sophomore
Nort!lwestem ............. :........ 154.2 ·
productive game of the season throwing tailback.
the
ball (108 yards) and was sacked
Achaii1 ae:
Pass Offet 158
three times in a 17·10 win over Illinois . Ohio Stille
Purdue ................................ 294.7
last Saturdqy. Ear1y in the season, North·
kJwi, .... ................................ 231.0
western's pass defense migtlt have been
Indiana ................................227.0
a welcome sight for a quarterback lqol&lt;ing
Ohio State .......................... 224.6
for a rebound game, but things seem to
Minnesota .......................... 210.1
have changed.
The Wildcats allowed an average of
Total Def81158
' 308 yards a·game in the air in
Miehigan ..............................241.5
their first four Big Ten
WISCOOSin ............................245.9
games, but in their last
Ohio State .......................... 258.2
two they have limited
· lllinois .......... .,, ..................... 292.7
Iowa's Drew Tate to
Penn State .......................... 296.9
14 7 yards and Michi·
gan's Chad Henne to
Rush Defense
116yards.
Miehigan ...........-.............. ., .....30.3
Northwestern
Ohio State ....... :....................92.4
quarterback C.J.
Penn State ..........................102.4
Bacher has throv.n
Wisoonsin .:..........................107.4
for 667 yards in his
Illinois ........... ' ......................123.8
last three games,
his interceptions
(6) outnumber
his touchdown

RJ. Hill, Wisconsin ................ 1,370
Mike Hart, Michi!'jln ............. 1,281
Antonio Pittman, Ohio St.........952
Tony Hunt Penn State ............931
Amir Pinnix, Minnesota ............861
~Yards

Curtis Painter, Purdue .......... 2,875
Blyan Cupito. Minnesota ......2,046

Troy Smith, Ohio State .......... 2,006
John Stocco, WISCOOSin ........ 1,979
Anthony Morelli, Penn St... .... 1,848
Ra celvlng Yards
Dorien Bryant, Purdue .............. 697
Anthooy Gorwlez, Ohio St.........639
Ted Ginn Jr., Ohio St ................ 637
Log,an f&gt;a)re. Minnesota ..........626
Travis 8eci&lt;um, Wisconsin ........616

passes (4.).
Advantage:
Ohio State

Antonio Pittman, with 952 yards, is
trying to beoome the first Ohio State
runner since Eddie George in 1994 and
1995 to have bal;k-to-back 1,000·
yard rushing seasons. He rushed a
~ · career·high 32 times against Illinois
' to gain 58 hard-earned yards. Most .
opposing defenses have kept him
from breaking big runs recentJy.
In four of the last 1ive games, ·
he hasn't had a run of more
than 13 yards.
Fumble concerns continue
to plague freshman Chris
Wells, who has lost four of
them in 86 canies. ·

Jim Naveau's
Player of the Week

2006 OSU SCHEDULE
Sept 2
Sept 9

N. Rlinois
@ TeJ&lt;aS

Sept. 16

Cincinnati
Penn State

Sept, 23
Sept. 30

Oct 7
Oct 14
Oct 21
Oct. 28
Na.i. 4

W35·12
W24-7
W37·7

Indiana

W35·7
W38·7
W44·3
W44-0

Content oompded by Jim NiMlau and
by Jeff Btaun • The Uma New.;

r.op.,;~ &lt;C&gt; 2006 The Uma New.;. Reprod\A:tion of ~I any portion of ltl~ material
~ prohibited Without ""J)reSS C&lt;lO!ll!flt

ex

Robiskie covered an onside kick late
m the fourttl quarter to seal a 17 ·10
Ohio St.ate win over Illinois.

w38·17

Minnesota
@ Illinois
w17·10
SA1IJRIMY @ NoNuoortatw:u""'..,•..,.. 3:30p.m.
Na.i. 18 Michig;m
3:30p.m.
~

WR • Brian Robiskie

W28·6

.@ Iowa
B&lt;&gt;Ming Green
@ Mich. State

BY BRIAN J, REED
BRErn.MYOAILYSENTfNEL.COM

Toumament.
SeePage81

POMEROY
- With
more than 3,000 ballots left
to be counted 'in the 92nd
House District race between
State Rep. Jimmy Stewart, a
Republican from Albany,
and Democrat Debbie
Phillips, the Ohio House
Democratic Caucus has
retained legal counsel to ,
overskthe outcome.
House Democrats have
reWned the McTigue Law
Group of Columbus to mon-

ha.e oombined for ~two sacks,~­
· Ohio State iJt. bad&lt; to full ~on the
line last week W1en Quinn Pitcock letlmed
both of Lane's toucl1dc7M1 catches and
after mis5in&amp; a week witt1 a ooncussion.
one of Hertle!t's came in one game ·
osu·s startirlgfrontfourd DEMd Patlel50fl,
against Michi!'P" State,
JayRichaid50fl, VemonG"dssoo .m Pit·
Ohio State's Ted Gim Jr. (49 catches) &lt;Xklk 11a.e OOI'l'lllil)ed for 151/.1 sa00.
aro Anthony Gonzalez (43 catches)
-..... -........
· rank second aro sixth in the Big Ten in
Alha , d - recaptions. Both ha.e WTte 1\ithout U. hI ·Ia i
a touchdovln the last two games
James Laurinaitis !Jlt his fifth interoeption
ag.&lt;!inst Minnesota and IHinois
of the season last week at 11inois, YAlich is
after oornbining for 14 in the · · near1y as many as AJ. HM had in his cae~ games before that.
reer and more than Bobby Capel 11e1
With Brian Rl tliskie, Roy tiall (3) picked off in his flu SeIS Ill IS at OSU.
and Brian Hartline, Ohio State
L.aurinaitis is tied for the Big Ten lead in in·
can llring rereiles off the
ten:eptions aro is filth in tackles.
bench who are probably
Northwestern lost its best linebacler
better than Northwestern's Nick Roach to a broken leg during a 41·
starters.
38 loss to Michigan State three ~
MicA a.:Olio
ago. Adam Kadela (66 tackles) is the best
5111111
of the remaining Wildcats here. Demetrius
01 111he ._
Eaton has two.quarteroack ~.
can Ohio State's ~
lodwil d Olio 5111111

m

to move the ball ag.3inst Illinois,

W1en it gained only 224 yards, be
tied to the absence of starting left
tackle Alex Boone because of an

Maybe he could have his own
partJ ... the Buckeye partJ."

11

- Defen:o.i\'e lineman David

Pauer~un

about '' hethcr co.~~.:h Jim Tresse l Could

win elet·uon if he

Def1 r'ue h1 tss

OSU's Antonio Smith was a long shot to
start this season, but has ~ well .
enoug, that he is a semifinalist for the
1holpe Award, ~ to the OOI.IitJy's best
defensive back. The senior cornerback
never started a game un1il this lo'Mr aild
~a total of 11 minutes at comer-

back last season. ·
Ohio State is second in the Big Ten ih
pass defelsse aro has allowed only fille
'passing touchdowns all season. North·
western is sevent!) in the Big Ten in pass
t:tlckers. 1he Wildcats
defense. But considering the fact it lost
rank fifth in the Big Ten safe{¥ Bryan Heinz, a senior captain, for
in ~ t\\Q spots the season to an injury, that number
behioo Ohio State. doesn't look too bad.
Adtd 181
Mvwf t :Olio SliD

Sill ill t I
Nol'itMestem plaoe-IQcker Joel Howells is
· CoreyWoot· • 5 ~9. All ~"HoM!I's misses are from inton, a 6-7,
Side 40 yalds. Otio State's AarOO Mey is .
275·poum s ~ 11. osu punter AJ. li&lt;l!l ,........,..__
redshirt · 41.4yardsapuntand~;;-­

Olio Sble

DuiUIIIbl..

Siade LaiSCheid a.eages 38.0 y.lds a lOOk.
Advw I dl: Olio 5111111

OBITUARIES

-·

Page AS
• Nancy Shoeotaft Bass
• James 'Ike' Eiselstein
• Arthur H. 'Butch' Kibble
• Vel1a Jean McCloud
.. • Fred E. Miller, Sr.
• Herbert Morris

• Louise Powell
• George Wdliam Price
.• Owen F. Queen
• PhiHip A. Snyder
• Paul David White

INSIDE

ALLIPOLIS - In
he wake of election
season, one thing was
missing from Saturday 's
Veterans Day celebration:
~~~\';;:::'~ · elected officials.
.
And it did not go tinno·
ticed.
·
"Well , you can tell the
election · is over," said
Veterans
Service
Commission President R.
Keith Jeffers and went on
to
thank
City
Commissioner Jim Cozza,
the only official in attendance, for his support.
Amidst stirring renditions
of patriotic songs, like ''God
Bless America," guest .
\\ .
speaker,
Herman
Morton. State Department
commander for Disabled .
American Veterans. asked
the question ; Is freedom
worth the price'
He spoke of war heroes
returning home and facing
the silence of freedom. void
of tanks, gunfire, bombs
·and death, sounds that had
become background music
to their lives.
He spoke of cost of war,
both physically and mentally.
on those who serve lll)d the ·
families they leave behind. ·
He spoke of the families
who generation after generaMlchola Miller/~
tion
send their ·loved ones to
Members of the Vietnam Veterans Chapter 709. VFW Post 4464, American Legion Post 27 and the Sons of the Union
Veterans of the Civil War, Cadot·Biessing Camp #126, present a 21 gun salute in celebration of their fallen comrades.
Pluse see C.Uill, AJ

• Local Briefs.
SeePageA2
• Annie's Mailbox.
: SeePageA3
: • Fund-raiser to aid gulf
· church. See Page A6
• Proudly She waves.
SeePage AS

WEATHER .

Ohio State LeaderS
loud.,_

PI i IIICyanls

Tacldes fur loss

Troy Smith ..........2,006 Antonio Pit\mah ........11 Vernon Gholston ......12
Ruii*IC yanls
••tan:eptkwts
Slides
Antonio Pittman ......952 James Laulinaitis ........5 Quinr. Pitcock .............. 7
Tacldes
Aec loWe yanls
Field . . .
AnthonyGonz.alez ....639 James Laulinaitis ......86 Aaron Pettrey ........&amp;'11

-. l

Michigan vs.
Ohio State

Beth S.rcent/ plloto

ian for ,puhlic office .

1: Who scored the winning

2: What three 3: Which Ohio State assis·
losing presiden· tant coach did Maurice
tial candidates aarett argue with on the
graduated from sidelines during the 2002
Northwestern?
Northwestern game?
Ans;;ers: 1. Noah Herron 2. William Jennings Bryan,
Adlai Stevenson, George McGovern 3. Tim Spencer

touchdO'Ml for Northwest·
em when rt brolle a 33·
year losing streak against
Ohio State in 2004?

days until kickoff

SHS honors graduate killed
in Vietnam, all veterans

INDEX
4 SI!C110NS -

24 PAGES

BY BETH SERGENT

Around Towrt

BSERGENT@MVDAILYSENTINEL.CQM

Gelebrations
Classifieds

Comics
Editorials
Movies
Obituaries
Regional .

'

CHEVROLET • CADILLAC • PONTIAC • BUICK • GMC
208 East Main • 1-740-992-6614 or 1·800-837-1094 • Pomeroy, OH
Hours: Mon.-Fri.

Sat.

Sun. ·12-4 •

.

Southern High School student Kaylyn Spradling extinguish·
es 83 candles during a Veterans Day ceremony at Southern
High Sthool. Each candle represented a Meigs County sol·
.dier killed from World War I through the Iraq War. All 83
names were read and a bell tolled fo r et1ch soldier.

Buckeye Brain Busters

Say what?

Pleue see Coullsel, AJ

G

and 8 1/2 tackles for losses for Northwest·
em. The other three reg.Jials on the line

..

ChaiTWoman Susan Gwinn
are in this pool of uncounted ballots." Kohlstrand said.
About 2,1 00 provisional
ballots throughout the district, including a large number ·from student'neighborhoods near Ohio University,
also remain uncounted.
In many cases, students
turned to provisional ballots
because their · driver's
license address did not
match their current ·campus
address.

BY MICIIEUE MIU.ER

freshman has foursad\S, twJ inll!loe1mns

Ohio Slate lnebatl zr
James F.aurinaltis leads
the team with 86 taddes
and fMI hll111ceptions.

Among the ballots not yet
counted are roughly 1.100
absentee ballots in Athen'
County that were ·im;dver·
tently not counted because
of a technical problem at the
board of elections . These
ballots are mostly from the
city
of Athens and
Nelsonville
. areas.
Kohlstrand said, where
Phillips received strong
support from voters. ·
"Democrats have reason
to believe that Phillips' own
absentee ballot and that of
Athens Democratic Party

MMIUER@MVOAILVTRIBUNE.COM

Wide receivels Shaun Herbert (39
catches, 360 yards, 2 TDs), and Ross
lime (24 catches, 336 yards, 2 TDs) give
Northwestern two adequate receivers. But

·

itor the situation, the
Caucus announced Friday.
The same law firm is also
representing the Democrats
in tWo other dose House
races elsewhere in the state.

Stewart cUrrently holds a
1,373-vote lead in the race,
which includes Meigs,
Athens,
Morgan
and
Washington counties, but a
pool of more than 3,000 ballots have yet to be consid- ·
ered, and DemocratJi believe
those ballots oould tum the
· tide in Phillips' favor.
"Democrats are certain
Phillips will make up
ground when these ballots
are looked at," said John
Kohlstrand,
caucus
spokesman. "The outcome
here is still in some doubt."

S OBSERVE A SPECIAL DAY

•

unspecified injUJy? OSU coach Jim
Tressel says that was only 115 of
the explanation, since the other
four regulars were there. Boone is
not expected to play Saturday.
. .I \Center Trevor Riles (31 career
. '. /
starts) and tackle fl&gt;pl
•
l'eenan (24 starts) are the ·
Wildcats' most experienced

lllllnnlltacks
~lMI&amp;

·~Ftancis

•

Re ectal

but for the season

Wisconsin ............................ 138.5
Ohio State .......................... 165.8
lllinoos .................................. 168.9
Iowa ............... """ ...............192.9
Penn State .......................... 194.5

Democrats retain counsel in Stewart/Phillips contest

SATURDAY'S OPPONENT: NORTHWESTERN (3- 7, 1-5 BIG TEN)

lOtaiOffenw

Pass Defense

required to haw six victories
to be eligible for a bowl if they
play 12 games. rr they play
13, they have to win seven.
Purdue (6-4), which plays
13 games, has the easiest
path. It can become bowl eligible by winning one of its
final three games against Illinois, Indiana and HaWllii.
Indiana (5-5) needs to beat
Michigan or Purdue to get to
·six wins. Michigan State ((..6)
needs to beat Minnesota and
Penn State to get there. And
Minnesota (4-6) would haw
f.o knock off Michigan State
NCAA Division I teams are • andiowa

championship game. The
Rooe Bowl has already said it
wants the loser of the showdown in Columbus.
WJSOOnsin (9-1), Penn State
(6-4) and Iowa (6-4) are all
bowl eligible, which means
there will be a Big Ten team
in the Capital One Bowl in
Orlando, the Outback Bowl
in Tampa and the Alamo
Bowl in San Antonio.
That leaves three more slots
-the Champs Sports BowL
the Insight Bowl and the
Motor City Bowl- the Big
Ten needs to fill.

SPORTS

.com

Sports

Weather

B Section
A6

© 0006 Ohio Valley Publishitt« Co

Michelle Mlltetf photo

Despite the rain, South Galli a High School" s groundbreak1ng ceremony tool\ place on
Saturday inside the gym. At the start of the presentation. attendees stood with their hands
over their hearts for the pledge of allegiance.
, ·

RACINE Although
Southern Hieh School s~l­
glcd out it' only gradua,te to
be killed in Vietnam for 'IX
cial recognition. all of Meig;
County"s fallen· soldiers
from World War I through
Iraq were recognized during
the 'choor s recent Veterans
Day ceremony.
During the .:erem11n).
\\hi.:h imolved the ent1re
'chool. Southern Principal

Tony Deem. himself a veteran of the Iraq War. spoke
of Cpl. Ralph Morgan
Triplett of Portland who
wa' a 1968 Southern gradu.ate killed on June 18, 1970,
in Cambodia duri ng the
Vietnam War.
Known 10 clas;mates as
"Pete ... Triplett was award·
ed the Silver Star, the
nation's third highest award
for gallantry in action. the
Bronze Star. Air Medal.
Purple Heart. the Good

Please see SHS. ~

I.

'

.

;

'

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            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
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        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
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          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
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      <name>nicholson</name>
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    <tag tagId="103">
      <name>stewart</name>
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