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I

.

· Page D6 • The Sunday Times- Se ntinel

'

' Sunday, September 28 ,2008

Middleport • Pomeroy • Gallipolis, OH • Point Pleasant, WV

Lawmakers, White
House a~ree on
$700B bailout, A2

.,•
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••

MeigsFFA
competes, A6

Employee

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far ·
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Everyone

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SPORTS
• Riversid(\High School
·~nvitalional. See Page Bl

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25
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33

10

IN STOCKI

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""" · "'~daii~M·ntim·l.mm

l\IONDAY, St-:I'TEMRER 29, 2008

'09 ODOT lo~l projects total $14 million
BY BRIAN

J.

I

REED

BREEDIIMVDAILVSENTINELCOM

POMEROY - The Ohio
Department
of
Transportation plans $14
in
highway
million
improvements in Meigs
County next year.
ODOT Deputy Director
Larry'Woodford and Debbie
Fought of ODOT's planning•
department met with Meigs
County Commissioners last
. week to di scuss projects

I 70U Ntllll&amp; G5 CIHIPI

MPRI

Printed on 100 %
Recycled Newsprint

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

MliP ..... .... ...... L . .SI8,110
GM EMPlOYH OIICOUMT . 11,414

'

planned for Meigs County
next rear and beyond.
000T s projects for next
year,
alone,
total
$14,143,200.
Those projects include a
$9.7.million project to relocate part of Ohio 124 at
Long. Bottom to repair a
landslide caused by the
January, 2005 flood event.
The Jist al so includes the
$.J.19 million landslide
repair project .near the
Athens County line on Ohio

.

'

124. In addition to relocating a part Of the roadw;~y.
the project also includes
paving work.
ODOT also plans to spend
$1 ,287 ,000 on a landslide
repair for another section of
124 damaged in the January,
2005 flood .
Construction
of
Middleport 's new shared-use
trail is also included in the
project list, at $135,000. That
r,roject has received funding
or right-of-way research and

acquisition and part of the County-Road 14. $289.tlbo.
construction COStS. Right-ofODOT has included
way research will begin on upgrades at the roadside rest
that project right of way, .· ' area on U.S. 33. re placing
Other projects included in primiti ve restrooms with
the 2009 construction year upgraded, modular flu sh
include pavement marking facilities. but that project will
on
various
routes , likely be deferred beyond
$136,400; resurfacing the next year, Fought said .
courthouse employee parkThe list of Meigs County
ing lot , $39,000; paving of ·projects submitted to county
six mile s of Ohio 7, commi ssioners
also
$815 ,000; a bridge repair on includes road repairs and
U.S. 33, $394,000; and a bridge replacements into
bridge replacement on . 20 I 0, 20 II , and 20 12.

Coyotes subject
of Meigs SWCD
annual meeting,
banquet

!L-~~~~-~.-~:--~

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l ..... S_TOCU!l!OrO
___ :._
.. .. c~.... ~,'"~-'J!I._____________
I

STAFF REPORT
:

•

2008 BUICK

lUCERNE

NEWS@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

Cll

28
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MSRP •.•.. . •. . •. .... . •..525,600
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GM RETAIL CONSUMER CASH . . ..)500
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MPOI

INSIDE
'
. • House approves
nuclear pact with India.

s

See Page A2

• Local
Briefs.
I
.. See Page AS
. · :. US ambassador
· appeals for p~tienpe in
. :lraq.• See Page Af
·~ Md'G~ tells Web
visitors to use voting
period. See Page AS

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Submitted pholo

•-EMC:llVIu

lUJ I &amp;llf

Norma Torres (center) will be presented with the Janet Voinovich Service Award by the former first lady of Ohio next month
during a ceremony in Middleport. Also pictured (far left) Courtney Sim of the Meigs County Cancer Initiative who nominated Torres and (far right) Darla Fickle, a member of the Ohio Breast and Cervical Cancer Coalition which is hosting the
event along with MCCI.

SIIBftA llaU Ql ~1

Torres honored by Voinovich

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GM 111~1 COIIIUMII CISH ..12,0110
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Former Ohio First Lady to visit Middleport
Bv BETH SERGENT

• Mohler r~presents
. church. See Page A6

$

BSERGENHIMVDAILYSENTINEL .COM •

MIDDLEPORT - Former First
Lady of Ohio Janet Voinovich will
visit Middleport next month to present
the Janet Voinovich Service Award to
this year's recipient , Meigs County's
Norma Torres.
The Ohio Breast and Cervical Cancer
Coalition, along with the Meigs County
Cancer Initiative, Inc. will host the
Tenth Annual Janet Voinovich Service
Award ceremony from 2-3 p.m. on
Thursday, Oct. 16 at the Middleport
Church · of Christ Family Life Center
with Mrs. Voinovich in attend.ance.

ST00113137~ , AUTO, A
ll, G4, 1EO lllll, MIJ(H MOlt

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GM EMPlOYE! DIICOUNT .....13,748
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MIIP ........ .. ....... ..547,67S
GM EMPloYEE DIICOONT •••• .$S,841
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GM PUIOIAII BONUS CISH .. S!,DOD

'I

. Torres, RN, BSN, MS Ed . is being
honored for her commitment and leadership that goes above and beyond,
which · inspired this year 's theme of
Champion for the Cause . In the
1990's, Torres was instrumental in
bringing the first mobile mammography units to Meigs County and initialed low cost gynecological clinics at
the Meigs County Health Department,
which ultimately resulted in the
receipt of grant funding for a Women's
Health Clinic and low cost Family
Planning services.
Since 2006, Norma has served as the
program manager for the Think Pink
Program , which · brings breast health'

education and screening services to
medically. underserved women in
Meigs County. Funded by the Susan
G. Komen for the Cure Columbus
Affiliate , this program has educated
more than 870 women , provided over
160 mammograms, referred over 95
women to other programs for mammography screening and has dispersed
over 130 travel vouchers to women in
Meigs County.
The nomination for this award
describes Ms. Torres as a "dedicated
nurse and volunteer who exhibits faith,
compassion, empathy, unwavering
Please see Torres, AS

Ex-POW to speak for McCain in

Details on Page AS

•

Republicans open headquarters today
2 SECTIONS -

3RD&amp;ANN ST.
1BLOCK FROM THE COURTHOUSE
PARKERSBURG, WV 26101 .

304-485-4418

WWW.MATHENYMOTORS.COM
SALE HOURS: MON·FRI9AM· 7:30PM • SAT 9AM·6:30PM • SUN 1PM·SPM

e

WEARE P A OFBSION ~L GRA{)t

Drive Beautiful'

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·~~~~!!~~
No wor rle l .

BSERGENT 0 MVDAILVSEN TINELCOM

16 PAGES

Annie's Mailbox

A6

:Calendars

A6

'(;:Jassifieds

Bs-6

:Comics

B7

Editorials

A4

:Sports
Weather

B Section

As

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:©aooH Ohio VaHey Publishing Co.
'

. :: 1111)1
,..

~4879

located on Second Street in
Pomeroy next to the Crow·
&amp; Crow Law Office and
POMEROY - Former across from the Meigs
Prisoner of War Colonel County
Prosecuting
Tom Moe of Lancaster, who Attorney's Office. ·
was held captive in Hanoi
Col .' Moe was recently
along with Senator and pointed out at the 'Nati'onal
Republican
Presidential Republican Convention by
Candidate John McCain Vice Presidential Candidate
during the Vietnam War, Gov. Sarah Palin during her
will be speaking on nomination speech. He was
McCain 's behalf at I p.m. asked by McCain to chair
tomorrow iri fr.ont of the "Ohio
Veterans
for
Meigs County Courthouse. McCain" and was a deleThe event is open to the gate to the Republican
public and is part of a busy National Convention in St.
week for Meig s County Paul , Minn .
Republicans who open their
Assigned to combat duty
county political headquar- in Vietnam in 1967 in the
ters at 6 p.m. tonight during
a reception and ribbon cut- 366th fighter wing, 480th
ting . The Meigs County fighter squadron , Danang
Republican Headquarters is
PlutH - SpHker, AS
BY BETH SERGENT

INDEX

,

.

Submlltod photo

Colonel Tom.Moe of Lancaster (left), who was a prisoner of·
war al9ng with Senator and Republican Presidential .
Candidate John McCain in Hanoi, will speak on McCain's
behall at 1 p.m. tomorrow ih front of the Meigs County
Courthouse. Col. Moe is pictured with Dale Colburn of the
Meigs County Republican Party.

POMEROY - "The coyote is a living. breathing
allegory of Want. He is
always hungry . He is always
poor, out of luck and friendless ... He is so spiritless and
cowardly that even while his .
exposed teeth are pretending
a threat, the rest of his face
is apologizing for it."
Stan Gerht , associate profe ssor of environmental and
natural resources at The
Ohi·o State University, used
that quote from famed
American writer Mark ·
Twain to dernonstrate·•&amp;ome
of the · persis.tent negative
attitudes human s have
toward coyotes. S incc
March , 2000 , he has conducted an extensive. ongoing study of coyotes in the
metropolitah Chicago area.
Gerht was the featured
speaker at Ihe recent. annual
banquet and meeting of the
Meigs Soi I imd Water
Conservation District. Over
!50 people attended · the
banquet which was . held at
Meigs High School.
Gerht stressed he was neither supporting coyotes nor
persecuting them. adding
that his putfose was to
share some o what he had
learned about the animals
over his years of study. The
coyote , Gerht expla ined,
was originally found in the
prairies and plains of the
western and southwestern
United States. However,
deforestation and the elimination of competing carnivores have allowed coyotes
to spread throughout almost
the entire country. Coyotes
were first obscrv&lt;:d in Ohio
in 1919, and stat1ed becoming more vis ible ' Ianing in
the 1970s. he said.
Coyotes are unique in that
no other species of carni vore
has doubled its range , he
said, adding thalmo'l uf this
expansion took place in the
mid 1900's during a time of
great predator contro l.
"They can handle anything
we throw at them." he sai d.
While largely .considered
a rural species , coyotes are
Jiving in Chi cago along
with 9 million people, he
said , adding that since 2000
he has captured. tagged and
studied more than 300 coyotes in Chicago . The coyote
is a member of the dog fa mily and can even breed with
dogs, although actual "coydogs" are very rare.
"Coyotes have sh111dards:
they aren't interested in our
dogs," he joked, adding that
in his studies he has yet to
encounter a "coydog."
Genetic testing shows thai
coyotes are monogamous
and mate for life. unless
se parated by dea th . In
almost I0 years of stud y we
have had no "divo rces"
although we've had' a lot of
widows and widowe rs,
Gerht remarked.
Please see. SWCD, AS

•

�•

AcROSS THE NATION

;'Il)e Daily 5entinel

, Page A3 • The Daily Sentinel

PageA2
Monday, September 29,

II'Ww.mydailysentine.com

200$

$1008
learn its details and vmce
their concerns.
Many said they left undeWASHINGTON
cided, and leaders were
:congressional leaders and scrambling to put the most '
;the White House agreed po~itive face on a deeply
:Sunday to · a $700 billion unpopular plan.
·rescue of the ailing financial
"This isn't about a bailout
: indu stry after lawmakers of Wall Street, it's a buy-in.
· insisted on sharing spending so that we can turn our
controls with the Bush · economy around." said
administration. The biggest House Speaker Nancy ·
: U.S. bailout in history won Pelosi. D-Ca!if.
:the tentative support of both
The largest government
:presidential candidates and intervention in financial.
·goes to the House for a vote markets since the Great
: Monday.
Depression
casts
The plan. bollixed up for Washington's long shadow
days by election-year poli- over Wall Street. The gov. tics. would give the ad min- ernment would take over
: istration broad power to use huge amounts of devalued
:billions upon billions oftax- assets from · beleaguered
;payer dollars to purchase financial companies in hopes
·devalued mortgage-related ·of unlocking frozen credit.
assets held by cash-starved
"I don't know of anyone
AP photo
financial firms.
here who wants the center Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi, 0-Calif., Secretary of the Treasury Henry Paulson, right, Senate Majority Le;;~d~r
· President Bush called of the economic universe to
H;;~rry Reid, D, Nev., second left, ahd Sen. Judd Gregg, R-N.H., left, announce a tentative deal on legislation regarding the
:the vote ·a difficult one for he Washington ," said a top
'
·
financial crisison Sunday on Capitol Hill in Washington .
:lawmakers but said he is negotiator, Sen. Chris
:con fident Congress will Dodd, chairman , of the
A breakthrough came
the government would
An extraordinary week Qf
:pass it. " Without this res- Senate Banking , Housing Emanuel, D-IlL
Sat11rday
night.
with
the
receive
stock
warrants
in
talks
unfolded after Paulson
,
But
it
was
a
tough
sell
for
cue plan, the costs to the and
Urban
Affairs
addition
of
a
requirement
return
for
the
bailout
relief,
and
Ben Bernanke , tl!e
American economy could Committee. But, he added , lawmakers in both parties.
centrist giving taxpayers a chance Federal Reserve chai'rmaii,
Rep. Joe Banon . R-Texas. sought . by
be disastrous,"' Bush said "The center of gravity is
Democn1ts
and
Republicans
to share in recipients' · went to Congress 10 da.)(s
an
opponent,
estimated
that
· in a written state11Jent here temporarily .... God
half
of
'the
House
's
199to
ensure
that
the
governfuture profits .
.
ago with ominous warnings
:released by the White forbid it's here any longer
To help struggling home" about a full-blown econom:House. He was. to speak than it takes to get credit Republicans are "truly ment be paid back by comundecided."
panies
that
got
help.
The
owners,
the plan would ic meltdown if lawmakeis
:publicly about the plan moving again."
lawmakers
who
struck
a
president
would
have
to
tell
require
the
government to · did not act quickly to infu~e
:early Monday morning,
The · plan would let
·. before U.S. markets open. Congress block half the .post-midnight deal on the Congress after five years tty · renegotiating the _bad huge amounts of gove11)with
Treasury how he planned to recoup 'mortgages it acquires with ment money into a financial
Flexing its political mus- money and force the presi- plan
the aim of lowering borrow- sector buckling under tlie
·
Secretary
HenrY.
Paulson the losses.
·c Je , Congress insisted on a dent to jump through some
Another
key
bargain
·ers'
monthly payments so weight of toxic debt. .
:
·stronger hand in controlling hoops befo,re using it all. predicted final congressionto · draw they can keep their homes .
The negotiations wer;e
time
..: the money than the White The government could get al action . might not come thi s
Republican
support
But
Democrats
surrenshaped
by the political presuntil
Wednesday.
:House
had
wanted. at $250 billion immediately,
allows,
but
doesn't
require,
·
dered
other
cherished
goals:
sures
of
an intense camThe proposal is designed
: Lawmakers had to navigate $1 00 billion more if the
' between angry voters with president certified it was to end a vicious downward government to insure some letting judges rewrite bank- paign seaso n in which vat. little regard for Wall Street necessary, and the last .$350 spiral that has 'battered all bad home loans rather than rupt homeowners ' mort- ers' economic concerns fig : and administration officials billion with a separate certi- levels of· the economy. buy,' them. That's designed gages and steering .any prof- ure prominently. They
and
·who warned that inaction fication - and subject to a Hundreds of billions of to limit the amount of feder- its gained toward an afford- brought . McCain
dollars
in
investments
a!
money
used
in
the
rescue.
able
housing
fund.
Obama
to
Washington
for-a
:would cause the economy to congressional resolution of
"This is something that all
It was Obama who first White House meeting thilt
based on mortgages have
:seize up and spiral into disapprovaL
soured
and
.cramped
banks'
of
us
will
swallow
hard
and
signaled
Democrats were yielded more, discord and
: rece ~s ion.
Still, the resolution could
go forward with," said willing to give up so me of behind-the-scenes theatrics
A deal in hand. Capitol be vetoed by the president . willingness to lend .
Republican
presidential their favorite proposals. He than progress, hut inc.reased
"If
we
do
not
do
this,
the
Hill leaders scrambled to meaning it would take
nominee
John
and
the
McCain.
told reporters Wednesday the pressure on both sides to
trauma,
the
chaos
sell it to colleagues in both extra-large congressional
His Democratic rival . that the bankruptcy measure strike a bargain.
disruption to everyday
parties and acknowledged majorities to stop it. .
Lawmakers in both parthey were not certain it
As Bush's team stepped Americans' lives will be Barack Obama sought cred- . was a priority, but that it
would pass. "Now we have up its efforts to corral reluc- overwhelming , and that's a it for taxpayer safeguards "probably something that ties who are facing re-electo get the votes." said Sen. tant Republicans, the White price we can't afford to risk added to the initial proposal we shouldn't try to do in tion are loath to embrace a
costly plan proposed by a
Harry Reid , D-Nev .. the House released a letter from paying," Sen. Judd Gregg. from the Bush administra- this piece of legislation ."
Frank negotiated much of deeply unpopular president
majority leader.
his but)get chief, Jim the chief Senate Republican tion . Later, at a rally in
Rep. John A. Boehner, R- Nussle, to Boehner saying · in the talks, told The Detroit, Obama st1id, "it the compromise in a that would benefit perhaps
looks like we will pass that marathon series . of up-and- the most publicly detested .
Ohio. the House minority the measure would cost tax- Associated Press.
Rep. Barney Frank of plan very soon." ··
leacler. said he was urging payers. "considerably less"
. down meetings at\d phone of all: companies that got
The rescue would only be calls ·with Paulson, Dodd , rich off bad bets that have
"every member whose con- · than its eye-popping $700 Massachusetts , the House
and
key cnuseil economic pain for ·
Financial
Services open to companies who D-Conn. ,
science will allow them to billion totaL
including ordinary people.
support this" to back it , but
Lawmakers in both parties Committee chairman, pre- deny their executives "gold- Republicans
officials in both parties were poring over the 1JO- dicted the measure would en parachutes" and limit Gregg and Blunt.
But many of them say the
exr.ecied the vote to be a page bill.. Democratic lead- pass, though not by a large their pay packages. Firms
Pelosi shepherded the dis- plan is vital to ensure their
nail -biter.
.
ers have made it clear they majority.
that got the most help · cuss ions at key points. and constituents dcin 't pay for
The final legislation was will not support the rescue
cut a central deal Saturday Wall Street's mistakes, in
"It's nota bill that any one through the program released Sunday evening, unless a substantial number of us would ha11e written. $300 million or more night ,.- on companies pay- the form of unaffordable
and
Republicans
and of Republicans join them.
It's a much ,better bill than would face steep taxes on ing back taxpayers for any credit and major hits ·to
Democrats huddled for
"It will take two to make we got. It's not as good as it any compensation for their losses - that gave momen· · investments they count on,
hours in private meetings to this work ," said Rep. Rahm should be," he said.
tum to the final accnrd.
like their pensions.
top people ever $500,000.
: BY JUUE HIRSCHFELD DAVIS
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

House approves nuclear pact with India
Bv

FOSTER KL~&lt;O

ASSOCIATEI'l PRESS WRITER

WASHINGTON - The
House voted overwhelmingly Saturday to approve a
landmark pact that would
allow the U.S. to provide
nuclear materials to India.
The deal still faces obstacles in the Senate , making
prospects uncertain for pas. sage before ·President Bush
leaves office in January.
Senate Majority Leader
Harry Reid , D-Nev .. a supporter, promised a Stmate
vote on the .accord in the
week
ahead.
possi bly
Monday.
Hoping to rai se pressure
on that chamber , Bush
quickly issued a statement
praising House passage and
prodding the Senate to do
the same thing.
"I urge the Senate to
quickly take up and pass
this important piece of legislation
befcire.
their
October adjournment." the
president sa id . "S igning
this bipartisan bill will help
strengthen our partnership
with India."
India's Prime Minister
Manmohan Singh, addressing the Indian community in
New York where he was
attending the U.N. General
Assembly, said "the journey
Presiden t Bush and I
embarked upon is nearing
fruition."
· "India will be liberated
from tpe constraints of technology denial of 34 years. lt
will add an important strategic pillar to our .bilateral

•

partnership. We will widen '
our clean energy options,"
he sa id Saturday.
The House approved the
measure 298-117 without
debate in an unusua•l
Saturday session, held as
lawmakers try dealing with '
the financial crisis and
wrapping up the year's
business.
The accord reverses three
decades of U.S. policy by
shipping atomic fuel to
India in return for international inspections of India's
civilian reactors. M;ilitary
reactors would not be ~ub­
ject to examination :
Supporters say it would
bring India's atomic program under closer scrutiny.
Critics say it would boost
India's nuclear arsenal· and
spark an arms race in
South Asia.
House Speaker Nancy
Pelosi , . D-Calif. , said the
measure "furthers our countries' ~trategic relationship
while balancing nuclear
nonproliferation concerns
and India's growing energy
needs."
But Rep. Ellen Tauscher,
D-Calif., said in a" statement
before the vote that the
agreement "flies in the face
of decades ·of American
leadership to contain the
spread of weapons of mass
destiUction ."
The deal enjoys strong
support from senior lawmakers in both parties. But
it has stalled in ·the Senate
because at least one lawmaker has anonymously
blocked it from coming to

'-·

Thank you,
AEP Ohio customers

\1"

'r

The men and womer;~ of AEP Ohio give sincere thanks for the patience, consideration and
support of our customers as we undertook recovery from the worst storm in recent history. We
understand the difficulty you endured and the frustration you experienced as the days wore on.
Hurricane 'Ike took an unpredicted and vicious turn through the AEP Ohio service territory.
The more than 75-mile-per-hour.winds toppled and uprooted trees, snapped utility poles
'and brought down power lines. The near hurricane-force winds ripped siding off houses and
shingles off rooftops and left nearly 700,000 AEP Ohio customers and more than 2 million
customers across the state without pow~r.

UCLA group discovers humongous prime number .

LOS ANGELES (AP) - Mathematicians l I that are divisible by only two whole posa vote, according to con- at UCLA have di scovered a 13 millidn-digit itive numbers: themselves and one .
gressional aides, who prime number. a long-sought milestone that
Merse nne primes - named for their disspoke on condition of makes them eligible for,a $100,000 prize.
coverer, i 7th century French mathematianonymity because they
The group found the 46th known cian Marin Mersenne - are expressed as
were not authorized to Mersenne prime last month on a network of ZP-1, or two to the power of ·:p" minus one.
brief reporters.
75 computers running Windows XP. The P is itself a prime number. For the new
Supporters warn that number was verified by a different comput- prime , Pis 43,112,609.
while Congress argues over er system running a different algorithm.
Thousands of people' around the world
the deal , U.S. businesses are . "We're delighted," said UCLA's Edson. have been participating in the Great Internet
losing opportunities as . Smith, the leader of the effort. "Now we're Mersenne Prime Search, or GIMPS. a coopFrance. Russia and other looking for the next one, despite the odds." erative system in which underused computIndia's
countries eyed
It's the eighth Mersenne prime discov- ing power is harn-essed to perform the calmultibillion-dollar nuclear ered at UCLA.
culations needed to find and verify
mark'et.
Primes are numbers like three, seven and Mersenne primes .
Critics say the initiative
sends the wrong message to
countries like Iran as they
FOR OVER
pursue atomic programs.
www.rutlandboHiegas.com .
India built its bombs outside
Nucleaf
Nonthe
Proliferation Treaty, which
provides civil nuclear trade
in exchange for a pledge
from nations not to pursue
nuclear weapons.
I
India has refused to sign
nonproliferation agreements
and has faced a nuclear
trade ban since Its first
atomic test in 1974. The
agreement with the U.S. has
been a top priority for the
Indian prime minister.
The 45-nation NucJear
Sign up for propane service during
Suppliers Group of · countries that supply nuclear
the month of September and receive
mate rial and technology
free tank installation!'
. agreed this month to lift the
ban on civilian nuclear
Meigs County's Oldest
trade with India after con'Terms and Conditions Apply
and Largest Propane
tentious talks 'a nd some
Offer good only to
concessions to countries
Company!
fearful it could set .adanqualified new customers
Visit us on the web at
gerous precedent.
www.ruttandboHiegas:com
Indian defense and diplomacy experts predicted
Torch ·Logan • McConnelsvU!e ·Rutland ·Gallipolis ·The Plains • Jackson
Saturday that the measure
would be approved by the
740-742-2511 or 1-800-837-8217
U.S. Congress.

RUTLAND

BOTTLE GAS

•

r·

!

''
''•
•

1-800-837-8217

EARL,Y BIRD SPECIAL!

AEP Ohi'? battled back, deploying a workforce of 3,200 service crews, support personnel, and
tree workers from AEP Ohio .and AEP affiliates, and other companies from as far as Canada,
Florida and New York to clear debris and restore power, Irs a total that does not include the
scores of meter electricians, customer service representatives and behind-the-scenes personnel
who were mobilized to st.i pport this extensive restoration effort.
Heartfelt thanks goes to all our employees, many who worked 16 hours a day and were
without power in their own homes, for their resolve to get the job done safely and swiftly. We
also gratefully acknowledge the continual support of their families during their long absence.
'

'

We thank the first responders ari.d crews from other areas who assisted us and the
customers who handed food and refreshments to our crews, and offered us kind words.
For all of us, custo111ers and employees alike, the week following the storm has been
challenging and exhausting. Again, we thank you for your patience, your understanding
a'n d your encouragement
.

Free Propane Tank Installation

limited

OHIO®

TlmeOHarll

..

••• •

I

I

Aunit ofAmerican Electric Power
AEPOhio;com

'''
I

I.

I
I .•

'' ..
·-

Monday. September 29, 2008

�•

AcROSS THE NATION

;'Il)e Daily 5entinel

, Page A3 • The Daily Sentinel

PageA2
Monday, September 29,

II'Ww.mydailysentine.com

200$

$1008
learn its details and vmce
their concerns.
Many said they left undeWASHINGTON
cided, and leaders were
:congressional leaders and scrambling to put the most '
;the White House agreed po~itive face on a deeply
:Sunday to · a $700 billion unpopular plan.
·rescue of the ailing financial
"This isn't about a bailout
: indu stry after lawmakers of Wall Street, it's a buy-in.
· insisted on sharing spending so that we can turn our
controls with the Bush · economy around." said
administration. The biggest House Speaker Nancy ·
: U.S. bailout in history won Pelosi. D-Ca!if.
:the tentative support of both
The largest government
:presidential candidates and intervention in financial.
·goes to the House for a vote markets since the Great
: Monday.
Depression
casts
The plan. bollixed up for Washington's long shadow
days by election-year poli- over Wall Street. The gov. tics. would give the ad min- ernment would take over
: istration broad power to use huge amounts of devalued
:billions upon billions oftax- assets from · beleaguered
;payer dollars to purchase financial companies in hopes
·devalued mortgage-related ·of unlocking frozen credit.
assets held by cash-starved
"I don't know of anyone
AP photo
financial firms.
here who wants the center Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi, 0-Calif., Secretary of the Treasury Henry Paulson, right, Senate Majority Le;;~d~r
· President Bush called of the economic universe to
H;;~rry Reid, D, Nev., second left, ahd Sen. Judd Gregg, R-N.H., left, announce a tentative deal on legislation regarding the
:the vote ·a difficult one for he Washington ," said a top
'
·
financial crisison Sunday on Capitol Hill in Washington .
:lawmakers but said he is negotiator, Sen. Chris
:con fident Congress will Dodd, chairman , of the
A breakthrough came
the government would
An extraordinary week Qf
:pass it. " Without this res- Senate Banking , Housing Emanuel, D-IlL
Sat11rday
night.
with
the
receive
stock
warrants
in
talks
unfolded after Paulson
,
But
it
was
a
tough
sell
for
cue plan, the costs to the and
Urban
Affairs
addition
of
a
requirement
return
for
the
bailout
relief,
and
Ben Bernanke , tl!e
American economy could Committee. But, he added , lawmakers in both parties.
centrist giving taxpayers a chance Federal Reserve chai'rmaii,
Rep. Joe Banon . R-Texas. sought . by
be disastrous,"' Bush said "The center of gravity is
Democn1ts
and
Republicans
to share in recipients' · went to Congress 10 da.)(s
an
opponent,
estimated
that
· in a written state11Jent here temporarily .... God
half
of
'the
House
's
199to
ensure
that
the
governfuture profits .
.
ago with ominous warnings
:released by the White forbid it's here any longer
To help struggling home" about a full-blown econom:House. He was. to speak than it takes to get credit Republicans are "truly ment be paid back by comundecided."
panies
that
got
help.
The
owners,
the plan would ic meltdown if lawmakeis
:publicly about the plan moving again."
lawmakers
who
struck
a
president
would
have
to
tell
require
the
government to · did not act quickly to infu~e
:early Monday morning,
The · plan would let
·. before U.S. markets open. Congress block half the .post-midnight deal on the Congress after five years tty · renegotiating the _bad huge amounts of gove11)with
Treasury how he planned to recoup 'mortgages it acquires with ment money into a financial
Flexing its political mus- money and force the presi- plan
the aim of lowering borrow- sector buckling under tlie
·
Secretary
HenrY.
Paulson the losses.
·c Je , Congress insisted on a dent to jump through some
Another
key
bargain
·ers'
monthly payments so weight of toxic debt. .
:
·stronger hand in controlling hoops befo,re using it all. predicted final congressionto · draw they can keep their homes .
The negotiations wer;e
time
..: the money than the White The government could get al action . might not come thi s
Republican
support
But
Democrats
surrenshaped
by the political presuntil
Wednesday.
:House
had
wanted. at $250 billion immediately,
allows,
but
doesn't
require,
·
dered
other
cherished
goals:
sures
of
an intense camThe proposal is designed
: Lawmakers had to navigate $1 00 billion more if the
' between angry voters with president certified it was to end a vicious downward government to insure some letting judges rewrite bank- paign seaso n in which vat. little regard for Wall Street necessary, and the last .$350 spiral that has 'battered all bad home loans rather than rupt homeowners ' mort- ers' economic concerns fig : and administration officials billion with a separate certi- levels of· the economy. buy,' them. That's designed gages and steering .any prof- ure prominently. They
and
·who warned that inaction fication - and subject to a Hundreds of billions of to limit the amount of feder- its gained toward an afford- brought . McCain
dollars
in
investments
a!
money
used
in
the
rescue.
able
housing
fund.
Obama
to
Washington
for-a
:would cause the economy to congressional resolution of
"This is something that all
It was Obama who first White House meeting thilt
based on mortgages have
:seize up and spiral into disapprovaL
soured
and
.cramped
banks'
of
us
will
swallow
hard
and
signaled
Democrats were yielded more, discord and
: rece ~s ion.
Still, the resolution could
go forward with," said willing to give up so me of behind-the-scenes theatrics
A deal in hand. Capitol be vetoed by the president . willingness to lend .
Republican
presidential their favorite proposals. He than progress, hut inc.reased
"If
we
do
not
do
this,
the
Hill leaders scrambled to meaning it would take
nominee
John
and
the
McCain.
told reporters Wednesday the pressure on both sides to
trauma,
the
chaos
sell it to colleagues in both extra-large congressional
His Democratic rival . that the bankruptcy measure strike a bargain.
disruption to everyday
parties and acknowledged majorities to stop it. .
Lawmakers in both parthey were not certain it
As Bush's team stepped Americans' lives will be Barack Obama sought cred- . was a priority, but that it
would pass. "Now we have up its efforts to corral reluc- overwhelming , and that's a it for taxpayer safeguards "probably something that ties who are facing re-electo get the votes." said Sen. tant Republicans, the White price we can't afford to risk added to the initial proposal we shouldn't try to do in tion are loath to embrace a
costly plan proposed by a
Harry Reid , D-Nev .. the House released a letter from paying," Sen. Judd Gregg. from the Bush administra- this piece of legislation ."
Frank negotiated much of deeply unpopular president
majority leader.
his but)get chief, Jim the chief Senate Republican tion . Later, at a rally in
Rep. John A. Boehner, R- Nussle, to Boehner saying · in the talks, told The Detroit, Obama st1id, "it the compromise in a that would benefit perhaps
looks like we will pass that marathon series . of up-and- the most publicly detested .
Ohio. the House minority the measure would cost tax- Associated Press.
Rep. Barney Frank of plan very soon." ··
leacler. said he was urging payers. "considerably less"
. down meetings at\d phone of all: companies that got
The rescue would only be calls ·with Paulson, Dodd , rich off bad bets that have
"every member whose con- · than its eye-popping $700 Massachusetts , the House
and
key cnuseil economic pain for ·
Financial
Services open to companies who D-Conn. ,
science will allow them to billion totaL
including ordinary people.
support this" to back it , but
Lawmakers in both parties Committee chairman, pre- deny their executives "gold- Republicans
officials in both parties were poring over the 1JO- dicted the measure would en parachutes" and limit Gregg and Blunt.
But many of them say the
exr.ecied the vote to be a page bill.. Democratic lead- pass, though not by a large their pay packages. Firms
Pelosi shepherded the dis- plan is vital to ensure their
nail -biter.
.
ers have made it clear they majority.
that got the most help · cuss ions at key points. and constituents dcin 't pay for
The final legislation was will not support the rescue
cut a central deal Saturday Wall Street's mistakes, in
"It's nota bill that any one through the program released Sunday evening, unless a substantial number of us would ha11e written. $300 million or more night ,.- on companies pay- the form of unaffordable
and
Republicans
and of Republicans join them.
It's a much ,better bill than would face steep taxes on ing back taxpayers for any credit and major hits ·to
Democrats huddled for
"It will take two to make we got. It's not as good as it any compensation for their losses - that gave momen· · investments they count on,
hours in private meetings to this work ," said Rep. Rahm should be," he said.
tum to the final accnrd.
like their pensions.
top people ever $500,000.
: BY JUUE HIRSCHFELD DAVIS
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

House approves nuclear pact with India
Bv

FOSTER KL~&lt;O

ASSOCIATEI'l PRESS WRITER

WASHINGTON - The
House voted overwhelmingly Saturday to approve a
landmark pact that would
allow the U.S. to provide
nuclear materials to India.
The deal still faces obstacles in the Senate , making
prospects uncertain for pas. sage before ·President Bush
leaves office in January.
Senate Majority Leader
Harry Reid , D-Nev .. a supporter, promised a Stmate
vote on the .accord in the
week
ahead.
possi bly
Monday.
Hoping to rai se pressure
on that chamber , Bush
quickly issued a statement
praising House passage and
prodding the Senate to do
the same thing.
"I urge the Senate to
quickly take up and pass
this important piece of legislation
befcire.
their
October adjournment." the
president sa id . "S igning
this bipartisan bill will help
strengthen our partnership
with India."
India's Prime Minister
Manmohan Singh, addressing the Indian community in
New York where he was
attending the U.N. General
Assembly, said "the journey
Presiden t Bush and I
embarked upon is nearing
fruition."
· "India will be liberated
from tpe constraints of technology denial of 34 years. lt
will add an important strategic pillar to our .bilateral

•

partnership. We will widen '
our clean energy options,"
he sa id Saturday.
The House approved the
measure 298-117 without
debate in an unusua•l
Saturday session, held as
lawmakers try dealing with '
the financial crisis and
wrapping up the year's
business.
The accord reverses three
decades of U.S. policy by
shipping atomic fuel to
India in return for international inspections of India's
civilian reactors. M;ilitary
reactors would not be ~ub­
ject to examination :
Supporters say it would
bring India's atomic program under closer scrutiny.
Critics say it would boost
India's nuclear arsenal· and
spark an arms race in
South Asia.
House Speaker Nancy
Pelosi , . D-Calif. , said the
measure "furthers our countries' ~trategic relationship
while balancing nuclear
nonproliferation concerns
and India's growing energy
needs."
But Rep. Ellen Tauscher,
D-Calif., said in a" statement
before the vote that the
agreement "flies in the face
of decades ·of American
leadership to contain the
spread of weapons of mass
destiUction ."
The deal enjoys strong
support from senior lawmakers in both parties. But
it has stalled in ·the Senate
because at least one lawmaker has anonymously
blocked it from coming to

'-·

Thank you,
AEP Ohio customers

\1"

'r

The men and womer;~ of AEP Ohio give sincere thanks for the patience, consideration and
support of our customers as we undertook recovery from the worst storm in recent history. We
understand the difficulty you endured and the frustration you experienced as the days wore on.
Hurricane 'Ike took an unpredicted and vicious turn through the AEP Ohio service territory.
The more than 75-mile-per-hour.winds toppled and uprooted trees, snapped utility poles
'and brought down power lines. The near hurricane-force winds ripped siding off houses and
shingles off rooftops and left nearly 700,000 AEP Ohio customers and more than 2 million
customers across the state without pow~r.

UCLA group discovers humongous prime number .

LOS ANGELES (AP) - Mathematicians l I that are divisible by only two whole posa vote, according to con- at UCLA have di scovered a 13 millidn-digit itive numbers: themselves and one .
gressional aides, who prime number. a long-sought milestone that
Merse nne primes - named for their disspoke on condition of makes them eligible for,a $100,000 prize.
coverer, i 7th century French mathematianonymity because they
The group found the 46th known cian Marin Mersenne - are expressed as
were not authorized to Mersenne prime last month on a network of ZP-1, or two to the power of ·:p" minus one.
brief reporters.
75 computers running Windows XP. The P is itself a prime number. For the new
Supporters warn that number was verified by a different comput- prime , Pis 43,112,609.
while Congress argues over er system running a different algorithm.
Thousands of people' around the world
the deal , U.S. businesses are . "We're delighted," said UCLA's Edson. have been participating in the Great Internet
losing opportunities as . Smith, the leader of the effort. "Now we're Mersenne Prime Search, or GIMPS. a coopFrance. Russia and other looking for the next one, despite the odds." erative system in which underused computIndia's
countries eyed
It's the eighth Mersenne prime discov- ing power is harn-essed to perform the calmultibillion-dollar nuclear ered at UCLA.
culations needed to find and verify
mark'et.
Primes are numbers like three, seven and Mersenne primes .
Critics say the initiative
sends the wrong message to
countries like Iran as they
FOR OVER
pursue atomic programs.
www.rutlandboHiegas.com .
India built its bombs outside
Nucleaf
Nonthe
Proliferation Treaty, which
provides civil nuclear trade
in exchange for a pledge
from nations not to pursue
nuclear weapons.
I
India has refused to sign
nonproliferation agreements
and has faced a nuclear
trade ban since Its first
atomic test in 1974. The
agreement with the U.S. has
been a top priority for the
Indian prime minister.
The 45-nation NucJear
Sign up for propane service during
Suppliers Group of · countries that supply nuclear
the month of September and receive
mate rial and technology
free tank installation!'
. agreed this month to lift the
ban on civilian nuclear
Meigs County's Oldest
trade with India after con'Terms and Conditions Apply
and Largest Propane
tentious talks 'a nd some
Offer good only to
concessions to countries
Company!
fearful it could set .adanqualified new customers
Visit us on the web at
gerous precedent.
www.ruttandboHiegas:com
Indian defense and diplomacy experts predicted
Torch ·Logan • McConnelsvU!e ·Rutland ·Gallipolis ·The Plains • Jackson
Saturday that the measure
would be approved by the
740-742-2511 or 1-800-837-8217
U.S. Congress.

RUTLAND

BOTTLE GAS

•

r·

!

''
''•
•

1-800-837-8217

EARL,Y BIRD SPECIAL!

AEP Ohi'? battled back, deploying a workforce of 3,200 service crews, support personnel, and
tree workers from AEP Ohio .and AEP affiliates, and other companies from as far as Canada,
Florida and New York to clear debris and restore power, Irs a total that does not include the
scores of meter electricians, customer service representatives and behind-the-scenes personnel
who were mobilized to st.i pport this extensive restoration effort.
Heartfelt thanks goes to all our employees, many who worked 16 hours a day and were
without power in their own homes, for their resolve to get the job done safely and swiftly. We
also gratefully acknowledge the continual support of their families during their long absence.
'

'

We thank the first responders ari.d crews from other areas who assisted us and the
customers who handed food and refreshments to our crews, and offered us kind words.
For all of us, custo111ers and employees alike, the week following the storm has been
challenging and exhausting. Again, we thank you for your patience, your understanding
a'n d your encouragement
.

Free Propane Tank Installation

limited

OHIO®

TlmeOHarll

..

••• •

I

I

Aunit ofAmerican Electric Power
AEPOhio;com

'''
I

I.

I
I .•

'' ..
·-

Monday. September 29, 2008

�.,

The Daily Sentinel

OPINION

PageA4
Monday, September 29, 2008

The l)aily Sentinel Cologne's speech-killing politicos reek of Jascisrn'

Readers of ·fJJy blog
(dianawest.net)
know that
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio
·this
past
week.
as a
over
(740) 992·2156 • FAX (740) 992-2157
maelstrom of buffeting ecowww.mydallysentlnel.com
nomic crises has sucked the
air out of the news atmosOhio Valley Publishing Co.
Diana
phere, I· have been all-butWest
transfixed by events unfoldDan Goodrich
mg in ihe German city of
Publisher
Cologne.
With
the
unabashed fascination of
the rubbernecker, I nave
Charlene Hoeflich
elections on the politically
watched in horror. combi ng
General Manager-News Edit,or
incorrect iss ue of resistance
online foreign press reports
to the spread of Islamic law
and a few favorite blogs
(Sharia), were invited to
(Brussels Journal. Gates of
Vienna, Atlas Shrugs), as speak in Cologne.
Congress shall make no law respecting an
Why Co logne? After a
local' aulhorities yielded long and contentious battle .
esdblishment of religion, or prohibiting the
their charge' of freedom of the city council last montr.
speech
and freedom of narrow ly approved the con free exerdse thereof; or abridging the freedom
assembly - indeed, yielded struction of a giant mosque
ofspeech, or of the press; or the right of the
civic ·space and civic peace complex funded by a gro up
people peaceably to assemble, and to petition
- ttl a lawless band of vio,called the Turk ish-Islamic
.
lent
leftists, who, in their Union to serve some portion
the Government for a redress grievances.
, weekend iitint of mob rule , of the cit y's 120.000
-' successfully prevented a Muslims.
While
the
-The First Amendment to the U;S. Constitution political : rally against the
American take.on any house
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 1 lslami;r,alion of Europe from
of worship going up is gen erally one of approval based
these same on a straightforward bel ief
' authorities , including the
: Today is Monday, Sept. 29. the 273rd day of2008 . Then~ mayor of this fourth -largest in. freedom of religion. in
are 93 days left in the year. The Jewish holiday of Rosh·. Gennan city (about 1 mil- . Euro pe, given the heavy
influx of Islamic popula Hashana begins at sunset.
·
: lion ,people), yielded to the
tions.
there is a political and
Today's Highlight in History: On Sept. 29. 1978. Pope John : mob happily and with much
Paul I was found dead in his Vatican apartment just over a se lf-congratulation. Indeed, legal dimension to such
tnonth after becoming head of the Roman Catholic Church . Colog ne
Mayor
Fritz mosq ue co nstruct ion th at
· On this date: In 1758 , English Admiral Horatio Nelson Schramma
called
the we JUSt don 't recogni ze
example.
was born in Burnham Thorpe. Norfolk .
episode "a · victory for the here. · For
Germany's
Muslim
popula: In 1789, the U.S. War Department established a regular City of Cologne and a victotion is largely Turkish; and
army with a Strength of several hundred men .
ry by the democratic forces
it is Turktsh Prime Mini ster
In 1829. London's reorganized police .force. which of the city.''
became known as Scotland Yard , went on duty.
Schramma may ~ell · Recep Tayyip Erdogan who
is infa mous for ha vi ng said
: In 1902, Broadway impresario David Belasco reopened count squelching peaceful
in 1998. "Toe mosques are
the Republic Theatre under his own name.
political discourse with a our barracks, the domes our
· In 1918 , Allied forces began their dec isive breakthrough violent mob as a victory for
helmets, the minarets our
of the Hindenburg Line during World War I.
his city, but there is nothing bayo nets and the fai th ful
· In 1938. British, French, German and Italian leaders con- "democratic" about it. or
our soldiers.'' Such a declaeluded the Munich Agreement, which was aimed· at appeas- about the "forces" responsi- ration of, well , religious war
ing Adolf Hitler by allowing Na zi annexation of ble . This twisting , weasel- from some'un e who is now a
Czechoslovakia's Sudetenland.
use of language, however, is head of state adds the threat
In 1963.• the second session of the Second Vatican only one example of the of conquest to any serious
Council opened.
campaign of disinformatip n mosque debate.
: In 1979, Pope John Paul II began the first papal visit to waged against reality in
And that 's not all. Earli er
Ireland as he arrived for a three-day tour.
Cologne this past weekend. this year in Cologne,
In brief, elected officials Erdogan declared before
In 1982, Extra-Strength Tylenol capsules laced with
cyanide claimed the first of seven victims in the Chicago from several different coun - 20,000 cheering Turkish
area. (To date, the case remains unsolved.)
tries (Austria, Belgium, expatriates that "assimilaIn 1988, the space shuttle Discovery blasted off from Gerinany, Italy) , politicians tion is a -c rime . against
Cape Canaveral, Fla ., marking America's return to manned who campaign and win humanity." On that same
space !light following the Challenger disaster.
.
One year ago: President Bush signed a bill to prevent a
government shutdown , but lambasted Democrats controlling Congress f9r sending him the stopgap measure while
they contin·ued to work on more than a dozen spending
THA,T WASN'T A
bills. Actress .Lois Muxwell, who'd starred as Mi.'5
LIE ... THAT WAS' SPIN.
Moneypenny in 14 James Bond movies, died in Fremantle,
Australia. at age 80. ·
: Today 's Birthdays: Actress Lizabe)h Scott is 86 . Actor
Steve Forrest is 84 . Actress Anita Ekberg is 77. Actor Eddie
Barth is 77. W[iter-director Robert Benton is 76. Singer
Jerry Lee Lewis is 73. Jazz musician Jean-Luc Ponty is 66.
Telev ision-film composer Mike Post is 64. Actress Patricia
Hodge is 62. TV personality Bryant Gumbel is 60. Country
~ inger Al vin Crow is 58. Actor Drake Hogestyn is 55.
Broadcast journalist Gwen Ifill is 53. Comedian-actor
Andrew "Dice" Clay is 51. Actor Roger Ban is 46 . Actress
Jill Whelan i0 42. Rock musician Brad Smith (Blind
Melon) is 40. Actress Erika Eleniak is 39. Rhythm-andblues singer Devante Swing (Jodeci) is 39. Country singer
Brad C:otter ("Nashville Star") is 38. Actress Emily Lloyd
is 38. Country musician Danick Dupelle (Emerson Drive)
i. s 35. Country singer Katie McNeill (3 of Hearts) is 26.
Rock musician Josh Farro (Paramore) is 21.
Thought for Today: " Nothing makes people so Worthy of
compliments as occasionally receiving them . One is more
delightf~·l for being told one is deli ghtful - just as one. is
more angry for being told one is angry." - Katharine
Fullerton Gerould , American writer ( 1879- 1944).

of

:T 0 DAY IN HIS T 0 R Y! taW';af.~a~~re,

·LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR

The Daily Sentinel

·--·-·

....

·

reported they also shoved
him. spit on him , and called
him a fascist pig. " I · wa~
pummeled in the head several tiines and th en shoved
to the ground where I was
beaten and kicked with
steel toe boots in plain sight
of police who did nothing."He later discovered he had
a broken ri b.
· And yet. the consensus
· narrative , dutifully repeated
in the mainstream .European
media, is that it is th ~
sil enced and hounded
politicians and their sup:
porters who are the "fas,
cists": wh ile it is th ~
silencers and hounders who
are th e ''anti-fascists ."
Such lies and distortions
are probably what help con,
vince our own media to
ignore such events allogeth:
er as just so much marginal
"extremis m" goi ng on
somewhere in Europe ,
Anyway, how does it affect
us? Nothing like that is happening here, ri ght? ··
Yes and no . As in Europe,
hu ge mosque comple xes
are openin g ·across the
States - one very ·re~e ntly
in Boston and another in
Atlanta. Do they portend
the extension and entrench;
ment of Islamic law in the
United States? One difference between the United
States and Europe is that we
don ' t have street thugs
enforcing a code of silenc~
on the subject. T.hat's
because of the other differ:
ence: We don 't have any
political parties willing, oi
even able to disc uss it.
(Diana West is a colum:nist for The Washin·gton
Times. She is the author oj
"Tire Dea rh' of rh e Grown c
11p: Ho w Am erica:~ Arrestee(
Derelupmellf Is Bringi11g ·
Westeni
Down
Civilization," and has a
hlog til dianawest.ner. She,
can be co ntacted via
diana west@ verizon.net.)

.....

2008

Local Briefs
Trick or treat
: TUPPERS PLAINS ~ Tuppers Plains and Che ster wil l
.
have Trick or Treat from 6to 7 p.m. on Oct. 29.

VanCooney personal ·
GALLIPOLIS - Ira E. VanCooney is a resident Abors at
Gallipolis, Room 204. "170 Pinecrest Dr:. Gallipolis. Ohio
45631. He would appreciate hearing from fr iends and fam ily and visi ts.
.

Plan holiday trip
. POM E~OY - Meigs County Senior Center is sponsormg a tnp lo th e . Radio Ci ty Music Hall Christmas
Spectacular on Dec . 10 at Nationwide Arena, Columbus.
· The 2008 show · is the biggest production of the Radio
City Christmas Spectacular in the show's 76-y.ear hi story. It
marks the debut of the whole new Spectacu lar. redesigned
specificall y for larger arenas and will contain al l of the elements of the 75th anniversary edition .
· It .is the most popula~ li ve holiday producti on in the
world. The show will ce lebrate Christmas wi th dramatic
lighting effects. breathtaking imagery. fl ying sequences.
new musical compos itions and an ~rray of new costumes.
The cost fo r this tri p will be S9Q or $85 for sil ver or gold
members, and. includes motorcoach transportation and tick ~
el. Dinner is on your own. Reservations and 50 percent
deposit are due by Oct. 3 from Debbie Jones at 992-2 161 .

Revival
POM EROY - Evangeli st Jerry Cottrell wi ll speak at
rev iv al servi ces at 7 p.m .. Oct. 16- 19. at ·Faitll Valley
Tabernacle Church, Bailey Run Road. Tl1e church is locat \'d 1.7 miks oil Ohio 124 . Questions may be directed to
Pastor Emmett Rawson, '192-5746.

Local' Weather
· Monday... Patc hy dense
fog in the morning. Mostl y
sunny . Highs in the mid 70s.
Light
and
variable
winds ... Becomi ng
north
around 5 mph in th e after-

Tuesday night ... Most.ly
cl oudy with a 20 pei"t:cnl
chance of showers. Lo ws in
the upper 40s. West wind s 5
to I0 mph with gusts up to
20 mph .
noon .
.
and
Wednesday
Monday night...Partl y Wednesday night...M ostly
cloudy. Lows in th e lower Cloud y. Highs in th e lower
50s. We st winds around 5 60s. Lows in th e lower 40s.
in
· the
1nph
Thursday
through
evening ... Becoming li ght Friday
night ... Partly
and variable.
ciOLtdy. Highs in the mid
Thesday ...Partly
sunn y 60s. Lows in the lower 40s.
with a chance of &gt;; howers
Saturday ...Sunny. Hi ghs
with a slight chance of thun- in the upper 60s.
derstorms. Highs in the. mid
Saturday night and
70s. Southwest winds 5 to 10 Sunday ...Partly
cloudy.
mph with gusts up to 20 mph . Low s in the lower 40s.
Chance of rain 30 percen't.
Highs in the upper 60s.

Torres rrom Page At
devotion and resolve in her the Ohio Breast &amp; Ce rvi ca l
effort s to increase breast · Cancer
Coalition.
a
cancer awarenes s.''
statewide organi zati on of
The Jan et Voinov ich individua ls and agency repServ.ice Award was created resentati ves who collabo.·to recognize extraordinary rate to reduce breast and
performance in the areas of , cervical cancer morb idity
breast and cervical cancer and mortality and improve
education and service. Thi s the quality of life for surprestig ious
statewide vivors of these diseases.
award is compri sed of a
If you would. li~ e to attend
rigorous nomination and thi s cere monv and award
re view process to select the presentation 'on Oct. 16,
most dese rving person. The please RSVP .bY calling 1Janet Vo inovi ch Servi ce ~88 - 227-6446 (Select ex t.
Award is coordinated by 2. followed by ext.7).

Speaker r~om Page At ·

Transparency key to bailout success

BY RACHEL BECK
federal officials - namely
Letters to the editor are welcome. They should be less
AP BUS INESS WRITER
U.S. Treas ury Secretary
.than 300 words. Allleuers are subj ect to editing, mu$t be
Paul son and F~d
Henry
~ ig n ed, and include address and telephone m1mber. No
NEW
YORK
If
the
Chainnan Ben Bemanke unsigned leuers will be published. Letters should be in
g,ood taste. addressin11 issues, not personalities. Lellers of U.S. government wants to to race to develop a .fix -it
thanks to organizatiom and individuals will not be accept- use taxpayer dollars to get plan, which they hope to get
financial markets function- ·passed · by Congress in the
ed for publication.
ing smoothly again , then it coming days.
better be prepared to let
The target will primarily
Americans see exactly how be the billions of dollars of
this effort is going to work . bad mortgage debt sitting
AI the center of the mega- on the books of major finan(USPS
213-960)
bailout
presented by the cial companies . As home
Reader Services
Ohio Vall~:.ubllshlng
Treas ury Department and prices have tumbled, those
Federal Reserve is a propos- assets have become worth
Correction Polley
Published avery attern·oon, Monday
al
to buy $700 billion of much less than they were
Our main concern in all stories is to
through Friday, 111 Court Street.
toxic
mortgage debt and before . and the market turbe accurate. If you know of an error Pomeroy, Ohio.. Second-class poS1age
other risky assets , which i ~ moil over the last year has
in a story, call ~he newsroom at (740) paid .at Pomeroy.
considered the root cause of made it increasi ngly diffi992-2t56.
Member: The Associated Press and
the Ohio Newspaper Associaticln.
ihe current credit storm .
cult to dete rmine the value
Po1tma1ter:
Send address correc·
This plan puts our money of such assets.
Our main number Is
t1ons to the Dally Sentinel, 111 Court
at stake ~ ·and that 's why we
(740) 992-2156_
.
The new plan would give
Slreet, ~me roy, Ohio 45769.
deserve
to
know
what
assets
the
gove rnm ent the abil ity
Department extensions are:
intends
to
the
government
to buy up the bad loans. takSubscription Rates
buy, from whom and for · ing· them off the books of
By carrier or motor route
News
One month
'10.27
how much . Without th at, financial finns . The hope is
Editor: Charlene Hoeflich, E.d. 12
One year
· ' 115.84
forget about rebuilding any- thi s will allow those compaDally
50'
Reporter: Brian Reed, Ext. 14
one's
confidence in the nies to resume norm al lendSenior Citizen rates
Reporter: 86th Sergent, Ext. ·~3
financial
system.
ing operations.
..
One month
't0.27
This bailout plan was
'
One year
'1 03.90
What's worrisome is how
, Subscrlbef's Should remit in advance
rushed out as financial mar- those asset purchases will
Advertising
direct 10 "the· Daily Sentinel. No sub·
kets
essentially failed to work . What's certain is that
Outelde Sates : Dave Harris, Ext. 15
scrlpl lon by mail permitted in areas
in the wake of a nothing should be hidden
function
o.Jt1lde S.ln: Brenda Davis, Ext 1B
where home carrier service Is aval!·
tumultuous week in finan- from public view.
Clooo/Circ.: Judy Clark, Ext. t 0
able.
cial markets, fed by
The government won't
Mall Subscription
Lehman Brothers' bank- likely buy these distressed
General Manager
Inside Meigs County
ruptcy filing and the gov- assets at par, meaning their
Charlen~ Hoeflich , Ext. 12
t 3 Weeks
'32.26
billion face value. The Treasury has
ernment's
$85
26 Weeks
'64 .20
of
insurance
giant stated that the "price of the
bailout
52 Weeks
' t27. tt
E-mail:
American
International
assets purchased will be
news@mydailysentinel.com
Outside Meigs Couhty
Group.
established through . market
t 3 Weeks
'53.55
Stocks tumbled and credit mechanisms where possible."
Wob:
2S Weeks
'107. t0
markets
froze as fear raged
But that doesn.' t shed
www.myctal1ysentinel .com
52 Weeks
'2 t4 .2 t
among investors. That· forced much light on how the gov-- - ~

trip to Germany. the Turkish
leader abo proposed the
of
German
formation
Turki sh-language sc hool s.
What's going on here? If
TLtrki&gt;h aS&gt;imilalion is out.
is Turkish colon ization in''
Isn't it the duty of QOliticians to debate these and
other transformati onal questions with in the political
' process? As a crossroads of
Islam and Europe, as a
fron tl ine in the colonization
of
E!Jrope.
Cologne
becomes the logical meeting-place for such a debate .
. But it wasn't to be. not in
"democratic" Cologne. ·As
some I .500 Europeans prepared to asse mble to lis ten
to the political opponents of
Islamizati on make speeches
last weekend, many more
thousands of co unterdemonstrators conve rged
on th e city spec ifically 'to
d~ny rally supporters their
rdlt to assemble, and the
p()l iticians' rig ht to speak.
And yes. by whatever
means necessary.
The thu gs · among the
counter -demons t r a I ors
mounted a rock-an d-bottle
attack that shattered wi ne
dows on a river boat plying
the Rh ine where the politi cian s ·attempted to hold a
pre- rally meeti ng. They
blocked urban trains in
·order to keep rally partici pants away. They ri nged the
city center with barricades
(tolerated
by
German
police), hurled paint bombs,
lit fires and launched violent attacks on some of the
panici pants who managed
to draw ncar the rally location. One wo uld-be rall y
parti ci pant . a Jewish man .
sent in an acL:ount of hi s
ordeal to Gates of Vien na.
writing: " I was wearing my
kippah and reau il y identifi able - as a .l ew; however.
they (the left ist co unterdemonstrators) screamed at
me 'Nazi. Raus."'. He

. Monday, September 29,

ernment will come up with
If the government does
appropriate prices for the overpay for th ose assets,
troubled assets. ·
there is also the risk that will ·
That matters because these a[tificially raise prices:
toxic sec urities can't be eas- throughout the mar~etplace
ily converted into cash; the for similar assets. Joshua.
banks often don·' r like the Rosner. managing director of.
price they could get for th em research firm Graham Fisher ·
in the market. which would &amp; Co., worries that could ·
IJe at a. deep discount from accidentally create another·
what they are cunently sit- asset bubble, since the prices
ting on their books.
won't reflect reality.
:
The governm ent's goal is
Rosner als.o says full dis-·
to stabilize fin ancial com pa- closure is important since the
nies. But that doesn't mean bill as it now stands gives the;
buying the assets at le-:els U.S. Treasury Secretary basi-.
that don'trellecl current con- call y · unchecked power Ia
ditions - even if that leads deal with $700 billion in taxto more losses fpr those com- . payer funds. According to:
panies and may put some at Section 8 of the proposal, the: ·
risk of insolvency.
decisions . are "non-review"
That's why it is so crucial able and committed to
fonhe public to know how agency discretion. and may.
the assets will be valued , not be reviewed by any court
and wha t prices will ulti- of law or any administrative
mately be paid for the secu- agency."
.
rities. Taxpayers de~erve to .
That " prevents judicial
see how the ir money is action could allow the probeing used , and whethe r tection of decisions that crethere is any hope for their ate fal Se marks. hide prior.
funds to be recouped .
marks . or could be used 1&lt;1
" Buyi ng assets at any- . prevent civil or criminat.
thing other than fair market prosecution in situation~
value is against every prin- where a management know -.
ciple we should be enforc- ingly provided false marks.
ing.
Transparency. that aiqed the growth of thi ~­
Accuracy. ·Fu ll disclosure."' crisis of confidence," Rosner
said Roger Ehrenberg on his said in a note to clients .
financial
market
blog
It 's bad enou gh _that U.S.
'' Information Arbitra ge.''
taxp:tyers are on the hook to·
·'This is a nonstane'i·. Who ''mop up thi s finan cial mess.
t:a res where the assets are That's why we can't afford
carried an· a firm "s book s ,,~ to lei anything else be
he saiu.
pulled over our eyes.

AB , Col. Moe !lew H5 c.om- the community to serve on
bat missions including 60 its association board.
over North Vietnam . His airHe was also a developcraft was downed in January ment offi cer at a private um196H by a weapon malfunc- versity in Columbus from
tion and he became a prison- )997 to 2002. In 2001 he
er of war for five years.
· was awarded the "Rev.
Following repatriation in William . Corby . CSC.
1973, he attended the Award" by. the University of
University cif Notre Dame Notre Dame. He has also
earning a Mas ter of Arts serv ed as vo lunteer poll
Degree in Government and worker and member of
Sovi et and East European Fairfield County . Special
Area Studies Certificate. Operations Team to assist
Studies included grad uate authorities in spccia l .emerGerman and Russian. He gency situations . ·· Other
was al so · desig nated a highlights on hi s post-retireDi stinguished Graduate by ment resume: Director Ohi o
the United States Air Force . Troops to Tea~ h ers and
During his 30-year career grant manager for the Oht o
in USAF he earned 24 Department of Education in
awards and decora ti ons 2003: ass isted vo;terans to
includin g
Silver
Star fu lfil l · requiremen.ts to
w/OLC, . Defense Superior- ·become Ohio secondaryService Medal . Legion of school teac hers; Director
Merit
w/OLC. Fairtield County Office of
Di stinguished Flying Cross. Emergency Management
Bronze Star Meda l w/V, and 'Homeland Securi ty
Purple
Heart
w/OLC , from 2004-06; directed
Defense
Meritorious county-wide progra m of
Service Medal. Meritorious disaster mitigation . preparaService Medal, Air Medal tion . response and recovery:
operated county emergency
w/ 6 OLC. etc.
Following
retirement operations center. etc. ·
Col. Moe reti red on full
from the USAF, he w.as
appointed in 1995 as a vis it- medical disability · in 2006
ing fellow. to the Joan B. and Enjoys retirement
Kroc
Institute
for restoring toy trains and
International Peace Studies mowing grass and raising
at Notre Dam ~. He was abo trees on his "minifarm'" in
awarded the Si lver Medal Lancaster with hi s wife of
by
the
Coun c:i I for 43 year,s, Christine and
Advancement and Support spending time with his
of Ed ucation (CASE) in the daughter Connie and two
ABest Anicle of the Year so ns Ryan anu Erik and
. eategory for an article in their families .
Col. Moe wi II be accomNotre Daine Magaztne . He
perfonned voluntary service panied tomorrow by Dick
as counselor for Campus Stobbs, congressional canMini stry and was elec ted by didate for the sixth district.

The. Dai ly Sentinel • Page As

www.mydailysentinel.com
. .'

Medical helicopter crashes in Md. park, killing 4
DISTR ICT HEIGHTS. Md . (APJThe pi lot of a medi cal helicopter twice
radioed for help in foggy wea th er
before crashing Sunday, killing four of
the five people on board in the latest of
n growing number of air ambulance
accidents, authorities said.
The med ical helicopter was carrying
v1ctims of a traffic accident when It
went down in a suburban Washington
park. It was the -deadliest medevac helicopter accident in Maryland since the
State Police began tlying those missions
nearl y 40 years ago. and the eighth fatal
medical helicopter crash in the last 12

mo nth' nat ionwiue. About 30 people
have Jied in SltCh crashes during that
period. National Tran;ponati on Safely
Board lnember Debbie Hersman satd.
Crashes of medical aircraft have
been increasihg. since the 1990s. in
part bec:htse it is a booming bu:-.iness ,
fueled by the dosing of emergency

crashes in four decades .
··we are the onIy operation in the
t:ountry that has the multiple mis;ion of
medevac , &gt;earc h anll rescue. law
enforceme nt . homeland security." State ·
Police spokesman Greg Shipley said.
On Sunday, a veteran pilot, a tlight
paramedic. a cou nty emergency medical technician and one of the traffic
accid_ent victims died in the crash,
authoritie&gt; said.
An 18-ycar.old woman also injured in
the traffic accident in Charles County
swvived the helicopter crash. She was
in critical cond iti on at a.hospital.

rooms in. rural areas and au aging pop-

ulation . according to the Nat ional
EMS Pilots Association. However. the
state-run program _in Mai'yland poes
not charge for · its se rvices. and has
been known for its safety record. It has
hall just three other fatal helicopre,-

s w c n·fromPageAl _
Although rodent s are
the ir main source .o f ·food .
t:ayotes serve as a biologi cal contro l on .urban geese.
occasionally raid ing nests
for eggs or killing geese
that · attempt to protect
their nests.
"The .;oyote is neither
good nor bad. it simpl y is
what it is," he sa id. David
DUT ~R RUN I= ARMS
Hanselmann. chief of the
l~~ FARM
Ml!"il!t. Countr
Ohio Department of Natural
Meig• County
Jr"")f? r·.: Jr.~r'ffl .:. lUI..
Resources' Division of Soil
n r · ·~r V[Aiand Water Conservati on.
spoke briefly and commended the Meigs SWCD
for maintaining a strong
conservation district .
He remarked that the district is no w in its 65th year.
making it one of the oldest
districls in the state, and
comme nd ed members of
the board of su.per visors
for their volunteer se rvice.
The program s administered through the Soil and
Submitted photos
Water
Conse rvation Keith Benlz ol Rac ine (Lee Farm) and Adam Woirol of Dexter (Dexter Run Farms) were
Distrkt are important to recently recogn ized as the Meigs Soil and Water Conservation District's Outstanding
yo ur economy in so uth - Cooperators for 2008 . They were presented with signs, donated by Farm Credit Services
eastern Ohio. he sa id.
of Mid-Am erica to dis play at their respective farms. Shown are. from left: Meigs SWCD
Jaso n Cri sl ip. so il conser- Board of Supervisors Chairman Ed Gibbs, Chris Smalley, repres enting Farm Credit
·v:ilioni st with the Natural Services of Mid-America, Woirol and Bentz.
·
Re sOU[ce
Conse rvation,.
Service. and Chri s Smalley.
represc nt.i ng Farm C1'edit
Services of Mi d- America.
recognized two ourstand ing
cooperators of the year.
Keith Bentz of Racine (Lee
Farm) and Adam Woirol of
Dex ter
(Dext er
Run
Farms) . .
"Over the last year both
cooperato rs ha ve worked
very hard installing conservat ion pracli&lt;:cs on their
fanns. They have installed
the followin g conservation
practices: livestock watering system. heavy use area.
fencing, m.:cess road . strcll m
crossing. nutrient management , and prescribed grazing." Crislip said.
"These families demon strate a real enthu siasm fo r
conservation and a . deep
respect for the lanu . Their
work et~i c is very impressive, and it is retlected in
the care of the·ir farm s. They
have done an excelleni job This team from Southern High School was recognized at the Meigs SWCD annual meetimplementin g conservalion ing and banqu et for the county's top Urban Soil Judging team at the District Soil Judging
on their farm . and we appre- · Competition held earlier this month in Athens County. Shown are, from left: seated, Dax
Holman and Dustyn Johnson; standing, Meigs SWCD education . coordinator Jenny
ciate their hard work :·
Both · families received Ri denour. Ryan Lain Eieeg le. Ryan Lee Beegle. and Southern FFA teacher Rashel Yates.
outstanding
cooperator
signs that wem prese nted
by Smalley. Smalley also
presented a $1 ,000 donation from Farm Credi t
Services of Mid-America to
the Meigs SWCD lo be
used for· educational programs at the Meigs SWCD
Conservation Area.
Tonja Hunter and Ed
Gibbs. both of Racine. were
reelec ted to th e ['-!eigs
SWCD
Board
of
Supervisors to serve terms
com mencing Jan. I. 2009,
through Dec . 3 1. 20 II.
James Birchfield. Rutland.
was the third candidate.
Jim Freeman , Meigs
SWCD wildlife speciali st.
gave a brief update on acti vities al the Meigs SWCD
Co nservati on Area during
the past year.
Top teams and individuals
in this year's Soil Judging
OJntest for Voca tional This team from Meigs High School was recognized as the county's top Rural Soil Judging
Agricu lture students were team ·at the District Soil Judging Competition held earli.er this month in Athens County.
recognized wi th individuals Shown ·are, from left: Meigs FFA teacher Ron Vlasik, Lacee Arms. Shawn Bare, Tiffany
rece iving cash prizes and Lee, Russell Scarberry. and Meigs SWCD education coordinator Jenny Riden our.
tea ms receiving trophies.
Meigs County teams from contest were. from first to was from Southe rn Hi gh to Roy Holter. winner iii all
Meigs and Southern high third:
Dax
Holman. Sc hool and included Dax three cla sses at the Meigs
schools panicipated · in •the Southern ; Jacob Lambert. Holman , Dustyn John son, Count y Fai r Hay Show.
event which was held at the Meigs ; Dustyn Johnson , Ryan Lee Becgk and Ryall His wife. Pat Holter. took
Cun Cline Farm in Albany Southern . The top-scoring Lain Beeg le. ·
second pl ace in all three
in Athens County.
A
pl'aque
was
pre
sented
Urban So il Judging . te~m
classes.
High -scori ng individuals
in the Agricultural Soil
•
•
Judging contest were, from
•
Taking Applicatic:ms
~ndirson 'MJ:'Danu{
first to third : Shawn B.are.
Meigs ; Russe ll Scarbury.
'Funera{
Meigs ; Olivia
Searl s,
Adam Mo:.•Donie l
HUD Subsidized
Southern. The top -.~coring
&amp; Jo.n1c:s A ndc:no n
D I'RECTORS
.Elflclency/1 Bedroom.
Agricultura l Soil Judging
Team was from Meig s
SOyrs or qualifying disability
High School anu incluued
Low income priority'
Bare ,
Ru sse ll
Shawn
7 40-992-7022
Scarberry. Tiffany Lee and
Middkpcrt • Pomcn •y
Silverheels
·
. Laccc Arms.
992-5141 992-5.J.l.l
High-scoring individuals
A Realty Company-EHO
11 ~ 'fl .1ndenonn1tdanitl.i'om
•
•
in the Urban Soil Judging
•
•

%nne

The Maples

�.,

The Daily Sentinel

OPINION

PageA4
Monday, September 29, 2008

The l)aily Sentinel Cologne's speech-killing politicos reek of Jascisrn'

Readers of ·fJJy blog
(dianawest.net)
know that
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio
·this
past
week.
as a
over
(740) 992·2156 • FAX (740) 992-2157
maelstrom of buffeting ecowww.mydallysentlnel.com
nomic crises has sucked the
air out of the news atmosOhio Valley Publishing Co.
Diana
phere, I· have been all-butWest
transfixed by events unfoldDan Goodrich
mg in ihe German city of
Publisher
Cologne.
With
the
unabashed fascination of
the rubbernecker, I nave
Charlene Hoeflich
elections on the politically
watched in horror. combi ng
General Manager-News Edit,or
incorrect iss ue of resistance
online foreign press reports
to the spread of Islamic law
and a few favorite blogs
(Sharia), were invited to
(Brussels Journal. Gates of
Vienna, Atlas Shrugs), as speak in Cologne.
Congress shall make no law respecting an
Why Co logne? After a
local' aulhorities yielded long and contentious battle .
esdblishment of religion, or prohibiting the
their charge' of freedom of the city council last montr.
speech
and freedom of narrow ly approved the con free exerdse thereof; or abridging the freedom
assembly - indeed, yielded struction of a giant mosque
ofspeech, or of the press; or the right of the
civic ·space and civic peace complex funded by a gro up
people peaceably to assemble, and to petition
- ttl a lawless band of vio,called the Turk ish-Islamic
.
lent
leftists, who, in their Union to serve some portion
the Government for a redress grievances.
, weekend iitint of mob rule , of the cit y's 120.000
-' successfully prevented a Muslims.
While
the
-The First Amendment to the U;S. Constitution political : rally against the
American take.on any house
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 1 lslami;r,alion of Europe from
of worship going up is gen erally one of approval based
these same on a straightforward bel ief
' authorities , including the
: Today is Monday, Sept. 29. the 273rd day of2008 . Then~ mayor of this fourth -largest in. freedom of religion. in
are 93 days left in the year. The Jewish holiday of Rosh·. Gennan city (about 1 mil- . Euro pe, given the heavy
influx of Islamic popula Hashana begins at sunset.
·
: lion ,people), yielded to the
tions.
there is a political and
Today's Highlight in History: On Sept. 29. 1978. Pope John : mob happily and with much
Paul I was found dead in his Vatican apartment just over a se lf-congratulation. Indeed, legal dimension to such
tnonth after becoming head of the Roman Catholic Church . Colog ne
Mayor
Fritz mosq ue co nstruct ion th at
· On this date: In 1758 , English Admiral Horatio Nelson Schramma
called
the we JUSt don 't recogni ze
example.
was born in Burnham Thorpe. Norfolk .
episode "a · victory for the here. · For
Germany's
Muslim
popula: In 1789, the U.S. War Department established a regular City of Cologne and a victotion is largely Turkish; and
army with a Strength of several hundred men .
ry by the democratic forces
it is Turktsh Prime Mini ster
In 1829. London's reorganized police .force. which of the city.''
became known as Scotland Yard , went on duty.
Schramma may ~ell · Recep Tayyip Erdogan who
is infa mous for ha vi ng said
: In 1902, Broadway impresario David Belasco reopened count squelching peaceful
in 1998. "Toe mosques are
the Republic Theatre under his own name.
political discourse with a our barracks, the domes our
· In 1918 , Allied forces began their dec isive breakthrough violent mob as a victory for
helmets, the minarets our
of the Hindenburg Line during World War I.
his city, but there is nothing bayo nets and the fai th ful
· In 1938. British, French, German and Italian leaders con- "democratic" about it. or
our soldiers.'' Such a declaeluded the Munich Agreement, which was aimed· at appeas- about the "forces" responsi- ration of, well , religious war
ing Adolf Hitler by allowing Na zi annexation of ble . This twisting , weasel- from some'un e who is now a
Czechoslovakia's Sudetenland.
use of language, however, is head of state adds the threat
In 1963.• the second session of the Second Vatican only one example of the of conquest to any serious
Council opened.
campaign of disinformatip n mosque debate.
: In 1979, Pope John Paul II began the first papal visit to waged against reality in
And that 's not all. Earli er
Ireland as he arrived for a three-day tour.
Cologne this past weekend. this year in Cologne,
In brief, elected officials Erdogan declared before
In 1982, Extra-Strength Tylenol capsules laced with
cyanide claimed the first of seven victims in the Chicago from several different coun - 20,000 cheering Turkish
area. (To date, the case remains unsolved.)
tries (Austria, Belgium, expatriates that "assimilaIn 1988, the space shuttle Discovery blasted off from Gerinany, Italy) , politicians tion is a -c rime . against
Cape Canaveral, Fla ., marking America's return to manned who campaign and win humanity." On that same
space !light following the Challenger disaster.
.
One year ago: President Bush signed a bill to prevent a
government shutdown , but lambasted Democrats controlling Congress f9r sending him the stopgap measure while
they contin·ued to work on more than a dozen spending
THA,T WASN'T A
bills. Actress .Lois Muxwell, who'd starred as Mi.'5
LIE ... THAT WAS' SPIN.
Moneypenny in 14 James Bond movies, died in Fremantle,
Australia. at age 80. ·
: Today 's Birthdays: Actress Lizabe)h Scott is 86 . Actor
Steve Forrest is 84 . Actress Anita Ekberg is 77. Actor Eddie
Barth is 77. W[iter-director Robert Benton is 76. Singer
Jerry Lee Lewis is 73. Jazz musician Jean-Luc Ponty is 66.
Telev ision-film composer Mike Post is 64. Actress Patricia
Hodge is 62. TV personality Bryant Gumbel is 60. Country
~ inger Al vin Crow is 58. Actor Drake Hogestyn is 55.
Broadcast journalist Gwen Ifill is 53. Comedian-actor
Andrew "Dice" Clay is 51. Actor Roger Ban is 46 . Actress
Jill Whelan i0 42. Rock musician Brad Smith (Blind
Melon) is 40. Actress Erika Eleniak is 39. Rhythm-andblues singer Devante Swing (Jodeci) is 39. Country singer
Brad C:otter ("Nashville Star") is 38. Actress Emily Lloyd
is 38. Country musician Danick Dupelle (Emerson Drive)
i. s 35. Country singer Katie McNeill (3 of Hearts) is 26.
Rock musician Josh Farro (Paramore) is 21.
Thought for Today: " Nothing makes people so Worthy of
compliments as occasionally receiving them . One is more
delightf~·l for being told one is deli ghtful - just as one. is
more angry for being told one is angry." - Katharine
Fullerton Gerould , American writer ( 1879- 1944).

of

:T 0 DAY IN HIS T 0 R Y! taW';af.~a~~re,

·LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR

The Daily Sentinel

·--·-·

....

·

reported they also shoved
him. spit on him , and called
him a fascist pig. " I · wa~
pummeled in the head several tiines and th en shoved
to the ground where I was
beaten and kicked with
steel toe boots in plain sight
of police who did nothing."He later discovered he had
a broken ri b.
· And yet. the consensus
· narrative , dutifully repeated
in the mainstream .European
media, is that it is th ~
sil enced and hounded
politicians and their sup:
porters who are the "fas,
cists": wh ile it is th ~
silencers and hounders who
are th e ''anti-fascists ."
Such lies and distortions
are probably what help con,
vince our own media to
ignore such events allogeth:
er as just so much marginal
"extremis m" goi ng on
somewhere in Europe ,
Anyway, how does it affect
us? Nothing like that is happening here, ri ght? ··
Yes and no . As in Europe,
hu ge mosque comple xes
are openin g ·across the
States - one very ·re~e ntly
in Boston and another in
Atlanta. Do they portend
the extension and entrench;
ment of Islamic law in the
United States? One difference between the United
States and Europe is that we
don ' t have street thugs
enforcing a code of silenc~
on the subject. T.hat's
because of the other differ:
ence: We don 't have any
political parties willing, oi
even able to disc uss it.
(Diana West is a colum:nist for The Washin·gton
Times. She is the author oj
"Tire Dea rh' of rh e Grown c
11p: Ho w Am erica:~ Arrestee(
Derelupmellf Is Bringi11g ·
Westeni
Down
Civilization," and has a
hlog til dianawest.ner. She,
can be co ntacted via
diana west@ verizon.net.)

.....

2008

Local Briefs
Trick or treat
: TUPPERS PLAINS ~ Tuppers Plains and Che ster wil l
.
have Trick or Treat from 6to 7 p.m. on Oct. 29.

VanCooney personal ·
GALLIPOLIS - Ira E. VanCooney is a resident Abors at
Gallipolis, Room 204. "170 Pinecrest Dr:. Gallipolis. Ohio
45631. He would appreciate hearing from fr iends and fam ily and visi ts.
.

Plan holiday trip
. POM E~OY - Meigs County Senior Center is sponsormg a tnp lo th e . Radio Ci ty Music Hall Christmas
Spectacular on Dec . 10 at Nationwide Arena, Columbus.
· The 2008 show · is the biggest production of the Radio
City Christmas Spectacular in the show's 76-y.ear hi story. It
marks the debut of the whole new Spectacu lar. redesigned
specificall y for larger arenas and will contain al l of the elements of the 75th anniversary edition .
· It .is the most popula~ li ve holiday producti on in the
world. The show will ce lebrate Christmas wi th dramatic
lighting effects. breathtaking imagery. fl ying sequences.
new musical compos itions and an ~rray of new costumes.
The cost fo r this tri p will be S9Q or $85 for sil ver or gold
members, and. includes motorcoach transportation and tick ~
el. Dinner is on your own. Reservations and 50 percent
deposit are due by Oct. 3 from Debbie Jones at 992-2 161 .

Revival
POM EROY - Evangeli st Jerry Cottrell wi ll speak at
rev iv al servi ces at 7 p.m .. Oct. 16- 19. at ·Faitll Valley
Tabernacle Church, Bailey Run Road. Tl1e church is locat \'d 1.7 miks oil Ohio 124 . Questions may be directed to
Pastor Emmett Rawson, '192-5746.

Local' Weather
· Monday... Patc hy dense
fog in the morning. Mostl y
sunny . Highs in the mid 70s.
Light
and
variable
winds ... Becomi ng
north
around 5 mph in th e after-

Tuesday night ... Most.ly
cl oudy with a 20 pei"t:cnl
chance of showers. Lo ws in
the upper 40s. West wind s 5
to I0 mph with gusts up to
20 mph .
noon .
.
and
Wednesday
Monday night...Partl y Wednesday night...M ostly
cloudy. Lows in th e lower Cloud y. Highs in th e lower
50s. We st winds around 5 60s. Lows in th e lower 40s.
in
· the
1nph
Thursday
through
evening ... Becoming li ght Friday
night ... Partly
and variable.
ciOLtdy. Highs in the mid
Thesday ...Partly
sunn y 60s. Lows in the lower 40s.
with a chance of &gt;; howers
Saturday ...Sunny. Hi ghs
with a slight chance of thun- in the upper 60s.
derstorms. Highs in the. mid
Saturday night and
70s. Southwest winds 5 to 10 Sunday ...Partly
cloudy.
mph with gusts up to 20 mph . Low s in the lower 40s.
Chance of rain 30 percen't.
Highs in the upper 60s.

Torres rrom Page At
devotion and resolve in her the Ohio Breast &amp; Ce rvi ca l
effort s to increase breast · Cancer
Coalition.
a
cancer awarenes s.''
statewide organi zati on of
The Jan et Voinov ich individua ls and agency repServ.ice Award was created resentati ves who collabo.·to recognize extraordinary rate to reduce breast and
performance in the areas of , cervical cancer morb idity
breast and cervical cancer and mortality and improve
education and service. Thi s the quality of life for surprestig ious
statewide vivors of these diseases.
award is compri sed of a
If you would. li~ e to attend
rigorous nomination and thi s cere monv and award
re view process to select the presentation 'on Oct. 16,
most dese rving person. The please RSVP .bY calling 1Janet Vo inovi ch Servi ce ~88 - 227-6446 (Select ex t.
Award is coordinated by 2. followed by ext.7).

Speaker r~om Page At ·

Transparency key to bailout success

BY RACHEL BECK
federal officials - namely
Letters to the editor are welcome. They should be less
AP BUS INESS WRITER
U.S. Treas ury Secretary
.than 300 words. Allleuers are subj ect to editing, mu$t be
Paul son and F~d
Henry
~ ig n ed, and include address and telephone m1mber. No
NEW
YORK
If
the
Chainnan Ben Bemanke unsigned leuers will be published. Letters should be in
g,ood taste. addressin11 issues, not personalities. Lellers of U.S. government wants to to race to develop a .fix -it
thanks to organizatiom and individuals will not be accept- use taxpayer dollars to get plan, which they hope to get
financial markets function- ·passed · by Congress in the
ed for publication.
ing smoothly again , then it coming days.
better be prepared to let
The target will primarily
Americans see exactly how be the billions of dollars of
this effort is going to work . bad mortgage debt sitting
AI the center of the mega- on the books of major finan(USPS
213-960)
bailout
presented by the cial companies . As home
Reader Services
Ohio Vall~:.ubllshlng
Treas ury Department and prices have tumbled, those
Federal Reserve is a propos- assets have become worth
Correction Polley
Published avery attern·oon, Monday
al
to buy $700 billion of much less than they were
Our main concern in all stories is to
through Friday, 111 Court Street.
toxic
mortgage debt and before . and the market turbe accurate. If you know of an error Pomeroy, Ohio.. Second-class poS1age
other risky assets , which i ~ moil over the last year has
in a story, call ~he newsroom at (740) paid .at Pomeroy.
considered the root cause of made it increasi ngly diffi992-2t56.
Member: The Associated Press and
the Ohio Newspaper Associaticln.
ihe current credit storm .
cult to dete rmine the value
Po1tma1ter:
Send address correc·
This plan puts our money of such assets.
Our main number Is
t1ons to the Dally Sentinel, 111 Court
at stake ~ ·and that 's why we
(740) 992-2156_
.
The new plan would give
Slreet, ~me roy, Ohio 45769.
deserve
to
know
what
assets
the
gove rnm ent the abil ity
Department extensions are:
intends
to
the
government
to buy up the bad loans. takSubscription Rates
buy, from whom and for · ing· them off the books of
By carrier or motor route
News
One month
'10.27
how much . Without th at, financial finns . The hope is
Editor: Charlene Hoeflich, E.d. 12
One year
· ' 115.84
forget about rebuilding any- thi s will allow those compaDally
50'
Reporter: Brian Reed, Ext. 14
one's
confidence in the nies to resume norm al lendSenior Citizen rates
Reporter: 86th Sergent, Ext. ·~3
financial
system.
ing operations.
..
One month
't0.27
This bailout plan was
'
One year
'1 03.90
What's worrisome is how
, Subscrlbef's Should remit in advance
rushed out as financial mar- those asset purchases will
Advertising
direct 10 "the· Daily Sentinel. No sub·
kets
essentially failed to work . What's certain is that
Outelde Sates : Dave Harris, Ext. 15
scrlpl lon by mail permitted in areas
in the wake of a nothing should be hidden
function
o.Jt1lde S.ln: Brenda Davis, Ext 1B
where home carrier service Is aval!·
tumultuous week in finan- from public view.
Clooo/Circ.: Judy Clark, Ext. t 0
able.
cial markets, fed by
The government won't
Mall Subscription
Lehman Brothers' bank- likely buy these distressed
General Manager
Inside Meigs County
ruptcy filing and the gov- assets at par, meaning their
Charlen~ Hoeflich , Ext. 12
t 3 Weeks
'32.26
billion face value. The Treasury has
ernment's
$85
26 Weeks
'64 .20
of
insurance
giant stated that the "price of the
bailout
52 Weeks
' t27. tt
E-mail:
American
International
assets purchased will be
news@mydailysentinel.com
Outside Meigs Couhty
Group.
established through . market
t 3 Weeks
'53.55
Stocks tumbled and credit mechanisms where possible."
Wob:
2S Weeks
'107. t0
markets
froze as fear raged
But that doesn.' t shed
www.myctal1ysentinel .com
52 Weeks
'2 t4 .2 t
among investors. That· forced much light on how the gov-- - ~

trip to Germany. the Turkish
leader abo proposed the
of
German
formation
Turki sh-language sc hool s.
What's going on here? If
TLtrki&gt;h aS&gt;imilalion is out.
is Turkish colon ization in''
Isn't it the duty of QOliticians to debate these and
other transformati onal questions with in the political
' process? As a crossroads of
Islam and Europe, as a
fron tl ine in the colonization
of
E!Jrope.
Cologne
becomes the logical meeting-place for such a debate .
. But it wasn't to be. not in
"democratic" Cologne. ·As
some I .500 Europeans prepared to asse mble to lis ten
to the political opponents of
Islamizati on make speeches
last weekend, many more
thousands of co unterdemonstrators conve rged
on th e city spec ifically 'to
d~ny rally supporters their
rdlt to assemble, and the
p()l iticians' rig ht to speak.
And yes. by whatever
means necessary.
The thu gs · among the
counter -demons t r a I ors
mounted a rock-an d-bottle
attack that shattered wi ne
dows on a river boat plying
the Rh ine where the politi cian s ·attempted to hold a
pre- rally meeti ng. They
blocked urban trains in
·order to keep rally partici pants away. They ri nged the
city center with barricades
(tolerated
by
German
police), hurled paint bombs,
lit fires and launched violent attacks on some of the
panici pants who managed
to draw ncar the rally location. One wo uld-be rall y
parti ci pant . a Jewish man .
sent in an acL:ount of hi s
ordeal to Gates of Vien na.
writing: " I was wearing my
kippah and reau il y identifi able - as a .l ew; however.
they (the left ist co unterdemonstrators) screamed at
me 'Nazi. Raus."'. He

. Monday, September 29,

ernment will come up with
If the government does
appropriate prices for the overpay for th ose assets,
troubled assets. ·
there is also the risk that will ·
That matters because these a[tificially raise prices:
toxic sec urities can't be eas- throughout the mar~etplace
ily converted into cash; the for similar assets. Joshua.
banks often don·' r like the Rosner. managing director of.
price they could get for th em research firm Graham Fisher ·
in the market. which would &amp; Co., worries that could ·
IJe at a. deep discount from accidentally create another·
what they are cunently sit- asset bubble, since the prices
ting on their books.
won't reflect reality.
:
The governm ent's goal is
Rosner als.o says full dis-·
to stabilize fin ancial com pa- closure is important since the
nies. But that doesn't mean bill as it now stands gives the;
buying the assets at le-:els U.S. Treasury Secretary basi-.
that don'trellecl current con- call y · unchecked power Ia
ditions - even if that leads deal with $700 billion in taxto more losses fpr those com- . payer funds. According to:
panies and may put some at Section 8 of the proposal, the: ·
risk of insolvency.
decisions . are "non-review"
That's why it is so crucial able and committed to
fonhe public to know how agency discretion. and may.
the assets will be valued , not be reviewed by any court
and wha t prices will ulti- of law or any administrative
mately be paid for the secu- agency."
.
rities. Taxpayers de~erve to .
That " prevents judicial
see how the ir money is action could allow the probeing used , and whethe r tection of decisions that crethere is any hope for their ate fal Se marks. hide prior.
funds to be recouped .
marks . or could be used 1&lt;1
" Buyi ng assets at any- . prevent civil or criminat.
thing other than fair market prosecution in situation~
value is against every prin- where a management know -.
ciple we should be enforc- ingly provided false marks.
ing.
Transparency. that aiqed the growth of thi ~­
Accuracy. ·Fu ll disclosure."' crisis of confidence," Rosner
said Roger Ehrenberg on his said in a note to clients .
financial
market
blog
It 's bad enou gh _that U.S.
'' Information Arbitra ge.''
taxp:tyers are on the hook to·
·'This is a nonstane'i·. Who ''mop up thi s finan cial mess.
t:a res where the assets are That's why we can't afford
carried an· a firm "s book s ,,~ to lei anything else be
he saiu.
pulled over our eyes.

AB , Col. Moe !lew H5 c.om- the community to serve on
bat missions including 60 its association board.
over North Vietnam . His airHe was also a developcraft was downed in January ment offi cer at a private um196H by a weapon malfunc- versity in Columbus from
tion and he became a prison- )997 to 2002. In 2001 he
er of war for five years.
· was awarded the "Rev.
Following repatriation in William . Corby . CSC.
1973, he attended the Award" by. the University of
University cif Notre Dame Notre Dame. He has also
earning a Mas ter of Arts serv ed as vo lunteer poll
Degree in Government and worker and member of
Sovi et and East European Fairfield County . Special
Area Studies Certificate. Operations Team to assist
Studies included grad uate authorities in spccia l .emerGerman and Russian. He gency situations . ·· Other
was al so · desig nated a highlights on hi s post-retireDi stinguished Graduate by ment resume: Director Ohi o
the United States Air Force . Troops to Tea~ h ers and
During his 30-year career grant manager for the Oht o
in USAF he earned 24 Department of Education in
awards and decora ti ons 2003: ass isted vo;terans to
includin g
Silver
Star fu lfil l · requiremen.ts to
w/OLC, . Defense Superior- ·become Ohio secondaryService Medal . Legion of school teac hers; Director
Merit
w/OLC. Fairtield County Office of
Di stinguished Flying Cross. Emergency Management
Bronze Star Meda l w/V, and 'Homeland Securi ty
Purple
Heart
w/OLC , from 2004-06; directed
Defense
Meritorious county-wide progra m of
Service Medal. Meritorious disaster mitigation . preparaService Medal, Air Medal tion . response and recovery:
operated county emergency
w/ 6 OLC. etc.
Following
retirement operations center. etc. ·
Col. Moe reti red on full
from the USAF, he w.as
appointed in 1995 as a vis it- medical disability · in 2006
ing fellow. to the Joan B. and Enjoys retirement
Kroc
Institute
for restoring toy trains and
International Peace Studies mowing grass and raising
at Notre Dam ~. He was abo trees on his "minifarm'" in
awarded the Si lver Medal Lancaster with hi s wife of
by
the
Coun c:i I for 43 year,s, Christine and
Advancement and Support spending time with his
of Ed ucation (CASE) in the daughter Connie and two
ABest Anicle of the Year so ns Ryan anu Erik and
. eategory for an article in their families .
Col. Moe wi II be accomNotre Daine Magaztne . He
perfonned voluntary service panied tomorrow by Dick
as counselor for Campus Stobbs, congressional canMini stry and was elec ted by didate for the sixth district.

The. Dai ly Sentinel • Page As

www.mydailysentinel.com
. .'

Medical helicopter crashes in Md. park, killing 4
DISTR ICT HEIGHTS. Md . (APJThe pi lot of a medi cal helicopter twice
radioed for help in foggy wea th er
before crashing Sunday, killing four of
the five people on board in the latest of
n growing number of air ambulance
accidents, authorities said.
The med ical helicopter was carrying
v1ctims of a traffic accident when It
went down in a suburban Washington
park. It was the -deadliest medevac helicopter accident in Maryland since the
State Police began tlying those missions
nearl y 40 years ago. and the eighth fatal
medical helicopter crash in the last 12

mo nth' nat ionwiue. About 30 people
have Jied in SltCh crashes during that
period. National Tran;ponati on Safely
Board lnember Debbie Hersman satd.
Crashes of medical aircraft have
been increasihg. since the 1990s. in
part bec:htse it is a booming bu:-.iness ,
fueled by the dosing of emergency

crashes in four decades .
··we are the onIy operation in the
t:ountry that has the multiple mis;ion of
medevac , &gt;earc h anll rescue. law
enforceme nt . homeland security." State ·
Police spokesman Greg Shipley said.
On Sunday, a veteran pilot, a tlight
paramedic. a cou nty emergency medical technician and one of the traffic
accid_ent victims died in the crash,
authoritie&gt; said.
An 18-ycar.old woman also injured in
the traffic accident in Charles County
swvived the helicopter crash. She was
in critical cond iti on at a.hospital.

rooms in. rural areas and au aging pop-

ulation . according to the Nat ional
EMS Pilots Association. However. the
state-run program _in Mai'yland poes
not charge for · its se rvices. and has
been known for its safety record. It has
hall just three other fatal helicopre,-

s w c n·fromPageAl _
Although rodent s are
the ir main source .o f ·food .
t:ayotes serve as a biologi cal contro l on .urban geese.
occasionally raid ing nests
for eggs or killing geese
that · attempt to protect
their nests.
"The .;oyote is neither
good nor bad. it simpl y is
what it is," he sa id. David
DUT ~R RUN I= ARMS
Hanselmann. chief of the
l~~ FARM
Ml!"il!t. Countr
Ohio Department of Natural
Meig• County
Jr"")f? r·.: Jr.~r'ffl .:. lUI..
Resources' Division of Soil
n r · ·~r V[Aiand Water Conservati on.
spoke briefly and commended the Meigs SWCD
for maintaining a strong
conservation district .
He remarked that the district is no w in its 65th year.
making it one of the oldest
districls in the state, and
comme nd ed members of
the board of su.per visors
for their volunteer se rvice.
The program s administered through the Soil and
Submitted photos
Water
Conse rvation Keith Benlz ol Rac ine (Lee Farm) and Adam Woirol of Dexter (Dexter Run Farms) were
Distrkt are important to recently recogn ized as the Meigs Soil and Water Conservation District's Outstanding
yo ur economy in so uth - Cooperators for 2008 . They were presented with signs, donated by Farm Credit Services
eastern Ohio. he sa id.
of Mid-Am erica to dis play at their respective farms. Shown are. from left: Meigs SWCD
Jaso n Cri sl ip. so il conser- Board of Supervisors Chairman Ed Gibbs, Chris Smalley, repres enting Farm Credit
·v:ilioni st with the Natural Services of Mid-America, Woirol and Bentz.
·
Re sOU[ce
Conse rvation,.
Service. and Chri s Smalley.
represc nt.i ng Farm C1'edit
Services of Mi d- America.
recognized two ourstand ing
cooperators of the year.
Keith Bentz of Racine (Lee
Farm) and Adam Woirol of
Dex ter
(Dext er
Run
Farms) . .
"Over the last year both
cooperato rs ha ve worked
very hard installing conservat ion pracli&lt;:cs on their
fanns. They have installed
the followin g conservation
practices: livestock watering system. heavy use area.
fencing, m.:cess road . strcll m
crossing. nutrient management , and prescribed grazing." Crislip said.
"These families demon strate a real enthu siasm fo r
conservation and a . deep
respect for the lanu . Their
work et~i c is very impressive, and it is retlected in
the care of the·ir farm s. They
have done an excelleni job This team from Southern High School was recognized at the Meigs SWCD annual meetimplementin g conservalion ing and banqu et for the county's top Urban Soil Judging team at the District Soil Judging
on their farm . and we appre- · Competition held earlier this month in Athens County. Shown are, from left: seated, Dax
Holman and Dustyn Johnson; standing, Meigs SWCD education . coordinator Jenny
ciate their hard work :·
Both · families received Ri denour. Ryan Lain Eieeg le. Ryan Lee Beegle. and Southern FFA teacher Rashel Yates.
outstanding
cooperator
signs that wem prese nted
by Smalley. Smalley also
presented a $1 ,000 donation from Farm Credi t
Services of Mid-America to
the Meigs SWCD lo be
used for· educational programs at the Meigs SWCD
Conservation Area.
Tonja Hunter and Ed
Gibbs. both of Racine. were
reelec ted to th e ['-!eigs
SWCD
Board
of
Supervisors to serve terms
com mencing Jan. I. 2009,
through Dec . 3 1. 20 II.
James Birchfield. Rutland.
was the third candidate.
Jim Freeman , Meigs
SWCD wildlife speciali st.
gave a brief update on acti vities al the Meigs SWCD
Co nservati on Area during
the past year.
Top teams and individuals
in this year's Soil Judging
OJntest for Voca tional This team from Meigs High School was recognized as the county's top Rural Soil Judging
Agricu lture students were team ·at the District Soil Judging Competition held earli.er this month in Athens County.
recognized wi th individuals Shown ·are, from left: Meigs FFA teacher Ron Vlasik, Lacee Arms. Shawn Bare, Tiffany
rece iving cash prizes and Lee, Russell Scarberry. and Meigs SWCD education coordinator Jenny Riden our.
tea ms receiving trophies.
Meigs County teams from contest were. from first to was from Southe rn Hi gh to Roy Holter. winner iii all
Meigs and Southern high third:
Dax
Holman. Sc hool and included Dax three cla sses at the Meigs
schools panicipated · in •the Southern ; Jacob Lambert. Holman , Dustyn John son, Count y Fai r Hay Show.
event which was held at the Meigs ; Dustyn Johnson , Ryan Lee Becgk and Ryall His wife. Pat Holter. took
Cun Cline Farm in Albany Southern . The top-scoring Lain Beeg le. ·
second pl ace in all three
in Athens County.
A
pl'aque
was
pre
sented
Urban So il Judging . te~m
classes.
High -scori ng individuals
in the Agricultural Soil
•
•
Judging contest were, from
•
Taking Applicatic:ms
~ndirson 'MJ:'Danu{
first to third : Shawn B.are.
Meigs ; Russe ll Scarbury.
'Funera{
Meigs ; Olivia
Searl s,
Adam Mo:.•Donie l
HUD Subsidized
Southern. The top -.~coring
&amp; Jo.n1c:s A ndc:no n
D I'RECTORS
.Elflclency/1 Bedroom.
Agricultura l Soil Judging
Team was from Meig s
SOyrs or qualifying disability
High School anu incluued
Low income priority'
Bare ,
Ru sse ll
Shawn
7 40-992-7022
Scarberry. Tiffany Lee and
Middkpcrt • Pomcn •y
Silverheels
·
. Laccc Arms.
992-5141 992-5.J.l.l
High-scoring individuals
A Realty Company-EHO
11 ~ 'fl .1ndenonn1tdanitl.i'om
•
•
in the Urban Soil Judging
•
•

%nne

The Maples

�•

PageA6

The Daily Sentinel

THE
Mohler represents church

The Daily Sentinel

Monday, September 29, 2008

. AROUND THE· WORLD

PageA7
Monday, September 29, 2008

$20 million Somali ransom
demand for ship; l crewman dies
BY MOHAMED 0L.AD HASSAN
ASSOCIATED PRESS WAITER

.,
M ·

FF

Submitted photo

e tgS .. A students have recently participated in soil judging and district forestry
competlttons.

.
·
·
AP photo
In this photo distributed by the official Xinhua news agency, Chinese astronauts Zhai Zhigang, Liu Boming and Jing
Haipeng wave during the welcome back ceremony at the space program headquarters .in Beijing's north suburbs,
China, today. The three Chinese astronauts, who successfully completed a space journey Sunday, came back to
Beijing this morning. .
·
'

Meigs FFA c9mpetes

SubmiHed photo
atasha Mohler recent ly represented the Rutland Church of God at the International Teen
Talent tn San Antonto, Tex., and was runner-up in the pantomime category. She is pictured
Wtth . Rev. Gary Lewts, asststant dtrector of Youth and Christian Education; Rev. Chris
Mustc, ~outhern . Ohto State Youth Director; and Rev. Tony Lane, Discipleship and
Chtldren s Mtntstnes Coordtnator.
N

ANNIE'S MAILBOX

'Teachers pet' not entirely at fault
BY KATHY MITCHELL
AND MARCY SuGAR

pos ition.
Either way, yuurdis:tgreement as if yo u
please get some counsel- had time to fi x it. Our conmg beca use you have a lot dok·n cc~.
Dear Annie: My hu sband of trust to rebuild , regard Dear Annie: 1 rea lly fee l
and I h&lt;~vc been married for less of what happens to ll11 "S hell-Shocked." whose
three years . and we both t ht s woman ..
wife left him out of the blue .
teach at · the same hi gh .. Dear, Ann.te: My brother. My wife did the same thing
school. Last semester. u new
Paul , passed away unex- to me after 12 years of marfemale teacher took quite a pectedly, leavmg my sister, ri age. She threatened to take
:ltkmg to my husband . who "Sue," and me as the only the kids away if! fought her.
js 20 years her senior. They s~u·vtvors. (Our parents so I allowed the divorce to
:f&gt;egan meeting" tew times a dred ~everal years _ago.) · happen quiCkly. She refused .
week for several months. The three of us were pretty wunseling and started see. i'hcir affair was obvious. close and lived m the same ing other men even before
the divorce was final.
. ~utI ~on firmed it by access- netghborhood.
_. mg hts cell phone records.
Last year. Paul and I sui'1 helped start her success:ro make matters worse. fered a nft m our relation- ful business, shared house::they were not discreet and . shtp. Afte~ much soothing hold duties, took care of the
:were the talk of both the and ~ years ttme, I felt our kids , bought her flowers for .
Jac ulty and students.
relat10nsh1p was well on the no reason. never missed a
· : I cannor begin to describe way to a complete recovery. birthc.lay. etc. Our friends
' !he pa in , humiliation and N_ow, I find that. ~!though an_d family ·were shocked
:cetrayal,. I believe they Paul s wrll sphts hts estate and saddened . The kids and
:stopped contacting each evenly between my sister I have been in counseling
..other over the summer, but and me, he named only Sue ever since.
::School has started up again ~s the beneficiary . on hi s
Her behavior was so self:and my husband sees this msurance policy. Thts was a ish and callous thm 1 can't
\"Oman every -day. Even if .very current policy. I don't believc this· i,, the person 1
· they are not involved begrudge Sue the money, married. But 1am not giving
~romantically, I believe she but was hurt to realize that up . Somewhere out there
:has a strong. adverse effect Paul must stdl have been arc good peo ple with a
.en hts mood. There is no harbormg til wtll .
sense of commitment·. trust
:Way our marria«e can surI am d t
d h h
d 1
·
:Vive this interfef.c. nee. but I .
I S resse t at t ese
an lonor. The joy 'of a
were the last thoughts he gm1d matTiage is remaining
\Vholeheartedly be lieve we had of me. More than any- faithful and kin·d anc.l work~an get past this if she is not thmg else. I would wish for ing at it every day. _
· in the picture.
_
more time Wtth my brother. Getting Over It
,
~ Being a new teacher. she Pl e~se tell your readers to.
Dear Getting: It sounds
: has no JOb protection. thmk very hard about how like you me already· on the
:Should I go to the admini~- . thetr actiOns could hurt their mend. Good luck to you. ·
:trat10n , exp?se ~he affatr loved ones alter they are
A1111ie's Mailbox i.~ writ- .
and get het fired. My hus- gone. I all! trymg_ to work ten by Kathy Mil&lt;'lle/1 alld
pand may suffer a little. but through thts sttuallon wtth- Marcy Sugar,tn11gtime ediwill survive relatively out bemg resentful and tors of the A 1111 Landers
_unscathed.
Not _wou_ld apiJ. reciate your colwil_ll. Please e-mar'lyot•r
-Teacher's
Pet
•
advtce. -. Sa dd ened Sister questums to mmiesmai/: Dear Not: We hope yo u . Dear S1ster: No matter- box@comcast.net or write
:are not blaming thi s yo ung ho~ current the policy. _it 's to: A1111ie's Madbox, P.O.
-~7~~~a~o~~~~~~ba nfdo r tdh~ q~tte posstble Paul ongi - Box 118190, Chicago, lL
• nally set up the be~eftctary 60611. To find out more
the decision to cheat and ~htle you were sttll feud- about A 1111 ie's Mailbox
· - ~cted on it. You can give '.ng and ret;cwed it without atrd read features by ollie;
:htm th ~ choice of reporting changmg tt , assull!mg he Creators Sy11dicate writers
;the aftatr to the admini s- .could .always _do_ tt. later. and cartQO(Iists, vi.~it the
::tration, taking a leave of You need to forgtve your- Creators Syudicate Web
:absence or finding another self and Paul for treating page at www.creators.com.

SR~CKSPI~INGS
.-- C&lt;!&lt;IY, Hill . and Jesha
,.
: tu ents It om the Metgs C leland.
!· FA_ chapter have rc·cc ntly
The results for' rural soil
parltctpated ''·' )~!I JUdgmg jud ging arc _ Shaw n Bear.
" '~d dtstnct ~"' ~ -~ tt y c·t•m - ltrst place wt th total ol 365.
pe
tltton,
· _·I
' d .' The.. tcs ·ulh
j- JJ Itom Russell . Scarbury ' scwnd
sot JU g m~ .'" " '" o ow_s: p_J,!ce wtth a _score o f 333.
Utb.tn. J,~ cob L.unbct L ltflany Lee, lltth place wtth
second pl.tcc Wtth a total ol a !ota l of 322. Lacec Arms
-136. Cody Htl! filt h pl"ce wtth a total of~I'J.Miranda
With a tota l ol .J ill . Jcsha Gru escr with a total of 313.
• tl 1
cle_l•.,n&lt;1_. stx
' Jl &lt;ll·e \\' ·It 11 a Ma rk'·1ta Bottita with a tota l
· tnt.t! of 3Y9. Ale\ .I nnes ol 303, Jessica Ellis with a
e~ght pla~e With a total ol total of 30 I. Kelsey Sauters
1
- ! 1. Julta Latll / .. ntnth
Wtth "score of 29 1. Ju.,tin
place With . a tota l ul 390. Morris with a total uf 290_ .
J~•ey Blackston. tc~llh pl ace Cl inton Kennedy with a
"Jth "- tot ,tl ol .3 !0_ Jesse total ol 2RX . Brenton Welsh
PLtllms . twelft h pl ace With wt th a score ol 281 Nicole
a total of 390. Bobby Kinn. Wise \~i th a scor~ ;,f ?81
· ., 1 I· . . · . -=
.
- -.
tI1_1rtee nt 1 p .tcc wtth .t· tot'd Kel sey Burton wtth a tow!
of
377.
:tnd
Denzil of 267 . Brianna Markin
Robe ~ts. folllt ee llth place Wtth a total of 265 , Carrie
~tth _,~ total_ 366. Gomg w Wl11te wtth a total of 265.
dt~t~ tc t . so t! JUd g mg lor Acl:tm Elliott wtth a total of
Ut b.tn JS Jacob Lambert. . 260 . Joey Thomas with a

.

:Community Calendar·
· Public meetings
Monday, Sepl. 29
POMEROY - Veterans
·;Service Com mission , 9
:a.m., 11 7 Memori al Dr.
:;::
Wednesday, Oct. I
: POMEROY
- Me igs
~ou my Board of Health, 5
p .m.. Health Department
. conference room. t 12 E.
: Memorial Dr.

p.m. will feature Forgiven
Again Trio, wit h other readings and ,music .

Clubs and
•
•
orgamzat10ns
•

Gay Perrin will review "A
Thmtsand Splenc.lid Suns ."
Leah Ord. hostess.
Friday, Ocl. 3
POM EROY - PERI. t
p.m .. Mulberry Community
Center. Insurance representatives to speak.

Tuesday, Sept. 311
POMEROY - OH-KAN
Coi n Club . change o f meettn g
from Monday to
Tuesday, Sept. 30
Tuesday at the Pomeroy
POM EROY
Library, 7 p.m .
Ch ildhood immunization
CHESTER
- Shade clinic. 9- 11 a.m ., 1'-3 p.m ..
Ri ver Lodge -l53. monthly Heal th Department. 'Bring
•
S.u nday, Oct. 5
~ HEMLOCK GROVE
stated meeting. 7:30 p m . shot records. medical card
; :Homecoming at Hemlock Refreshments follow.
where applicable. Children
: Grove Christian Church.
Wednesday, Oct. I
must be accompan ied by a
;Worship at 9:30a .m.. di nner
MIDDLEPORT
Grange Hall at 12:30 p.m . Midd leport Literary Cl ub , parent or legal guardi an. $7
donation accepted but not
~ftemoon program at 2 2 p.m .. Pomeroy Library.
required .

Ctturch events

_,.t

Other events

oi

BY GtLLIAN WONG
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

~-.
l

News and
information for
senior citizens of
the Tri-County ...

J
!

,,

Senior Citizens make
up 65% of the total
population of the
Tri-County.
To reach this group,
contact your
Advertising
Representative.

• The Daily Sentinel
'

·

handle s attached to the
Shenzllou 7 ship's orbi tal
module. Zhai remained outside for abo ut 13 minutes
before climbitig back inside .
China has rel ied heav il y
on homegrown tec hnology.
panly out of necessity. It
has trouhle ohtaining such
technology abroad due ro
0 .S. and European bans and
is not a pat1icipant in the
lntcm ational Space Station .
The Chinese program is
backed bv the sec retive mil itary. Whil e Beijing insists
it is committed to a peaceful
program. analysts point to
numerous potential applicati ons for it s technology.
such as when it used a landbased missile to blast apart
an o ld satellite last January.

Five nation ... ha ve bee-n

sharing information to tr) to
secure the "' ift release M
the shi p and 11.' crew -'Ukr;!iJIL'. Somalia. Ru"ia.
the United State' and
Britain.

Kcnvan

not kn own \Vhid1 cmr ntrY

the plane' he longc•d to. He

al ~o :-.aid oliH.'r' who made
earlier ran . . um clcmancb dltl
not speak fnr the pira te'
holding the ship .
·
A man '' ho ... aid he was
the captain of the 'cized
shi p and whn iclcnt ificll
him sel f as Viktor Nikol skv
to ld the AP that a Russiai1
crew member died Su nd&lt;ty
becausl:' of ll\ pt:nension. ·

"'!'he rest ,;r us are fee litig
we ll .''
Nikul,ky
'a id .
adding that he could sec .
three ships about a mile
away. inL·Iudi ng one l'arry-

inc an AmeriL·:m fl ag_

Both Al i and N'ikolsky
spoke nn a s;ll;•l! ile p!l(lne
num her tlw AP ~111 fro m a
Somal i JllHrnali st-whn ,poke
to Al i earlier 111 the da y. Th~
conveJ;sat it'n las ted abt,lllt JU
minut ~s. Al-i spoke in Sunmli
with a ccntr't! Soma lia n .
accent and Nik nlsky .&gt; poke
in broken E n ~! ish.
Russ ian m.?d ia had earlier

ic.lentified Nikols ki "-' the
first mate. ye t he i'dentifiecl
hitmel f tu tl1e AP a' the
ship \ capta in. It \l'a' not
possihle to immec.l iately
resolve the disucpcmcy.

IT'S A GREAT TIME
TO BUY A :KUBOTA!

"a

'

'

446-2342
6.75-1333
992-2155

Advertising Deadl·ine. Oct 3, 2008

BAGHDAD
U.S.
Ambassador Ryan Crocker
on Sunday accused Iran of
trying to interfere with a
new security pact between
Iraq and the United States,
and said Americans need
sense
to view Iraq with
of strategic · patience"
because the stakes in the
region are so high .
The 37-year veteran
diplomat , interviewed by·
The Associated Press at his
embassy in Baghdad, is in
the middle of tough negotiations with Iraqi officials to
define the basis for a continuing American military
presence in the country
beyond the end of this year.
The talks hit an impasse
recently and are taking
place against a backdrop of
mcreasing calls in the
United States for a U.S.
withdrawal ahd declining
interest in the war i!self
from many members of the
American public.
Crocker struck an emotional note in discussing
the re ce nt accomplishments in Iraq , including a
sharp decline in violence
across much of the country
and some preliminary
steps toward political reconciliation, s1,1ch as last
week 's
agreement
to
schedule provincial elections by Jan. 31.
"All Americans should be
and are proud of the
achievements in Iraq and
the American role in bringin$ about the -change," he ·
sa1d. "Iraq is in a far, far
better place than it was say
· 18 months ago."
•

; .t

Submitted photo

U.S. Ambassador to Iraq, Ryan Crocker answers a question
during an Interview with the Associated Press in Baghdad,
·
Sunday.
However, he warned, resolve and to embrace an
those gains could )le in , attitude -of defiance . 'These
jeopardy if U.S. interest in kinds of actions have prothe country is allowed to found and very far-reaching
!lag. "So I think what consequences," he said.
Americans need going forThe talks on the military
ward is .a ~ense of strategic pact have hit an impasse
patience ," he said.
recently over U.S . insis"If we .decide we are tence on retaining sole legal
tired of it, if we decide we jurisdiction over American
don't want to do it any- troops and differences over
more and that it is time to a schedule for the departure
turn our attention to other of the U.S. military. Iraqi
things, this could all go the officials have said that they
other
way,"
Crocker want all foreign troops out
warned. "And it is certain- by the end of 20 II. .
ly my sense as someone
Crocker, 59, who became
who has served in the ambassador in March 2007
Middle. East for the better . and who is expected to
p.art of three decades, that leave his post around the
you would _ pa~ a major eRd of the Bush administralong-term pnce. '
tion , is one of the most
He suggested it could be experienced diplomats in·
seen as a n:peat of the U.S. the Middle East. ' l:le has
withdrawal from Lebanon served as ambassador in
in the early 1980s, a move . Lebanon, Syria and Kuwait.
that led coWJtries like !{an and was ambassador to
and Syria to draw assump- · Pakistan before his appointtions about U·.S. lack of ment to Iraq .

..

-. -

ALL_POWER EQUIPMENT
ONE

Mtl.E \-\'EST OF A fH ENS ON
IWUTE 51)/1::'

ATf·!ENS, OH

74()..593-3279/800-71 0-t 917

!!OV~rn ­

ment 'P''ke,·n""' " Alfrec.l
Mutua . ho\\"1.~ \· er. in :-. isted
hi s wuntrv \\ill not n e~oti ­
att with pirates or terrorists.
Ali 'aid pi&lt;Hles hllVC bcCJl
fly ing n\'l'r the Fa ina . It wa ..

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

Qctoher 10, 2008

• -~oint ~Iea~ant 3!\el}ister

constrained space programs
elsewhere'
Saturday's
space walk wus watched by
cheering crowds on huge
outdoor TV screens .
State broadcaster CCTV
showed the astronauts'
return Sunday after their
Shenzhou 7 ship's re-entry
vehicle burst through the
Earth's atmosphere to make
a landing under clear skies
in the grasslands of China's
northern Inner Mongolia
region. The vessel floated
down gently while attached
to a giant red:and-white
striped parachute, marking
the end of the 68-hour
endeavor.
"It was a glorious mission,
full of challenges with a suecessful end," said mission
commander Zhai Zhigang. a
fighter pilot. "We feel pro~d
of the motherland."
·Premier · Wen Jiabao ·
applauded at mission control in Beijing and shook
hands with staff.
"This mission's success is
a milestone; a stride forward," Wen said. "I would
like to extend my congratulations to .the heroic astranauts who successfully
completed this mission."
The spacewalk was a key
step in mastering techniques
for docking two orbiters to
create China's first orbiting
space station. Tethered to

ran~om. nothir~

BY JOHN DANISZEWSKI

uar er

&amp;it• ~aUipoli~
. 1\ailp ~ribune

BEIJING
Three
Chinese astronauts arrived
Monday in Beijing to a
homecoming parade after
complt;ting China 's first
spacewalk and putting the
country closer to building a
space station and landing a .
man on the moon .
State broadcaster CCTV
showed the three, · with
flower garlands around their
necks, waving and smiling
as they were slowly driven
through the streets at
Beijing Aerospace Center,
where they did their space
training.
.
Holding up Chin~ se !lags :
and balloons, hundreds of
people , many of them uni:formed soldiers, cheered •
:and applauded as the astro:nauts went by, with some
:shouting out, "Learn from
the astronauts and salute the
astronauts." ·
One banner read: "Warmly
celebrate the great success of
the task of the Shenzhou
,manned space flight."
The success of the mission now shifts the focus to
building the space station
and plans to land a man on
the moon, said Wang
Zhaoyao, deputy director of
manned space !light.
·
He said the program is

looking to launch a new
·orbiting vehicle and set up a
simple space lab by 20 I I .
There are also hopes of
sending unmanned and
manned space vehicles to
perfonn docking activities
with the target vehicle .
By 2020, China wants -to
launch a manned mission to
experiment with technologies that will enable astranauts to take care of ~pacecraft for lbnger periods of
time, Wang told reporters at
a briefing in Beijing after a
parachute brought the astronauts' capsule back lo
ground Sunday.
"After we have successfully completed these three
steps, we will go to even
more remote areas," Wang
said, adding China hopes to
seDtl ·a manned mission to
the moon "in the near
future." ·
The United States is the
only country to have
accomplished that feat,
putting its first astronaut
team on the moon in 1969.
But its Jast hbman landing
was in 1972, and it has since
concentrated on unmanned ·
probes.
· China's communist leaders, riding a wave of pride
and patriotism after hosting
the Olympics, face few of ·
the public doubts or budgetary pressures that have

"We walll

ebe. We neec.l S~llmillion l()r
.the safe release of the ship at'\(~
the crew." Ali said. adding
that "if we are anacked. we
will defend oursclve' until the
last one of us dies ...

US ambassador appeals for patience in Iraq

~ or

1113

. l

tota1259 .ChrisCokley with
a ti&gt;tal of 259 Beth , L
with a tota l ?4J ~~ ee
0
Kl ein with a ~tal· of ~~~
Brandon Jarvi s with a total
•1 f 218 Sl1·•wn F. ·I
'tl
• - · "
ISlerWtla
total of 238, Ashley
Bateman-Lee with a total of
23~. Josh Fetty with a total
of211, Brandon Lon« with '
a total of 23 1 J '' ·h f1 J. os
orr s
with a .total. of
211 •v Nate
Davis with a total at· 203
Zach Custer with a total of
195 Codv We·we· 'th .
totaJ of -163 ' ~ ~ 1 . ·.d
Justis with a '10~~ of u,sJ't
Going to Districts for rural
soil J'udg' · · Sh
B
.Rlt ssel' 'sng tsb . awTnff~ar,
. . 1 cat uty, 1 any
Lee. and Lacee Arms . The
forestry team finished sixth
out of eight teams· at distriers. Going to state is Cod
Hill. Adam Lavender an~
Nate Davi s.
'

MOGA'oiSHU, Somalia
- As a heavily anned U.S.
destroyer patrolled ilearby
and planes flew overhead
Sunday, a Somali pirate
spokesman
told
The
Associated Press his group
was demanding a $20 million
ransom to release a cargo ship
loaded with Russian tanks.
The spokesman also
warned that the pirates
would fi~ht to the death if
any country \ried military
acrion to regai n the ship. and
a man who said he was the
&gt;hi p's captain reported that
one crew member had died. ·
Pirates
se ized
the
ship
Ukrainian -operated
Fain;t off the coast of
Somalia on Thlt rsday as it
headed to Kenya carrying
33 Russian -built 1~ 72 tanks ·
and a substantial amou nt of
ammunition and spare parts.
The ordn ance was ordered
by the Kenyan governme nt.
The
guided
mi ss ile
destroyer USS Howard was
stationed otfthe Somali coast
on Sunc.lay. making sure that
the pirates did not remove the
tank s. ammunition and other
heavy weapons from 'the
ship . which was anchored off
.the coast.
A spokesman ft•r the U.S .
5th fleet said the Navy
remained "deeply concerned"
over the fate of the ship's 21member crew and c.argo.
In a rare gesture of cooper.the
Ameri cans
atio·n.
appeared to be keeping an eye
on the Faina un til the Ru ssian
missile frigme Neltstrashin)y . .
or lnt'repid. reaches the area.
The Russian ship was still in
the Atlantic on Sunday. the
Russian navy reported.
Pirate spokesman Sugulc
Ali said he was speaking
Sunday from the deck of the
Faina via a satellite phone
- anc.l verified his locati on
by handing the phone over

to the ship's captain. \1 ho
also spoke with t il~ AP. It
was not P'"'ihle lo further
confirm the-ir idcntitic, .

r

1' /S/7' Ol/ R 'il.l \f., i. U c' :\ 1/(1,\
BLJS. tn..1.' SOUTH OF L.-\ :-.JC:\STr

LAf\:C:\5lT'I&lt;. Oil
740-nf;3,2M27

"l'our frictrdly Ollflltwr J'm,••·r [quirmrt'llf Ulf1f l'mdor Sr,1t'rsl 1m:"

I~

�•

PageA6

The Daily Sentinel

THE
Mohler represents church

The Daily Sentinel

Monday, September 29, 2008

. AROUND THE· WORLD

PageA7
Monday, September 29, 2008

$20 million Somali ransom
demand for ship; l crewman dies
BY MOHAMED 0L.AD HASSAN
ASSOCIATED PRESS WAITER

.,
M ·

FF

Submitted photo

e tgS .. A students have recently participated in soil judging and district forestry
competlttons.

.
·
·
AP photo
In this photo distributed by the official Xinhua news agency, Chinese astronauts Zhai Zhigang, Liu Boming and Jing
Haipeng wave during the welcome back ceremony at the space program headquarters .in Beijing's north suburbs,
China, today. The three Chinese astronauts, who successfully completed a space journey Sunday, came back to
Beijing this morning. .
·
'

Meigs FFA c9mpetes

SubmiHed photo
atasha Mohler recent ly represented the Rutland Church of God at the International Teen
Talent tn San Antonto, Tex., and was runner-up in the pantomime category. She is pictured
Wtth . Rev. Gary Lewts, asststant dtrector of Youth and Christian Education; Rev. Chris
Mustc, ~outhern . Ohto State Youth Director; and Rev. Tony Lane, Discipleship and
Chtldren s Mtntstnes Coordtnator.
N

ANNIE'S MAILBOX

'Teachers pet' not entirely at fault
BY KATHY MITCHELL
AND MARCY SuGAR

pos ition.
Either way, yuurdis:tgreement as if yo u
please get some counsel- had time to fi x it. Our conmg beca use you have a lot dok·n cc~.
Dear Annie: My hu sband of trust to rebuild , regard Dear Annie: 1 rea lly fee l
and I h&lt;~vc been married for less of what happens to ll11 "S hell-Shocked." whose
three years . and we both t ht s woman ..
wife left him out of the blue .
teach at · the same hi gh .. Dear, Ann.te: My brother. My wife did the same thing
school. Last semester. u new
Paul , passed away unex- to me after 12 years of marfemale teacher took quite a pectedly, leavmg my sister, ri age. She threatened to take
:ltkmg to my husband . who "Sue," and me as the only the kids away if! fought her.
js 20 years her senior. They s~u·vtvors. (Our parents so I allowed the divorce to
:f&gt;egan meeting" tew times a dred ~everal years _ago.) · happen quiCkly. She refused .
week for several months. The three of us were pretty wunseling and started see. i'hcir affair was obvious. close and lived m the same ing other men even before
the divorce was final.
. ~utI ~on firmed it by access- netghborhood.
_. mg hts cell phone records.
Last year. Paul and I sui'1 helped start her success:ro make matters worse. fered a nft m our relation- ful business, shared house::they were not discreet and . shtp. Afte~ much soothing hold duties, took care of the
:were the talk of both the and ~ years ttme, I felt our kids , bought her flowers for .
Jac ulty and students.
relat10nsh1p was well on the no reason. never missed a
· : I cannor begin to describe way to a complete recovery. birthc.lay. etc. Our friends
' !he pa in , humiliation and N_ow, I find that. ~!though an_d family ·were shocked
:cetrayal,. I believe they Paul s wrll sphts hts estate and saddened . The kids and
:stopped contacting each evenly between my sister I have been in counseling
..other over the summer, but and me, he named only Sue ever since.
::School has started up again ~s the beneficiary . on hi s
Her behavior was so self:and my husband sees this msurance policy. Thts was a ish and callous thm 1 can't
\"Oman every -day. Even if .very current policy. I don't believc this· i,, the person 1
· they are not involved begrudge Sue the money, married. But 1am not giving
~romantically, I believe she but was hurt to realize that up . Somewhere out there
:has a strong. adverse effect Paul must stdl have been arc good peo ple with a
.en hts mood. There is no harbormg til wtll .
sense of commitment·. trust
:Way our marria«e can surI am d t
d h h
d 1
·
:Vive this interfef.c. nee. but I .
I S resse t at t ese
an lonor. The joy 'of a
were the last thoughts he gm1d matTiage is remaining
\Vholeheartedly be lieve we had of me. More than any- faithful and kin·d anc.l work~an get past this if she is not thmg else. I would wish for ing at it every day. _
· in the picture.
_
more time Wtth my brother. Getting Over It
,
~ Being a new teacher. she Pl e~se tell your readers to.
Dear Getting: It sounds
: has no JOb protection. thmk very hard about how like you me already· on the
:Should I go to the admini~- . thetr actiOns could hurt their mend. Good luck to you. ·
:trat10n , exp?se ~he affatr loved ones alter they are
A1111ie's Mailbox i.~ writ- .
and get het fired. My hus- gone. I all! trymg_ to work ten by Kathy Mil&lt;'lle/1 alld
pand may suffer a little. but through thts sttuallon wtth- Marcy Sugar,tn11gtime ediwill survive relatively out bemg resentful and tors of the A 1111 Landers
_unscathed.
Not _wou_ld apiJ. reciate your colwil_ll. Please e-mar'lyot•r
-Teacher's
Pet
•
advtce. -. Sa dd ened Sister questums to mmiesmai/: Dear Not: We hope yo u . Dear S1ster: No matter- box@comcast.net or write
:are not blaming thi s yo ung ho~ current the policy. _it 's to: A1111ie's Madbox, P.O.
-~7~~~a~o~~~~~~ba nfdo r tdh~ q~tte posstble Paul ongi - Box 118190, Chicago, lL
• nally set up the be~eftctary 60611. To find out more
the decision to cheat and ~htle you were sttll feud- about A 1111 ie's Mailbox
· - ~cted on it. You can give '.ng and ret;cwed it without atrd read features by ollie;
:htm th ~ choice of reporting changmg tt , assull!mg he Creators Sy11dicate writers
;the aftatr to the admini s- .could .always _do_ tt. later. and cartQO(Iists, vi.~it the
::tration, taking a leave of You need to forgtve your- Creators Syudicate Web
:absence or finding another self and Paul for treating page at www.creators.com.

SR~CKSPI~INGS
.-- C&lt;!&lt;IY, Hill . and Jesha
,.
: tu ents It om the Metgs C leland.
!· FA_ chapter have rc·cc ntly
The results for' rural soil
parltctpated ''·' )~!I JUdgmg jud ging arc _ Shaw n Bear.
" '~d dtstnct ~"' ~ -~ tt y c·t•m - ltrst place wt th total ol 365.
pe
tltton,
· _·I
' d .' The.. tcs ·ulh
j- JJ Itom Russell . Scarbury ' scwnd
sot JU g m~ .'" " '" o ow_s: p_J,!ce wtth a _score o f 333.
Utb.tn. J,~ cob L.unbct L ltflany Lee, lltth place wtth
second pl.tcc Wtth a total ol a !ota l of 322. Lacec Arms
-136. Cody Htl! filt h pl"ce wtth a total of~I'J.Miranda
With a tota l ol .J ill . Jcsha Gru escr with a total of 313.
• tl 1
cle_l•.,n&lt;1_. stx
' Jl &lt;ll·e \\' ·It 11 a Ma rk'·1ta Bottita with a tota l
· tnt.t! of 3Y9. Ale\ .I nnes ol 303, Jessica Ellis with a
e~ght pla~e With a total ol total of 30 I. Kelsey Sauters
1
- ! 1. Julta Latll / .. ntnth
Wtth "score of 29 1. Ju.,tin
place With . a tota l ul 390. Morris with a total uf 290_ .
J~•ey Blackston. tc~llh pl ace Cl inton Kennedy with a
"Jth "- tot ,tl ol .3 !0_ Jesse total ol 2RX . Brenton Welsh
PLtllms . twelft h pl ace With wt th a score ol 281 Nicole
a total of 390. Bobby Kinn. Wise \~i th a scor~ ;,f ?81
· ., 1 I· . . · . -=
.
- -.
tI1_1rtee nt 1 p .tcc wtth .t· tot'd Kel sey Burton wtth a tow!
of
377.
:tnd
Denzil of 267 . Brianna Markin
Robe ~ts. folllt ee llth place Wtth a total of 265 , Carrie
~tth _,~ total_ 366. Gomg w Wl11te wtth a total of 265.
dt~t~ tc t . so t! JUd g mg lor Acl:tm Elliott wtth a total of
Ut b.tn JS Jacob Lambert. . 260 . Joey Thomas with a

.

:Community Calendar·
· Public meetings
Monday, Sepl. 29
POMEROY - Veterans
·;Service Com mission , 9
:a.m., 11 7 Memori al Dr.
:;::
Wednesday, Oct. I
: POMEROY
- Me igs
~ou my Board of Health, 5
p .m.. Health Department
. conference room. t 12 E.
: Memorial Dr.

p.m. will feature Forgiven
Again Trio, wit h other readings and ,music .

Clubs and
•
•
orgamzat10ns
•

Gay Perrin will review "A
Thmtsand Splenc.lid Suns ."
Leah Ord. hostess.
Friday, Ocl. 3
POM EROY - PERI. t
p.m .. Mulberry Community
Center. Insurance representatives to speak.

Tuesday, Sept. 311
POMEROY - OH-KAN
Coi n Club . change o f meettn g
from Monday to
Tuesday, Sept. 30
Tuesday at the Pomeroy
POM EROY
Library, 7 p.m .
Ch ildhood immunization
CHESTER
- Shade clinic. 9- 11 a.m ., 1'-3 p.m ..
Ri ver Lodge -l53. monthly Heal th Department. 'Bring
•
S.u nday, Oct. 5
~ HEMLOCK GROVE
stated meeting. 7:30 p m . shot records. medical card
; :Homecoming at Hemlock Refreshments follow.
where applicable. Children
: Grove Christian Church.
Wednesday, Oct. I
must be accompan ied by a
;Worship at 9:30a .m.. di nner
MIDDLEPORT
Grange Hall at 12:30 p.m . Midd leport Literary Cl ub , parent or legal guardi an. $7
donation accepted but not
~ftemoon program at 2 2 p.m .. Pomeroy Library.
required .

Ctturch events

_,.t

Other events

oi

BY GtLLIAN WONG
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

~-.
l

News and
information for
senior citizens of
the Tri-County ...

J
!

,,

Senior Citizens make
up 65% of the total
population of the
Tri-County.
To reach this group,
contact your
Advertising
Representative.

• The Daily Sentinel
'

·

handle s attached to the
Shenzllou 7 ship's orbi tal
module. Zhai remained outside for abo ut 13 minutes
before climbitig back inside .
China has rel ied heav il y
on homegrown tec hnology.
panly out of necessity. It
has trouhle ohtaining such
technology abroad due ro
0 .S. and European bans and
is not a pat1icipant in the
lntcm ational Space Station .
The Chinese program is
backed bv the sec retive mil itary. Whil e Beijing insists
it is committed to a peaceful
program. analysts point to
numerous potential applicati ons for it s technology.
such as when it used a landbased missile to blast apart
an o ld satellite last January.

Five nation ... ha ve bee-n

sharing information to tr) to
secure the "' ift release M
the shi p and 11.' crew -'Ukr;!iJIL'. Somalia. Ru"ia.
the United State' and
Britain.

Kcnvan

not kn own \Vhid1 cmr ntrY

the plane' he longc•d to. He

al ~o :-.aid oliH.'r' who made
earlier ran . . um clcmancb dltl
not speak fnr the pira te'
holding the ship .
·
A man '' ho ... aid he was
the captain of the 'cized
shi p and whn iclcnt ificll
him sel f as Viktor Nikol skv
to ld the AP that a Russiai1
crew member died Su nd&lt;ty
becausl:' of ll\ pt:nension. ·

"'!'he rest ,;r us are fee litig
we ll .''
Nikul,ky
'a id .
adding that he could sec .
three ships about a mile
away. inL·Iudi ng one l'arry-

inc an AmeriL·:m fl ag_

Both Al i and N'ikolsky
spoke nn a s;ll;•l! ile p!l(lne
num her tlw AP ~111 fro m a
Somal i JllHrnali st-whn ,poke
to Al i earlier 111 the da y. Th~
conveJ;sat it'n las ted abt,lllt JU
minut ~s. Al-i spoke in Sunmli
with a ccntr't! Soma lia n .
accent and Nik nlsky .&gt; poke
in broken E n ~! ish.
Russ ian m.?d ia had earlier

ic.lentified Nikols ki "-' the
first mate. ye t he i'dentifiecl
hitmel f tu tl1e AP a' the
ship \ capta in. It \l'a' not
possihle to immec.l iately
resolve the disucpcmcy.

IT'S A GREAT TIME
TO BUY A :KUBOTA!

"a

'

'

446-2342
6.75-1333
992-2155

Advertising Deadl·ine. Oct 3, 2008

BAGHDAD
U.S.
Ambassador Ryan Crocker
on Sunday accused Iran of
trying to interfere with a
new security pact between
Iraq and the United States,
and said Americans need
sense
to view Iraq with
of strategic · patience"
because the stakes in the
region are so high .
The 37-year veteran
diplomat , interviewed by·
The Associated Press at his
embassy in Baghdad, is in
the middle of tough negotiations with Iraqi officials to
define the basis for a continuing American military
presence in the country
beyond the end of this year.
The talks hit an impasse
recently and are taking
place against a backdrop of
mcreasing calls in the
United States for a U.S.
withdrawal ahd declining
interest in the war i!self
from many members of the
American public.
Crocker struck an emotional note in discussing
the re ce nt accomplishments in Iraq , including a
sharp decline in violence
across much of the country
and some preliminary
steps toward political reconciliation, s1,1ch as last
week 's
agreement
to
schedule provincial elections by Jan. 31.
"All Americans should be
and are proud of the
achievements in Iraq and
the American role in bringin$ about the -change," he ·
sa1d. "Iraq is in a far, far
better place than it was say
· 18 months ago."
•

; .t

Submitted photo

U.S. Ambassador to Iraq, Ryan Crocker answers a question
during an Interview with the Associated Press in Baghdad,
·
Sunday.
However, he warned, resolve and to embrace an
those gains could )le in , attitude -of defiance . 'These
jeopardy if U.S. interest in kinds of actions have prothe country is allowed to found and very far-reaching
!lag. "So I think what consequences," he said.
Americans need going forThe talks on the military
ward is .a ~ense of strategic pact have hit an impasse
patience ," he said.
recently over U.S . insis"If we .decide we are tence on retaining sole legal
tired of it, if we decide we jurisdiction over American
don't want to do it any- troops and differences over
more and that it is time to a schedule for the departure
turn our attention to other of the U.S. military. Iraqi
things, this could all go the officials have said that they
other
way,"
Crocker want all foreign troops out
warned. "And it is certain- by the end of 20 II. .
ly my sense as someone
Crocker, 59, who became
who has served in the ambassador in March 2007
Middle. East for the better . and who is expected to
p.art of three decades, that leave his post around the
you would _ pa~ a major eRd of the Bush administralong-term pnce. '
tion , is one of the most
He suggested it could be experienced diplomats in·
seen as a n:peat of the U.S. the Middle East. ' l:le has
withdrawal from Lebanon served as ambassador in
in the early 1980s, a move . Lebanon, Syria and Kuwait.
that led coWJtries like !{an and was ambassador to
and Syria to draw assump- · Pakistan before his appointtions about U·.S. lack of ment to Iraq .

..

-. -

ALL_POWER EQUIPMENT
ONE

Mtl.E \-\'EST OF A fH ENS ON
IWUTE 51)/1::'

ATf·!ENS, OH

74()..593-3279/800-71 0-t 917

!!OV~rn ­

ment 'P''ke,·n""' " Alfrec.l
Mutua . ho\\"1.~ \· er. in :-. isted
hi s wuntrv \\ill not n e~oti ­
att with pirates or terrorists.
Ali 'aid pi&lt;Hles hllVC bcCJl
fly ing n\'l'r the Fa ina . It wa ..

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

Qctoher 10, 2008

• -~oint ~Iea~ant 3!\el}ister

constrained space programs
elsewhere'
Saturday's
space walk wus watched by
cheering crowds on huge
outdoor TV screens .
State broadcaster CCTV
showed the astronauts'
return Sunday after their
Shenzhou 7 ship's re-entry
vehicle burst through the
Earth's atmosphere to make
a landing under clear skies
in the grasslands of China's
northern Inner Mongolia
region. The vessel floated
down gently while attached
to a giant red:and-white
striped parachute, marking
the end of the 68-hour
endeavor.
"It was a glorious mission,
full of challenges with a suecessful end," said mission
commander Zhai Zhigang. a
fighter pilot. "We feel pro~d
of the motherland."
·Premier · Wen Jiabao ·
applauded at mission control in Beijing and shook
hands with staff.
"This mission's success is
a milestone; a stride forward," Wen said. "I would
like to extend my congratulations to .the heroic astranauts who successfully
completed this mission."
The spacewalk was a key
step in mastering techniques
for docking two orbiters to
create China's first orbiting
space station. Tethered to

ran~om. nothir~

BY JOHN DANISZEWSKI

uar er

&amp;it• ~aUipoli~
. 1\ailp ~ribune

BEIJING
Three
Chinese astronauts arrived
Monday in Beijing to a
homecoming parade after
complt;ting China 's first
spacewalk and putting the
country closer to building a
space station and landing a .
man on the moon .
State broadcaster CCTV
showed the three, · with
flower garlands around their
necks, waving and smiling
as they were slowly driven
through the streets at
Beijing Aerospace Center,
where they did their space
training.
.
Holding up Chin~ se !lags :
and balloons, hundreds of
people , many of them uni:formed soldiers, cheered •
:and applauded as the astro:nauts went by, with some
:shouting out, "Learn from
the astronauts and salute the
astronauts." ·
One banner read: "Warmly
celebrate the great success of
the task of the Shenzhou
,manned space flight."
The success of the mission now shifts the focus to
building the space station
and plans to land a man on
the moon, said Wang
Zhaoyao, deputy director of
manned space !light.
·
He said the program is

looking to launch a new
·orbiting vehicle and set up a
simple space lab by 20 I I .
There are also hopes of
sending unmanned and
manned space vehicles to
perfonn docking activities
with the target vehicle .
By 2020, China wants -to
launch a manned mission to
experiment with technologies that will enable astranauts to take care of ~pacecraft for lbnger periods of
time, Wang told reporters at
a briefing in Beijing after a
parachute brought the astronauts' capsule back lo
ground Sunday.
"After we have successfully completed these three
steps, we will go to even
more remote areas," Wang
said, adding China hopes to
seDtl ·a manned mission to
the moon "in the near
future." ·
The United States is the
only country to have
accomplished that feat,
putting its first astronaut
team on the moon in 1969.
But its Jast hbman landing
was in 1972, and it has since
concentrated on unmanned ·
probes.
· China's communist leaders, riding a wave of pride
and patriotism after hosting
the Olympics, face few of ·
the public doubts or budgetary pressures that have

"We walll

ebe. We neec.l S~llmillion l()r
.the safe release of the ship at'\(~
the crew." Ali said. adding
that "if we are anacked. we
will defend oursclve' until the
last one of us dies ...

US ambassador appeals for patience in Iraq

~ or

1113

. l

tota1259 .ChrisCokley with
a ti&gt;tal of 259 Beth , L
with a tota l ?4J ~~ ee
0
Kl ein with a ~tal· of ~~~
Brandon Jarvi s with a total
•1 f 218 Sl1·•wn F. ·I
'tl
• - · "
ISlerWtla
total of 238, Ashley
Bateman-Lee with a total of
23~. Josh Fetty with a total
of211, Brandon Lon« with '
a total of 23 1 J '' ·h f1 J. os
orr s
with a .total. of
211 •v Nate
Davis with a total at· 203
Zach Custer with a total of
195 Codv We·we· 'th .
totaJ of -163 ' ~ ~ 1 . ·.d
Justis with a '10~~ of u,sJ't
Going to Districts for rural
soil J'udg' · · Sh
B
.Rlt ssel' 'sng tsb . awTnff~ar,
. . 1 cat uty, 1 any
Lee. and Lacee Arms . The
forestry team finished sixth
out of eight teams· at distriers. Going to state is Cod
Hill. Adam Lavender an~
Nate Davi s.
'

MOGA'oiSHU, Somalia
- As a heavily anned U.S.
destroyer patrolled ilearby
and planes flew overhead
Sunday, a Somali pirate
spokesman
told
The
Associated Press his group
was demanding a $20 million
ransom to release a cargo ship
loaded with Russian tanks.
The spokesman also
warned that the pirates
would fi~ht to the death if
any country \ried military
acrion to regai n the ship. and
a man who said he was the
&gt;hi p's captain reported that
one crew member had died. ·
Pirates
se ized
the
ship
Ukrainian -operated
Fain;t off the coast of
Somalia on Thlt rsday as it
headed to Kenya carrying
33 Russian -built 1~ 72 tanks ·
and a substantial amou nt of
ammunition and spare parts.
The ordn ance was ordered
by the Kenyan governme nt.
The
guided
mi ss ile
destroyer USS Howard was
stationed otfthe Somali coast
on Sunc.lay. making sure that
the pirates did not remove the
tank s. ammunition and other
heavy weapons from 'the
ship . which was anchored off
.the coast.
A spokesman ft•r the U.S .
5th fleet said the Navy
remained "deeply concerned"
over the fate of the ship's 21member crew and c.argo.
In a rare gesture of cooper.the
Ameri cans
atio·n.
appeared to be keeping an eye
on the Faina un til the Ru ssian
missile frigme Neltstrashin)y . .
or lnt'repid. reaches the area.
The Russian ship was still in
the Atlantic on Sunday. the
Russian navy reported.
Pirate spokesman Sugulc
Ali said he was speaking
Sunday from the deck of the
Faina via a satellite phone
- anc.l verified his locati on
by handing the phone over

to the ship's captain. \1 ho
also spoke with t il~ AP. It
was not P'"'ihle lo further
confirm the-ir idcntitic, .

r

1' /S/7' Ol/ R 'il.l \f., i. U c' :\ 1/(1,\
BLJS. tn..1.' SOUTH OF L.-\ :-.JC:\STr

LAf\:C:\5lT'I&lt;. Oil
740-nf;3,2M27

"l'our frictrdly Ollflltwr J'm,••·r [quirmrt'llf Ulf1f l'mdor Sr,1t'rsl 1m:"

I~

�•

OHIO

The Daily Sentinel

Ohio GOP tells Web
visitors to use voting period

BY MATT REED
ASSOCIATED PRESS WAITER

•

•••

For Zukowski, a native of
Poland and proud holder of
a master 's degree in electrical engineering, it had came
to thi s helpless moment,
inside a government building among auctioneers,
sheriff's deputies and eyeing investors.
After years of squabbling
with the home butlder, the
county tax auditor and the
mortgage company, after
writing his owri court petitions and pleading in person
to judges and government
officials, and after being
fired from his job and not
paying his mortgage, he sat

BY MATT REED
ASSOCIATED PRESS WAITER

_

AP photo

Jamie and John Petree stand in front of their home as they move out Saturday, May 3, in
Gahanna. The Petrees say that previous owner Andrew Zukowski , who had lost the house
in a bank foreclosure, has tried to scare them away for eight yl!ars.
·

bewildered and he watched cruised past the home more ·
frequentlr . taking pictures
and listened .
"They started the auction: and wnting down the ·
$100,000 ... 105 ... 110 ... license plate numbers of
120. I stand up and I say, ' l visitors , the Petrees say. l1e
am Andrew Zukowski . often parked his truck on
What are you doing here? the opposite· block where he
This hou se has not been had . a clear -line of sight
foreclosed because I have a through fenceless backyards
pending-- appeal."'
to the back of the home.
He had bought the house
" I would see headlights ,
new for $101 ,000. UnhaPP.Y real slow, right across the
with the way it was butlt, back there,~ ' said Petree ,
Zukowski demanded that who recogmzed the truck.
the county reassess its value "And he'd sit there. He'd sit
for tax purposes .
there for a half hour."
After an almost decade- · The Gahanna prosecutor
long fight the Ohio Board of foled four char~es of menacTax Appeals ruled that he mg by stalktng , and the
and his wife, Teresa, were Petrees filed for a ctvt! pronot exempt from Franklin teet ion order. Charges were
County property taxes, · dropped when a JUdge
board records show.
found Zukowski mentally
With little savings and no incompetent to stand trial.
income, they couldn ' t keep
" Mr. Zukowski does ~ave
up with their $532 monthly · a persecutory mental d,l,sormortgage payments.
der,delus1onal dtsorder, Dr.
The house eventually sold John Randall •. a forensic
at auction for $125 ,000, in a psychtatnst, satd m a 2001
case that preceded the h~ar1pg before the lOth Ohm
nationwide mortgage crisis . Dtstnct Cou;.r of Appeals tn
Eight
years
later, Columbus . Mr. Zukowski
Zukowski sits at a kitchen has repeatedly acted on
table in a small condomini-- delusions and beliefs in a
urn in nearby Whitehall, " way that have resulted in the
another suburb-of Columb11s . .! fear and intimidation of othHe's still without work. A ers. particularly the current
portrait of Pope John Paul II, -~ residents of the house."
the on! y pope born in Poland,
•••
hangs nearby.
In
May
2003
the
Zukowski says he knpws Zukowskis were at the
not to go past the house. But Petrees' front door. He said
he still has hope that some- they just wanted to see·who
day he'll again walk was in the house and
through the front door.
thought it might be empty.
"I lost my house but
"I was thinking that this
maybe God will take differ- house will be ours," he said.
ent option and maybe some- "I don't know . Mayb-e
body will evaluate this situ~ somebody wants to . give
ation and change their mind back this house because ·
about my good standing, my they made a mistake ."
¥ood reputation because I
Mrs. Petree pushed her
am not a violator," he said.
panic button, setting off the
"I don't want any ·house home alarm, and called 911.
which is not mine . I want to
"I gmbbed as many chillive quietly and peacefully." dren as I could at one time
•••
and ran up my flight of stairs
Gahanna police had told with them, my legs collapsPetree to look out for the ing underneath me every couformer owner.
·pie of steps from pure anxiety
According
to
police and fear," she later wrote to a
records, Zukowski was municipal court judge. .
arrested at the house on
She told her daughter to
charges of criminal trespass- · keep the bedroom door
ing and felonious assault a locked until she returned
few days after the January and said it was safe. She
2000 eviction. He was hurried downstairs , grabbed
accused of swinging a pipe at a butcher knife and waited
the investor who bought the by her front window.
house. The charges later were · . A dozen police cars
dropped, Zukowski said .
biocked off both ends of the
That fall, as Petree street.
Zukowski was charged
unloaded woceries from his
car, he nottced a uuck slow- \l'ith menacing by stalking ,
ly going by.
· violating a protection order
"I thought, 'You know and resisting arrest. The
what, that's a red and white charges were dismissed ,
pickup truck.I wonder if he's after three years , when the
· hanging arouod.' So I started appeals court found that he
walking toward the truck, and · hadn't been given a proper
it took off," said Petree, 41.
mental evaluation.
After that.. Zukowski
A Franklin County pro-

OSU president assembles pricey adviser team
COLUMBUS (AP) Ohio
State University
President Gordon Gee has
assembled a larger and
higher paid team of senior
advisers than his predecessors , costing the nation 's
largest public university at
least $5 .1 million a year.
Gee . who earns a $1 million annual salary, added
five vice presidents to his
c·a bimit and more than
doubled the group's cost.
By January, Gee will have
14 senior adv1 sers, all
making
more
than
$200,000 a year.
"Sure, it is a . lot of
money," Gee said. "But in
the· end, it is not about the
money. It's about making an
invesunent in this 'institu-

tion and in our future ."
Gee's predecessor, Karen
Holbrook, relied on nine
executives who earped a littie more than $2.8 million a
year in base salaries.
When Gee returned to
Ohio State last year from
the top post at Vanderbilt
University, he told trustees
that he needed to hire the
best people to improve the
school . - and that it would
not be cheap..
. "This is a great institutmn, and Its greatness has
been created despite underperforming
in
several
areas," said Gee, who was
president of Ohio State
f~om 1990 to 1998.
OSU board Chairman G.
Gilbert Cloyd said Gee

was upfrorrt about new
positions.
"One person can 't do it
alone ," Cloyd said. "It gets
overwhelming ."
Gee said that if he and his
cabinet haven ' t reached
their goals in five years. "!
will p,ump gas in Vernal,
Utah . •
Gee enjoys ·a reputation
in ac~demic circles for
spending top dollar for talent, arguing it helps recruit
and retain better staff and
students. At Vanderbtlt, he
raised $1.75 billion two
rears ahead of schedule.
tncreased the · school 's
endowment by almost 50
percent and almost doubled
the funding for academic .
research .

National Scoreboard, Page 82
More images from Riverside lnvite, Page BJ
MLB season goes into extra innings, Page 84
~razy weekend in college football, Page B4

Monday, September·29, 2008

Ohioans: Home's ex-owner tried to scare them out
GAHA NNA - John and
Petree
co ul dn 't
Jamie
believe their luck. The home
they bought in a leafy suburban neighborhood was near
family and qual ity schools.
lis huge bac kyard promised
years of afternoon fun for
the ir 2-year-old daughter
and about-to- be-born son.
Petree built a deck and
installed a gas barbecue. The
couple painted each room a
different 'color - bright p1nk
and green in the gir.! 's room ,
orange and blue in their
son 's. They rewired the electrical system and installed a
new hot water tank. They
spent about $25 ,000 and
made plans for ne w carpeting, new flooring and more .
"We thought , ' We're a
young coupl e with a starter
home . We ' ll get in and fi x
things up," ' said Mrs.
Petree, now 34. " He 's
handy, I like to decorate ."
Instead of fini shing the
remodeling, the coupl e
spent thousands more on a
security system: panic but- .
to ns, seven smoke detectors . outdoor cameras connected to the living room
television , fire extinguish~ r s on every floor and doors
that chirped when opened .
They accuse the previous
owner, who had lost the
house in a bank foreclosure,
of trying to scare them
away. Andrew Zukowski, at .
the Petrees' insistence ,
eventually . was charged
with menacing by stalking .
Neighbors and the couple
say he went from door to
door, handing out fliers and ·
urging people to sign a peti. tion to have "his" home
returned.
"After reading, send to
your friends," he wrote on
one flier.
The Petrees say Zukowski
also took photos of visitors
and at one point blocked the
·driveway with his pickup
truck, refusing to allow a
friert4JoJS:J. ve.
"It never ended," said ·
neil!h.bOr Ken Weimer-.
..You'd think he·'s gone, he.'s
finiilfy"'g!Wl'i up and then a
month or two later he ' d be
back. And· he'd just stop and
stare at the house .
"Weird. It was just weird."
Zukowski, 62, says he
drove by the home only
once after the foreclosure
and never threatened the
Petrees or handed out fliers
or petitions.
. "! don't know what he is
thinking, but he is a policeman," Zukowski said of the
accusations made by Petree,
a Franklin County deputy
sheriff. "I lost my freedom,
my integrity. my dignity by
this irresponsible person."
Charges
against
Zukowski eventually were
· dropped , and he was ruled
mentally incompetent.
Eight years later, the
Petrees have moved out.

Inside

Page AS

bate judge 's refusal last year
to order him either committed to a mental hospital or
closely monitored - mean ing Zukowski was no Ianger
considered mentally incompetent - finally persuaded
the Petrees to give up.
They say they have lost
more than $100,000. including lost income and a lower
home \!alue.
"We're not letting our
house go because we can't
pay," Petree said . "We're
letting our house go because
it's unsafe."
They left in May, saying
only that they were moving
to a nearby rental home .
A day before they closed
the front door for the last
time dishes were stacked in
box~s in the kitchen and a
child's karate trophy lay on
the floor of one of the brightly painted upstairs rooms.
, "It became challenging. We
thought, ' He's not running us
from our house," ' Petree said .
"But over last summer, 1 just
got mentally tired"
·

COL UMBUS - Ohio
Re publi ca ns are encouraging voters to iake advan tage of a weeklong period
that allows them to reg ister
and immediately cast a ballot in the state - the same
period that 's the subject of
legal challenges backed by
th e GOP.
Democratic Secretary of
State Jennifer Brunner has
told local electi ons boards
to have policies· in place to
- allow first-time voters to
both register and vote on the
same day, beginning with
Tuesday's start of absentee
voting through the Oct. 6
voter registrati on deadline .
The · period has sparked
several law suit~. including
one by two ·GOP-backed
voters . The Republicandominated Ohio Sl\preme
Court is expected to rule on
th at suit on Monday.
Party official s have said
Brunner improperly interpreted state klw, but the
GOP is nonetheless telling
voters on a party Web site to
make use .of tbe wil}dow. _
" You have a · special
opportunity to help elect
John McCain , Sarah Palin
and Republfcans across the
ballot," a page on the
Republican
National
Committee's Web site says :
" Use this tool to locate your
nearest early voting center,
where you can register and
vote in person."
Ohio Republican Party
Chairman Bob Bennett said.
Sunday night · that party
officials and candidates
don't want to "unilaterally
disarm ," in case legal challenges to Brunner are
unsucces sful. Organizers
for Democratic presidential
nominee Barack Obama
have bet&lt;n encouraging
supporters to make . use of
early voting .

" It would be silly for us to
just sit on the sidelines and
do nothing, so we are proceeding as if the ruling that
she has made is in effect
beginning
Tuesday,"
Bennett said . "Candidates
wele concerned , and I think
rightfully so ." ·
· The calendar glitch was
approved by a Republican
Legislature and signed into
law by former -GOP Gov.
Bob Taft, and it's been in
use since 2006. It could
allow tens of thousands of
· unregistered voters a chance
to register and cas t a ballot
on the same day.
But Republicans are
arguing that Ohio law
requires voters to be regis tered for 30 days before
they c an be given a ballot,
and they say same-day voting creates opportunittes for
voting fraud .
_
The ~tate GOP filed a federal lawsuit Friday in
Columbus challenging the
voting period .
Ohio Democratic Party
spokesman Alex Goepfert
said Republicans ·are only
trying to suppress the vote.
. "Their real goal isri 't to
.make a credible legal argument. but to inject confusion and chaos into the Ohio
election process," he said.

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

Monday, September 29,2008
J;,ocAL" SCHEDULE
POMEROY -A sch edule ot upcoming high
schOol V!HSI!y sporting "vents involvmg
terms !rom Meigs and Gallia counties.

Warren hands Marauders second consecutive loss·

Monday Seplerober 211

BY DAVE HARRIS

Volleyball
'
Southern, River Valley at Meigs (tri),
5:30p.m.
Ironton at Gallia Academy, 5:15 p.m.
Rock Hill at South Gallia, 5:30 p.m.
Fairland at OVCS, 5:30p.m.

SPORTS CORRESPONDENT

Tu11day; Stj»tmbtr 30
Soccer
· G.allla A~ademy at Jackson, ·s p.m.
Elk Valley at OVCS. 5 p.m.

.
Volleyball
Ga. Academy at Ct1illicothe: 5:15 p.m.
Meigs at Att1ens, 6 p.m.
Southern at Eastern, 6 p.m.
Coal Grove at River Valley, 5:30 p.m.
Elk Valley at OVCS, 6 p.m.

VINCENT Andrew
Dunfee turned a short pass
into a 58-yard touchdown on
the final play of the first half
to give Warren Local the
momentum and break a 7 -all
tie to power the Warriors to a
31 -22 win over Meigs
Saturday evening at Warren
Local High School.
· The loss was the second in
a row for Meigs (4· 2) after
opening the season with four
straight wins. But the lpss
could be more severe for the
Marauders as their ·outstand-

ing junior
quarterback
Jacob Well
iqjured his
knee with
7:14 left in
the contest.
was
We ll
qelped from
the
field
and was on
Bolin
c rut c hes
after
the
contest , no word on how
severe the injury is was
available Sunday afternoon.
After an exchange of
·punts to begin the contest,
the Warriors (3-3) threatened

first drivin g
to
the
M a rauder
II. But the
M e i g s
defen s e
s tiffened
and forced
·l
h
e
Warriors to
attempt a
Well
32 - yard
field goal.
Tyler Cox 's attempt was
wide left , and the Marauders
took over at their own 20.
Meigs quickl y put together a six play , 80-yard drive
with Jerem y Smith going the

Ohio schools dominate
15th annual Riverside
High School Invitational

Saturday's Boxscore

Warren 31, Meigs 22
Meigs
Warren

7 o. 1 8 0 14 10 7 -

fin al 12 yards for the score. momentum going into the
Mason Metts added the kick locker roo m at the half when
for a 7-0 Marauder lead with Dunfee cau ght Ellenwood "s
I :261eft in the first period . . short pass -near the side line .
B1g plays in the drive were a cut back to th e middle and
16-yard run by Smith and we nt 58 ya rds for the score
pa sse ~ of 19 and 24 yards to as the first half clock went to
Clay Bolin .
zero . Cox added the extra
The Warriors came back to po mt for th e 14 -7 Warren.
tie the game a t 7 on a 20" lead .
·
yard run by Andrew Coffin -- The Warriors received a
at the 8: II mark of the first big break when S mith fum half. Cox added the ki ck to bled and Erik Mason recuvknol the score JJP -That score ered for Warren at the
was set up when Kyle Pratt Maraud er 20 . But the
made a diving interception Maroon and Go ld defense
of a Well pass at the stiffened and he ld . Cox
Marauder 33 .
Warren Local grabbed the
Please see Meigs. Bl

22
31

Scoring sUmmary
First Quarter
M-Jeremy Smith 12 run '
·(Mason Metts kick) 1:26
Second Quarter
W-Andrew GoHman 20 run
(Tyler COK kick) 8:11
W-Andrew Dunfee 58 pass
from Clay Ellenwood (Cox kick)

Meigs finishes tied for 11th,
Southern, Eastern just behind
BY Boa BLESSING
SPECIAL TO THE SENTINE L

:00
• Th'ird Quarter
W-Cox 26 field goal4:45
W-Seth Wellspring 34 run (Cox
kick) 51
'
M-Caleb Davis 71 pass from
Jacob Well (Metts kick) :10
. · Fourth Quarter
W-Wellsprlng 7 run (Cox kick)
8:40..
'
M-Smith 13 run (Clay Bolin
pass from Cameron Bolin) 1:13

First Downs ·
Rushes-yards
Passing yards
Total yards
Comp-att-inl
Fumbles-lost

-

M
W
11
11
32-146 50-272

202

MASON. W.Va. - Mitch
Harden , the number I player
for the Logan varsity golf
team made a hole -in-one
Saturday to help his teammates win the 15th annual
Riverside High School
Invitational
Golf
Tournament played on ·the
Riverside Golf Course in
Mason ; W.Va. Saturday
afternoon.

.,I'.

108

..

.

A total-of 16 teams were
represented at the tournament tha t used a 'play fi ve.
count four format. Logan 's
winning score "Js an exce llenl 307, but it was not an
easy victory. The team from
Jackson al so 'pla ye d very
we ll and fini shed sec·ond
only four strok es behind the
winners score . Charl eston
Catholic. the defending state
champions in Class A in

Please see Coli. Bl

'

348
380
11-22-2 4-6-o

2-2

Penalties-yards 5-25

2·1
4-20

.,......J!IIII'ddllll Slldiatlcl

Ruehlng: M-Jere,Y Smith 1 8·
88, Gabe Hilt 3-43, Cory Hutton
6-11. Jacob Well 4-4.
W-Seth Wellspring 23-165,
Andrew Dunfee 12-85, Andrew
GoHman . 11-60, Clay Ellenwood
4-(-6).
Paoalng: M-Jacob Well 10-212 202, Cameton Bolin 1-1-0·2.
W-Ciay Ellenwood 4-6-o 1OB.
Receiving: M~ Ciay Bolin 8119, Caleb Davis 1-71, Gabe Hilt
1-20, Cory Hutton 1-6, Jeremy
Smith 1-0.
W-Grant Venham 2-39, Andrew
Dunfee 1-58, Andrew HoHman 1·

9.

Ohio.gets
big win
overVMI
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2d" lli.14 11.11
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•

•

Bryon Walters/photo
Bryan Walters/photo

Meigs' Ryan Jeffers putts on the eighteenth hole at the 15th annual Riverside High School
Invitational held Saturday in Mason, W.Va.

Wells~ Pryor lead

ATHENS (AP) - Boo'
Jack~on threw two touch down passes in a high-scorBY RUSTY MILLER
ing first half to lead Ohio
ASSOC IATED PRESS
past VMI 51-31 SaturdaY.· ·
·_ The Bobcats (1-4) ptled
COLUMBUS - Woody
up 535 yards in total
C&gt;ffense, and the two teams Hayes would have loved the
combined for almost 400 Be11nie and.Terrelle Show.
yards in offense in just the • Tailback • Chris "Beanie"
first quarter. Jackson's · sec- Wells rushed for I06 yards
ond TD pass - a 22-yarder in his first game in a month
to LaVon Brazill just before anti quarterback Terrel_le
the half - was the seventh Pryor ran for two scores and
.lead change and put Ohio threw for another as No . 14
Ohio State went old school
jll:tead to stay, 31-24.
.; The Keydets (2-2) got to to beat Minnesota 34-21 on
tyithin three in the third Saturday.
It was the first time the
j,vhen running back Tim
two
started in the same
l"'aypray' scored on a onebackfield
. All the Buckeyes
~d run, but Ohio's LJ.
~intall returned the kickoff did was rush for a seasonbest 279 yards on 37
~7 yards to make it 41-31.
attempts.
•: Ohio's Donte Harden ran
"It's incredible to be with
for 142 yards on 20 carries,
including a 67-yard touch- Terrene," Well s said. "What
l:lown run in the first quarter. ati athlete : We can provide a
'ackson was 16-for-23 for spark for the offense ."
In an era · of everyone
!287 yards.
•
embracing
the
spread
offense, the Buckeyes relied
mainly on the option with
'
some
modern-day
sets
CoNTACI'US
tossed in . They passed for
1-7 40-446-2342 ext 33
just 135 yards, throwing the
billl only 22 times - which
~·· - 1-740-446-3008
would . have thrilled Hayes,
~-mill ~ sportsOmydailyse~lineLcom
master of "three yards and a
~port• Staff
cloud of dust."
Call thi s version "7 .5
Eric Randolph, Sports Writer
(740) 446·2342, O&gt;&lt;t 33
yards and a hint of black tire
efsndolphOmydallysentinel.com
dust from the FieldTurf."
Coach Jim Tressel didn't
Eiryan Watters, Sports Writer
sound thrilled that his team
(1,wtO) 446·2342 , 8llit. 33
'bwaltersOmyda!lylrlbune.com
was so grounded .
"I hope that we throw it
Larry Crum, Sports Writer ·
more
effectively down the
(740) 446-2342 , O&gt;&lt;t 33
road than we did today,"
lcrumOmydallyreglster.com

Southern's Alex Hawley watches his putt roll on the eighteenth hole at the 15th annua.l Riverside High School
Invitational held Saturday in Mason.

Buckeyes, 34-21-Anderson rallies
Browns to 20-12 win
BY JOE KAY
ASSOCIATED PRESS

CINCINNATI - Three
quarters,
three
points .
Cleveland's offense · was
havi-ng another meltdown
day. and Derek Anderso·n
was runnin~ out of chances
to keep his JOb .
The quarterback's one
good moment was enough to
save his job - and the
Browns' season , too.
With Brady Quinn on the
sideline ready to take over at
any time Sunday, the embattled Anderson threw a
touchdown pass and rallied
the Browns to a 20-12 victory over a winless Cincinnati
Bengals team missing its
starting 'l.uarterback .
"I dectded to give him
another chance ," , aid coach
Romeo Crennel , who considered replacing Anderson .
" He went ahead and took
advantage of it and fini shed
'
on a good note ."
A.1derson
threw
a
4-yard
pholo
Ohio State running back Chris Wells (28) runs during the touchdown pass to Braylon
Edward s that put the
first quarter of an NCAA college football game against
Browns (1 -3) ahead to stay
Minnesota Saturday in ColtJmbus.
· in the fourt~ quarter, his best
.
Tressel said . " It just didn ' t showed his old form by rac- play on an afternoon that
feel as if we threw and ing for 28 yards on hi s sec- had few of them. Even that
caught and protected as well ond atte mpt. He also vaulted moment came with an asteras we' re gomg to have to."
a potential tackler on anoth- isk : A Bengals penalt y
Wells, out after injuring er big ga iner that should · wiped out a potential interception on the drive .
his right foot in the seasonAnderson wore a green Topener, carried 14 times and Please see Buckeyes. 81

shirt, tan ·cargo shorts .
brown flip-fl ops and a big
grin to his postgame news
conference. He cut off th e
first mention of losi ng his
job .
" Nope. don' t go there ."
said Anderson . who we nt
15 -of-24 for 138 yards with .
an interception. " !' stayed in
the game . You 're not go ing
to score every single down."
He had help fro m th e
down-and-out Benga ls .
Carson Palmer rested a
sore p ass in g e lbow th at
forced him to mi s$ a game
for the first time since 2004 ,
a hu ge setbac k for a strugg ling o ffense . C incinnati
couldn ' t do much beh ind
Ryan Fi tzpatrick. who hadn' t completed a pass in a
regular-season ga me in three
years.
·
Fi tzpatri ck threw three
intercepti ons and fi nished ,
th e ga me as Cinci nnati' s
leadin g rusher with 4 1 ya rds
on four 'crambl es. un der-

Pie._s e see Browns. Bl

�•

OHIO

The Daily Sentinel

Ohio GOP tells Web
visitors to use voting period

BY MATT REED
ASSOCIATED PRESS WAITER

•

•••

For Zukowski, a native of
Poland and proud holder of
a master 's degree in electrical engineering, it had came
to thi s helpless moment,
inside a government building among auctioneers,
sheriff's deputies and eyeing investors.
After years of squabbling
with the home butlder, the
county tax auditor and the
mortgage company, after
writing his owri court petitions and pleading in person
to judges and government
officials, and after being
fired from his job and not
paying his mortgage, he sat

BY MATT REED
ASSOCIATED PRESS WAITER

_

AP photo

Jamie and John Petree stand in front of their home as they move out Saturday, May 3, in
Gahanna. The Petrees say that previous owner Andrew Zukowski , who had lost the house
in a bank foreclosure, has tried to scare them away for eight yl!ars.
·

bewildered and he watched cruised past the home more ·
frequentlr . taking pictures
and listened .
"They started the auction: and wnting down the ·
$100,000 ... 105 ... 110 ... license plate numbers of
120. I stand up and I say, ' l visitors , the Petrees say. l1e
am Andrew Zukowski . often parked his truck on
What are you doing here? the opposite· block where he
This hou se has not been had . a clear -line of sight
foreclosed because I have a through fenceless backyards
pending-- appeal."'
to the back of the home.
He had bought the house
" I would see headlights ,
new for $101 ,000. UnhaPP.Y real slow, right across the
with the way it was butlt, back there,~ ' said Petree ,
Zukowski demanded that who recogmzed the truck.
the county reassess its value "And he'd sit there. He'd sit
for tax purposes .
there for a half hour."
After an almost decade- · The Gahanna prosecutor
long fight the Ohio Board of foled four char~es of menacTax Appeals ruled that he mg by stalktng , and the
and his wife, Teresa, were Petrees filed for a ctvt! pronot exempt from Franklin teet ion order. Charges were
County property taxes, · dropped when a JUdge
board records show.
found Zukowski mentally
With little savings and no incompetent to stand trial.
income, they couldn ' t keep
" Mr. Zukowski does ~ave
up with their $532 monthly · a persecutory mental d,l,sormortgage payments.
der,delus1onal dtsorder, Dr.
The house eventually sold John Randall •. a forensic
at auction for $125 ,000, in a psychtatnst, satd m a 2001
case that preceded the h~ar1pg before the lOth Ohm
nationwide mortgage crisis . Dtstnct Cou;.r of Appeals tn
Eight
years
later, Columbus . Mr. Zukowski
Zukowski sits at a kitchen has repeatedly acted on
table in a small condomini-- delusions and beliefs in a
urn in nearby Whitehall, " way that have resulted in the
another suburb-of Columb11s . .! fear and intimidation of othHe's still without work. A ers. particularly the current
portrait of Pope John Paul II, -~ residents of the house."
the on! y pope born in Poland,
•••
hangs nearby.
In
May
2003
the
Zukowski says he knpws Zukowskis were at the
not to go past the house. But Petrees' front door. He said
he still has hope that some- they just wanted to see·who
day he'll again walk was in the house and
through the front door.
thought it might be empty.
"I lost my house but
"I was thinking that this
maybe God will take differ- house will be ours," he said.
ent option and maybe some- "I don't know . Mayb-e
body will evaluate this situ~ somebody wants to . give
ation and change their mind back this house because ·
about my good standing, my they made a mistake ."
¥ood reputation because I
Mrs. Petree pushed her
am not a violator," he said.
panic button, setting off the
"I don't want any ·house home alarm, and called 911.
which is not mine . I want to
"I gmbbed as many chillive quietly and peacefully." dren as I could at one time
•••
and ran up my flight of stairs
Gahanna police had told with them, my legs collapsPetree to look out for the ing underneath me every couformer owner.
·pie of steps from pure anxiety
According
to
police and fear," she later wrote to a
records, Zukowski was municipal court judge. .
arrested at the house on
She told her daughter to
charges of criminal trespass- · keep the bedroom door
ing and felonious assault a locked until she returned
few days after the January and said it was safe. She
2000 eviction. He was hurried downstairs , grabbed
accused of swinging a pipe at a butcher knife and waited
the investor who bought the by her front window.
house. The charges later were · . A dozen police cars
dropped, Zukowski said .
biocked off both ends of the
That fall, as Petree street.
Zukowski was charged
unloaded woceries from his
car, he nottced a uuck slow- \l'ith menacing by stalking ,
ly going by.
· violating a protection order
"I thought, 'You know and resisting arrest. The
what, that's a red and white charges were dismissed ,
pickup truck.I wonder if he's after three years , when the
· hanging arouod.' So I started appeals court found that he
walking toward the truck, and · hadn't been given a proper
it took off," said Petree, 41.
mental evaluation.
After that.. Zukowski
A Franklin County pro-

OSU president assembles pricey adviser team
COLUMBUS (AP) Ohio
State University
President Gordon Gee has
assembled a larger and
higher paid team of senior
advisers than his predecessors , costing the nation 's
largest public university at
least $5 .1 million a year.
Gee . who earns a $1 million annual salary, added
five vice presidents to his
c·a bimit and more than
doubled the group's cost.
By January, Gee will have
14 senior adv1 sers, all
making
more
than
$200,000 a year.
"Sure, it is a . lot of
money," Gee said. "But in
the· end, it is not about the
money. It's about making an
invesunent in this 'institu-

tion and in our future ."
Gee's predecessor, Karen
Holbrook, relied on nine
executives who earped a littie more than $2.8 million a
year in base salaries.
When Gee returned to
Ohio State last year from
the top post at Vanderbilt
University, he told trustees
that he needed to hire the
best people to improve the
school . - and that it would
not be cheap..
. "This is a great institutmn, and Its greatness has
been created despite underperforming
in
several
areas," said Gee, who was
president of Ohio State
f~om 1990 to 1998.
OSU board Chairman G.
Gilbert Cloyd said Gee

was upfrorrt about new
positions.
"One person can 't do it
alone ," Cloyd said. "It gets
overwhelming ."
Gee said that if he and his
cabinet haven ' t reached
their goals in five years. "!
will p,ump gas in Vernal,
Utah . •
Gee enjoys ·a reputation
in ac~demic circles for
spending top dollar for talent, arguing it helps recruit
and retain better staff and
students. At Vanderbtlt, he
raised $1.75 billion two
rears ahead of schedule.
tncreased the · school 's
endowment by almost 50
percent and almost doubled
the funding for academic .
research .

National Scoreboard, Page 82
More images from Riverside lnvite, Page BJ
MLB season goes into extra innings, Page 84
~razy weekend in college football, Page B4

Monday, September·29, 2008

Ohioans: Home's ex-owner tried to scare them out
GAHA NNA - John and
Petree
co ul dn 't
Jamie
believe their luck. The home
they bought in a leafy suburban neighborhood was near
family and qual ity schools.
lis huge bac kyard promised
years of afternoon fun for
the ir 2-year-old daughter
and about-to- be-born son.
Petree built a deck and
installed a gas barbecue. The
couple painted each room a
different 'color - bright p1nk
and green in the gir.! 's room ,
orange and blue in their
son 's. They rewired the electrical system and installed a
new hot water tank. They
spent about $25 ,000 and
made plans for ne w carpeting, new flooring and more .
"We thought , ' We're a
young coupl e with a starter
home . We ' ll get in and fi x
things up," ' said Mrs.
Petree, now 34. " He 's
handy, I like to decorate ."
Instead of fini shing the
remodeling, the coupl e
spent thousands more on a
security system: panic but- .
to ns, seven smoke detectors . outdoor cameras connected to the living room
television , fire extinguish~ r s on every floor and doors
that chirped when opened .
They accuse the previous
owner, who had lost the
house in a bank foreclosure,
of trying to scare them
away. Andrew Zukowski, at .
the Petrees' insistence ,
eventually . was charged
with menacing by stalking .
Neighbors and the couple
say he went from door to
door, handing out fliers and ·
urging people to sign a peti. tion to have "his" home
returned.
"After reading, send to
your friends," he wrote on
one flier.
The Petrees say Zukowski
also took photos of visitors
and at one point blocked the
·driveway with his pickup
truck, refusing to allow a
friert4JoJS:J. ve.
"It never ended," said ·
neil!h.bOr Ken Weimer-.
..You'd think he·'s gone, he.'s
finiilfy"'g!Wl'i up and then a
month or two later he ' d be
back. And· he'd just stop and
stare at the house .
"Weird. It was just weird."
Zukowski, 62, says he
drove by the home only
once after the foreclosure
and never threatened the
Petrees or handed out fliers
or petitions.
. "! don't know what he is
thinking, but he is a policeman," Zukowski said of the
accusations made by Petree,
a Franklin County deputy
sheriff. "I lost my freedom,
my integrity. my dignity by
this irresponsible person."
Charges
against
Zukowski eventually were
· dropped , and he was ruled
mentally incompetent.
Eight years later, the
Petrees have moved out.

Inside

Page AS

bate judge 's refusal last year
to order him either committed to a mental hospital or
closely monitored - mean ing Zukowski was no Ianger
considered mentally incompetent - finally persuaded
the Petrees to give up.
They say they have lost
more than $100,000. including lost income and a lower
home \!alue.
"We're not letting our
house go because we can't
pay," Petree said . "We're
letting our house go because
it's unsafe."
They left in May, saying
only that they were moving
to a nearby rental home .
A day before they closed
the front door for the last
time dishes were stacked in
box~s in the kitchen and a
child's karate trophy lay on
the floor of one of the brightly painted upstairs rooms.
, "It became challenging. We
thought, ' He's not running us
from our house," ' Petree said .
"But over last summer, 1 just
got mentally tired"
·

COL UMBUS - Ohio
Re publi ca ns are encouraging voters to iake advan tage of a weeklong period
that allows them to reg ister
and immediately cast a ballot in the state - the same
period that 's the subject of
legal challenges backed by
th e GOP.
Democratic Secretary of
State Jennifer Brunner has
told local electi ons boards
to have policies· in place to
- allow first-time voters to
both register and vote on the
same day, beginning with
Tuesday's start of absentee
voting through the Oct. 6
voter registrati on deadline .
The · period has sparked
several law suit~. including
one by two ·GOP-backed
voters . The Republicandominated Ohio Sl\preme
Court is expected to rule on
th at suit on Monday.
Party official s have said
Brunner improperly interpreted state klw, but the
GOP is nonetheless telling
voters on a party Web site to
make use .of tbe wil}dow. _
" You have a · special
opportunity to help elect
John McCain , Sarah Palin
and Republfcans across the
ballot," a page on the
Republican
National
Committee's Web site says :
" Use this tool to locate your
nearest early voting center,
where you can register and
vote in person."
Ohio Republican Party
Chairman Bob Bennett said.
Sunday night · that party
officials and candidates
don't want to "unilaterally
disarm ," in case legal challenges to Brunner are
unsucces sful. Organizers
for Democratic presidential
nominee Barack Obama
have bet&lt;n encouraging
supporters to make . use of
early voting .

" It would be silly for us to
just sit on the sidelines and
do nothing, so we are proceeding as if the ruling that
she has made is in effect
beginning
Tuesday,"
Bennett said . "Candidates
wele concerned , and I think
rightfully so ." ·
· The calendar glitch was
approved by a Republican
Legislature and signed into
law by former -GOP Gov.
Bob Taft, and it's been in
use since 2006. It could
allow tens of thousands of
· unregistered voters a chance
to register and cas t a ballot
on the same day.
But Republicans are
arguing that Ohio law
requires voters to be regis tered for 30 days before
they c an be given a ballot,
and they say same-day voting creates opportunittes for
voting fraud .
_
The ~tate GOP filed a federal lawsuit Friday in
Columbus challenging the
voting period .
Ohio Democratic Party
spokesman Alex Goepfert
said Republicans ·are only
trying to suppress the vote.
. "Their real goal isri 't to
.make a credible legal argument. but to inject confusion and chaos into the Ohio
election process," he said.

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

Monday, September 29,2008
J;,ocAL" SCHEDULE
POMEROY -A sch edule ot upcoming high
schOol V!HSI!y sporting "vents involvmg
terms !rom Meigs and Gallia counties.

Warren hands Marauders second consecutive loss·

Monday Seplerober 211

BY DAVE HARRIS

Volleyball
'
Southern, River Valley at Meigs (tri),
5:30p.m.
Ironton at Gallia Academy, 5:15 p.m.
Rock Hill at South Gallia, 5:30 p.m.
Fairland at OVCS, 5:30p.m.

SPORTS CORRESPONDENT

Tu11day; Stj»tmbtr 30
Soccer
· G.allla A~ademy at Jackson, ·s p.m.
Elk Valley at OVCS. 5 p.m.

.
Volleyball
Ga. Academy at Ct1illicothe: 5:15 p.m.
Meigs at Att1ens, 6 p.m.
Southern at Eastern, 6 p.m.
Coal Grove at River Valley, 5:30 p.m.
Elk Valley at OVCS, 6 p.m.

VINCENT Andrew
Dunfee turned a short pass
into a 58-yard touchdown on
the final play of the first half
to give Warren Local the
momentum and break a 7 -all
tie to power the Warriors to a
31 -22 win over Meigs
Saturday evening at Warren
Local High School.
· The loss was the second in
a row for Meigs (4· 2) after
opening the season with four
straight wins. But the lpss
could be more severe for the
Marauders as their ·outstand-

ing junior
quarterback
Jacob Well
iqjured his
knee with
7:14 left in
the contest.
was
We ll
qelped from
the
field
and was on
Bolin
c rut c hes
after
the
contest , no word on how
severe the injury is was
available Sunday afternoon.
After an exchange of
·punts to begin the contest,
the Warriors (3-3) threatened

first drivin g
to
the
M a rauder
II. But the
M e i g s
defen s e
s tiffened
and forced
·l
h
e
Warriors to
attempt a
Well
32 - yard
field goal.
Tyler Cox 's attempt was
wide left , and the Marauders
took over at their own 20.
Meigs quickl y put together a six play , 80-yard drive
with Jerem y Smith going the

Ohio schools dominate
15th annual Riverside
High School Invitational

Saturday's Boxscore

Warren 31, Meigs 22
Meigs
Warren

7 o. 1 8 0 14 10 7 -

fin al 12 yards for the score. momentum going into the
Mason Metts added the kick locker roo m at the half when
for a 7-0 Marauder lead with Dunfee cau ght Ellenwood "s
I :261eft in the first period . . short pass -near the side line .
B1g plays in the drive were a cut back to th e middle and
16-yard run by Smith and we nt 58 ya rds for the score
pa sse ~ of 19 and 24 yards to as the first half clock went to
Clay Bolin .
zero . Cox added the extra
The Warriors came back to po mt for th e 14 -7 Warren.
tie the game a t 7 on a 20" lead .
·
yard run by Andrew Coffin -- The Warriors received a
at the 8: II mark of the first big break when S mith fum half. Cox added the ki ck to bled and Erik Mason recuvknol the score JJP -That score ered for Warren at the
was set up when Kyle Pratt Maraud er 20 . But the
made a diving interception Maroon and Go ld defense
of a Well pass at the stiffened and he ld . Cox
Marauder 33 .
Warren Local grabbed the
Please see Meigs. Bl

22
31

Scoring sUmmary
First Quarter
M-Jeremy Smith 12 run '
·(Mason Metts kick) 1:26
Second Quarter
W-Andrew GoHman 20 run
(Tyler COK kick) 8:11
W-Andrew Dunfee 58 pass
from Clay Ellenwood (Cox kick)

Meigs finishes tied for 11th,
Southern, Eastern just behind
BY Boa BLESSING
SPECIAL TO THE SENTINE L

:00
• Th'ird Quarter
W-Cox 26 field goal4:45
W-Seth Wellspring 34 run (Cox
kick) 51
'
M-Caleb Davis 71 pass from
Jacob Well (Metts kick) :10
. · Fourth Quarter
W-Wellsprlng 7 run (Cox kick)
8:40..
'
M-Smith 13 run (Clay Bolin
pass from Cameron Bolin) 1:13

First Downs ·
Rushes-yards
Passing yards
Total yards
Comp-att-inl
Fumbles-lost

-

M
W
11
11
32-146 50-272

202

MASON. W.Va. - Mitch
Harden , the number I player
for the Logan varsity golf
team made a hole -in-one
Saturday to help his teammates win the 15th annual
Riverside High School
Invitational
Golf
Tournament played on ·the
Riverside Golf Course in
Mason ; W.Va. Saturday
afternoon.

.,I'.

108

..

.

A total-of 16 teams were
represented at the tournament tha t used a 'play fi ve.
count four format. Logan 's
winning score "Js an exce llenl 307, but it was not an
easy victory. The team from
Jackson al so 'pla ye d very
we ll and fini shed sec·ond
only four strok es behind the
winners score . Charl eston
Catholic. the defending state
champions in Class A in

Please see Coli. Bl

'

348
380
11-22-2 4-6-o

2-2

Penalties-yards 5-25

2·1
4-20

.,......J!IIII'ddllll Slldiatlcl

Ruehlng: M-Jere,Y Smith 1 8·
88, Gabe Hilt 3-43, Cory Hutton
6-11. Jacob Well 4-4.
W-Seth Wellspring 23-165,
Andrew Dunfee 12-85, Andrew
GoHman . 11-60, Clay Ellenwood
4-(-6).
Paoalng: M-Jacob Well 10-212 202, Cameton Bolin 1-1-0·2.
W-Ciay Ellenwood 4-6-o 1OB.
Receiving: M~ Ciay Bolin 8119, Caleb Davis 1-71, Gabe Hilt
1-20, Cory Hutton 1-6, Jeremy
Smith 1-0.
W-Grant Venham 2-39, Andrew
Dunfee 1-58, Andrew HoHman 1·

9.

Ohio.gets
big win
overVMI
·Spruce Lumber ·
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2d" lli.14 11.11
11.11

•

•

Bryon Walters/photo
Bryan Walters/photo

Meigs' Ryan Jeffers putts on the eighteenth hole at the 15th annual Riverside High School
Invitational held Saturday in Mason, W.Va.

Wells~ Pryor lead

ATHENS (AP) - Boo'
Jack~on threw two touch down passes in a high-scorBY RUSTY MILLER
ing first half to lead Ohio
ASSOC IATED PRESS
past VMI 51-31 SaturdaY.· ·
·_ The Bobcats (1-4) ptled
COLUMBUS - Woody
up 535 yards in total
C&gt;ffense, and the two teams Hayes would have loved the
combined for almost 400 Be11nie and.Terrelle Show.
yards in offense in just the • Tailback • Chris "Beanie"
first quarter. Jackson's · sec- Wells rushed for I06 yards
ond TD pass - a 22-yarder in his first game in a month
to LaVon Brazill just before anti quarterback Terrel_le
the half - was the seventh Pryor ran for two scores and
.lead change and put Ohio threw for another as No . 14
Ohio State went old school
jll:tead to stay, 31-24.
.; The Keydets (2-2) got to to beat Minnesota 34-21 on
tyithin three in the third Saturday.
It was the first time the
j,vhen running back Tim
two
started in the same
l"'aypray' scored on a onebackfield
. All the Buckeyes
~d run, but Ohio's LJ.
~intall returned the kickoff did was rush for a seasonbest 279 yards on 37
~7 yards to make it 41-31.
attempts.
•: Ohio's Donte Harden ran
"It's incredible to be with
for 142 yards on 20 carries,
including a 67-yard touch- Terrene," Well s said. "What
l:lown run in the first quarter. ati athlete : We can provide a
'ackson was 16-for-23 for spark for the offense ."
In an era · of everyone
!287 yards.
•
embracing
the
spread
offense, the Buckeyes relied
mainly on the option with
'
some
modern-day
sets
CoNTACI'US
tossed in . They passed for
1-7 40-446-2342 ext 33
just 135 yards, throwing the
billl only 22 times - which
~·· - 1-740-446-3008
would . have thrilled Hayes,
~-mill ~ sportsOmydailyse~lineLcom
master of "three yards and a
~port• Staff
cloud of dust."
Call thi s version "7 .5
Eric Randolph, Sports Writer
(740) 446·2342, O&gt;&lt;t 33
yards and a hint of black tire
efsndolphOmydallysentinel.com
dust from the FieldTurf."
Coach Jim Tressel didn't
Eiryan Watters, Sports Writer
sound thrilled that his team
(1,wtO) 446·2342 , 8llit. 33
'bwaltersOmyda!lylrlbune.com
was so grounded .
"I hope that we throw it
Larry Crum, Sports Writer ·
more
effectively down the
(740) 446-2342 , O&gt;&lt;t 33
road than we did today,"
lcrumOmydallyreglster.com

Southern's Alex Hawley watches his putt roll on the eighteenth hole at the 15th annua.l Riverside High School
Invitational held Saturday in Mason.

Buckeyes, 34-21-Anderson rallies
Browns to 20-12 win
BY JOE KAY
ASSOCIATED PRESS

CINCINNATI - Three
quarters,
three
points .
Cleveland's offense · was
havi-ng another meltdown
day. and Derek Anderso·n
was runnin~ out of chances
to keep his JOb .
The quarterback's one
good moment was enough to
save his job - and the
Browns' season , too.
With Brady Quinn on the
sideline ready to take over at
any time Sunday, the embattled Anderson threw a
touchdown pass and rallied
the Browns to a 20-12 victory over a winless Cincinnati
Bengals team missing its
starting 'l.uarterback .
"I dectded to give him
another chance ," , aid coach
Romeo Crennel , who considered replacing Anderson .
" He went ahead and took
advantage of it and fini shed
'
on a good note ."
A.1derson
threw
a
4-yard
pholo
Ohio State running back Chris Wells (28) runs during the touchdown pass to Braylon
Edward s that put the
first quarter of an NCAA college football game against
Browns (1 -3) ahead to stay
Minnesota Saturday in ColtJmbus.
· in the fourt~ quarter, his best
.
Tressel said . " It just didn ' t showed his old form by rac- play on an afternoon that
feel as if we threw and ing for 28 yards on hi s sec- had few of them. Even that
caught and protected as well ond atte mpt. He also vaulted moment came with an asteras we' re gomg to have to."
a potential tackler on anoth- isk : A Bengals penalt y
Wells, out after injuring er big ga iner that should · wiped out a potential interception on the drive .
his right foot in the seasonAnderson wore a green Topener, carried 14 times and Please see Buckeyes. 81

shirt, tan ·cargo shorts .
brown flip-fl ops and a big
grin to his postgame news
conference. He cut off th e
first mention of losi ng his
job .
" Nope. don' t go there ."
said Anderson . who we nt
15 -of-24 for 138 yards with .
an interception. " !' stayed in
the game . You 're not go ing
to score every single down."
He had help fro m th e
down-and-out Benga ls .
Carson Palmer rested a
sore p ass in g e lbow th at
forced him to mi s$ a game
for the first time since 2004 ,
a hu ge setbac k for a strugg ling o ffense . C incinnati
couldn ' t do much beh ind
Ryan Fi tzpatrick. who hadn' t completed a pass in a
regular-season ga me in three
years.
·
Fi tzpatri ck threw three
intercepti ons and fi nished ,
th e ga me as Cinci nnati' s
leadin g rusher with 4 1 ya rds
on four 'crambl es. un der-

Pie._s e see Browns. Bl

�..
Page B2 •

The Daily Sentinel

•

www.mydailysentinel.com

National Scoreboard

American League

East Division
w L Pel
K·Tampa Bay 97 65 599

GB

95 67 586
89 73 549
Toronto
86 76 531
Baltimore
68 93 422
Central Division
w L Pel
Mmnesota
88 74 .543
Chicago
87 74 .540
' Cleveland
81 81 .500
Kansas City
75 87 .463
DetrOit
74 87 .460
West Division
w L Pel
K·Los Angeles 100 62 '617
Texas
79 83 .488
: Oakland
75 66 I .466 ·
61 101 .377
· Se&lt;inle

2
8,

~-Boston

New York

11

28/;

GB

NOT E: W1ld eardteams play teams with
best records unless in same div1sion and
Wild card may not have home-field
advantage
(Best·OI-5)
American League
LOI Angelel VI. Boston
Wednllc:Wy,J&amp;U
Boston (Beckett 12·10) at Los An geles

(Lackey 12·5)
'

Erlllu..OOU

Boston at Los Angeles

h

7
13

13/;

GB

21
39

24 ',

.

SWiday...t!cl...5

Los Angeles at Boston

Ml&gt;rulay,..Q&lt;l.Ji
Los Angeles at Boston, if necessary
·
W.dnesday,J&amp;t.....S
Boston at LOs Angeles . il necessa ry
Tampa Say vs . AL Cenlral Champion
Thursday ...act....2
Chicago or Minnesota al Tampa Bay
(Kazmir 12-8 or Shields 14-8)

Erlllu.Jl&lt;U

: II·Ciinched diVISIOn

Chicago or Minnesota af Tampa Bay
(Kazmir 12-8 or Shields 14-8)

. y-chnched w1ld card ·

Swl!lay.JlcU

Saturday 's Games
N.Y. Yankees i'lt Boston, ppd . Rain
Kansas Clly 4, Minnesota 2
Seattle 7 . Oakland 3
· Detroit 4 . Tampa Bay 3
' Baltimore 2, loronto 1, 6 1nnmgS,

Tampa Bay at Chicago or Minnesota
Momlgy,OCL..§
Tampa Bay at Chicago or Minnesota . if
necessary

Wednesday ..OCU

: Cleveland 12. Chicago Wh1te Sox 6
• Texas 6. LA Angels 4
·
Sunday's Game6

· Tampa Bays: Detroit 7. 11 innings
N.Y. Yankees 6. Boston 2. 1st garpe
Toronto 10 . Baltimore 1

Boston 4 , N Y Y8. nkees 3. 10 mn1ngs.
2nd game
Ch1cago White Sox s, Cleveland 1
. Minnesota 6. Kansas City 0
· LA Angels 7 , Texas 0
' Seatlle 4. Oakland 3
' Monday's Games
DetrOit {Garc ia 1-1) at Chicago Wl1i\e
Sox {G. Fioyd 16-8), 2.05 p.m .
National League
East Division
W ·
Pel GB
M-Ph iladelphia 92
.568
New York
89
.549
Florida
77 .522 . 7 ~.!
· Alla nta
.444
Washmgton
32/1
Central Division

L
70
73
84
72 90
59 102 .366
w L Pel
x-Chicago
97 64 '. 602
y-Milwaukee
90 72 .556
Hou sto n
86 75 534
St . Louis
86 76 S31
Cincinnati
74 88 .457
Pillsburgh
67 95 .4 14
West DivisiOn
w L Pel
x-Los Angeles 84 78 519
Anzona
82 80 506
Colorado
74 88 .457
San Francisco 72 90 .444
San Diego
63 99 389

3
20

, GB

71,
11
11 /,
23/1
30 (1

GB

2
' 10
12
21

Chicago or Minnesota at Tampa Bay, if
necessary
National League'
Clllcago vs. Los Angeles
Wgdnoaday JkU
Los Angeles (lowe 14-11) at Chicago
(Dempster 17-6)
~ Tburaday~
Los Angeles (Billingsley 16- 10) at
Chicago (Zambrano 14·6)
Satyrdoy~

Chlcago (Harden 5-1) at Los Angeles
(Kuroda 9-10)

Swl!lay.JlcU
Chicago at los Angeles . it necessary
Tyesday .1ktJ
los Angeles at Chicago. if necessary "
Philadelphia va. Milwaukee
Wednesday _Ot;L._1
M ilwaukee at Philadephia (Hamels 14-

101

Tuuday JlcL..l

Milwaukee at Philadephia, if necessary

FooTBALL

National Football League
AMERLCAN CONFERENCE
Eaat
WL T Pet
· Buffalo
4 0 0 1.000
New England 2 1 0 .667
N.Y. Jets
2 2 0 .500
Miami
1 2 0 :333

)(-clinched divisicn
y-clinched wild card

SOU1h

WL T Pet
Ten nessee · 4 0 0 1.000
Jacksonville 2 2 0 .500
Indianapolis 1 2 0 .333
Houston
0 3 0 .000
.North
W L T Pet
Baltimore
2 0 0 1.000
Pittsburgh
2 10.667
Cleveland
Cinc1nna11
We at
WL T Pet
Denver
3 1 0 .750
San Diego
2 2 o .500
Oakland
1 3 0 .250
Kansas City 1 · 3 0 .250

. Saturday 's Games
N.Y. Mats 2, Florida 0
Chicago Cubs 7, Milwaukee 3
Philadelphia 4, Wash ington 3
Atlanta 1 1. HotJston 5
St. Louis B. Cincinnati 5
Arizona 6. Colorado 4
LA Dodge rs 2. San Francisco 1
San Diego 3, Pittsburgh 2
Sunday's Games
Flor ida 4. N.Y. Mets 2 •
Philadelphia 8, Washington 3
Houston 3, Atlanta 1
Milwaukee 3, Chicago Cubs 1 ·
St. Louis 11 . Cincinnati 4
Pittsburgh .6. San Diego t
san Francisco 3. L.A. Dodgers 1
~AHzona ~· Colorado 1
End Regular Season

WL
3 0
3 1
3 1
2 2

PF
109
49
115
62

PA
63
58
11 6
64

PF
102
79
52
56

PA

85
67
99

PF
45
54

PA
20
38

46

T Pet
0 1.000
0 .750
0 .750
o .500

PF
83
86
120
1 1o

PA
43
81
89
74

PF
80

PA
70

South

WL T Pet
Caro 11na
3 1 0 .750
Tampa Bay 3 t 0 .750
New Orleans 2 2 0 .500
Atlanta
2 2 0 .500
North
WL T Pet
Green Bay 220.500
Chicago
2 2 0 .!)00
t 3 0 .250
M1nnesota
Detroit
0 3 0 .000

West
Wl T Pet
Arizona
2 2 0 500
S. Franc1sco 2 2 0 500
Seattle
1 2
.333
St. Louis
· 0 4 0 .QOO

101 78
111 100
90 83
PF

~~9

PA

.;g1

7 1 ' 82

59 113
PF PA
106 103
97 .

94

o

n

eo

43

147

Sunday's Games

N.Y. Jets 56 . Arizona 35
Tennesseo 30. Minneso•a 17
Kansas Ci ty 33, Denver 19
New Orleans 31 : San Francisco 17
Carolina 24. Atlanta 9
Cleveland 20. C1nc1nnati 12
Tpmpa Bay 30. Green Bay 21
Jacksonville 30 . Houston 27, OT
BuHa16 31 , St. LOUIS 14
San D1ego 28. Oakland 18
Washington 26. Dallas 24
Ch1cago 24. Philadelphia 20
Open : lndtanapol 1s. Miami.
New
England , Seattle. N.Y. Giants. Detroit
Monday 's Game
Baltimofe at Pittsburgh. 8:30 p.m .

COLLEGE FOOTBALL
The AP Top 25
The 'Top 25 teams in T he Associated
Press college /oolball poll, with firstplace votes In parentheses. records
through Sept. ~7, total points based on
25 points for a first-place vote through
one point for a 25th-place vote , and previous ranking : .

1. Oklahoma

(43)

2. Alabama (21 )

3. LSU

8. BYU

Silrully...t!cl...5

Philadelphia at Milwaukee. il necessary

PRo

N Y G1an ts
Washington
Dallas
Philadelphia

4. Missouri n J:
s . Texas
6. Penn St.
7. Texas Tech

Thyraday _Qc1.__2
Milwaukee at Philadephia
Saturdav --'W.._4
Philadelphia-at Milwaukee

9. S&lt;luthern Cal
10. South Florida
11. Georgia
12. Florida
13. Auburn
14. Ohio St.
15. Utah
t6. _Kansas
17. Boise St.
18. Wisconsin
19. Vanderbilt
20. Virginia Tech
21 . Oklahoma St.
22. Fresno St
23. Oregon
24. Connecticut
25. Wake Forest

Rec

P1s

4-()

1,599
1,565

5·0
4-()
4·0
4-0
5·0
4·0
4·0
2·1
5·0
4-1
3-1
4·1
4-1
5-0
3-1
3·0
3-1
4-0
4-1
4-0
3·1
4-1
5-0
3·1

Pv

1.466
1.453
1.362
1,252
1,105
1.098
1,087
1.035
1,0t8

914

860
829
713
6SO
549
520
459
290
277
232
199
126
107

2
8
5
6
7
12
10
11
1
13
3
4
15
14
17
18
19
9
21
25
16

NASCAR
Sprint Cup Star1dlngs

ANer Kansas
Name .
Wins
1. Jimmie Johnson
5
1 30.250 46 78
2. Carl Edwards
6
040.000 52 87
3. Greg Billie
2
• 4.Jef1Burton '
1
PF PA
5. Kevin Harv1ck
0
6 . Jeff Gord on
133 117
' 0
138 112
7. Clint Bowyer
1
76 101 8. Dale Earnhardl Jr.
1
0
65 97 ' 9.MattKenseth
' 10_Denny Hamlin
·1
NATIONAL CONFERENC'E
. II . Tony Stewart
0
1 12. Ky/e8usch
East
a

Pts
5575
- 10
- 30
-i21
-136
-143
- 1 64
- 190
-192
-243
-255
-311

Buckeyes

showdown at No. 9 the ball on two consecutive
Wisconsin. Minnesota (4-1) possessions. First Adam
hoped to prove it had turned Weber threw behind a
fromPageBl
th'ings around afrer last receiver . at the Ohio State
year'sdismall-11 mark.
14, directly to Buckeyes
up
the
28
After
picking
cornerback
Donald
make quite a few highlight
on
his
second
carry,
yards
Washington. lhen Weber
. shows.
a
loud
ovaWells
received
hit tight end Jack Simmons
In his second start as a
of
tion
from
a
crowd
on
a 12-yard first-down
·true freshman . Pryor ran for
105,175
,
as
if
they
were
pass play when a slow whis97 yards on eight carries,
scoring on runs of 33 and I telling him , "Welcome tle resulted in Ohio State
back. We missed you."
safety Anderson Russell
yard.
The
Ohio
State
offense
stripping the ball away. The
, "Beanie makes us more
: conl'ident ," Pryor said. "It obviously had missed him. play was reviewed but the
In the three games he fumble stood. · leading
·takes the pressure off me ,"
Pryor completed 8-of- 13 missed, the running game Minnesota coach Tim
passes for 70 yards, includ- had been average and the Brewster to. twice wave his
ing an 8-yard scoring passing game erratic as the arms in anger at the offihookup
with
Brian Buckeyes were stuffed by, cials.
I
Southern
, Robiskie. He also had a 31- then-No.
While Ohio State was pil: yard touchdown catch from California 35-3 and strug- ing up a 34-6 lead, Wells
:Todd Boeckman, who Pryor gled in wins over Ohio (26- took a handoff that was supreplaced as starter a week 14) and Troy (28-10).
posed to go up the middle
earlier.
The Buckeyes built a 20-3 and made a nifty cut at the
One observer was very halftime lead and never line to avoid traffic, then
looked
back
against rumbled down field and
impressed.
"He .has all the . talent in Minnesota.
hurdled diving defender
. the world." said Minnesota
On . the next play after . Kyle Theret on the way to a
. quarterback Adam Weber. Wells' first big run , Pryor 2 1-yard pickup.
·
.."lt"s all abo~t how far he kept around the right end on
"I tried to tell him he
wants. to go. It's pretty a 33-yard carry, colliding jumped too high," Pryor
amazi ng to see a true fresh- . with a tackler at the goal said with a laugh . "He 's
man Iike that come in and line and falling into the end going to get hurt. But that
do that."
zone for a 7-0 lead .
was a beautiful , beautiful
In the Big Ten opener for
Minnesota , among the play."
both teams, Ohio State (4-1) national leaders with a +II
Woody would have felt
tuned up for next Saturday's in turnover margin, gave up the same way.

Meigs ·
from Page Bl
added a 26-yard field goal .
at the 4:45 mark of the period .
Warren
held
the
: Marauders to a three and
: out, but Meigs received
: huge bre~k when Seth
: Wellspring fumbled Well's
punt and Crockett Crow
pounced o on the loose ball
giving Meigs good field
position at the Warrior 42.
: On first down Well hit Clay
: Bolin down the right side-·
' line for 36 yards to the
Warren Local six·.
But on second down the
Marauders once again fum·
, bled and Kaleb Wolfe
: recovered for the Warriors
· at their own 17 .
· Seth Wellspring capped
· off a five play, 73-yard
drive by scoring from 34
yards out. Cox once again

a

was true on Lhe extra point
for a 24-7 lead . But it took
just two plays for the
Marauders to cut into the
Warriors lead .
After Well hit Clay Bolin
for 10 on first down , Well
then hooked up with junior
tight end Caleb Davis with a
beautiful pass down the left
sideline 71 yards for the
score . Metts added the extra
point with 10 seconds left in
the third period and Meigs
had pulled to within 24-14 ..
But Warren Local , came
right back illld took a 31·14
lead when Wellspring
"scored from seven yards
out. Cox capped off the
Warrior scoring with his
seventh point of the night. .
Meigs closed out the scoring when Smith scored from
13 yards out with J: 13 left
in the contest. Cameron
Bolin hooked up with older
brother Clay for the extra
points and a 31 -22 finaL
" We just made too many
mistakes," a disappointed

:· Monday,

Villegas wins Tour Championship

2008 Postseason Baseball

DIVISION SERIES

Monday, September 29, 2008

Mike Chancey said after the
game. "Warren Local did a
good job, they i1re a good
football team . Their kids
and coaches just out e•ecuted us. We n'eed to stick
together, we have four more
TVC games left.'"
Wellspring
led
the
Warrior ground game with
165 yards in 23 carries.
Dunfee added 85 yards and
a score. Grant Venham
caught two passes for 39
yards, Dunfee one for 58
and Coffman one for nine
yards.
For Meigs Smith gained
88. yards in 18 carries, Gabe
Hill added 43 in three tries.
Well was I0 df..2-Wn the air
with two picks for 202
yards. Clay Bolin caughl
seven for 11 7 yards, Davis
one for 7 1 and Gabe Will
one for 14 yards.
The Marauders drQp to 4 ;~
2 and will ge t. back into
TVC action next Friday
when they travel to Vinto n
County.

ATLANTA (AP) - A
two-putt par to win the Tour
Championship in a playoff
was wonh an extra $) .5 million to Camilo Villcgm•.
A 7-iron lu a si:ary pin on
the 7 i ' ' hnlc, under more
pressure Lhan he has ever
faeedry
That wa&gt; invaluable .
Vill e~as overcame a five shot deficit wi.th six birdie's
on his final II hole; of regu latio n - the last one afler

going at a dangerous flag on
the 17th - and won the
Tour Championship on the
first extra hole aga inst
Sergio Garcia for hi s second
struight victory.
The
, 26-year-old
Colombian, who had gone
85 starts on th e PGA Tour
w,ithout winning. picked up
his second in a row with a
fini sh th at brought the
gallery to life on a sunny
aflernoon at East Lake ..

Sep~ember

29, 2008

Photos by Bryan Walters

;

Golf

In a four-man race coming
to the fin al holes, Villegas
&lt;:augh t Garcia with a 7-iron
from ·184 yanls to 12 feet on
the 17th , then twice hit
beautiful lag putts from 45
feet for par on the 233-yard
18th - once in regulation to
finish at ?-under 273, then in
the playoff to win.
Anthony Kim and Phil
Mickelson each shot 69, and
each had a chance to join the
playoff.

from PageBl
scoring the Bengals' futility.
They're 0--l for the first
time ; ince 2002. when they
went a franchi,e-worst 2' 12
that got coad1 Dic k LeBeau
fired.
"We desperately needed
this one." Fitzpatrick said.

' .

•

.

" This was a devastating loss

EHS - Christian
AP pho(o
Cleveland Browns quarterback Derek Anderson (3) dives fqr
extra yardage against Cincinnati Bengals defensive end
Robert Geathers (91) in the second half of an NFL football
game Sunday in Cincinnati. Cleveland won the game 20-12.

loss to the · Giants last
Sunday, getting his nose
bloodied. He also hurt his
elbow when he was hit
while throwing, an injury
the team didn't reveal until
late in the week.
" It happens a lot," said
Palmer, who also has suffered a broken nose and a
spi·ained ankle thi s , year.
''Sometimes it takes a little
while to come back .
Hopefully it won't take too
long."
Coach Marvin Lewis told
Palmer on Saturday night
that he was going to sit our.
"He's got an elbow that's
inflamed." Lewis said. "Ifs
were gu1ng lo score ... better. It was precautionary
Edwards said. "We've got io not let him play to get back to th;it atti tude , against his wishes - and
and we had that attitude have him ready for next
played physical week and beyond."
where
A three-play . sequence
all game . We established
our presence on Lhe field, late in the first half encapsuand it's definitely a step in lated the current state of pro
football in Ohio.
the right direction."
Crennel decided to go for'
With Palmer out of the
piclure , the Bengals were, it on 4th-and-l at the
Cincinnati 45 ~ yard line .
too .
Palmer was knocked Andersqn faked a handoff,
around during an ove1time rolled right . and s potted

we

Riverside Invitational
al Ri"''"ide
Clul&gt; In-16 1Bams,
Par

from Page Bl

Browns

for us in terms of dropping
to 0-4 and going to Dallas
nexl week."'
It was ugly all-around.
The Bengals wasted two
timeouts in the· second half
because their confused
.defense had too many men
on the field. Edwards
undercut a drive in the
fourth quarter with a late
hit, then exchan~ed words
on the sidelme with
Anderson before storming
away.·
The tipping point came
after Anderson threw an
interception and the Browns
went three-and-out to start
the second half, trailing 6-3.
Anderso~ , who got a three. year, $24 million deal in the
offseason, was only 6-of-12
for 48 yards wilh an interception at Lhat point numbers bad enough to get
him benched.
His touchdown pass to
Edwards on the next drive
calmed things down .
. "I told him I koew · we

The Daily Sentinel • Page 83

www.mydailysentinel.com

MHS -Joey Blackston

l

1
,,

Steve Heiden breaking
open. Anderson dumped his
throw low and behind the
tight end, showing again
why his job was in jeopardy.
Two
plays . later,
Fitzpatrick tried to throw a
pass to Chad Ocho Cinco,
b.ut Eric Wright made a onehanded interceptiort and
headed upfield. He was hit
and fumbled - right to
Ocho Cinco.
At that moment, no one in
ihe stadium had any doubt
why these two teams were
winless.
Notes: It was Edwards'
first touchdown catch of the
season. ... The Bengals
managed only 211 yards. It
was the third consecuti1.1e
' game that the Browns'
defense held a team to less
than 300 yards. ,, RB Jamal
Lewis s&lt;:ored CleveHmd !s
first rushing touchdown of
the season, He had ' 36 yants
on the opening drive, only
43 the rest of the way . ....
Ocho Cinco caught a 4-yard
touchdown pass. his first of
the season. -He didn 't celebrate .
·

..

:t

•f.
. .,

_.,.

" I

,I

'-'*·'lJ

''I
;:

f
~

SHS - Nathan Roush

-

We; t Virginia was third
with a 324 for the day.
Athens was 4th and
Waterford finished in 5th
place.
When an was said and
done. thou gh, it was
Harden 's ace on the 14th
hole that was the . highlight
of the day. His final total
was a l-over par 71 which
~a rned him the medalist
honor fo'r the tournament.
Jackson 's Morgan Dobbins
also shot a 71 to tie for the
day's low score. However,
using a tie breaker of the
lowest back · nine score,
gave the medalist plaque to
Harden along with the title
of Captain of the AllTournament
team . Of
eourse, Dobbins was named
Lo the All Tournament team .
In addition to Harden 's
'core , the Logan team had
&gt;co res of 76 by Daniel
Wagoner. a 78 from Kris
Cummings aod 82 from
Kelly
Barrell , · Both
Wagoner and Cummings
were named to the All
Tournament team.
Jackson 's Dobbins had
good support from· teal\1mates Dilan Newsom with a
78. Ntck Cantor's 79 and a
8:1 by Anthony Malone.
Newsom just missed a spot
on the All-Tourn~ment team
with his 78 as he lost the
timil posilion using the tie
breaker sysLem of the lower
back nine score.
Other members of the AllTournament team were
Southern's Bryan Harris
&lt;~nd Scolt 's Harry Howell
who both shot 76 for the
day. Charl eston Catholic
· had the· final two members
with both Bobby Pack and
Will Kin1berling shooting
78.
The team from Gallipolis
shot a :157 for the day to
lead the schools from the
triicounty area. Corey
Hamilton Lurned in a 83 to
lead his team . .Kamal Dayal
was close he hind with an 85
followed .. by
Jordan
Comwell with 94 and Nick

Held 5awrday, Sept. 27,

Golf
B0 compolilors -

W.va.

70

T~IY!duat-

1. Logan t3Q1}: Mi!llh Harden 37-34-71, Daniel Wagooer . ~7-7$, Kelly
Berreii&gt;I0-42-82, Krls Cummings 41-37- 78, Randall Kullklet 45-44--89.
2. Jackson (311): Mor(llln Dobbins 35-36-71, Nick Can1or'311-40-79, Dylan
Newsom 39-39-78, An1hony MaiOne 41-"2-83, Alec Aay 51~1(10 ,
3. Cha-n Ca1holi(: n (324): JIJ61en Hols101n 41-50-91, Mlctlael Bosh 4242-84, WUI Kimbe~ing 41·37-78, David Miller 42-"2-84, 8ollby ~ 41·3776. '
4. Atllens (334): Curtis Goldsberry 46-38-84, Ky Crist ~2-65, Stopl\en
Kebler ~39-79, Matt ~uUns 41-45--&amp;3, Sean Ferguson ...._.2--&amp;6.
5, Watlll1ord (338): Brad Miller 36-4~5. Ky1e Allen 41-47-. Joey Rogonl ~
42---92, Stevie Wetz 44-42-86. Aaron Mill@r 42·37-'TSI6. Scott (347): Harry Howell 37·311-76, Corey Jus'1ice 46-42-, Sllano Ugh1
48-41---89, Kodi&amp; Halstead 52-42-94, Krls Halstead 49-46-95.

Nick Saunders 51).45-95,,Cory Hamllon 40-43-113, Kyle Ahodos -oo.
9. Wah3ma (362): Adam Roush 48-43--91 , Dave Greene SQ-.43--93. Warren
Bissell ~6, Brandon Johnson 49-44--93, Man Aroold 46-46---92.
10. Ripley (382j: Blake Bametle 42-41-83, OevU&gt; Mahan &gt;18-4:&gt;-91, Andy
Scaggs 50-45-95, Heath Swisher SQ-.43-93, Jordan Franklin 52-44-96.
111.

Meigs (362): Joey Blacl&lt;s1on 41-40-111 , Ty1er Andrews 43-41-,8.4, Bobby,

King 53~48-101 , Ryan Jetter&amp; 55-45-100, ScoH Kertnedy 52·45--97.
t11 . Potnt Pleasant (362): Opie lucas 41-43--84, Alex Potter 47-46-93, Travis
Grimm 47-45--92, Robert Da\lls 50-43--93, Justin Cavender 54oo47-101 .
Calhol~ t2 (366):
Tyltr Whipkey
41---sa..,.Aiex Schlarb 49·~95, Daniel Smolder 51·4-4-95. Kristi Gennette SS.

13, Charles1on
Palrick Flnlayoon 41-47-88,
47·
49-108.
'
14, SOuU&gt;ern (396): Bryan Harris 40-36-76, Alex Howley 53-53--103, Tayk&gt;r

Deem -ONF. Andrew Roseberry 59-56-i 15, Nathan Ro4sh 52-52-104.
15. Eastern (403}: Jay Warner 59-52-111 , Jordan Wood 57-49-106, Christian
Amsbary 56-47- 103, Craig Jones 55-43-9S. Chris Bissell 59-47-106 ...
16. Roane County (465): Vasty Usityn 42· 43-$5. Dan Matics 6()..50-110, Tlm
William! 57·71-128, Erhan Epling 78-68-146, Madison Sergent Sl-59-142.
••• - All team tiebreakers were decided b~ the fifth scorer. Also, Individual
·tiebreakers were determined by the lower BaCk 9 score.

2008 AII·Rivers/da Team
Mitch Harden•
Morgan ()obbins
Daniel Wagoner
Bryan Harrl6
Harry Howell
Kris Cummings
Will Kimberling

71
76
76

76
78
78
78

Scol1

76

logan
Chas. Cat h. # 1
Ghas. Cath. #l
Jackson

Bobby Pack

Dylan Newsom
•-

71

logan
Jackson
logan
.S outhern

denotes medall6t and All-Riverside cap tain

Saunders with IJ5.
Strange a&gt; it 1i1ay seem.
Wahama, Point Pleasanl and
Meigs all shnt a total of 362
for the day. Using the tiebreaker of the 5th man 's
score. Wahama was awarded 9th place while Ripley,
who also had a total of 362.
was lOth wi.th Point
Pleasant and Meigs tlni shing dead even for a tie for
II th. Southern finished in
13th position followed by
Eastern in '14th place.
Wahama 's best score for
the day was 86 by Warren
Bissell. Adam Rou sh added
a 91 and Matt Arnold a n.
Both Dave Greene and
Brandon John son turned in
93'sfor the day.
Point · Pleasant's Opie ·

Lucas led his team with 84
followed by a 92 from
Truvis Grimm and a pair of
9:1\ from Alex Potter and
Robert Davis. Point's 5th
score was a I 0 I from Justin
Cavender. ·
·
Joey Blackston was the
lead ing, scorer for Meigs
with a 81. Tyler Andrews
shot 84 followed by Scott
Kennedy's 97 , a 100 from
Ryan Jefters and I0 I by
Bobby King .
In addition to the tine 76
by Bryan Ha1Ti s, S,aurhern
had scores of I 03 by Alex
Haw ley, 104 from Nathan
Roush and 1'15 by Andrew
Roseberry. Taylor Deem
was Southern "s 5th player,
hut was not able to complete hi s round .

3 1'EAR/20CO HOUR

J

~PH~ li w·~~~~'

l'"'''il

.' I

Proper Tree Stand Usage Critical for Safe Hunting

Falls from' tree stands are a
significant source of injuries
and deaths to hunters. Full
body harness~type safety
devices are recommended
for use in tree stands, but
they must be used properly.
The use of ropes, bells, or
belt-type devices is not
recommended.·
E~perts

recommend fallarresting equipment for use
·when hunting from a tree
stand. In addition, look for a

dynamic
system
engineered
with25
percent
stretch. This
lowers the
pounds of
lOree required
to stop your
fall from a tree
stand,
significantly
reducing the
impact on
your body.
Seek toad,
rated steel
constructililn in the hardware
used in your protebtive
equipment Finally, dual
connection points for the
harness, such as those found
in rock-climbing equipment,
Will spread the force of a fall
across more than one piece
of hardware.
. Makesureofy.o urtarget-·
and beyond

.

hunters' failure to properly
identify their targets.

I

•I

• 28.7 HP' 3-cylirtder direct
fuel injection dttatl enam~

• l..arge flywheel for smoother.
more susttined horsepower

'l

,• Treat m,Y gun altli waaioaded: .

· o Alftye point till MIIZZI411n a ule .

diNctlon.

. .

• H.v.r point • guli at lnythlng you
don't w•nt to lhoot.
• Unload guns when not in u...
1 Store guns and ammunition
separately. ·

a:

Source: ODNR mldflfll

Gavin Plant/Cheshire, Ohio

seperetel~.

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OHIO'

$209
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/MONTH*
AUechments sold

• larst -flywheel for smoother,
mort sustained horstpower

• Be sure, the b~mil and action are
cleat of olistructlona.
• Never Climb • fence or ttae, ciOa • r(
log or 1 lltrum, ot jump a ditch
•. . w~t~ta~gun.
• Nem lhoot 1 bullet It a fl-'- hard
· llll'flce or Wiler.
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• N - UH alcohOliC beverages or
drugs whan hartllling a fjrearm.

'..Al'•

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visibility and modern detign

According to the Ten
Commandments of Firearm
Safety. published by the
Ohio Department of Natural
Resources, Division of
W1ldlife. "Be sure of your
target and beyond . Safe
hunters never take aim at a
sound . movement or flash of
color. A safe shot is taken at
a positively Identified target
against a clear, safe
background ."

Take time to prep11re for your hunting e~eperlen~e this season. Be safe.

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Ex2900 COMPACT TRACTOR

According to the
International Hunter
Education Assocration, in
2005 there were 30 huntiryg;
related injuries from firearms
in Ohio. Of those, two
Involved fatal~ies . Duri)lg the
same period in West
VIrginia, there were 11
incidents with two fatalities.
The fatalities took place
because hunters failed to
identify their targets.

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7. Ravenswood (349): Tom Moss 44-.41--85, Joel MiUer 43-38--81 , TOJTY Wolfe
45-4C&gt;-e5, Jacob Lavender 53-45-98, Garrett Qarke 51~100.
8. Galtla Academy {3~1): Kamal Dayal 46-39-85, Jordal1 COrnwell 51-43-D4.

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Page B2 •

The Daily Sentinel

•

www.mydailysentinel.com

National Scoreboard

American League

East Division
w L Pel
K·Tampa Bay 97 65 599

GB

95 67 586
89 73 549
Toronto
86 76 531
Baltimore
68 93 422
Central Division
w L Pel
Mmnesota
88 74 .543
Chicago
87 74 .540
' Cleveland
81 81 .500
Kansas City
75 87 .463
DetrOit
74 87 .460
West Division
w L Pel
K·Los Angeles 100 62 '617
Texas
79 83 .488
: Oakland
75 66 I .466 ·
61 101 .377
· Se&lt;inle

2
8,

~-Boston

New York

11

28/;

GB

NOT E: W1ld eardteams play teams with
best records unless in same div1sion and
Wild card may not have home-field
advantage
(Best·OI-5)
American League
LOI Angelel VI. Boston
Wednllc:Wy,J&amp;U
Boston (Beckett 12·10) at Los An geles

(Lackey 12·5)
'

Erlllu..OOU

Boston at Los Angeles

h

7
13

13/;

GB

21
39

24 ',

.

SWiday...t!cl...5

Los Angeles at Boston

Ml&gt;rulay,..Q&lt;l.Ji
Los Angeles at Boston, if necessary
·
W.dnesday,J&amp;t.....S
Boston at LOs Angeles . il necessa ry
Tampa Say vs . AL Cenlral Champion
Thursday ...act....2
Chicago or Minnesota al Tampa Bay
(Kazmir 12-8 or Shields 14-8)

Erlllu.Jl&lt;U

: II·Ciinched diVISIOn

Chicago or Minnesota af Tampa Bay
(Kazmir 12-8 or Shields 14-8)

. y-chnched w1ld card ·

Swl!lay.JlcU

Saturday 's Games
N.Y. Yankees i'lt Boston, ppd . Rain
Kansas Clly 4, Minnesota 2
Seattle 7 . Oakland 3
· Detroit 4 . Tampa Bay 3
' Baltimore 2, loronto 1, 6 1nnmgS,

Tampa Bay at Chicago or Minnesota
Momlgy,OCL..§
Tampa Bay at Chicago or Minnesota . if
necessary

Wednesday ..OCU

: Cleveland 12. Chicago Wh1te Sox 6
• Texas 6. LA Angels 4
·
Sunday's Game6

· Tampa Bays: Detroit 7. 11 innings
N.Y. Yankees 6. Boston 2. 1st garpe
Toronto 10 . Baltimore 1

Boston 4 , N Y Y8. nkees 3. 10 mn1ngs.
2nd game
Ch1cago White Sox s, Cleveland 1
. Minnesota 6. Kansas City 0
· LA Angels 7 , Texas 0
' Seatlle 4. Oakland 3
' Monday's Games
DetrOit {Garc ia 1-1) at Chicago Wl1i\e
Sox {G. Fioyd 16-8), 2.05 p.m .
National League
East Division
W ·
Pel GB
M-Ph iladelphia 92
.568
New York
89
.549
Florida
77 .522 . 7 ~.!
· Alla nta
.444
Washmgton
32/1
Central Division

L
70
73
84
72 90
59 102 .366
w L Pel
x-Chicago
97 64 '. 602
y-Milwaukee
90 72 .556
Hou sto n
86 75 534
St . Louis
86 76 S31
Cincinnati
74 88 .457
Pillsburgh
67 95 .4 14
West DivisiOn
w L Pel
x-Los Angeles 84 78 519
Anzona
82 80 506
Colorado
74 88 .457
San Francisco 72 90 .444
San Diego
63 99 389

3
20

, GB

71,
11
11 /,
23/1
30 (1

GB

2
' 10
12
21

Chicago or Minnesota at Tampa Bay, if
necessary
National League'
Clllcago vs. Los Angeles
Wgdnoaday JkU
Los Angeles (lowe 14-11) at Chicago
(Dempster 17-6)
~ Tburaday~
Los Angeles (Billingsley 16- 10) at
Chicago (Zambrano 14·6)
Satyrdoy~

Chlcago (Harden 5-1) at Los Angeles
(Kuroda 9-10)

Swl!lay.JlcU
Chicago at los Angeles . it necessary
Tyesday .1ktJ
los Angeles at Chicago. if necessary "
Philadelphia va. Milwaukee
Wednesday _Ot;L._1
M ilwaukee at Philadephia (Hamels 14-

101

Tuuday JlcL..l

Milwaukee at Philadephia, if necessary

FooTBALL

National Football League
AMERLCAN CONFERENCE
Eaat
WL T Pet
· Buffalo
4 0 0 1.000
New England 2 1 0 .667
N.Y. Jets
2 2 0 .500
Miami
1 2 0 :333

)(-clinched divisicn
y-clinched wild card

SOU1h

WL T Pet
Ten nessee · 4 0 0 1.000
Jacksonville 2 2 0 .500
Indianapolis 1 2 0 .333
Houston
0 3 0 .000
.North
W L T Pet
Baltimore
2 0 0 1.000
Pittsburgh
2 10.667
Cleveland
Cinc1nna11
We at
WL T Pet
Denver
3 1 0 .750
San Diego
2 2 o .500
Oakland
1 3 0 .250
Kansas City 1 · 3 0 .250

. Saturday 's Games
N.Y. Mats 2, Florida 0
Chicago Cubs 7, Milwaukee 3
Philadelphia 4, Wash ington 3
Atlanta 1 1. HotJston 5
St. Louis B. Cincinnati 5
Arizona 6. Colorado 4
LA Dodge rs 2. San Francisco 1
San Diego 3, Pittsburgh 2
Sunday's Games
Flor ida 4. N.Y. Mets 2 •
Philadelphia 8, Washington 3
Houston 3, Atlanta 1
Milwaukee 3, Chicago Cubs 1 ·
St. Louis 11 . Cincinnati 4
Pittsburgh .6. San Diego t
san Francisco 3. L.A. Dodgers 1
~AHzona ~· Colorado 1
End Regular Season

WL
3 0
3 1
3 1
2 2

PF
109
49
115
62

PA
63
58
11 6
64

PF
102
79
52
56

PA

85
67
99

PF
45
54

PA
20
38

46

T Pet
0 1.000
0 .750
0 .750
o .500

PF
83
86
120
1 1o

PA
43
81
89
74

PF
80

PA
70

South

WL T Pet
Caro 11na
3 1 0 .750
Tampa Bay 3 t 0 .750
New Orleans 2 2 0 .500
Atlanta
2 2 0 .500
North
WL T Pet
Green Bay 220.500
Chicago
2 2 0 .!)00
t 3 0 .250
M1nnesota
Detroit
0 3 0 .000

West
Wl T Pet
Arizona
2 2 0 500
S. Franc1sco 2 2 0 500
Seattle
1 2
.333
St. Louis
· 0 4 0 .QOO

101 78
111 100
90 83
PF

~~9

PA

.;g1

7 1 ' 82

59 113
PF PA
106 103
97 .

94

o

n

eo

43

147

Sunday's Games

N.Y. Jets 56 . Arizona 35
Tennesseo 30. Minneso•a 17
Kansas Ci ty 33, Denver 19
New Orleans 31 : San Francisco 17
Carolina 24. Atlanta 9
Cleveland 20. C1nc1nnati 12
Tpmpa Bay 30. Green Bay 21
Jacksonville 30 . Houston 27, OT
BuHa16 31 , St. LOUIS 14
San D1ego 28. Oakland 18
Washington 26. Dallas 24
Ch1cago 24. Philadelphia 20
Open : lndtanapol 1s. Miami.
New
England , Seattle. N.Y. Giants. Detroit
Monday 's Game
Baltimofe at Pittsburgh. 8:30 p.m .

COLLEGE FOOTBALL
The AP Top 25
The 'Top 25 teams in T he Associated
Press college /oolball poll, with firstplace votes In parentheses. records
through Sept. ~7, total points based on
25 points for a first-place vote through
one point for a 25th-place vote , and previous ranking : .

1. Oklahoma

(43)

2. Alabama (21 )

3. LSU

8. BYU

Silrully...t!cl...5

Philadelphia at Milwaukee. il necessary

PRo

N Y G1an ts
Washington
Dallas
Philadelphia

4. Missouri n J:
s . Texas
6. Penn St.
7. Texas Tech

Thyraday _Qc1.__2
Milwaukee at Philadephia
Saturdav --'W.._4
Philadelphia-at Milwaukee

9. S&lt;luthern Cal
10. South Florida
11. Georgia
12. Florida
13. Auburn
14. Ohio St.
15. Utah
t6. _Kansas
17. Boise St.
18. Wisconsin
19. Vanderbilt
20. Virginia Tech
21 . Oklahoma St.
22. Fresno St
23. Oregon
24. Connecticut
25. Wake Forest

Rec

P1s

4-()

1,599
1,565

5·0
4-()
4·0
4-0
5·0
4·0
4·0
2·1
5·0
4-1
3-1
4·1
4-1
5-0
3-1
3·0
3-1
4-0
4-1
4-0
3·1
4-1
5-0
3·1

Pv

1.466
1.453
1.362
1,252
1,105
1.098
1,087
1.035
1,0t8

914

860
829
713
6SO
549
520
459
290
277
232
199
126
107

2
8
5
6
7
12
10
11
1
13
3
4
15
14
17
18
19
9
21
25
16

NASCAR
Sprint Cup Star1dlngs

ANer Kansas
Name .
Wins
1. Jimmie Johnson
5
1 30.250 46 78
2. Carl Edwards
6
040.000 52 87
3. Greg Billie
2
• 4.Jef1Burton '
1
PF PA
5. Kevin Harv1ck
0
6 . Jeff Gord on
133 117
' 0
138 112
7. Clint Bowyer
1
76 101 8. Dale Earnhardl Jr.
1
0
65 97 ' 9.MattKenseth
' 10_Denny Hamlin
·1
NATIONAL CONFERENC'E
. II . Tony Stewart
0
1 12. Ky/e8usch
East
a

Pts
5575
- 10
- 30
-i21
-136
-143
- 1 64
- 190
-192
-243
-255
-311

Buckeyes

showdown at No. 9 the ball on two consecutive
Wisconsin. Minnesota (4-1) possessions. First Adam
hoped to prove it had turned Weber threw behind a
fromPageBl
th'ings around afrer last receiver . at the Ohio State
year'sdismall-11 mark.
14, directly to Buckeyes
up
the
28
After
picking
cornerback
Donald
make quite a few highlight
on
his
second
carry,
yards
Washington. lhen Weber
. shows.
a
loud
ovaWells
received
hit tight end Jack Simmons
In his second start as a
of
tion
from
a
crowd
on
a 12-yard first-down
·true freshman . Pryor ran for
105,175
,
as
if
they
were
pass play when a slow whis97 yards on eight carries,
scoring on runs of 33 and I telling him , "Welcome tle resulted in Ohio State
back. We missed you."
safety Anderson Russell
yard.
The
Ohio
State
offense
stripping the ball away. The
, "Beanie makes us more
: conl'ident ," Pryor said. "It obviously had missed him. play was reviewed but the
In the three games he fumble stood. · leading
·takes the pressure off me ,"
Pryor completed 8-of- 13 missed, the running game Minnesota coach Tim
passes for 70 yards, includ- had been average and the Brewster to. twice wave his
ing an 8-yard scoring passing game erratic as the arms in anger at the offihookup
with
Brian Buckeyes were stuffed by, cials.
I
Southern
, Robiskie. He also had a 31- then-No.
While Ohio State was pil: yard touchdown catch from California 35-3 and strug- ing up a 34-6 lead, Wells
:Todd Boeckman, who Pryor gled in wins over Ohio (26- took a handoff that was supreplaced as starter a week 14) and Troy (28-10).
posed to go up the middle
earlier.
The Buckeyes built a 20-3 and made a nifty cut at the
One observer was very halftime lead and never line to avoid traffic, then
looked
back
against rumbled down field and
impressed.
"He .has all the . talent in Minnesota.
hurdled diving defender
. the world." said Minnesota
On . the next play after . Kyle Theret on the way to a
. quarterback Adam Weber. Wells' first big run , Pryor 2 1-yard pickup.
·
.."lt"s all abo~t how far he kept around the right end on
"I tried to tell him he
wants. to go. It's pretty a 33-yard carry, colliding jumped too high," Pryor
amazi ng to see a true fresh- . with a tackler at the goal said with a laugh . "He 's
man Iike that come in and line and falling into the end going to get hurt. But that
do that."
zone for a 7-0 lead .
was a beautiful , beautiful
In the Big Ten opener for
Minnesota , among the play."
both teams, Ohio State (4-1) national leaders with a +II
Woody would have felt
tuned up for next Saturday's in turnover margin, gave up the same way.

Meigs ·
from Page Bl
added a 26-yard field goal .
at the 4:45 mark of the period .
Warren
held
the
: Marauders to a three and
: out, but Meigs received
: huge bre~k when Seth
: Wellspring fumbled Well's
punt and Crockett Crow
pounced o on the loose ball
giving Meigs good field
position at the Warrior 42.
: On first down Well hit Clay
: Bolin down the right side-·
' line for 36 yards to the
Warren Local six·.
But on second down the
Marauders once again fum·
, bled and Kaleb Wolfe
: recovered for the Warriors
· at their own 17 .
· Seth Wellspring capped
· off a five play, 73-yard
drive by scoring from 34
yards out. Cox once again

a

was true on Lhe extra point
for a 24-7 lead . But it took
just two plays for the
Marauders to cut into the
Warriors lead .
After Well hit Clay Bolin
for 10 on first down , Well
then hooked up with junior
tight end Caleb Davis with a
beautiful pass down the left
sideline 71 yards for the
score . Metts added the extra
point with 10 seconds left in
the third period and Meigs
had pulled to within 24-14 ..
But Warren Local , came
right back illld took a 31·14
lead when Wellspring
"scored from seven yards
out. Cox capped off the
Warrior scoring with his
seventh point of the night. .
Meigs closed out the scoring when Smith scored from
13 yards out with J: 13 left
in the contest. Cameron
Bolin hooked up with older
brother Clay for the extra
points and a 31 -22 finaL
" We just made too many
mistakes," a disappointed

:· Monday,

Villegas wins Tour Championship

2008 Postseason Baseball

DIVISION SERIES

Monday, September 29, 2008

Mike Chancey said after the
game. "Warren Local did a
good job, they i1re a good
football team . Their kids
and coaches just out e•ecuted us. We n'eed to stick
together, we have four more
TVC games left.'"
Wellspring
led
the
Warrior ground game with
165 yards in 23 carries.
Dunfee added 85 yards and
a score. Grant Venham
caught two passes for 39
yards, Dunfee one for 58
and Coffman one for nine
yards.
For Meigs Smith gained
88. yards in 18 carries, Gabe
Hill added 43 in three tries.
Well was I0 df..2-Wn the air
with two picks for 202
yards. Clay Bolin caughl
seven for 11 7 yards, Davis
one for 7 1 and Gabe Will
one for 14 yards.
The Marauders drQp to 4 ;~
2 and will ge t. back into
TVC action next Friday
when they travel to Vinto n
County.

ATLANTA (AP) - A
two-putt par to win the Tour
Championship in a playoff
was wonh an extra $) .5 million to Camilo Villcgm•.
A 7-iron lu a si:ary pin on
the 7 i ' ' hnlc, under more
pressure Lhan he has ever
faeedry
That wa&gt; invaluable .
Vill e~as overcame a five shot deficit wi.th six birdie's
on his final II hole; of regu latio n - the last one afler

going at a dangerous flag on
the 17th - and won the
Tour Championship on the
first extra hole aga inst
Sergio Garcia for hi s second
struight victory.
The
, 26-year-old
Colombian, who had gone
85 starts on th e PGA Tour
w,ithout winning. picked up
his second in a row with a
fini sh th at brought the
gallery to life on a sunny
aflernoon at East Lake ..

Sep~ember

29, 2008

Photos by Bryan Walters

;

Golf

In a four-man race coming
to the fin al holes, Villegas
&lt;:augh t Garcia with a 7-iron
from ·184 yanls to 12 feet on
the 17th , then twice hit
beautiful lag putts from 45
feet for par on the 233-yard
18th - once in regulation to
finish at ?-under 273, then in
the playoff to win.
Anthony Kim and Phil
Mickelson each shot 69, and
each had a chance to join the
playoff.

from PageBl
scoring the Bengals' futility.
They're 0--l for the first
time ; ince 2002. when they
went a franchi,e-worst 2' 12
that got coad1 Dic k LeBeau
fired.
"We desperately needed
this one." Fitzpatrick said.

' .

•

.

" This was a devastating loss

EHS - Christian
AP pho(o
Cleveland Browns quarterback Derek Anderson (3) dives fqr
extra yardage against Cincinnati Bengals defensive end
Robert Geathers (91) in the second half of an NFL football
game Sunday in Cincinnati. Cleveland won the game 20-12.

loss to the · Giants last
Sunday, getting his nose
bloodied. He also hurt his
elbow when he was hit
while throwing, an injury
the team didn't reveal until
late in the week.
" It happens a lot," said
Palmer, who also has suffered a broken nose and a
spi·ained ankle thi s , year.
''Sometimes it takes a little
while to come back .
Hopefully it won't take too
long."
Coach Marvin Lewis told
Palmer on Saturday night
that he was going to sit our.
"He's got an elbow that's
inflamed." Lewis said. "Ifs
were gu1ng lo score ... better. It was precautionary
Edwards said. "We've got io not let him play to get back to th;it atti tude , against his wishes - and
and we had that attitude have him ready for next
played physical week and beyond."
where
A three-play . sequence
all game . We established
our presence on Lhe field, late in the first half encapsuand it's definitely a step in lated the current state of pro
football in Ohio.
the right direction."
Crennel decided to go for'
With Palmer out of the
piclure , the Bengals were, it on 4th-and-l at the
Cincinnati 45 ~ yard line .
too .
Palmer was knocked Andersqn faked a handoff,
around during an ove1time rolled right . and s potted

we

Riverside Invitational
al Ri"''"ide
Clul&gt; In-16 1Bams,
Par

from Page Bl

Browns

for us in terms of dropping
to 0-4 and going to Dallas
nexl week."'
It was ugly all-around.
The Bengals wasted two
timeouts in the· second half
because their confused
.defense had too many men
on the field. Edwards
undercut a drive in the
fourth quarter with a late
hit, then exchan~ed words
on the sidelme with
Anderson before storming
away.·
The tipping point came
after Anderson threw an
interception and the Browns
went three-and-out to start
the second half, trailing 6-3.
Anderso~ , who got a three. year, $24 million deal in the
offseason, was only 6-of-12
for 48 yards wilh an interception at Lhat point numbers bad enough to get
him benched.
His touchdown pass to
Edwards on the next drive
calmed things down .
. "I told him I koew · we

The Daily Sentinel • Page 83

www.mydailysentinel.com

MHS -Joey Blackston

l

1
,,

Steve Heiden breaking
open. Anderson dumped his
throw low and behind the
tight end, showing again
why his job was in jeopardy.
Two
plays . later,
Fitzpatrick tried to throw a
pass to Chad Ocho Cinco,
b.ut Eric Wright made a onehanded interceptiort and
headed upfield. He was hit
and fumbled - right to
Ocho Cinco.
At that moment, no one in
ihe stadium had any doubt
why these two teams were
winless.
Notes: It was Edwards'
first touchdown catch of the
season. ... The Bengals
managed only 211 yards. It
was the third consecuti1.1e
' game that the Browns'
defense held a team to less
than 300 yards. ,, RB Jamal
Lewis s&lt;:ored CleveHmd !s
first rushing touchdown of
the season, He had ' 36 yants
on the opening drive, only
43 the rest of the way . ....
Ocho Cinco caught a 4-yard
touchdown pass. his first of
the season. -He didn 't celebrate .
·

..

:t

•f.
. .,

_.,.

" I

,I

'-'*·'lJ

''I
;:

f
~

SHS - Nathan Roush

-

We; t Virginia was third
with a 324 for the day.
Athens was 4th and
Waterford finished in 5th
place.
When an was said and
done. thou gh, it was
Harden 's ace on the 14th
hole that was the . highlight
of the day. His final total
was a l-over par 71 which
~a rned him the medalist
honor fo'r the tournament.
Jackson 's Morgan Dobbins
also shot a 71 to tie for the
day's low score. However,
using a tie breaker of the
lowest back · nine score,
gave the medalist plaque to
Harden along with the title
of Captain of the AllTournament
team . Of
eourse, Dobbins was named
Lo the All Tournament team .
In addition to Harden 's
'core , the Logan team had
&gt;co res of 76 by Daniel
Wagoner. a 78 from Kris
Cummings aod 82 from
Kelly
Barrell , · Both
Wagoner and Cummings
were named to the All
Tournament team.
Jackson 's Dobbins had
good support from· teal\1mates Dilan Newsom with a
78. Ntck Cantor's 79 and a
8:1 by Anthony Malone.
Newsom just missed a spot
on the All-Tourn~ment team
with his 78 as he lost the
timil posilion using the tie
breaker sysLem of the lower
back nine score.
Other members of the AllTournament team were
Southern's Bryan Harris
&lt;~nd Scolt 's Harry Howell
who both shot 76 for the
day. Charl eston Catholic
· had the· final two members
with both Bobby Pack and
Will Kin1berling shooting
78.
The team from Gallipolis
shot a :157 for the day to
lead the schools from the
triicounty area. Corey
Hamilton Lurned in a 83 to
lead his team . .Kamal Dayal
was close he hind with an 85
followed .. by
Jordan
Comwell with 94 and Nick

Held 5awrday, Sept. 27,

Golf
B0 compolilors -

W.va.

70

T~IY!duat-

1. Logan t3Q1}: Mi!llh Harden 37-34-71, Daniel Wagooer . ~7-7$, Kelly
Berreii&gt;I0-42-82, Krls Cummings 41-37- 78, Randall Kullklet 45-44--89.
2. Jackson (311): Mor(llln Dobbins 35-36-71, Nick Can1or'311-40-79, Dylan
Newsom 39-39-78, An1hony MaiOne 41-"2-83, Alec Aay 51~1(10 ,
3. Cha-n Ca1holi(: n (324): JIJ61en Hols101n 41-50-91, Mlctlael Bosh 4242-84, WUI Kimbe~ing 41·37-78, David Miller 42-"2-84, 8ollby ~ 41·3776. '
4. Atllens (334): Curtis Goldsberry 46-38-84, Ky Crist ~2-65, Stopl\en
Kebler ~39-79, Matt ~uUns 41-45--&amp;3, Sean Ferguson ...._.2--&amp;6.
5, Watlll1ord (338): Brad Miller 36-4~5. Ky1e Allen 41-47-. Joey Rogonl ~
42---92, Stevie Wetz 44-42-86. Aaron Mill@r 42·37-'TSI6. Scott (347): Harry Howell 37·311-76, Corey Jus'1ice 46-42-, Sllano Ugh1
48-41---89, Kodi&amp; Halstead 52-42-94, Krls Halstead 49-46-95.

Nick Saunders 51).45-95,,Cory Hamllon 40-43-113, Kyle Ahodos -oo.
9. Wah3ma (362): Adam Roush 48-43--91 , Dave Greene SQ-.43--93. Warren
Bissell ~6, Brandon Johnson 49-44--93, Man Aroold 46-46---92.
10. Ripley (382j: Blake Bametle 42-41-83, OevU&gt; Mahan &gt;18-4:&gt;-91, Andy
Scaggs 50-45-95, Heath Swisher SQ-.43-93, Jordan Franklin 52-44-96.
111.

Meigs (362): Joey Blacl&lt;s1on 41-40-111 , Ty1er Andrews 43-41-,8.4, Bobby,

King 53~48-101 , Ryan Jetter&amp; 55-45-100, ScoH Kertnedy 52·45--97.
t11 . Potnt Pleasant (362): Opie lucas 41-43--84, Alex Potter 47-46-93, Travis
Grimm 47-45--92, Robert Da\lls 50-43--93, Justin Cavender 54oo47-101 .
Calhol~ t2 (366):
Tyltr Whipkey
41---sa..,.Aiex Schlarb 49·~95, Daniel Smolder 51·4-4-95. Kristi Gennette SS.

13, Charles1on
Palrick Flnlayoon 41-47-88,
47·
49-108.
'
14, SOuU&gt;ern (396): Bryan Harris 40-36-76, Alex Howley 53-53--103, Tayk&gt;r

Deem -ONF. Andrew Roseberry 59-56-i 15, Nathan Ro4sh 52-52-104.
15. Eastern (403}: Jay Warner 59-52-111 , Jordan Wood 57-49-106, Christian
Amsbary 56-47- 103, Craig Jones 55-43-9S. Chris Bissell 59-47-106 ...
16. Roane County (465): Vasty Usityn 42· 43-$5. Dan Matics 6()..50-110, Tlm
William! 57·71-128, Erhan Epling 78-68-146, Madison Sergent Sl-59-142.
••• - All team tiebreakers were decided b~ the fifth scorer. Also, Individual
·tiebreakers were determined by the lower BaCk 9 score.

2008 AII·Rivers/da Team
Mitch Harden•
Morgan ()obbins
Daniel Wagoner
Bryan Harrl6
Harry Howell
Kris Cummings
Will Kimberling

71
76
76

76
78
78
78

Scol1

76

logan
Chas. Cat h. # 1
Ghas. Cath. #l
Jackson

Bobby Pack

Dylan Newsom
•-

71

logan
Jackson
logan
.S outhern

denotes medall6t and All-Riverside cap tain

Saunders with IJ5.
Strange a&gt; it 1i1ay seem.
Wahama, Point Pleasanl and
Meigs all shnt a total of 362
for the day. Using the tiebreaker of the 5th man 's
score. Wahama was awarded 9th place while Ripley,
who also had a total of 362.
was lOth wi.th Point
Pleasant and Meigs tlni shing dead even for a tie for
II th. Southern finished in
13th position followed by
Eastern in '14th place.
Wahama 's best score for
the day was 86 by Warren
Bissell. Adam Rou sh added
a 91 and Matt Arnold a n.
Both Dave Greene and
Brandon John son turned in
93'sfor the day.
Point · Pleasant's Opie ·

Lucas led his team with 84
followed by a 92 from
Truvis Grimm and a pair of
9:1\ from Alex Potter and
Robert Davis. Point's 5th
score was a I 0 I from Justin
Cavender. ·
·
Joey Blackston was the
lead ing, scorer for Meigs
with a 81. Tyler Andrews
shot 84 followed by Scott
Kennedy's 97 , a 100 from
Ryan Jefters and I0 I by
Bobby King .
In addition to the tine 76
by Bryan Ha1Ti s, S,aurhern
had scores of I 03 by Alex
Haw ley, 104 from Nathan
Roush and 1'15 by Andrew
Roseberry. Taylor Deem
was Southern "s 5th player,
hut was not able to complete hi s round .

3 1'EAR/20CO HOUR

J

~PH~ li w·~~~~'

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.' I

Proper Tree Stand Usage Critical for Safe Hunting

Falls from' tree stands are a
significant source of injuries
and deaths to hunters. Full
body harness~type safety
devices are recommended
for use in tree stands, but
they must be used properly.
The use of ropes, bells, or
belt-type devices is not
recommended.·
E~perts

recommend fallarresting equipment for use
·when hunting from a tree
stand. In addition, look for a

dynamic
system
engineered
with25
percent
stretch. This
lowers the
pounds of
lOree required
to stop your
fall from a tree
stand,
significantly
reducing the
impact on
your body.
Seek toad,
rated steel
constructililn in the hardware
used in your protebtive
equipment Finally, dual
connection points for the
harness, such as those found
in rock-climbing equipment,
Will spread the force of a fall
across more than one piece
of hardware.
. Makesureofy.o urtarget-·
and beyond

.

hunters' failure to properly
identify their targets.

I

•I

• 28.7 HP' 3-cylirtder direct
fuel injection dttatl enam~

• l..arge flywheel for smoother.
more susttined horsepower

'l

,• Treat m,Y gun altli waaioaded: .

· o Alftye point till MIIZZI411n a ule .

diNctlon.

. .

• H.v.r point • guli at lnythlng you
don't w•nt to lhoot.
• Unload guns when not in u...
1 Store guns and ammunition
separately. ·

a:

Source: ODNR mldflfll

Gavin Plant/Cheshire, Ohio

seperetel~.

············••i••··················································
3 'r[AP :?110) t--&lt;OUR
! V

Sc2400 SUB-COMPACT TRACTOR

LOW

• 24 HP' diesel ensine

$151

• Hydrostatic transmission with selectable 4WD

• Shirt-On -The-GO• rana:e control lets you shift from

hilh without stopping
I HigheSt ldedtr lift capacity in its clasS*'*
' Dual hydraulic pUmps to maximize attachment

MONlHLY

. low to

t

l' '""lhl"""

"'A~,'~ OI I o

PAYMLN IS

AS LOW AS

/MONTH*

performance

• Comfortable and open gperator ,tation
• Etgonomically desiane&lt;f grab handles allow the operator
to 1et an and off th• tractor •.tsily
.

3 YEAR/1000
l '-' "'ll

HOUR

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Ex3200 COMPACT TRACTOR '
• 32 HP' 3~cylinder direct
futl injection die:r.el engine

.,

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selectable -4WO

• FuUy hydraulic power steering

$219

AS

~OW AS

~MONTH*

Attechm1nts sold ttptrllely.

• Curvtd boom loader wieh txcetlent
visibility and modern des.isn
'

'

100~ SERVICE AND SUPPORT. EXPECT IT WHEN YOU

YOUR CUB CADET0 VANMAR0 INDEP,END.ENT DEALER.

ALLPOWER EQUIPMENT
FAMILY 0/\NED SINCE 1996
.8880 UNITED LANf • ONE MILE WEST OF ATHENS ON RT. 50/32
1830 OLD LOGAN RD SE .• RT. 33 JUST SOUTH OF LANCASTER
ATHENS. OH 45701 • &lt;740&gt; 593·3279
LANCASTER, OH 43130 • &lt;740) 653 -2827
STORE HOURS MONDAY-FRIDAY 9:00-6:00, SATURDAY 9:00-5:00

.

'•

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~,,

A,; ,";!\\' 1"; '00'1, '"\"·~ ~~ Ll(,l. '"'$ 'A~~ (lf'J ~~'\'

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1 '8~'1; -~~~.¥'~ "l'h I •t=HI li 4 '&lt;'11 ~.,-o ~ 1; ""'""' '' "'',Y' '!"''..:l -'-1'01) Pll'.,. .• , "' 0• I!) ~ ',. '' ' •

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',..,, .._, • n •T"'':: b~&gt;'O&lt;'O&gt;'·, .;,_Up'·,..~, t'o·ono (•t"''OI ~1...0 "" ~'"0"'' r,,. ,..,~ ::' ~~ X.O ' '"' ,,_..,, .., t '"' • ·'' I I 'io-0~·,•• '""' '•• I •l •o'o ="1'~ 1 l' ,. '1 IJO '\#'R (~~( .,W, ....,.""'., 1-•'ot' " '' ',ot•(f'll .. · ~ "'J :WIH~· m'lil "1'-lii"IO ~ J.tcw ~ H, .... "'t'~ll:&gt; -.J~ .,.,., Ill ' ""''',.;

' I ' '1'''l• 1''0' I "'H •o! tl'" t

OHIO'

$209
.
/MONTH*
AUechments sold

• larst -flywheel for smoother,
mort sustained horstpower

• Be sure, the b~mil and action are
cleat of olistructlona.
• Never Climb • fence or ttae, ciOa • r(
log or 1 lltrum, ot jump a ditch
•. . w~t~ta~gun.
• Nem lhoot 1 bullet It a fl-'- hard
· llll'flce or Wiler.
·' '
• N - UH alcohOliC beverages or
drugs whan hartllling a fjrearm.

'..Al'•

• C~rved boom loader with &amp;)(cellent
visibility and modern detign

According to the Ten
Commandments of Firearm
Safety. published by the
Ohio Department of Natural
Resources, Division of
W1ldlife. "Be sure of your
target and beyond . Safe
hunters never take aim at a
sound . movement or flash of
color. A safe shot is taken at
a positively Identified target
against a clear, safe
background ."

Take time to prep11re for your hunting e~eperlen~e this season. Be safe.

~~~I',,;.

AS LOW .AS

• Fully hydr-sulic power stttnn&amp;

AsignifiCant number of fatal
hunting InCidents result from

Tfpa fot.,.
,_,J.NitMdUIJfl

lOWU

• Hydrostatic transminion wi1h selectable 4WD

(

tl

Ex2900 COMPACT TRACTOR

According to the
International Hunter
Education Assocration, in
2005 there were 30 huntiryg;
related injuries from firearms
in Ohio. Of those, two
Involved fatal~ies . Duri)lg the
same period in West
VIrginia, there were 11
incidents with two fatalities.
The fatalities took place
because hunters failed to
identify their targets.

I:' ~.:t ·T'"• ~,.,, O•r1··1 (J' •·~ '3 "'"' ' " '"-~~•J ,. "'
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fro• r.,.. ~., ,,.d ., t!lt II)!&lt;M~I, l l[O()qQ IJ:il :o•elilllf"' :Yil~t "''"''""'""": U'·"'•'·•l·l• ol"l· ·yo, l''··"~''' ''

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!I'll ~ ~- :It' l l

·

7. Ravenswood (349): Tom Moss 44-.41--85, Joel MiUer 43-38--81 , TOJTY Wolfe
45-4C&gt;-e5, Jacob Lavender 53-45-98, Garrett Qarke 51~100.
8. Galtla Academy {3~1): Kamal Dayal 46-39-85, Jordal1 COrnwell 51-43-D4.

""''"n••··· c~~(~4f' ~·-~, ~~·oc. r.,...,n~· b'lX ,. ~

,.----·
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•~ • • ' ' .ll,~- o •

�Page B~ • The Daily Sentinel

Monday, September 29,

www.mydailysentinel.com

Monday, September 29, 2008.

2008

www.mydailysentinel.com

1 playoff spot left, baseball season goes extras
BY BEN WALKER
ASSOCIATED PRESS

AP photo

.;hmm te J ohnson leads Carl Edwards 1n the Camptng World
RV 400 NASCAR S pnnt Cup Series a uto race at Kansas
S peedway on Sunday 1n Kansas C1ty, Kan. Johnson won
the race and took over the potnts lead tn the Chas e for the
champions ht p
·

Johnson holds ofT
Edwards for victory
BY MIKE HARRIS
ASSOCIATED PRESS

KA NSAS C ITY, Kan.
J11nmi e J ohn so n ba-re ly
held o ff a strong challenge
from Carl Ed wards on
Sund ay
at
Kansas
Speedw ay, winnin g th e
race and vaulting into first
place in the Chase for th e
Sprint Cup championship
Edwards, who overcame
a poor startin g position and.
two pit lane inc1dents, to
catc h and pass Johnso n for
the lead , lost the top spot to
John son on a pit stop w1th
4 7' laps to go. Edw ard s
finall y caught him agam on
the last lap , shooting past
John son on the low SJde of
the banked I .S-mile oval m
turn three - but just a ltttle
·
too fa st.
Edwards slid up the track
and bounced off the wall as
Johnson drove back past
and on to his ftfth victory
of
the
se aso n ,
with
Edwards holdin g on for
second .
'That was cool ," Johnson
said moments after crossing
the
ftm sh
lme.
"Where'd he come from ?
"Those last two laps he
figured out something and
got a bunch of grip . I
thought he was under control and all of a sudden he
was there . Great race, I saw
the slide jump coming ,
dodged it and got a win "
Edwards w as grinning '
after the race .
"I was ju st wo ndenng
how far I cleared him by,"
he sa1d . " I planned on hitting the 'wall , but I didn 't
plan on the wall slowing
me down that much.
" In video. games, you can
JUSt run mto the wall and
run it wide open ," he
added . "That 's what I did ,
but it didn ' t qutte work out
the sam e as the video
game . I just reall y, really
wanted to win thi s race . .. .
But Jimmie's a smart racer.
I've done that to guy s, too.
When they slide jump you ,
you just lift , go right back
by them and watch them . I
didn ' t kn ow wh ut was
going to happen and just
had to give it a try."
G re g Biftle , who came
into the third race of the
I O-r ace Chase for the
championship with two
straight victones , foll owed
the le aders acro ss the fini sh
line to stay close m th e
points.
Johnson, who has three
wins and five top-five fin ishes in his last fi ve start s,
now lead s Edwards by 10
points, with Biffle 35
points behind and seve n

races to go.
It was a very long race
for Edward s , who started
34th tn the 4 3-ca r fi e ld
aft er a po or qu alify ing
effo rt on Friday.
On his ftr st pit sto p .
Bri an Vi cke rs veered into
hiS pit as Edw ard s was
coming out o f his and the
two made co ntact. · On
Edw ard' s ne xt pit stop , he
got out clea nl y but was htt
in th e side by Dave Bl aney,
who had ri cocheted off Jeff
Burton .
T hat second co lli s io n
forced Edward s to make
ano ther stop to have sheet
metal pulled aw ay from the
tire.
Mt sso urian
Edward s,
wh o conside rs th1 s ht s
home track , was rele ntless
as he drov e through the
f1eld and took h1 s ftrst lead
o f the day on lap 176 of
267 .
But Johnson, who started
from the pole and had the
stron gest car all day, was
just as tough and twi ce
regained the lead w tth
quick p!l stops.
" What a great race ," satd
Chad Knau s, John son 's
crew chief. " Jimmie's just
done a great job . I love rac ing with Carl Edw ards and
(c rew chief) Bob Osborne .
They 're gentle man racers
and the; wanted it really
badly."
Asked about be in g m the
po ints lead , Kn aus said ,
" Doesn ' t mean anythm g
ri ght now All we ha ve to
do is win races and fmi sh
in the top five , and the re st
o t it wtll take care of
itself."
Jeff Gordon , battling an
un spec tft ed illness since
Fnday, fin1sh ed fourth , fol lowed by Matt Kenseth ,
Kev in Harv1 ck , who got hi s
ninth straight top- 10, and
Burton , all among the 12man C hase fi e ld .
The postseason night marc continued for reg ular
season points leader Kyle
Busch , who had an early
en g ine problem and struggled to a 28th-place fini sh .
Joe Gibbs Racing team mate Tony Ste wart, a twotime Cup champion , had an
even worse day, fim shm g
40th after collidmg with
Brian Vickers and damaging hi s front splitter as he
drove through the infie ld
grass.
'
. Heading mto nex t week 's
race at Tall adega, Gibbs
teammates Denny Hamlin ,
who fim shed lith Sunday,
Stewart and Busc h are
IOth , II th and 12th in the
points and all but eliminated from title contention.

Already standmg tall , CC
Sabathta climbed on top of
the Brewers dugout and
sprayed fans with bubbly.
A vintage scene. indeed.
For the first ttme since
1982. when it was a member
of the American League and
well before wild cards eve n
existed, Milwaukee is going
to the playoffs .
" It's our ttme." Sabathia
satd after beating the Cubs
3- 1 Sunday.
No suc h lu ck for the New
York Mets. They lost on the
field - and the out-ol-town
sco reboard - and agam
were eli minated by Flori da
on the fi nal day. Makmg it
worse, a farewe ll -to -Shea
Stadiu m followed.
" We fa iled. W~ fa iled as a
tea m ," star Dav id Wrig ht
satd after a 4-2 loss.
"There 's no pointmg fmgers.
There's no excuses. We as a
unit d idn 't get the job done ."
No te llmg ye t about the
Tw in s
and
Minnesota
C hicago White ,Sox. They
still have n't sorted out their
AL Ce ntral scramble.
So whil e worke rs at
Wrigley Field and Trop ica na
Field put up the postseason
bunting, thi s year is.go mg to
ex tra innmgs.
One slot left , guys .
" It's kind of an ongoing
JOke that it see ms like
nobody wanted to win the
Central , so this is kind of
probably the way tt should
go down , go mg into a game
tomorrow when the season 's
supposed to be over," Twms

champs shirts on the flight
back home, it reminded the
Rays
The Whue Sox hoping to
join the Rays this week.
They g:n e themselves a
chance with 5- 1 win over
Clevel.111d whi le Mmnesota
was beating Kansas Cny 6-

a

closer Joe Nathan said.
O n Monday afternoon.
Detrott visits Chtcago in a
makeup from a September
rainout. II ' the White Sox
win, th e would · hoq the
Twins tn a · one-game
tiebreaker Tuesday for the
AL Central tule.
Then on Wednesday. the
playoffs beg in with th ree
ga mes· Manny Ramtrez, Joe
Torre and the Los A n ge l e~
Dodgers take on the Ch1cago
Cubs. the wtl d-card Brewers
travel to Phtl adelphta and
th e Worl d Senes champion
Boston Red Sox play the
I 00-win
Los
Ange les
'Angels.
On Thursday, the Tampa
Bay Rays ma ke ihe tr postseason debu.t whe n they host,
th e Wh tte Sox or Tw in s.
Before the Rays beat
Detroit 8-7 in II tn nmgs
S und ay,
ma nager
Joe
Maddon held a bnef team
meeting
" Joe j ust sa id to keep
everyt hin g norma l - ltk e
any other game. There's no
reaso n to sta rt showin g up
fi ve hours before the game
now. It 's another game and
we need to prepare like it 's
anoth er ga me," p itcher
James Shields sa id
lnstde their clubhouse at
Comerica Park , th ere also
was a note on a dry e rase
board : Wear your AL E.tst

(\ .

" You play 16 1 games and
tod&lt;ly ts supposed to be the
last day of the year." Mark
Buehrle · sitid after pnchmg
the Whue Sox to vtctory.
"E,crybody is gomg home.
a lot of people are gmng to
the playoffs and here we got
to play another game that
matters for us and not for the
other team ..
The Brewers and Mets
went into the fi nal day even
at 89-72. f,K ing the possibi ltty of a wild-card tiebreaker
at Shea
Instead. in a mo ment's
nottce. the who le playoff
ptcture took shape.
Rtght alter the scoreboard
at Mt ller Park showed th e
Mets had fallen behmd the bull pe n aga in was th e
cu lpn t ,
wuh
Scott
Schoeneweis and Luts Ayala
gtv mg up back- to-back
home run s in the e tg hth
mnin g. the Brewers struck.
W ith Mtlwaukee fa ns stJll
buzz ing abo ut the b tg do mgs
in New York. Ryan Braun hit
a ttebreakmg homer m the
e igh th mning. Sabatht a th en
closed it out , pttchmg a to urhttter in hiS thi1d straight
sta rt on three days' test.
" He's th e best pitcher m
baseball ." Bra un said "The
best pt tcher o n the pi anet.
He's our MVP this year. No

'{[rthune - Sentinel - l\egister

chance for us to do this with,
.
oul htm."
After the tr fans watched
the Mets' loss on the gtant
v1deo board in center field,
the Brewers ce lebrated.
Qune an end for a team that
li red manager Ned Yost with
two weeks left , promoted
thi rd-base · coach
Dale
Sveum to run the club and
overcame a 3- 11 September
start.
" I give all the credit tQ
Ned .'' s,eum satd "H e'~
one of my good fnends.J ust
some unfortunate mcident s:
I love Ned fro m the bottom
-of my heart and I w1sh he
was here n ght now."
The Mets and their fans
could onl Y, wonder what
:
we nt wrong.
A year ago , they blew a
seven-game d ivision lead
with (7 ga mes left. Tht s
year. they wasted a 3 112game edge w1th f 7 re main ~

CLASSIFIED

E-mail
classifted@ mydailyt rtbune.com

'W

Visions of crystal footballs
dance through the head ~ of
Al abama fa ns . Superman
gets stuffed m the Swamp.
Northwestern and Kentucky
are unbeaten. Wisconsin and
Georgia are not.
The first season-alte ring
college football weekend is
in the books. Ttme to assess
the damage:
The Big Story
As painful as the past few
day s ha ve been for those who
root for Southern California,
Georgta, Florida and a bunch
of other te ams with h1gh
aspirations for thi s season,
it's important to remember
that all is not lost.
If 2007 taught us anything,
it was to expect the unexpected and never write a team off.
Was it over for LSU when
the Tigers lost to Kentucky?
Was it over for Ohto State
when the Buckeyes lost to
Jllinois? '
Was it over for LSU when
the Ttgers lost again, this
time to Arkansas?
No to all the above.
The stunmng events that
started Thursday night when
Southern Califomta lost to
25-pomt underdog Oregon
State
and
culmmated
Saturd ay
ni ght
when
Alabama did everything but
burn the hedges down at
Georgia's Sanford Stadium ,
have come close to renderin g
the preseason rankings moot.
And wh1l e trying to project
can be the most foolish of
exercises, you know the folk s
in Tuscaloosa are lqoking at
the Tide's remammg schedule and thinking. At LS U.
Auburn at home. We can do
th1s.
At $4 million per year,
coach Nick Saban ts lookmg ·
like a bargain for the Tide.
The rest of the Southeastern
Conference, really the rest of
the country, has been hav mg
a good laugh at ' B ~ m a 's
expense for years . The bungled coaching searches, the
NCAA violattons, the losses
to-the Louisiana- Monroes of
the world, they've provided
great fodder fo r anyone who

Your Ad,

Florida qu a rterback Ttm Tebow (15) reacts after a fat led
first down attempt on th e tr final possession against
Mississippi late in the fourth quarter of an NCAA college
football game. in Gaines ville, Fla., Saturda y.
wanted to pil e on.
Now it 's pay bac k time and Ti de stars Julto Jones,
Dont'a Hightower and Mark
Ingram are onl y freshmen.
Alabama is No ..2 for now,
behind Oklahoma, but the
Tide can make a great case
for bemg No. I . In th ree
games
away
from
Tuscaloosa, Al abama has
outscored
Clemson ,
Arkansas and Georgia 12454 .
As for the Sooners. we've,
seen this before from them
They are crushing everythmg
in their path , much the way
they dtd last year before losing at Colorado.
"Teams are upset every
Saturday. so we've just got to
play smart football and play
the way we know how to
play,'' said Okl ahoma recetver Manue l Johnson, who
caught three TD passes m the
Soo ners' 35- 10 win over
TCU.
The players kn ow nothmg

is automatic. The coaches
know it. too. Everybody else
got a reminder tht s weekend .

Not-too-good Tebow
Tim Tebow couldn 't ga m 2
feet.
With the· game on the hnc
fo r
Flat ida
again st
Mi sstss ippi , Urba n Meyer
put the ball m the hands of
hts Heismatl Trophy wmner.
just the way the coac h should
have.
And for what see med ltke
the first ttme in ht s college
career, Tebow, a plaver who
has mspi red a cultltke level
of hero worshi p a m o n ~
Gators fan s, fa iled. H ~ couldn't surge for a first dow n late
in the game and Mt ss tss tppi 's
3 1-30 upset of the Gators
was all but co mpl ete.
Te bow apologiud aft er the
loss, whtch will surely make
him even more ad ored in
Ga inesvill e . Wh o doesn' t
love accountability' Still , his
earl y season r.erfonn ance has
left -the posStbtltty of Te bow

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W§J'E 6K 62
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1\nnouncem ents

2000

NOTICE OHI O VALL EY
rec ·
PUBLISHING CO
ommends that you do
bustness wtth people you
know, and NOT to send
money through the matl
unttl you have ~nvesttgat
tng the offenng
Skaggs Appliances
moved
740-379-9034

Aulomott 'Je

MAKl
SOMlONl'S
DAY!

300

The Daily Sentinel
(740) 992-2155
l&amp;e~ist~r

(304) 675-1333

Wanted ........ :.,................ ........ ...... ............ ... 235

Services ..... ..........1... . ....... ....... ...... .... .... . ..... 300
. Appliance Service .. ... .... ....... ...................... 302

, Automotive ,,............. ,,................................. 304
Bulldl ng Materials ......................................, 306
Businesa ..... ............. ....... ....... .. .......... ....... ... 308
Catering .... ....... ............. ... ............ ... ... .... ....... 31 0
Chlld/1: lderly Care ... ................... .. ............... 312
Computers ... ............ ....... .. .......... ....... ... .. .. .. 314
Contractors ...... ........ ....... .......... .. .... .......... 316

Domealics/Janltorlal ...... .. ........................... 318
Electrical ................... ...... .. ...... ..... ...... .......... 320
Financial .. ...... .......... ..................................... 322
Health .. ... .... .... ... .. ......................................... 326
Heating 11 Cooling .. ..................................... 328

Home Improvements 330

Insurance.. .. .............. ..... .................... :.. .. 332
Lawn Servlce .... ....... ....... .............. ..... .......... 334
MuelcJDance/Drama ................... ...... ........... 336
Other Servl cas ...... ,, ....... ,, .... ,,, ..... ..... ....... ,••• 338
Plumbing/Electrical........ ........... ........... .... 340
Proteselonal Servlces ...............................:. 342

Repairs ..... ....... , ,,.... .. ,..... ... ....... :................... 3444
RoofIng.................... ....... .... .... .................346
Security........... ...... .. ...... .......... ... ...... ..... 1..... 348
Tax/Accounting ........ ....... ...... .., ................. 350

Travel/Entertainment .... 1........... . .... .. ... . ...... 352
Finane tal ......... ........ ........ ......... ......... ............400

Financial Services ......................................405
. Insurance .............. ............................ ......... 410
Money to Lend .............................. P• • •••••••• • ••• 415
Education ............... - ..... ............... ..... ...... ..... 500
Business &amp; Trade Schooi ............ ..... ...... .... SDS
· Instruction &amp; Tralnlng ... .................... ...... .... $10
Lessons.................. ............ .. ........... ............ 515
Peraonat ................................. ...... ..... ........... 52D
Animals ................................ ...................... 600
Animal Supplies .... ..................................... 605
Livestock ................................ .......... ..... ......615
Peta..... ...... ...... ...... ........ ........ ... .. ,,................. 620
Want to buy ....................... :..... ..................&amp;25
Agrlculture ..................... ............. ...... ........... 700
Farm Equipment .........................................705
Garden &amp; PrOduce ....................................710
Hay, Feed, Seed, Grain ............................... 715
Hunting 11 Land ........................................... 720
Want ta buy ............................ ........... ........... 725

: MerchandiH ... ,,,,.., .......... ............................ 900

i

Antiques ......................... ......... .................. ... 905
\ Appliance ........................ ............ ..., .... ......... 91 0
: Auctions ... ...... ............................................. 915
• Bargain Baaement .......... ....................... ..... 920
• Collocllbleo ............ ........ .............................. 925
~ Computers .!..................... ...... ..................... 930
&gt; Equipment/Supplies........... ....... .. ................935
! Flea Marketo ................................ ...... ......... 940
} Fuel 011 Coat/Wood/Gas ............. ..... ......... 945
i Furniture ............ ,.... ............:.. ...... ............... 950
; Hobby/Hunt &amp; Sport .......:.... ....... ........... ..... 955
; Kld'o Corner ................................................. 960

• Ml•cellaneout .............................................. 965
' Went to buy .................................................. 970
Yard Sele ................................................ ..... 975

03 Stratus AutomatiC 4
cy
$3l00
OBO
256-1652 or 256·1233
2007 Honda VTX I 300!1
1800 mtles black $7800
388·8380
2004 Ntssan Max1mum
3 5 SE all all leather "ex·
cetlent
con
42 000
mtles 1 owner 446·3088
or 446·1675

Wanted to buy Gravely
tractor L-model from late
1960's-early1970's
w1th
mower attachments must
be 1n good shape an d
worKtng
order 740-992,-5052·
leave message

ATV .... ............... ....... .... .... .,, ........... .... 1005
Bicycles ............ .............. ............ . .... ......... 101
Boats/Accessories .............. ..... ....... ..... . 1015
Camper/RVs &amp; Trailers ............................. 1020
Motorcycles .. ........... .......................... ..... . 1025
Other ................................, ........ ................ 1030
Want to buy ............................ .................. 1035
Automotive .... .................... ............ ... .. .... 2000
Auto RentaVLease .......... ... ........... ........ 2005
Autos ........... ....... ........................... ............. 20 1
ClassiciAntiques .. .... ... .. .... . .. .... ............ 20 15
Commercial/Industrial .......... ................ 2020
Parts &amp; Accessorles ...... ......... ................... 2025
Sports Utility ......................................... 2030
Trucks ... ........................ ..... ........ ,............ 2035
Utility Trailers .............. .............. ................ 2040
Vans ...... .... . ........... ..... .... .................... 2045
Want lo buy .. ............................... ............ .. 2050
Real Estate Sales ....... ........... .................. 3000
Cemetery Plots ................ .................. .. 3005
Commercial ............. .,......................... .. .... .. 301
Condominiums ........................................ 301 5
For Sale by Owner..... ....... ................... .. 3020
Houses for Sale ......... ................................ 3025
Land (Acreage) ........ - ............................ 3030
Lots ........................................:...................3035
Want ta buy .. .......................................... 3040
Real Estate Rentals ................................... 3500
Apartments/Townhouses ,,,,,,,, ................ 3505
Commerclal ............................. .... ... ............ 3510
Condomlnlums .................. .................. .. .... ~515
Houses for Rent ....................................... 3520
Land (Acreage),........ .... · ... .. ...... .... ...... 3525
Storage ......... .............. ....... .... ......... ............ 3535
Want to Rent ............. ...... ........ .... ............ 3540
Manufactured Housing ............ .... ........ ... 4000
Lots ....................................... ................. 4005
Mover s ... ........................ ......... ................. 4010
Rentals ....................... ., .......................... .... 4015
Sales ...• 1. ..... .............. .. ......................... . ..... 4020
Supplies ................................... .... .......... 4025
Want to Buy .......................... ,.. ....... .......... 4030
Resort Property ... ............ .. .................. ..... 5000
Resort Property for sale ........................... 5025
Resort Property for rent ..... ..... .............. ... 5050
Employment.. ..... ...................................... .. 5000
Accounting/Financial. ........... ................... 5002
Administrative/Professional ....... .. .......... 6004
Cash lor/Clerk ............................................. 5006
Child/Elderly Care .... ....... .:.. ...... .. ........ 5008
Cieri cal ..... .................. ... ............................. 50 I 0
Constr uction ....... ..... ................ ........ ... ...... 601 2
Drivers &amp; Del ivery ..... ................. ...... .... 6014
Education ................................ .................. 50 16
Electrical Plumbing ................................. 6018
Employment Agencles .......... ......... ...... ..... 8020
Entertainment ...... ...................................... 502 2
Food Services................................ ..... .. .... 6024
Government &amp; Federal Joba ... ........ -.. ... .... 602 6
Help anted- General ............................... 6028
Law Enforcement ...... ....................... ......... 6030
Maintenance/Domestic ..................... ........ 6032
ManagemenVSupervlsory ....................... 6034

o

o

o

Mechanlca ..................................................~36
Madlcal. ..................................... ..... ......... ... 6038
Musical .... ...... ............................... ......... ... 6040 ,
Part· Time-Temporaries .................... ,..... ... 604 2
Restaurants ......... ................... .. ............. .. 6044
Sales ............ ............................................... 5048
Tec hnical Tradea ....................................... 5050
Te&gt;rtlloo/Factory ........ .............. ......... .... ..... 5052

97 Chrysler LHS automatte atr S1800 060
256-6002 or 256- 1233

'1 -'~-4

Serv tces

CNA'S &amp; RESIDENT AS·
SISTANTS Interviews
Are Now Betng Con·
ducted For CNA &amp; Ae st·
dent Asststant Pos1t1ons
ll You Are A Cartng , En
thustastt c
Dependable
Person, Then We Wan t
You To 'Jotn Our Team
COme On Ov er &amp; Check
Us Ot.J tl You 'll Be Glad
You
Dtd'
Compe t1t1ve
CNA Wages. Pa1d Vacattons, Pa td Meals Many
Other Beneltts Ravensw0od Care Center 1 I 13
Wasl1tngton St Ruvens
wood. WV
Refere nces
d E0 E
ReqUire

Personals ............................... .................... 230

0 Oo

Wanted

(740) 446-2342

floint flleasant

04 Honda Ctvtc LX 5
speed, 40R 34 MPG,
Ex
Con,.
$10,200
304-576·3353

has
Call

Heahll

Happy Ads ....................... ..... ...... .......... ........ 210
Last &amp; Found ................. ........................... 215
.. Memory/Thank Yau .. .................... .... ......., ... 220
Notices ............. ...... .. .............................. ..... 225

t

be prepa id'

@allipohs 1ll:lail!' OX:rrbun~

Announcements .....,.................................... 200
Blrthday/Annlversary ............. ... .................. 205

:
'
·;

Thursd a y fo r S und a y s Paper

must

Auto•

CLASSIFIED INDEX
oo Recreational Vehicles ................. ... ...... ... .. 1000

'·
;
•
:
,

Ja

ktt n ca rt y t e @com ~ ast.net

Legals ....... ........ ...... ................ .......... , ........... 1

~

Now you can have borders and graphics
~
added to your classified ads
~
,.,.,
Borders $3.00/ per ad .
t!
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In Next D ay's Paper
' Publi catio n
Sunday In ~Column : 9 :00a .m . Sunda y Di s pla y : 1 :0 0 p .m .

200

We
will
no
nowlngly accept an
vertlsement
I
lolallon of the law.

Heisman-worthy

QUALITY INDOW SYSTEMS
is Celebrating
Years In
1S Business

l\egtster

KIT &amp; CARLYLE

Horses ...................................................... ... 610

The Daily Sentinel

Sentinel

« POLICIES«

wmning a second consecuti ve Heisman Trophy unhkely
Tebow is 30th in passer rat,
in g m the nation and has run
for only 125 yards and 2 6
per carry There 's lot of time
left. but he's already way
behind Oklahoma's Sam
Bradford and Mt ssoun 's
Chase Dan ie l in voters'
mmds.

Donald Brown of newly
No. 24-ranked Conne cti~ut
led the Huskies to a 26-2 1
victory againsl Loui sville
with 190 yards rushing on
Friday ,night. Brown leads
the natton at 181 yards per
game.

Websttes.
www mydallytribune com
www mydatlysenttnel.com
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GET YOUR CLASSIFIED LINE AD NOTICED

Offtee 11o~~

M mus the 1981 spill sea:
so n, the Mets beca me the
fi rst clu b in big league history to hold 3 112-game dt visto n leads in consecutiv e
Septembers and fat! to make
the postseason both times~
the El ias Sports Bureau said.
Hat dl y a way to send out
thetr old ballpark.
" It wo uld have bee n be tte~
if we would have won today,
but I don 't thin k it spoils the
ce lebration ." ge neral manage r O mar Minay a said ,
" Wh at's goin g on out there,
it 's abo ut the history of tht s
buildmg. the history of the
players, th e history of tht s
organ izatton."

Unlikely unbeatens

AP photo

Galli a
County,
OH

992-2156 (304) 675-1333
Call Today••• (740) 446-2342 (7Or40)
Fax To (740) 992-2157
Or Fax To (304) 675-5234

mg.

There are 17 unbeaten
teams in major college foot:
ball after the first month of
the season. Some we know
are
good:
Oklahoma,
Alabama, BY U,, LSU , for
example. Others sttll have a
lot to prove.
Northwestern (5-0)
Tough de fen se and a schedule that doesn' t include
Wisconsin and Penn State is
a good co mbination for
Wtldcats.
Ball State (5-0) - The
Cardinals wtll use Dante
Love 's inJury as mspiration,
and Nate DavJS is the latest
star quatte rback in the MidAmeri can Conference , ' but
not having their talented
recetver wtll catch up to
them.
Okluhoma State (4-0) Cowboys' offense is hi ghpowered . The defense has
much to prove against those
other potent Big 12 defenses.
Tulsa (4-0) - You probably don 't kn ow this, but the
natt on's top- rated quarterbac k plays for the Golden
Hurncane. David John son is
a semor and fi rst-year starter
who is compl eting 72 percent
ot hts passes. He could help
make Tul sa Conference
USA's ft rst BCS buster.
Kentucky (4-0) - Reality
comes to the Commonwea lth
when the Wildcats VISit
Alabama on Saturday. The
rest of the SEC is probably
not worried about 'Kentucky.

'{[rthune

Meigs County, OH

We Cove
Meigs, Gallla,
And Mason
Counties Like
NoOne
Else Can!

In One Week With Us·
REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS
YOUR AD NOW NLI

To Place ·

'Barna breaks out in a season-altering weekend.
BY RALPH RUSSO
ASSOCI ATED PR ESS

The Dail y Sentinel • Page 85

~

www comtcs..co m

~=======

Business &amp; Trade
School
Gallipolis Career
College
(Care ers Close To Home)
Call Toda y1 740·446·4367
t 800 214 0452

gellrpolrsL&lt;lrBEHcot~gat~Uu

Awedr1ed Member Acmdrt
tng Councrlior Independent
C"ll"""~ ~""&lt;-·hoots 12146
"~,"~""";x;

Home Improvements
Uveotodc
Small Home Repatr and ;;;;;;=~~~~--­
brush cu11tng tree Est 20 8 yea r old mare 11orse
yrs Exp (7401446·3582
$250 Call740 256 1498

© 2008 by NEA, Inc.

Pomeroy Police Dept will
be aucllomng ol1 off a
2000 Jeep Grand Chero·
kce on Oc t
11,08@
'10 oo,.I,M •t ~tPY VII-'

lage Hall Stamng bid w1tl
be S 1500 Con1act Chml
Mark Pro lftt! fo r details

"""""""""""""""""""
""'""'""'""'""'""'""'
U~lity
Wont Buy
Wont To
~::?'~:;;;;;;.;;;;~';;;;;::'
To

Spom

Buy

Want ed • to Buy· Paw Absolute Top Dollar · st t·
Paws
Black
Walnuts, verlgold
totns
any
Call740·596·6060
I OK/14K/ t8K gold 18W·
elry, dental gold
pre
1935
US
cur rency
prool/mtnt
sets.
dta
monds MTS Cmn Shop
151 2nd Avenue, Galli·
--=·An~~.;qu;;;l;;il=~ polls 446-2842
~
;;;;;;;;,;;;;;,;;;;;;,;;;;,,.,,
Antique Flea Market. PL
Yard Sole
Pleasant
WV at the ~;;;;;;;~~="":""':"'
West Vtrgmta State Farm Huge 8 famtlv yard sa le
M
0 1 b
4 h •
'
useu m
coer t co Oct 2·5 9am-dark 1367
51h !lours 9-4. ~dvertts College Rd . Syracuse
tng Stoneware, M1lk Bol- Jewelry furntture. too ls
tie s
Collec11bles. Free
anttques, clothes, etc
admt sston &amp; appra tsals
De~er Space A\lallable, Aatn or sh1ne carporl
Contact
Charlie
Perry, sale L1bby Fisher 809
(740)992 ·5088.
perry· Johns
Ad
Ra ctne
cola@suddenhnk net
10·2&amp;3 8 OOa m .?

'1999 ' Jeep
Grande
Chero Kee Lorado. gotd
outs 1de w/gray tnm , 4 O,
ale, crwse tt lt EC t60K,
$4,800. no Sunday calls
please (740)992 7599

Trucks

=~':::'~~~~
2000 Cl1e\ly SIO ext
cab 4 cyl. 5 speed CD.
A:C ,
$4500
740 _645 _6434
1988
runs

E-350 Box Truck
but needs work

~3~9;
-0;;;88~5""'""'""'""'""'

Utility Trailers

;;;;;;...;~~....~~
Ut•li ty
Tratler
400.000
~
l ":;;
m:;,7;;4:;;
0·;;;
44;;;1~
·0;:;9;;;88""'""""

=

Want To Buy
Screws. natls elect sup
plies. tools &amp; more Oct Want to buy Junk Cars,
Waterproofmg
ANTIQUES· 3·4 9arn-3pm 45555 SR cc,a~II~7;::40~·3~B~
8·~08~8~4~=
Uncondtttonal ltfellme
AKC mtntalure Schnau· GIBBS
Also. re store furmture lo·
~
guarantee Local reter·
zers
now
avatlable cated on Tornado Ad off :"1=
24::,=
Ra:c:~n:
• ·=
O=
h
Real Estate
3000
ences 1urntshed Estab ·
whtle
or
salt/pepper Rt
33
Ractne
Recreattona l
Sales
1000
llshed '1 975 Call 24 Hrs
(7 40)992· 1328
{Park&amp;Rtde)
ex1t
Veh1c les
740 446 0870 Rogers
~=-~~-':"""~ 740-949·2246
Basement Waterptooftng
Reg•stered
Mm1
CKC
Commercial
Fuel/ Oil/ Coal/
Dachshunds
2
long8oah Acceuories
Other Services
For
sale
or
I(O!asb
llatred temales $350 and
Wood/ Goo
2311
SeaRay ot11ce/warehous e/sto raqe
Pet
CremaiiOn s
Call 4
shorthatre d
maIes -- - = = - ' = = =. 1989
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�Page B~ • The Daily Sentinel

Monday, September 29,

www.mydailysentinel.com

Monday, September 29, 2008.

2008

www.mydailysentinel.com

1 playoff spot left, baseball season goes extras
BY BEN WALKER
ASSOCIATED PRESS

AP photo

.;hmm te J ohnson leads Carl Edwards 1n the Camptng World
RV 400 NASCAR S pnnt Cup Series a uto race at Kansas
S peedway on Sunday 1n Kansas C1ty, Kan. Johnson won
the race and took over the potnts lead tn the Chas e for the
champions ht p
·

Johnson holds ofT
Edwards for victory
BY MIKE HARRIS
ASSOCIATED PRESS

KA NSAS C ITY, Kan.
J11nmi e J ohn so n ba-re ly
held o ff a strong challenge
from Carl Ed wards on
Sund ay
at
Kansas
Speedw ay, winnin g th e
race and vaulting into first
place in the Chase for th e
Sprint Cup championship
Edwards, who overcame
a poor startin g position and.
two pit lane inc1dents, to
catc h and pass Johnso n for
the lead , lost the top spot to
John son on a pit stop w1th
4 7' laps to go. Edw ard s
finall y caught him agam on
the last lap , shooting past
John son on the low SJde of
the banked I .S-mile oval m
turn three - but just a ltttle
·
too fa st.
Edwards slid up the track
and bounced off the wall as
Johnson drove back past
and on to his ftfth victory
of
the
se aso n ,
with
Edwards holdin g on for
second .
'That was cool ," Johnson
said moments after crossing
the
ftm sh
lme.
"Where'd he come from ?
"Those last two laps he
figured out something and
got a bunch of grip . I
thought he was under control and all of a sudden he
was there . Great race, I saw
the slide jump coming ,
dodged it and got a win "
Edwards w as grinning '
after the race .
"I was ju st wo ndenng
how far I cleared him by,"
he sa1d . " I planned on hitting the 'wall , but I didn 't
plan on the wall slowing
me down that much.
" In video. games, you can
JUSt run mto the wall and
run it wide open ," he
added . "That 's what I did ,
but it didn ' t qutte work out
the sam e as the video
game . I just reall y, really
wanted to win thi s race . .. .
But Jimmie's a smart racer.
I've done that to guy s, too.
When they slide jump you ,
you just lift , go right back
by them and watch them . I
didn ' t kn ow wh ut was
going to happen and just
had to give it a try."
G re g Biftle , who came
into the third race of the
I O-r ace Chase for the
championship with two
straight victones , foll owed
the le aders acro ss the fini sh
line to stay close m th e
points.
Johnson, who has three
wins and five top-five fin ishes in his last fi ve start s,
now lead s Edwards by 10
points, with Biffle 35
points behind and seve n

races to go.
It was a very long race
for Edward s , who started
34th tn the 4 3-ca r fi e ld
aft er a po or qu alify ing
effo rt on Friday.
On his ftr st pit sto p .
Bri an Vi cke rs veered into
hiS pit as Edw ard s was
coming out o f his and the
two made co ntact. · On
Edw ard' s ne xt pit stop , he
got out clea nl y but was htt
in th e side by Dave Bl aney,
who had ri cocheted off Jeff
Burton .
T hat second co lli s io n
forced Edward s to make
ano ther stop to have sheet
metal pulled aw ay from the
tire.
Mt sso urian
Edward s,
wh o conside rs th1 s ht s
home track , was rele ntless
as he drov e through the
f1eld and took h1 s ftrst lead
o f the day on lap 176 of
267 .
But Johnson, who started
from the pole and had the
stron gest car all day, was
just as tough and twi ce
regained the lead w tth
quick p!l stops.
" What a great race ," satd
Chad Knau s, John son 's
crew chief. " Jimmie's just
done a great job . I love rac ing with Carl Edw ards and
(c rew chief) Bob Osborne .
They 're gentle man racers
and the; wanted it really
badly."
Asked about be in g m the
po ints lead , Kn aus said ,
" Doesn ' t mean anythm g
ri ght now All we ha ve to
do is win races and fmi sh
in the top five , and the re st
o t it wtll take care of
itself."
Jeff Gordon , battling an
un spec tft ed illness since
Fnday, fin1sh ed fourth , fol lowed by Matt Kenseth ,
Kev in Harv1 ck , who got hi s
ninth straight top- 10, and
Burton , all among the 12man C hase fi e ld .
The postseason night marc continued for reg ular
season points leader Kyle
Busch , who had an early
en g ine problem and struggled to a 28th-place fini sh .
Joe Gibbs Racing team mate Tony Ste wart, a twotime Cup champion , had an
even worse day, fim shm g
40th after collidmg with
Brian Vickers and damaging hi s front splitter as he
drove through the infie ld
grass.
'
. Heading mto nex t week 's
race at Tall adega, Gibbs
teammates Denny Hamlin ,
who fim shed lith Sunday,
Stewart and Busc h are
IOth , II th and 12th in the
points and all but eliminated from title contention.

Already standmg tall , CC
Sabathta climbed on top of
the Brewers dugout and
sprayed fans with bubbly.
A vintage scene. indeed.
For the first ttme since
1982. when it was a member
of the American League and
well before wild cards eve n
existed, Milwaukee is going
to the playoffs .
" It's our ttme." Sabathia
satd after beating the Cubs
3- 1 Sunday.
No suc h lu ck for the New
York Mets. They lost on the
field - and the out-ol-town
sco reboard - and agam
were eli minated by Flori da
on the fi nal day. Makmg it
worse, a farewe ll -to -Shea
Stadiu m followed.
" We fa iled. W~ fa iled as a
tea m ," star Dav id Wrig ht
satd after a 4-2 loss.
"There 's no pointmg fmgers.
There's no excuses. We as a
unit d idn 't get the job done ."
No te llmg ye t about the
Tw in s
and
Minnesota
C hicago White ,Sox. They
still have n't sorted out their
AL Ce ntral scramble.
So whil e worke rs at
Wrigley Field and Trop ica na
Field put up the postseason
bunting, thi s year is.go mg to
ex tra innmgs.
One slot left , guys .
" It's kind of an ongoing
JOke that it see ms like
nobody wanted to win the
Central , so this is kind of
probably the way tt should
go down , go mg into a game
tomorrow when the season 's
supposed to be over," Twms

champs shirts on the flight
back home, it reminded the
Rays
The Whue Sox hoping to
join the Rays this week.
They g:n e themselves a
chance with 5- 1 win over
Clevel.111d whi le Mmnesota
was beating Kansas Cny 6-

a

closer Joe Nathan said.
O n Monday afternoon.
Detrott visits Chtcago in a
makeup from a September
rainout. II ' the White Sox
win, th e would · hoq the
Twins tn a · one-game
tiebreaker Tuesday for the
AL Central tule.
Then on Wednesday. the
playoffs beg in with th ree
ga mes· Manny Ramtrez, Joe
Torre and the Los A n ge l e~
Dodgers take on the Ch1cago
Cubs. the wtl d-card Brewers
travel to Phtl adelphta and
th e Worl d Senes champion
Boston Red Sox play the
I 00-win
Los
Ange les
'Angels.
On Thursday, the Tampa
Bay Rays ma ke ihe tr postseason debu.t whe n they host,
th e Wh tte Sox or Tw in s.
Before the Rays beat
Detroit 8-7 in II tn nmgs
S und ay,
ma nager
Joe
Maddon held a bnef team
meeting
" Joe j ust sa id to keep
everyt hin g norma l - ltk e
any other game. There's no
reaso n to sta rt showin g up
fi ve hours before the game
now. It 's another game and
we need to prepare like it 's
anoth er ga me," p itcher
James Shields sa id
lnstde their clubhouse at
Comerica Park , th ere also
was a note on a dry e rase
board : Wear your AL E.tst

(\ .

" You play 16 1 games and
tod&lt;ly ts supposed to be the
last day of the year." Mark
Buehrle · sitid after pnchmg
the Whue Sox to vtctory.
"E,crybody is gomg home.
a lot of people are gmng to
the playoffs and here we got
to play another game that
matters for us and not for the
other team ..
The Brewers and Mets
went into the fi nal day even
at 89-72. f,K ing the possibi ltty of a wild-card tiebreaker
at Shea
Instead. in a mo ment's
nottce. the who le playoff
ptcture took shape.
Rtght alter the scoreboard
at Mt ller Park showed th e
Mets had fallen behmd the bull pe n aga in was th e
cu lpn t ,
wuh
Scott
Schoeneweis and Luts Ayala
gtv mg up back- to-back
home run s in the e tg hth
mnin g. the Brewers struck.
W ith Mtlwaukee fa ns stJll
buzz ing abo ut the b tg do mgs
in New York. Ryan Braun hit
a ttebreakmg homer m the
e igh th mning. Sabatht a th en
closed it out , pttchmg a to urhttter in hiS thi1d straight
sta rt on three days' test.
" He's th e best pitcher m
baseball ." Bra un said "The
best pt tcher o n the pi anet.
He's our MVP this year. No

'{[rthune - Sentinel - l\egister

chance for us to do this with,
.
oul htm."
After the tr fans watched
the Mets' loss on the gtant
v1deo board in center field,
the Brewers ce lebrated.
Qune an end for a team that
li red manager Ned Yost with
two weeks left , promoted
thi rd-base · coach
Dale
Sveum to run the club and
overcame a 3- 11 September
start.
" I give all the credit tQ
Ned .'' s,eum satd "H e'~
one of my good fnends.J ust
some unfortunate mcident s:
I love Ned fro m the bottom
-of my heart and I w1sh he
was here n ght now."
The Mets and their fans
could onl Y, wonder what
:
we nt wrong.
A year ago , they blew a
seven-game d ivision lead
with (7 ga mes left. Tht s
year. they wasted a 3 112game edge w1th f 7 re main ~

CLASSIFIED

E-mail
classifted@ mydailyt rtbune.com

'W

Visions of crystal footballs
dance through the head ~ of
Al abama fa ns . Superman
gets stuffed m the Swamp.
Northwestern and Kentucky
are unbeaten. Wisconsin and
Georgia are not.
The first season-alte ring
college football weekend is
in the books. Ttme to assess
the damage:
The Big Story
As painful as the past few
day s ha ve been for those who
root for Southern California,
Georgta, Florida and a bunch
of other te ams with h1gh
aspirations for thi s season,
it's important to remember
that all is not lost.
If 2007 taught us anything,
it was to expect the unexpected and never write a team off.
Was it over for LSU when
the Tigers lost to Kentucky?
Was it over for Ohto State
when the Buckeyes lost to
Jllinois? '
Was it over for LSU when
the Ttgers lost again, this
time to Arkansas?
No to all the above.
The stunmng events that
started Thursday night when
Southern Califomta lost to
25-pomt underdog Oregon
State
and
culmmated
Saturd ay
ni ght
when
Alabama did everything but
burn the hedges down at
Georgia's Sanford Stadium ,
have come close to renderin g
the preseason rankings moot.
And wh1l e trying to project
can be the most foolish of
exercises, you know the folk s
in Tuscaloosa are lqoking at
the Tide's remammg schedule and thinking. At LS U.
Auburn at home. We can do
th1s.
At $4 million per year,
coach Nick Saban ts lookmg ·
like a bargain for the Tide.
The rest of the Southeastern
Conference, really the rest of
the country, has been hav mg
a good laugh at ' B ~ m a 's
expense for years . The bungled coaching searches, the
NCAA violattons, the losses
to-the Louisiana- Monroes of
the world, they've provided
great fodder fo r anyone who

Your Ad,

Florida qu a rterback Ttm Tebow (15) reacts after a fat led
first down attempt on th e tr final possession against
Mississippi late in the fourth quarter of an NCAA college
football game. in Gaines ville, Fla., Saturda y.
wanted to pil e on.
Now it 's pay bac k time and Ti de stars Julto Jones,
Dont'a Hightower and Mark
Ingram are onl y freshmen.
Alabama is No ..2 for now,
behind Oklahoma, but the
Tide can make a great case
for bemg No. I . In th ree
games
away
from
Tuscaloosa, Al abama has
outscored
Clemson ,
Arkansas and Georgia 12454 .
As for the Sooners. we've,
seen this before from them
They are crushing everythmg
in their path , much the way
they dtd last year before losing at Colorado.
"Teams are upset every
Saturday. so we've just got to
play smart football and play
the way we know how to
play,'' said Okl ahoma recetver Manue l Johnson, who
caught three TD passes m the
Soo ners' 35- 10 win over
TCU.
The players kn ow nothmg

is automatic. The coaches
know it. too. Everybody else
got a reminder tht s weekend .

Not-too-good Tebow
Tim Tebow couldn 't ga m 2
feet.
With the· game on the hnc
fo r
Flat ida
again st
Mi sstss ippi , Urba n Meyer
put the ball m the hands of
hts Heismatl Trophy wmner.
just the way the coac h should
have.
And for what see med ltke
the first ttme in ht s college
career, Tebow, a plaver who
has mspi red a cultltke level
of hero worshi p a m o n ~
Gators fan s, fa iled. H ~ couldn't surge for a first dow n late
in the game and Mt ss tss tppi 's
3 1-30 upset of the Gators
was all but co mpl ete.
Te bow apologiud aft er the
loss, whtch will surely make
him even more ad ored in
Ga inesvill e . Wh o doesn' t
love accountability' Still , his
earl y season r.erfonn ance has
left -the posStbtltty of Te bow

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RoofIng.................... ....... .... .... .................346
Security........... ...... .. ...... .......... ... ...... ..... 1..... 348
Tax/Accounting ........ ....... ...... .., ................. 350

Travel/Entertainment .... 1........... . .... .. ... . ...... 352
Finane tal ......... ........ ........ ......... ......... ............400

Financial Services ......................................405
. Insurance .............. ............................ ......... 410
Money to Lend .............................. P• • •••••••• • ••• 415
Education ............... - ..... ............... ..... ...... ..... 500
Business &amp; Trade Schooi ............ ..... ...... .... SDS
· Instruction &amp; Tralnlng ... .................... ...... .... $10
Lessons.................. ............ .. ........... ............ 515
Peraonat ................................. ...... ..... ........... 52D
Animals ................................ ...................... 600
Animal Supplies .... ..................................... 605
Livestock ................................ .......... ..... ......615
Peta..... ...... ...... ...... ........ ........ ... .. ,,................. 620
Want to buy ....................... :..... ..................&amp;25
Agrlculture ..................... ............. ...... ........... 700
Farm Equipment .........................................705
Garden &amp; PrOduce ....................................710
Hay, Feed, Seed, Grain ............................... 715
Hunting 11 Land ........................................... 720
Want ta buy ............................ ........... ........... 725

: MerchandiH ... ,,,,.., .......... ............................ 900

i

Antiques ......................... ......... .................. ... 905
\ Appliance ........................ ............ ..., .... ......... 91 0
: Auctions ... ...... ............................................. 915
• Bargain Baaement .......... ....................... ..... 920
• Collocllbleo ............ ........ .............................. 925
~ Computers .!..................... ...... ..................... 930
&gt; Equipment/Supplies........... ....... .. ................935
! Flea Marketo ................................ ...... ......... 940
} Fuel 011 Coat/Wood/Gas ............. ..... ......... 945
i Furniture ............ ,.... ............:.. ...... ............... 950
; Hobby/Hunt &amp; Sport .......:.... ....... ........... ..... 955
; Kld'o Corner ................................................. 960

• Ml•cellaneout .............................................. 965
' Went to buy .................................................. 970
Yard Sele ................................................ ..... 975

03 Stratus AutomatiC 4
cy
$3l00
OBO
256-1652 or 256·1233
2007 Honda VTX I 300!1
1800 mtles black $7800
388·8380
2004 Ntssan Max1mum
3 5 SE all all leather "ex·
cetlent
con
42 000
mtles 1 owner 446·3088
or 446·1675

Wanted to buy Gravely
tractor L-model from late
1960's-early1970's
w1th
mower attachments must
be 1n good shape an d
worKtng
order 740-992,-5052·
leave message

ATV .... ............... ....... .... .... .,, ........... .... 1005
Bicycles ............ .............. ............ . .... ......... 101
Boats/Accessories .............. ..... ....... ..... . 1015
Camper/RVs &amp; Trailers ............................. 1020
Motorcycles .. ........... .......................... ..... . 1025
Other ................................, ........ ................ 1030
Want to buy ............................ .................. 1035
Automotive .... .................... ............ ... .. .... 2000
Auto RentaVLease .......... ... ........... ........ 2005
Autos ........... ....... ........................... ............. 20 1
ClassiciAntiques .. .... ... .. .... . .. .... ............ 20 15
Commercial/Industrial .......... ................ 2020
Parts &amp; Accessorles ...... ......... ................... 2025
Sports Utility ......................................... 2030
Trucks ... ........................ ..... ........ ,............ 2035
Utility Trailers .............. .............. ................ 2040
Vans ...... .... . ........... ..... .... .................... 2045
Want lo buy .. ............................... ............ .. 2050
Real Estate Sales ....... ........... .................. 3000
Cemetery Plots ................ .................. .. 3005
Commercial ............. .,......................... .. .... .. 301
Condominiums ........................................ 301 5
For Sale by Owner..... ....... ................... .. 3020
Houses for Sale ......... ................................ 3025
Land (Acreage) ........ - ............................ 3030
Lots ........................................:...................3035
Want ta buy .. .......................................... 3040
Real Estate Rentals ................................... 3500
Apartments/Townhouses ,,,,,,,, ................ 3505
Commerclal ............................. .... ... ............ 3510
Condomlnlums .................. .................. .. .... ~515
Houses for Rent ....................................... 3520
Land (Acreage),........ .... · ... .. ...... .... ...... 3525
Storage ......... .............. ....... .... ......... ............ 3535
Want to Rent ............. ...... ........ .... ............ 3540
Manufactured Housing ............ .... ........ ... 4000
Lots ....................................... ................. 4005
Mover s ... ........................ ......... ................. 4010
Rentals ....................... ., .......................... .... 4015
Sales ...• 1. ..... .............. .. ......................... . ..... 4020
Supplies ................................... .... .......... 4025
Want to Buy .......................... ,.. ....... .......... 4030
Resort Property ... ............ .. .................. ..... 5000
Resort Property for sale ........................... 5025
Resort Property for rent ..... ..... .............. ... 5050
Employment.. ..... ...................................... .. 5000
Accounting/Financial. ........... ................... 5002
Administrative/Professional ....... .. .......... 6004
Cash lor/Clerk ............................................. 5006
Child/Elderly Care .... ....... .:.. ...... .. ........ 5008
Cieri cal ..... .................. ... ............................. 50 I 0
Constr uction ....... ..... ................ ........ ... ...... 601 2
Drivers &amp; Del ivery ..... ................. ...... .... 6014
Education ................................ .................. 50 16
Electrical Plumbing ................................. 6018
Employment Agencles .......... ......... ...... ..... 8020
Entertainment ...... ...................................... 502 2
Food Services................................ ..... .. .... 6024
Government &amp; Federal Joba ... ........ -.. ... .... 602 6
Help anted- General ............................... 6028
Law Enforcement ...... ....................... ......... 6030
Maintenance/Domestic ..................... ........ 6032
ManagemenVSupervlsory ....................... 6034

o

o

o

Mechanlca ..................................................~36
Madlcal. ..................................... ..... ......... ... 6038
Musical .... ...... ............................... ......... ... 6040 ,
Part· Time-Temporaries .................... ,..... ... 604 2
Restaurants ......... ................... .. ............. .. 6044
Sales ............ ............................................... 5048
Tec hnical Tradea ....................................... 5050
Te&gt;rtlloo/Factory ........ .............. ......... .... ..... 5052

97 Chrysler LHS automatte atr S1800 060
256-6002 or 256- 1233

'1 -'~-4

Serv tces

CNA'S &amp; RESIDENT AS·
SISTANTS Interviews
Are Now Betng Con·
ducted For CNA &amp; Ae st·
dent Asststant Pos1t1ons
ll You Are A Cartng , En
thustastt c
Dependable
Person, Then We Wan t
You To 'Jotn Our Team
COme On Ov er &amp; Check
Us Ot.J tl You 'll Be Glad
You
Dtd'
Compe t1t1ve
CNA Wages. Pa1d Vacattons, Pa td Meals Many
Other Beneltts Ravensw0od Care Center 1 I 13
Wasl1tngton St Ruvens
wood. WV
Refere nces
d E0 E
ReqUire

Personals ............................... .................... 230

0 Oo

Wanted

(740) 446-2342

floint flleasant

04 Honda Ctvtc LX 5
speed, 40R 34 MPG,
Ex
Con,.
$10,200
304-576·3353

has
Call

Heahll

Happy Ads ....................... ..... ...... .......... ........ 210
Last &amp; Found ................. ........................... 215
.. Memory/Thank Yau .. .................... .... ......., ... 220
Notices ............. ...... .. .............................. ..... 225

t

be prepa id'

@allipohs 1ll:lail!' OX:rrbun~

Announcements .....,.................................... 200
Blrthday/Annlversary ............. ... .................. 205

:
'
·;

Thursd a y fo r S und a y s Paper

must

Auto•

CLASSIFIED INDEX
oo Recreational Vehicles ................. ... ...... ... .. 1000

'·
;
•
:
,

Ja

ktt n ca rt y t e @com ~ ast.net

Legals ....... ........ ...... ................ .......... , ........... 1

~

Now you can have borders and graphics
~
added to your classified ads
~
,.,.,
Borders $3.00/ per ad .
t!
Graphics SOC for small .
$1 .00 far Iorge

In Next D ay's Paper
' Publi catio n
Sunday In ~Column : 9 :00a .m . Sunda y Di s pla y : 1 :0 0 p .m .

200

We
will
no
nowlngly accept an
vertlsement
I
lolallon of the law.

Heisman-worthy

QUALITY INDOW SYSTEMS
is Celebrating
Years In
1S Business

l\egtster

KIT &amp; CARLYLE

Horses ...................................................... ... 610

The Daily Sentinel

Sentinel

« POLICIES«

wmning a second consecuti ve Heisman Trophy unhkely
Tebow is 30th in passer rat,
in g m the nation and has run
for only 125 yards and 2 6
per carry There 's lot of time
left. but he's already way
behind Oklahoma's Sam
Bradford and Mt ssoun 's
Chase Dan ie l in voters'
mmds.

Donald Brown of newly
No. 24-ranked Conne cti~ut
led the Huskies to a 26-2 1
victory againsl Loui sville
with 190 yards rushing on
Friday ,night. Brown leads
the natton at 181 yards per
game.

Websttes.
www mydallytribune com
www mydatlysenttnel.com
www.mydatlyregtster com

GET YOUR CLASSIFIED LINE AD NOTICED

Offtee 11o~~

M mus the 1981 spill sea:
so n, the Mets beca me the
fi rst clu b in big league history to hold 3 112-game dt visto n leads in consecutiv e
Septembers and fat! to make
the postseason both times~
the El ias Sports Bureau said.
Hat dl y a way to send out
thetr old ballpark.
" It wo uld have bee n be tte~
if we would have won today,
but I don 't thin k it spoils the
ce lebration ." ge neral manage r O mar Minay a said ,
" Wh at's goin g on out there,
it 's abo ut the history of tht s
buildmg. the history of the
players, th e history of tht s
organ izatton."

Unlikely unbeatens

AP photo

Galli a
County,
OH

992-2156 (304) 675-1333
Call Today••• (740) 446-2342 (7Or40)
Fax To (740) 992-2157
Or Fax To (304) 675-5234

mg.

There are 17 unbeaten
teams in major college foot:
ball after the first month of
the season. Some we know
are
good:
Oklahoma,
Alabama, BY U,, LSU , for
example. Others sttll have a
lot to prove.
Northwestern (5-0)
Tough de fen se and a schedule that doesn' t include
Wisconsin and Penn State is
a good co mbination for
Wtldcats.
Ball State (5-0) - The
Cardinals wtll use Dante
Love 's inJury as mspiration,
and Nate DavJS is the latest
star quatte rback in the MidAmeri can Conference , ' but
not having their talented
recetver wtll catch up to
them.
Okluhoma State (4-0) Cowboys' offense is hi ghpowered . The defense has
much to prove against those
other potent Big 12 defenses.
Tulsa (4-0) - You probably don 't kn ow this, but the
natt on's top- rated quarterbac k plays for the Golden
Hurncane. David John son is
a semor and fi rst-year starter
who is compl eting 72 percent
ot hts passes. He could help
make Tul sa Conference
USA's ft rst BCS buster.
Kentucky (4-0) - Reality
comes to the Commonwea lth
when the Wildcats VISit
Alabama on Saturday. The
rest of the SEC is probably
not worried about 'Kentucky.

'{[rthune

Meigs County, OH

We Cove
Meigs, Gallla,
And Mason
Counties Like
NoOne
Else Can!

In One Week With Us·
REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS
YOUR AD NOW NLI

To Place ·

'Barna breaks out in a season-altering weekend.
BY RALPH RUSSO
ASSOCI ATED PR ESS

The Dail y Sentinel • Page 85

~

www comtcs..co m

~=======

Business &amp; Trade
School
Gallipolis Career
College
(Care ers Close To Home)
Call Toda y1 740·446·4367
t 800 214 0452

gellrpolrsL&lt;lrBEHcot~gat~Uu

Awedr1ed Member Acmdrt
tng Councrlior Independent
C"ll"""~ ~""&lt;-·hoots 12146
"~,"~""";x;

Home Improvements
Uveotodc
Small Home Repatr and ;;;;;;=~~~~--­
brush cu11tng tree Est 20 8 yea r old mare 11orse
yrs Exp (7401446·3582
$250 Call740 256 1498

© 2008 by NEA, Inc.

Pomeroy Police Dept will
be aucllomng ol1 off a
2000 Jeep Grand Chero·
kce on Oc t
11,08@
'10 oo,.I,M •t ~tPY VII-'

lage Hall Stamng bid w1tl
be S 1500 Con1act Chml
Mark Pro lftt! fo r details

"""""""""""""""""""
""'""'""'""'""'""'""'
U~lity
Wont Buy
Wont To
~::?'~:;;;;;;.;;;;~';;;;;::'
To

Spom

Buy

Want ed • to Buy· Paw Absolute Top Dollar · st t·
Paws
Black
Walnuts, verlgold
totns
any
Call740·596·6060
I OK/14K/ t8K gold 18W·
elry, dental gold
pre
1935
US
cur rency
prool/mtnt
sets.
dta
monds MTS Cmn Shop
151 2nd Avenue, Galli·
--=·An~~.;qu;;;l;;il=~ polls 446-2842
~
;;;;;;;;,;;;;;,;;;;;;,;;;;,,.,,
Antique Flea Market. PL
Yard Sole
Pleasant
WV at the ~;;;;;;;~~="":""':"'
West Vtrgmta State Farm Huge 8 famtlv yard sa le
M
0 1 b
4 h •
'
useu m
coer t co Oct 2·5 9am-dark 1367
51h !lours 9-4. ~dvertts College Rd . Syracuse
tng Stoneware, M1lk Bol- Jewelry furntture. too ls
tie s
Collec11bles. Free
anttques, clothes, etc
admt sston &amp; appra tsals
De~er Space A\lallable, Aatn or sh1ne carporl
Contact
Charlie
Perry, sale L1bby Fisher 809
(740)992 ·5088.
perry· Johns
Ad
Ra ctne
cola@suddenhnk net
10·2&amp;3 8 OOa m .?

'1999 ' Jeep
Grande
Chero Kee Lorado. gotd
outs 1de w/gray tnm , 4 O,
ale, crwse tt lt EC t60K,
$4,800. no Sunday calls
please (740)992 7599

Trucks

=~':::'~~~~
2000 Cl1e\ly SIO ext
cab 4 cyl. 5 speed CD.
A:C ,
$4500
740 _645 _6434
1988
runs

E-350 Box Truck
but needs work

~3~9;
-0;;;88~5""'""'""'""'""'

Utility Trailers

;;;;;;...;~~....~~
Ut•li ty
Tratler
400.000
~
l ":;;
m:;,7;;4:;;
0·;;;
44;;;1~
·0;:;9;;;88""'""""

=

Want To Buy
Screws. natls elect sup
plies. tools &amp; more Oct Want to buy Junk Cars,
Waterproofmg
ANTIQUES· 3·4 9arn-3pm 45555 SR cc,a~II~7;::40~·3~B~
8·~08~8~4~=
Uncondtttonal ltfellme
AKC mtntalure Schnau· GIBBS
Also. re store furmture lo·
~
guarantee Local reter·
zers
now
avatlable cated on Tornado Ad off :"1=
24::,=
Ra:c:~n:
• ·=
O=
h
Real Estate
3000
ences 1urntshed Estab ·
whtle
or
salt/pepper Rt
33
Ractne
Recreattona l
Sales
1000
llshed '1 975 Call 24 Hrs
(7 40)992· 1328
{Park&amp;Rtde)
ex1t
Veh1c les
740 446 0870 Rogers
~=-~~-':"""~ 740-949·2246
Basement Waterptooftng
Reg•stered
Mm1
CKC
Commercial
Fuel/ Oil/ Coal/
Dachshunds
2
long8oah Acceuories
Other Services
For
sale
or
I(O!asb
llatred temales $350 and
Wood/ Goo
2311
SeaRay ot11ce/warehous e/sto raqe
Pet
CremaiiOn s
Call 4
shorthatre d
maIes -- - = = - ' = = =. 1989
• tS an d Seasoned Ftrewood. all Cuddy Cabm &amp; Tratler great locatton 1n Galhpo $ 300 ' FlfSl Sr10
740·446·3745
wormed
Please
call hardwood
$55
load w/new
350
w/Merc hs
t 800
sq
fl
cnuser
sleeps
6 centra l $400/month Call Wayne
Profeuionol Servic11 740 3BB 8445
or :::
30;,;4,;
·8;;;;
82;;2;,;5;;;,
67; ,,.,,.,,.,
AC/Heat shtp to shore 404 ·456·3802
740 -645 2396 may leave
MiJcellaniiOul
capabthltes
shower
a message
, TURNED DOWN ON
potty
fndge
1979
20ft
For Sole By Owner
SOCIAL SECURITY SSI ~~~~~=~
mere
cru 1ser
No Fee Unless We W1n 1 'FREE Ktttens 1-male or· DR table wl 6 cha1rs 2 century
1·888·582·3345
ange/whlte
Her(lale leavesS300 sewtng rna· Cudt:ly cabrn&amp;traller new 2001 Clayton Rockwood
chtne $25 LR chatr &amp; ta· ttres &amp; wheel banngs t4:.oe70 tratler 1 287 acre
graytwhlle
call
Kelly
ble $50, 2 BBO gr1HS $40 w/new 350 Chevy motor :::'•;;;
nd';,;&lt;;;;•;;,ll4;;;4;;;,6·,:;66
::;7,:;8, . , = 304·593·3822
each 446-4333
Cushrons&amp;seats
have

Basement

Pets

·====

I

=

=

Money To Lond
NOTICE Borrow Smart
Contact the Ohm Dtvt
ston of Ftnanaal lnstttu·
ttons Office of COnsumer
Affatrs BEFORE you refinance your home or ob·
ta1n a loan BEWARE of
requests for any large
advance
payments
of
fees or tnsurance• Call
the Offtce of Consumer
Aff1ars
toll
free
at
1·866·278·0003 to learn
11 the mortgage broKer or
lender IS properly h·
censcd (Th ts IS a publiC
servtce
announcement
from the OhiO Valley
Publishing Company)

FIND
BARGAINS
EVERY
DAY
IN THE
CLASSIFIEDS

Berber Carpet $6 95 yd
carpet remnants $40 00
•
&amp; up M01
1Ohan carpe t
Form Equ1pment
22 12 Eastern Ave Galh·
EBY,
INTEGRITY, pol ts, Ohto)40-4 45-7444
KIEFER BUILT,
VALLEY
HORSE/LIVE· ~~-.-.~-.STOCK
TRAILERS , Jet Aerat1on Motors re·
LOAD
MA.X
EQUIP- patre d, new S rebwll 1n
MENT
TRAILERS, stocK Call Ron Evans,
"
1-800-537·952 8
CARGO
EXPRESS &amp;
HOMESTEADER
,..,.-.~=~=~
CARGO/CONCESSION
NEW AND USED STEEL
TRAILERS
'
B+W Steel Beams. Ptpe Rebar
GOOSENECK FLATBED lor
Concrete
Angl e,
53999 VIEW OUR EN· ChanneL Flal Bar Steel
TIAE TRAILER tNVEN Grating for Orarn s Dnve·
TORY AT
'
ways &amp; Walkways LSL
WVW&gt;J CARMICHAELScrap Metals Open Man
TRA ILERS COM
Tue
Wed
&amp;
Fn
4 30
ctos d
740·446·3825
Bam·
pm
e
Thurs
Sat
&amp;
Sun
740-446-7300
Have you pnced a John
Deere lately? You'll be
surpnsed1 ChecK out our
used
tnventor.y
at
wwwCAAEO com
Carmtchaol
EqwpmeJit
t
740 44 6 24 2

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

Pole Barn 30x40x10 only
$6 995. other s1zes Free
Delivery 877-773·83 56

_ _ _ _ _. . _ _
Remtnglan
Model
11 ·12ga $300 Remtng·
Hoy, FHd, Seed, Grain
1on
Model
tt48·12ga
Hay sq bales. 1st &amp; 3rd $275 Both have 30 111
cumng occhA'd gcass miX full choke. ntce guns
4x5
rolls
tnSJde 740·379·2860, 1f no an·
L__ _ _ _ _--J 740 446·2075
swer leave message

'

been
reupholstered -;;;.;H;;;o~U~Ie~o~F~or.;S~o~lo~
porta potty sold together ~
lor $H 000 or can be 2 bdrm Ftxer Upper 2913
separated
'
Madison Ave
AS IS
F1rm
(740)591·341 1
or 513000
ask
for3··0~4~
·6~75~·~
1 9':"05~~-~
304 _773 5277
Dave
JsA
A
sq ft
2 58 1721
""'"""""'""'""'""'=w1th full Bsmt . 2 car 2FP
Campers RVs &amp;
on 0 BAC 1n Spring Va l·
Trailan
ley Est move tn ready
~-::--=;;;;;;;-::~ Aopotnt
Only
AV Servtce at Carmt- 740·286-5280
chael
Trailers
3·4 BR 2 bath lamll y
740 446 3825
~------ room bonus room o\ler
RV
garage approli. 3 acres
Servtce at Carmrchaet part tally wooded Cherry
Tratlers
Rtdge Ad Rto Grande
740 44 6-3825
area
740-245·5 416 or
740·645·2226
Leave

I

M~torcycles

:::m;:;••::sa::lg~e~":"::::-:::'~~
j Yr old SA 588 for more

2000 Honda XA 250. all
tnfo and ptctures go to
ongmal . low miles Ex. www Of'.'b com
I0 .
Cond
$1,500
Brown tn g 740-446·7204
3041 . 67 5 4131
~~-.-.~~= 3BA,2BA 2 'c ar gar
2007 Hon,da VTX t300A. patiO DR/FA Ae locattng
1800
mtles
black s 115
740 446-0817
$7800 388-8380
~
te:;av::;e~m~sg~-.~~~
2007
f&lt;awasak t
N1n1a '::'
For sale by owner 3/2

.ooo

250 under 1500 mtles
red helmet and tank bag
S2800 740-645- 1912
2007
Kawasakt
Nrn1a
250 under 1500 mtles
red helmet and tank bag
$2 800 740 645-1912

hcnie on 11'2 acre level
lot Located at 3089 Bulavtlle Ptke Anached ga:
rage
Appratsed
$1 10 000
Asktng
$98,500 '
Call
740 446 -4910

�Page 86 • The Daily Sentinel
All electric Ranch home
at 2620 Mt. Vernoo AveQue. Point Pleasant sit1ing on 1 112 lots. 2200
square feet living space
3 bedrooms, 1 full ba th.
LA. DR &amp; Krtchen Most
~ooms
carpeted
over

I

· Aportmonb/
Townhou.a• ·

ove-n pee a
Cl1p th1s AD and take 11
Wi th you when you v1srt
our community to get
this Special diSCOUnt
Move:1n m Oct aM get
$100.00 your 2BR Apt.
nardwOOd floors.
t car
ot1 Nov rent. Curiently
~anached garage
PallO
rent1ng I &amp; 2 BR UnitS
•with
Pergola. Outsrde
Spacious lloor plans.
:storage bwldmg.
Base- ranch &amp; townhome style
~ent
includes carpeted
hvrng. playground &amp;
) ami ty. room/wood burner
bas~etball court, on-s1te
with Barn Board Panel·
laundry tac1lity. 24 hr
illg &amp; accents.
Large
emergency marnte·
bedroom/offrce wrth walk .
nance. quiet country to·
rn closet
Carpeted lull
cat1on close to mator
bath wrth Jacuzzr tub.
med1cat
tac 1ht1es,
large shower and double
pharmnc1es. grocery
srnk vanity
Large .laun·
store ... Just m1nutas
dry room &amp; storage area
away tro'll other major
304·q75·6135
shopp1ng in tho ama ·
Honeysuc~le Hills
Foreclosure
4br. 2ba,
Apartments
only $29.9001 Pr1ces to
266 Colonial Dr·ive ll l 13
Selll
For
list1ngs
Bidwell, Oh10 45(;)14
800-620-4646 exT 462
740-446-3344
Hous.e w1th 2 acres 10 SR
Ofi1Ce Hours M, W, F
160 Will consrder land
9AM · SPM
contract.
441·5062 or
379·2923
Nice 4 br, 2 ba home on
Kmeon Dr m Gall1pohs
Quite nerghbornood on
dead end street. large 2
car garage and finiShed
basement. 740·25G· 1109

• Three Bedroom house
· At# 2 Noi!h Two Bed·
Home
roorn
Mobile
Camp
Conley
304-695·3 129

www.mydailysentinel.com
Aportmenb/
Townhouas
New

Haven

rborn

apartment,

lhr

bed - ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ;

Appl r,ml.'&lt;"'

rur

n1,heJ. ';,,175 o- .t.-~J\11,
PPIIS
1(14 07 .~ ~ 1 00
H!J-f&gt;75- :i51.W

n~a r,

2 br trarler besrde Wal-

rnar1 rn Mason $475 mo .
plus deposrt. references

Now accepting
applications at:
Valley View Apartments
. 800 State Route 325
Federal Funds just - re· Thurman. Ohio 45685
leased for Land Owners.
740-245-9170
· No
closing cost and
1·2 Bedroom Aparlments
ZERO
DOWN! Will do
with appliances f.urnrshed
land
Improvements.
On site laundry facility
Bank!Uptcy
&amp; Bad Credit
Call lor deta1ls or p1ck up
OK
2.
3.
4
and 5 bed·
appl1cation at rental
rooms
available.
office"
740·446-3384
Possibility ot rental
assistance .
3BR 2 bath S575 depos•t
Equal Housing
$575/mo rpnt plus utls
Opportunity
Ready 1722 8 Chatham
TOO# 4 19~526~0466
Ave . (740)645- 1646
"This lnSIItUti•l'"l IS an
Equal 0~ . • tunrty
3br, 2ba , Pt. Pleasant
Provide r il.nd Employer" area 304-273-6622 or

'

Commerdcl
t BR Apt, WID hoOkups.
satellite TV 1ncl. w/rent, 2 bay service sta!Jon
Pi~e
Lease
close to hosp1tat. Call Jackson
requi
red
.
Call
446-364·1
740·339·0362
for more irifo
1 BR Apts for Rent. 1st
Ave,
Gallipolis.. Commercia l property
"No
Pets
S37H325.
over 1 acre , large ga-'
HUD
or
construction. rage, display area and
Washer/Dryer
Hook-up office, Upper Rt. 7 be·
Depes1l .
Req. side new Hampton Inn

2· 2006 161180 Clayton 3
bed 2 bath. 200 t6x70
Fleetwood 2 bed 1. bath ,
1999 Fortune 3 Oed , 2
bath We deliver Olock
level and anchor. We
can do !he footers also.
Oay!ime
740-388-()(){X)
01
740-388-8513 Evenmgs 740 .388 _8017 or
740-245-92 13.
~~-~~~~-,
2004 Ooublewide In
new condition. 4 bedroom. 2 bath, all appli- ·
ances
1ncluded,
$37 .000
loca ted
at
176 Zuspan Lane Mason City 304 ·675~2 lt 7
Brand new 3bed 2bath
on + ·hall acre 1n Pt.
Plea&lt;;anl
OWNER
FlNANCE
AVAILABLE .
17401 446-3570
New 3 Bedroom homes
from $2 14.36 per month ,
mcludes many upgrades,
detrvery
&amp;
set-up:
740..385·2434
6000

Employment

Clerical
Clencal &amp; ott 1ce pos1ti ons
available. paid tra1ning
~ta rts
immediately, no
experience needed, no
sElles .
ca ll
1-888-610-6953

;,,;;;;;,;;;,;~;,==
Construction

:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;=;;;;;=;;;;;;;;

Skillrid Carpcntdr s. must
have own to ots Fax re·
sumes· to ·7.40-388-9530
or mail to: PO Box 55,
Bidwell,
OH
45614.
Some
travel required.
Salary based on axperience. EEO Employer

Dr'.v.er's Educa1 1·0 0 pos 1·•
tion open in the Gallipolis
and Meigs area. Flexible
hours. Must be .able to
work
evemngs
and
weekends. Job entails
classroom and behind·
ttJe wheel instruction for
new drivers. Qualified
candidates must have a
h1gh
school
diploma,
valid · dr1vers
license,
pass
background
checks, exp. preferred in
t raffic safety. taw enIorcement. or teaching,
or we Will train . Dt·op off
resum9 at Gallipolis AAA
office or fax res ume to
Attn; AI at 740·351·0537
EOE

Erc.perienced MIG Weldei
with the abilitY to read
blue prirts, Competitive
Wages
with
excellent
.
b ene f.rt pac ka ge . Evenrng
Send
Resu
·me
•,,o·.
·
,
•.
Sh 11
Imperial Electric Co 345
Sycamore St. Middle port,
OH 45760
;;;,;.;,;;;,;;;;,.,..,..,..,,..,
Government &amp; Federal
Jobs

Senior :Discount*
when you pay for a 6 or 12 ·
month-subscription on your
home delivered subscription!

FEDERAL
POSTAL JOBS

Here's all you
need to do ...
Fill out the coupon below
and drop off or. mail it with a
copy of your photo ID.

$17.89·$28.271HR .,
now
h1ring. "For application ·
and free government jOb
info, call American Asol
labor
soc.
t ·913·599·8226, 24/hrs
amp. serv.

®a:Uipol if~ '1laailp.W:rtbune
.•

tlleaflant jS.egt~ter
The Daily Sentinel
~unba!'· nttme~ -i\&gt;entind

~oint

The Daily Sentinel • Page 87

NEA Crossword Puzzle

Sigfi..Jlfl.J!.tmlt.l

Jnterv;ew
TOMORROWI!

Ten poSitions need tilled
by next week!
No eJCper1ence requ1red!
No Sates!
No Collections!

YoJIL!~Iu '"-""'00Llt1-

waillng for yoyl!!
1;888·1MC·PAYU
Ext. 1901

httpJ~obs. i n l ocision .c om

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

De1iverymarehouSe person needed. lull time, lnl mediate opEining , must
have good driving record. Apply·Lifestyle Fur·
niture 856 Third Ave.
Gallipolis . 9·:30-5·00 No
Phone Calls

Full and Part-trme
Pos111ons
Profess1onal Work
Env1ronmentl
Medical. Dental. EAP.
40 tK1
On-s1te Docrorl
Weekly Pay and
Bonus lncerl!lvesJ
1

Call TODAY.'

In terview
TOMORROW/!
Work NEXT WEEK!! !

Someone to work ' on gar1·888-IMC·PAYU
bage route, Must be at
Ext. 2331
hltp:lljobt.inlocision.com
least 25 yrs.otd. clean
driv1ng reco rd, able to
read &amp; follow directions, - - . . . , . - - - - - Sportswriter
wor~
alone
&amp; some
The Ohio Valley Publish ·
ma'.ntenance. Send re·
ing "Co. is seeking moti·
sume to P.O Box 21
vated , people-oriented
Bidwell, Oh 4561 4
indiVidual ti fill a vacancy
in the news dept as a
Pomeroy Bus1ness need
Sportswriter The suce)(penenced
welder.
cessful candidate will
Hou rs between 8·4 Call cover h1gh school athlet- ·
740·992-3020
ics in-the area for the
daily ed1tion of the news·
paper, as well as assist :
ResCare Home Care is
with th e produc tion of
accepting
applications
sports
pages. Excellen t
for Support Associates,
CNA &amp; STNA. MR/00 writing and English skills,
phOtography sk1IIS ancf
exp preferred . Apply al
'
knowled!:Je of desktop
8204 Carla Dri vO. Gallipublishmg are sough t
polis, Mon · Fn. 8-4
The position is fulltiri1e.
Email resume to: rharri 40 hours a week, Wilh
son@rescare .com.
benetits. Interested parlies can send resumes lo
An Exce llent way to earn .
Kevin Kelly, Managing ·
money. The New AVon.
Edrtor. Ohio Valley PubCall
Marilyn
lishing Co .. 825 Third
304-882-2645
Ave .. Gallipolis. Oh10
~...,...~--,--...,...~
45631 or kkelly@my Custodian
for
loca l
dailytnbune.com . No
church . Mon-Fri 8:30am
phope calls please .
to 2prri. $10/hour. ·Send
reume to Minister, PO """"'""'""'""'"""""'""'"'
Mo1n
· t enonce /
Box 228, Point Pleasant,
WV 25550
Domelli·c
Direct Care Staff in resi·
dentlal youth ·program _
Must be 21 years ot age.
Pay baSed on experiCa ll
ence.
l740J379·9083
Mon-Fri
9arn-3pm.

ACROSS

Phillip
Alder
/

•~-------------~----. ---·---------••
. •• Subscriber's Name
•
.
•
•
.
••
••
•
'' Address
••••
••
•••
•• Qity/State/Zip
•
•
. ••
•
.•
•••
•• Phone
.
••
••
••
Mall or drop off this coupon along
••
••
with a copy of your photo 10 to
•
• Ohio Volley Publlohlng P.O. Box 469, Gallipolis, OH 45631 •
••
• •
•

• Room Additiont &amp;
Remodeli ng

• New Gar1ge1

· Eleclrk:al &amp; Plumbing
·Roofing &amp; Guners
• VInyl Siding &amp; PalnUng
· Pall o and Porch Decks

.

wv 036725

Johnson's Tree
Service

V.C. YOUNG Ill

St. Rl.124 PDIIIIOV.IH

Complete Tree Care

992-621 5

74D-992·5182

740-44 1;tlll1

laen9-6M·F
9-12511.

EJCpenence

4577 1
740-949·2217

Sizes 5'x10'
to 10'1130'
1:00AM· 8:00PM
11t41l mo pd

Hardw"d Cabinetry And Furnialre

WL· !--Cf\•icc

AfliOflEAIGflA~~Afl

BARNEY
IT MUST 8E

MISS PRUNELL'( KEEPS
TALKIN' 'BOUT OTHER .

CAREER 'DAY,
JAMEY !!

JOBS !!

OR A NICE QUIET

·.LIBRARIAN
.)OB !! OR ...

wi nterize boat s and
RV "s

(740) 992-5344
rvh111-Fr i.
H:OU am · -l :30 pm
Sat . H:OO am - 12

THE
Racine, Ohio 740·247-2019

II· \VIS
C O ~ CRf

LOSER

~'t'OU ~\1&gt; 't'OIJ WERE. 601~~

GLAt&gt;'t'~, KO!

TO 11\l&gt;.'t(.(. 1&gt;.1-\E.~O\C.
E.FFQ\q TO ~TA.'{ at\

II

CONSTitL C IIO !\

Owners:
Jon Van Meter &amp;

Concrete Removal

Paul

and Replacement
AllTyp,s 01
Concrete

Rowe

Cell:

West

,. ,.
North

740·416-5047
email:

CI-\OC.OLATt.

I~

M.'t'

t&lt;.R.'t'PTO~ITE. 1

YOUR 1&gt;\ET

jrshadfrm@aol.com

il-\1~ T\1-\t. !.

·

w'orll

t •

East
Pass
Pass

Pass

Puss

.•

Estimates

Stanley TreeTrimming
&amp; Removal

.
Part-time
rna1ntenance
worker, · 25·30hrs
per
week, Pa y based on eJC.
Call "' PronHJI and Qual ity
penence.
(740)379-9083
Mon-Fr1 Wmk
between 9am -3pm
* Rc~• sonahl t! Rules

C r&gt;lmllt.'l"cii.tl

ROBERT
BISSEll

CONSTRUCTION

740-992-1611

your . . ·
busiri~ss. on this page.

.Joraslow as . ·.,_ .:

&amp;

~ e.lil l err l irll

up·· ol!. ...

Viny l

* In sured
"""'""'""'""'""'""'""'""' *Ex periCn..:cd
Hours from 9·5 FJve (5)
Medical
days a week, Secretanal - = = = = = = = • Re ferences Avail:tble!
work, fil1ng, typing, com Cal l Gary Stanley @
puler 1.1pdates, Wages A
Celebration
of
7~ 11-.\ 91-KII44
negotiable. No Benefits Life.... Overbrook Center
P
le&lt;h~
lc;wc messa 1 C
Point Pleasan t Business located at 333 Page
Send Resume to CLA t 5 Street, Middleport, Ohio
TREI' WORK
c/o Point Pleasant Regis- is pleased to announce
ter, 200 Main St. Pt. lhat due to ·in.ternal
To pped, Take. Down
Pleasant,WV 25550
changes in our facility.
&amp; Removal
we are accepting afJpli·
All'ordable.
cations for
full
time
Rca"iJnable Price
House
parents(2)wan!ed
7P·7A LPN"s. part time
for boys group home lo·
740-444-5152
7A·7F: LPN'S and full
cated in soufhern Oh1o.
or leave messa e
time
and
part
time
27-7 care for 2 weeks on
to join
ou r ....- - - - - -...
·2 weeks off. Experience STNA'
trrendlys and
dedicated
ra ising teens or fos ter
.staff.
Applicant's must
care preferred . We pro· be
dependable,
team
vide training. Interested ?
Catt
., players witM positive altl·
035 5
1• 677 - 325 - 1566 Ior more tudes
Interested appli·
cants can p1ck up an ap·
information
M-F
6:30
Plication
• New Homes'
. , . . . . - - - - - - - . AM-4:30 PM . M eligible
•
Garages
Service Manager &amp; Serv- applicants will then be
• Complete
ice Technic1an positions contacted by Hollie Bumavailable. Health care &amp; garner, LPN , Slalf DeveiRemodeling
Retirement plans avail- opmen t
able. Please send re - Coordinator @740-992- .
to 6472. EOE &amp; A Partici· •
sume
Stop &amp; Compare
LLC@CAREO.COM
or· pant of the Drug-Free
fax to 740·446-9104
workplace program

~~~"' ·:,a~vertise

Noeoo'('.s.
COHe: UP
TO ME
TO SIW
'HEY" Of\
'WHAT"S

Quality Seam ley_
Gutters
Maintenance Plus
Sidi iig/Replacemcnt
WintiiJws/Rcmodeling
Bonded &amp; Insured

740-992· 1493 Olfice
740-416-8339 Cell
Free Estimated
Pnmerny. Ohi o

Seamless Gutters
Roofmg. Siding, Gutters
Insured &amp; Bonded
740·653·9657

'(0U1RE

601N6TO
T~EMOON?

503 Mil SL• Middle II II. 0145780

THEM HAVI!
~I'Oi&lt;EN TO

BUT YOU J.lAVE

· WELL,'fES ...SORT .
OF LIKE THAT..

WEAR ONE
OF TJ.lOSE TJ.IIN6S ·
ON 'I'OUR HEAD..
TO

748-992·3184

.......IV-friiiV 8:81 06:110 ...
SIIII'IIIV 11:81&amp;12:tllllm

PIYINB TOP PRICES fOR
11111111• Clas • Mlni.IIIIIIIINII
CIIIIIV!Ic Cllmrtn •CIIIIM
IIIIIUIAIIIIIIInl
.ICIII Ftr Clrl'lltl'rlclll

PSI CONSTRUCTION
RICK PRICE
New Homes , Ruum Additions, Remodeling,
Metal &amp; Shingle Roofs, '
Bathroom RetntO&lt;lclilng

Decks,

Construction ·
· VInyl Siding
• Replacement

Windows

fl

• Roofing
·Decks
· Garages
• Pole Buildings
·Room Additions

Owner:
James Keesee II

Roofing, Siding,
Soffit, Decks,
Doors, Windows,
Electric, Plumbing,

Drywall,

Remodeling, Room I
Additions
Local Contractor

740-367-0544
Free Estimates

7 40-367·0536

• Room Additions • Garages • Vinyl
and Wood Siding • Roofing • Pole
Barns • Patio \. Porches and Decks

MillE W. MARCUM,-~~
472.W Rie.hel Rnad . Lnng Bonom. OH

740-985-4141
Cell: 7-10-41 6- 18)4

25+ }'ears experit11ce Free Euimates

:.,992-2155

PLENTY OF

PEANUTS

Racycllng

Call: MARCUM CONSTRUCTION

The Daily Sentinel

.

H&amp;H
Guttering

For Retnod eling and New House Building

-~

H~VEW'T
AAt&gt; TH~T
Pll.O&amp;!..E M ~

t\E!

Manlay' a

742-2332

••

r

· ;:::::::====
Advertise
in this space for
$64 per month

cowandBOY
/

YOU t&lt;NOW ~OW IN THE
MOVIES WHEN TWO PEOPLE
SA~ THE SAME THING AT
THE SAME: TIME 0~ THEY
GET HIT IN THE HEAD
WITH THE
OBJECT, THEY
CAN SWITCf\
PLACES WITH
EACH OTHER?

BILLY SAID IF I

MISSED WITH THE
GA11BAGE CAN LID,
1WAS TO USE
THIS 2X4.

v-.. . . . .

GARFIELD
..:me. ONe WlfH rHe
BUIMNG I'ICI!P5 l'

. .. 1HI! CAf
HUGGriSR?

1&gt;\of'\,.. Vol~~ pO I.
Ha~e To Le~r"' THis.

S11J!'J D MaTH \"

engine
26 Strong,
43 News arti·
inventor
as veniso11
cle
4 Blue Grotto 27 Fromm
45 ti ny insect
isle
or Clapton 46 Raison d'5 Wheel track, 28 Tortilla
47 ls 1 to Pedro
6 lime cooler
snack
50 Big flap
7 Auction
30 Mongolian 51 Rob ust en ~
-goers

desert
32 Del igh1
9 Harmful thing 34 More brittle
10 The - lhe 35 -in
limit!
(curbed)

ergy

8 GoOd dirt

36 Close

.,

CELEBRITY CIPHER
.

by Luis Campos

Celebnty C1 ~T qptogliJllS are creai!J\l irom QUCta:•o"S oy !a1'0LS :JeO~~
:a ~;h etter 1n rne CIPher 51a1o; 'o• ~notroe

~as: a'IC p•esent

Today·s clue· Mequals B

" 0

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RUJN

MWHHUJK

HZUJU

XUDO

CEB ' H ZOH

XZUJURUJ

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•

HUOD
OH

ZOH

WBNXWN . "

XOOOOU

LN

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ZDL .

OH . ZU ' K

P OO

ZECPUK . EB

LWNK

PREVIOUS SOLUTION - ' You've gal guys in cnarge ol shows who p1obaoiy
went to school for chemistry, and now they're e)(ecutrve producers ·· ·Berme

Mac ·
..._ _ _ _ _ _

a

,__~="'::"·"""-===~:=-~----. ~

l:~~:t:;'
S©"R~~
- t-tr'b~
~~!~
.
1...,; for
Y
_.;;__""'!..,....:_
Cut

I. ,OUAN

A Reorrc .~lde !ertor~ of t~e
U lour scrambled words be·

.......,. 'Birthday:

SOUP TO NUTZ

"Beetle

Vice ·· cop

·Graph

Tuesday, Sep&lt;.30, 2008
By Bernice Bede Osol
In addition to your regular routine, you
might lind yourself engaged In an enterprising situation in the year ahead. H
could be something you'll entoy doing but
never thought you'd have 1he courage to
get involved with.
LI BRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) - It's not
importan t \hat you ta ke' the bows
because alltha1 really mailers is that you
, are th e power behind the thron e. You'll
write the script and let others act it ou t.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22(- Your self·
esteem will be greatly enhanced by let·
ling your compassionate nature domi·
nate your behavior. You'll feal ' happies t
wh en you give of yourse ll.
SAGITTARI US (Nov. 23-0 ec. 21 ) - It
won't he necessary to pu t on a1rs ,
because your dynamic personality has a
dimension that transfo rms you intO the
center of attraction without even trying.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22·Jan. 19) !....
Competitive iiwolvements will be eJCactly
wh at you need in order to challenge
yourself to be 1he bes t. Being No. 2 at
anything won't sit well with you
AQUARIUS (Jan . 20-Feb. 19)- Unless
there are many adventures in your life at
this time. you will be eKtremely restless
and edgy. If YOlJ can 't gel others to move
at your pace. don't hesitate to go oH on
you r own.
,.
PISCES .(Feb. 20-M arch 20) - You can
manage things effectively Jar others in
much better ways than ihey Can lor .
them selves. To your credrt, you'll use thi s
gilt ad vantageously.
ARIES (March 21-Aprit 19)- Because
your companions are likely to have a
strong influence. on you. selec t those
who are erigaged and perform well in tne
types of activities You would like to develop.
,
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) - You are
lrkely to fee t wortnless unless you are
industrious. Do something that is very
productive in your mind. Work on a project you believe is worthwhile.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20)- A. gung-ho
atlitude makes you want to lea~ the pack
and call the shots in all endeaiJOrs. Don't
let anyone relegate you to the back raw.
CANCER (June 21-July 22) - Because
you are motivated by a sense of urgenCy,
you will be a strong stretch runner who ·
won't tire as time ticks on. You 'll not rest
unfil you have reached your objective.
LEO (July 23·Aug. 22) - When you
speak, those within earshot wilt sit up
and ta ~e notice. It's not so much your
demeanor but what you "have to say and
the power1u l message your words seem
to carry.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) -Tho maJor
. reason why you are apt to be sucn a success can be summect up In one sen·
tanca: Vou want It The probabilities lor
achieving your ob.l(totlves are excellent.

40 Helps a
crook
41 Currier's
24 River in
partner
England
42 Dancer - 25 Enjoy a feast
Ellen
rarewe ll
23 - AlamoS

Ba iley ··
3 Steam

'in India
33 Daughter's
brother
34· Allend
35 " Miami

Astro-

lnsur8d
WV042182 Free

36 Oil barrel

22 Caesar's

2 Dog in

down

A takeout double usually occurs early in
· an auclion, bul it can come up later,
wnen the opponents have ground to a
halt 1n a suit lit. Then. if you judge that
your side has sullrcienl values to compete. back into the auction with a takeout
double. You hope to make your contract,
but your · primary aim is to push the
opponents one level. higher and defeat
them by a trick - as in today's deal."
After North opens one di"amond, East
m1ght throw in a thin one-heart overcall.
But it 'we assume that he·p~Sses, South
Jesponds one spade. Then West should
pass because he does not have four
clubs. North raises to two spades, of
course, and two passes tallow.
West could lie down and play dead, but
a r.ed·blooded player would doubl e. He
knows the opponents have found a
mator·suit fit lltit have not investigated
game. So East rs marked with some
points. The double would not be underwritten by Lloyd's of Landon, but it is a
worthwhile garilble.
East advances with lhree hearts. (Note
· thai he would never bid lour hearts; he
knows West is bidding his points.) Now
South cannot win. If he passes, East will
probably make three hearts by playing
.North for the club queen. And when
South bids three spades. he is, one too
high.
West leads tOO heart king. East encouraging with the six. On-the ne~~:t heart.
though, East should play the two, his
lowest card being a suit-preference signal lor clubs. Now an e~~:pert West would
shift to the club jack. in case South had
lO·x-x of clubs and East K-9+x.

20 Not ·neath

t Uh-huh

26 Loft
29 Roman poet
30 Slangy
ladies
31 British rule

.

12 Waterproof 37 Stone Age
16 Bearing
tool

DOWN

22 Geese
· fonnaHo'il
23 Weighed

28 Years E-.;perience

David Lewis
740-992-6971

Infusion

21 Luau
welcome

Compete with a late
takeout double

2459 St. Rt. 160 • Gallipolis
CALL FOR FREE
I

We appte,·iate yorir
bm·inen;

7 4
K 10' 9
6 3 2

Opening lead: ¥ K

740.446.9200

and

AI0911 5

•
t
•

projectile
55 Mr. Shepard
56 CD-57 Herbal

18 Type of
balloon
(2 wds .)
19 Geodesic
structures

K I 0, 9 7

·•

Pass

www.tim'be:rcreekcablnetry.com

1"Cpt11L

•

53 Revise
54 Blowgun

- wool?"

~

¥ A6 5 :12

Pass·
Db I.
Pass

FI~TtfE~

q1echanit: work.
L'l\!llp!t:ll' .~crv ice oi l
chan~e~. small enpi ne

• J 4

South

Ponwroy, OH

wheel
ali£nlllenls. lig.lll

• 6 j :I 2
"' A. J 8

• ·a.urch D/..,Qunt ,

HIIS7 Wipple Rd .

L'()mputcr

.. 7

Dealer: North
Vulnerable: North-South

L &amp; L Tire Barn

Wt• hi I) u:-.ed ti·res,

l~ ast ,

Se11rot"CH~

· l5 Point~)
New &amp; L\c~ Tire~.

14 Hardwood
15 Tried
17 "Ha~e you

.. ,J 6
Y KQJ I O

:20 r•tt• •~F~«,......,,

E-mail: captbill65@yahoo.com
www.auctionzip.com
#5548

Hours

vehicle

9 8
A Q 7 G
Q 5 ~

West

lnturt&lt;l · FrM bUmllu

Auctioneer:
BiiiV R. Goble Jr.
740-416-1164

29670 Bashan Road
Racine . Ohio

13 Import

South

AUCTIONS/ANTIQUES

Hill's Self
Storage

"A Place to Call HOME "
Foster Parents Neected!ll
$30·$46 a day with pd.
respi te Tra1ning begins
in September. Call Oasis
to help a child find a
place ' to call home.
1-677-325· 1556

A.VONI All Areas,!
To
Buy or Sell
Shirley
Spears 304-675 1429

ROGER HYSEllS
GARAGE

-------~,.

Owner Operator Opportunities R&amp;J Trucking •
Ms11etta. Oh1o has opportunities available lor .
OWner Operators within
the region. We feature
weekly settlements. in·
eludin-g fuel surcllarge &amp;
trailer rental. Ope rators
hould have newer equip·
ment. For more
1nfo rm atron contact Den·
n1s at 800-462-9365

•
t
•

39 Noon
on a sundial
40 Mr. Onassis
41 Leafy vines
44 Stretchy
cord
48 Rover ' ~ doc
49 Raad
surfaces
52 Before

guesses

09 ·211..1)8

II K Q 4 3

CARPENTER
SERVICE .

25 Years Local
IF'

I

North

YOUNG'S

38 Fake drake

1 Ouch!
4 Seafood
choice
8 Freigh1
amts.
·11 Timetable

•I

Help Wanted- General

•

·-------------------------------

Call TODAY!

Work NEXT WEEKf!!

POST
OFFICE , ·· NOW
HIRING avg. ~ay $20/tu
or
%57Klyr,
1ncltJdes
Fea.Ben, OT. Place by
atiSourc'~, not at1iliated
with USHS who hires
1-666·403·25B2

.

.. . ......

Drivers &amp; Delivery

Electrical/ Plumbing

If so, you qualify for a

•

www.mydailysentinel:com · '
BRIDGE

Pomeroy Ohio

Olfering a $250

Sales

Are you 65
·or older?

•

·Full and Part-time
Pos1t1ons
Day and Evening
Shifts
Professional W6rk.
Environmerit!
Medical, Dental .
EAP, 401KI
On-Site Doctor
, Weekly ~ay and
Bonus Incentives!

304~674-6204

~

'

No SalesJ No
Collections! Recru it
volunteerS for non-profit
organizations that help
save lives arJd prevent
diseases such as cancer,
lung and heart drsease!
Get paid to make a
difference!

2 BR 1 bath hke new
3675 8ulav11!e Pike no
pets
all
eleCt PC.
or
740-446· 4234
740·206·7661

fn·level bnck/cedar on
· .98 acres, Rutl and. Oh.
."prNata
Sertrng
eat-In
"".kitchen, 3 llr., 2 full
' baths, lg tivingr6om, lg.
family room, out of flood ~17_4..;0;,;
)3..;3,;.9·-306•3~--~ $850 mo. plus sec . dep.
pla1n, (740)742·-'. 404 or 2 bedroom Apartment &amp; 44t -5062 or 37!1-2923
740-949-2930
2 bedroom House on 5th
St 304-812-4350 ask f9r Commencal Space tor
Land {Acreage)
Rent, Man• St. Pt Pleas
Don
-200ac.
+Ion ----~~~-- $400/mo.
2000
sq/!t
.
3 rooms and hath up· 703·501-4808
, Gallia/Me1gs . Co..
OH
·
comp1e1e1Y 1ur·
. border.
Great hunting sta1rs
H
f R nt
·land .
5210.000 neg. nished wrth
R 4WID.
02 No •o;;;;=o-use=s=o;;;r
pets. Ret. eq. 41· 45
304.593.5,,
.:.60
S~.1KI IlHI' 4 h...·d . 2 llatli
Furil1shed apanment 2nd B.ml.. R\:pu ' (5';;: J1,v.n. ~~ ~
ApproJC. 25 acres mil re- ave. Uostairs all utilities yt'ar~ . im APR 1 r.u 11,1in.~'
. moie.
rough
access. paid, 1 BR , 11 0 pets, Gal- XOII- Ii~IJ - 4'-J4(o c' 1\1127
S40K. Buyer must Sur· hpolis . 446-9523
vey , C"tt alter 5pm CONVENIENTLY
LO· 1br House 1n New Ha·
304·695-3390
GATED
&amp;
AFFORD· ven , WV, total electnc,
Approx. 50 acres for ABLE! TownhOuse apart- everything 1n walking dissmall lance $300 month. $300
sale Call 740· 446·3964 ments.
and/or
Pets
No
or 740-44 1·1533. Leave houses for rent. Call depOSit
a message please ,
740-441 -111t for appll· . 304 ~B 6 2 · 3652
cation &amp; inforn:tation.
Real Estafe
2 BR house in Gallipolis.
3500
Rentals FREE RENT SPECIAL W/D · c"onn
$415/mo
Jordan Landing 2br, 3br $150/dep. You pay all
&amp; 4br Available No Pets. utilities. No section B or
Aportinonts/
Tenant Respon sible lor HUD.
Call
Wayne
Townhouses
Rent
&amp;
Electric 404-456-3802
304·674 ·0023
or ~-~~~~~28R APT. CIA. (740) 304-6 t0-0776
2br in Pt. Pl. $450/mo. ,
' 44 1·0~94
dep. req., no pels. deFree
Rent
SpeciaPI! tached
garage,
.w/d
Apartment available now 2&amp;JBR and up, Central hookup 304-812-5030 or
Riverbend
Apts.
New Air, W/O hookup, tenant 304 -675·6474
Haven wv. Now accept- pays electric . EHO Elm ,.,.-~-..,.....,.......,.,...,..,...
appiJCS trons
lor View
Ap ts. 2br, 1ba. Quite Neigh. ingHUD ·subsldlzed,
one (304)B82 •30 ' 7
borhood, No Smoking,
Bedroom Apts . Utilities ~~~~~~~~ No Pets $450 month plus
&amp; Re1erence.
included. Based on 30% Twin Rivers T.ower is ac- 0 epsort·
.d.
of adjusted 1ncome. Call cepting applica tions for WaterITrashiS ewer pa1
304·862 ·3121 ,
ava•lable waiting list for HUD sub· 740-446-6939
.for SeniOr and Disabled sidized . 1-BR apartment
for the elderly/disabled. 3 bd., 2 . bath, Pomeroy,
people.
call 675-6679
basement
wlgarage.
handicap
accessible,
Gr~clous Living 1 and 2
$650
per
mo .,
Bedroom A.pts. at Village 740·94.9·2303
Beautiful Apts. at Jack· Marwr
and
Riverside
son Estates. . 52 West- Apts. in . Middleport, from
Land {Acroago)
wood Or.. from $365 to $327
' to
$592
$560 .
740·446·2568. 74C-992·5064.
Equal
Wanted To Lease. Bow
Equal Housing Opportu· Housing Oppo~unity.
need
nity. This institutiOn iS an -~..;..~~--~~ "hunting
land
Equal Opportunity Pro- Modern 1BR ap1 Call · enough for 3 people.
vider and Employer
740-446-0390
(628\·380·0594

•

I need to tind (2) people
needtng a full t1me JOb.
You need to be honest. u
person ot rntegnty, w1th
good people skills. You
also need to be able to
follow instruchons and
have an aOility to listen
and lead people m the
right directron. 1 need
people who wanl to work
and -will show up tor
work. It yOu are a recem
college grad and cannot
l1nd employment an"d feel
that you are quatJtled,
grve us a chance' until a
JOb 1n your career pllth
hecomes available Cal!
Pat Hill ; New Car ManaQer to' an interv1ew at
446·9800.

reqwred, (740)992-3961

--:"== ,

\
I
I

$250 Sign an Bonusl
No experience required 1 ·
Voted TOP FIVE Best
Places to Work in Ohio
for 20071
Come See Why ,

::-o:-=-:---:o;;;;;;;:-~

nr ~'::'!'~'"":~'"":~~

(!)
·~··.'

Help Wonlod • General

deposrt

references

740-992-0165

Help Wam.d • Gonorol

Monday, September 29, 2008
ALLEYOOP

HOUS111 9

one

&amp;

,\Jl"t'

4000

Manufactured

Monday, September 29, 2008

iow to l orm fo i.lr

~ impl e

Word!.

Z E RN F Y

"To mak e up ni!h ;-Uillt.'Onr.'·
the mom 1id\· i~. .·d h~r ditu"'~hrcr.··
~ I you musl b&lt; willing lo meet

.

BUNM YL
9
1. 7 19 • . . 1
.

III

-------··

.

e
you

@ ~'PI;~r-

~.JUMEE~ fC. ~-r·

LfP[~~

Complo" ·''• ""'" '' qvct"f
by f1ll lng 1n fh t! m1~mg worth

deve lop

iJ !4
I

!

irom sr~n r.:a

1:.

ito

I

3 ce!o.,....

lj;

19
I

!T WL-_ _..__
':
SCKAMLETS .J\ NS WERS 'l!cbiiiS
Yr•nder· (h~nt·r - Newsv Piltc·t I·I v:
··f J,)ll t \' ;lrt.: h&lt;l\\ ' much:"!

mun

CI11Tlt1rare ml'·cttnl: . "i flt &lt;.::tltllv

uik. ·

.! :•

\\1 11'11\
.ln :r.v· .. ··'d -t: 1.

s;n:, i1 111 ,\ fl· \1. \;.' · k l )'\ .,

ARLO &amp; JANIS
LI5WJ 1 THE. HUMAO l'tODY
L05~o

30,000·40,000 ();AD
&amp;J&lt;IU
A1o111JU~!

cme

,

Tf1AT'o ALMO~T

Nt!J{. PO/J!JD5A YOAR.!

THo OODY

Rm.AC~o

THE..'\

�Page 86 • The Daily Sentinel
All electric Ranch home
at 2620 Mt. Vernoo AveQue. Point Pleasant sit1ing on 1 112 lots. 2200
square feet living space
3 bedrooms, 1 full ba th.
LA. DR &amp; Krtchen Most
~ooms
carpeted
over

I

· Aportmonb/
Townhou.a• ·

ove-n pee a
Cl1p th1s AD and take 11
Wi th you when you v1srt
our community to get
this Special diSCOUnt
Move:1n m Oct aM get
$100.00 your 2BR Apt.
nardwOOd floors.
t car
ot1 Nov rent. Curiently
~anached garage
PallO
rent1ng I &amp; 2 BR UnitS
•with
Pergola. Outsrde
Spacious lloor plans.
:storage bwldmg.
Base- ranch &amp; townhome style
~ent
includes carpeted
hvrng. playground &amp;
) ami ty. room/wood burner
bas~etball court, on-s1te
with Barn Board Panel·
laundry tac1lity. 24 hr
illg &amp; accents.
Large
emergency marnte·
bedroom/offrce wrth walk .
nance. quiet country to·
rn closet
Carpeted lull
cat1on close to mator
bath wrth Jacuzzr tub.
med1cat
tac 1ht1es,
large shower and double
pharmnc1es. grocery
srnk vanity
Large .laun·
store ... Just m1nutas
dry room &amp; storage area
away tro'll other major
304·q75·6135
shopp1ng in tho ama ·
Honeysuc~le Hills
Foreclosure
4br. 2ba,
Apartments
only $29.9001 Pr1ces to
266 Colonial Dr·ive ll l 13
Selll
For
list1ngs
Bidwell, Oh10 45(;)14
800-620-4646 exT 462
740-446-3344
Hous.e w1th 2 acres 10 SR
Ofi1Ce Hours M, W, F
160 Will consrder land
9AM · SPM
contract.
441·5062 or
379·2923
Nice 4 br, 2 ba home on
Kmeon Dr m Gall1pohs
Quite nerghbornood on
dead end street. large 2
car garage and finiShed
basement. 740·25G· 1109

• Three Bedroom house
· At# 2 Noi!h Two Bed·
Home
roorn
Mobile
Camp
Conley
304-695·3 129

www.mydailysentinel.com
Aportmenb/
Townhouas
New

Haven

rborn

apartment,

lhr

bed - ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ;

Appl r,ml.'&lt;"'

rur

n1,heJ. ';,,175 o- .t.-~J\11,
PPIIS
1(14 07 .~ ~ 1 00
H!J-f&gt;75- :i51.W

n~a r,

2 br trarler besrde Wal-

rnar1 rn Mason $475 mo .
plus deposrt. references

Now accepting
applications at:
Valley View Apartments
. 800 State Route 325
Federal Funds just - re· Thurman. Ohio 45685
leased for Land Owners.
740-245-9170
· No
closing cost and
1·2 Bedroom Aparlments
ZERO
DOWN! Will do
with appliances f.urnrshed
land
Improvements.
On site laundry facility
Bank!Uptcy
&amp; Bad Credit
Call lor deta1ls or p1ck up
OK
2.
3.
4
and 5 bed·
appl1cation at rental
rooms
available.
office"
740·446-3384
Possibility ot rental
assistance .
3BR 2 bath S575 depos•t
Equal Housing
$575/mo rpnt plus utls
Opportunity
Ready 1722 8 Chatham
TOO# 4 19~526~0466
Ave . (740)645- 1646
"This lnSIItUti•l'"l IS an
Equal 0~ . • tunrty
3br, 2ba , Pt. Pleasant
Provide r il.nd Employer" area 304-273-6622 or

'

Commerdcl
t BR Apt, WID hoOkups.
satellite TV 1ncl. w/rent, 2 bay service sta!Jon
Pi~e
Lease
close to hosp1tat. Call Jackson
requi
red
.
Call
446-364·1
740·339·0362
for more irifo
1 BR Apts for Rent. 1st
Ave,
Gallipolis.. Commercia l property
"No
Pets
S37H325.
over 1 acre , large ga-'
HUD
or
construction. rage, display area and
Washer/Dryer
Hook-up office, Upper Rt. 7 be·
Depes1l .
Req. side new Hampton Inn

2· 2006 161180 Clayton 3
bed 2 bath. 200 t6x70
Fleetwood 2 bed 1. bath ,
1999 Fortune 3 Oed , 2
bath We deliver Olock
level and anchor. We
can do !he footers also.
Oay!ime
740-388-()(){X)
01
740-388-8513 Evenmgs 740 .388 _8017 or
740-245-92 13.
~~-~~~~-,
2004 Ooublewide In
new condition. 4 bedroom. 2 bath, all appli- ·
ances
1ncluded,
$37 .000
loca ted
at
176 Zuspan Lane Mason City 304 ·675~2 lt 7
Brand new 3bed 2bath
on + ·hall acre 1n Pt.
Plea&lt;;anl
OWNER
FlNANCE
AVAILABLE .
17401 446-3570
New 3 Bedroom homes
from $2 14.36 per month ,
mcludes many upgrades,
detrvery
&amp;
set-up:
740..385·2434
6000

Employment

Clerical
Clencal &amp; ott 1ce pos1ti ons
available. paid tra1ning
~ta rts
immediately, no
experience needed, no
sElles .
ca ll
1-888-610-6953

;,,;;;;;,;;;,;~;,==
Construction

:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;=;;;;;=;;;;;;;;

Skillrid Carpcntdr s. must
have own to ots Fax re·
sumes· to ·7.40-388-9530
or mail to: PO Box 55,
Bidwell,
OH
45614.
Some
travel required.
Salary based on axperience. EEO Employer

Dr'.v.er's Educa1 1·0 0 pos 1·•
tion open in the Gallipolis
and Meigs area. Flexible
hours. Must be .able to
work
evemngs
and
weekends. Job entails
classroom and behind·
ttJe wheel instruction for
new drivers. Qualified
candidates must have a
h1gh
school
diploma,
valid · dr1vers
license,
pass
background
checks, exp. preferred in
t raffic safety. taw enIorcement. or teaching,
or we Will train . Dt·op off
resum9 at Gallipolis AAA
office or fax res ume to
Attn; AI at 740·351·0537
EOE

Erc.perienced MIG Weldei
with the abilitY to read
blue prirts, Competitive
Wages
with
excellent
.
b ene f.rt pac ka ge . Evenrng
Send
Resu
·me
•,,o·.
·
,
•.
Sh 11
Imperial Electric Co 345
Sycamore St. Middle port,
OH 45760
;;;,;.;,;;;,;;;;,.,..,..,..,,..,
Government &amp; Federal
Jobs

Senior :Discount*
when you pay for a 6 or 12 ·
month-subscription on your
home delivered subscription!

FEDERAL
POSTAL JOBS

Here's all you
need to do ...
Fill out the coupon below
and drop off or. mail it with a
copy of your photo ID.

$17.89·$28.271HR .,
now
h1ring. "For application ·
and free government jOb
info, call American Asol
labor
soc.
t ·913·599·8226, 24/hrs
amp. serv.

®a:Uipol if~ '1laailp.W:rtbune
.•

tlleaflant jS.egt~ter
The Daily Sentinel
~unba!'· nttme~ -i\&gt;entind

~oint

The Daily Sentinel • Page 87

NEA Crossword Puzzle

Sigfi..Jlfl.J!.tmlt.l

Jnterv;ew
TOMORROWI!

Ten poSitions need tilled
by next week!
No eJCper1ence requ1red!
No Sates!
No Collections!

YoJIL!~Iu '"-""'00Llt1-

waillng for yoyl!!
1;888·1MC·PAYU
Ext. 1901

httpJ~obs. i n l ocision .c om

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

De1iverymarehouSe person needed. lull time, lnl mediate opEining , must
have good driving record. Apply·Lifestyle Fur·
niture 856 Third Ave.
Gallipolis . 9·:30-5·00 No
Phone Calls

Full and Part-trme
Pos111ons
Profess1onal Work
Env1ronmentl
Medical. Dental. EAP.
40 tK1
On-s1te Docrorl
Weekly Pay and
Bonus lncerl!lvesJ
1

Call TODAY.'

In terview
TOMORROW/!
Work NEXT WEEK!! !

Someone to work ' on gar1·888-IMC·PAYU
bage route, Must be at
Ext. 2331
hltp:lljobt.inlocision.com
least 25 yrs.otd. clean
driv1ng reco rd, able to
read &amp; follow directions, - - . . . , . - - - - - Sportswriter
wor~
alone
&amp; some
The Ohio Valley Publish ·
ma'.ntenance. Send re·
ing "Co. is seeking moti·
sume to P.O Box 21
vated , people-oriented
Bidwell, Oh 4561 4
indiVidual ti fill a vacancy
in the news dept as a
Pomeroy Bus1ness need
Sportswriter The suce)(penenced
welder.
cessful candidate will
Hou rs between 8·4 Call cover h1gh school athlet- ·
740·992-3020
ics in-the area for the
daily ed1tion of the news·
paper, as well as assist :
ResCare Home Care is
with th e produc tion of
accepting
applications
sports
pages. Excellen t
for Support Associates,
CNA &amp; STNA. MR/00 writing and English skills,
phOtography sk1IIS ancf
exp preferred . Apply al
'
knowled!:Je of desktop
8204 Carla Dri vO. Gallipublishmg are sough t
polis, Mon · Fn. 8-4
The position is fulltiri1e.
Email resume to: rharri 40 hours a week, Wilh
son@rescare .com.
benetits. Interested parlies can send resumes lo
An Exce llent way to earn .
Kevin Kelly, Managing ·
money. The New AVon.
Edrtor. Ohio Valley PubCall
Marilyn
lishing Co .. 825 Third
304-882-2645
Ave .. Gallipolis. Oh10
~...,...~--,--...,...~
45631 or kkelly@my Custodian
for
loca l
dailytnbune.com . No
church . Mon-Fri 8:30am
phope calls please .
to 2prri. $10/hour. ·Send
reume to Minister, PO """"'""'""'""'"""""'""'"'
Mo1n
· t enonce /
Box 228, Point Pleasant,
WV 25550
Domelli·c
Direct Care Staff in resi·
dentlal youth ·program _
Must be 21 years ot age.
Pay baSed on experiCa ll
ence.
l740J379·9083
Mon-Fri
9arn-3pm.

ACROSS

Phillip
Alder
/

•~-------------~----. ---·---------••
. •• Subscriber's Name
•
.
•
•
.
••
••
•
'' Address
••••
••
•••
•• Qity/State/Zip
•
•
. ••
•
.•
•••
•• Phone
.
••
••
••
Mall or drop off this coupon along
••
••
with a copy of your photo 10 to
•
• Ohio Volley Publlohlng P.O. Box 469, Gallipolis, OH 45631 •
••
• •
•

• Room Additiont &amp;
Remodeli ng

• New Gar1ge1

· Eleclrk:al &amp; Plumbing
·Roofing &amp; Guners
• VInyl Siding &amp; PalnUng
· Pall o and Porch Decks

.

wv 036725

Johnson's Tree
Service

V.C. YOUNG Ill

St. Rl.124 PDIIIIOV.IH

Complete Tree Care

992-621 5

74D-992·5182

740-44 1;tlll1

laen9-6M·F
9-12511.

EJCpenence

4577 1
740-949·2217

Sizes 5'x10'
to 10'1130'
1:00AM· 8:00PM
11t41l mo pd

Hardw"d Cabinetry And Furnialre

WL· !--Cf\•icc

AfliOflEAIGflA~~Afl

BARNEY
IT MUST 8E

MISS PRUNELL'( KEEPS
TALKIN' 'BOUT OTHER .

CAREER 'DAY,
JAMEY !!

JOBS !!

OR A NICE QUIET

·.LIBRARIAN
.)OB !! OR ...

wi nterize boat s and
RV "s

(740) 992-5344
rvh111-Fr i.
H:OU am · -l :30 pm
Sat . H:OO am - 12

THE
Racine, Ohio 740·247-2019

II· \VIS
C O ~ CRf

LOSER

~'t'OU ~\1&gt; 't'OIJ WERE. 601~~

GLAt&gt;'t'~, KO!

TO 11\l&gt;.'t(.(. 1&gt;.1-\E.~O\C.
E.FFQ\q TO ~TA.'{ at\

II

CONSTitL C IIO !\

Owners:
Jon Van Meter &amp;

Concrete Removal

Paul

and Replacement
AllTyp,s 01
Concrete

Rowe

Cell:

West

,. ,.
North

740·416-5047
email:

CI-\OC.OLATt.

I~

M.'t'

t&lt;.R.'t'PTO~ITE. 1

YOUR 1&gt;\ET

jrshadfrm@aol.com

il-\1~ T\1-\t. !.

·

w'orll

t •

East
Pass
Pass

Pass

Puss

.•

Estimates

Stanley TreeTrimming
&amp; Removal

.
Part-time
rna1ntenance
worker, · 25·30hrs
per
week, Pa y based on eJC.
Call "' PronHJI and Qual ity
penence.
(740)379-9083
Mon-Fr1 Wmk
between 9am -3pm
* Rc~• sonahl t! Rules

C r&gt;lmllt.'l"cii.tl

ROBERT
BISSEll

CONSTRUCTION

740-992-1611

your . . ·
busiri~ss. on this page.

.Joraslow as . ·.,_ .:

&amp;

~ e.lil l err l irll

up·· ol!. ...

Viny l

* In sured
"""'""'""'""'""'""'""'""' *Ex periCn..:cd
Hours from 9·5 FJve (5)
Medical
days a week, Secretanal - = = = = = = = • Re ferences Avail:tble!
work, fil1ng, typing, com Cal l Gary Stanley @
puler 1.1pdates, Wages A
Celebration
of
7~ 11-.\ 91-KII44
negotiable. No Benefits Life.... Overbrook Center
P
le&lt;h~
lc;wc messa 1 C
Point Pleasan t Business located at 333 Page
Send Resume to CLA t 5 Street, Middleport, Ohio
TREI' WORK
c/o Point Pleasant Regis- is pleased to announce
ter, 200 Main St. Pt. lhat due to ·in.ternal
To pped, Take. Down
Pleasant,WV 25550
changes in our facility.
&amp; Removal
we are accepting afJpli·
All'ordable.
cations for
full
time
Rca"iJnable Price
House
parents(2)wan!ed
7P·7A LPN"s. part time
for boys group home lo·
740-444-5152
7A·7F: LPN'S and full
cated in soufhern Oh1o.
or leave messa e
time
and
part
time
27-7 care for 2 weeks on
to join
ou r ....- - - - - -...
·2 weeks off. Experience STNA'
trrendlys and
dedicated
ra ising teens or fos ter
.staff.
Applicant's must
care preferred . We pro· be
dependable,
team
vide training. Interested ?
Catt
., players witM positive altl·
035 5
1• 677 - 325 - 1566 Ior more tudes
Interested appli·
cants can p1ck up an ap·
information
M-F
6:30
Plication
• New Homes'
. , . . . . - - - - - - - . AM-4:30 PM . M eligible
•
Garages
Service Manager &amp; Serv- applicants will then be
• Complete
ice Technic1an positions contacted by Hollie Bumavailable. Health care &amp; garner, LPN , Slalf DeveiRemodeling
Retirement plans avail- opmen t
able. Please send re - Coordinator @740-992- .
to 6472. EOE &amp; A Partici· •
sume
Stop &amp; Compare
LLC@CAREO.COM
or· pant of the Drug-Free
fax to 740·446-9104
workplace program

~~~"' ·:,a~vertise

Noeoo'('.s.
COHe: UP
TO ME
TO SIW
'HEY" Of\
'WHAT"S

Quality Seam ley_
Gutters
Maintenance Plus
Sidi iig/Replacemcnt
WintiiJws/Rcmodeling
Bonded &amp; Insured

740-992· 1493 Olfice
740-416-8339 Cell
Free Estimated
Pnmerny. Ohi o

Seamless Gutters
Roofmg. Siding, Gutters
Insured &amp; Bonded
740·653·9657

'(0U1RE

601N6TO
T~EMOON?

503 Mil SL• Middle II II. 0145780

THEM HAVI!
~I'Oi&lt;EN TO

BUT YOU J.lAVE

· WELL,'fES ...SORT .
OF LIKE THAT..

WEAR ONE
OF TJ.lOSE TJ.IIN6S ·
ON 'I'OUR HEAD..
TO

748-992·3184

.......IV-friiiV 8:81 06:110 ...
SIIII'IIIV 11:81&amp;12:tllllm

PIYINB TOP PRICES fOR
11111111• Clas • Mlni.IIIIIIIINII
CIIIIIV!Ic Cllmrtn •CIIIIM
IIIIIUIAIIIIIIInl
.ICIII Ftr Clrl'lltl'rlclll

PSI CONSTRUCTION
RICK PRICE
New Homes , Ruum Additions, Remodeling,
Metal &amp; Shingle Roofs, '
Bathroom RetntO&lt;lclilng

Decks,

Construction ·
· VInyl Siding
• Replacement

Windows

fl

• Roofing
·Decks
· Garages
• Pole Buildings
·Room Additions

Owner:
James Keesee II

Roofing, Siding,
Soffit, Decks,
Doors, Windows,
Electric, Plumbing,

Drywall,

Remodeling, Room I
Additions
Local Contractor

740-367-0544
Free Estimates

7 40-367·0536

• Room Additions • Garages • Vinyl
and Wood Siding • Roofing • Pole
Barns • Patio \. Porches and Decks

MillE W. MARCUM,-~~
472.W Rie.hel Rnad . Lnng Bonom. OH

740-985-4141
Cell: 7-10-41 6- 18)4

25+ }'ears experit11ce Free Euimates

:.,992-2155

PLENTY OF

PEANUTS

Racycllng

Call: MARCUM CONSTRUCTION

The Daily Sentinel

.

H&amp;H
Guttering

For Retnod eling and New House Building

-~

H~VEW'T
AAt&gt; TH~T
Pll.O&amp;!..E M ~

t\E!

Manlay' a

742-2332

••

r

· ;:::::::====
Advertise
in this space for
$64 per month

cowandBOY
/

YOU t&lt;NOW ~OW IN THE
MOVIES WHEN TWO PEOPLE
SA~ THE SAME THING AT
THE SAME: TIME 0~ THEY
GET HIT IN THE HEAD
WITH THE
OBJECT, THEY
CAN SWITCf\
PLACES WITH
EACH OTHER?

BILLY SAID IF I

MISSED WITH THE
GA11BAGE CAN LID,
1WAS TO USE
THIS 2X4.

v-.. . . . .

GARFIELD
..:me. ONe WlfH rHe
BUIMNG I'ICI!P5 l'

. .. 1HI! CAf
HUGGriSR?

1&gt;\of'\,.. Vol~~ pO I.
Ha~e To Le~r"' THis.

S11J!'J D MaTH \"

engine
26 Strong,
43 News arti·
inventor
as veniso11
cle
4 Blue Grotto 27 Fromm
45 ti ny insect
isle
or Clapton 46 Raison d'5 Wheel track, 28 Tortilla
47 ls 1 to Pedro
6 lime cooler
snack
50 Big flap
7 Auction
30 Mongolian 51 Rob ust en ~
-goers

desert
32 Del igh1
9 Harmful thing 34 More brittle
10 The - lhe 35 -in
limit!
(curbed)

ergy

8 GoOd dirt

36 Close

.,

CELEBRITY CIPHER
.

by Luis Campos

Celebnty C1 ~T qptogliJllS are creai!J\l irom QUCta:•o"S oy !a1'0LS :JeO~~
:a ~;h etter 1n rne CIPher 51a1o; 'o• ~notroe

~as: a'IC p•esent

Today·s clue· Mequals B

" 0

AWB'H

RUJN

MWHHUJK

HZUJU

XUDO

CEB ' H ZOH

XZUJURUJ

H· ZUN

•

HUOD
OH

ZOH

WBNXWN . "

XOOOOU

LN

HE

ZDL .

OH . ZU ' K

P OO

ZECPUK . EB

LWNK

PREVIOUS SOLUTION - ' You've gal guys in cnarge ol shows who p1obaoiy
went to school for chemistry, and now they're e)(ecutrve producers ·· ·Berme

Mac ·
..._ _ _ _ _ _

a

,__~="'::"·"""-===~:=-~----. ~

l:~~:t:;'
S©"R~~
- t-tr'b~
~~!~
.
1...,; for
Y
_.;;__""'!..,....:_
Cut

I. ,OUAN

A Reorrc .~lde !ertor~ of t~e
U lour scrambled words be·

.......,. 'Birthday:

SOUP TO NUTZ

"Beetle

Vice ·· cop

·Graph

Tuesday, Sep&lt;.30, 2008
By Bernice Bede Osol
In addition to your regular routine, you
might lind yourself engaged In an enterprising situation in the year ahead. H
could be something you'll entoy doing but
never thought you'd have 1he courage to
get involved with.
LI BRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) - It's not
importan t \hat you ta ke' the bows
because alltha1 really mailers is that you
, are th e power behind the thron e. You'll
write the script and let others act it ou t.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22(- Your self·
esteem will be greatly enhanced by let·
ling your compassionate nature domi·
nate your behavior. You'll feal ' happies t
wh en you give of yourse ll.
SAGITTARI US (Nov. 23-0 ec. 21 ) - It
won't he necessary to pu t on a1rs ,
because your dynamic personality has a
dimension that transfo rms you intO the
center of attraction without even trying.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22·Jan. 19) !....
Competitive iiwolvements will be eJCactly
wh at you need in order to challenge
yourself to be 1he bes t. Being No. 2 at
anything won't sit well with you
AQUARIUS (Jan . 20-Feb. 19)- Unless
there are many adventures in your life at
this time. you will be eKtremely restless
and edgy. If YOlJ can 't gel others to move
at your pace. don't hesitate to go oH on
you r own.
,.
PISCES .(Feb. 20-M arch 20) - You can
manage things effectively Jar others in
much better ways than ihey Can lor .
them selves. To your credrt, you'll use thi s
gilt ad vantageously.
ARIES (March 21-Aprit 19)- Because
your companions are likely to have a
strong influence. on you. selec t those
who are erigaged and perform well in tne
types of activities You would like to develop.
,
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) - You are
lrkely to fee t wortnless unless you are
industrious. Do something that is very
productive in your mind. Work on a project you believe is worthwhile.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20)- A. gung-ho
atlitude makes you want to lea~ the pack
and call the shots in all endeaiJOrs. Don't
let anyone relegate you to the back raw.
CANCER (June 21-July 22) - Because
you are motivated by a sense of urgenCy,
you will be a strong stretch runner who ·
won't tire as time ticks on. You 'll not rest
unfil you have reached your objective.
LEO (July 23·Aug. 22) - When you
speak, those within earshot wilt sit up
and ta ~e notice. It's not so much your
demeanor but what you "have to say and
the power1u l message your words seem
to carry.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) -Tho maJor
. reason why you are apt to be sucn a success can be summect up In one sen·
tanca: Vou want It The probabilities lor
achieving your ob.l(totlves are excellent.

40 Helps a
crook
41 Currier's
24 River in
partner
England
42 Dancer - 25 Enjoy a feast
Ellen
rarewe ll
23 - AlamoS

Ba iley ··
3 Steam

'in India
33 Daughter's
brother
34· Allend
35 " Miami

Astro-

lnsur8d
WV042182 Free

36 Oil barrel

22 Caesar's

2 Dog in

down

A takeout double usually occurs early in
· an auclion, bul it can come up later,
wnen the opponents have ground to a
halt 1n a suit lit. Then. if you judge that
your side has sullrcienl values to compete. back into the auction with a takeout
double. You hope to make your contract,
but your · primary aim is to push the
opponents one level. higher and defeat
them by a trick - as in today's deal."
After North opens one di"amond, East
m1ght throw in a thin one-heart overcall.
But it 'we assume that he·p~Sses, South
Jesponds one spade. Then West should
pass because he does not have four
clubs. North raises to two spades, of
course, and two passes tallow.
West could lie down and play dead, but
a r.ed·blooded player would doubl e. He
knows the opponents have found a
mator·suit fit lltit have not investigated
game. So East rs marked with some
points. The double would not be underwritten by Lloyd's of Landon, but it is a
worthwhile garilble.
East advances with lhree hearts. (Note
· thai he would never bid lour hearts; he
knows West is bidding his points.) Now
South cannot win. If he passes, East will
probably make three hearts by playing
.North for the club queen. And when
South bids three spades. he is, one too
high.
West leads tOO heart king. East encouraging with the six. On-the ne~~:t heart.
though, East should play the two, his
lowest card being a suit-preference signal lor clubs. Now an e~~:pert West would
shift to the club jack. in case South had
lO·x-x of clubs and East K-9+x.

20 Not ·neath

t Uh-huh

26 Loft
29 Roman poet
30 Slangy
ladies
31 British rule

.

12 Waterproof 37 Stone Age
16 Bearing
tool

DOWN

22 Geese
· fonnaHo'il
23 Weighed

28 Years E-.;perience

David Lewis
740-992-6971

Infusion

21 Luau
welcome

Compete with a late
takeout double

2459 St. Rt. 160 • Gallipolis
CALL FOR FREE
I

We appte,·iate yorir
bm·inen;

7 4
K 10' 9
6 3 2

Opening lead: ¥ K

740.446.9200

and

AI0911 5

•
t
•

projectile
55 Mr. Shepard
56 CD-57 Herbal

18 Type of
balloon
(2 wds .)
19 Geodesic
structures

K I 0, 9 7

·•

Pass

www.tim'be:rcreekcablnetry.com

1"Cpt11L

•

53 Revise
54 Blowgun

- wool?"

~

¥ A6 5 :12

Pass·
Db I.
Pass

FI~TtfE~

q1echanit: work.
L'l\!llp!t:ll' .~crv ice oi l
chan~e~. small enpi ne

• J 4

South

Ponwroy, OH

wheel
ali£nlllenls. lig.lll

• 6 j :I 2
"' A. J 8

• ·a.urch D/..,Qunt ,

HIIS7 Wipple Rd .

L'()mputcr

.. 7

Dealer: North
Vulnerable: North-South

L &amp; L Tire Barn

Wt• hi I) u:-.ed ti·res,

l~ ast ,

Se11rot"CH~

· l5 Point~)
New &amp; L\c~ Tire~.

14 Hardwood
15 Tried
17 "Ha~e you

.. ,J 6
Y KQJ I O

:20 r•tt• •~F~«,......,,

E-mail: captbill65@yahoo.com
www.auctionzip.com
#5548

Hours

vehicle

9 8
A Q 7 G
Q 5 ~

West

lnturt&lt;l · FrM bUmllu

Auctioneer:
BiiiV R. Goble Jr.
740-416-1164

29670 Bashan Road
Racine . Ohio

13 Import

South

AUCTIONS/ANTIQUES

Hill's Self
Storage

"A Place to Call HOME "
Foster Parents Neected!ll
$30·$46 a day with pd.
respi te Tra1ning begins
in September. Call Oasis
to help a child find a
place ' to call home.
1-677-325· 1556

A.VONI All Areas,!
To
Buy or Sell
Shirley
Spears 304-675 1429

ROGER HYSEllS
GARAGE

-------~,.

Owner Operator Opportunities R&amp;J Trucking •
Ms11etta. Oh1o has opportunities available lor .
OWner Operators within
the region. We feature
weekly settlements. in·
eludin-g fuel surcllarge &amp;
trailer rental. Ope rators
hould have newer equip·
ment. For more
1nfo rm atron contact Den·
n1s at 800-462-9365

•
t
•

39 Noon
on a sundial
40 Mr. Onassis
41 Leafy vines
44 Stretchy
cord
48 Rover ' ~ doc
49 Raad
surfaces
52 Before

guesses

09 ·211..1)8

II K Q 4 3

CARPENTER
SERVICE .

25 Years Local
IF'

I

North

YOUNG'S

38 Fake drake

1 Ouch!
4 Seafood
choice
8 Freigh1
amts.
·11 Timetable

•I

Help Wanted- General

•

·-------------------------------

Call TODAY!

Work NEXT WEEKf!!

POST
OFFICE , ·· NOW
HIRING avg. ~ay $20/tu
or
%57Klyr,
1ncltJdes
Fea.Ben, OT. Place by
atiSourc'~, not at1iliated
with USHS who hires
1-666·403·25B2

.

.. . ......

Drivers &amp; Delivery

Electrical/ Plumbing

If so, you qualify for a

•

www.mydailysentinel:com · '
BRIDGE

Pomeroy Ohio

Olfering a $250

Sales

Are you 65
·or older?

•

·Full and Part-time
Pos1t1ons
Day and Evening
Shifts
Professional W6rk.
Environmerit!
Medical, Dental .
EAP, 401KI
On-Site Doctor
, Weekly ~ay and
Bonus Incentives!

304~674-6204

~

'

No SalesJ No
Collections! Recru it
volunteerS for non-profit
organizations that help
save lives arJd prevent
diseases such as cancer,
lung and heart drsease!
Get paid to make a
difference!

2 BR 1 bath hke new
3675 8ulav11!e Pike no
pets
all
eleCt PC.
or
740-446· 4234
740·206·7661

fn·level bnck/cedar on
· .98 acres, Rutl and. Oh.
."prNata
Sertrng
eat-In
"".kitchen, 3 llr., 2 full
' baths, lg tivingr6om, lg.
family room, out of flood ~17_4..;0;,;
)3..;3,;.9·-306•3~--~ $850 mo. plus sec . dep.
pla1n, (740)742·-'. 404 or 2 bedroom Apartment &amp; 44t -5062 or 37!1-2923
740-949-2930
2 bedroom House on 5th
St 304-812-4350 ask f9r Commencal Space tor
Land {Acreage)
Rent, Man• St. Pt Pleas
Don
-200ac.
+Ion ----~~~-- $400/mo.
2000
sq/!t
.
3 rooms and hath up· 703·501-4808
, Gallia/Me1gs . Co..
OH
·
comp1e1e1Y 1ur·
. border.
Great hunting sta1rs
H
f R nt
·land .
5210.000 neg. nished wrth
R 4WID.
02 No •o;;;;=o-use=s=o;;;r
pets. Ret. eq. 41· 45
304.593.5,,
.:.60
S~.1KI IlHI' 4 h...·d . 2 llatli
Furil1shed apanment 2nd B.ml.. R\:pu ' (5';;: J1,v.n. ~~ ~
ApproJC. 25 acres mil re- ave. Uostairs all utilities yt'ar~ . im APR 1 r.u 11,1in.~'
. moie.
rough
access. paid, 1 BR , 11 0 pets, Gal- XOII- Ii~IJ - 4'-J4(o c' 1\1127
S40K. Buyer must Sur· hpolis . 446-9523
vey , C"tt alter 5pm CONVENIENTLY
LO· 1br House 1n New Ha·
304·695-3390
GATED
&amp;
AFFORD· ven , WV, total electnc,
Approx. 50 acres for ABLE! TownhOuse apart- everything 1n walking dissmall lance $300 month. $300
sale Call 740· 446·3964 ments.
and/or
Pets
No
or 740-44 1·1533. Leave houses for rent. Call depOSit
a message please ,
740-441 -111t for appll· . 304 ~B 6 2 · 3652
cation &amp; inforn:tation.
Real Estafe
2 BR house in Gallipolis.
3500
Rentals FREE RENT SPECIAL W/D · c"onn
$415/mo
Jordan Landing 2br, 3br $150/dep. You pay all
&amp; 4br Available No Pets. utilities. No section B or
Aportinonts/
Tenant Respon sible lor HUD.
Call
Wayne
Townhouses
Rent
&amp;
Electric 404-456-3802
304·674 ·0023
or ~-~~~~~28R APT. CIA. (740) 304-6 t0-0776
2br in Pt. Pl. $450/mo. ,
' 44 1·0~94
dep. req., no pels. deFree
Rent
SpeciaPI! tached
garage,
.w/d
Apartment available now 2&amp;JBR and up, Central hookup 304-812-5030 or
Riverbend
Apts.
New Air, W/O hookup, tenant 304 -675·6474
Haven wv. Now accept- pays electric . EHO Elm ,.,.-~-..,.....,.......,.,...,..,...
appiJCS trons
lor View
Ap ts. 2br, 1ba. Quite Neigh. ingHUD ·subsldlzed,
one (304)B82 •30 ' 7
borhood, No Smoking,
Bedroom Apts . Utilities ~~~~~~~~ No Pets $450 month plus
&amp; Re1erence.
included. Based on 30% Twin Rivers T.ower is ac- 0 epsort·
.d.
of adjusted 1ncome. Call cepting applica tions for WaterITrashiS ewer pa1
304·862 ·3121 ,
ava•lable waiting list for HUD sub· 740-446-6939
.for SeniOr and Disabled sidized . 1-BR apartment
for the elderly/disabled. 3 bd., 2 . bath, Pomeroy,
people.
call 675-6679
basement
wlgarage.
handicap
accessible,
Gr~clous Living 1 and 2
$650
per
mo .,
Bedroom A.pts. at Village 740·94.9·2303
Beautiful Apts. at Jack· Marwr
and
Riverside
son Estates. . 52 West- Apts. in . Middleport, from
Land {Acroago)
wood Or.. from $365 to $327
' to
$592
$560 .
740·446·2568. 74C-992·5064.
Equal
Wanted To Lease. Bow
Equal Housing Opportu· Housing Oppo~unity.
need
nity. This institutiOn iS an -~..;..~~--~~ "hunting
land
Equal Opportunity Pro- Modern 1BR ap1 Call · enough for 3 people.
vider and Employer
740-446-0390
(628\·380·0594

•

I need to tind (2) people
needtng a full t1me JOb.
You need to be honest. u
person ot rntegnty, w1th
good people skills. You
also need to be able to
follow instruchons and
have an aOility to listen
and lead people m the
right directron. 1 need
people who wanl to work
and -will show up tor
work. It yOu are a recem
college grad and cannot
l1nd employment an"d feel
that you are quatJtled,
grve us a chance' until a
JOb 1n your career pllth
hecomes available Cal!
Pat Hill ; New Car ManaQer to' an interv1ew at
446·9800.

reqwred, (740)992-3961

--:"== ,

\
I
I

$250 Sign an Bonusl
No experience required 1 ·
Voted TOP FIVE Best
Places to Work in Ohio
for 20071
Come See Why ,

::-o:-=-:---:o;;;;;;;:-~

nr ~'::'!'~'"":~'"":~~

(!)
·~··.'

Help Wonlod • General

deposrt

references

740-992-0165

Help Wam.d • Gonorol

Monday, September 29, 2008
ALLEYOOP

HOUS111 9

one

&amp;

,\Jl"t'

4000

Manufactured

Monday, September 29, 2008

iow to l orm fo i.lr

~ impl e

Word!.

Z E RN F Y

"To mak e up ni!h ;-Uillt.'Onr.'·
the mom 1id\· i~. .·d h~r ditu"'~hrcr.··
~ I you musl b&lt; willing lo meet

.

BUNM YL
9
1. 7 19 • . . 1
.

III

-------··

.

e
you

@ ~'PI;~r-

~.JUMEE~ fC. ~-r·

LfP[~~

Complo" ·''• ""'" '' qvct"f
by f1ll lng 1n fh t! m1~mg worth

deve lop

iJ !4
I

!

irom sr~n r.:a

1:.

ito

I

3 ce!o.,....

lj;

19
I

!T WL-_ _..__
':
SCKAMLETS .J\ NS WERS 'l!cbiiiS
Yr•nder· (h~nt·r - Newsv Piltc·t I·I v:
··f J,)ll t \' ;lrt.: h&lt;l\\ ' much:"!

mun

CI11Tlt1rare ml'·cttnl: . "i flt &lt;.::tltllv

uik. ·

.! :•

\\1 11'11\
.ln :r.v· .. ··'d -t: 1.

s;n:, i1 111 ,\ fl· \1. \;.' · k l )'\ .,

ARLO &amp; JANIS
LI5WJ 1 THE. HUMAO l'tODY
L05~o

30,000·40,000 ();AD
&amp;J&lt;IU
A1o111JU~!

cme

,

Tf1AT'o ALMO~T

Nt!J{. PO/J!JD5A YOAR.!

THo OODY

Rm.AC~o

THE..'\

�Page B8 • The Daily Sentinel

Monday, September 29, 2008

www .mydail ysentinel.com

. ©2008 l!N!YE RSAL MEPIA 5YNPICAIE INC. SPECIAL ADVERTISEMENT 1-'E ATURE

ADVERTISEMEN T

FO RHEAT SURGE LLC 3939 EVERHARll RD CANTON OH 44709

Amish mantle and miracle invention
help home
bills hit ro bottom
.

Bailo!lt bill slapped
. aside; record
stock plunge, A2

.

'

•

•

Miracle heaters being given away free with orders for real Amish fireplace mantles to announce the invention
that help slash heat bills, but Amish craftsmen under strain .of early Christmas rush forces household limit of 2
Save money: only uses about 8¢ electric an hour; so turn down your thermQstat and never be cold again
Uniuersol Media Syndicate

:;(&gt;CENTS • Vol. ;,H, No.;;-

SPORTS ,
· ~ Meigs wins tri-match.
See Page Bl

W\\w,mydailysJntinel.com .

1(1(19&lt;

..

Republicans
setup shop
Bv BETH SERGENT

BSERG ENTAJ MYOAILYSENT! N!;L.COM
POMEROY - The Meigs County Republican Party
officially opened its pany headquaners last night on
Second Street in Pomeroy.
Located next to the Crow, &amp; Crow Law Office ,
Meigs County Republican (&gt;arty Chairman Dave
Warner said hours of operation will be from 10 a.m. noon , 2 p.m.-4 p.m., 6 p.m.-8 p.m ., Monday-Friday
and noon -·2 p.m. on Saturday.
Last night supponers of the Grand Old Party rallied
at the grand opening , passing out signs, shaking hands
and sharing some refreshments all in support of local
Republican candidates seeking reelection and election
to their respective offices.
Republican candidates .who lined up outside their
political headquarters as part of the grand opening were,
Judge L. Scott Powell who is seeking reelection as
Meigs County Juvenile and Probate Coun Judge, Sheriff
Raben Beegle who is seeking reelection as Meigs
County Sheriff, Eugene Triplett who is seeking reelection as county engineer, Tom Anderson who is running
for Meigs County Commissioner, Colleen Williams who
is running for Meigs County Prosecuting Attorney,
Meigs County Recorder Kay Hifl who is seeking reelection as recorder, Diane Lynch who is running for Meigs
County Clerk of Couns, Peggy Yost who is running for

0BITUARIFS

• GENUINE AMISH MANTLES MADE IN THE USA: Everyone wants to save money on heat bills this winter, so entire Am ish·communi ·
ties are work ing from the crack of dawn to finish. These fine real wood Amish made fireplace mantles are built to last forever. The oak man·
tie is a real steal at just two hundred ninety-eight do llars because all t hose who beat the order deadl ine by calling the National Hotline at
1·800-918·4312 to order the firepl,ace mantles are actually getti ng the imported hi ·tech Fire less Flame HEAT SURGE m~ra c le heate rs for free.
early are surprising the whole family by getting two. So when lines are busy keep trying

~~;~:E:~e:Fo~r:~~:~::~~~~~£i~1~; . How o gat _
2free heat,ers _
1

._
.
_ t

beautiful Heat Surge Roll-n,Glow Fireplace,"
1.
Milton said.
The National To!l Free Hotlines are now
·
"You'll instantly feel bone soothing heat in
open . All those who.beat the 48·hour order
y;
'll
h
t b ld
· " 1 deadline to cover the cost of the .Amish
~~~f;~ ou WI never ave_0 e co agam, ! made Firepla.ce Mantle and shipping get the
HEAT SURGE miracle heater free.
1
A strict limit of 2 per household has
'
On tire worldwide web: www.amishfireplaces.com
been imposed. S1nce some home woodwork·
ers want ·to build their own mantle piece,
Ij ·
they are letting 'people get the imported
f\
..
!· miracle heoter alone for just ' 249. Or, with .
the Amish made mantle you get the .miril•
cle heater free.
·
.
How It Works: The HEAT, SURGE miracle
' Use the map below to locate the weathhe~ter is a work of engineering genius from
er zone you live in and call the Hotline numthe China coast so advanced, you simply plug
ber for your zone.
it 1nto any standard wall outlet. ·It uses only
about 8¢ of electrl(: an hour. Yet, it produces up
to an amazing s:u9 BTU's. An on board Powerful hi·tech heat turbine silently forces hot air
out into the room so ypu feel the bone soothing heat Instantly. ·It e\len has certification of
Underwriters Laboratories coveted UL listing.
It also comes with a limiteq full year replaceWAY: Early Christmas orders have
ment or money back warranty plus a 30-Day
turned country roads Into pipelines to the big City
· Satisfaction Guar~ntee. ·
delivery system. Everybody w~nts a f ir~ l ace that
comes· fully assembled with a handmade Amish
..., ...
mantle in oak or cherry finish an~ gets delivered by
.. .
tr~ck
right to your door. All you do is plug it' in.
•.
1

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=HFA'J su·IRGE®

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f ireless F arne

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EVEIMlNE UVING IN THE
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START CALLING AT
8;00 A.M. TODAY

START
AT
· 8:30 A.M. TODAY

START CAUING AT
9:00A.M. TODAY

1-800•918-4312

'. HI00-716-2513

1·800-695-3077
'•

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Please see Republican, AS

.

'·

Beth Sergent/photo

Yesterday Meigs County Republicans opened their politiGal headqua(lers on Second Street in
Pomeroy. Along with supporters in the background, pictured in the lirst two rows are Republican
candidates on the November ballot. Front row Meigs County Prosecuting Attorney candidate
Colleen Williams with children Clayton and Hannah , Meigs County Recorder Kay Hill, Meigs
County Clerk of Courts candtdate Dtane Lynch , Me1gs County Treasurer candidate Peggy Yost,
Ohio House of Representative candidate Jill Thompson ; second row Meigs County Probate and
Juvemle Court Judge L. Scott Powell, Meigs County Sheriff Robert Beegle, Meigs County
Eng1neer Eugene Tnpplet, Me1gs County C,ommiSS!oner candidate Tom Anderson , Meigs
County Commissioner Jim Sheets.

General
election
voting begins
Thesday .

Page AS
• Charles Barton, 57
• Dottie Cremeans, 62
• Robert Walton, 57

.Rolls anywhere to throw an instant heat wave with no chimney; no vents, no wood and no smoke ·

• EASILY nVLL;:o
table Roll ·n·Giow® Fireplace that easily rolls
from bedroom to living room to keep you warm.
No vents, no chimney and no tools. Just plug it in.

'11 '1-.Sil.\\, Sl 1''1 E:vtBER ;{0, :.!OI;R

Printed on

Kf'q ·clrd Newsprint

'

"Tbese portable Roll-n-Glow Fireplaces .are

the latest home decorating sensation. They
actually give you a beautifully redecorated
room while they quickly heat from wall to wall.
It's the best way to dress up every room, stay
really warm and slash your heat bills all at the
same time,'' says Josette Holland, Home Makeover Expert.
And here's the best part. Readers who beat
the 48-hour order deadline are getting their
imported hi-tech miracle heaters free when
encased in ihe Amish built real wood fireplace
mantles. The mantles are being handmade
in the USA right in the heart of Amish country where they are beautifully hand-rubbed,
stained and varnished.
You just can't find custom made Amish mantles like this in the national chain stores. That
makes the oak mantle a real steal for just two
hundred ninety-eight dollars since the entire
cost of the miracle heater is free .
'l'his free giveaway is the best way to slash
. heating bills and stay warm this fall and winter. The HEAT SURGE Roll' n-Glow Fireplace
gives you zone heating and all the beauty and
warmth of a built-in ·fireplace but rolls from
room-to-room so it can also save you a ton -of
money on heating bills.
Even .people in California and Florida are
Hocking to get them so they may never have to
turn on their furnace all winter. And since it
uses only about 8 cents of electric an hour the
potential savings are absol)Jtely incredible.
"We are making sure no one gets left out, but
you better hurry because entire communities
of Amish craftsmen are-straining to keep up
with demands. For now, we are turning away
· all dealers in order to let· readers have two per
household just as long as they call before the
deadline," confirms Milton.
It's a really smart decision to get two right
now because for only the next 48 hours you get
, both miracle heaters free. That's like putting
five hundred bucks right in your pocket and
you can save even more money on your monthly heating bills.
"Everyone's calling to get one but those who
are getting their Christmas shOpping done

Middieport • Pomeroy, Oliio

ne tl&gt;

-'

By MARK Wuoos

(UMS) Everyone hates high heat bills. But
we're all sick and tired of simply turning down
the thermostat an.d then being cold.
Well now, the popular HEAT SURGE• miracle heaters are actually being given away
free to the general public for the next 48 hours
starting at precisely 8:00 a.m. today.
The only thing local readers have to do is
call the National Distribution Hotline before
the 48-hour deadline with their order for the
handmade Amish Fireplace Mantle. ·Everyone
who does is instantly being awarded the miracle heater absolutely free.
,
This is all happening to announce the HEAT
SURGE Roll-n-Glow• Fireplace which actmilly
rolls from room-to-room so you can turn down
your thermostat and take the heat with you
anywhere. That way, everyone who gets them
first can immediately start saving on their·heat .
bills.
· Just in time for winter weather, portable
Amish encased fireplaces are being delivered
directly to the doors of all those who beat the
deadline.
These remarkable fireplaces are being called
a miracle because they have what's being called
the 'Fireless Flame' patented technology that
gives you the peaceful Hicker of a real fire but
without any Hames, fumes, smells, ashes or
mess. Everyone is getting them because they
require no chimney and no vent. You just plug
them in.
.The Fireless Flame looks so real it amazes
everybody·because it has no real fire. So what's
the catch? Well, soft spoken Amish craftsmen
who take their time hand building the mantles
have a process that forces a strict household
limit of 2 to keep up with orders.
"We can barely keep up ever since we started giving heaters away free. With winter just
around the corner, everyone's trying til get
them. Amish craftsmen are working their
fingers to the bone to be sure everyone gets
their delivery In time for Christmas,'' confirms
Tili!Othy Milton, National Shipping Director.

Heart patients
should be screened
for depression, A6

'

···IN'Sl'DE

Bv BRIAN

J.

REED

BREEDCMYDAILYSENT!NEL.COM
. POMEROY - Registered
voters will begin casting ballots Tuesday.
Under Ohio's early voting
system, no-fault absentee
ballots can be requested and
cast any time between now
and the weekend . before
Election Day - Nov. 4. .
According to Becky
Johnston, deputy director of
the Meigs County, voters can
request absentee ballots by
telephone or in writing . They
will then be mailed to .the
residential address, Voters
can also vote at the board of
Joy Kocmoudlphoto
~ McCain speaks to
elections office during regu- Smoke slowly rises from a smoldering hay bale on a farm on Ohio 325 near Rio Grande.
supporters in Columbus. lar business hours.
As farmers harvest and store hay, it's importanl to follow several steps to reduce the risk
Voters
no
longer
must
proof
spontaneous combustion.
· See Page A3
vide a rejlson for an absentee
, • Local Briefs.
. ballot, and ·any registered
See Page AS
voter can do so without vis.,
iting their neighborhood
polling places. Johnston said
more people than ever are
voting early. Why? Because
they can, she said .
STAFF REPORT
amount of heat is released in the bale. Many
NEWS@MYDAILYSENTINELCOM
producers refer to this elevation in bale
Please see Voting. AS
temperature as ·•s w·eating " or "going
· POMEROY - Fires that damage or through a heat ." In hay that is baled at the
destroy hay and barns cost farmers thou- proper moisture concentrati\)n, plant cell
sands of dollars in building and feed respiration has slowed dramatically and
replacement costs and in lost revenues .
wiH eventually cease .
Man.y of these fires are caused by I he
The heat generated by plant cell respiraspontaneous combustion of hay that usually tion in hay bales is normal and generally -of
occurs within six weeks after baling. These little consequence. However, if bale moisfires are Iar~ely preventable and their risks ture levels are too high (greater than 20 percan be s1gmficantly reduced by ~ecommg cent) , the heat and moisture will provide a
aw~re of the factors that cause this danger- suitable environment for the growth and
Details on Page A3
ous phenomenon. . .
. , . . n · multiplication of mesophilic (warm temperBv CHARLENE HOEFLICH
1s
not
dead.
ature) bacteria that are present on forage
Freshly
cut
forage
HOEFL!CHIIMYDA!LYSENT!NELCOM (the burnmg of plant sugars loresplratlo
produce
energy) continues in plant cells and a small
'Please see Hay. AS
POMEROY - The road
behind the Meigs Local
: 2 SEcrJONS- l2 PAGES
Elementary School has
been
named Jim Vennari
Annie's Mailbox
Visitors that day will learn opening In addition they
Drive by the · Meigs Local
Bv CHARLENE HOEFLICH
HOEFL.ICHCMYDAILYSENTINEL.COM
about
the latest discoveries will see first hand all the
School Board 'in honor and
Calendars
from real-life archeologists. ani facts in the exhibit.
memory of the long-time
POMEROY
Images
Topics
will cover a wide
·educator
and
coach
in
the
Families will be given the
Glassifieds
83-4
engraved
in
stone
along
the
range
of
archaeological
Rutland and Meigs Local
opponunity to work togeth'
Ohio River in Meigs interests, including: Ohio's er at a "site" to find out how
Comics
Bs School Districts.
A decision to name the County is one of four ancient treasures, discovery archaeologists use science .
displays fea- of the Anthony Wayne, nau- a11. and a lot of patience to·
Editorials
A4 roadway after Vennari archaeological
tured
in
the
Ohio tical archaeology, ship- learn about the past. That
came during a Tecent meetArchaeology
Month
display
wrecks in Lake Erie , revela- program runs fr~m 9 a.m.·
Gbituaries
As ing of the Board in the elementary school cafeteria. at the Ohio Historical tions about Ohio's only 1:30 p.m. for ages 8 and up
Sports
B Section Another feature of that Center in Columbus.
Revolutionary . War battle 'and requires a program fee
site
, discoveries from of $5 .for adults and $2 for
of
the
display
Theme
meeting was updates from
Weather
Pickawillany,
the Newark children ages 6-12 .
A3 the primary and intermedi- which opens Saturday and is
ate principals about initia-·' ongoing is "Discover Ohio's Ea11hworks and more .
The new archaeology dis© 2008 Ohio Valley, Publishing Co.
There will be pottery play which will be ongoing
tives in their buildings for Past." The opening day an
Archaeology Fair, spon- demonstrations, tli nt knap- through October will introthe current school year.
A -discussion was held sored by the Ohio Historical ping demonstrations, and a duce and p~ovide a cultural
concerning ticket/admission Society, will be held from .9 time o( identification for context for the artifacts in the
·a.m. to 5 p.m. and is free -visitors who have anifacts
with .museum admission .
they want identi fied on the
Please see Display, AS
Plun - RCNid, A5
1

,

•

Hot hay

Reducing the risk of spontaneous combustion

WEATIIER

Meigs Board
names road.
for veteran
educator

INDEX ·

Meigs past featured in Ohio Histofica] Center display

• SAVES ON
Everyone can get low bil ls
and stay warm and cozy. •The new Roll·n ·Giow
Fireplace saves a ton of money and makes your
front room look like a mill ion bucks .

• SAFE: The Fireless. Flame looks so real it fools
everybody but ttiere is n.o real fire. That makes the
flame safe to the touch. It's where the kids will
play and the cat and dog will sleep.

• FREE: Get this 1249 miracle heater free. It is being

givenawayfreeto all who beat the 48·hdur order dead·
line for your choice of the oak or cherry finishAmish
Mantles. The free heater comes already encased.

•

Wilson to
keynote
Kennedy
Day Dinner
BY BRIAN

J.

REED

BRE EO @MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM
MIDDLEPORT - U.S.
Rep. Charlie Wil son. DBridgeport , will be the
keynote
speaker
at
Saturday's Kennedy Day
Dinner.
·
.
The ,
freshman
Congressman will speak at
7 p.m. A soc ial hour is
planned for 5 p.m. , and din - .
ner at 6. The event will be
held at the Riverbend Atts
Council.
Wilson · was el ected in
2006 to the Sixth District
Congressional Di strict then
represented by Gov. Ted
Strickland: Pri or to that , he
was a slate senator.

Tickets are $ 15 per person , $25 per couple, and can
be purchased at the door.
"While we hope our
Democrati c fa ithful wil l
turn out in big num bers. it is
impo11ant for the public to
understand that the dinner is
open to an yone... Party .
Chairman Hemy Hunter
said . " It is parti cularly
imponant this year that we
educate our vote rs
Democrats, Republicans
and independents - about
our choices thi s year."
"Thi s is a ve ry imponant
election. for our community and our count ry . I hope
anyo ne who is interested in
the·future and in our candidates will feel welcome to
join us."
"For those other faithful
Democ rats. it will be a great
night to be with others who
share our co mmittmcnt ~o
change ," Hunter said .

••

·

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