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Page B6 • 'Ib:- Daily Sentinel

Monday, November 13, 2oo6

www.myd.ailysentinel.oom

Harvick wins, Johnson one race · AD that's left is No. l
away from first championship
~=~o~:t:
.

vs. No..2

AVONDALE. Ariz.
_.
Jimmie Johnson moved a
1.
Jimmie
Johnlon
~
5
step closer to his first 2. _ _ , -03 4
NASCAR championship on 9. 'Kevin 'HIII'\'ict( ..00 5
+2
Sunday, using yet anotper 4. Donny tlomlln ·90 2
-2
smooth run to leave Phoenix 5. Olio Eamhotdl -115 ~
'6 .Jell&amp;rdori · -167 2
International Speedway with 7. Jell BurlOn
..225 1
-273 .0
•1
a finn hold on the top spot in B. 'MaiUI•nln
9.1&lt;uey l(ahne
.:S19 6
•1
the season standings.
40. Kyle BuoCh
-359 1
-2
Johnson smartly settled for ' .. ~ --.. ----. -·- -- - - - ~ - - --. second place, racing winner
Kevin Harvick just ha'r d
enough over a final three-lap
·1
sprint to the finish to maintain his track position and
keep the Nextel Cup title
within his reach. Jghnson
can wrap up the title with a
12th-place finish or · better crossed the fini sh line.
nexl week at Homestead"Jimmie got a good run on
Miami Speedway.
me," Harvick said. ':But I
"In order to get the win, 1 wasn 't going to lose this
was really gotng to have to · race."
force the is$ue," Johnson
Harvick, whose alternator
said. "I had a good run on was on the fritz over the final
Kevin ... a little bit of post- stretch worried he wouldn "t
lion inside of him, but he have e~ough juice to make it
was shutting the door and 1 to the end. But he got a good
knew that I ~ to, be jump on th.e final restart,
. smart from that pomt on.
. then steadily watched his
Johnson heads mto the rearview mirror as Johnson
season finale wtth a 63-pomt came hard at him.
Harvick blocked the challead . over Man Kenseth,
needmg JUSt one more trou- lcnge briefly opened up a
ble-free race to grab the title gap, then withstood a sC.cond
~at has so cruelly eluded a run by Johnson. From
htm th~ past two seasons.
there he knew Johnson .
Harvtck, who won for the
•. .
.
.
fifth time this year and swept · couldn t n~k dom~ anythmg
the season at Phoenix, led that would Jeopardtze the btg
252 of the 312 laps and was pt~rure.
.
out front for a series of late
I knew he was g~ng to
restarts. A short stoppage push me, but he wasn t gomg
allowed both drivers to map to take .. any . unneces~~ry
out their final strategy. which chances, Harvtck s~td. He
called for Johnson to make a was gomg to try to make us
brief run at Harvick over the make a mistake." '
. The win moved Harvick
closing !:Ips.
But Harvick twice held off mto. a 11e for thtrd m the
the charge, and Johnson fell standings, but 90 points back
in line behind him as . they -and headed to Homestead

knowing
the
title
ts
Johnson· s to lose.
··we wi'h· we were closer
than that but we did everything we could do today." he
said. "That's all we can do
and however it falls, it falls.
It's been a great year for us."
Denny flamlin finished
third, Jeff Gordon was fourth
and Carl Edwards rounded
out the top tive as it was a
decent day for nine of the
Chase for the championship
drivers - all but Kyle Bose~
finished inside the top 13.
Still. five of them were
mathematic-ally eliminated
from title contention and the
scoreboard now shows that
~nly Kenseth , Hamlin,
Harvick and Dale Earnhardt
Jr. have a chance to catch ·
Johnson.
"I' m not too optimistic
about it,"· said Kenseth. who
finished 13th. "Ol)viously
anything can happen, we're
still' within striking di stance
if they have a mt:ehanical
problem or some type of
problem like that.
"But certainly we'd be
fooling ourselves if we think
we'd beat them on performance."
That's because Johnson
has been unbelievable· of
late, finishing second or better in the past five races to
climb back into contention
for a title that looked to be
well out of reach after Round
I of the Chase. He wrecked
in the opener and finished
39th, dropping all the way to
ninth in the standings.
Instead of crying over ·
what could have been, again
-· remember. Johnson has
fallen apan in the Chase the
past two seasons - he took
it one race at a ttme and dtd·
n ' t worry about the poin'ts.

COLUMBUS
No
longer do the players have
to watch what they say.
There are no other teams
left on the schedule.
, No. 2 Michigan , meet
No. I Ohio State.
A spot in the national
championship game, a·n
outright Bi g Ten title,.a ,perfect season- and certainly
·not least of all, a year of
braggi ng rights· for r.abid
fans - await the winner of
the annual grudge match
Saturday in packed Ohio
Stadium.
"It 's something we can' t
wait to be a part of,"
Buckeyes
coach . Jim
Tressel said Saturday after
team
dispatched
his
Northwestern 54-10 to set
the table for the I 03rd
meeting in one of college
football 's most storied
riv.alries .
It' ll be the second time
this season Ohio State has
played in a I vs .. 2 game,
and mark the ftrst ttme
since The Associated Press
started ranking teams in the
preseason in 1950 that Nos .
I and 2 will meet twice in
the regular season.
It happened twice in the
1940s, the last time in 1945
when . Armv was No. I
when it played No. 2 Navy
and No. 2 Notre Dame. ·
Ohio State (11-0) beat
No. 2 Texas on Sept. 9, and
has hardly been .tested
since. Michigan ( 11-0) has
also been cruising since its
big win a week later over
Notre Dame.
"You couldn't really
script it any better,"
Wolverines
cornerback
Leon Hall said after
Michigan 's 34-3 r&lt;Jut of

Indiana on Saturday.
Like a bad slasher movie,
this is the ending that
everyone has anticipated .
It ' ll be only the third time
both Ohio State and
Michigan have been perfect
since "The Game" became
the regular-season finale
for the teams in 1935.
- 4 ' lt's
bigger than · the
things I've known. I'm
actually part of it. It really
blows my mind,'' said Ohio
State 'quarterback Troy
Smith, who might also have
a Heisman Trophy riding
.
on the outcome. · .
In 1973, the last time
both were unbeaten, the
'teams tied 10-10. In those
days only one conference
team -got to go to a bowl
game,'sothe Big Ten 's ath·
letic directors voted to
decide which team got to
go to the Rose Bowl. It was
Ohio State.
·The winner won't be
decided in a smoky hotel
room this year.
.
Michigan head coach
Lloyd Carr has a feel for
that history, having spent
the past 27 years in Ann
Arbor, the last 12 as head
coach. Like most of the
players and coaches, he's
just glad the big game has
finally arrived.
"It's .going to be another
great Ohio State-Michigan
game," he said. "It will be
an exciting ·w eek.''
For several games, both
ieams have had to focus.

focus, focus on lesser oppo·
nents. NoW there 's a ·sense
of relief that the task is
finaHv at hand . •·
"It's going to be a big
one, probably the biggest
game I ever play tn m~
whole football career,
Ohio State tailback Antonio
Pittman said. "It's always
one game at a time. one
week at a time. and now the
.week is here so we'll think
about it a lot now.""
No pep talks are needed.
" If you're not mot1vated
for this game, then .1 ~on ' t
know what you're mot1vat·
ed for," said Michi'gan
quarterback Chad Henne.
Ohio State has won each
of its games by at least 17
points, except for a narrow
17-10 win at lllinois on
Nov. 4.
After that game , wide
receiver Anthony Gonzalez
said h€ was · surprised how
teams had gone away quietly before. the Buckeyes.
· "That was the first team I
feel like played with no
fear,'' he said. "Prior to that
game, I think defenses. for
whatever
reason,
and
maybe teams in general,
have played with a sli!lht
bit of fear. ... It seems hke
teams were readily allowing them selves to be
defeated for some reason."
That certainly won't be
the case on Saturday, for
. either team. For a change,
they'll be staring eye-to·
eye with an equal.

Michigan are followed by
USC, Florida and Notre
Dame. 'Arkansas is sixth. In
from Page 81 .
the USA Today coaches'
poll , the top six is Ohio
State,
Michigan. Florida,
also move up three spots.
USC,
Notre Dame and
No. 5 Arkansas moved up
six spots with its 31-14 vic- A:rkansas.
Rutgers is eighth in the
tory over Tennessee, and coaches' poll and seventh in
Notre Dame went up three the Harris poll.
.
spots to No. 6 after winning
Last week, Louisville,
39-17 at Air Force.
Texas and Auburn held
The Razorbacks have spots three through five, hut
their highest ranking since all were upset.
they were No. 4 in October · Unbeaten Rutjlers handed
1985 . .
Louisville its ftrst loss of
In the Hartis Interactive the season on Thursday, 28poll, Ohio State and 25. The win boosted the

Scarlet Knights to No. 7,
their first appearance in the
.
top 10.
"Anytime you do something for the first time in
history, it is significant."
Rutgers
coach
Greg
Schiano said Sunday. "In•
season rankings are more
for the fans than they are for
us. "
Texas and Auburn were
beaten by unranked teams.
The Longhorns lost at
Kansas State 45-42, and
Auburn fell · to Georgia 3715.
The last time three topfive teams lost on the same

weekend was Nov. 2; 2002,
when No. 3 Virginia Tech.
No. 4 Notre Dame and No.
5 Georgia all were upset by
unranked opponents.
West Virginia is No. 8 in
the latest media poll. followed
by
LSU
and
LouisviJie, which dropped
seven spots to No. 10. The
Big East has three top-1 0
teams , along with the
Southeastern Conference.
Texas fell seven spots to
No. II. No. 12 Wisconsin
moved up four spots and
undefeated Boise State
moved up one place to No .
13.

No. 14 Wake Fore st.
coming off a 30-0 victory
at Florida State that made
the Demon· Deacons 9- I
for the first time, moved up
four spots.
No. 15 Auburn dropped
I 0 spots. The Tigers are
followed by Oklahoma and
California, the fourth
memher of last week' s top
10 to lose . Cal was upset
24-20 at Arizona.
·Four · Atlantic Coast
Conference teams hold the
next four . spots. starting
with No. 18 Genrgia Tech,
the
Coastal
Division
champ.' Virginia Tech i.s

19th, followed by Boston
College and Maryland,
which is tied with Wake
Forest for the lead in the
Atlantic Division. The
ACC has six ranked teams,
the most of any ·conference .
Tennessee dropped nine
places to 22 after its second consecutive loss. No.
23 BYU moved up two
spots and No. 24 Nebraska
and No. 25 Clemson
moved ·back into the rank ings thi s week.
Texas A&amp;M and Oregon
fell out of the rankings.

8YJENNAfna
ASSOCIATED PRESS

1006Nextel

- __

Cup Standings

.,
.,

PoD

.

.

from Page 81
Ferguson added 14 points
and senior point guard
Carlesha Chambers chipped
, in 10 points and dished out
four assists. Sophomore forward Sarah Drabinski was
held to seven - points but
managed to collect II
rebounds.
·
Both
Ferguson
and
Drabinski were named to
the all-tournament.
The Trojans used a balanced scoring attacR in
which only two players netted double figure s. Kristin
Archie led the way with 14
points. Abby Lawson added
I 0 points. Jennifer Bognar
scored six points but led
. Trevecca with six rebounds.
Archie and Lawson were
also named to the all-tournament wlii le Bognar was
the tabbed as the tourney's
Most Valual1le Player.
Rio strug~led from the
field, shMtmg only 38.2
percent from the field (21of-55). including 4-of-15
(26.7 percent) from beyond
the three point arc. Rio also
shot 67 percent ( 16-of-24)
from the ·free throw line.
Trevecca shot 41.3 percent
from the field (26-{)f-63) but
was red-hot from three-point
land, connecting on 9-of-17
(52.9 percent) from outside
the arc. The · Trojans shot
58.3 percent (7-of-12) from
the charity stripe.
One factor that kept Rio
Grande in the game was a
decided advantage by the
Redwomen on the glass (42·
32). To go along with
Drabinski \ II boards and
Walker five. &gt;Dphomore forward Erin Kume (Marion.
OH ) corralled six caroms on
the night. ·
Rio
committed
17
turnovers to 14 for the
Trojan,.

unti

Reach

Lose

l
PlaceY

......

-

.
. ..
Paid ·claalftad

5 years after

.E nd comes for
Ohio fundraiser at
center o( scandal, A6

Taliban's retreat,
no celebrations in
Mghan capital, A2

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
I ' I".\'"· .)h.'"

•'' I

-..

.

SPORTS

I{

\\\\\\ .m"lail)"'llliJil'l.t&lt;&gt;IOO

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..

Money (and where to find it). an issue in Pomeroy

• Gavs beat Knicks.
SeePageB1

n ' I· SIJ \\ . :'1:0\ 'I.MBI

8Y 81114 SERIENT
BSERGeJTOMYDAILYSENTtNEl.COM

POMEROY
Comsidering
Christmas
bonuses for employees,
·i ncreasing the salary of the
, clerk-treasurer's position
and purchasing a new backhoe left Pomeroy Village
Council digging deep into
the village's pockets last
night during council's regular session though a new
ladder truck for the fire
department purchased with
grant money was one bright
spot, because .it was free.
Council did approve pur-

chasing a new backhoe with
a 36~inch ditch bucket from
Southeast Imports for
$62,011. Council approved
a loan &lt;if $62 ;000 from
Farmers Bank for a fixed
rate of 4.85 percent to purchase
the ·equipment.
Payments for the loan will
come from both the water
department and cemetery
fund which will pay for 50
percent of the backhoe.
Council did not approve
nor take a vote on increasing· salary of the clerk-treasurer's position or approving Christmas bonuses for
village employees. In fact,

both issu~s were shifted to
the finance committee for.
further consideration.
Tt's estimated the village
would have to find $2 ,500
to pay for Christmas bonuses for its 21 employees nex!
month. The raise for the
clerk -treasurer '·s posit ion
which would take effect in
2008 has been in the ordinance committee's lap for
several weeks now.
Councilman
Shawn
Arnott, who is on the ordi ·
nance committee, said he
and other members of thl:
ordinance committee needed more input from council

For~

nEEinftla I

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

Bv

0BTIUARIFS

OVER ~.

17

'•
'

maih' 'lrribunr

(740) 446-2342

The Daily
Sentinel
.
.
(740) 992-2 155-

~o1nt~·1~~~~
(~.....:M....ilili

"

. for the
·g est a salary increase
clerk-treasurer's position
on the same night when the
village w11s unsure · of .
"scraping" up $2 ,500 for
Christmas bonuses. Arnott
then asked for input from
council.
"We (ordinance committee) need more guidance,"
Arnott told council.
Unlike other village
administrative positions ,
the clerk-treasurer's position did not receive a raise
this year as it is an elected
position. Even if a. raise is
Pie liSe see Money, AS

•

-

Bv C!tARUNE lfoERJcH
HOEFLICH@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY· "Memories
of Christmas Shows Past" is
the theme of the annual holiday flower show of the Meigs
County
Garden
Clubs
Association to be staged this .
weekend at Carleton School
in Syracuse.
As always there will be
plenty of Christmasy things
to see - lots of bells,
baubles, ribbon and glitter to
enhance beautiful traditional
and creative flower lj.rrangements,. indoor and outdoor
wreathes, gift wrappings and
table settings. .
As the show title implies,
this year is al'!out flower
shows of the past. Each of the
.
.
arrangement classes in this
year's show have been
included
in
previous
Christmas shows, some dating back to 1983. Each class
name shows the year it was
earlier used. Books of
arrangement photos lfrom
several years past will be
available so that viewers can
compare how the design ·
classes were depicted in earher shows.
. Offering something for
DetallsonP... A8
everyone the show is bound
to boost the holiday spirit of
viewers. Hours to visit the
display are from I to 5. p.m.
Sarurday and noon to 4 p:m.
Sunday. The judging by an
2 SECilONS- 12 PAGES
accredited judge of the Ohio
Association of Garden Clubs
Calendars
A3 will
select the best from the
rest and place ribbons in first
Classifi.eds
B3-4 to third places, with honormention awards as needComics
B5 able
ed. The judging will begin at
. Saturday.
Dear Abby
A3 I p.m
From the blue ribbons winners
of shdw and a
Editbrials
A4 reservea best
best of show will be
Obituaries
As selected by the judge. She
will also choose a best in creativity
award in both the
Sports
B Section
senior and junior divisions
Weather
A6 which need not be made from
tbose
top
wmners.
Horticulture
sweepstake
@Qhlo Volley Publlohing Co.

"

J.

REED

. MIDDLEPORT - Middleport merchants will kick off
the Christmas shopping season with an open house 'o n Nov.
26, followed by the annual Christmas parade on Dec. 2.
The merchants' open house will be held from 1-4 p.m. on
Nov. 26. Participating merchants will offer special sales
promotions and refreshments.
A number of other events are also scheduled for the nighi
of the Christmas parade, including the lighting of the
downtown Christmas tree in a service sponsored by the
Middleport Ministerial Association. The tree lighting cere·
mony will begin at 5:30p.m. on the "T," with the parade
.
immediately following.
Santa Claus will appear in the parade, and will be at
.
Bank following the parade for free photographs,
sponsot'ed by the bank. Christmas carolers will also be
smging along the parade route.
Those who wish to participate in the Christmas parade
should line up at the Rejoicing Life Church, where the
parade will begin.
.
.
.
The holiday shoppmg season wtll conclude wtth the
annual Frantic Santa shopping event, on Dec. 23.
Participating merchants will be open until late in the
evening, and will offer special promotions.
·
As in years past, the Association plans to organize a live
nativity and other holiday events downtown throughout
December.

INSIDE
• Bush, Clinton join cMI
· rights activists at
gr()l.jndbreaking for Martin
Luther King memorial.
SeePageA2
• · PVH adds massage
therapist to staff.
See Page A3
• Scholl receives
Bioscience Leadership
award. See Page A3
• March of Dimes begins
fund-raising campaign.
SeePageA§

BRIAN

BREEOOMYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

Page AS
~ B9bbY Dill
• Judy Coblentz
" ·Robert Meredith

INDEX

'

/,

or the finance committee
when considering a raise for
the clerk-treasurer's position which currently pays
$19,000 annf!aliy. Arnott
reported a previous suggestion to raise the salary to
$25,000 was dismissed by
the committee.
Arnott complimented
current
Clerlt-Treasurer
Kathy Hysell and reported
compliments from Village
Administrator
John
Anderson about her work,
inducting her efforts to
lower workers compensation premiums. However,
Arnott was hesitani to sug-

Middleport merchants plan
holiday open house, _p(lrade .

-

WEATIIER

Dally

~alhpo[ig

•

Serpntjphllto

Beth Cremeans, CMA, right, of the Meigs County Health
Department vaccinates Janet Blake of Middleport against
the flu. Only 70 doses of influenza vaccine remain at the
health department Which will now be admif!iStered On a first
come, first-served basis to the general public.

L_..;.._ _ _...,::~-------..::lo.......:
Judy Bunger creates ·two spatial thrust designs suitable for
display in the class "I is for Ice Skates Racing Together"
arrangement category. Bunger made the arrangements at
last week's meeting of the Wildwood Garden Club.
awards. as determined by a
point system, will be awarded in both the senior and
junior divisions.
Of the 13 arrangement
classes, nine are for garden
club member only. Four are
"invitational" which means
anyone can exh\bit in those.
Exhibits must be in place
by noon on Saturday and cannot be removed until after 4
p.m. on Sunday when the
show closes.
As for the horti culture
classes, plants entered must
be owned and grown by !he
exhibitot for at least three
months prior to the 'how.
Enhancers like oil or polish
are not pemnitted . Both the

common and botanical
names are to be wri nen on the
entry tags. The plant names
are also to be furnished by the
exhibitor and written on the
entry tags.
While in the artistic
arrangements
classes,
exhibitors are limited to one
exhibit a class, more than one
may be entered in the specimen categories. Baubles,
glitter. snow, backgrounds
and accessories are permitted
in all classes provided they
add distinction to the design.
Anistic arrangements
Class I : 'The Greatest
Gift" (1985) - Christmas
Ple.~se

see Flowers, AS

.•.
·\

f{ealth department
vaccinates 422 against flu
BY

BEl11 SERGENT

BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY - Yesterday
the Meigs County Health
Department administered
422 doses of influenza vaccine and 146 doses of pneumonia vacCine at its annual
flu shot clinic, ·according to
Sherry Wilcox, RN, director
of nursing for MCHD .
Wilcox said this leaves the
health department with
around 70 influenza doses
which will be administered
to the general public on a first
come. first-served basis . For
those without Medicare of
Medicaid, the flu shots are
$ 15. Around 54 pneun\oni a
shots are left and are $27 for
those without Medicare or
Medicaid.
Back in January the health

department ordered l ,QOO
doses of influenza vaccine
through
the ·
Ohio
Department of Health but
due to a miscommunication
between ODH and the manufacturer only 40 percent of
the doses were shipped to the
MCHD.
Yesterday's flu shot clinic
was made possible with help
from health levy funds.
. •
Wilcox added the. public
was . very p'atient with the
wait and everything ran
smoothly at the dinic with
the majority of clients being
65 years or older. Connie
Little. RN, of the MCHD
added for those clients who
were unatile to make it inside
the building staff from the
MCHD ventured out to vehiPie.~se

•

see Flu, AS"
,,

�PageA2

NATION • WORLD
5 YFARS AFrER TATmAN'S REIRFAT,·No·
CE:J.F.RRATIONS IN AFGHAN CAPITAL

The Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, November 1.4, :t006

BY JASON STRAZIUSO
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

AP pilot&lt;&gt;

This illustration released by the Martin Luther .King National
Memorial Project Foundation shows a partial rendering of
the Martin Luther King Jr, National Memorial which will be
located on the Tidal Basin between the Lincoln and
· Jefferson Memorials in Washington. The ground breaking
ceremony for the memorial took pla'ce Monday.·

•

Bush, Clinton join civil rights
activists at groundbreaking for
Martin Luther King memorial
BY STEPHEN MANNING
ASSQCIATED PRESS WRITER

WASHINGTON
Martin Luther · King Jr.
· belongs among American
icons like Thomas Jefferson
and Abraham . Lincoln,
national
leaders
said
Monday at the ceremonial
groundbreaking for a· King
memorial.
"We give Martin Luther
King his rightful place
among the many Americans
honored on the National
Mall," President Bush told a
crowd of about 5,000.
King's memorial, he said,
"wi II unite the men who
declared the promise of
America and defended the
promise of America with the
man who redeemed the
promise of Arnerica."
The King memorial, slated
to open in the spring of
2008. will be the frrst monument for a civilian and black
leader on the large park at
Washington's core. It is also
probably among the last
monuments on the Mall following a 2003 vote in
Congress to sharply limit
development of the parkland.
The stage in front of the
crowd was filled with King's
. fellow civil rights leaders
such as Jesse Jackson,
celebrities
like
Oprah
Winfrey, politicians including Illinois Sen. Barack
Obama, and three of King's
children. A gospel choir
sang, and Maya Angelou
read poetry. Children read ·
essays they had written
about King.
Clinton, who signed legislation in 1996 authorizing
the memorial , received a
standing ovation from the
largely black crowd. He told
the crowd of King's commitment to nonviolence and
social justice causes such as
ending poverty. saying those
goals still have not yet been
achieved.
"If he were here, he would
remind us that •the time to do
right remains," Clinton said.
The memorial will occupy
a four-acre plot on the banks ·
of the Tidal Basin. near the
Potomac
River.
The
Jefferson Memorial is across
the Tidal Basin. while the
Lincoln Memorial lies to the
northwest, near the river.
The design is based in pan
on King' s 1963 "I Have a
Dream·· speech . Before
repeating the "Let freedom
ring" refrai,n, King told the
crowd. "We wi II be able to
hew out of the mountain of
despair a stone of hope."
Visitors will P&lt;ISS through
an entryway cut through a
massive stone $ymbolizing
the mountain of despair and
once inside, will come upon
the missing section marking
the stone of hope. bearing a
carved profile of King. It
will be ringed with walb
chiseled with King's words
that may eventuall y be the
ba., e for a waterl'all.
.
Obama. who ha, 'aid he i'

considering a presidential
run in 2008, spoke shortly
after Bush. He imagined
bringing his two young children to the memorial when it
is completed and passing
through the mountain of
despair.
·
"He never did live to see
the promised land from .that
mountaintop," Obama said. ·
"But he pointed the way fur

us."
Winfrey credited King and
other civil rights leaders with
making it possible for her to
build her talk show empire.
"It's because of them that I
can be heard," she said. '"I do
not take that for granted, not
for one breath."
The memorial was first
conceived in 1983 by members of King's fraternity,
Alpha Phi Alpha. But it has
been beset by delays and
fundraising issues - the
memorial's foundation still
has only $70 million of the
estimated $100 million construction cost.

KABUL, Afghanistan A chuckle rang out from
under the blue burqa as the
mother of eight rifled
through a mound of children's sweatshirts. "Yes,"
the woman said, "life is better today. I can go shopping
by myself."
.
An Afghan barber smiled
as he recalled a shop full of
customers waiting to shave
their
Talibim-rilandated
beards. The eyes of a janitor .
lit up as he descrit&gt;ed
.Northern Alliance fighters
rolling into town.
"That's when the music
started," sai&lt;l the janitor, Jan
Mohammed.
On Nov. 13, 200 I, the
Taliban regime tl;lat had
imposed a harsh brand of
Islam fled
Kabul as
Northem Alliance fighters
backed by a U.S ..-Ied coali.,..
, . plloto
tion poured in. Residents
celebrated in the streets with An Afghan woman clad in· a burqa passes by a makeshift stall at a market .in Kabul,
music . and laughter. Men Afghanistan, Monday. Monday is the five-year anniversary of the Taliban 's retreat out of
flocked to barber shops to KabUl, but no celebrations were held and few Afghans were even ·aware of the day. Many
shave their long beards . .
S[lliled, however, at the m!lmory of the hard line militia's retreat.
· No official celebrations
"But it's not that good body with Afghan and interwere held Monday, and no women to cover themstlves
representatives,
Afghans approached in and did not allow them to now," he said. "The other natior '! '
street interviews knew it leave home without a male big problem t&lt;&gt;&lt;lay is figur- showeu a sharp increase in
was the five-year anniver- escon, meaning widows had ing out how to feed your 'violence, more than 600
attacks a month, up from the
sary. Many smiled when to rely on other family to children."
' Five years after the monthly average of 130 last
reminded of the Taliban 's survive.
The, regime also banned Taliban's ouster, poverty is year.
fali, though some also
a
senior
endemic
in · However,
lamented the deteriorating music and )llOvies, didn't still
allow kite flying and forced Af~hanistan, and the cost of Western official involved
security in the country.
A
high-level
report all men to wear long beards. livmg has risen sharply. with the monitoring board
"I came to work that day Many women ·still suffer said the report also showed
released Sunday found that
violence has risen fourfold and started shaviJJg beardS," from abuse and discrimina- the Afghan govemmeQt is
over 2005 ·. and that more said Mohammed Hesa, a tion, and the drug. trade is making progress.
"Desptte the insurgency.
than 3, 700 people have died 22-year-old barber. "Pe0ple out of controL And despite
were
lined
up
outside
'the
we
are staning to have an
.
the presence of some 4Q,OOO
in 2006 because of insurshop." None of his 10 cus- U.S. and NATO troops, the impact ori the bulk of the
gency-related violence.
, lives in the country," the
Still, Pashtun, a .W-year- tomers in the shop brought insurgency is unabated.
old who goes by one name, up the five-year anniverAfghanistan enjoyed a official s01id. He spoke on
relatixe period of calm in condition of anonymity
said she appreciates being sary.
HToday we have a lot the· years after the U.S.-led because he wasn' t authoable to go shopping by herself before winter settles in. more freedom," he said. invasion
launched
in rized to speak for the group.
"The years the Taliban "Then your beard was not October 200 I to oust the "Literacy, education and
was in Kabul, I was like a under your control. Your Taliban for hosting Osama health measurements are
prisoner," she said, as other wife was not even under bin Laden. But insurgents starting to move."
female shoppers nodded in your control. If you walked have this year launched a
Azizullah,
a money
agreement. "For five y&amp;its I with her in the street the record number of roadside changer in Kabul's main
had to stay at home."
Taliban would stop you and bombs and suicide attacks, currency
market,
said
Pashtun still wears the all- ask 'What is r,our relation- and there have been heavy Afghans were too busy with
clashes between insurgents daily life, and ihe struggle
co~eri!lg burqa favored by_ a ship with her? "
maJonty of women m
At the city's centtal cine- and Afghan and NATO to make money, to rememKabul. She said it's tradition ma, janitor Jan Mohammed security forces, particularly ber the anniversary of the
for women in her family to · said he was happy when the near. the border with Taliban' s fall. Like many in
wear· it, but she has friends Taliban
fell,
thinking Pakistan.
Afghanistan, he is losing
who now only wear a head Afghanistan would see a
A report released Sunday patience with the governscarf.
new era of freedom and by the Joint Coordination ment and the pace of recon:
The Taliban foreed all security.
and Monitoring Board, a struction.
t

unt

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•

.;

PlaCII

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...., .

'

DVER
17
~alhpohs

.

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:mailp mrtbune

(740) 446-2342
'

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-

.

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.

The Daily Sentinel
(740) 992-2155

The Daily Sentinel

BYTHE .BEND

Community calendar
Public meetings
Thesday, Nov. 14
_ POMEROY - Bedford
Township Trustees, 7 p.m.
town hall,.regular meeting .
RUTLAND - Rutland
Village Council, regular
meeting, 7 p.m., Rutland
Civic Center.
.
SYRACUSE - Syracuse
Community Center, Board
:of Directors. meeting, 7
:p.m. at the Center.

Clubs and
·organizations
..
'fuesday, Nov. 14
POMEROY -.
Meigs
County
Chamber
of
Commerce, business-mind,
ed
luncheon,
noon,
Pomeroy Library, discus. sian, "Well ness in the
:Workplace," catered by
:Bun's Party Barn.
Wednesday, Nov. IS
MIDDLEPORT
Middleport Literary Club, 2
·p.m. at the · Pomeroy
Library. Jeanne Bowen to
. review "Poets Laureate of
the United States." Marlene
Kuhn, hostess.
BASH AN
-Meigs
County
Firefighters

Association, regular meeting, 7:30 p.m., Bashan fire
house.

hymn sing will be held at
the Long Bottom United
Methodist Church at 7 p.m.
Those attending are to take
a canned food item for the
Meigs Cooperative Parish.

Thul'liday, Nov. 16
POMEROY - AA open
discussion, 7 p.m., Sacred
Heart Church.
RACINE PomeroyRacine Lodge 164 F&amp;AM,
Thursday, Nov. 16
will have election of offiRACINE - Village leaf
cers, 7:30p.m. All members collection, Elm to Vine
to
attend. Streets 'today and Vine
asked
Refreshments.
Street to Yellowbush Road
POMEROY - American · on Nov. 17. place leaves ·a t
Cancer Society Meig~ edge of stteet.
County Advisory Board's
annual meeting. noon, Wild
Horse Cafe. lunch provided,
RSVP, 992-6626, ext. 24.
Friday, Nov. 17
TUPPERS
PLAINS
Saturday, Nov. 18
Shank
will
be .80 years
John
POMEROY .- AA Big
Book study, 8 p.m., Sacred old on Nov. 17. Cards may
be sent to him at 798 Sun
Heart Church.
Crest
Place,
South
Charleston, W. Va. 25303.
lie was a fonmer basketball
coach at the Tuppers Plains
Thursday, Nov. 16
School.
RUTLAND
Ohio
Apostolic
Truth
;md
Sunday, Nov. 26
Holiness C.onference, guest
POMEROY - Luetchia
speakers each day. begin- Riggs will observe her 98th
ning at II a.m., today birthday on Nov. 26. Caros
though Nov. 18, Rtitl11nd may be sent to her at the
Civic Center.
Rocksprings Rehabilitation
Center or to her home, 3945
Sunday, Nov. 19
. Rocksprings
Road,
LONG BO'ITOM - A Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.

·Other events

Birthdays

Church events

POINT PLEASANT -In
an effon to continuously
focus on quality patient care
and recovery, Pleasant
Valley Hospital has added
Bill Wray, a massage therapist, to the staff of
Outpatient Rehabilitation
Services, located at the
.Wellness Center.
. "We · believe that Wray
will be an asset to our team
as he provides therapeutic
massage to .patients and
offers recreational massage
:_therapy through outside ·
appointments," said Debra
Long,
Director
of
· Rehabilitation Services.
. Massage therapy has
: become one of the fastest
·growing health-related professions in the nation. It. has '
evolved into many modalities of advanced therapeutic
Sub ucltted ,e.ato
· techniques in healthcare
Bill Wray, · a massage therapist, recently joined the
environments.
Outpatient
Rehabilitation Services staff at PVH. Wray is
Massage is seen both as a
science and an art. It is used located at the Wellness Center and provides theraJieutic
as a medical treatment for massage to patients through a referral by a physician or
specific ailments or injuries. therapist, and also takes outside appointments for masIt is also used to generate a sage therapy in relaxation.
sense of calm and internal
healing which assists in Therapeutic massage can using massage.
Massage is unique in its
bringing individuals into also j)e an imponant addiability
to reduce and elimimentlil and . emotional bal- tion to any fitness or sports ·
nate
particular
types of musance evoking a sense of pro$ram. helping a patient
well-being.
achteve perfonmance goals cular pain. The kinetic
Wray is trained in the with minimum injury and nature of massage, which
breaks down the natural tenSwedish massage technique pam.
that offers a "whole body
Massage therapy is one of dency of muscles to adhere
treatment."
However. the most effective means of to one another, enhances
according to this dedicated t&lt;elaxing muscle tissue and range of motion and dimintherapist, each patient 's increasing
circulation. ishes pain and joint probmassage will vary depend- Increased drculation pro- lems.
Massage · treatments are
in~ on his or her needs.
vides · more blood to the
'While
massaging a muscles and tissues provid- generally a half hour to one
patient, I will find trigger ing the nutrients necessary hour in length :
· points where the muscles for a ·body to heal itself. · Appointments are availneed to be worked. Those Tight muscles reduce blood able with Wray on Mondays,
are the areas where I will flow, restricting enough Wednesdays and Fridays in
focus my treatment," Wray blood to enter into the tissue. half-hour ($30) and full hour
explained.
prolonging or halting the sessions ($48). Gift certifiMassage therapy is espe- healing process and also cates are available for the
cially beneficial to physical causing muscles cells to die. upcoming holiday season.
workers, desk workers, trav- This will eventually cause For more infonmation or to
elers and athletes who have atrophy of the muscle tissue. schedule an appointment,
added stress on their bodies. · This process can be reversed please call, (304) 675-8639.

SclwU receives Bioscience Leadership award

.

•

Tuesday, November 14, 2006

ANNIE'S MAILBOX

PVH adds massage therapist to staff

ATHENS - Diagnostic
HYBRIDS President and
CEO
Dav{d
Scholl
received the Omeris 2006
Ohio
·Bioscience
Leadership Award during
this year's BioOhio conference in Columbus.
Omeris, a nonprofit organization dedicated to building and accelerating biol;cience industry, research.
and education in Ohio.
sponsors the annual conference. Thi.s year's cvem
focused on developing
Ohio's bioscience work. force and inc)uded a career
fair dedicated to employment in the sciences.
The award recognizes
leadership in Ohio's growing bioscience industry, as
well as the recipient' s
commitment to funhering
bioscience enterprises in
the state.
honored
Schon was
Ohio
along
with
Representative Earl · J.

PageA:J

Martin (R ) and Ohio 1986
as
Edison
Senator Kimberly A. Zurz BioTechnology
Center.
(D), who both received · Today, the group works to
Legislator of the Year support
bioscienc&lt;;
awards for their commit- researchers and entreprement to furthering and sup- neurs · in Ohio by helping
porting bioscience efforts them comP,Cte for governin the state.
ment and private funding .
"This fype of rt't'ngnition and by connecting them
really is a te am a\\ anl and with other Omeris merna strong validation of the hers to foster co11aboration
way W&lt;' . ha1 c dc1 doped and support.
"Omeris is simply the
and nmductctl &lt;'Ill' .l&gt;usi ness over man\' \'cars with stron~&lt;"St advocate in our
the patit•nt •m•l,·i"tonwr iit state· fM articulating .the
mind ." he ,,,id . "R,•.-,.;, •ng needs and requirements
such a prbt igion' "" .ml within the SIJ&lt;.'Cialized and
from Omens ,·,•mp.m·s rapidly emerging binright up tht'l'&lt;' h• th&lt;' hm· ~ - scien,·e industr).'' Scho11
10'- h:ll' ~
l"tin~'
'"' · s3id .
reccin·•lm li•• ~·rl\1 mu~.~ Ht':ld&lt;Ju:lrtered in Athens.
1ine in :t~\.1 an.l ~11(1~. .. Di.u:nostic
HYBRIDS
11n·ents. develops. manuScht'll :tdtk&lt;l
Scholl
''"'litcd factu~s. and ,;ells innovaDiagnostl&lt;'
H\ HRlPS. tiw di:1gnosti,· prodth:ts for
employt'l'' an.t thru &lt;'&lt;&gt;Ill - a wide range ,,f viral respi mitment II&gt; tlw ••'1111'·111\ r:lfnry di&gt;eases. herpes
.for the un·ompil,hmcnts vims infrctions. and other
that led In I he a11ard .
SIJ&lt;.'&lt;iific viral and thyroid
Omeris wa, ft&gt;umkd 111 diseases.

Desened roo11111Ulte not liable for bills·
BY KATHY MITCHELL

ried. - Left in the Lurch herself. Try to stop worryDear Lurch: Call the ing so you can enjoy yourInternet, cable and phone self, too.
Dear Annie: Earlier this companies, and rell them
Dear Annie: This is in
~ear, my best friend, Helen has moved and you response to "Stuck in
'Helen," and I decided . to want to cancel the service Silence," the gay man who
get an apanment together. or trarrsfer it to your wants to come out to his ·
Since she lived on the name . You are not other- mother. ·
West Coast, l did all the wise liable for Helen's
1 came out to my parapartment hunting, put bi11s. Call the Humane ents some years ago. It
down tl\e ·deposit and Society about the cat. And felt wonderful. However.
bought
furniture
and yes, talk to Helen's ' par- my parents had their own
appliances.
ents. If their daughter is crisis. They were the only
Helen · was messy and taking illegally obtained parents in their communirarely . cleaned up after painkillers and acting ty to have a gay son. In
herself. She also was not erratically, she could be in turn they went to their
working, and ·therefore serious trouble.
was unable to pay me
Dear Annie: My sister, clergyman, who was not
back the money she owed "Sally," and I are going on prepared to offer them
or contribute to the house- a five-day cruise together . advice. PFLAG was not an
hold bills. She also regu- with our brother and his option then.
.
.
larly brought men home, · wife. We are all in our 8os
"Stuck" might first start
which .I found disturbing, and don't get together very a discussion . along the
especially since she has a often.
lines of "How do you feel
boyfriend
back
in ·· 'Sa11y is fun to be with about gay people?" Also.
California.
most of the. time, but she many folks seek a sibWithin weeks, I found a tends to argue a lot and ling's help dealing with
large·
number
of nitpick over little things. parents. While everything
paink(IIers in our shared She has strong opinions, may go smoothly, my
bathroom. None of the and even my friends have advice is to understand
prescnpt!ons
was
in commented that she is dif- that rejection is one of
Helen's ume. l was ficult to be around for many possible outcomes.
shocked and suggested she very long. How can I tact- He should be prepared to
see a doctor. This escalat- fully tell her to be less offer resources to deal
ed into a screaming match. argumentative with the with issues that may ar,ise
Helen announced she was new people we will be and offer Mom compasreturning to the West meeting on the cruise? sion while she sorts thi·ngs
· Coast and skipped town When I tell her she fights out. _ I Did It
while I was at work. She too much, she gets very
Dear 1 Did It· Thanks
left behind a pet cat and defensive: She could ruill--for your insight. we hope
most of her personal pos- our va&lt;:allon: Please help. "Stuck" sees this .
Annie's Mailbox is
sessions.
- Lovmg_Stster
I am absolutely furious.
Dea.r Stster: You are written by Kathy Mitchell
I cannot afford this much not gomg to do a complete and Marcy Sugar. longrent. Helen also didn't dis- overhaul of Sally's person- .
.
.~ '
connect the cable, Internet ality in a few weeks, so time editors 0J the Ann
or phone, all of which are you'd best learn to accept . Land~rs column. _Please
in her name. Since ' I am what you cannot change. e-ma~l your. questions to
not on the accounts, I've You are not responsible antuesmallbox~com­
not been able to shut off for the way Sally mteracts cast.~~t, or. Write t9:
these ~ervices.
with others. People on the Anme s Madb~x, P.O.
Am l obligated to pay cruise can avotd her if Box 118190, Ch1cago, IL
these bills? What do I do they wish. (So can you.) 60611. To find out more
about the cat I, don't want? At meals, there are usually about Annie's Mailbox,
Should I call Helen's par- enough other guests at a and read features by
ents? She was acting real- table to carry the conver- other Creators Syndicate
ly erratic, not at all like sation over anyone who is writers and cartoonists,
the person · I've been particularly dtsruptive or visit
the
Creators
friends with all my life. I annoying. And Sally may Syndicate Web page at
am angry, but also wor- surprise you by enjoying www.creators.com.
AIID MARCY $UQAR

Hearts and Hands giveaway planned
· TUPPERS PLAINS, OH c
Hearts and Hands Free
Clothing Pantry, an outreach
of Bethel Worship Center,
will be hosting jts 6th annual Christmas giveaway on
Dec. 2 at the church.
Parents are welcome to
come "shop" for their children, ages 0-17years, begin.

ning at 9 a.m. on that
Saturday.
Bethel Worship Center is
located two miles south of
Tuppers Plains on State
Route 7. The giveaway will
last .until the toys/presents
are gone. They are given
away to needy families in
the community on a first

come, first served basis.
Anyone wanting to donate
new or very gently hsed
toys. new clothes or anything else achild would be
thrilled to , receive this
Christmas, is asked to con'tact Bethel Worship Center
at 667-6793 or Jill Holter at
949-2603.

'

Youth hunting .season set this
SM IE ORt
NEWS4!&gt;MVOAILYSENTINEL.COM

,
POMEROY
- Ohto's
youth ~ gun season will be
held this weekend.
''The youth gun season continues to grow in popularity,"
said Dan Smith, assistant
wildlife management sopetvisor for · the Division of
Wildlife's southeast Ohio disnict. "For many youth this
weekend will be the hi~ight
of their hunting season.'
Young hunleFS killed 8,641
deer during the 2005 two-day
season. More than 15,000
young hunters are expected to
participate in the upcoming
youth hunt.

Some young hunters may
take advantage of Ohio's new
apprentice hunting license.
This new licenses allows new
hunters, both adults and youth,
to experience hunting under
the mentorship of a licensed
adult, prior • to completing a
hunter education course. The
apprentice hunting license was
developed as pmt of a nationwide effort cailed "Families
Afield," designed to remove
barriers that prevent hunters
from passing along the hunting
. heritage.
HThe youth deer-gun season
is open statewide. Hunters
may take one deer of either sex
during this sea.&lt;;()(), in accordance with existing bag and

wee~end.

deer-zone limits. Plugged shotguns, muzzleloaders, handguns and bo\1/s are legal. All
participants must wear hunter
orange, possess a valid Ohio
hunting license and deer permit, and be accompanied by a
non-hunting adult in the field
All other regularly scheduled hunting seasons will continue during the two-day youth
season.
However,
other
hunters, including deer-archery
hunters, are required to wear
hunter orange during this period.
This year. Ohio's regular
deer-gun season runs Nov. 27
through Dec. 3, wiih an additional weekend Dec. 16 and
17.

�•

•

PageA4

OPINION.
Message
of
2006:
Modera(es
fed
up
with
polarization
The Daily Sentinel

·The Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, November 14, 20o6

Obituaries

·For the Record

'

The 2006 election results
force it. Encouragingly, they
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio
say they won't.
were a rebuke not just to .
(740) 992·2156 • FAX (740) 992·2157
President
Bush
and
Tbe clearest repudiation
-.mydallysentlnel.com
Congressional Republicans,
of the loud right came on
but to radio talk-show hosts
the issue of immigration. By
and
other
right-wing
polara
margin of 57 percent to 38
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
·
percent, voters said. they
tre~
wanted illegal immtgrants
The
right
managed
to
win
Jim Freeland
who work in the United
seven mol\\ anti-gay marPublisher
riage referendu'ms across
States to be allowed a
the
country,
but
it
was
repuchance
to . apply for legal
Charlene Hoeflich
dialed on Iraq, immigration average for such elections: status and not be deported.
G~neral Manager-News Editor
arid excessive religiosity.
close to 30 House seats ver- , Voters in Arizona rejected .
At the same time; while sus the average of 32, and two of .the nation's most
immigration
Democrats won control of . likely six Senate seats com- vociferous
the House and possibly the pared to the average of restrictionists, Rep. J.D.
Congre..•s shall make no law respecting an
Senate, they did so by cap- eight.
. .
Hayworth
(R)
and
establishment of religion, or prohibiting the
turing the votes of moderIn elections during which Minuteman founder Randy
free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of ates and independents, the president's popularity Graf (R).
House Republicans maswhom they could Jose easily was low because of war,
speech, or of the press; o; the right of the peo- with
demonstrations of scandal or recession, how- sively bought into the talkple peaceably to assemble, and to petition the wretched excess.
ever, the average is 47 show claque's agenda by
It's
encouraging
that
Bush
House seats and eight rejecting Bush's LatinoGovernment for a redress ofgrievances.
friendly proposal for comand incoming Speaker Senate seats.
Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., and
·Democrats did not cam- prehensive
immigration
-The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution
likely Senate Majority paign on a distinct positive reform, and they've suffered
Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev., agenda, but rather against important damage as a
are talking the language of Bush an(j the Iraq war and result.
Bush managed to capture
bipartisan cooperation, but for an ill-defined "new
44 percent of the Latino
Democrats will be strongly direction."
tempted to exercise their
Bush, of course, failed to vote in 2004, according to
passions against the presi- win a majority of the popu- disputed exit polls, but this
dent and his policies.
Jar· vote in 2000, yet he . year
Hispanics
went
Exit polls showed that, began governing as though Democratic by a margin of
once again. self-identified he had won a smashing 72 percent to 27 percent, I 0
moderates made up a near . mandate. La~gely because points higher than in 2002.
majority of the electorate- of his response to terrorism,
·If · Republicans
and
4 7 percent - and this group he managed to defy history Democrats are looking for
split 62 percent to 36 per- by increasing his party's an issue around which to
'
cent Democratic - a 9- majorities in two subse- demonstrate they can unify
Dear Editor:
The Nov. 7 picture of the old Pomeroy Junior High's point Democratic gain from quent electio~
and accomplish something,
tumbling walls filled me with sadness. reminding me of a 2002 and 8 points above
But he has turned himself they could use the lamepivotal point when ,lite changed for the worse. A change 2004."
into one of the most pol ariz- duck session of Congress to
that destroyed my sense of continuity with the past.
Only 21 percent of voters ing presidents in American pass the comprehensive
The new high sehool at Meigs meant a Joss of free identified themselves as lib- history. And history has at Senate immigration bill.
movement in contrast to the open buildings at Pomeroy. erals and 32 percent as con- last caught up with him.
The exit polls also suggest
At Pomeroy you could get away downtown. Mei~s stood servatives. Liberals support- · The loudest message from that a revolt to6k place this
in isolation out in the middle of nowhere and 11 meant ed Democrats nearly 90 per- the elections is ·that the year against the right's infubeing yanked away from the old traditional after-school cent of the time, while con- nation wants
change of sion of religious dogma into
stopping points like the . Blue and Grey, Stark's, and the
servatives
voted
Republican
policy
·in
Iraq.
By
a margin politics - as in the effort to
two bakerles. And not long afterward, they closed down.
of 57 percent to 41 percent, keep brain-damaged Terri
Thus began the darkest most dreary period of my life: , by less than 80 percent.
While
Republican
·
and
voters .said they oppose the Schiavo · alive and Bush's
After departing an overcrowded bus every morning in
veto of expanded federal
which ignorant toughs would frequently threaten you Democratic candidates held war.
partisan
base
voters
by
By
59
percent
to
34
perfunding
for embryonic
their
physically rather than make room for you to sit, I walked
90
percent,
cent,
voters
said
the
war
has
.
stem-cell
research.
margins
above
into lockdown every morning so low that they would
independents
• went not improved American
Some of the biggest gains
have had to jack me up to bury me.
of
security,
and
by
56
percent
scored
by Democrats over
Democratic
by
a
margin
Graduation night I walked out the door alone. 1be
58 percent to 38 percent, a to 37 percent, they called for 2002 election results were
sense of isolation seemed a fining end.
Jeff Fields
10-point gain over 2002 and withdrawal of some or all among people who attend
Symcuse
U.S. troops, as opposed to . church a few times a month
9 points over 2004.
Clearly, these elections maintaining current levels (a · 16 percent Democratic
· · gain), a few .times a year (10
were a classic "six-year or sending more.
Yet full withdrawal is a ·percent) or never (13 peritch" referendum on the
tient).
incumbent president - and · distinct minority position Bush lost.
30
percent
and
At the same time, the
The scale of this Joss was Democrats ~on't have the rapid spread of anti-gayconstitutional
on par with the post-war country's support if they marriage

READER'S

VIEW

Isolation

Sad 1fjledion on old sdwot

a

Justa game
.Pamtts should lighten up

Dear Ediror: ·
This letter is concerning the Big Bend Youth Football
League. Well, not just the league itself, but the parents too.
You know some people seem to forget that it really is just a
.
ball game. Not life or death, but just a game.
People start calling the kids names arid figHting with other
parents. Don't you guys think that this is making our kids
look bad?
·
Everyone tends to point the finger at the Tornado parents,
but.just sit back and pay attention to the other parents and
grandparents of the other teams. I understand that everyol]e
is proud of their child or grandchild, but when you start calling the kids names because your child gets tackled, then that
is bad. The sport is called Tackle Football. Hello.
· As a parent, I would like to see some of these little guys
play together one day as professionals, but you know what,
no good parent is going to sit back and let anyone call their
child names because he is playing the game. We Tornado
very proud of our boys, "win or lose," and some
·parents
. of us have no problem Watching the game from the other .
·side of the fence. If we get thrown out for taking up for our
kids, then so be it.
Candie Davis

are

Racine

The Daily Sentinel
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amendments in the states is
the consequence of overreaching by liberal courts
that have short&lt;ircuited the
political process on a deeply
felt social issue.
Democrats also gained I 0
. points among white males;
possibly .reflecting the fact
that only 29 percent of voters said their personal
finances were · in ·better
shape than they were two
years ago and that 68 percent said they were barely
maintaining their standard
. of living pr were falling
behind.
Democrats
and
Republicans have to .work
together to improve workers' ability to cope wiih the
high-tech · global economy.
Democrats will be tempted
to be as isolationist on trade
as Republicans have been
restrictionist on immigration, but that would be a losing proposition.
Democrats
and
Republicans have a lot of
tasks they can unite around,
- reauthorizing the $tate
Children's Health Insurance
Program and No Child Left
Behind, redirecting oil-company subsidies to . altemati ve-energy ·research, trying
to reach an accommodation
on out -of-control entitlements and expanding opportunities to attend college.
Possibly the ' most arresting single statistic in the exit
polls was the finding that a
plurality of voters - 40
percent - believe the next
generation of Americans
will experience a life
"worse than today," while
only 30 percent expect it to
be better and 28 percent
about the same.
This means that voters are·
discouraged not only about
America •s present but also
its future. The message of
the elections is that the
country wants its politicians
to stop squabbling for partisan advantage and restore
the American dream.
(Morton Kondracke i$
executive editor of Roll
Call, the newspaper of
Capitol Hill.)

The US. torture trail
When the president signed
security risk. There was no victims of CIA renditions."
the Military Commissions
apology to him from the top The book, which I particuAct of 2006 last month, he
level of the Canadian gov- larly recommend to the
expressed gratification . that
ernment, . but the Royal attorney general and CIA
the CIA will still be able to
Canadian Mounted Police director Hayden, is "Ghost
use "alternative" (also .
co.mmtss•oner
Giuiiano Plane: The True Story of the
Nat
known as'''coercive") methZaccardelli did, at an
·Hentoff
CIA Torture Program" (St.
ods of interrogation (,in highOttawa news conference,
level detainees in its secret
apologire "for the terrible Martin's Press) by Stephen
prisons. Also gratified after
injustices that ··you experi- Grey, who has reported for
the signing was CIA director
enced and the pain that y011 The New York Times, CNN,
CBS • "60 Minutes," the
Michael Hayden, who told
and your family endured."
the
amendment
was
defeathis far-flung employees:
lltere has been no apdlo- BBC, et al.
ed
with
only
one
Republican
"We can be confident that
The plane that took Arar
gy to' Maher Arar from the
our program remains -as it vote against it, Lincoln CIA or the rest of our gov- . to his Syrian cell, Grey
always has been - fully Chafee. Even Rockefeller ernment. Indeed, as Sen. notes, was a CIA-hired charcompliant with U.S.law, the finally voted for the Military Patrick Leahy, D-Vt., said in tered jet, among others the
Constitution and our inter- Commissions Act.
a Sept. 26 letter to Attorney
Had there been a public General Alberto Gonzales: CIA has used for its "rendinational treaty ()bligations."
before
the "Public reports indicate that tions.''
This denial of reality by · heaiing
On Oct. 31, a tiny New
Hayden is a pristine exam- Rockefeller ~mendrnent was the United States ' refused to
York Times item repprted
ple of doublespe:ik - as cast aside, the New York- cooperate
with
the
Center
for
when presidential press sec- based
(Canadian) commission'". that Secretary of State
Constitutional
Rights
would
retary Tony Snow said on
conducting the investigation Condoleezza Rice, answerhave
told
the
illuminating
Oct. 27: "We don't torture,
on Canada's turning Arar ing an official Canadian
Canadian
story
of
its
client.
protest on our treatment of
we don't condone torture,
over to the CIA.
cititen
Maher
Arar,
one
of
we don' 1 do torture." We'
And then - in a state- Arar, pledged that any future
have heard the same indig- the many victims of the ment that should shame this .taking of Canadians against
nant protestations from the CIA's "extraqrdinary rendi- country around the world their will by the United
tions" by which it sends
president; the secretary of
our
chief
law-enforcement
States to a third country will·
prisoners - outside of U.S.
state and vice president
officer,
Gonzales,
actually
.
be preceded by our consullaw - to countries where
Cheney (who acknowledges
said,
when
.asked
at
a
press
tation
with the Canadian
they've been tortured to
wryly that he. has been extract information.
conference
if
the government.
described. as "the vice presiCanadian
intelligence Department of Justice owes
The news story ended:
dent for torture" as he dis- officials had given the CIA an apology to Arar:
"Ms.
Rice did not address a
missed such nonsense).
"We were not respon&gt;ible
what turned out to be false
With regard to future like- information that Maher Arar for (Mr. Arar's) removal to request that the United
lihood of torture, the had AI Qaeda connections, Syria. I'm not aware that he States acknowledge 'inapRepublican-controlled and he was flown to Syria in was tortured, and I haven't. propriate conduct."' Of
Congress - in passing the a CIA-hired plane. Held for read the commission report course, there was no apoloMilitary Commissions Act more than I 0 months in a ... He WIIS initially detained gy to Arar from her. I~ there
of 2006 - has given the cell 7 feet high, 3 feet wide because his name appeared any wonder why - among
president considerable lee- and 6 feet deep, Arar was on terrorist lists, and he was citizens of countries who !ll'e
way in deciding what forms viciously tortured continual- deported according to our U.S: allies- our leaders are
of interrogation are not war ly, and still bears the psy- (immigration) laws." (By regarded as hypocrites when
crimes under our War chological wounds.
the way, Arar is now banned they preach democracy and
Crimes Act and the Geneva
Syrians
finally from entering the United such American values as the
The
Co11ventions. ·
released Arar because of States. Why'))
rule of law?
Congress· trust in the total lack of evidence
Gonzales wasll't aware
(Nat Henrojfis a nationalpresident was so strong that against him. On Sept. 18. that Arar was tortured?.The
when Sen. Jay Rockefeller. after a long, exhaustive story, in detail, was in main- lv renowned authority on the
D-W.Va., offered an amend- investigation. the Canadian stream American newspa- First Amendmem and the
ment to the legislation government. in a I ,200-page pers, as well as in the for- Bill of Rights and author of
requiring the CIA to at least report, also declared Arar eign pre~s. Also, in a new, many books, including "The •
keep the Senate and House innocent of any ~terrorist fully documented and foot- War on the Bill of Rights
Intelligence Committees connections. stating "cate- noted book, Mar's "terrible and
the
Gathering
informed about it' resource - gorically, there is no evi- inju.stice" appears, along Resistance" (Seven Stories
ful techniques on prisoners, dence" that Arar was or is a with those suffered by other Press, 2003 ). )
'

.

The Daily Sentinel• Page As

www.mydailysentinel.oom

Bobby DIU

Divorces

CHESHIRE -Bobby Eugene Dill, 76, Cheshire, died
Sunday Nov. 12, 2006 at Overbrook Center in' Middleport.
He was born July 7, 1930, in Meigs County, son of the
late Homer Eugene and Anna Cunningham Dill. Mr. Dill
retired from the Foote Mineml Co after 29 years of ser'vice,
served in the anned forces during the Korea Conflict, and
was a member of Feeney-Bennett Post 128 American
Legion in Middleport.
•
·
Besides his parents, he was preceded in death by his sons,
Tony and Ryan Dill.
·
. He is survived by his wife: Corrine McDaniel Dill; chil:dren: .Bobby Dill, Michael (Isabelle) Dill, Eddie Dill and
Todd Dill; several grandchildren and several great grand'children; a sister, Pauline Fields; stepchildren: Bobby
{Becky) McDaniel; Mike (Sherry) McDaniel, and Cathy
(Arthur) Elswick, six step grandchildren and three step
great-grandchildren. ·
Service will be I p.m. Thursday, Nov. 16, 2006 at the
Middleport Chapel of Fisher Funeral Horne with Rev.
'Steve Little officiating. Burial wil~ be in Gilmore
Cemetery.
.
.
Friends may call .at the funeral home from II a.m. untd .
the service at I p.m. and may send onltne condolences to
www.fisberfuneralhomes.com.

POMEROY - An action for divorce was filed in Meigs
County Common·Pleas Court by James L. l..egg, Pomeroy,
against Kandice R. l..egg, Athens.
.
A divorce was granted to Angela S. Spangler from Davtd
It Spangler.

Judy Coblenh
POMEROY - Judy C. Coblentz, 62, of Pomeroy died
Sunday Nov. 12, 2006, at the home of her .good f!iend
Sherrie Bernard Might in Pomeroy.
· She was born Dec. 28, 1943, in Salem Oregon. Judy was
an L.P.N. and attended the Oasis Christian Fellowship.
.. Surviving are her children; Robin Kemp and Karea
Coblentz, both of Springfield, Oregon, and Allen Coblentz,
West Palm Beach Fla.; grandchildren: David Mann,
.Christopher Baird, and ·Joshua, Nathan and Alexander
Baker; a special friend, with whom she made her home,
Sherrie (Bernard) Might of Pomeroy; and a special friend,
Marcia Dunn.
Service will be at 7 p.m. Thursday, Nov. I 6, 2006 at the
·Pomeroy Chapel of Fisher Funeral Home wtth Pastor Chns
Stewart officiating. Her ashes will be returned to Oregon
for burial.
.
Online condolences may be sent to www.fisherfuneralhomes.com.

Robert Meredith
· POMEROY -Robert J. Meredith, 77, Pomeroy, died
Saturday Nov. II, 2006, at Marietta Memorial Hospital In
Marietta. He was born inDaytonon Dec. 29, 1928, son of
the late Raymond and Addie Jobes Meredith.
. .
· Mr. Meredith was a trinter with the .Arizona ~nntmg
Company a veteran o the U.S. Atr Force dunng the
Korean War and·attended the Mt. Hermon United Brethren
Church.
Besides his parents, he was preceded in death by his first
wife, Betty Buckley Meredith; brothers, .Sherwood and
Tom Meredith; and a nephew Roger Meredith.
·
Surviving are his wife, Kathryn Meredith, Pomeroy; a
son, Dennis (Mary) Meredtth, G.lendal~ Anz.; a dal;lghter,
Patricia (John) Cooper, Phoemx, Anz.; grandchildren:
Christen (Brett) Garden and Jasmine and Joshua Cooper;
four great-granddaughters; · a sister, Manon (Robe~t)
Murphy, Sandusky; a brother, William (Gladys) Meredtth
of Beverly; step daughters: Sandra (Steven) Scott, Cathy
(Bill) Davis and Teresa (Tim) Gillilan: and several step
grand and great grandchildren.
Service will be 7 p.m. Wednesday, Nov. 15, 2006, at the
Pomeroy Chapel of Fisher Funeral Hou:re with Peter
Martindale officiating.
·
Friends may call from 5 p.m. until th~ time of se~ice
Wednesday. Burial. will ta~e place m .the Nattonal
Memorial Cemetery m Phoemx, Anz.
.
.
The family asks that .donations be made to the Amencan
Cancer Society.
Online condolences may be sent to www.fisherfunera:lhomes.com.

Local Briefs
Card shower planned ·
RACINE - Friends have panned a birthday card shower for Barbara MeN ickle Pierce of 48008 St. Route 124,
Racine, 45771. She wsill celebrate her 75th birthday on
Nov. 20.

Sentenced
POMEROY - Dennis Foley was sentenced in Meigs
County Common Pleas Court to 18 months in prison on a
charge of attempted failure of a sex offender to provide
notice of residence address change. The term IS to be served
consecutively with a sentence previously imposed.

Taylor lands job
Lori Taylor has recently
been hired as a clerical
specialist at the TASC
(Treatment Alternatives to
Street Crime) Center of
Southeast Ohio. She is a
2006 summer quarter graduate of Gallipolis Career
College where she earned
her associate of applied
business degree in medical
office administration. She
currently resides in
Gallipolis.
S. I • - pllato

Money
fromPageA1
approved it would not go
into effect until the next
elected term in 2008.
Counci I approved the
sale of the Pomeroy
Volunteer
Fire
Department's Pumper Two
to the Scipio Township
Volunteer Fire Department
for $45,000.
This sale will go towards
the purch'ase of a new lad.der truck for the Pomeroy
Fire Department which will
cost $632,842, a state-bid
price. Rick Blaettnar, chief
of the Pomeroy Volunteer
Fire Department reported
that a $565,250 Firefighter
Investment and . Response
Enhancement Act fund federal grant would be used to
purchase the new truck.
Blaettnll,r added the department was using its $30,000
Community Development
Block Grant money and
$10,000 CDBG match
administered by the Meigs
County Commissioners to
purchase equipment on the
truck. This $40,000 deduction/payment for equipment along with the
$565,25.0 grant leaves a
balance of $27,824 for the
ladder truck. B laettnar said
with the $45,000 sale of
Pumper Tw.o this leaves a
reserve of$17,148.
· ."1' m very proud of what
Todd Smith (grants writer),
my department and council
bas done here," Blaettnar
said. "This i&amp; very exciting.
Blaettnar said the truck
is to be delivered within
270.days.
Council approved the
new code enforcement I
housing ordinance for

No service
PORTER - The Clark Chapel FWB Church will not be
having a service on Saturday due to the quarterly conference, Pastor Clyde Ferrell announced.
·

·March of Dimes begins
fond-r~ising campa_ign
. . POINT PLEASANT Terry Eller, director of the
Tri-'Cmmty Walk's West
Virginia Chapter of th.e
March of Dimes, along with
Andrea Strauch, who was
the top walker in the 2005
.and 2006 WalkAmerica
events, are encouragmg
local residents to take part
in this week's fund-raising
campaign in observance of
· November as Prematunty
Awareness Month.
Eller said local Pizza Hut
restaurants are helping out
by donating 15 percent of
tht; sales .generated to the
March of Dimes organization. Residents may simply
take a flyer, which is avail,
able by calling Eller, to the
participating locatiOns -.
415 West Main Street m
Pomeroy, Ohio, and 210 I
State Route 7 in Galhpohs,
Ohio - on Wednesday or
Thursday for dine -i n or
carry-out between II a.m .
and 9 p.m .
Fifteen percent of the

Andrea Strauch

total purchase. excluding
alcoholic beverages, ta~
and tip, will be donated to
the March of Dimes. Flyers
will not be available at the
restaurants.
For more information.
call Eller at 675-6029.

Flowers
from PageA1
Madonna, separate divisions
for traditional and contempomry.
Class 2: "The Other
Wiseman" (1984)- In an
oriental manner.
Class 3: "Treasure the
Card"
(1983)
Interpretive arrangement.
· Class 4: "Chri~tmas in Our
Town" (1984) --Christmas
exhibitional table setting
type 2.
Class 5: "We Wish You a
Merry Christmas" ( 1991 )Including candle or candles,
Class 6: "l i's for Ice Skates
Racing Together" (1986). Spatial
thrust
destgn
"Special Class."
Class 7: "See The Sun
Shine on The Snow" (1994)
Reflective design.
. Class 8: "And Gather the
Clutter" ( 1983) - synergistic type.
Class 9: "And Now We
Can Rest" (1983) - featuring treasured wood.
Invitational
Class I 0: "The Husband of
Mary" ( 1995) - The holy
family
Junior.
Class II: ''What's in My
Sock" (19941 - your interpretation.

'

'

rental properties. All rental
property in the ·village
· must now be inspected
annually with registration
to begin next month and
continue through the end of ·
January 2007 as previously
reported in The Daily
Sentinel.
Council approved the
hiring
of
Andrew
Holcomb, Adam Holcomb
and Jason Brown as part
time officers for the
Pomeroy
Police
Department.
Council
approved the hiring of
Cassandra Smith as a parte
time dispatcher for the
Pomeroy
Police
Depanment.
Pomeroy
Chtef of Police Mark E.
Proffitt
announced
Patrolman Eric Augenstein
left the department for a
law enforcement job in
Belpre.
Council approved the
Jones Tree Service estimate to remove three trees
in Beech Grove Cemetery
for $3,500.
Insurance agent Donald
Vaughan from the Vaughan
A~ency ptesented coun~il
wuh options to lower VIIlase health insurance premmms which must be
renewed in May 2007.
Vaughan suggested the village fill out applications
for United Health Care
which may lower those
premiums though that ts
preliminary' at this time.
The meeting was called
into executive . session to
discuss personnel ll)atters. ·
specifically disciplinary
actions in regards to an
employee .
All members of council
were present and were
joined
by
Blaettnar,
Hysell • . Proffitt and resident Bill Kitchen ..
·class 12: "Oh! The Tree"
(1983) - Using shades ,of
green. · ·'
Class 13: "It's Time To Get
Up" (1983) - Showing
motion.
Holiday Decorations
Class I :. '~The Neighbor
Comes Over" ( 1994) - categories for outdoor and
indoor wreaths.
. Class 2: "Greetings to You
Friend" (2006) - a home. made Christmas Card
ineluding plant material.
Class 3: "Presents" ( 1985)
wrapped package - for
child, for adult.
Horticulture
·
Adult
Class I : Any flowering
plant - including multi
crown African violet
Class 2: African violets
Class
3: .
Foliage
Houseplant
Class 4: Cactus · • or
Succulents I perpot
Class 5: Berried Brahch
12"to18"
Class 6: Your Favorite
Line Material -- name variety "sJieciat'class"
Class 7: Evergreen
Class 8: Holly
Junior
Class 9: Dried Road Side
Material
Class I 0: Tree Ornament
featuring natural materials
Class II: "Ghost of
Christmas Past" (1983) -

FDA adds 'abnormal behavior'
precaution to Tam iflu label
BY /IIUR£W &amp;bDGES
ASSOCLo\TED PRESS v.lli'TER

WASHINGTON
Patients who take Tarniflu
should be closely monitored
for signs of abnormal behavior, health officials said
Monday in announcing an
updated label for the flu drug.
The ' added precaution
comes after reports of more
than 100 new cases of delirium, hallucinations and other
unusual psychiatric behavior
in children treated with the
drug. Most were Japanese
children.
The Food and Drug
Administration said a relationship between the drug and the
behavior had not been establi~ and that the updated
label was "intended to mitigate
a poteiltial risk a~sociared .with
Tamitlu." It recommends that
close monitoring begin immediately after ~g treatment
with the drug. .
FDA said it had received
103 reports, mostly from
Japan, of injury and delirium
among the millions of flu
patients treated with Tamiflu.
The changes bring the U.S.
label more in line with the
Japanese one, which already
warned such abnormal behavior coold occur. The previous
FDA-approved label mentioned "seizure and confusion"
seen in some patients. _
Tarniflu is made by the
Swiss phannaceutical company Roche Holding AG. Roche
spokesman Terence Hurley
said there was no evidence the
drug caused the rarely occurring adverse events.
Both Roche and the FDA
also said that severe cases of
the flu can spark 1:\te abnormal
behavior flagged in the updated label.

Flu
f1om PageA1
cles to administer vaccinations.
Although one if not the
best way to avoid the flu is to
receive a flu shot, there are
other ways to ptotect yourself this cold and flu season.
Practice good hygiene by
washing your hands frequently and avoid touching
your eyes, nose or mouth as
much as possible; stay away
·
from people who are stck;
cover your mouth with a tissue with coughing or sneezing,· get regular exercise as
well as enough rest and eat
healthy, balanced meals.
Influenza is defined as a
vital infection in the nose,
. throat and lungs. A bout I 0 .
to 20 percent of Americans
get the flu each year. Each
year, about 130.000 peote
go to a hospital with the u,
and 20,000 people die
because of the flu and complications.
Those at higher risk of flu
complications, like pneu- .
moma, are all children aged
six to 59 months; all ·adults
aged 65 years or older; all

The surprise change came
three days before an FDA
panel of outside expens was to
discuss whether to recommend that the agency add the
precautionary language to the
Taniitlu label. In documents
released Monday, FDA staff
acknowledged that stopping
treatment ·with Tamitlu oould
actUally harm influenza
patients if the virus is the cause
of delirium, hallucinations and
other abnormal behavior, such
as aggression and suicidal
thoughts.
.
Last year, the same adVIsory
committee rejected making
any such changes to the laJlel.
At that time, however, the
committee did recommend
11\at the FDA continue to monitor the drug's safety and return
a year later with an '!pdate.
Health officials have been
sensitive about taking any
action that might dissuade
people from taking Tamiflu.
since the drug could play an
important role in an outbreak
of bird flu. The drug doesn't
prevent flu but can reduce the
length and severity of its
symptoms.
Previqusly, Roche has cited
studies from the United States
and Canada that show the
death mte of influ~ patients .
who took Tamiflu was far
below those who did not.
Most of the new cases of
bizarre behavior ·are from
Japan, where Tamitlu usage is
the highest in the world.
Between 200 I and 2005,
Tamiflu wa' prescribed 24.5
million times in Japan, compared with just 6.5 million in
the United States, which has
more than twice the population, · according to FDA.
However, FDA believes U.S.
usage could increase to
Japanese levels.
women who are or will be
pregnant during flu season;
residents in nursing homes
and long-term facilities;
individuals who have lonHterm health problems; cht dren aged six months· to 18
years who are on chronic
aspirin therapy; heath care
workers who have direct
contact with patients; care.givers and household contacts of children less than
six months of age.
Flu vaccines are available in shots or nasal spray
kb
·
and wor y exposmg your
immune system to the flu
virus. Your body will build
h ·
up antibodies
f to t e vtrus
·
hto
protect you rom geltlng t e
flu. The flu shot contains
dead viruses. The nasalspray vaccine contains Jive
but weakened viruses. You
.cannot get the flu from the
flu shot or the nasal-spray
vaccine .
Some people who get the
'vaccine will still get the flu,
but they will usually get a
milder case than people who
aren't vaccinated.

decorated gourd
'Educational
In the educational category, there are three classes:
one for winter landscape by
the Meigs County Master
Gardeners, and the other for
a display by each garden
club to submit ideas and
handouts next year's garden. The exhibit will als.o
include books of photos of
arrangements entered in previous 'Christmas flower
shows .

A!!~!·

11/t8 7 pm "Mystery"
The Ohio Valley Youth
Qtthesl[l
ll/25 7:30pm "USO ·
A Senlimentat Journey of .Music
from the 1930's and 40's"
presented by
The River Ci~ Plo~ers
12/2 8 pm "Jingle"
·The Ohio Valtei Siml!honi
Check oul 811 of oor magicol
.Holi\]Yt even~.- ·
www.an theatre
The Ariei•Dater Hall
428 Sec. Ave. Gallipoli~~H
740-446-ARTS (278

ANNUAL
Meigs Elementary School

Saturday, Novembe.r 18,2006
Tickets $6.00 Available at the door.
Serving Starts 5:00 pm
Rutland Vol. Fire Dept.
Tickets Available at: Quality Print Shop
Rutland Dept, Store
Pomeroy Flower Shop or Call Danny
742-2)72 or

.

'

�PageA6

•

The Daily Sentinel

OHIO

I

Tuesday, November 14,

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

2006 •·

Appeals court upholds one abortion
regulation, strikes dooo other
BY LISA CORNWEll

due . process clause of the ther ruling will significantly
Constitution.
change the current legal landThe appeals court agreed, scape for Ohio's abortion
however. with Beckwith's rul- clinics because the appeals
ing that &lt;l provision requiring court last year set aside
women seeking abortions to enforcement of the parental
attend a face-to-face meeting notification rule while allowwith _a doctor did not cause an ing the counseling rule to be
undue burden on those implemented pending the
women even though it COl)Jd tourt's decision.
delay abortions up to two
'The court's single-petition
weeks. The provision requires ruling reflect~ the fact that a
such a meeting for infonned- minor could have good rea&lt;;On
consent pU!pJses at least 24 to seek a judicial bypass after
hours before the procedure.
· being turned down on a first
AI Gerhardstein, the attor- one." said Gerhardstein . .
ney who filed the appeal,
The court diSagreed with
pmised the ruling on parental Gerhardstein's argument that
notification, but said the if the rule is unconstitutional,
coun 's finding on the coun- the whole law is unconstituseling rule is "unfortunate for tional. The appeals panel said
women and a setback for that the single-petition J?I:OVireproductive ·health." He said sion cOUld be deleted WtthOUt
no decision had been made on affecting the rest of the law..
whether to appeal Monday's
Gerhardstein also had
ruling.
. argued
that
in-person,
Ohio Attorney General Jim informed-consent meetings
Petro said the court's rejection · are all but impossible for
of the parental notification women in abusive situations.
ruling would have '1ittle prac- He argued that records from
tical effect," because initial three Ohio abortion clinics
requests are mrely denied.
showed that between six and
"We are pleased the courts 12.5 of,the 50 to 100 women
upheld the most important excused from a clinic's counprovisions of this very reason- seling requirement would be
able law," Petro said in a unable to meet the requirestatement.
ment without the. risk of .
Gerhardstein said that nei- domestic abuse.

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

CINCINNATI
An
appeals court upheld one
Ohio abortion regulation and
struck down another Monday,
ruling that minors should get
more than one chance during
a pregnancy to try to bypass a
'parental notification requirement and agreeing that
women· must get doctor counseling before an abortion.
A thnee-judge panel of the
6th U.S. Circuit Court of
Appeals issued its decision
Monday on an appeal of U.S.
District
Judge
Sandra
Becl-with's Sept. 8, 2005, ruling. The appeal wa' filed on
behalf of Cincinnati Women's
Services Inc., a now-&lt;:losed
clinic thai performed abortions.
The appeals court reversed
Beckwith's ruling that said it
would not cause an undue
burden to limit minors to one
request per pregnancy when
seeki_ng a judicial bypass of
the parental notification
requirement.
The appeals court said the
requirement acts as a substantial obstacle to the right to an
abortion in a large percentage
of cases, thereby violating the
&lt;

,.

Thesday, November 14,2006

.Hype, excitement, ticket prices way up·
BY MERDITII HEAGNEY
ASSOCIATED

. AP photo

Tom Noe, center, tall&lt;s with his lawyer Bill Wilkinson, left, and John Mitchell while waiting
for a verdict in his trial Monday at the· Lucas County Courthouse in Toledo. Noe, 52, a former GOP fundraiser was convicted Monday of embezzling from a rare-coin investment fund
in a scandal that contributed to the rout of Ohio's Republican Party on Election Day.

End
BY JOHN SEEWER
ASSOCIATED

~RESS

WRITER

TOLEDO - For seven
years, Tom Noe lived the
high life.
The rare coin dealer dined
with Ohio's most powerful
political leaders, reaped
invitations ·to the White
House and kept a seaside
home in the Florida Keys.
It all came to an end
Monday as Noe was hand. cuffed by federal marshals
and led out of a courtroom
where he was convicted of
stealing at least $2 million
from a state investment.
He now faces at least a
decade in prison after being
found guilty of theft, corrupt
activity. money laundering,
forgery and tampering with
records.
Noe's rise to prominence
in Ohio politics began in
1998.
That was the same year.
the Ohio Bureau of Workers"
Compensation gave him $25
million to invest in rare '
coins, followed by another
$25 million in 2001.

Prosecutors said during
his trial that he began s.tealing the money the day he got
it. He paid off a business
loan and started living a lavish lifestyle.
·
He bought homes. in Ohio
and Florida. He wined and
dined political leaders in
Columbus. And he became a
go-to-guy in the Republican
Party.
·
Once a member of state
boards that oversee the Ohio
Turnpike and Ohio's public
universities, he was a top
GOP fundraiser who gave
more than $105,000 to
Republicans including Bush
and Gov. Bob Taft in 2004.
Democrats say he got the
investment money because
of his political connections,
and that the deal revealed a
culture of corruption that
developed with Republicans
in charge of all of state government. Republicans say it
was an isolated case.
The trial put a spotlight on
the embarrassing scandal for
Republicans in ·the weeks
leading up to the election
last Tues~ay. Voters fed .up

with government conruption
scandals broke the GOP's
12-year lock on state government, electing Democrats
to the governor's office, a
U.S. Senate seat and three of
. four other key statewide .
offices.
·During the trial, Noe's former right-hand man testified
that they both intended to
repay the money at some
point.
Prosecutors doubted that
was true.
"If you don't know how
much you 've taken, how can
you pay it back?" said David
Buchman, a prosecutor who
worked on the investigation.
"They simply continued to
borrow and get in over their
head."
Noe stood still and stared
straight ahead when the verdiets were announced. He
did not look at jurors while
the judge asked them to confirm their verdicts ..
· He nodded when Lucas
· County Common Pleas
Judge Thomas Osowik said
he would be taken into custody.

Michelle Miller/photo

By this time next year, a new Hometown Hampton Inn will take the place of Ibis empty lot
next to Norris Northup Dodge on Eastern Avenue . .

KICK .OfF

.

Gallipolis will be new hotel site
BY MtcHm£ Mll..ER
MMILLER@MYDA.ILYTRIBUNE.COM

GALLIPOLIS ·- By this
time next year, a three-stoty.
approximately 68-room' hotel
will rest on the empty lot next
to Norris Northup Dodge on
Eastern Avenue.
According to Randy Breech,
owner of Breech Engineering,
Gallipolis, earth work should
begin a brand new Hometown
Hampton Inn in December.
To begin with. J2 feet of fill
will raise the hotel well above

the floodplain, a project that
will cost approximately
$300.000.
Drainage will be installed
around the site to avoid any
problems.
Construction on the hotel
should begin late March or
early April and will take
around seven months, weather
permitting.
·
The total cost of the project
will be approximately $3.5
million and the plans for both
.the hotel and a restaurant.
which construction will begin

on after the hotel is up and
running, have already been
approved by the Gallipolis
Planning Commission.
With prices \n the mid-mnge
for hotels, the new Hampton
Inn will have a small indoor
pool, meeting rooms and will
employ an estimated I0 to 15
people.
During the recent planning
commission meeting, City
Commission President Dow
Saunders said the new hotel
will be a "good addition for
the community."

Local stocks
ACI- 34
AEP- 41.43
Akzo- 57.19

Ashland - 65.85 ·
BIG- 21.41
Bob .Evans - 34.33
BorgWarner - 58.64
~ENX-

37.45

Champion - 6. 72
Charming Shops - 14:63
City Holding - 39,25
Col- 58.25
DG -13.91
DuPont- 47.48

Federal Mogul - .39
Pepsico - 61.41
USB- 33.70
Premier - 14.22
Gannett - 59.78
Rockwell- - 63.90
General Bectrtc - 35.36
Rocky Boots - 14.26
•·
Sears~
176.70
GKNLY- 5.80
Harley Davidson - 70.67
Wai-Mart - 48.47 .
JPM- 47.66
Wendy's - 35.30
Kroger - 22.07
Worthington - 17.58
Ltd.- 31.64
Dally stock reports are the
4 p.m. closing quotas of
NSC- 52.66
Oak Hill Financial - 27.31 the previous day's transacova- 25.40
tions, provided by Smith
BBT- 43.21
Financial Advisors of
Peoples - 29.59
Hilliard Lyons In Gallipolis.

Local weather
Tuesday ... Mostly cloudy
in the morning .. .Then
becoming partly cloudy. No~
as cool with highs in the
upper 50'. Light and v&lt;l[iable winds.
Tuesday night...Partly
cloudy in the evening .. .Then
becoming mostly cloudy.
Lows in the lower 40s. Light
and
variable
wind ~ .. . Beco min g

east

around 5 mph after midni ght.
Wednesday ... Cloud y with
rain likely. Highs around 60.
East winds 5 1n I0 mph .
Chance uf rain 70 percent.

.

Wednesday night...Rain.
Lows in the upper· 40s .
Southeast winds 5 to IU
mph with gusts up to 20
mph . Chance of rain I00
percent.
·
Thursday .. cMo s tly
Cloudy with a 50 percent
chance of showers. Highs in
the lower 50s.
Thursday nighL.Mostly
cloudy with a 30 percent
chance of showers. Cooler
with lows in the upper 30s.
Friday .. . Mostl y cloudy.
Highs around 50.
Friday
night
and
Saturday ... Pan ly clo ud y.

'

Lows in the mitl 30s. Highs
'in the lower 50s.'
Saturday nlght.. ~ Partly
cloudy with a 30 percent
chance of rain showers.
Lows in the mid 30s.
Sunday ... Mostly cloudy
with a chance of rain and
snow showers. Highs in the
upper 40s. Chance of precipitation 40 percent.
Sunday
night ... Panl y
cloudy wi th a chance of rain
showers. Lows in the lower
30s. Chance of rain 30 percent.
Monday ... Partl y cloudy.
Highs in the mid 40s.

•

THE

tiOLIDAY

SEASO"!
With your business
advertised in the

Dail Sentinel
Advertise in .Wednesday, rtov. 22,
Thanksgiving Day rtov. 23
~

..

·~

and Friday
rtovembvr 24
Editions
and Save
Advertising Deadline
Monday, November 20th ,
Call Dave or Brenda
992-2155

.

~RESS

COLUMBUS - . Tickets
to the football game with the
highest stakes this season
are selling for up to $1 ,500.
High school games are being
· moved to avoid conflicts
Saturday. University officials are encouraging fans to
behave.
It's Michigan-Ohio State
week. and the frenzy is
fueled by what's on the line
between the No. I Buckeyes
and the No. 2 Wolverines:
the Big Ten title, a trip to the
national championship and
bragging rights in one of
colle$e football's biggest
rivalnes.
·
'This is probably the
biggest game that's ever
come to Columbus," said
Tony Mollica, general manager of the Varsity Club, a
bar about 500 yards from
Ohio Stadium that expects
its best business ever this
weekend.
On the day of "The Game"
two years , ago, the Varsity
Club had run out of beer by
6J?.m., Mollica sai~ .. But not
thts time - a stocked,
refrigerated truck will be
parked outside to prevent
such a shortage.
R'yan Forgacs, the owner
of Main Event Ticket
Service, said game tickets
are fetching $550 to $1,500
- higher prices than he's
seen for a Michigan-Ohio
State game in the company's
eight years.
Tickets are more expensive than ones for the national championship ~arne· the
Buckeyes won m 2002,
Forgacs said.
About 2,900 students had
upgraded their student tic_k-

inappropriate behavior," he
said.
The Frog Bear &amp; Wild
Boar Bar isn't expecting any
brawls, despite the ·fact that
the II ,000-square-foot venue
is being divided into two
sides - the Buckeye faithful
and traveling Michigan fans.
The bar usually has a milder
croWd, said marketing direc.tor Randy Haffey.
The two groups will have
separate sound systems, so
each can jam to their own
fight songs, and each side will
be decorated accordingly.
The bar has been inundated
with reservations from fans
of both teams, Haffey said.
"I have a feeling there will
be a lot more Michigan fans
in town this time," he said.
The Franklin County Board
of Elections has decided not
to open on Saturday and will
wait until the next day to
count 18,000 absentee and
provisional ballots that will
.
AP photo decide the tight congressional
Ohio State fans wait in line at Value City Arena in Columbus Monday, to upgrade tickets for Saturday's football game race between Republican
between Ohio State and Michigan. It's Michigan-Ohio State week, and the frenzy is fueled by what's on the line between incumbent Deborah Pryce
the No. 1 Buckeyes and the No. 2 Wolverines: the Big Ten title, a trip to the national championship and bragging rights in and · Democrat Mary Jo
one of college football's biggest rivalries.
Kilroy.
Elections Director Matthew
ets to regular tickets as of somebody offered me thing of this magnitude that Michigan.
Damschroder acknowledged
Friday, allowing them to $1,000 I'd probably take has caused us .to make such
Mitch
Brown,the last week that football 'give the tickets away or sell that."
.
drastic changes," he said.
Columbus safety service along with worker fatigue _
them without the recipient
High school football playConcerned by rioting and director, promised a signifi- was a factor in the decision.
needing a student ID.
off games scheduled for couch burning after the cant police presence on camd ·
Sam Fretz, 19, a secon~- Saturday evening have been Michigan game four years pus without divulging
Not everybo Y IS preparing for·a big day, though. On
year student from Denver, is moved to earlier in the day ago - events that annual! y details for tactical reasons.
waiting to decide to go or to .or to Friday. The Ohio High show up on TV news video
Mayor Michael Coleman, most
Saturdays, · the
sell. He has a friend who. School Athletic Association highlights _ city and uni- whose birthday.. is Saturday, Confluence Park Restaurant
sold his ticket for about worried it would not be able versity cfficials O!l Monday said the game js a historic in Columbus hosts at least
$700.
to get as · many fans or emphasized the importance opportunity for the city and one or two wedding recep"I really do want to go see enough stadium workers if of responsible fan behavior. . the campus but also warned tions, said catering sales
the game but if in fact some- the playoffs overlapped with
Officials . unveiled four against bad behavior.
manag~r Regina Myers. But
one did come up to me with the afternoon Ohio State- .public service TV announce"I want you to know that not t~ts weekend. -~yers
a good offer I would sell it, Michigan game, Assistant ments, dubbed Best Fans in we have a game plan off the · doesn t remember ~ostmg a
Bob the Land, that encourage ·· field and that game plan will w~dd_mg . r~cepuon on
just because ·I'm a college . Com~issioner
student · and need the Goldnng said.
people to cheer for Ohio be one where, frankly there MiChigan-Ohio State game
money," Fretz said. "If
"We've never had any- State and not against . will be no tolerance of any day in the past seven years.

Jones steps up as Redmen dominate All-AMC
team;
Dawson
named
POY
Cavs step past Knicks
BY MARK WtWAMS
SPECIAL TO THE SENTINEL

BY BRIAN MAHONEY
ASSOCIATED PRESS

NEW YORK - LeBron .
James and Damon Jones
'
took
turns
carrymg
CleveIand and scored 29
points apiece, leading the
Cavaliers over the New York
Knicks I 02-96 Monday
night for their third straight
victory.
Jones kept Cleveland in
the game m the first half
with 24 points, and made
seven 3-pointers in what
was easily his best game of
the season. James scored 19
in the second half, and also
set up baskets by Donyell
Marshall aild Anderson
Varejao in the fourth quarter,
both after New York had
closed within two points.
· Nate Robinson scored 19
points and nearly led · the
Knicks back from a 14-point
deficit, but New York fell to 03 at Madison Square Garden
this season. Jamal Cmwford
had 18 and Channing Frye
added 17, ending his horrendous stan to the season.
The Knicks led for most of
the first half. but Cleveland
stayed close behind Jones, ·
who was 7-of-8 in 17 minAP Photo
utes through two quarters. Cleveland Cavaliers' LeBron James drives during the first
His three free throws gave
Cleveland its tirstlead at 39- quarter of NBA basketball action against the New York
38 with 3:18 remaining, and Knicks Monday at Madison Square Garden In New York.
he followed with a 3-pointer
Jones hit another 3 to make after Stephon Maffiury missed
four-point advantage . He it 81-67 with under 10 min- a 3, James pushed the lead to .
was 6-of-7 behind the arc at utes remaining before the six with thnee 1!ee throvys.
half\ime, with the Cavs up Knicks stormed back. New
Hughes fimshed wtth 14
York'
hit
nine
of
its
frrst
10
points
for the Cavs, who
7
51-4
· th e pen·od, gettu1,g
·
Jam~s finally heaied up sh.ot~ m
snapped a three-game 1osmg
midway through the third, w1thm 84-82. on Crawford s streak at Madison Square
3k_·
a J·umper and fol- floater wtth 6.15 to play.
Garden.
m _mg .
. . , . Marshall then dunked,. and
A first-team All-Rookie
lowmg with a steal and when the Knicks got Within selection last season, Frye
bucket about 20 seconds two again, James found
d'
·
later for a. 67-58 lead w1th Varejao inside 00 make it 90- had been such ·a tsappomt2:36 left in the 9uarter. He 86_ New York eventually got ment that his eighth point,
added a 3-pomter that within one when Crawford with 3:20 left first quarter,
pushed the lead to 12 with followed his long 3-pointer was already a season high.
2:02 remaining, and the with a dunk in transition. but He entered averaging only
Cavs were up 71-63 heading 1...arty Hughes knocked down 3.4 points on 22 percen~
to the fourth.
• · a jumper with I:25 left. and shooting.
-

--;

ward
Guy
Heywood.
Heywood, last's ·year AMC
South Player of the Year,
CEDARVILLE - As the wins a second straight I st .
University of Rio Grande team honor. The high-scormen's soccer team gears up ing forward led the Redmen named as honorable menfor at a second NAJA in scoril)g with 22 goals and tion. Brown netted seven·
National Championship, six four assists (48 points). goals and eight assists (22
members of the squad were
Sen 1·or defender Tony pomts
· ) th'IS season and
·
red
th
All
A
hono on e - mencan Griffiths also was named 1st Massie burst on the scene
Mideast Conference South teatn. Gn'ffiths was on· the
'
·
with eight goals and 17
DivisiOn team.
2nd team in 2005 and 2003.
· mt'd•file lder Conar Griffiths scored· one goal assists (33 points).
Semor
Dawson was tabbed as the
Rio Grande is 17-2 and
South Division Player of the and four assists (six points) ranked No. 2 in the final
Year as well as landing on and was one of the primary . NAJA Top 25 poll. The
the 1st-Team. Dawson is the defensive.stoppers.
' der Pa. uI Redmen ·finished the AMC .
Sop· homore deien
sixth straight Rio player to
Nicholson earned AII-AMC season at 7-1 tying Ohio
earn the POY honor. In 2006 Dawson was sec- · South second team honors. Dominican for a fifth
ond on the team in scoring Nicholson was a rock for the straight AMC South title arid
with 19 goals and nine Rio defense teaming with captured a sixth consecutive
assists (47 points). Dawson Griffiths as a great 1-2 AMC/NAIA Region IX Title
was also I st AII-AMC South punch on defensive' end. ·
d Fran k and a berth in the NAIA
'
Sop homore .orwar
last year.
Joining Dawson on the Brown and freshman mid- National Tournament in
frrst team was junior for- fielder Jason Massie were Daytona Beach. FL.

Michigan's Carr has_a chance
to silence remaining crities
defend" his mark against
Tressel or anyone, but his
mentor came to his defense
ANN ARBOR, Mich.
when the topic arose
Lloyd Carr has quieted most Monday.
of the criticism about his · "That's hogwash," former
coaching this year, leading Michigan
coach
Bo
Michigan to an 11-0 record Schembechler said. "Go
and its best season since he back through the history of
won the 1997 national title . the Michigan-Ohio State
Carr can .silence his series ... one would win two,
remaining critics - perhaps three in a row. Th&lt;!t's just the
one last time - if he can way it is.
·
help the second-ranked
"1 think we should ·go back
Wolverines beat No. I Ohio and look at Lloyd's record. I
State on the road Saturday don 't care whether he beats
and earn a spot in the nation- Tressel or not."
al championship game .
Carr is 113-34 overall If Michigan loses, hi s winning 77 percent of his
record against nuckeyes games .to rank among active
coach Jim Tressel will drop coaching leaders - and 75to 1-5 and to 6-6 overall in 20 in the Big Ten with five
one of the most storied rival- conference championships
ries in sports.
in 12 seasons as head coach.
Carr has never been one to Against Top-! 0 teams, he is

·-- -'" ·--· ·- --

BY LARRY LAGE

ASSOCIATED PRESS

~--

-

-

-

-

-

16-6 and has won eight of I0
against teams in the top five .
. But at Michigan and Ohio
State, how you fare in the
rivalry is what really matters.
Just ask John Cooper.
Cooper won 72 percent of
. his games with the
Buckeyes. but was 2-10-1
against the · Wolverines including a 1-5 mark against
Carr.
When Tressel was hired in
2001 , qe didn't waste any
time letting fans understand
what hi&gt; focus was. Four
hours after being fonnall y
· announced as Cooper's suecessor, Tressel sent the
crowd at a Michigan-Ohio
State basketball game into a
frenzy.
,
PIN~ see Mkhlc•n. 81
t

�.•
·'

Page B2 • The Daily Sentinel

Thesday, November 14, 2006

www.mydailysentinel.com

··Tuesday, November 14,2006

Ramirez, Verlander win Rookie of the Year awards
•

BY

Josh Johnson was fourth,
ASSOCIATED PRESS
tabbed first on the other two
entries.
Right
After Ramirez won, one of
NEW YORK after Hanley Ramirez heard the tlrst calls he got was
he was the NL Rookie of the from Uggla, his double-play ·
Year, he started getting con- partner and good friend.
gratulatory calls from his
''Nobody was talking
Florida Marlins teammates. about winning Rookie of the
That was only .fitting, Year in the clubhouse,"
· because some of his tough- Ramirez said. "No egos."
est competitio.n came from
Verlander easily won the
all those other baby-faced AL award after his closest
playel'li inside his own club- competitors in a race domihouse.
nated by pitchers were sideRamire z
• edged lined late in the season
Washington third baseman because of injuries. The
Ryan Zimmerman in a tight · hard-throwing right-hander,
race for NL honors, and who helped the surprising
Detroit Tigers pitcher Justin Tigers ·reach the World
Verlander took home the AL Series, was listed first on 26
award when balloting by the of 28 baJlots for a total of
Baseball
Writers'
Association of America was 133 points. '
revealed Monday.
Boston closer Jonathan
''I'm so happy," Ramirez Papelbon came in second
said. "I want to thank each with
63
points, .and
one of my teammates, . Minnesota lefty Francisco
be cause every.day th ey gave Liriano finished third.
me the energy to play in the
''I was· pretty excited. I
big leagues."
was actuaJly outside washRamirez
beat
out ing the car. I totally forgot
Zimmerman by four points that today was the day it was
- the closest NL vote since announced," Verlander said.
the current formal was "It was pretty fun just to be a
adopted 26 years ago. The part of tliis rookie class."
speedy shortstop got 14 of
Next up is the NL Cy
30 frrsi-place votes and fin- Young Award, another wideished with 105 points. open race. The winner will
Zimmerman received 10 be announced Tuesday.
first-place votes and totaled
The
23-year-old
10 I points.
· Verlander, who went 17-9
· Three of the top four NL with a 3.63 ERA, became
finishers · were. Marlins. tbe first starting pitcher to
Second baseman Dan Uggla win AL Rookie of the Year
came in third, getting six since Dave Righetti of the
first-place votes, and pitcher New York Yankees in 198 I.
MIKE fiTZPATRICK

Verlander, Ramirez. named 101 rookies
Tigers' flame-thrower Justin Verlander easily took the AL Rookie of
the Year award, and Marlins' shortstop Hanley Ramirez won the
NL award in a tight race Monday.
l;lanley Ramirez
Florida Marlins
Shortstop

Justin Verlander
Detroit Tigers

. RHP
ERA

so

3.63
124

RBI

Tied for fourth in wins among all AL
pitchers and rattled off an 11-1 record
from May 4-Aug. 9, helping lead the
Tigers to the World Series.
AMERICAN LEAGUE

COLUMBUS - Gerard
Gallant was fired as the head
· coach of the Columbus Blue
Jackets on . Monday, less
than 24 hours after the team·
d!OpJ?ed into last place in its
diVISIOn.
No
rJ:placement
for
Gallant
was
named.
Columbus next plays at
home Wednesday night
against Nashville.
, The 43-year-old Gallant
had a record of 56-76-l 0 in
one full season and parts of
two others as the head coach
of the Blue Jackets. The
team fell to 5-9-1-0 this season and to last place in the
Central Division of the
Western Conference after
With the signing of free
Sunday night's 1-0 loss at agent Anson Carter and the
Chicago.
addition of Fredrik Modin in
Gallant's
firing
was . a trade, the B.lue Jackets
announced by general man- were expected to be a possiager Doug MacLean, who ble playoff contender. The
also has come under fire team also has rising young
because the franchise has yet stars such as Rick Nash,
to make ,it to the playoffs in who shared the NHL lead in
its tlrst five seasons.
goals in 2003-2004, Nikolai
MacLean called a news Zherdev
and
Pascal
conference for Tuesday Leclaire, along with vetermoming to discuss the job. ans Sergei Fedorov and
•
The team's top two. assis- Adam Foote.
tants are Gary Agnew and
Gallant took over for
Gord
Murphy,
should MacLean midway through
MacLean seek a short-term the 2003-2004 season and
solution.
finished with a 16-24-5
MacLean said he was dis- record. After the lockout
appointed to hav·e to fire season, the Blue Jackets
Gallant.
went 35-43-4 a year ago and
"He . has shown tremen- set club records for wins and
dous dedication to our orga- points while finishing with a
mzatton over the past six- rush. They went 23-16-2 in
plus years and worked as the second half of the season
hard as he could to help our after Nash returned from an
team · be
successful," tnjury.
. .
.
MacLean said· in a stateA former star player m the
n\ent. "Unfortunately, we NHL •. pnnc1pally w1th the
have not gotten off to the DetrOit Red Wmgs, Gallant
stan we expected this season had been with the club since
and while there are always a its inaugural season in 2000of
factors 2001. He spent more than
multitude
involved. we felt a change ttiree seasons as an assistant
. befo(e he was elevated to
was needed."

Top VOte-getters

NATIONAL LEAGUE

1st 2nd 3rd Tot

Y!r!~!'!~~............ -~..... J .......... J~
~:. f.~p~l.l?.9.~! .~9.~~. 9.....?9.....'.:3..... §.~

R~m.I.~....................J~... :J~ ..... ~.J~
f.!:. ?;i!.'}~~!'!.l}~!'!•. Y'!..~!'!: .19... .1.~......~...19J

F. Liriano, Min.

1

3 16

30 ·

D. Uggla, Fla.

6

3 16

55

AP

The last Tigers player to
receive the honor was second baseman Lou Whitaker
in 1978.
"It's a nice tribute to him
and his teammates," Detroit
manager Jim Leyland said in
a telephone interview from
his home in Pittsburgh.
"Usually when you accomplish something like this, it's
a combination of earning it
with your play and with

MIWR

ASSCCIATED PRESS

Second Major League rookie since
1900 with. 115-plus runs scored and
50-plus stolen bases. SeattleDs lchiro
Suzuki accomplished the feat in 2001.

1st 2nd 3rd Tot

Blue Jackets fire coach Gallant
BY RuSTY

59

AP photo

Columbus Blue
Jackets head
coach Gerard
Gallant watches
the first period
against the
Tampa Bay
Lightning in an
NHL hockey
game in this
Jan. 13, 2006
file photo in
Tampa, Fla. The
Columbus Blue
Jackets fired
Gallant Monday.

teammates making contributions. Winning usually
helps, too."
Ramirez gave the Marlins
their second· Rookie of the
Ye~ in four years, joining
ace pitcher Dontrelle Willis,
who played a little prank on
his teammate by calling in
unannounced
during
Ramirez's conference call
with South Florida reporters.
"I just called in to say con-

grats. I love you. Keep doing
your thing out there," Willis
said.
The 22--year-old Ramirez,
acquired from Boston last
November in a deal for Josh
Beckett · and Mike Lowell,
batted .292 with 17 homers,
59 RBis, 119 runs and 51
stolen bases. Ramirez also
hit 46 doubles and 11 triples.
Voters select their top
three choices and points are

tabulated on a 5-3-1 basis .
Before 1980, writers voted
for just one rookie.
Zimmemian, who actually
appeared on more ballots
than Ramirez (29-27}, hit
.287 with 20 homers, 110
RBls and 47 doubles. He
also played strong defense at
third base.
"To tell you the truth, you
can't
be · disappointed,
because you had a great
year," Zimmerman said. "I
knew it was going to be a
really close vote, and that
made it kind of easier. It was
a tough year to be a rookie,
because there were so many
good ones."
Pre.viously, the closest NL
election was in· 1982 when
Steve Sax of the Los
Angeles Dodgers edged .fellow second baseman Johnny
Ray of Pittsburgh 63-57.
Six Marlins received
votes, the most for one team
on a rookie ballot. Pitchers
Scott Olsen and Anibal
Sanchez were also mentioned, along with outfielder
Josh Willingham.
Liriano and Baltimore outfielder Nick Markakis, who
finished sixth, received the
other frrst-place votes in the
AL. Seattle catcher Kenj i
Johjima came in fourth, and
Los Angeles Angels pitcher
Jered Weaver was fifth.
Previous winners from
Detroit were pitcher Mark
Fidrych in 1976 and shortstop Harvey Kuenn in 1953.

Redwomen soccer lands
five on All-AMC team
BY MARK WtWAMS
SPECIAL TO THE SENTINEL
CEDARVILLE - Five members of the
University of Rio Grande women's soccer
garnered honorable mention honors on the
All-American Mideast Conference South
Division team.
Sophomore forward Beth Hoffman earned
the honor for the second straight season.
Hoffman was t~e team's leading scorer and
number one option .on offense. She scored
five goals and had one assist (II points) in
13 games played this season.
Freshman Leslie McGee and sophomore

~ribune

MORE LOCAL SPORTS. MORE LOCAL FOLKS.

+

Meigs County, OH

...

1!\"!11'..----------=0:.:,r,.F.iiiiaxTo

446-3008

Or Fax To (740) 992·2157

Word Ads

Dally ln~column: l:OO p .m.
MonHy-Prld•y for ln. . rtlon

Monday thru Friday
8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.
HOW IO. WRnE AM AD

Ohlo.VIIIoy
Publlllhlng ffltNII
lilt rtghl!O odH,
rejlcl or concol any
od at lny limo.
Errors lluat
Repo&gt;rlld on 1t1o ft
or pobllcatlon
Trlbunt-Stnllntl
···-'-

will

r
r ~'1S
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ANNooN

Pa~r

Sunday In-Column: 1:00 p.m.

All Dlaplay: 12 Noon 2

au•ln.. . D•YII Prtor To
Publication
·
$unct.y Dl•play: 1:00

POLIC1ES: Ohio Valley PubtlltMg.....,..,.. tM rtgM to tctll, retect. or~ any ld at 1ny time. Errort mu1t bl111p0rtld on thl flrat
~· Rlgll"r wtll be relpOnllbll tor no men thAn lhl c011 ofthllpKe occupied by the trror and only theflrat lnMrtion.
eny ton or u,.n.. tNd r.tultt frorn IN p; lll It ; or oml•lon of Mt adV«tiMmtinL Corntctlon will bl miiCh~n theflrl11¥.tlal* .clition. •lox
n llwlp oonfhNntw. • Curr'lflt rMt arc! • • · • All I'MIIItlte ldvtnt..,...ntl are 1ubject to thl Fecltrlt Fair Houalng Act ot ntea. • Thla ,
tiCOfPPtl only help_.... ada
EOE itlliidM'dL We will nalllnawli'lgty accept 1ny .tvmblngln vl•tton of the law.

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.K,..IT-:-&amp;_c_A_R_t:_-r_LE_ _ _ _ _ _ _...,._ _ _ _ _ _
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,..
GIVFAWAY

I

Free 10 good home spayed
Blue Heeter. Wonderful
Attn: Xmas Shoppers Home house pet, current oo vaocl·
Decorating Sale, most items nations. (740)245·5t86.
50% oH. Sat. N0\1. 18th,
Bam·Spm, Gloria Otter, State Giveaway: Kinens, line,
Aouto 325, Langsville,. Oh, trained. (740)446·7872.
(740)742·2076
- - - - - - - - Greyibtack Tabby cat, li&gt;ed,
I Jeremy Scott Smith will not declawed, house broke,
be responsib'e for any deb1s updated shots, great with
other than my . own as of kids. (740)992~7093.
11/10/ll6
Two bedroom oceanfront Malo Blue Heeler, 6 months
Condo, Qocoa Beach, FL o4d, no papers. Call

t

'&lt;

f.
n

~

!.
I'I~Af

-r; 1'1\e'
I~

(740)379·~798.

Resort, Dec.3· 10. 2006.
(740)446·0106
(740)709·1292
Sisson.

I

LOST;
Black and WMe
Border Collie, New Have'n
;eights araa. Answers to
Tipper. Call (304)882·8240

lost chocolate
female Lab, - Timber Ridge
area . 3
weeks
ago. 110
(740)256·1824 or (740)55Q. 1
t473.

···:·... :-:~ .. ; . .·.· ..
r

IIIEA,

CLASSIFIED INDEX

". ··.-

fil!,l.¥

~"'.II'.L-0
W.··~.
..

-·-for-·. . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

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www.comics.com

-!!1~------,
HHIJIIWANim
lll'i•I•O______

I

t

•

Inc.

Free to a good home···1 0 M
onth old part bloodhound,
AUCilON AND
male dog-·very good
fu.A MARKEr
nature-- must
give
awliy- moving---{740}992· Auction
Henderson
5408 or (740)416·5482.
Community Center
Thursday Noliember 91h,
Free to good home Blue 6pm . Cash Draw beginning
Hoaler. t yr old , good wilh and end of Sale.
children, will make good Thursday November 161h.
farm dog, needs room lo 6pm. Turkey giveaway fNery
run . (740)645·71 t5.
hour. Jim (JC) Cowan
Auctioneer WW 1674

4x4'o For Sole .............................................. 725
Announcoment ............................................ 030
Anllqun ....................................................... 530
~ for "-"1 ................................... 440
· Auction - File Morket...........................,:oeo
Auto Plrlll • Acceuorln ......................... 760

•

..... ·... : .. . . .

Reward

r

I"o

UWW.OOID

·II.~~--II'MR·Sclloot.s-UCI1()N--.,t1
.
eo
• ~

. ...
Position available for an
Assistant Housemanager to
work evenings, nights and
weekends ~t a .-ghelter klr
women
and
children.
Applicant must have high
sdlool diploma or equivalent Duties include: Intake
procedures, answering crisis
calls, shatter housekeeping
duties and Interaction with
the residents. Appl~cant
must be ab!e to work 1nde·
pendently and ha\le good
pe:opte skills. Interested
applicants may apply lo
Personnel , PO Box 454,
Gallipolis. OH 45631 by
November 28th.

Karate prtYite and group 4 rental houses ·For Sale~
Instruction. Books, unl· Good income producing
forma, auppllta. · Don propenies. Great locatlonl
Blntang•'• Martl1l Arta Price{s) are Negotiable.
Center,
(740)t92·5715 Motivated
Seller1
In
Open O.lly
Gallipolis. Ce.ll Wayne
...
(404)456·3802 .

lrro

~

I 5 acres with 3BR brick home

~·_ _ _ _ _ __.t. full basement, 5 mi. E. ol

Jackson. Up to 65 acres
Seasoned tire wood, Oak
and Hicttory split. You haul available
(7 40)286·5255
or 1 haUl· Take HEAP 740 _ after Bprn; (7 40)418·2421
aays.
94 9-2038
·
-------1180
WANTED
5BR. 3.5 bath ranch llomo.
• •
ToDo
3,100+ sq. ft. Hardwood
floors, fireplace, deck, 2-car
Come st.y with ui during garage, LA, Family room,
the winter. 2 females, 2 many extras. 2.5 acres near
R&amp;J TRUCKING malos or a couple. (304)675· Meigs
High
School.
$149,000. 740-416-4765.
Leading The
6183.
R&amp;J Truc;.;lng now Hiring al - - - - - - - - About $3000 down .. 8~2 S.
George's Portable Sawmill, 3d
our New Haven. WV
r . A.ve., Middleport. TrOt oily
don't haul your Logs to the
Terminal. For R.....,ional
rem odeled. 3 bed rooms, 1
~~~
Mill just call 304-675-1957
b t
Hauls-Dump Div. 1 year
a h. Per••eel· credit not
QTR
required Payment $525 .
verifiable exp.
..::::::1.
Appraised $70,000 . 740·
can 1-800-462·9365 ask lor . . Ray &amp; Son's 367-7129.

I

way

6 month old female dog. has - - - - - - - been fiked, miKed breed. Lost:Near Vinton, very large
(740)388-8005.
friendly black hound named
Skippy.
Please
call
Complete twin bed set. Call (740)388·0416. we mis•
him.
(740)446-8896.
Free kittens. 8 weeks old.
Long hair, gray female and
'long hair charcoal black
female. 740-698·9252.

ft\E

C..AIIIE

or
Cathy

. GIVFAWAY

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succellful Ad1
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*POLICIES*

Oearll1ire.i

1!'1!:-'-----.,

,.III"O . u- -w.· ·-·

FEDERAL

nu.r

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Kent
Receptioni s~ needed for
b
Ph · · •
H.
E&gt;&lt;perienat
preferred. oSend
usy
ysocoans
•ce.

Resume, through 11 /17106
to Bok TSC-.11, c/o Poi ~!
Plaasan~ Register 200 Ma1n
UCENSED SOCIAl WORK·
St. , Po1nt Pleasant, WV
ERS
25550

Compl•te..Car

(740)367.()()()0

WANIDJ

roBuv

Auto Repolr .................................................. no

Autoe for Sole .............................................. 710
750

Building SUppltee..................................:.... sso
Bue- llfld Bulldlnge ............................. 340
aue- 0pportuntty................................. 210
a u - Trlilnlng ....................................... 140
Compere • Motor - . ........................... 780
c.mptng Equlpi1Hiftl ......................:............ 780
tarde of Thlnke ......................................... OIO

All Nil Ntate ..tvertlelng
In thla ••• ; pw Ia

IUtJtlct to IN Feder~~~

Fair Hou•ne Act ot 1811
which mtkM it lllegd to
advefttM ....,,

Eleclrlct!IIRefrlgeratlon ............................... 840
EqulprMnt lor llent..................................... 480
E1C8Vatlng ................................................... 830
F., Equlpment .....: ....................................&amp;10
FRent.............................................430
f8rln8 for S.le ............................................. 330
ForLNH ....................... :............................. 490
For Slle ... :.......................... ,........................ 585
For Sole or Tredo ................:........................ 580
FNb • V8gelablea .................................... 580
Furntohed Roomo .........................................SO
OoMrel Hlullng ......................................: ....l50
~oy.....................................................040

Pl•••uc., llmtt.tlon or
dlacrlmlnltlon bned on
taett,, color, rwllglan, • •
flmll~ 1tldul or nation.t

for

don't-break scheme on
defense and Mike DeBord
implementin~ a zone-blocking style sim1lar to what has
worked for the Denver
Broncos for years.
The coaching changes
were made without Car(
having to fire his previous
coordinators, allowing them
to leave to be NFL assistants.
· "Coach Carr is loyal, but
you do what you have to
do," said former Wolverine
Baas,
a
San
David
Francisco 49ers guard. "He
did, and it's worked ."
But the truth is, a lot of
what Carr accomplished
this season in a bounce. back year will be forgotten
if he loses to Tressel for a
fifth time in six games.
Barringer,
a
1 Willis
Michigan safety and Ohio
native, provided a much·
needed dose of levity to the
story when asked what he
would say to people who
think Tressel has Carr's
number.
"He should call him
sometime," Barringer said.

,,

•

---A---0.-,-~

" ~;Deal company Offering ·No
Cleaning
DOWN PAYMENr pro·
grams for you to buy your
hrime instead of renting .
N e wash
by hand •100%financing .
~omptete waSh job • Less than pert8ct credit
lspeelal $5.00 off. Ex1erio accepted
L..:.sh job $3.00 off
•
• Payment could be the
I"""
same as rent.
Mortgage
Locators
·

Chtld/EideriJ care ...................................... 190

Michigan

.Randy Moss Award will
go to top college returner

ter

Websjtes:
In One Week With Us
'NWw.mydailytribune.com
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www.mydailysentinel.com
classifled@mydailytrlbune.com REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS
www.mydailyregister:com
PLUS YOUR
NOW ONLINE
To Place
l\egi~ter
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Sentinel
ca~r;.::y (740). 446-2342 (740) 992-2156 (304) 675-1333

Redmen No. 4 seed - at tourney
in the game to give the
Redmen the victory.
Rio Grande is eager to
eager to get back to action at
the national tournament
afier falling short in .2005
when they were the top seed
in the 20-team lield. Rto was
bounced in the quartertlnals
last year by Hastings (NB),
2-0.
Fans will be able to all the
action of the Red men ·at the
national tournament as
Stretch Internet will provide
play-by-play coverage of
every Rio game.

- Sentinel -

CLA .S SIFIED

Jill McQuinniff represent the defense while
freshman forward Tiffany Reese and sopho·more goalkeeper Sarah Sandlin were also
first time award winners.
.
Reese was the second leading scorer for
the Redwomen, scoring four goals and one
assist (nine points) in 12 games and Sandlin ·
was extremely busy in the;· net for the
Redwomen. She posted 182 saves, which
established a new school-record, in I ,259
minute~. Sandlin had a 4.5 goals against ·
average.
Rio Grande finished an injury-riddled
season with a· 2-14 ma:rk overall and 0-8 in
the AMC South.

replace MacLean as coach.
Gallant was a fixtllfe at
left wing for the Red Wings
BY MARK WtWAMS
power. The two schools
for nearly a decade. After a
SPECIAL TO THE SENTINEL
have not met since Nov. 19,
rookie season in 1984 in
2001
in
the
NAJA
which he scored six goals
RIO GRANDE _ Rio . S~mifinals with
when
and h:Jd 12 assists in 32 Grande earned a too. 4 seed Lmdsey won 2- I. That 2~1
games, he averaged 72 at the NAIA National sea~n w~s the first -;&gt;f SIX
games and 56 points for the Tournament and wjll face straight trips to the nationals
next eight years, . including the winner of No. 20 for the R1o soccer team .. ..
four consecutive seasons of Lindsey Wilson and No. 13
It would be. a fam1har
at least 70 points from 1986- Judson (Ill.) on Thursday, opponent for R10 1f Judson ·
1990.
Nov. 16 at J I a.m. in the sec- gets by LWC m the opemng
ond
round.
round. The Redmen ~efeatThe Blue Jackets have
lt
will
prove
·to
be
a
tough
ed
Judson, Sept. 8, m the
mustered just one goal in
ftrst
match-up
for
the
17·2
Judson
College tournament
their last two games. They
scored points in the season's Redmen as Lindsey Wilscn by a 1-0 score. Jumor midfirst three games, winning is the defending national fielder Ryan Baxter scored
~ lwice and fueling the excite- champion and a perennial With two mmules remammg
ment of fans. But since then,
they have lost nine .of their
- its worst in two decades
last 12 starts.
- and closed a . second
Offense - expected to be
straight season with losses
a strength - has been a
to Ohio State and in bowl
fromPageBl
problem this season. They
games.
have scored just 33 goals,
"When you had .the ty~
"I can assure you that
the fewest in the league. •
of
season we had, you re
you 'II be proud of our young
either
going to back down
Their II points is the people if! the classroom, .in
.
.
·
and you're going to continthlr?-worst. 10 the NHL, the comrnumty - and espe- ue. that trend, or you're
behmd Ph1ladelph1a and Cially in 310 days in ·Ann gomg get up and fight,"
Phoenix, who had eight Arbor, Michigan," Tressel Carr said. ••1 don ' t think
apiece heading into Monday said on Jan. 18, 2001.
there's any question that it
Tressel wa&amp; right.
ni ght 's action.
The
Buckeyes
beat motivated all of us, and
Michigan 26-20 on the. road that's what it should have
in his debut season. After done."
Carr found a motivationaJ
losing to Michigan in 2003,
Tressel has led the Buckeyes ploy that worked this season.
to two straight wins and has like he did in 1997, with a
Jon Krakauer's
a chance to lead them to book "Into
Thin
,Air"
- about a
three straight wins in the
series for the first time since group that used teamwork to
climb Mt. Everest. He startGulf Coast the early 1960s.
OAKLAND, Calif. (AP) Minnesota and Oakland,
ed
showing clips from the
Tressel agreed that coach- Randy Moss has a new .scoring on a 64-yard punt
Events and
movie "Cinderella Man''
award named after him .
GameDay es in t,he rivalry are given during preseason practices
return for the Vikings in
1999.
Consultants, too much credit- and crit- and has gone back to it the
The top returner in
Division 1-A college football
··sack in college, I took
operators of icism.
··Not unlike the quarter- day before each game this
as chosen by sports informa· P.ride in that," Moss said.
the
2007
season.
tion directors will receive 'That's somethin~ I've
North South back sometimes gets blamed
A boxer in the movie tells
A II· Star for things and maybe there his trainer that his opponent
the Randy Moss Return Man always had the pass10n and
love for is bemg able to
Classic . The wasn't good protection or a is not the same guy he was
Award.
finalists for ball was drop!&gt;ed here or previously, just as the
Moss was the leading kick catch a kickoff, catch a
the award there, and the same as with a Wolverines don't believe
retarner in Division 1-AA in punt and be able to run it
back,
because
that
can
MOll
will
be coach," he said.
1996 when he averaged 34.6
they're the same team they
in
the
·
-picked
Dec
.
make
a
difference
Cart has been hailed as a were last year.
yards
per return
for
with
the
winner great coach and has been
Marshall. He has returned game. Tt can bust a game 13
"It fits perfectly," offenannounced at the North second-guessed like a rooktwo kicks and 18 punts in his wide open."
sive tackle Rueben Riley
The award was created by . South game Jan . 13.
nine-year NFL career with
ie, and the latter happened a said.
lot last season and then carCarr's new coordinators
ried into· the winter, spring also provided a flawless
m\ltch, with Ron English
and summer.
Subscribe today 992-2155
Michigan was 7-5 in 2005~ getting rid of a bend-but-

The Daily Sentinel • Page' 83

www.mydallysentlnel.com

HlppyAdo............................... ................ .....050
Hoy • Groln ..................................................840
Help Wllllld ................................................. 11 0

origin, or .ny ln'tel'ttion to
m11ke MY such
Prefel'lnoe, limitation or

dlacrlmiMtion."
This MWSPIIpel" will no1
knowingly~""'"" for rMI
.... ttl which Is In
vloaadon of thllaw. Our

- ...-

Wanted C&amp;r$ any cond. or
fixablo . (740)388-8228.
I \ 11'1 I I\ \II \ I

lntorrned thllltll

'lh\itl"

-ling•

Home tmprovements:..................................81_0
Homett for Slle ........, ................................... 31 0
HouMhold Good~ ....................................... $10
Hou"o lor Ronl .......................................... 410

In Memorlom ................................................020

InsUrance ............................................,••.•• -~ 1:11
......., • o.rden Equlpi1Hiftl.. ...................... 660
. U - k ............................................:......... 630
Loll and Found ........................................... oao
I.* • Acreege ............................................350
M-taneouo .............................................. 170
M-la.-ut -.:tu~ndlu ...................... :S40
·Homo RtPOir .................................... 860
. Moblll- lor Ron1 ............................... 420
-lie HDIIHII for Slle ................................ 320
Money to L.oan ............................................. 220
Motorcyclll &amp; 4 W11MIIft.......................... 740
Muolctll tnotrumenm ................................... 570

............................................................... 005

-forSIIe ................................................ 560
Plumbing • tillllng .....................:.............. 820
Pioi'IIJionll Servtcel.,............................... 230
-·TV • CB Flep1dr .......................:....... 160
"-1 Wlnlld ......,.............................. 360
. ac-lno!NC11Dn.............................:....... 150
Sled , Plant &amp; Fer!IIIZIIf ......, ....................... 650
SlluMionl w.nlld ....................... :............... l20
Spece for Rent ............................................. 480
Sporttng Goodo ........................................... 520
SUV'o for Slole .............................................. 720
- f o r Silo ............................................ 715
Upt1011111i.................................................. 870
VIne For ................................................. 730

-ID

W•otMID Buy ............................................. 090

Buy· Fonn Suppllet ................. 620
wTo Do,............................................ 180
w.,,a.c~ to Rent ............................................ 470

Yord Sole- Gllllpoiii.................................... 072
· Ylfd Sole Po&lt;nerDy/Middle ......................... o7•
Ylfd Sole-Pl. Pleliunl ................................ 076

-ood In

tf'll1 new

papr are

available on an ~ual

...........t t y -.

~

@$
LEARN
TO DRIVE
• FULL TIME Cl...ASSES'
• COL TRAINII-Kl '
• FIN"NCI~Q "\I"ILABLE'
• JOa PLACEMENT" •

·ALLIANCE
E!'.rn $1 D0-$200 plus tree
· piCtures in one day. lrwite
your friends to your home for
Tr11inlng 1n W&amp;-eviMe. Virginle
a glamour picture party. Call
(740)525-4163 lor lnlorma·
1-800·334-1203 tion.
TRACTOR-TR AILER

TRAINING CENTERS

100 WORKERS NEEDED
Assemble crafts.
wood items.
To $480/wk
Malenats provided . .
Free Information pkg. 24Hr.
801-428-4649

3 bedroom home tor sale on
Gelllpollo Cor- College
land contrBcl. (740)388·
{Careers Close To Home)
Call Today' 740·446·4367. 8228
------~1-801)..214·0452
3 bedroom, 2 bafh,,wtth f1regal.~ll!t.\ftollll~ c:om
place . 40•60 barn RIO
Acouu:llleO Member A.ccre~~tlllj Grande area On a nat aces
Coi.lr\011 tor 1noepenoem ColegK
$120,000 . (7401709-1166.
1rw:1 5(hooll 121•B

Help wanted at Darst Group
Home, working with elderly.
heavy lifting involved. 740-

992·5023.

-... --·-----:-----.,.

'·

New Haven. Bank owned, 3
to-4 bedrooms, ' Formal
Olnmg. $35.000
Mike
Sll'lck, Old Colony GMAC
Real Estate (304)542-5888
-------Very mce 3BR, bath.
upsta1rs. furnished 1BR apt.
downstairs. Furniture store
1n rear Car lot on side. All on
t/2 """ lot at 130 Bulo.;tle
P1ke
GalhpQiis,
OH
$1354JO (740)U6-4782

�•
•

www.mydallysentlnel.com

COUPOII
Ranch styte horne on 2.6 3br,

House tor Rent
$350/month, $300/deposit,
No Pets, Call (30&lt;)593-6341
or (304)614-5639
- - - - , - -, - - - Atlrlntionl
Local company offering "NO

OO&lt;M .....,rlookilg 1he beau-

tllul Ohio River In Long
Bonom, Olllo located at
61618 SR 124. This ~'
room house includes 2.5
bedloo.ns, one full bath and
1 1hnle quarter bath. 1421 DOWN PAYMENT' pro·
lqUale feet of living space grams for you to buy your
with full finished basement home instead of renting.
·
and
.
an anached two car • 100"-" fi nanctng
~~ cro:our•
. Also i~·~- a 32 • • Less tha11 peril:'\,.•
·~
JC 40 1 heated melal outside accepted
-building with conCrete floor. • Payment could be tl'le
Home is ...... ~ wittl heat· same as rent.
~-"""""
lng, cooling, water, and all Mortgage
Locators.
-oooo
36_7______
electric Utilities.
Some ~(1_40...:1_
kitchen appliances are Clean &amp; Nice 2dr. Central
Included. For more informa- Heat.
Efficient,
tlon call 70-985-3315(day- Conv6 nientty located. Ref. ,
time)
or
740·992· Oep .. No Pets. \ (3Q.4)6752071 (evening)
Price 5162
$160,000.00
:._:_::______ _
For Rent or sate. Home in
Glenwood. 3bf, detached

DI.IG ...

....... I

- _.....

740182..l'lr':':'.;..~:--~.,

r

Ar.um.mas
FOR lbNr

"""'

bedroom. 2 bath. very nice.
Priced to sell. (740)4410955 . ,
- -------2003 16x80, Fleetwood, . $600/mo + aeposit.
' refer.
38R, 2BA. vinyl siding, shin· ences. no smok1ng inside.
g1e root. central air included, no pets. 105 Bastiani.
nice Homa. Call for pncing. (740)446-3667.
:...:::..:..::..::.:.:..c.____
Daytime
1740138B·OOOO, p
36R H
f R nt
Evening
(740)388·8017, reny
ouse or 8 ·
Ce!1(740)S45-6,SO. 6, 14 &amp; Cedar Str. Gentral Heat/air,
FP. • $695+Util and dep. Call
16 wide's to choose from.
(740}446-4639. ..
2oo3 oakwood t6•6o 3
bedroom, 2 bath, central air, Small 1 bedroom home,
$14 ,500. Axles &amp; wheels deposit/reference required .
included. (740)245·9680.
(3041576 ' 2000·
GallirX;Iis. Ferry. 95 Norris
14 xeo, 3br, 2ba, alreadu
setup or can be moved'
$6,900 (304)S33-653B

Taking applications, 3BA
hOuse, no pets, $350 month,
$300
•
·t .
Ph on e
ueposl
{740)446-3617

Great used 3BR home only Very nice :3BR, 1 bath, 1 car
$9,995. Will help with delill· garage. All new carpet and
paint. Ntce level lawn. Quiet
ery. Call(740)31!5-7671
neighborhood. No pets, ref
New 2006 Clayton sin- and dep. $500 per mo.
glewides S1arting at $199.84· {740)245-511 4.
per month. Trade-ins wetH
MOllFORILii-,~11
comes. Oall (7401385-2434.

SakJ or rent: 1971 ·2 bedroom, gas heat. near Holzer.

iL,---iii"""iiiliiro'-,1I

Gallipolis. $3,900, rentaa lot. 1BR furnished motile home
(740}678 _2109.
Private
lot
wlcarport.
illll"-""!-~~-., Ae11dep required . $400 mo..
flllll
.
Wrs &amp;
(740)448-4782.
'

AiiCRFAGiiiiiiiiii'E-·

._I_ _ _

-,
2 bedroom, 1 bath, newly
MDIMie Home LOI for rent remodeled, close to lown , lg
near Vinton. Call (740)441- apya~nvetmryentp(r7iv4a0tei4. 4C1a9911 7fo2r
1111 .
~
·
References ~
deposit
;,~ ,, "~·~
Ar.N... I!.,') lA 1 K'..
required. $450/month, water
'nANnD
"
r'n"
..•-•.
~r~uutn~

r

..__ _ _ _ _ _pl .
Need to sell your home?
Late oo, payments, divorce,
job transfer or a death? I
can buy your home. All cash
andquicl&lt;closing. 740-416·
3130.

2 bedroom, 2 bath,
$425/mo.
includes
water/trash, washer/dryer,
storage buildirig. Located on
SA 554 toward Cheshire. No
pets. (7401367·0255

2 bedroom. NC, porch &amp;
awning . Very. very nice. no
pets. In Gallipolis. (740)446·
7
46 1409
or

l!riiiJOI"'"'-~~~---.,,. ~~!~~ 2~~ '

o--

FOR
..,_,.;itiiiiil""'iiii"iiro-rl
,

28A, bath, W/0 hookup.
v 3bedroom 2 large livingroom, with open
$176/mo. l 6u
J
'
kitchen, small troot &amp; back
bath HUDI 4% dn, 30 yrs.@
8%. For listings 800-559· porch. (7401319-2254
4109 ext. 1709
3 Br. 1· 1/2 bath mobile
-------~ house located on Oh10 Rive"r
$182/mo! 4 Bedroom. 2.5 at Apple Grove, Ohio $350
· bath HUD! 4% down, 30 plus, deposit. no pets, 740•
yeano 0 8%. For listings 698-6002 IWenings.
800-559-4109 erd F254
. . Accepting applications, 1
· 1 bedroom In Galhpoh~. b.edroom, furnished with
$225 monlh/$ 100 depoSII. ,covered porch, 8xa storage
No pets. Call Wayne building, complete~ remod(404)456-3802 lor Inform~- eled, suitabtlt for I adult,
tion.
$385/mo. $2 15 deposit

-,------=-----

2 bedroom home in Eureka, includes

Washer/dryer,

$350 mo. S350 oep. No pets. waterf'lrash, you pay electric
references required. Call Oillon Road,
(740)384·2560.
(1401256-1106.

Map\8

Ave. 3br, 2ba.
·
~. garage. No pets
inside Of out. $550/monlh.
·
$5501deposit.
(304)67 5·

~25_1_5_ _ _ _ _ __

Gallipolis,

B1dwell area, Clean 2br,
$400/month,
includes
water/sewer.
Aef!Oep.
required. No Pets (30415764037

3br Home in Mason, Toial fianford, WV clean, 2br.
Electric,
No
pets, $350 a month, references
$425/month, S300fdeposit deposit, required (304)576·
(~)882-3652
4037
'-':::'---:-::---:-- - - - - - - - - ' .3BA horhe- SA 554, Bidwell· Mobile home for rent located
$575Jmo~ sec. dep. refer~ in Cheshire . (740)446-4234
oncos, all elec. (740)446· :-:or.:.I7:-:40_1:,_2_06_·7_6c:.6:-:1.--.3644.
Mobile Home Lot in Johnson
3br, 1ba. 'CoUntry Home Mobile Home Park in
Board Rd. Letart, close to Gallipolis, OH . Phone
Power Plan! (3041675-2 464 17401446-2003 or (7401446·
or (304)593·1 481
1409.

Twin RiYen Tower Is accept·
ing appllcatioos for wa~ng
list for Hud·subslz.O, 1• bf.

I

L,~-------"·

BRIDGE

I Gordon·

ENTERTAINMENT
and more ...

"Take the p11in nu• ""'
painting-let us do II

c8 aw

The Daily Sentinel
992-2155
FOR

IriO

s.w:

Auros

•

r·.O llousoiOlD

Commercial building "For
GoQI:ti
Sate• 1600 square reet, off
street parking. Great toe&amp;lion! 749 Third Avenue tn
7 plec_e oak bedroom su~e Gallipolis. Pnce "Negotiable'
includes new springs and
.
mattress.
$650.
Call NeW roo11 Motivated Seller&lt;
(740)441-8299.

rtO

EQun&gt;r.FARM&amp;M

•BJSON
&amp;. LIVE'KIEFER •HORSE
BUILT 'VALLEY
STOCK TRAILERS ·'LOADMAX
•GOOSENECk,
DUMPS
l
UTILITY
'ALUMA
'ALUMINUM
TRAILERS '"BI:W GOOSE·
-NECK
HITCHES.
Carmichael
Equipment
_17_
~_lU&amp;__2_._,2____

740-985-4180

Leave message

FOR SALE

Iii~;::~;;;;;;;;;~ '----:,..._,.-....J

1

ror you"
Interior Only

To Subscribe Call

i

l ~~be~~~ore~6P~M:m;;;

1991 Lumina Z-34. white,
$1,995,ar$1 ,000down.
1993 Flrebird red, sharp,
$2,995 or $1 ,200 down
1993 Corsica whrte. $1,495

1981 VW truCk diesel, about
50 miles per gallon $1,300
1976 COl"\lette 25 yr
Anniversary. good shape
$7 695
•
(7401446-61 12 or (74017091124
.
-------1999 Chevy Monte Car!o.
Loaded, in excellent shape,
$3,000 or best offer. Call
·17401256•1306 .

2004 John Oeere Gator with 2001 Chevy Blazer, very
electric dump/light kk. 250 good condition, loaded.
PiAUTIFUL
APART· 27 ·-~ TV Ke
X
hours. Goad condition.
MENTS AT BUDGET
hMt
•
nmore tra $4,500. (740)441.•9814
$4,950 (304)675~7996 or
PRICES AT J•CKSON large capacity washer (4/y!Ji
(740)441·8241
""
old), Bedroom set ( no mat~ Joh n Deere 10 ft. No Til Drill
ESTATES, 52 Westwood
tress
or box-springs), tor
~ent.
Carmichael 86 Ranger truclt, auto, 4 cyl.
Drive from $349 to $448. Fui!Oueen frame and head- Equipment (740)446-2412 . 98 Neon Sport, auto, priced
Walk to shop &amp; movies. Call board, vanity, mirror, niles·
to sell. (740)386~8228.
740·446-2568.
Equat rand &amp; chest, TV stand, New John Deere Compacts
Housing Opponunity.
bookcase. (304)675-3626
and 5000 Series Utility trac~ 98, 4-door, black Honda
tars 00% Fixed for 36 Accord EX, Moonroof, CO,
CONVENIENTLY LOCAl~ Bow Hex Uhimate. All ~nach- month• through John Leather, excellent COndition.
EO 6 AFFORDABLE!
ments and· accessories Deere Credit. Carmichael $6,500 call (304)675-5688
Townhouse
apartments, included $750. Nordic traclt Equl
pmenl (740)4ot6-241 2 •
~·s
andlor 5111all . houses FOR treadmill, heevy duty, pro•
~
RENT.. Call (7401441·1111 grammabte, tons and drink
tor a'"'.... icatk&gt;n &amp; information.
.~...o~vr..""t•~
1-1"
holders. Great condition
W
·
_52_7_5....:(7_4...;
01'-41_6_
·1_163
_._ _
2003 Chev Silverado. SW6.
Candy vending machine for •KIEFER 8UIL.T -vALLEY 4.8, S·spe&amp;d, Z7l, 4x4, red,
sale. Non·e!ectric. •Good 'BISON 'HORSE &amp; UYE- many other options. 12,600.
• 2&amp;3 bedroom apartments condi~on. 5150 060. Call STOCK TRAILERS 'LOAD- miles. Truck Hko now condi·
(7401"··2342 erct. 26.
MAX
'GOOSENECK; lion. $14,500 (3041675·
•Central heat &amp; A/C
......,
DUMPS
UTILITY
•Washer/dryer hookup
Commercial Tanning bed, 24 •ALUMA
• •ALUMINUM
•All electric· avemglng
bulb SCA Wotf System, new 'mAIL~$ 111:W GOOSE·
$50·$60/month
bulbs,20 min.1imer.5yrliold NECK
HITCHES.
'-h·-• E 1
•Owner pays wetor, sower, $900.(7401256-ll244.
rm~ .::..:.:....:.:....:=.:....::c....:__ (740' - - L2412 qu pmenl 2006 Chevy Taho9 LS 4.tC4,
!rash
JET
,_..
5.3L, Auto, Silver Birch
(304)882·3017
AERATION MOTORS
Butcher Lambs. (740144 1· Metallic, Gray in1, ·3rd .row
R 1~ N &amp; Rebu'" 1
•.• S1=.r~N ':on Ewn~:' ~ 9814.
seating, tQwing package,
800-537·9528.
.... Draft horse shoeing stock, 15,500
mile's,
Asking
good condition. s 350 .
000. 740-949-2055.
(740)418-1183.
4X4
NEW AND USED STEEL - . , . . - - - - - - FORSAIE
Gracious living. 1 and 2 bed- Steel Beams, Pipe Rebar Excellent 13 month old reg. "--,.;itiiiiliiiiliiii. . .
room apartments at V~!age For · Concrete,
Angle, Angus bull; Call (740)446·
Manor
and
Riverside Channel. Flat Bar. Steal 9656.
1980 150 Ford Picl&lt;-up 302
Apartments in Middleport. Grating
For
Drains,
eng. 4X4, 5 speed. Run's
740 742
From $295·$444. Call 740· Driveways &amp; Walkways. L&amp;L
$BOO.oo.
'
'
992·5064. Equal Housing SCrapMe1alsOpenMonda)',
AUTOS
-----~--Opportunities.
Tuesday, Wednesday .$.
FOR SAlE
1998 Dodge Ram ext cab
-,m"m"a-cul-at_o_2_b_e_d-roo-m Friday, 8arT)-4:30pm. Closed '--,.;itiiiiliiiiiii. . . 4dr, 4x4, 102k, $5,995. 304·
Thursday. ·Seturd8y &amp;
apartment in the country. So""-. (7401 ••• 7300
$500!
Cars I
Police 615-4816
·-•
~
New carpet &amp; cabinets,
ImpoundS from $5001 For - - - - - - - - fresl:lly painted &amp; decorated, WANTED:
Responsible listings BO!f-559-4086 x3901 1999 Dodge Ram ext cab
41(4 blaci( 57·495
WID hookup. Beautiful coun- party to take on small
tr)' setting. Must see to !monthty payments on High 04 Kie Spectra 46.000 miles 1992 Ford Explorer, 4X4,
appreciate. 3991mo. No .. Defini1ion Big Screen TV. 1- $3,995; 97 Dodge 314 t. 4x4 only 97k, $2,295 or $1,000
pets. (614)595-7773 or 1· 800-398-3970.
$4,200; 01 5~10 BlazE!f 4x4; down. (740) -446·8172 or
$4,300; 01
Jeep Gr. (740)709·1124.
600 _700•4666.
---'---~- WANTED:Restlonslble party Cherokee $6,500; 01 Neon - - - - - - - In Gallipolis, dean, upstairS, to take on small monthly $2,995; 01 Cavalier $2,695; 2000 Jeep Cheroke8 4x4,"
2 bedrooms, 2 bath, dish· payments on High Definition 9BNeon$2,100;99Caravan ~uto/air, CO player. $3,000
washer, W/0 hookup, $500. Big SCreen TV. 1·800-396- $2,200; 96 S·10 PU auto 0 BOr"..;(7•40..;.12~56~·-165..,.2...,._,
deposit,
references. 3970
$2,995; 95 GMC elt cab 1111
:..(1_40...:1_446_·9_20_9_._ _ _ _
PErs
$3.500 ; 94 Ford F-150
F.!";AIE
Large
One
Bedroom --oiiORiiiiiS.W:iiiiit-pl $1 ,400; 94 GMC pu $1,400;
An
' ~·
PI
g9 Suzuki sw $2,1 00; 95
,....,artment 1n rvlnt easant. 4
Ford FtSO ex. cab $2,000; 1996 Dod ge Cargo van,
$495/month
includes
all
AKC
Chocol
Lab
$2 .000
U1il~res (304)6 5"
ate
pups 00 Ford Escort ZX2 $2,000; auto,
· 060 .
7 5619
$250. (740)245·5296.
9B Dodge cara118n $1,300. (7401256-6002 or (74012561233
New 2BR apartments.
B&amp;O Auto Sales
·
AKC Reg. FC Sired Beagle
Washer/dryer
hookup, puppies lOr sale. Tri-colored.
Hwy 180 N
"I II\ II I "'
740 448
stOIIOirofrigorator
included.
6wks.
old.
$150.00/aach
-::::-(:-)
__
-6665_
.
_
_
"'l!:--~----.,
Also, un~s oo SA 160. Pets
.
Iii
0
Welcome! (740144Hl194.
Call: I740)256-25B3
1990 Pontiac Sunblrd
HoME

~

~~~§~~~o~n~ly~

NOW O"rN
rr

i

Full · bloOded Lab puppies Convertible • Black-126,000
Nice 2 bedroom apt. stove, $100. Choc. &amp; Yellow. miles· $1 ,100 or Best offer·
refriQSrator, paid water, (740)441-o931 .
Call740-992-1082.
waaher/Oryer
hookup,
C&amp;ntenary Rd . No pats, Golden Retriever puppies, 6. 2002 Dodge Strauss 59.000
(740)~9442 after 5:00.
weeks a·ld, h!JS been miles, runs great, new tires.
· .,ormed
$225
each. $3,800 OBO. 2003 Dodge
~6~ tst flr., ~oi;,lltit. pd., (304}n3-5164 or (3041614· Neon 39,000 miles, runs
No ~~sn~ngr= ~57'-'8_1_ _ _ _ _ _ _ great, new .ti res, $3.600
stove &amp; refrig.. turn., coin Poodles, Tea-cup &amp; Toy, tiny OBO. (?-40)256· 1233 or
WID on premises. Sultab6e Chihuahua, male. Snuggle (740)256-903 , ·
for 1, 256 S1ato St, your tap babies Into the hoti·
96 Chevy Cavalier Z24.
Gallipolis, (740144&amp;-3667
days. (7401446-9426
Power
windows/doors,
Sunroof, CD pleyer. Good
condition, $2,000. Call
(7401416·1415.

r'

IMPRoVEMENrS

'-,.;iiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiriilirrJ

Hill 's Self
Storage

• &lt;

e

Pleasant Valley Hospital is currently
seeking an 08/PEDS· Manager. A
minimum of three years experience in an
acute care setting (preferably Obstetrics).
Previous management/supervisory
experience preferred. WV RN license; BSN
preferred.
Holidays, health insuran.ce single/family
plan: dental plan, life insurance, vacation,
long term disability ~nd retirement
Send resumes to: · •
'

Pleasant Valley Hospital
C/0 Hum1n Resources
2520 Valley Drive
Point Pleasant. WV 25550
or lax to (304) 675-6975
or apply online at:
www.pvalley.Drg

. I

... .......,

Advertise in
this SP.ace for
$108 per
month.

Pa..

111411 mo. pd

..

·-r..

SToc;.

.-:.

twAYI~ IT'S

..,

ExCHAWGE
...
.,..

GAS~

A

Of

6Jt~il&gt;LOC~.

Cl.oSfp

ToPAY .

:BARNEY

Hardlooll CDinei'J All- FunHure.

Localit~
.T

Ma,·a

riA.!. nil'\ n
~Se'-Uol
- rvl~ 16
·

ce

New Homes - Decks • Roofing
Siding - Foundations
· Sidewalks

Lowest Prices
No Job Too Small

Pls9
DbL

Pass
Pass

· YEP !!

cou~e.

TH' CAMERA

I

CAN;T PROVE IT !!

'•

WA~'T

II\N&amp;N11!1) 'r'ET !!

:THE BORN LOSER

: ,..~ow ~~ 'lou ~'It &amp;rn "'~ 'ON '&lt;OUR CN-\Pfo,l~ 1'\..E.~E
EU:.c.Tt.t:&gt;, W\LL '1'0\JR t\i:::JT .
~~ \til OFI'IC£ &amp;. \0
Fou.c:M W.ROO'.f\...

1-74()-698-0890

A«onJable
n'

TO \W.I~ ~~~FULL
f'l~'-'-'-''"'"""'"\0 \I-I.E. .x:&gt;B...

·~

40 Kyoto cuh

A recent read of New Zealand Bridge
unearthao this deel. which was played In
1975 during a match between Auckland
and Canterbury. At one labia, West was
in lour hearts doubled; at the other,
South was in lour spades doubled. What
do you tllink happened al aach? Can
lour spades be deleated?
At the fl"'t table, South for Aucldend
opan.O throe spades, West """"'"'~
lour hearts, and North doubled. •
North lad the club ace and continued
with tho club king. wast ruffed and
playod five rounds ol hearts. North,
tlllnklng 1hat his partner hed the spade
ace, erclt.O with tile club queen. But tills
pormined declarer to claim tO tncl&lt;s
(tllreo spades and seven hearts) lor plus
790. The wrilor made no comment about
South's discaras. Surely his fll51 was dis·
couraglng In spades. But maybe North
was not watching, believing everything
was under control.
In the ·. auction given, South for
Canterbury paosod. West opaned lour
clrbs, Namyals. showing a strong lour·
heart opening. Nort.h doubled to
announce values in clubs, ancl South bid
tour spadeS. East, thinking they could
beat tills, doubled.
wast led a top hlart, of course. Dacaror
ruffed and played 1ho spade jaci&lt;.
However the delendera turnad, Soutll
cou~ hold his IO:SSI"$ to threBtop trumps.
That was another 790 to Canterbury and
gain of 17 intorhational match points in
a double ~bled-game swing.
.
To defeat lour spades, West must load
his club, win the first trump with his ace,
end play a haar1. East ruffs high end
returns e club for West to rufl.

,,....,_.
ott
Ricl120Y~
Jolmlon Jr.· Ownor

By Bomlce -

IINITS

~;;;;;:;;;;;:;:

11

RIBERT
BISSEll

We Deliver To You!
• Home Oxygen
• Portable Oxygen
• Hometill Sys~m
• Helios System

.PEANUTS

~ .~'!'t)lil:"i~1"-!!dl'!4!!11.·:,..•

THIS FROZEN DINNER
.'I"OU'RE HAVING TONIGHT
COST TflREE DOLLARS
F'~TV CENTS ..

CAN OF D06
FOOD COST E16HT'(CEN.T5 ..

&amp; MEDICAL EQUIPMENT
70 Pine Street • Gallipolis

MOM AND DAD SHOULD
TRADE 'f'OtJ IN FOR

ANOTHER ;_D0:.:6:.::..~Iil

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) -

446-0007
• New Homes
• Garages
• Complete
Remodeling

'M1-812·1611
Stop &amp; Compare

Resldtntial• Commercial• Central Contndlna

SUNSHINE CLUB

rr'LJVrr

Sli(ESS, ~T

JONES'

I

Top • Removal : Trim
• Stump ·6rinding
• Buckcf Tnx:k
l6 Years Experience

David Lewis

TAURUS (April 20-May 20) -

GARFIELD
, _ ,... tiC . .......... -

.

Advertise
in this
space
54 per
month

5

oou~ reeull

YOUNG'S

. by Luis Campos
rtom QUOIIUOnS b'V r.nous people, pu~.n ~

Etcn 111111 1111"11 c.;t«" Nndi ftr anot..
TO&lt;flly's du&lt;l: Cequals N

...

" MNLZ OVZPA BVAE
CVEWLCK . " -

YVWC

L P F N A V C ." GFFBWFZ

PREVIOUS SOlUTION - 'The people who tllink 1hey can wind up ahead of
1he races are everybody who has over won a bet' - Ugden Nastt

~~

""'d'

1119

A favor

z

I think that we hav~ two em,
two eyes and one tongue so
thll we will hw and sec more

_. . . • l;~::;~;:

0
t---i'EI:.:,:;L,rP-r'EI-:;7P.,,-'-. r,_,]

L-..I......J'--'--'-.J.......J YOII dtvelop hom sfeo No. 3

e

r~ll~! NUMSWD LHHP.S

II&lt;

!H!~E

SQut.lfS

8

1

I

I

II I II

"A dog is tlrc only thing on earth," the cutic
told her vain boyfriend, "that will love you
more than HE docs IUMSELF ."

ARLO &amp; JANIS

Benefits

New lnfor·

now:

V.C. YOUNG Ill
992 (.215
Ohl&lt;.'

LllC,l' E)prr r' 'IC

'

btlow.

• ' • I'_ J

SCRAMLETI tllll""'
RcfUSI: - Bless- Minh- Finish - liEdotslliMSEI.f

WV036726

'

I' •

\Jt&lt;lCRAMIIlf \E!HR,'
--~r~
o~r~A~
N~SW~{~R~--~.~~

PaUo and Porch Decks

.

rho chvtklo quorod

by lillrn9 iM lho milliM9 word$

New Geragt~s

'

1411

lo11011 ol tiro
. ·tour rtrambled
below 1o lortr1 four olmt&gt;lo word1.

Electrical &amp; Plumbing .
Roolin; &amp; Guttert
Vinyl Siding &amp;. Pain ting

..

WOlD

ClAY l. POllAN

Room Addition• &amp;

Yrm~

WNCK

W.F C Z R 'oN Z P

Remodeling

.?'&gt;

KNR

"NHH DVZPA NZF TFKA EV

SOUP TO NUTZ

CARPENTER
SERVICE

g:,.ra:r,.

aged lela

matlon you've recently acquired will help
promote some Ideas you'd like to
achieve. They'll be readily accepted by
moat, so make your preuntatlon now
while you can.
LIBRA (Sept. 23·0ct. 23) -·It's to your
adVantage no1 to rock the bOat and 111
IVtnta . conlinu• to m~ along_ their
pr•eei'lt courtu. If thlngl art not dil·
turbed, a rwmber ot lortun•t• b,.1k1

for

48 Tlluinb

31 Having

IMITiber

efforts.
VIRGO (Aug. 23·Sept. 22) -

I~

atate

GEMINI (May 21-June 20). - Take care
of your responsibilities oo the home
front. because the service or assistance
you render to your loved ones will be
greatly appreciated.
CANCER (June 2j ..July 22) - Even if a
valu ed friend is not a round at this time,
you are not out of his or her thoughts.
There's a strong chance you will hear
from this person abOut some very happy
tidings.
LEO (July 23-Aug . 22) - You may be
more fortunate tha n usual In situations
that cou ld contribute to your material
well-being. LadY Luc::;t( Is working on your
behaH in repayme_nl for your latest

i

42 Funny_,
43 wtteel ol

26 ean.fllngth 44 Let•allp
27 Cooking
-46.Poi!W
47 IndigO pl8nt
veSMia

made your deal. They will not let anybody

740-992-6971
Free

24 Cabin

_n_

i

41 llogull

25 Rocky
Mountain

from agreements you've made of a
social or business nature will be derived
from those very persons with whom you

I

._

Bun...r

ered possible.

Tree Service ·

.....

leg39 Doer's

51
r.glon
29 Undeniable
br.nchell

7 Warta,.

8 GII!Or kin

Celelny~ crypklglllml•• CfMII!ICl

•

of exceptional worth to you could be
instrumental in helping you aChieve an
important obj~live . Be nice to everybody, because you don't know who might
be a benefactor.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) - You
should be able to tWlaHy solidify an
aiT8ngernent with another over a maMer
that requires lt11s person's cooperation. ·
The partnership could turn out to be
rather special.
ARIES (March 21~Aprll 19) - Continue
as you havti been for the ,last couple of
·days, and you will successfully complete
whatever il is you've been working on In
grBater measure than you ever consid·

Cornerstone
Construc_tion
Painting • Door-s • Windows • Decks
• Siding • Roofing • Room Additions • Remodeling
WV 0381t2 • Plumhing • EledricaJ 740-317-ol44
OH 382-U
• Accoustic Ceiling
740-331-3412

~ur

river
21 Aim
dlroc:tor -

CELEBRITY CIPHER

0 Roorra11g0

wiN be established than you have Seen In
the past couple ot vetrs. 11 will enable .
you to be more effective and successful
in the future.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) - Do not
discount the loyalty and ablllttes of any of
your friends , because someone you may
least suspect could be the one who will
tum out to be your greatest source of
help at this time.
S.AGITIARIUS (NO\/. 23·Dec. 21) - You
are likely to tunclion more efleclivety by
being the power behind .the scenes in a
critical career development. Rather than
be the""-Person in the spotlight. do the
directing instead.
CAPRICORN . (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) Things ha'lie been running pretty well for
you lately, and there is no reason to think
they must come to an end. If you lower
your expectations, it could have a sour·
ing effect on your ludc

~;;::";'"~'":O:";':":'..,.:;r:::~

17 yrs . experience.
First Barber Shop on
Texas Road offRoote 7
740-985-3616

Ooo1

More harmony and balance In

350....pten
' 36 Idee36 Synti*IC

s brlve cruy 21 German
6 Bang Into
industrial

- - - - - , - li'.tt4

w.ctneedly, Nov. 15, 2006

,.,.,,_

West Shade Barber Shop
Owned &amp; operated by
Chris Parker

(hypll.)

33TerreltM*
toe.

,:~:~' S©\\~lA-~t.tfs·

W~!I?!,

.BI(} NATE

Tree Clre

"'':".',.."'::.:,~~

nood
54 Antarctic
...
55 U doubled I 0 Bunion
56 Suahl llah
sHn
57 Kllty,moybe 13 cgms
58 Shlde ·lroo 19 Siberian

dev-

Game for both
sides .;... or is it?

ACE EE SERVICE

Comec

nood
53 Potter'a

37 Kr1thna

~Astro-

Bonded

':~~~~~~~

r

50 lAI Iemmo
52 Cartoonist'•

partlc:lel

Fully Insured

Daily, Weekly, or
Monthly Plans
Available
1-740-992-61%

localel

4t Bu118r1Ub111110

36 1111n-go11t
dolly

o

De~ndable
·
r--

&amp;

Flthl

39 Plnk..llpped 9 Sial!

'FRANK &amp; EARNEST

Hours
7:00AM • 8:00 PM

Paso

Eo9t

Dbl.

45

woman
DOWN
Druid or
llhaman
1 Brown 181·
Mo. bill
TillY tubarl 2 Sourdough
Jaclile'a
lllrtkee
IYCOOII
3 Paychlc'a
Voun~
tntro (2 Mk.J
Chlrgod
4 - oollilllon

34
35

Opening lead: • A

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

www.U.hlastlln.......,.ooa

West Nonlt

South
Pass

45771

Porl1t'l !I{

AA EOE

I

downer
j2 wda.)

24 MMior

31
32

Vulnerable ~ Both

740-949-2217

Help Wanted

· 08/PIDS MANAGER

740-446-0007 Toll Free 877-669-0007

-wll8hen

23

30

Dealer: Soulh

29670 Bashan Road
Racine, Ohio

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Unconditional tltellme guarant&amp;e. Local references fwni&amp;hed. Established 1975.
Call 24 Hrs. (740) 4460870, . Rogers 8asemen1
Waterproofing.
Mr. Fix It Complete home
remodeling , all major &amp;
minor rep,rs around the
house. 24hr. Emergency
Sarvice (3041674-6538

70 Pine Stt:'eet • Gallipolis

17 .. 11 Not ...,
20 Hom por·
tiona
22 Judge 11e1n ,

27

.A K 6
• 7 52

7~367·7442

Kim Bi~~.Qy,·ner

s

r

·-

&amp; MEDICAL EQUIPMENT

Sew&amp;:Uwd fumllurt

1

itO ·

·-

,rJamihJ •·tt1M~•

297 1iocoln Street Mldo.llq~Qn.oH
7..0.794-tl7SI

ea

=·

Wost
Eolt
• A 8
• K Q 52
• AKQJ8532
• Q 3
• 10 8 7 5
.. 9
.. 10 8 6 4 3
Se•llr
.JI0t7643

•

tailed
onlmal

. 42 Tr•*

16=

IHt..fMS

• AKQJ

MONTY

41 Bushy-

7 SUdoddle
11 Heli!Md
IOUndl
12 SocJn.clly
14 Vocal group
15 Singer
Piggy -

. 1 097&amp;4
• J' 4 2

Klmmy's Furniture
Outlet

a

r,j~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~

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

1

Ellm View
Apartments

Help Wanted

.

1Ox10X 1Ox20
992-3194
01 992·6635

i!'s.w:

!SHOP CLASSIFIEDSI

ON

97 Beech Street
Mid~leport. OH

or $BOO down
1991 Lumina, good work car
$695 or $250 down
1997 Kia car red, 5 spe~.
$1 ,995 or $700 down
1983 GMC chop top show
trucl&lt;$3,495

r •--· Ir··

·Non.

r49

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

4 NellY laugh

Alder

COmmerdal building "For
Rent" 1600 square loot, off
str&amp;OI ·~rklng. Great looa·
.tlonl
Third Avenue WI
GaNipolls, Rent "NeQ!ll.iable"

Thompsons Appliance &amp;
Repalr-615-7368 . For sale,
r~-oandltioned automatic
washers &amp; d~~ rafrigera·
.,... ..,
tors. gas and etectric
ranges, air conditioners, and
Apartment for rent, 1·2 · writlger washers. Will do
Bdrm., remodeled, new car- repairs on major brands in
pet, sto\le &amp; · trig., water, shop or at your home.
sewer, trash pd. Middl~.
"""" Us.O Furniture Store. 130
$4 25 ·00 · No petS. Rei. Bulaville Pike (740)446·
required. 74()-843-5264.
4782,Gallipolis,OH . Hrs11 ~
BANK FORECLOSURES! 3 5 (M·S) We buy used mat·
bedroom, 2 b8th, $155/mo. 4 tresses. Call us.
bedroom. $225/mo. 4% dn. l!rr~;,;,..;.;.
.,
30 yrs 0 ~.4. For listings
~~ .
800·559-4109 ext. F144.
__ Jl'II!.IV....nJU'II,.JI,X. ,

pond ftotr

Phillip

"'1"

you pay the U111ffias. Call
(703)526-0617

ACROSS

COMICS SPliTS

Upstalr1 3 rooms &amp; bdl.

(404) 4""3802
ayne
...,.
Downtown
Commercial
Retail sp~;~oa for Rent. $4001
month.
Upstairs Office
Suhes for Rent$125/ month

The Daily Sentinel • Page .8 5

TECHNOLOGY

apartment. call 675-6679
Equal Houolng Clppo&lt;runi1y

j'"

_22_1_6·-----:-....... ...-..
1 rm au:....:
.. ~,ency _ .. """'ro5
pd $'~
"' s de~•
. ~ mo. ,.u r-• ·
1st floor, 2 bedrm, rg. &amp; ref.
fum, laundry rm . L. rm &amp; D.
rm . clean, $400 mo + dep. &amp;
utilit1es. (7&lt;40)441-&lt;&gt;596
18R apt in Spring Valley.
HUD1?RC vouctlers accept·
C
40ed. WID hookups. a11 7
446.()834 a&lt; 740.339-0362

www.mydailysentlnel.com

CURRENT EVENTS

paffiolly 1\wnillred. No pets_
Reference
&amp;.
depoait
1 and 2 bedroom apart· required. (740}446-1519
ments, fumished and untur- :.:.r..;.;;-~_..;._.,
.,_,CE
nished. security deposit
""'
n..,......
r~•ired. no petS, 740-992MlR....,.., 1

I

MOBILiliORc~
.

2001 16x80 Aeetwood, 3

291 g

r

Garage. $400/monlh. plus :..&lt;ce_H.:.I- - - - -DepoSit ( 304 )743"8584
1BR tri-~vel , close to hospiFor Rent Beautiful Dutch tal, $400 mo, dep &amp; ref
Colonial
House,
PI required. &lt;740}446-2957.
Pleasant, 7 rooms, 2 full 3 rooms &amp; bath, stolle,
baths, stove, refrigerator. refrigerator, ' utilities paid.
forced~air furnace, air-condi· Downstairs. 46 Oliva St.
tioned
S650/month call $450 month, no pets.
(3041675 2319
c=.=:..·=:._·- - - , 1__7_40.:.14_46_·39_45_.- - House tor rent. Pomeroy. no pats. 140 _992 _5666
A Hidden lteesure. Largest
apartments in the area.
House
in
Clifton. Newly renD~:ataO. brsod'new
$400/month, $400 Security everything, starting at $425.
Deposit (304)593·8167
CaN today before they are all
La el Commons
Nice 3BR, 1 bath, central air, gone.
ur
stove/refrig turn .. 1 "r tease. Apartments (304 )273 "3344

4 a.m
2 s.th
.......

~(
._27·•5om
0

Two bedroom trailer $400.00
a month. Eledric includod.
R._,.;ble for own hN1
bill. 740-843-5546.
!liP~-----,

~

Tuesday, November 14, 2006
ALLEYOOP

Tuesday,NovemtMw14,2006

r

�•

Page 86 • The Daily Sentinel

Thesday, November 14, 2006

www.mydailysenlinelcom

-----------------

•

'

'

Advertisers visit Gizmosads.com and see how we can work for you !

•

1zmos
I .

I

. I

there goes

the schedule

m. underhill

The Spattercatrifle represents the latest in nonlethal military technology. When the trigger is pulled
Q) a linkage pivots the feather arm@,
stimulating the cat into a reflex hairball
ejection(3). All of this is made
possible by'rnzmos &amp; Gadgets Brantl
~EXPLOSIVE JOLT HAIRBALL
EXPELLERANT"

ADVERTISERS VISIT:

IIZMISIIlCDM

®
No cats were harmed in the
production of this comic strip.

Just another example of our taxpayers
money a~ work. ·

THINKING 3 DIMENSIONALLY

Thinking three
dimensionally is the key
to great drawing. . ·

THINK!

~w
When sketching an ellipse around a character's
face, try to think in terms of drawing along the surface
of a three dimensional object. Which side
you determine is the front defines the direction
they are looking.

000

,' ooc

If the crank is turned in the direction
shown will the sign slide left@or right@?

®Eleilaa e®~

/

so~oe
but he
didn't wear
a costume!

®0

a o u &lt;&gt;. oe
•

DECODER MOUSE
--~~

EACH SYMBOL STANDS FOR A LETIER

-.-~

~--

I

•

I

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