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                  <text>Page B6 • The Daily Sentinel

Monday, October 20,

. www.mydaUysentinel.com

2008

.

~

Johnson continues his .Martinsville dominatio~

Momentum building
for new economic
package,A6

'

BY

HANK

KuRZ

ASSOCIATED PRESS

2008 Sprint Cup Slllndlnge
MARTINSVILLE, Va. Alter IIUrt/nav/He
Jimmie Johl\son is on a roll
again, and whether he's will- ~a me
Wins Pts.
ing to admit it or not, while 1. Jimmie Johnson . 6 6073
Greg Biffle
2
-149
everyone else in NASCAR 3.2. Jeff
Burton
2
-152
is chasing him, he 's chasing 4. Can Edwards
6
-198
5. Clint Bowyer
1
-246
history. .
6·. Kevin Harvick
0
.-256
Johnson led · 33.9 laps 7. Jeff Gordon
0
·275
Sunday as he and hi s 8. Tony Stewart
1
-338
Earnhardt Jr. 1
-379
Hendrick Motor~ports team- 9.10.Dale
Kensath
0
-408
mates a!iain dominated at 11. Matt
1
-420
Denny Hamlin
Martinsville Speedway, and 12. Kyle Busch
8
-445
the two-time defending
Cup
champion
"There 's a lot 'of great
Sprint
·padded his lead in his bid for teams that were huge in the
a record-tying third champi- sport." Dale Earnhardt Jr.
onship in a row with four said, l11mping Johnson and
races remaining.
crew ·chief Chad Knaus in
Only Cale Yarborough, with his father and Richard
from 1976-78 has won three Petty, . both seven-time
straight cha~pionships in champions, and Hall of
stock car racing's premier ·Famers David Pearson ,
series and Johnson ts look- Yarborough and Junior
ing m~re and more as if he'll Jo~nson. . .
be the second.
·To pack tt m three years
"I'm going to have to and just dominate like that,
answer those questions one there's only a half a dozen
of th.ese days; aren't I?" teams that have ever done
Johnson said of the ones anythmg hke that, been that
about Yarborough and taking strong
. consistently,"
a position beside him in his- Earnhardt satd.
tory.
A.nd. it could only be the
Johnson 's sixth victory of ~egmmng of another btg finthe year extended his points Ish for Johnson.
lead from 69 to 149, and
It was a year ago ihat this
while his closest challengers race started a four-race wmvowed ihat th~ Chase race . ning streak for Johnson, a
isn't over, the plaudits .keep run .that he said .le~t hiT
coming, too.
leavmg Phoemx thmkmg , I

carumt believe I'm ex periencing this.':
Now, to experience it
again, he's not planning on
letting up at all.
" As long as I can stay
scared and on my heels and
worried about losing this
thing, the better this team's
going to be. If we start getting comfortable and complacent, we're going to stub
our toes, make mistakes," he
said. "We're trying to keep
our eye on the prize." .
So are the rest of the contendo:rs, even if it's g~tting
fun her and funher away.
"We're ~oing to come and
get them ,' said Greg Biffle,
who climbed to second in
points. "We 've got four
more chances and we're
going to some of our best
places, so they better be on
their 'A' game .... I'm still
confident we can catch him,
for sure."
.
So are }Jeff Bm1on, 152
points flack, and Carl
Edwards, founh . and I 98
behind.
·
"He could have any sort of
trouble the next two races
and IX: right back there· with
us," Edwards said, lumping
himself with Biffle and
Burton. "It can happen to
anyone.''
But at Martinsville, as
always, none of them had a
way to stop Johnson. It was

his . third consecutive fall
victory here , and fourth in ·
the last five races on
NASCAR's s)lortest oval.
Earnhardt was second, followed by Edwards and Jeff
Gordon, giving Hendrick
three of the top four spots. ·
Denny Hamlin was fifth and
Casey Mears, the fourth
Hendrick. driver, was sixth.
The 1-2 finish was the 23rd
for the multicar team, and
third at Martinsville .. It was
sealed in a two-lap sprint to
the finish after the 12th caution flew on lap No . 499.
"I didn't have anything for
Jimmie. That car was so awe~
some," Earnhardt said.
Johnson led seven times in
all, passin~ Gordon for the
top spot wtth 209 laps to go,
then making quick work of
. Matt Kenseth, who stayed
out on the track under caution
with 38 to go.
Johnson heads to Atlanta
with the largest lead in the
history of the Chase at this
point.
The day was shaping up as
a great one for Jamie
McMurray, who started 20th
and climbed into contention
quickly. He was running
fourth with about 100 laps to
go when his car suddenly
.
.
APphoto
slowed on the backstretch.
He drove it ~irectly to his Jimmie Johnson celebrates alterewinning the NASCAR
garage stall and wound up Sprint Cup. Series Tums QuikPak 500 auto · race at
38th.
Martinsville Speedway in Martinsville, Va., Sunday.

;; o l I'\ IS • \ ul. ;;S . '\u . -:.!

ll I· Sil "_ (}( IIJBI.I{ :.!1. :.!OoX

SPORTS
:• Rays, Phillies prep for
World Series. See Page-lU

BV

BETH

0·
SERGENT .

BSEAGENT@MYDAILVSENTINEL.COM

PO.MEROY - Late November
or early December is the latest
"guesstimate" as to when the new
Pomeroy Mason Bridge will open
to traffic , according to the Ohio
Department of Transportatio11.
·
Karen Pawloski, spokesperson
for ODOT, said an official dedication· ceremony is in the works and
invitations will be extended to both
Gov. Ted Strickland of Ohio and
Gov. Joe Man chin of W.Va.

Perspective

Big Tex, battling Barna
and a plan for Joe Paterno

OBITUARIES
Page AS
• Emily Deem
• George Ralph Diddle
·• Margaret Cremeans

Bv RALPH Russo
ASSOCIATED PRESS

•

'

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

College Football Notebook

Texas flexes. Alabama
escapes. And Penn State
pushes forward to a Big Ten
showdown with Ohio State
as JoePa continues to lead
the Nittany Lions via long
distance.
Week 8 brought a return to
order, relatively speaking, in
college football. It also produced a clear Heisman
Trophy favorite and an even
more muddled ACC. Oh
yeah, and the BCS standings
are out.
· The Big Story
Maybe Joe Paterno should
just stay in the press box.
Seriously.
Jhat's not meant . as a
knock on major college
AP pMii,
football's winningest. coach. Penn State running back Evan Royster (22) rushes 24 It's a plan that could allow yards for a first quarter touchdown agai.nst Mich. igan during
the 81-year-old Hall of
~
Farner to remain Penn a NCAA college football game in ;:,late College, Pa. ,
State's patriarch and head . Saturday. Penn State won 46-17.
football coach ~or .a few many of the program's big- Longhorns'
quarterback
more years, even tf his body dollar donors. That will be completed a ridiculous 29 of
isn't quite up to the task. . impossible to replace, even 32 passes for 337 yards , and ·
Penn State has played tts if the next coach comes from accounted for four touchlast three games with within.
downs against Mizzou. The
Paterno working from the
So maybe Penn State and race is far from over; but
press box an~ his assistants, ~atern~ should be· embrac- everybody
is chasing
led by defensiVe coordmator mg thts .new arrangement McCoy at this point.
,
~om. Bradley, handhng the · and considering making it
Atlantic Coast Carousel
permanent if it keeps him in
Don't hate the ACC
s1delme.
.Continuity is key to mak- charge.
because it has no dominant
ing this work.
BCS breakdown
team. Embrace. the league
Bradley has been on staff The first BCS standings for it's depth and unprefor 30 years . .For offenstve came out Sunday and here's dictability.
lme coach Dtck Anderson , the most important thing
Three ACC teams fell out
it's 3.1. Defensive line coach you need to know. If Texas of the rankings this week Larry Johnson is in year No. and Alabama win out, it'll Wake Forest, Virginia Tech
13 at Penn State. Jay be Longhorns vs. Crims_on and North Carolina. Three
Paterno, Joe's son; has been Tide in the BCS national more moved in - No . 21
working for his dad for 14 championship game on Jan. Georgja · Tech, No. 23
seasons.
!lin Miami.
Boston College and . No. 24
While Paterno's inability
Texas is first in the stand- Florida State.
to roam the sideline because ings and Alabama is second,
Clemson, the preseason
of a sore leg and htp makes anq third-place Penn State is favorite, appears to be headnews and fuels speculatton too far behind to .catch either ed for. a total washout.
that his 43rd seaso~ as Penn if all three keep winning. Virginia looked like the
State coach may fmally be Texas' schedule is .the tough- worst team in conference
· his last, it hasn 't stopped the esi of the three. After crush- the first month of the season
Nittany ~ions from· becom-. ingMissouri 56-31 to take a and now the Cavaliers can't
1ng a national champ10nsh1p huge lead in the polls, lose .
Marylarid
does
way
the Virginia one better. One
contender.
there's no
No. 3 Penn State (8-0) Longhorns will slip signifi- week it's Fear the Turtle.
sco~ed th~ !ast 39 pomts cantly in the rankings while The next week, the Terps
asamst M1chtgan m a 46-17 winmng.
are as helpless as a turtle on
VIctory Saturday.
Alabama's schedule is its back.
Bradley was quick to point next best. Even ugly wins What team will emerge
out after the game that such as the 24-20 hold-on- from this mess as champ?
Pate':"o is still al?resence on for-dear-life effort against Who knows? But here's a
t~e stdehne, barkmg m~t.ruc- Mississippi - should keep prediction: the participants
lions and · suggestiOns the Tide rolling. . •
m tjle ACC championship
through the headset to his ·Penn State's best chance game at Tampa, Fla., on
lieutenants.
· for a big BCS bump comes Dec ..6 will have at least five
. And even tho~gh Paterno this week when it plays at losses combined.
mststs he doesn t hke bemg· Ohio State, but the Nittany
Lookahead
upstatrs and never Will, he Lions' other remaining
No.3 Penn State plays at
does sound as if he's 'warm- opponents are all unranked. No. 10 Ohio State in a game
ID§ up to hts new perch.
Four times in his career that will likely decide the
.'1 get a better view of Paterno has coached a tea~ Big Ten title. The Nittany
football games from up to an unbeaten season and Lions haven't beaten the
there than I ever do on the not won a national title the Buckeyes in Columbus
sideline," he said.
last in 1994. He's set up to since 1978, going 0-7 since.
It could be argued that at make it five.
No. I Texas faces another
this )Xlint Paterno's greatest
Heisman-worthy
big test at home. this time
contnbutton to Penn State
Just like Texas in the No . 7 Oklahoma State.
football is his mere pres- BCS, Colt McCoy has a· No.9 Georgia goes to No.
ence. He ts the brand, and comfortab le lead in the I I LSU. Both have one loss
the stron.gest connection to Heisman Trophy race. The and can't afford another.
,.

Strong finish, A3

Although 'nothing has been etched
in stone , Pawloski said she assumed
the dedication would be first immediately followed by· traffic crossing
the new bridge.
Pawloski, who visited the con"
struction site last week, said "obviously some more work needs to be
done." Pawloski said according
ODOT engineers there is sti ll structural geometry that needs completed which basically means all the
cables on the bridge have to be
properly stressed to again appropriate geometry of the structure.

Lighting and electri c work
remai ns to be.finished on the "ridge
and at traffic intersections and yes
there will be a traffic light where Jhe
current three-way stop area is located in Pomeroy. Sidewalks on the
Ohio side .are still being completed
and an intermediate and surface
coat of asph'alt remuin s for the Ohio
approach. Also, some paving work I
line painting on the Ohio and West
Virginia sides remain to be com pleted . All the overlay pours of concrete on the bridge's driving surface
have been completed.

AMP-Ohio
•
meeting

tomorrow
Bv BETH

AP STATEHOUSE CORRESPONDENT

. see·,f'aRe

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INDEX ·

A4

IL.

SERGENT

BSERGENTOMYDAILYSENTINELCOM

INSIDE

-

·

Pawloski said the Ohio approach
has been named after the late Gen. ·
James Hartinger and the West
Virginia approach will be named after
the late Stuff Sgt. Jimmy G. Stewan.
After compleJed, the bridge will
belo,ng to the state of West Virginia.
Accordmg to ODOT, the method of
demolishing the existing bridge will be
left up to the contractor, CJ Mahan,
though nothing has been fonnally
announced . The opening of the new
bridge will be formally announced as
soon as the date has been confirmed, ·
according to Pawloski.

Bv JULtE CARR SMYTH

COLUMBUS - 'The
process of involving average Americans in the political process by having them
sign on the dotted line can
be messy.
ACORN, the Association
• Magnet device aims to
of
Community
treat depression patients. Organizations for
Reform
See Page A6
Now, caught the attention of
the FBI last week aJter a
. • ~I Briel$.
serie~ of local i'nquiries
A3
turned up irreg11l~rities in itS ·
;,;.;, .Woifdmarkets
,
collection .o f voter registra.
tion forms, the Associated
surge on credit
Press reported. The bureau
easing. See Page A2
is in'vestigating whether
ACORN helped foster
widespread voter registration fraud, according to a
senior law enforcement
official.
One of those lodl
inquiries was in Cleveland,
where election officials
heard tales of ACORN ·
abuses that included more
than four dozen registration
cards collected .from a single would-be voter.
Concerning as some of the
allegations are' a ~air of
experts say ACORN s track
record for accuracy is significantly better than the average
ballot issue campaign, which
sees 19 percent of its signa:. Taliban gunmen kill
tures invalidated according to
Christian.aid worker in
on~ recent study.
' Kabul. See Page A2
· That rejection rate carries
despite the state you're in,
despite what political party
I
an issue's backers come
from and despite whether
WEATHER
signatures are collected by
volunteers or paid professionals.
·
"In terms of the broader
picture, this pales in co':lpanson to what we .see m
· ballot initiative campaigns,"
said Daniel A. Smith, an
associate professor of polit- ·
ical science and initiatives
expert at the University of
·Florida.
Take a couple of recent
Detail• on Page A3
examples in Ohio: Of
763,181 signatures submitted b;r supporters of a constitutional amendment for a
casino; 283,178 were
invalid. That's 37 percent.
;.' ~,SECTIONS - 12 PAGES Of
422,000 first-round signatures submitted· by an
Annie's Mailbox A3 industry
-group seeking to
repeal
recent
restrictions on
Calendars
A3
the payday lending industry,
236,271' were invalid.
Classifieds
That's 56 percent .
•
~omics
Bs .Meanwhile, look at some
ACORN numbers.
•
In . Ohio's Cuyahoga
Editorials
County, officials ·ordered
Obituaries
As their investigation after
fla~ging 50 ACORN voter
Sports
B Section regtstrations out of 65,000
registration cards submitWeather
A3 ted, or a fraction of. a percent. In Florida. new figures
C, 1001 Ohio van.,. Pubtuhln&amp; eo. out Friday found that about
8,000 new re1!istrants . have
been called mto question
·out of close to half a million
PIMH ... Election. A5
4

100% { )

Newsprint

""" ·m"la il) " ' "lind.wm

Pealdng

Signature
challenges
are messy

t'rintedon

Rrc~'rlcd

Beth SergenVpholo

Typically, fall colors peak throughout Southeast Ohio in late October which makes now a
pelfect time to take a drive out to the country to take a gander at the vibrant palette. Here ,
the Moredock family angel in Beech Grove Cemetery is framed in yellow as leaves fall at
her feet.

'Shop local' may be positive
consequence of economy
BY BRIAN

J. REED

BREEDOMYDAILVSENTINEL.COM

MIDDLEPORT - A bad national economy, the higher
cost of gasoline and other economic factors might be
good for some local retailers, as local shoppers spend
more time and money closer to home..
·
.
· The collection of the county's one-percent sa les tax ts
at a four-year high, ~nd thai , many in the loca l business
community believe, is large ly because local residents are
staying closer to home to do their day-to-day shopping.
After years of watching sales tax decline and then slowly climb back up , July sales tax revenue was $125,794.29,
an increase of over $'13,000.for July, 2007. The county's
collections for 2008. to date, are $60,550 more I han last
.

y~~

Some businesse s catering to tourists say the busmess
they enjoy from out-of-towners is down, but a spike in
local trade is offsetting any losses.
Campers and other visitors to Forked Run State Park
have always been an important part of the sales base at
Reed's Country Store in Reedsville. The general store
stocks a variety of merchandise for them: charcoal and
hot dog buns, fishing tackle and hunting apparel.
According to Kirk Reed, the 80 year-old business is
now catering to a 21st century market: Disc golfers. It is
difficult to keep the special discs used in the sport in
stock, he said, and the game is played year-round on a
speci~l course at the state park.
P...se see Economy. AS
(I

Expert:ioca1
merchants slwidd
add value, advertise
BY BRIAN J. REED
BAEEOOMYOAILYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY ---, The local
retail economy has •been
dicey fQr years, but a national economic crisis gives
local merchants even more
to worry· abOut.
. . There ' are a number of
strategies thll.t can help a
small,. slrtigglin!l business
stay afloat in a bad rmancial
market. Last )"~k. Shaun
Mallett of the Small Business
Development Center in
Athens told Meigs County
Chamber of ·Commerce
members - many of them
retailers - that cycles are a
part of reality in the world of
small business.
PiiiH
HI .Md v.aue. AS
'

RACINE - The public
hearing
, concerning
American Municipal PowerOhio's application for transmission lines remains set for
6
p.m.
at Southern
Elementary School.
The official public notice
states the meetine; will be
held at Southern Htgh School
but Southern Elementary
· School Principal Scott Wolfe
said the hearing will be held
at Southern Elementary
School. All other meetings
· concerning the project have
been held at the elementary
school. A spokesperson for
the Ohio Power S1ting Board said there will be signs directing the public to the correct
building.
As reported earlier, during
this public hearing, the
OPSB, which is considering
th e application, will take
formal testimony for and/or
against the project. All questions asked will eventually
be answered in the formal
response
though
not
answered · at the meeting.
The corresponding adjudicatory hearing in Columbus
is slightly more formal with
cross-examination permitted
during witness testimony.
The adjudicatory hearing
remains set for 10 a.m.,
Monday in Hearing Room
11 -C at the offices of the
Public Utilities Commission
of Ohio. 180 East Broad
Stree!, O;&gt;lumbus. . The
originally date for the adjudicatory hearing was S~pt.
22. The public hearing in
Racine was originally
scheduled for Sept. 17 iii
Meigs High School but
attorneys for' AMP-Ohio
requested a continuation on
the matter after submitting
modifications to the appl ication . AMP-Ohio then
asked fo r a 45 day continuance of the hearing dates.
AMP-Ohio also requested
the meeting place be
changed
to
Southern
Elementary School to' be
closer to'those near the proposed plant and transmission lines.
AMP plans to construct
approximately five miles of
double circu it 345 kV transmission line. including related facilities. to provide an
interconne.ction for its proposed pulverized coal power
pl.am at Letart Falls. The
new transmission line would
be connected to the existing
345 kV Spom-Muskingum
River · Transmission Line,
located to the north.
The I ine would be
installed on single shaft
self-supported steel structures and double circuit pole
struct ures. These poles
would typically be approximately 150 feet in height
and have conductor spans
ranging from 750 feet to
I .200 feet. The line requires
150-foot r-o-w to maintain
reliability.

a

�•

\

· The Daily Sentinel

AROUND THE WORLD

PageA2

Tuesday, October :u, 2008

•

Tuesday, October 21,

2008

Community Calendar

Bv AMtR SHAH
•SSOCIATED PRESS WAITER

Public meetings

KABUL. Afghanistan Taliban assailants on a
motorbike gu nned down a
Chri stian aid wurl-er · in
Kabul on Monday and the
miliiants said she was killed
for spreading her re ligion
- a. rare tnrgeted killing of
a Westerner in the nation\
capital. .
Gayl e Willi ams. a 34year~o ld dual British-South
African national
who
.
.
.
AP photo
helped
handicapped
A broker seen unde r the curve of German stock index DAX
at the sto.ck market in Frankfurt , central Germany, Monday. Afghan s, was shot to death
as she was walking to work .
.European markets open_strongly after solid gains in Asia, abo ut 8 a.m., said · Interior
:wtth fi nancial stocks doing well on hopes that the crisis in Ministry spokesman Zemeri
:the markets has abated amid s igns banks may be less Bashary.
-wary of te nding to each other.
A spqkesman for the.militants sa id th e Taliban
ordered her killed because
she was accused of prose ly- ·
ti zing.
·
"Thi s woman came to
Afghanistan
to
teach
Christianity
to
the
people
of
BY PAN PYLAS
Afghanistan
."
Zabiutlah
AP BUSINESS WAITER
Mujahid
told .
The.
AP pHOtO
. ·LONDON ~ World . stocks surgeu Monday ~s lower · Associated Press. ''Our
1nterbank lcnd1n g rates luelcd hopes that credit markets are (leaders) i"ued a decree to An Afghan woman passes by the SERVE Afghanistan office for, which the South African
returnmg to normal and Federal Reserve ·chairman Ben · kill thi s woman."
woman, Gayle Williams was working, who was shot to death jn the westem part of the
Bernank~ ~ave hi s support to more fiscal stimulus in the
Britain \ secretary of state Kabu l. Afghanistan, on Monday. Gunmen on a motorbike killed a .South African aid work·
U.S
·
·
.
. for intemati onal develop- er in Katiul and NATO-led troops assaulted an insurgent stronghqld just west of the cap!·
M:u'kets in Asia . Europe and Latin America all rallied , ment called the . killing a tat. spark1ng a two-day battle that killed 20 militants; offici.als said Monday.
·
inspired by the f&lt;tll in interbank lending rates after govern- "callous and cowa rdlv act"
ments and ccmral banks 111 past weeks . have cut interest and said Williams was in confirmed some &lt;1f its so lrates while. injecting huge sr1ms of cash into battered banks Afghanistan to ,.help · ease dier' w~ re killed or wormtlccl in the attack.
anu fmanc 1al companies.
poverty.
Omar· sa id the soldiers
. On Wall Street. the Dow mdustrials fi ni shed up 413.21
''To present her killing as
TURKMEN.
were
patro lling on foot
pomts. or -l .7 percent. to 9,265.43, while broader indexes a religion s act is as despicalogged sim ilar gai ns.
'
ble as it is absurd - il was when the bomber riding a
Britain 's. FTSE 100 index of ~eading shares closed up cold blooded murder," bicycle hit them. :Northern
has been
219.66 po111ts. or SA percent htglier, at 4,282.67. while Douglas Alexander said in a Afg han[ ~"'"
spared much of the violence
German{' DAX was up ?3.68 points, or 1.1 percent, high- statement.
Afghanistan 's
cr at 4.Rj5 .0 I. rhc CAC-40 111 France was 118 .59 points, or
'A spokeswoman for the afnicting
eastern
and
southern
l.6 perce nt. stronger at 3,448.5 1..
.
aid group, SERVE ·
Tho&gt;c g•~ in s follow the 3.6 percent adyance on Japan's · Serving Emergency Relief prov i·nces.
West of Kabul , meanN1kkc1 22) to 9.00~ .59 an&lt;,) the 5.3 percent j~mp in the and Vocational Enterprises
AFGHANISTAN
w~ile
,
assault
helicopters
Hang Scng mdex 111 Hong Ko11g to. 15 ,323.01.
said it is a Christian
PAK.
Brazil '&gt; lbovcspa index led gainers in Latin America, orga nization but denied it dropped NATU troops into
soanng 8 4 perc·ent to 39.44 1. while Chile's IPSA rose 4.7 was involved in proselyti z- Jalrez dist rict in Wardak
province on Thursday,
percent to 2.5 ~ 6. Me xico's IPC index linished up 2.3 per- mg.
0
c:ent to 20.786 and Colombia's IGBC gained 1.2 percent at
" It's not the case that they sparking a two-day battle
7.689.. Argen 11na s Mcrval was the only laggard, slipping preach , not at all." said the involving airstrikes, the
0 100
.3.3 p~rccnt to 1. 176.
..
.
spokeswoman, Rina van der military alliance said in a
"What we are seeing b a gradual reduction in money mar- Ende . "They are here to do statemenr Monday.
· SOURCE: ESRI
AP
ket rat~s wi11L' h goe' a long way to restoring investor conti- NGO (aid) work."
More than 20 militants
.Jcnl'e . sa ~tl Ne il Mackum&lt;)n. chief economist at ECU Group:
Afghanistan is a conserv- were killed, NATO said. .
Islamic . nation.
The i nt e rb&gt;~nk . lend ing rate for three-month dollar loans . ative
Wardak province, just 40 for a sharp increase in the members have refused to
move th.eir troops from
fell for the sixth day running Monday and by its biggest Proselytizi~g is prohibited miles west of Kabul, has number of troops.
Some
65,000
internationmore peaceful parts of the .
daily amount since January. I!.dropped 0.36 percent to 4.06 by law, and other Christian become an insurge,nt strongal
troops
now
operate
iri
country
and have imposed
percent. wlule the three- month Euro. Interbank Offered missionarie s or charities holc;l. . Militants
have
including restrictions on the duties
Rate. or Euribor, fell almost 0.05 percentage points to 5.00 have faced severe hosti lity. ex17aoded their traditional Afghanistan ,
their forces can carry out.
percent.
l,.ast year, 23 South Korean · bases in the country's south about 32,000 Americans.
"It is this wavering political
Speaking
in
London
mi
. Ov~mighr. the Hong Kong interbank offered rate , known aid Workers from a church and-east - along. the border
Gen .
John will that impedes operational
as H1bor, tor three-month loans tumbled to 3.66 .percent group were taken hostage in with Pakistan - and have Monday,
from 4.19 as the .teiTitory's de facto central bank pumped southero Afghanistan. Two gained territoxy in the Craddock ,. the head of U.S. )lrogress and brings mto que&amp;more money into the financial· system.
were killed and the rest provinces
surrounding European Command and ttpn the relevance of the
. Abnormal ly high interbank lending rates have been a were eventually released.
Kabu), a worry'ing develop- NATO's supreme allied alliance here in the 21st cen.s1gn ofd1stress m credi t markets and been the catalyst for
According to its Web site, ment for Afghan and NATO commander for Europe, tury," Craddock told • the
the c1'1Sls m the fmanctal markets over recent weeks. High SERVE is a Christian chari- troops.
called into . question the Royal .. United ' Service~
mterbank rates can choke off credit to businesses and indi- ty registered in Britain and · Those advances are part political
will
among Institute,
. a milil!iry think tltnk.'
victua ls. hurting the economy. ·
·
·
has been . working with of the re ~~on that top U.S. alliance members for the
The thawing of the cred it markets has helped financial Afghan refugees since 1980 · military' ' .o fficials have mission in Afghanisfan.
Net
stocks ~cross Europe. particularly in London, with Royal in Pakistan.
Commanders have called
warned the . international
Bank ot Scotland .PLC cloSing up 23 percent. and HSBC and
"SERVE Afghani stan 's m1s.s10n io defeat . the for more NATO troops to be
SEjVE
Afghani~tan,
·Barclays_more than 5 percent_lind 7 percent respectively.
purpo~e is to express God's Taliban is in p~ril , and why deployed in the violent http:llwww.s.erveafghanista
One of the most h1gh- proflie gamers in Europe Monday love, and brin g hope by NATO generals have called south , but some (1/ATO
~ .org
. was Am sterdam-l"ted lNG Groep NV after the Dutch gov- servmg the people of
1
emment mJeCtecl 10 billion euros ($ 13.4 billion) into the Afghanistan , especially the
fmanc1al com pany over the weekend. Its shares were up 20 needy, as we seek to address
personal , social and envi percent. almost recoup ing most of last Friday 's losses.
Encrgy Mocks 111 Europe. such as BP PLC , Royal Dutch ronmental need ;,''. the' site
Shell and Total SA. were also up as oil prices rose further . says .
Monday '~' near S74 a baiTel at one stage on mpunting talk
A
member
of
that OPEC will Cllt productiOn at the end of this w~ek in an Afghanistan 's highest reliuttempt to shore up pri&lt;:es that have fallen by 50 percent in gious council said Monday .
three months.
.that rumors have· spread
The m;11·kets ab o seem to have taken comments from Fed over the last two years that
chairm;nl Bernanke in stride , Though. Bernanke warned Westerners have been
that tile U.S. economy is likely to be "weak· for several preaching Chrisriai1itv to
quarter,. and with some risk of a protracted slowdown ," he Afghan s.
·
d1d md1c"te that he would support a new fiscal stimulus to
"We have heard rumors
prop up growth in the U.S.
.
that houses ha ve heen rentBcrnanke's remark s before the Buuget Committee of the ed to preach Christianity in
House of Representatives marked his first endorsement of Kabul and some provinl'es, ·
·•
&lt;mother round or gove rnment stimulus. Democrats on· but we have no evidence
Capitol I lilt have been pu.shing for another stimulus plan, that thi s is taking place ,"
hut the H t~sh adn11n"trat1on has been cool to the 1dea as the sa id council member Jebra
federal br1d~et deficit erows.
Ali . The cmmcil pre viously
. "Effcctl\dy. the Fed'chairman i~ giving Congress agree~ has made a formal comli ght.. to go ahead w11h an additional ti scal .stimulus pack- plaint to "President Ham id
age. &gt;&lt;IlLI I! nan Bethune. chief U.S. financial economist at K~rza i that Westerners are
Global ilh1 eh t.
· ·
·
trying to spread Chri stianity
Ev·i;,n it Libur rates cont inue to decline . analysts say stock · in Afghani stan . . .
Monday's attack adds to a
. n1.11 kc 1&gt; 11111 not he out of the woods give n the sharp econann &lt;:. slowdown l1kcly to occur over the coming months, prowing sense of insecurity
w.hllh '" 1.1 hcwme more and more evident as companies 111 Kabul. The city is now
1cpmt the1r latest .earmng,.
.
blanketed with
poli ce
·. "We arc li"ing to go. throu gh this volati lity for the next checKpoints. and embas-ies.
tew \\ceb 11. not mon ths though the vo latilit y should he military baf.es and the U.N.
less marked . su 1d ll owurd Wheeldon. sen ior strateg ist at are erecting cement barriers
~&gt;~Ends:
~&gt;~
BGC Partners.
·
to guard against sui cide
Earlier in t\,ia. Sout h Korea 's K'"Pi cl imbeu about 2.3 bombings .
pertent after the gmcrnment \ annou n&lt;:cmcnt Sunday to
Kidnappings
targeting
'
pr~VI dc up t~ $!00 bill ion to sccurc.banks' maturing for- wealthy Afghans have long
elgn.~ un cnq debt ·'"" ~mothe r $30 bllilon for the banks .
been a problem in Kabul ,
Mmnla~1d Ch1,1la skn:es. mea nwh ile, recoveretl early loss- b~.l .
attacks
against
cs to edge hl~h~' Ill spite ol new gove1:nment fi gures show- Westerners ha ve grown
, mg the &lt;:ountry .s cconom1c growth ea,ed to 9 percent in the · recently . In mid-August,
;third yu&lt;nk r ol th" year - its slowest in more than fi ve . Tali ban militants kill ed
,yea" .
three wome n working for
; . The reading. '~hilc 't il l robu.st.fcd into anxiety that Jete- the
U·.S. aid
group
:rtorallng ilnanc1a l_and econom1c condilfons around the International
Resc 11 e
::world were damag1ng A&gt;wn growth .
Committee whi le they were
.. Investor,, though. \\ere relieved by lower third-quarter drivi ng in Logar, a province
ilnflat1on data and pledges of fresh government intervention south of KabLII.
; to 'uppon the ceonnm). Shang lwi 's key index ended 2.25
Ebcwhcrc in Afghanistan,
;percent higher at I .97~,01 ·
· a su icide bomber killed two
; In Tok}o. 'hare' .moved hi gher amid hopes for better- German soldier' and five·
. than -e xpected cnrpora ~c earn1ngs. with. Panasonic Corp. up child ren
in
Kunduz
: ~.9 percent alter the N1kke'. ht"ine., , dai ly reported that the prov ince to the norrh, 'said
: compan) "ould he&lt;~ ! Its mtcnm opcratmg profit fore,ast by Mohammad Omar, the
more than 20 hli l11111 yen t~ l'i7J mil lion).
provinci"l governor. NATO

,.
Monday, Oct. 27
·
.• RACINE ~ Southern Local School Board , regular meetmg. 8 p.m., htgh school media room .

Clubs and organizations
Tuesday, Oct. 21
.
CHESTER - Chester Council 323. Daughters of
.Amenca. 7 p.m., wtth friends~ip meeting and ~tluck at 6.
.· CHESTER - Past Counctlors CI.OO of Council 323
~aughters of America, 7 p.m., at hall .
'
Thursday, Oct, 23
POMEROY -, Meigs County Retired Teachers. noon.
meetmg room at Wild Horse Cafe. Candidates for county comll)issioner to discuss current issues. Guests wel·
:come.
: HARRISONVILLE - Harrisonville Senior Citizens I 1
a.m. , Presbyterian Church . Blood pressure screening.
potluck follows.
· REEDSVILLE -:- Riverview Garden Club annual dinner
out, ():30 p.m .. DaVinci's in Williamstown.• W.Va.
·
: POMEROY - Alpha Iota Masters Sorority, regular
.meet mg . II :30 a.m., Bun's Party Barn .
.

World markets surge
· on credit easing

Saturday, Oct. 25
•
POMEROY -:- Delta Kappa Gamma Teacher 's Society,
)0:45 a.m ., Wtld Horse Cafe, bring international food
·
. rectpe, paper products .• school supplies.
- POMEROY - Metgs County Republican Women 9
a.m., Republican headquarters. Call Karen York, 696-1042 ,
9~ Darlene Newell, 985-3537 .

Church events
Friday, Oct. 24
: GUySVILLE -'- Fall revival, 7 p.m. Friday and
:Saturday. Carthage Gap Church, U.S. 50 , Guysville .

·Completes basic training
: POM£ROY - Marine Corps Pvt. Jesse L. Long , son of
;Vicki L. Cook of Pomeroy and Jeffrer M. Long, Pomeroy,
:recently completed 12 weeks of baste training at Marine
:Corps Recruit Depot, Parris Island , S.C. designed to chai.Jenge new Marine recruits both physically and mentally.
: Long and fellow recruits began their training at 5 a. m.,
:by running three miles .and performing calisthenics. In
addition to the physical condilloning program, Long spent
pumerous hours in classroom and field assignments which
mcluded learning first aid, uniform "regulations, combat
W!J.ter survival, marksmanship, hand-to-hand combat and
'assorted weapons training. They performed close qrder
drill and operated as a small infantry unit during field training.
.
· ·
' Long and other recruits also received instruction on the
Marine Corps' core values - honor, courage and commitrnent , and ~hat the core values mean in guiding personal
and profess10nal conduct.
' Long and fello~ recruits ended the training phase with
The Crucible, a 54-hour, t~am evolution culminating in an
emotional ceremony in which recruits are presented the
·Marine Corps Emblem. and addressed as "Marines" for the
first time in their careers .

··Local Weather ·

.

:Local Stocks
~~

1uefd,av,

Octo~er 2.1, ·2.008

RotDoU&amp;

•r- 1s.2s ·'·

; Champion (NASDAQ) - 3.56
: f,';;rmlng Shops (NASDAQ) -

8:00

:City Holding (NASDAQ) - 40
• tolllna (NYSE)- 37.19
; DuPont (NYSE) - 36.17
•IJS Blink (NYSE) - 31.12
• Cannell (NY$!!) - 11 .04
·
;Jleneral Electric (NYSE) - 20.14
• Jtarley-Divldeon (NYSE) - 26.25
Morgan (NYSE) - 40.66

''"'•

aakeSale_

;-p

• ~ (NYSE) - 26.17

l'tlz11

COME JOIN US IN COOKING UP A GOOD TIME!

36159 ROCKSPRINGS ROAD
992·6606

.

.

.

• ).EP (NVSE) - 32.57
: A.k zo (NASDAQ) - 37.38
• "ahland Inc. (NYSE) - 26.46
: Big Loll (NVSE) - 22.52
, Jlob Evana (NASDAQ) - 23.52
•lloogWarner (NYSE) - 22.71
; Century AlUminum (NASDAQ)

· nee

Beginf: 6:00

•

Tuesday...Mostly clou'dy with a chance of showers in the
;morning ... Then partly s.unny in the afternoo.n. Highs in the
•Jlpper 50s. Northwest winds 5to 10 mph . Chance of rain 50
:percent.
.
;. Tuesday night ...Partly cloudy in the evening ...Then clearing.
·[:oolerwith lows in the lower 30s. North winds 5 to to mph .
:: Wednesday ...Sunny. Highs in the upper 50s. Northeast
:winds around 5 mph .
·: Wednesday nigbt ••.Mostly clear. Lows in the mid 30s.
'Northeast winds around 5 mph. . ·
, · Thursday and Thursday night ••• Panly cloudy. Highs in
;ihe lower 60s. Lows around 40.
·
.. ! Friday...Partly sunny with a 40 percent chance of show:s:rs. Highs in the lower 60s.
.
:• Friday night •• .Mostly cloudy with showers·Jikely. Lows
;in the. mid 40s. Chance of rain 60 percent.
·.
.. : Saturday•••Showers likely. Highs in the mid 50s. Chance
: Jlf rain 60 percent.
;• Saturday nigbt ...Cioudy with a 50 percent chance of
;showers. Lows in the lower 40s.
~
,

REHABILITATION CENTER

' tmltld Branda (NYSE) - 12.64
: .
k SOUthern (NYSE) - 55.88
•

lo Valley Bane COrp. (NAS..

; AQ)-21
BT (NYSE) - 33.80
plel (NASDAQ) - 20.27
, p.pelco (NYSE) - 56.76
' ......Ill' (NASDAQ) - 8.65
; fi.OC:kwell (NYSE) - 28.23
•lklcky BOote (NASDAQ) - 3.42
:Royal Dutch Shall - 54.68
1 lleww Holding (NASDAQ) - 58.73
• W.~Mart INYSE) - 54.43
: ~endy'a NYSE) - 3.63
•IV•Banco (NYSEI ·- 26.41
;,vorthlngton (NYSE)- 11.83
• pally atock raporta ara the 4
: ~.m. ET closing quotea of trans-

;

.'

,

Submitted photo

ANNIE'S MAILBOX

:
.
Saturday, Oct. 25
; MIDDLEPORT - Hymn Sing Alon&amp; the River, 4 p.m.
:until dark .. Dave Diles· Park. Brmg lawn chair.
.Performers mclude 'Bet Foster and Pat Neece , Marty
:Short , Joe McCloud , Charlie and Ellen Rife and Mike
'
~
.·Puckett .

Rocksprings

''"'''"''''

.

The Racine Tornadoes recently finished up a strong finish in the Racine Youth League. placing fourth in the tournament
and third in the league. The team, sponsored by Hill's Sunoco and Hill's Self Storage, are pictured .(first row, from left)
Garrett Wolfe, Dylan Smith, Jacob Riffle, Conner Wolfe. Andrew Evans, Riley Roush, Austin Baker, Weston Thorla,
Brayden Cunningham, William Elaston, Jonah Hoback, Spencer Harrison. Pictured in the back row (from left) are coaches Joe Wolfe, Chris Smith, Charlie Wolfe.
·
.

Other events

. .On the

•

PageA3

BYTHEBEND

!he Daily Sentinel

TAlmAN GUNMEN KUI CmusTh\N AID woRKER IN KABm:

'

•

Market watch
Oct. 20, 2008
DawJOIIts

llHiualrlata

9,265.43

Trying to ·escape life at hqme
I asked my . husband to dessert, etc .. or they reciproread
some books on inar- care by having us over to
AN!l MARCY SUGAR
riage, but he says he doesn't their homes.
Dear Annie: I've been understand what they are
The problem is th~t we
married for ,17 years and talking about. He 's not have a friend who is a
have a 16-year-old son. My interested in counseling . Is priest. "Father John" always
husband leaves for work at this abuse ? Am I just being comes empty-handed. He
5 a.m. and doesn't get home a complainer? Is this how has no problem eating our
until after 7 p.m. He eats in all marriages are?
food and drinking our
liquor. but never brings a
the family room and watch-. Desperate Housewife
es TV until he nods off. He
. Dear . Desperate: Of thing or offers to take us out
rouses himself for bed course not. It sounds like in repayment. Recentl y we
around 10, and if I'm still your husband is trying to invited Father John and his
awake , we ' ll have 10 min- escape his life at home, two brothers over for dinutes of conversation before including his relationship ner. One brother brought an
he falls asleep.
· with you and your son. lt may appetizer and the other
I've always run carpool for have started when the respon- · brought w.ine. Father John
our son, but 011 those rare sibilities of being a husband brought another priest. also
and father lirst overwhelmed ·empty-handed .
.
occasions when I got in a jam him, but it wasn't addressed
I think this behavior is so
and had to ask my·husband 10 at the time and now avoid- rude that! no longer want to
pick him up from school,you ance is habitual and expected. invite him. Are priests held
would have thought I Was He doesn't sound eager to to a different standard'? Is
asking for a lung. Even on change this pattem, so you there a polite way to let
his days off, my husband will have to do most of the Father John know he 's
goes.to the office "to read the work _ again.
inconsiderate '?
paper and drink coffee" and
If you can get your hus- Frustrated in Indiana
then plays golf, getting home bane! to go for marriage
Dear Indiana: Most
around noon·. By then , I:m counseling, that would be· priests are given a small
exhausted. I have a chronic best. Explain that since he salary. Some give the
pain condition and the nar- didn't understand the books money ·away through chari cotics make me tired.
on marriage , counseling · ty or tithing , but not all. If
I an\ sick of feeling unin ~ !
_make things clearer. If Father John is accum~lating
teresting , unloved and secwon 't go. go without savings. he should bring a
and-class. Due to the chron1m. •
.
small gift whev he i·s a
ic pain, I cannot work. l feel
Dear Anme: My partner repeat guest. but he may not
so trapped. I do not qualify and I have great jobs, a have the. money. or he may
for disability, and my hus- lovely home and ·a large cir- not realize you expect anyband's income is too high de of friends. We entertain thing. Still , the point of
for me to qu.alify for any quite often , and most guests inviting someone to your
other assistance.'
bring a bottle of wine. home is not to rece ive gifts.
. BY KATHY MITCHELL

Local Briefs
Making
apple butter
RACINE Southern
Charge United Methodist
Men of Racine will make
apple butter on Saturday.
Orders may be placed
through Dale ):lart , 949•
2656 or Vernon HaiTison,
992-2945. Proceeds will go
to the children's fund.

Think Pink
workshop

POMEROY - thursday
is
the deadline to register
1,7'70.03
for the Think Pink Cancer
StMtlalll •
Survivor Workshep, sponPoor'aliOO
sored by Meigs County
Cancer•lnitiative.
It will be
RuiHII
2000
held from I0 a.m. to 3 p.m ..
Oct . 29, at the Ohio Valley
NYSE diary
Christian Assembly, 39560
Advanced: 2,660
Rocksprings Rd .
491
Docllned:
Toptcs will including
UnchOnged:
50
advances in survivorship
issues , body image and sex5. 17b
uality, relaxation and guided
Nasdaq diary
imagery. role of diet ·and
Advanced: · 1,895
exercise.
learning to live
DlcfiMd: •
583
again, and community
Unchonged:
66
resources .
2.0Sb
There is no fee to attend ,
AP
SOURCE &amp;a1Giwd
hut reservations are request-.
ed by calling (888) 227actlona for Oct. 20, 2008, pn&gt;v)ded by Edward Jon• financial
6446
by
Thursday.
advlaora laue Milia In Galttpolla. Survivors ,
caretakers,
at (740) 441-8441 and Loaley
health professonals and the
~Mrrero In Point PIHnnt at
public are invited.
(304) 674-0174. Member SIPC.

co':::L

1

It is for the enjoy: .1ent of his
company.
Dear Annie: The letter
from "S'haron" .claims that
"stupidest" is not part of the
English language .
I've been using that word
for years, so I checked my
1996 edition of Webster's
Unabridged. Webster begs to
differ with Sharon. Both •·stupider'' and "stupidest"' are
shown under "stupid." Let he
(01: she) who is without sin
throw the lirst stone . - Vlad
Dear Vlad: Some dictionaries list words that have
fallen into . popular usage :
even though they are not
grammatically correc.t. This
means if evervone starts
saying."between you and 1,"
it will eventually be accepted us proper, even though it
makes us cringe .
Annie's Mailbox is wrilten
by Kathy Mitchell and
Marcy Sugar, lougtime editors of tile Ann Landers col- ·
um11. Please e-mail your
questions to allniesmail·
. box@comcasr.t.ret, or write
to: A11nie's Mailbox, P.O.
Box 118190, Chicago, IL
6061/. To find out more
about A1111ie's Mailbox, and '
read features by other
Creators Syndicate writers
and cartoonists, visit tile
Creators Syndicate Web
page aJ www.cnalon·.com.

Hunter education
TUPPERS PLAINS -' A
hunter education course wi 11
be held from 6-9 p.m. Nov.
11 -13 and 9 a.m . to' noon on
Nov. IS at Eastern High
School. Class size is limited
to 60. Information. is avai lable from Gilbert Woods at
985-3914.

Small
business course
ATHENS
- Small
Business Develo[m1ent Center
and the Appalachian Regional
Entrepreneurship Group of
Southea~t Ohio wil sponsor
"Basis of a Successful ·sta.rt."
fium 6 to 9 p.m. on Nov. 10
and Dec. 2. Registration is
required by calljng 593-1797 .
The workshop is free.

Partners in care

6 p.m . on Oct. 31 at the
Family Life Center. Chili
shredded cheese ,
POMEROY - A support with
pea.nut butter sandwiches
group for caregivtrs of those and desset1 will be served .
affected by Alzheimer 's disc
ease and other dementias
meets at J;J 5 p.m. every
Friday at the Meigs County'
MIDDLEPORT - A Fall
Senior Center. The group
Bull
Bash Co-ed Softball
offers those affected by the
Toumamcnt
will be held
di sease help understand .
cope with and managing Friday through Sunday at
Gener&lt;1l Hartinge r Park . All
daily situations.
Activities are planned for proceeds will benefit the
those with dementia while Chester Bull Association
the caregivers meet to sup- and the Angela Eason
port each other as they face Memorial Fields. The cost is
similar issues . In formation $ 100 per team plus two 12is available from Kathy inch 44 core balls and two
canned goods per player. for
McDaniel. 992-2161.
donation to food banks .
Rules and other infonnation are available bv calling
Angie Edwards at 416-6956
qr Kristi Finlaw at 992-3 136.
Beans and cornbread.
MIDDLEPORT
Middl eport Ch urch · of vegetable soup·. chili and
Christ will have a free coitl- homemade desserts will be
munity dinner from 4:30 to served on Sunuay.

Support group

Plan tournament

Community
· dinner

POMEROY - Partners
in Care , a program fo r those
with memory loss, &lt;lepr~s­
sian, or loneliness, consists
of activities, current events,
history, a time to socialize,
refreshments. and lunch,
· and meets from 9 a.m. to 10
p.m. Monday and Friday ut
the Meigs Senior Center.
For more information.
call Kathy McDaniel at
992-2 161 .
•

�•

\

· The Daily Sentinel

AROUND THE WORLD

PageA2

Tuesday, October :u, 2008

•

Tuesday, October 21,

2008

Community Calendar

Bv AMtR SHAH
•SSOCIATED PRESS WAITER

Public meetings

KABUL. Afghanistan Taliban assailants on a
motorbike gu nned down a
Chri stian aid wurl-er · in
Kabul on Monday and the
miliiants said she was killed
for spreading her re ligion
- a. rare tnrgeted killing of
a Westerner in the nation\
capital. .
Gayl e Willi ams. a 34year~o ld dual British-South
African national
who
.
.
.
AP photo
helped
handicapped
A broker seen unde r the curve of German stock index DAX
at the sto.ck market in Frankfurt , central Germany, Monday. Afghan s, was shot to death
as she was walking to work .
.European markets open_strongly after solid gains in Asia, abo ut 8 a.m., said · Interior
:wtth fi nancial stocks doing well on hopes that the crisis in Ministry spokesman Zemeri
:the markets has abated amid s igns banks may be less Bashary.
-wary of te nding to each other.
A spqkesman for the.militants sa id th e Taliban
ordered her killed because
she was accused of prose ly- ·
ti zing.
·
"Thi s woman came to
Afghanistan
to
teach
Christianity
to
the
people
of
BY PAN PYLAS
Afghanistan
."
Zabiutlah
AP BUSINESS WAITER
Mujahid
told .
The.
AP pHOtO
. ·LONDON ~ World . stocks surgeu Monday ~s lower · Associated Press. ''Our
1nterbank lcnd1n g rates luelcd hopes that credit markets are (leaders) i"ued a decree to An Afghan woman passes by the SERVE Afghanistan office for, which the South African
returnmg to normal and Federal Reserve ·chairman Ben · kill thi s woman."
woman, Gayle Williams was working, who was shot to death jn the westem part of the
Bernank~ ~ave hi s support to more fiscal stimulus in the
Britain \ secretary of state Kabu l. Afghanistan, on Monday. Gunmen on a motorbike killed a .South African aid work·
U.S
·
·
.
. for intemati onal develop- er in Katiul and NATO-led troops assaulted an insurgent stronghqld just west of the cap!·
M:u'kets in Asia . Europe and Latin America all rallied , ment called the . killing a tat. spark1ng a two-day battle that killed 20 militants; offici.als said Monday.
·
inspired by the f&lt;tll in interbank lending rates after govern- "callous and cowa rdlv act"
ments and ccmral banks 111 past weeks . have cut interest and said Williams was in confirmed some &lt;1f its so lrates while. injecting huge sr1ms of cash into battered banks Afghanistan to ,.help · ease dier' w~ re killed or wormtlccl in the attack.
anu fmanc 1al companies.
poverty.
Omar· sa id the soldiers
. On Wall Street. the Dow mdustrials fi ni shed up 413.21
''To present her killing as
TURKMEN.
were
patro lling on foot
pomts. or -l .7 percent. to 9,265.43, while broader indexes a religion s act is as despicalogged sim ilar gai ns.
'
ble as it is absurd - il was when the bomber riding a
Britain 's. FTSE 100 index of ~eading shares closed up cold blooded murder," bicycle hit them. :Northern
has been
219.66 po111ts. or SA percent htglier, at 4,282.67. while Douglas Alexander said in a Afg han[ ~"'"
spared much of the violence
German{' DAX was up ?3.68 points, or 1.1 percent, high- statement.
Afghanistan 's
cr at 4.Rj5 .0 I. rhc CAC-40 111 France was 118 .59 points, or
'A spokeswoman for the afnicting
eastern
and
southern
l.6 perce nt. stronger at 3,448.5 1..
.
aid group, SERVE ·
Tho&gt;c g•~ in s follow the 3.6 percent adyance on Japan's · Serving Emergency Relief prov i·nces.
West of Kabul , meanN1kkc1 22) to 9.00~ .59 an&lt;,) the 5.3 percent j~mp in the and Vocational Enterprises
AFGHANISTAN
w~ile
,
assault
helicopters
Hang Scng mdex 111 Hong Ko11g to. 15 ,323.01.
said it is a Christian
PAK.
Brazil '&gt; lbovcspa index led gainers in Latin America, orga nization but denied it dropped NATU troops into
soanng 8 4 perc·ent to 39.44 1. while Chile's IPSA rose 4.7 was involved in proselyti z- Jalrez dist rict in Wardak
province on Thursday,
percent to 2.5 ~ 6. Me xico's IPC index linished up 2.3 per- mg.
0
c:ent to 20.786 and Colombia's IGBC gained 1.2 percent at
" It's not the case that they sparking a two-day battle
7.689.. Argen 11na s Mcrval was the only laggard, slipping preach , not at all." said the involving airstrikes, the
0 100
.3.3 p~rccnt to 1. 176.
..
.
spokeswoman, Rina van der military alliance said in a
"What we are seeing b a gradual reduction in money mar- Ende . "They are here to do statemenr Monday.
· SOURCE: ESRI
AP
ket rat~s wi11L' h goe' a long way to restoring investor conti- NGO (aid) work."
More than 20 militants
.Jcnl'e . sa ~tl Ne il Mackum&lt;)n. chief economist at ECU Group:
Afghanistan is a conserv- were killed, NATO said. .
Islamic . nation.
The i nt e rb&gt;~nk . lend ing rate for three-month dollar loans . ative
Wardak province, just 40 for a sharp increase in the members have refused to
move th.eir troops from
fell for the sixth day running Monday and by its biggest Proselytizi~g is prohibited miles west of Kabul, has number of troops.
Some
65,000
internationmore peaceful parts of the .
daily amount since January. I!.dropped 0.36 percent to 4.06 by law, and other Christian become an insurge,nt strongal
troops
now
operate
iri
country
and have imposed
percent. wlule the three- month Euro. Interbank Offered missionarie s or charities holc;l. . Militants
have
including restrictions on the duties
Rate. or Euribor, fell almost 0.05 percentage points to 5.00 have faced severe hosti lity. ex17aoded their traditional Afghanistan ,
their forces can carry out.
percent.
l,.ast year, 23 South Korean · bases in the country's south about 32,000 Americans.
"It is this wavering political
Speaking
in
London
mi
. Ov~mighr. the Hong Kong interbank offered rate , known aid Workers from a church and-east - along. the border
Gen .
John will that impedes operational
as H1bor, tor three-month loans tumbled to 3.66 .percent group were taken hostage in with Pakistan - and have Monday,
from 4.19 as the .teiTitory's de facto central bank pumped southero Afghanistan. Two gained territoxy in the Craddock ,. the head of U.S. )lrogress and brings mto que&amp;more money into the financial· system.
were killed and the rest provinces
surrounding European Command and ttpn the relevance of the
. Abnormal ly high interbank lending rates have been a were eventually released.
Kabu), a worry'ing develop- NATO's supreme allied alliance here in the 21st cen.s1gn ofd1stress m credi t markets and been the catalyst for
According to its Web site, ment for Afghan and NATO commander for Europe, tury," Craddock told • the
the c1'1Sls m the fmanctal markets over recent weeks. High SERVE is a Christian chari- troops.
called into . question the Royal .. United ' Service~
mterbank rates can choke off credit to businesses and indi- ty registered in Britain and · Those advances are part political
will
among Institute,
. a milil!iry think tltnk.'
victua ls. hurting the economy. ·
·
·
has been . working with of the re ~~on that top U.S. alliance members for the
The thawing of the cred it markets has helped financial Afghan refugees since 1980 · military' ' .o fficials have mission in Afghanisfan.
Net
stocks ~cross Europe. particularly in London, with Royal in Pakistan.
Commanders have called
warned the . international
Bank ot Scotland .PLC cloSing up 23 percent. and HSBC and
"SERVE Afghani stan 's m1s.s10n io defeat . the for more NATO troops to be
SEjVE
Afghani~tan,
·Barclays_more than 5 percent_lind 7 percent respectively.
purpo~e is to express God's Taliban is in p~ril , and why deployed in the violent http:llwww.s.erveafghanista
One of the most h1gh- proflie gamers in Europe Monday love, and brin g hope by NATO generals have called south , but some (1/ATO
~ .org
. was Am sterdam-l"ted lNG Groep NV after the Dutch gov- servmg the people of
1
emment mJeCtecl 10 billion euros ($ 13.4 billion) into the Afghanistan , especially the
fmanc1al com pany over the weekend. Its shares were up 20 needy, as we seek to address
personal , social and envi percent. almost recoup ing most of last Friday 's losses.
Encrgy Mocks 111 Europe. such as BP PLC , Royal Dutch ronmental need ;,''. the' site
Shell and Total SA. were also up as oil prices rose further . says .
Monday '~' near S74 a baiTel at one stage on mpunting talk
A
member
of
that OPEC will Cllt productiOn at the end of this w~ek in an Afghanistan 's highest reliuttempt to shore up pri&lt;:es that have fallen by 50 percent in gious council said Monday .
three months.
.that rumors have· spread
The m;11·kets ab o seem to have taken comments from Fed over the last two years that
chairm;nl Bernanke in stride , Though. Bernanke warned Westerners have been
that tile U.S. economy is likely to be "weak· for several preaching Chrisriai1itv to
quarter,. and with some risk of a protracted slowdown ," he Afghan s.
·
d1d md1c"te that he would support a new fiscal stimulus to
"We have heard rumors
prop up growth in the U.S.
.
that houses ha ve heen rentBcrnanke's remark s before the Buuget Committee of the ed to preach Christianity in
House of Representatives marked his first endorsement of Kabul and some provinl'es, ·
·•
&lt;mother round or gove rnment stimulus. Democrats on· but we have no evidence
Capitol I lilt have been pu.shing for another stimulus plan, that thi s is taking place ,"
hut the H t~sh adn11n"trat1on has been cool to the 1dea as the sa id council member Jebra
federal br1d~et deficit erows.
Ali . The cmmcil pre viously
. "Effcctl\dy. the Fed'chairman i~ giving Congress agree~ has made a formal comli ght.. to go ahead w11h an additional ti scal .stimulus pack- plaint to "President Ham id
age. &gt;&lt;IlLI I! nan Bethune. chief U.S. financial economist at K~rza i that Westerners are
Global ilh1 eh t.
· ·
·
trying to spread Chri stianity
Ev·i;,n it Libur rates cont inue to decline . analysts say stock · in Afghani stan . . .
Monday's attack adds to a
. n1.11 kc 1&gt; 11111 not he out of the woods give n the sharp econann &lt;:. slowdown l1kcly to occur over the coming months, prowing sense of insecurity
w.hllh '" 1.1 hcwme more and more evident as companies 111 Kabul. The city is now
1cpmt the1r latest .earmng,.
.
blanketed with
poli ce
·. "We arc li"ing to go. throu gh this volati lity for the next checKpoints. and embas-ies.
tew \\ceb 11. not mon ths though the vo latilit y should he military baf.es and the U.N.
less marked . su 1d ll owurd Wheeldon. sen ior strateg ist at are erecting cement barriers
~&gt;~Ends:
~&gt;~
BGC Partners.
·
to guard against sui cide
Earlier in t\,ia. Sout h Korea 's K'"Pi cl imbeu about 2.3 bombings .
pertent after the gmcrnment \ annou n&lt;:cmcnt Sunday to
Kidnappings
targeting
'
pr~VI dc up t~ $!00 bill ion to sccurc.banks' maturing for- wealthy Afghans have long
elgn.~ un cnq debt ·'"" ~mothe r $30 bllilon for the banks .
been a problem in Kabul ,
Mmnla~1d Ch1,1la skn:es. mea nwh ile, recoveretl early loss- b~.l .
attacks
against
cs to edge hl~h~' Ill spite ol new gove1:nment fi gures show- Westerners ha ve grown
, mg the &lt;:ountry .s cconom1c growth ea,ed to 9 percent in the · recently . In mid-August,
;third yu&lt;nk r ol th" year - its slowest in more than fi ve . Tali ban militants kill ed
,yea" .
three wome n working for
; . The reading. '~hilc 't il l robu.st.fcd into anxiety that Jete- the
U·.S. aid
group
:rtorallng ilnanc1a l_and econom1c condilfons around the International
Resc 11 e
::world were damag1ng A&gt;wn growth .
Committee whi le they were
.. Investor,, though. \\ere relieved by lower third-quarter drivi ng in Logar, a province
ilnflat1on data and pledges of fresh government intervention south of KabLII.
; to 'uppon the ceonnm). Shang lwi 's key index ended 2.25
Ebcwhcrc in Afghanistan,
;percent higher at I .97~,01 ·
· a su icide bomber killed two
; In Tok}o. 'hare' .moved hi gher amid hopes for better- German soldier' and five·
. than -e xpected cnrpora ~c earn1ngs. with. Panasonic Corp. up child ren
in
Kunduz
: ~.9 percent alter the N1kke'. ht"ine., , dai ly reported that the prov ince to the norrh, 'said
: compan) "ould he&lt;~ ! Its mtcnm opcratmg profit fore,ast by Mohammad Omar, the
more than 20 hli l11111 yen t~ l'i7J mil lion).
provinci"l governor. NATO

,.
Monday, Oct. 27
·
.• RACINE ~ Southern Local School Board , regular meetmg. 8 p.m., htgh school media room .

Clubs and organizations
Tuesday, Oct. 21
.
CHESTER - Chester Council 323. Daughters of
.Amenca. 7 p.m., wtth friends~ip meeting and ~tluck at 6.
.· CHESTER - Past Counctlors CI.OO of Council 323
~aughters of America, 7 p.m., at hall .
'
Thursday, Oct, 23
POMEROY -, Meigs County Retired Teachers. noon.
meetmg room at Wild Horse Cafe. Candidates for county comll)issioner to discuss current issues. Guests wel·
:come.
: HARRISONVILLE - Harrisonville Senior Citizens I 1
a.m. , Presbyterian Church . Blood pressure screening.
potluck follows.
· REEDSVILLE -:- Riverview Garden Club annual dinner
out, ():30 p.m .. DaVinci's in Williamstown.• W.Va.
·
: POMEROY - Alpha Iota Masters Sorority, regular
.meet mg . II :30 a.m., Bun's Party Barn .
.

World markets surge
· on credit easing

Saturday, Oct. 25
•
POMEROY -:- Delta Kappa Gamma Teacher 's Society,
)0:45 a.m ., Wtld Horse Cafe, bring international food
·
. rectpe, paper products .• school supplies.
- POMEROY - Metgs County Republican Women 9
a.m., Republican headquarters. Call Karen York, 696-1042 ,
9~ Darlene Newell, 985-3537 .

Church events
Friday, Oct. 24
: GUySVILLE -'- Fall revival, 7 p.m. Friday and
:Saturday. Carthage Gap Church, U.S. 50 , Guysville .

·Completes basic training
: POM£ROY - Marine Corps Pvt. Jesse L. Long , son of
;Vicki L. Cook of Pomeroy and Jeffrer M. Long, Pomeroy,
:recently completed 12 weeks of baste training at Marine
:Corps Recruit Depot, Parris Island , S.C. designed to chai.Jenge new Marine recruits both physically and mentally.
: Long and fellow recruits began their training at 5 a. m.,
:by running three miles .and performing calisthenics. In
addition to the physical condilloning program, Long spent
pumerous hours in classroom and field assignments which
mcluded learning first aid, uniform "regulations, combat
W!J.ter survival, marksmanship, hand-to-hand combat and
'assorted weapons training. They performed close qrder
drill and operated as a small infantry unit during field training.
.
· ·
' Long and other recruits also received instruction on the
Marine Corps' core values - honor, courage and commitrnent , and ~hat the core values mean in guiding personal
and profess10nal conduct.
' Long and fello~ recruits ended the training phase with
The Crucible, a 54-hour, t~am evolution culminating in an
emotional ceremony in which recruits are presented the
·Marine Corps Emblem. and addressed as "Marines" for the
first time in their careers .

··Local Weather ·

.

:Local Stocks
~~

1uefd,av,

Octo~er 2.1, ·2.008

RotDoU&amp;

•r- 1s.2s ·'·

; Champion (NASDAQ) - 3.56
: f,';;rmlng Shops (NASDAQ) -

8:00

:City Holding (NASDAQ) - 40
• tolllna (NYSE)- 37.19
; DuPont (NYSE) - 36.17
•IJS Blink (NYSE) - 31.12
• Cannell (NY$!!) - 11 .04
·
;Jleneral Electric (NYSE) - 20.14
• Jtarley-Divldeon (NYSE) - 26.25
Morgan (NYSE) - 40.66

''"'•

aakeSale_

;-p

• ~ (NYSE) - 26.17

l'tlz11

COME JOIN US IN COOKING UP A GOOD TIME!

36159 ROCKSPRINGS ROAD
992·6606

.

.

.

• ).EP (NVSE) - 32.57
: A.k zo (NASDAQ) - 37.38
• "ahland Inc. (NYSE) - 26.46
: Big Loll (NVSE) - 22.52
, Jlob Evana (NASDAQ) - 23.52
•lloogWarner (NYSE) - 22.71
; Century AlUminum (NASDAQ)

· nee

Beginf: 6:00

•

Tuesday...Mostly clou'dy with a chance of showers in the
;morning ... Then partly s.unny in the afternoo.n. Highs in the
•Jlpper 50s. Northwest winds 5to 10 mph . Chance of rain 50
:percent.
.
;. Tuesday night ...Partly cloudy in the evening ...Then clearing.
·[:oolerwith lows in the lower 30s. North winds 5 to to mph .
:: Wednesday ...Sunny. Highs in the upper 50s. Northeast
:winds around 5 mph .
·: Wednesday nigbt ••.Mostly clear. Lows in the mid 30s.
'Northeast winds around 5 mph. . ·
, · Thursday and Thursday night ••• Panly cloudy. Highs in
;ihe lower 60s. Lows around 40.
·
.. ! Friday...Partly sunny with a 40 percent chance of show:s:rs. Highs in the lower 60s.
.
:• Friday night •• .Mostly cloudy with showers·Jikely. Lows
;in the. mid 40s. Chance of rain 60 percent.
·.
.. : Saturday•••Showers likely. Highs in the mid 50s. Chance
: Jlf rain 60 percent.
;• Saturday nigbt ...Cioudy with a 50 percent chance of
;showers. Lows in the lower 40s.
~
,

REHABILITATION CENTER

' tmltld Branda (NYSE) - 12.64
: .
k SOUthern (NYSE) - 55.88
•

lo Valley Bane COrp. (NAS..

; AQ)-21
BT (NYSE) - 33.80
plel (NASDAQ) - 20.27
, p.pelco (NYSE) - 56.76
' ......Ill' (NASDAQ) - 8.65
; fi.OC:kwell (NYSE) - 28.23
•lklcky BOote (NASDAQ) - 3.42
:Royal Dutch Shall - 54.68
1 lleww Holding (NASDAQ) - 58.73
• W.~Mart INYSE) - 54.43
: ~endy'a NYSE) - 3.63
•IV•Banco (NYSEI ·- 26.41
;,vorthlngton (NYSE)- 11.83
• pally atock raporta ara the 4
: ~.m. ET closing quotea of trans-

;

.'

,

Submitted photo

ANNIE'S MAILBOX

:
.
Saturday, Oct. 25
; MIDDLEPORT - Hymn Sing Alon&amp; the River, 4 p.m.
:until dark .. Dave Diles· Park. Brmg lawn chair.
.Performers mclude 'Bet Foster and Pat Neece , Marty
:Short , Joe McCloud , Charlie and Ellen Rife and Mike
'
~
.·Puckett .

Rocksprings

''"'''"''''

.

The Racine Tornadoes recently finished up a strong finish in the Racine Youth League. placing fourth in the tournament
and third in the league. The team, sponsored by Hill's Sunoco and Hill's Self Storage, are pictured .(first row, from left)
Garrett Wolfe, Dylan Smith, Jacob Riffle, Conner Wolfe. Andrew Evans, Riley Roush, Austin Baker, Weston Thorla,
Brayden Cunningham, William Elaston, Jonah Hoback, Spencer Harrison. Pictured in the back row (from left) are coaches Joe Wolfe, Chris Smith, Charlie Wolfe.
·
.

Other events

. .On the

•

PageA3

BYTHEBEND

!he Daily Sentinel

TAlmAN GUNMEN KUI CmusTh\N AID woRKER IN KABm:

'

•

Market watch
Oct. 20, 2008
DawJOIIts

llHiualrlata

9,265.43

Trying to ·escape life at hqme
I asked my . husband to dessert, etc .. or they reciproread
some books on inar- care by having us over to
AN!l MARCY SUGAR
riage, but he says he doesn't their homes.
Dear Annie: I've been understand what they are
The problem is th~t we
married for ,17 years and talking about. He 's not have a friend who is a
have a 16-year-old son. My interested in counseling . Is priest. "Father John" always
husband leaves for work at this abuse ? Am I just being comes empty-handed. He
5 a.m. and doesn't get home a complainer? Is this how has no problem eating our
until after 7 p.m. He eats in all marriages are?
food and drinking our
liquor. but never brings a
the family room and watch-. Desperate Housewife
es TV until he nods off. He
. Dear . Desperate: Of thing or offers to take us out
rouses himself for bed course not. It sounds like in repayment. Recentl y we
around 10, and if I'm still your husband is trying to invited Father John and his
awake , we ' ll have 10 min- escape his life at home, two brothers over for dinutes of conversation before including his relationship ner. One brother brought an
he falls asleep.
· with you and your son. lt may appetizer and the other
I've always run carpool for have started when the respon- · brought w.ine. Father John
our son, but 011 those rare sibilities of being a husband brought another priest. also
and father lirst overwhelmed ·empty-handed .
.
occasions when I got in a jam him, but it wasn't addressed
I think this behavior is so
and had to ask my·husband 10 at the time and now avoid- rude that! no longer want to
pick him up from school,you ance is habitual and expected. invite him. Are priests held
would have thought I Was He doesn't sound eager to to a different standard'? Is
asking for a lung. Even on change this pattem, so you there a polite way to let
his days off, my husband will have to do most of the Father John know he 's
goes.to the office "to read the work _ again.
inconsiderate '?
paper and drink coffee" and
If you can get your hus- Frustrated in Indiana
then plays golf, getting home bane! to go for marriage
Dear Indiana: Most
around noon·. By then , I:m counseling, that would be· priests are given a small
exhausted. I have a chronic best. Explain that since he salary. Some give the
pain condition and the nar- didn't understand the books money ·away through chari cotics make me tired.
on marriage , counseling · ty or tithing , but not all. If
I an\ sick of feeling unin ~ !
_make things clearer. If Father John is accum~lating
teresting , unloved and secwon 't go. go without savings. he should bring a
and-class. Due to the chron1m. •
.
small gift whev he i·s a
ic pain, I cannot work. l feel
Dear Anme: My partner repeat guest. but he may not
so trapped. I do not qualify and I have great jobs, a have the. money. or he may
for disability, and my hus- lovely home and ·a large cir- not realize you expect anyband's income is too high de of friends. We entertain thing. Still , the point of
for me to qu.alify for any quite often , and most guests inviting someone to your
other assistance.'
bring a bottle of wine. home is not to rece ive gifts.
. BY KATHY MITCHELL

Local Briefs
Making
apple butter
RACINE Southern
Charge United Methodist
Men of Racine will make
apple butter on Saturday.
Orders may be placed
through Dale ):lart , 949•
2656 or Vernon HaiTison,
992-2945. Proceeds will go
to the children's fund.

Think Pink
workshop

POMEROY - thursday
is
the deadline to register
1,7'70.03
for the Think Pink Cancer
StMtlalll •
Survivor Workshep, sponPoor'aliOO
sored by Meigs County
Cancer•lnitiative.
It will be
RuiHII
2000
held from I0 a.m. to 3 p.m ..
Oct . 29, at the Ohio Valley
NYSE diary
Christian Assembly, 39560
Advanced: 2,660
Rocksprings Rd .
491
Docllned:
Toptcs will including
UnchOnged:
50
advances in survivorship
issues , body image and sex5. 17b
uality, relaxation and guided
Nasdaq diary
imagery. role of diet ·and
Advanced: · 1,895
exercise.
learning to live
DlcfiMd: •
583
again, and community
Unchonged:
66
resources .
2.0Sb
There is no fee to attend ,
AP
SOURCE &amp;a1Giwd
hut reservations are request-.
ed by calling (888) 227actlona for Oct. 20, 2008, pn&gt;v)ded by Edward Jon• financial
6446
by
Thursday.
advlaora laue Milia In Galttpolla. Survivors ,
caretakers,
at (740) 441-8441 and Loaley
health professonals and the
~Mrrero In Point PIHnnt at
public are invited.
(304) 674-0174. Member SIPC.

co':::L

1

It is for the enjoy: .1ent of his
company.
Dear Annie: The letter
from "S'haron" .claims that
"stupidest" is not part of the
English language .
I've been using that word
for years, so I checked my
1996 edition of Webster's
Unabridged. Webster begs to
differ with Sharon. Both •·stupider'' and "stupidest"' are
shown under "stupid." Let he
(01: she) who is without sin
throw the lirst stone . - Vlad
Dear Vlad: Some dictionaries list words that have
fallen into . popular usage :
even though they are not
grammatically correc.t. This
means if evervone starts
saying."between you and 1,"
it will eventually be accepted us proper, even though it
makes us cringe .
Annie's Mailbox is wrilten
by Kathy Mitchell and
Marcy Sugar, lougtime editors of tile Ann Landers col- ·
um11. Please e-mail your
questions to allniesmail·
. box@comcasr.t.ret, or write
to: A11nie's Mailbox, P.O.
Box 118190, Chicago, IL
6061/. To find out more
about A1111ie's Mailbox, and '
read features by other
Creators Syndicate writers
and cartoonists, visit tile
Creators Syndicate Web
page aJ www.cnalon·.com.

Hunter education
TUPPERS PLAINS -' A
hunter education course wi 11
be held from 6-9 p.m. Nov.
11 -13 and 9 a.m . to' noon on
Nov. IS at Eastern High
School. Class size is limited
to 60. Information. is avai lable from Gilbert Woods at
985-3914.

Small
business course
ATHENS
- Small
Business Develo[m1ent Center
and the Appalachian Regional
Entrepreneurship Group of
Southea~t Ohio wil sponsor
"Basis of a Successful ·sta.rt."
fium 6 to 9 p.m. on Nov. 10
and Dec. 2. Registration is
required by calljng 593-1797 .
The workshop is free.

Partners in care

6 p.m . on Oct. 31 at the
Family Life Center. Chili
shredded cheese ,
POMEROY - A support with
pea.nut butter sandwiches
group for caregivtrs of those and desset1 will be served .
affected by Alzheimer 's disc
ease and other dementias
meets at J;J 5 p.m. every
Friday at the Meigs County'
MIDDLEPORT - A Fall
Senior Center. The group
Bull
Bash Co-ed Softball
offers those affected by the
Toumamcnt
will be held
di sease help understand .
cope with and managing Friday through Sunday at
Gener&lt;1l Hartinge r Park . All
daily situations.
Activities are planned for proceeds will benefit the
those with dementia while Chester Bull Association
the caregivers meet to sup- and the Angela Eason
port each other as they face Memorial Fields. The cost is
similar issues . In formation $ 100 per team plus two 12is available from Kathy inch 44 core balls and two
canned goods per player. for
McDaniel. 992-2161.
donation to food banks .
Rules and other infonnation are available bv calling
Angie Edwards at 416-6956
qr Kristi Finlaw at 992-3 136.
Beans and cornbread.
MIDDLEPORT
Middl eport Ch urch · of vegetable soup·. chili and
Christ will have a free coitl- homemade desserts will be
munity dinner from 4:30 to served on Sunuay.

Support group

Plan tournament

Community
· dinner

POMEROY - Partners
in Care , a program fo r those
with memory loss, &lt;lepr~s­
sian, or loneliness, consists
of activities, current events,
history, a time to socialize,
refreshments. and lunch,
· and meets from 9 a.m. to 10
p.m. Monday and Friday ut
the Meigs Senior Center.
For more information.
call Kathy McDaniel at
992-2 161 .
•

�PageA4

·The Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, October 21, 2008

Tuesday, October 21; 200ft

Obituaries

.

Strategic
Pakistan
steps
up
terror
fight,
needs
aid·
.
The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

(740) 992·2156 ·FAX (740) 992·2157
www.mydallysentlnel.com

·)

Ohio Valley Publishil)g Co.
Dan Goodrich
Publisher
Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager-News Editor

Congress shall make flo larv respectiug an
establishment of religion, or prohibiting the
free exercise tl1ereof; or abridgiug tl1e freedom
of speech, or of the press; or the ·right of the
people peaceably to assemble, and to petitiot1
the Govert~ment for a redress ofgriel•ances.
:.... The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

TODAY IN HISTORY
Today is Tuesday, Oct 21. the 295th day of 2008 There
are 71 days left in the year

Today 's Highlight tn Htstory: On Oct 21, 1805, a British
fleet commanded by Admtral Horatio Nelson defeated a
French-Spantsh fleet m the Battle of Tmfalgar, Nelson,
however, was ktlled.
On thts date: In 1797, the US Navy fngate
' Constitution, also known as "Old lronstdes." was christened in Boston\ harbor
In 1879. Thom:" Edtson pcrlectt·d a 1\otkable electllc
hght at hts lab01atmy tnl\lrnlo P.ttk. N J
In 1917. mcmbcts olthe lsi Dtvtston ol the US A11ny
training m Luncvtlle. hdncc. became the first Amencans to
·see action on the lront hncs of Worlu War I
In 1944, dunng World War II, US. troops captured the
German ctty of Aachen.
In 1959, the Solomon R Guggenhetm Museum tn New
York Qpened to the pub he.
In 1960, Democrat John F. Kennedy and Republican
Richard M. Nixon clashed m thetr fourth and fmal presidential debate in New York.
In 1967. ten~ of thou~ands of Vtetnam War protesters
began two days of demonstt.tttons 111 Washington. D.C.
In 1967, the lsrach dcsttoycr INS Etlat was sunk by
Egyptian rnisstle boats ncar Port Smd. 47 lstaelt new
members wet e lust
'
In 1971 , Prestdent Ntxon mHntnatcd Lc\\ts F. Powell and
Wtlltam H Rdmqutst to the US . Supreme Court.
Today's l:litthtl,tys Adrc·ss luyc:e Randolph IS ~3 Rock
'singer Manfted Mann ts 68 . Mustcmn Steve Croppct
(Booker T. &amp; the MG's) IS 67 Singer Elvm Btshop ts 66
TV's Judge Judy Shemdlin ts 66. Actor Evctett McGtll ts
63. Musician Lee Loughnane (Chtcugo) ts 62. Fmmer
Israeli Pnme Mimster Benpmin Netanyahu is 59 Mustctan
Charlotte Caffe} (The Go Go's) is ~5. Actress-author
Carrie Ftsher is 52 Smget Julian Cope ts 51. Rock must ·
-cmn Steve Lukathet (Toto) ts 51. Actor Ken Watanabe ts
49 Rock mustcian Che Colovtt&lt;~ Lemon ts 18 Rock smgcrmusictan Nick Oliven (Mondo Gcnerdtot) ts 37. Chmtmn
rock musician Chatlte Lowell I Jars of Clay) 1~ 35 Actor
Jet~my Mtflct ts 1] i\cllll Will Estes ts 30 Acttcss Knn
Kardashtdn is 2X i\clnt M.ttl D.tfl,ts IS 26.
fhougltt fm li&gt;d.ty "There &lt;~rc three thmgs whtdl the
j:mbhc will .dw&lt;~ys d,tmor lot. soonct 01 later namely,
Novelty, novelty, novelty" - Thomas Hood. Brtttsh poet
(1799-1845).

Alnng with a deep tecessum , Prestdent Bush ts
bequeathmg hts successor a
detenorating sttuatton m
Afghamstan - but there are
posttive stgns across the
Morton
border 111 Paktstan
Kondracke
Puktstan 's new ciVIlian
g(&gt;Vernment .111&lt;1 mtlttary
high comm.md me at last
t.tking steps to .tttack the
safe huvcns th,tt lslamtc
mthtants use to menace ol the cotpot ate .tnd bankAfghani stan . the Untted mg b.ulout&gt; currentl y bemg
States and Paktstan ttself
workctl 0111 ..
"We have a tnbal.tw.tkenWtth tts teserves bled dry
by tormct Prestdent Pcrvcz
mg program whereby the Mushanaf. who used govtnbes are bemg mobtltzed emmcnt money to keep fuel
to fight AI Qaeda and the pnces lo-.. ,1s fJ:ut of an effot1
Tahban," Paktstan's ambas- to keep htnJself in power.
sador to the Umtcd States, Pukt st,m ts seekm~ $10 btlHusum Hayqmu. told me
lion to $12 htllton ~n gu.u.tn"The Puktstunt anny hus tees from 1l1e lntcm,tttonal
conumtted ttsclf. esJJCCinlly Moncwv Funtl , Wmld Bank.
111 un mea called BaJur. which
Unttcd ·st,ttes, Chma and
botdets Kunar province m Gulf Antbs to ttde 1t over
Afgnanistun, whtch has been
The Untied States 1, helpa stronghold for AI Qaeda
mg wtth ,111 IMF pl.1n - like
"And . we have used our ly to be $5 htlhontn $10 btlatr force for the first time, han . a St.ttc Dep.u1ment ollithereby dtmtntshmg the need eta! satd _ ,md Secretary ol
for Amenca to come mto the State ComloleczL,t Rtce has
Paktst.mt stde and bomb."
tnecl to lmm a "Fnends ol
State Depal1ment ofhctal s P&lt;tktstan" consm1tum but st&gt;
confirm that the anuterronst fdt has gotten only "ptomtseffnrt be mg mounted by cs. not pledges nt numbers ·
Wh.tt P.tktstan ts tt ytn" to
Pakistam President Astf Ah
Zatdari und At my Chtef of do , H.tqq.un s,11 d, is "fight,,
Stuff Ashfay KiyMtl ts w.tr .md resttucturc .m econ"much mme scrimts than omy smlltlt.tucously It\ not
ever before," though they c.tstlv done ·•
- ,!long with Jomt Chiefs
State Dcpat tmcnt nfltu.tls
gtve Z:td.ui .111d H&lt;~qq.ttll
Chatrman Mtke Mullen say that the eftort h,ts to he uedtt fot dcdK,ttm~ them
sustamed. and ,,, lot more sch es to ftghtmg. "lsl,unrc
needs to be done
cxtremtsm even though w Haqqam. a formet ptoles- opct&lt;ttion 1\tth the Untted
sm at Boston Untverstty St,ltcs rcnwn s unpopul.tt 111
and close advtser to assasst- • Puktstan .
nated
former
Prttne
U.S
olftl'tal s
.tlso
Mimster Bendzir Bhutto .llknowkdcc that Zardatt
u~d now to Zardan. hct .md Kty.tm.h.tw tdken steps
wtdowctl husband. IS cur- to tcfol'm P.tktstan's mtellitently muktltg ,m appeal lot gcnce setvtce . the lSI.
tnternationnl aid to holstct thought to be ttddled wtth··
the PakiStam economy
pt o-Tu ltb,tn e Iemen! s, and
'' If i\IG IS deservmg nf ,, to tt:patr prev10uslv tense
hailnut . then Stitely sttategt - tdattons with Alghan
cally located Paktst.m Prestdent Hamtd K,uz:u .
desetVL'S a bailout .. he said
And they gtve Ktyum
"And (Paktstan's) IS not credtt 1•11 stattomng dll ,tddtgomg to he as large as some tton.tl 10 UOO troops 111 tnbal

hsue\ not fJCJ.Smraltfll'\ I r&gt;lf (' l ' t ndon/111.{ lo£al 01 natwn"ai candtdarcr,; m

'rHlftiiiiiHJ: IW'

\onaf otfw kL

1t

rlluut be

11ccepted
-

- - - - - -- · - -- -- ----'-

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR
l..ette1s to the edl/or we welcome . They 1hould be less
than 300 word1. All /eifel&gt; we 111bject /o edtlmg, musr be
signed, and mclude addreH and trleplwne number No
unstgned lel/ers tw// be puhlt~lted Letten ~ltould !Je 111
good tasre add1e111ng 111111' 1, 1101 pt•l\mlalille\ Lell&lt;'ll of
thanks ro In ~:am :allll/1\ and wrlmdua/1 to ill 11m /J&lt;' "" epred for pubil((lfton.

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J Edgar Hoover lives!
Even 111 tts final weeks , the
Bush admmistratton contmues tts war on our ~tvtlltber­
llcs. On De~ I, l:lush ultraloy.tltst Attorney General
Michael Mukascy wtll put
mto effect his new exp.mdcd
"Guidelines for Domcsttc
FBI Operations." To search
for any possibthties of terronst acttvtties, the FBI ~an
now conduct "thteat assessments" - in plain language.
investtguttons - on mtltvtdu,tls and organwtttons wtth
out any specific evtdcnce of
wrongdnmg
No JUdtctal watT.Ints ate
rcqutred as Muka;cy and
FBI duel Robert Mueller
suspend
the
Fourth
Amendment's "right of the
people to be secure m thetr
persons. houses. papers and
effects" - outstde theit
homes as well, and in their
use of phones, Internet, et al.
Moreover, m the course
of searching for patterns of
su sptctous terronst hnk s.
FBI agents. free from Btl! ol
Rtghts constramts. can as 111 the glory days of J
Etl~ar Hoover covertly
tnltlttate lawful groups.
deploy infmmants and
"assess'' such potential
mdenttfiers m suspects as
race, ethnicity and religion
So, under these new FBI
powers, am I under susptcion of subversiOn for
ul'jdermm10g Mukasey and
Mueller by publicly recallmg that on Sept. 12. 200 I,
President Bush declared·
"We wtll nut allow thts
cnemv to wtn the war 11~
changmg our way of Ilk ,;,
testnctmg one~ freedoms &lt;..
Ah, but FBI agents. say
Mukasey and Mueller. must
be careful to "avotd unncc-

Nat
Hentoff

essary mtrustmls mto the
ltves of law-abtdmg people ." Thmk about that ptoblem for them. As Anthony
D' An&gt;&lt;lto. pt 11fcssm uf Ltw
at Nmthwcstctn Untvetsity.
tea&gt;on,Jbly .tsks - .on the
Untverstty of Ptttsbutgh
School ol !caw's Web stte ,
"Junst'' - "how can the
FBI know that anyone IS a
law-abidmg person wtthout
makmg an mvcsttgall ve
mtrus10n mto hts 01 her ptt ·
vate atfatrs?"
Smce there is no JUdictal
superv tston. and no reqmrement that FBI :tgcnts bcgm
thctr '\1ssessments · wtth
an y spectftc evtdence of
wrnngd01n g.
[)' AnMto
asks, '' Dn the Guidelines
pto vtdc :til) ltmtt,tltons to
the po w ~rs of the Fl:ll r·
The .mswct - by plamspoken
Carolme
Frederickson , dtrector of the
American Civil Ltbet1tes
Umon 's
W.tsh ington
Legtslattve Office "Though
the De pat tme'nl of Justtce
(headed by Mukdsey) and
FBI claim they are domg
what they must to meet the
law enforcement neecb of the
luturc. they me onl y doomed
tn tcpeat the .tbuscs of the
p:"t .. She &lt;:tllllmues. " Under
these gllldelmes. smre ,1 generalized 'threat' ts enough to
begm an mvesugatton, the
FBI wt II be gt ven carte

blanche to begm ~urvetllance
without factual evidence.
The standatd of susptcion ts
so low and the ptedicate of
tnvesttgattOns so flimsy that
tt's tnevttable we will all
become suspects ,.
Well, not all of us.
Cell,unly Mukasey, Mueller
and other guatdtans of
natton,tl secunty m this
admimstratton wtll be
tmmunc
!rom
the
Gutdclmcs · mtrusmn mto
thctr public and pn vate
ltvcs . But 111 Vtcw of the
abtmdant 1ecord of past and
ptcsent FBI agents' dtsregard of thetr previous
Gutdelmcs . it ts hardly p.uanoid to be mtsttustful of letting v.arrentless FBI agents
loose into such fet\celess
ndllonal grazmg pastures
I. .111 unyteldmg anttCommumst from the ttme,
at 15 , when I read Arthur
Koestler's "Darkness at
Noon ," am old enough to
remember the ~are many of
us nonsubversives took durmg the years of J. Edgar
Hoover's measunng of
Amencans patnottsm. Thete
were ~enam magazmes ,
bo(Jkstorcs and meett ngs to
IJc avotded - and petitions
to·be stgned only gmgerty, tf
at all . And we heard - and
read - of careers bemg broken by McCarthyism and
Hoovct CBS 's Edward R.
Murrow dtdn 't have enough
TV tune to rehabilitate all
the suspects'
But tjnally. we did have a
Btllol Rtghrs hero back then
Sen Frank Chul'ch of Idaho
- chamnan or the Senate
Select Committee ro Study
Government Operations wtth
Respect to Jntelltgence
Acttvlltcs - prestded over

and Defense Department
offictals
ask
concent
Pakistan's ability and wtllingness to carry on the antiterror
fight over the long run.
"Is thts a surge or a sus•
tamed effort?" one · official
asked. Mullen said. for
example. that the Pa~tst~i
mtlitary needs to shtft Its
enttre emphasis from conventional conflict with IndilJ
to counterinsurgency against
mtlitants, which the United
States is assisting.
The stakes could not be
higher. As Mullen warned
- echoing reports of a
forthcommg
National
Intelligence Estimate "the trends across the board
(tn Afghani~tan) are not
going in the right directton.''
Much of the Afghan trouble lies with dysfunction and
corruption m the Afghan gov;
emment, too few and badly
coordinated NATO forces
and a booming opmm trade.,
But the terrorist safe
haven in Paktstan is a cructal problem, too. Pakistan
ts trymg to address it. but it
needs help.
Congress could play its part
by passing legislation s~­
sored by Sens. Joseph Btden.
D-Del.. and Dtck Lu¥ar, R•
lnd . to provide $1.5 btllion n
yea~ in economic aid.
Endorsed by both presidential candtdates, the legis..
latton was approved by the
Senate Foreign Relations
Committee But it was
never voted upon by the full
Senate. and no appropria.
tton has even been intro!
duced in the House.
The next president cer1
tainly wtll put more forcel!
intn Afghamstan . But a$
1ong as Congress is spend·
mg ztlhons on baiiQuts and
sttmuh, it ought to be able
to come up wtth a billion for
strategic Paktstan.
(Morton Kondracke is
eucutlve editor of Roll
Call, the netv~paper oj
Capttol Ht/1.)

Margaret Cremeans

Election

-

George Ralph Diddle

.

hearings that starkly illumi~
nated, With concrete eva••t
dence, the utter contempt
the Bill ()f Rtghts by the FB
and various co!l~~ession~
un-Amencan acttvtttes com&gt;,
n11ttees.
1
In 1975, Church, address•
ing the un-American record
of J Eel gar Hoover, said that
the FBI had engaged in "11
sophtsticated
vigilante
operation aimed squarely af
preventing the exercise ot
Ptrst Amendment rights of
~peech and association,.,
The senator then pledged: .i
' "The Amencan peopl"
need to be reassured thaf
never again will an agenc~
of the government be perr
muted to co.nduct a secre
war against those citizens i
considers a threat to the
established order."
That assurance, so passiOI!-'
ately and patriotically given~
has since, of course, ~
betrayed by many govem1
mcnt survetllance agents 111111
thctr superiors over the yeani;
That Mukasey and Muel~
- with no obJections front
George W Bush - have chosen to revtve that secret war
agamst the Constitution I~
to a very pel1ment question~:•'
Wtll the next president a
Congress
retain
the
Mukasey-Mueller Guideline
for
Domestic
Operations? The silence
Obama and McCain has ·
alas. not been surprising. 1
(Nat Hentoff is a nation!
ally renowned authority Olf
rite Frr'st Amendmem artd
the Bill of Rights and autho~
of numy books, includinf,
"71/e ~fur 011 the Bill of
Rtghts and tile Gatherin8.
Resisrance" (Seven Storlej
Press, 2004) .

.Economy rrom

a

Add value

MEIGS COUNTY
REPUBLICAN PARTY

r:'J

. \

of

'

'
I

I

•I

l
I

•

SEOUL, South Korea reported over the weekend regardmg
ctvthan reported
announcement
(AP) - There was no that the communist nation exchanges between the mtght be
unusual activity in North had ordered its diplomats South and the Nonh They
....
About otie week ago,
' PO.MEROY - Emily Grace Deem, II, of Pomeroy, left Korea on Monday, South abroad to be on standby and are going on as scheduled ., North Korea released phoKorean offtcials satd, planned to ban foretgners
The spokesman added, tos showmg Ktm mspectmg
th1s life to be Wtth our ~eavenly Father on Oct. 18, 2008.
despite
reports
that
from
entenng
the
country
"All
of North Korea's mter- a mtlltary unn and appearShe ~as born on Apnl 21, 1997, in Gallipolis, daughter
f
potsed
to
Pyongyang
was
ahead of an "tmportant nal broadcast111g as well as mg healthy. Howe~er. tt dtd
i&gt; Ja~11e Lynn and David' Lee Deem.
mternattonal and domesttc · not say when the ptctures
E.mtly, who wtll be very sadly missed, was a student at make an announcement announcement "
amtd
speculatiOn
about
the
Tokyo
's
Sankei
newspaevents
are proceedmg nor- were taken sparkmg specu,Met~s Mtddle School where she excelled in all of her acahealth
of
tts
leader,
Kim
per
t
~
ported
the
North
mally."
lation the photos m1ght have
dcnuc subjects. She was active in a number of sports and
Jong
II.
In a dispatch Sunday from been taken earher because
planned to make an
extra-curricular activtties and particularly loved playing
The
autocratic
North
announcement
Monday
the
northeastern Chinese the lush ' green foliage
lloftb~ll, while wearing number "9" for the Pomeroy
Korean leader has been the and It could be about ctty of Shenyang , South appeared not to match the
. Mystics. •
· ~mily, along with her Mom and Dad, loved music and focus of intense speculalton Kim's death or a govern- Korea's Yonhap news Korean pentnsula 's current
en)oyed spendmg many, many hours supporting the Meigs since he disappeared from ment change induced by a agency also quoted an autumn season
public view in mid August. coup.
'On Sunduv. the North's
unnamed source 111 BetJmg
Htgh School Marching Band.
U.S.
and
South
Korean
offi"There
were
some
media
as
saying
some
North
offictal
Korean Central News
• She also loved being surrounded by all of her many
cials
,suspect
he
suffered
a
reports about (the North) Korean Embassy officials Agency publtshed typtcal
friends and family.
stroke
and
had
bram
ban·nmg foretgners," satd who left on bus111ess tnps propaganda dtspatches pratswas
a
member
of
the
Sacred
Heart
Catholic
Emily
surgery. North Korea has Ktm Ho-nyeon, spokesman have not returned
mg Ktm 's regime and cnu(:hurch
flatly
denied
there
is
anyfor
Seoul
's
Umftcatton
CIZing
In
Washmgton.
State
the South Korean gov· She is ~umved by hbr Mom and Dad, Jami&lt;! Lynn Deem
thing
wrong
with
its
66Mimstry m charge of moni- Department
spoke sman ernment. There were no artt·
1111d Davtd Lee Deem; . her sister, Jessica Blaettnar and
year-old
lead~
r
.
.
tonng
Nonh
Korea.
"But
Noel
Clay
smd
he
could not cles mdtcatmg any Imminent
Derek Mtller of Pomeroy; her brother, Michael BlaeUnar of
Japanese
newspapers
there
are
no
unusual
stgns
comment
on
what
the government announcement.
Po~eroy; her grandmother, Jamce (Robert) Curry of
Racme; her grandfather, Norman (Carole) Deem of Racine;
her grandmother, Ke1th Ann Sisson . of Middleport; her
gr~dfather, J;~mes (Judy) Sisson of Pomeroy; her aunt,
:Ju_lle (Bryan) Ztrkle of Pomeroy; her aunt, Jodie (BJ.)
Ntcho~son of Mtddleport; her aunt. Dentse (Steve)
ISLAMABAD, Pakistan is taking serious mihtary bonng Afghamstan . where explodes there. the U S is
Hen~ncks of Lo11an; h.er uncle. Tony (Wendy) Deem of (AP) - A Pakistani court actton agamst the terronsts ," , vtolence is runnmg at record accttsed of domg tt." he
Racme; her spec1al fnends, "The Skittles;" as well as has ordered an Amencan Boucher told repo11ers after levels , leavmg many doubt- satd
numerous other cousins, relatiEand other friends too detained for two more three days of meet111gs wtth mg whether the seven-yearIn the l.ttest vtolence
numerous to list, all of whom lo ed her very much. '
weeks after he was accused Paktstam leaders, mcludmg old war there can be won.
close to the border. twelve
Friends may call on the f mtly from 4-9 p.m on of trying to enter a militant the president. "We have seen
Boucher dtsmtssed reports su spected mtlttants were
Wednesday at the Anderson-McDaniel Funeral Home in stronghold near the Afghan the government has shown of
negottat10ns ktlled m BaJur 111 shelling or
peace
Pomeroy.
·
border, police satd Monday the determ111ation and will- between the government an strikes ovenught and into
Funeral wm be held at I:30 p.m. on Thursday, Oct 23,
The extended detention of ingness to see this through to and Taliban in Afghanistan Monday. satd Jamil Khan,
2008, at the Anderson McDaniel Funeral Home, with 20-year-old Jude Kenan of the end."
after mtlitants sat down wtth ' the No 2 reptesentattve of
Michael Kennedy, a local educator and family fnend mak- Raleigh, North Carolina
Kenan, the Amencan Afghan offtctals in Saudt the government m the largeing remarks for all present. ·
ly mttonomous area
comes as Amertca 's top deta1pee, tried to enter th~ Arabta last month
A full Mass of Christian Burial will follow at 2.30 p.m., diplomat m the reg10n, Mohmand tnbal regton a
"At thts pomt I can say
The mtfttar) does not
at Sacred Heart Church on Mulberry Avenue m Pomeroy, Asststant Secretary of State week ago. Authonties have there ts not much there," release ftgures on ctvthan
with Rev. Father Leonard Cencula officiating.
deaths. though BaJur restRichard Boucher, pratsed not satd whether tlley sus- Boucher satd.
- Burial will follow at the Beech Grove Cemetery, Paktstan for its mtlltary pect htm of contact wttb
Boucher 's vistt comes dent s have reported that
Pomeroy, Wtth a celebration and remembrance of her life to offensive agamst ai-Qatda Tallban or ai-Qatda mili- am1d a surge m vmlence on many have been killed
J&gt;e held in the reception ball of the church thereafter
and Taliban m1htants in the tants Kenan's famtly says both stdes of the border and
In the nmthwest\ Swat
• A regtstry is available on-line at www. andersonmc- lawless tribal regions bor- he was in the country to tensions over US misstle Valley. the army ratsed the
daniel.com.
denng Afghanistan
visit his Pakistani father
strikes on targets withtn death toll from clashes the
Some U.S. offictals doubt
It was not immedtately Pakistan The mtsstle stnkes prevtous day to 25 suspectthat Islamabad ts wtlhng or clear tf Boucher dtscussed - and a htghly unusual ed mtlttanrs whtle saymg a
able to take on the mtlitants Kenan's case durmg meet- ground ratd by Amencan ltnther seven were ktlled
and cntictzed earher army mgs wtth Paktstan 's prest· commandos la~t month Monday
POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. - Margaret Ellen operations that ended in dent and other offictals.
have angered ctHI and mtltSunda} \ bombs htt an
~remeans, 75, died on Monday morning, Oct. 20,2008, at
short-lived peace deals they
Mtlitants m the tribal tary leaders. who say they ammunition dump 111 the
Pleasant Valley Hospital in Pomt Pleasan,t, W.Va., after a say gave the extremists time regions have put up strong fan mihtancy
Barthana mea , causing
long illness. Margaret was born on August 12, 1933, in to regroup
In line with apparent extenstve damage
resistance to the Pakistan
Honaker, Va., to the late Elijah Jake and Ollie Gaye Helton.
The army satd tt had no
But Boucher said he was military offensive and have American pohcy of not con'After graduating from Garden Creek High School, she encouraged by what he was stepped up suicide attacks f1rming or denying the repolts on ctvtltan casualattended Hiwassee College in Tennessee, earning a degree seeing in the border reg10n around the country, 111clud- stnkes, Boucher dtd not ttes there But Anwer Alt, a
In education.
mg last month's blast at the dtrectly answer or ignored Barthana restdent. told The
,She returned home and taught grade school at Garden of Bajur, where troops
launched a maJOr offenstve Marriott hotel 111 Islamabad questions about the ratds, Assocwted Press 111 a phone
Creek Grade School until she moved to Ohio. It was here 10
but dtd say that some mtentew the bombmg by
August that offictals that ktlled 54 people.
1'he met her husband, Ted. She taught at Middleport Middle claim has ktlled 1,000 mthThe insurgents are also reports bltlm111g America for ftghtet jets had htt a house,
School and then, after she and Ted moved to Columbus, she tants.
ktllmg a woman and two of
blamed for attacks on U S. attacks were wrong
taught in a Columbus city grade school for several years.
"Every tune somethmg her chtldren
"!think it ts good Pakistan · and NATO troops in neighMargaret and Ted moved back to Meigs County some
years later and she began working in accounting until she
retired at thetr current restdence outside of Rutland.
She is leavmg behmd her husband of 53 years, Frankhn
from Page AI
Theodore (Ted) Cremeans; sisters: Lois Stump of
The ftght over a proposed much red tape to cut througl)
Columbus, Ruth Smith of Rowe, Va., Barbara Blankenship new-voter cards submitted ends up in the courts.
Florida
constitutiOnal to get an tssue before voters.
In Anzona, Mancopa
of Oakwood, Va.; Lola Rainey of Richlands, Va.; several by ACORN and other grass"It's so dtfftcult, there are
roots groups. That's less County Superior Court amendment landed m federnieces, nephews and many friends.
Judge Edward Burke called al court over questions of so many barners, that what
In addition to her parents, Margaret was preceded in than 2 percent.
death by: sisters: Berntce McClanahan, Maggie Daniels,
It's not the numbers that the srtuatmn "a mess" after whether the state's stgna- we'te seeing is people
methods doing whatever 11 takes to
Myrtle Clark and Juanita McGlothlin.
are driving ·the outrage. It's he was caught 111 the middle ture-counting
Service will be held at the Kingdom Hall of Jehovah's political positioning, said of a nasty oattle pitting the improperly blocked 11 from get on the ballot," she satd.
In the case of the ACORN
the University of Southern rights of a ballot mitiative's the November ballot. The
Witness at a later date.
amendme"nt
would
requtre
accusations.
whtch the
California's
Kareem
the
state's
supporters
against
Arrangements are being handled by Anderson-McDaniel
Republican
Pany
has taken
Funeral Home m Pomeroy.
Crayton, a professor of law. duty to start preparing for voters to approve changes
m local growth manage- to courts around the natton,
On-line condolences may be sent to www. andersonmcd- and J?Oiitics.
the upcoming election.
Smtth smd they wtll serve to
"Smce 2000, no person 10
Suppol1ers of the afftrma- ment plans
daniel.com.
slow down the momentum
Litigating
the
process,
the pohtical world would tive action measure ultiof
Democt aile prestdenttal
try to proceed 111 an election mately abandoned their rather than stmply taking
wtthout a team of lawyers effort, saying they were the issue ftght to voters, ts nommee Barack Obama,
ready to litigate at every "cheated" by time and other an 111creasing trend, Smtth whose campatgn ts 111 the
GALLIPOLIS - George Ralph Diddle, 70, of single stage of the process. circumstances.
posttton to benefit most from
said.
Gallipolis, passed away at his residence on Sunday, Oct. There is close scrutiny of
"My sense 1s that It 's newly regtstered voters
A Missouri JUdge stded
,19, 2008, following a courageous battle with cancer.
"Instead of targetmg those
every rule," he said. "In a last month wtth opponents attacking the process at an
He was born Jan, 7, 1938, in Racine, son of the late Oval lot of people's mmds, thts of proposed eminent domatn earlier stage," he satd. "Thts newly tegis1ered .for their
and Sarah Roush Diddle.
can actually dectde an elec- restrictions who wanted to ts just one of many arrows vote and try111g to persuade
: He was a U.S. Army veteran who St!rved in the Vietnam tion before tt begins.
Join a court fight over plac- 111 the quiver of partisan them 111 thetr dtrectiOD.
War, and a retired truck driver
"No stde wants to be on ing the issue on the ballot. groups who want to game they've got ro go back a
In addition he was member of the Gallipohs First the losing end of an elec- Proponents had sued after- the system."
.step." Smtth satd. "That's
Presbyterian Church for more than 30 years.
But Sandy Thets, a consul- the whole tdea of these
tion, so politicians on both the secretary of state's office
; He is survived b): his wtfe of 40 years, Victoria Gueltig sides battle tooth and nail." concluded they didn't have tant who has worked on bal- early challenges: It dtverts
Diddle, and two sons and two daugfiiers, Wayne (Marla)
As a result, the signature- enoug)l sillJla!Ures to place lot campatgn~. S31d the btgger attention. it burns fuelm the
Diddle of Dayton, David (Bethany) Diddle of Point gathermg process often the questton before voters.
concern ts that there is too end days of the campatgn"
Pleasant. W.Va., and Kedron (Bob) Campbell of Winston
~alem, N C., and Jtll (Mark Miller) Diddle of Gallipolis;
1111~ six grandchildren, Coltin, Derrick, Ashleigh,
Page At
Savan'nah,.Biake and Keira.
'
'
:· Also surviving are brothers and sisters, Bernard (Opal)
"Servmg a mche market
due to dwmdhng sales tax
Reed said the course restaurant, mstead
Diddle, Tom (Pam) Diddle, Don (Carol) Diddle, Libby
wtth
these httle thmgs make
"As
I
am
seatmg
'guests,
Gallla
revenue
,
and
draws
disc
golfers
from
:Pisher. Carolyn (Boone) Adams, and Marilyn Powell, all of
a
busmess
more recessiOn·
will
tell
me
it's
thetr
County
has
also
expenthey
Racine; sister-in-law, Betty Diddle of Kentucky; brother- around the region and even
several other states. The first vistt," Berry said. enced a drop m revenue. proof." Varn.ttloe &gt;atd.
~-law, Art Dials of Ohio.
Varnadoe satd the county
discs
cost $10 to $15 , and "When I ask w.here they are according to Economtc
·,&lt;~e was preceded in death by one son, John Frederick
economtc
development
to
say
from,
I
expect
them
Development
Dtrector
Diddle, in 1992; sister, Adria Diddle; and a brother, Waid golfers also stock up on
office ts prepanng to launch
snacks, gasoline and other tbey are vtsiting from Perry Varnadoe.
llid(Ue.
.
Charleston,
or
Huntmgton
a "shop locally" ad camat
the
store.
satd
mche
marsupplies
whtle
Varnadoe
• Services wtll be 11 a.m. Wednesday, Oct. 22,2008, in the
or
Parkersburg,
but
more
of
Guests from out of town
kets like the disc go! fers patgn for the holiday ~ea­
McCoy-Moore Funeral Home Wetherholt Chapel in
November
and
GaJiipolis, with wrth the Rev. Tim Luoma officiating. have been a btg part of busi- them are telling me they are from Forked Run can pro- son
Friends may call at the funeral home on 1\tesday, Oct. 21, ness at the Wild Horse Cafe from a community here in vide retailers with a son of December. he satd, are
(2008, from 5 to 8 p.m., and on Wednesday from 9 to II a.m. in Pomeroy, but according the county."
insurance agamst a weak "make or break.. ttme for
"Because of the price of retail economy Rather than local retatlers . and tht s year,
• In lieu of flowers, memorial gifts niay be mailed to The to General Manager Dave
Memorial Fund, First Presbyterian Church, 51 State St., Berry, tourist bus mess is gasoline, people who used dedtcatmg thetr businesses local shoppers may spend
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631. Condolences may be sent to down from last year. The to leave the county to dine to one ttem or market . more money m local stores
good news is that locals are out are n&lt;lw celebrating dtverstfymg thetr mventory r,lthet than ttavelmg to shop
www.timeformemory.com/mm.
eat111g there more often and their special occasions can be a safe bet.
out ol necesstty
here."
in bigger numbers.
Once again . Meigs
Those celebrat10g btrthfrom PageAl
days, anmversaries and County ts an exception of
; Mallett presented tips he has learned to lower the nsks of other milestones, are dri- sorts . Many other counties
ving
less 'often
to in the rejpon hal'\: seen a
business failure when the economy ts tough.
W.Va .. dip in sales tax revenue,
: • Before lowering prices in order to entice customers, Parkersburg,
. or Washington County cut its
Huntington,
W.Va
Annual Bean Dinner
f&lt;4allett said, retatlers should consider adding 'value' to the
general
fund
budget
by
a
Athens
to
celebrate.
and
are
,product. Even extra customer services can make the differdollars
choosing the Pomeroy quarter-million
Bean Soup, Vegetable Soup and Chili
ence in a sale without a loss in pt:alit.
'
• A ti~ht retatl economy is not a good reason to reduce or
Donations Accepted but not required.
(lisconhnue adverttsmg Advertism~ when times are dtffitult is one of the most important thmgs a retailer can do to
Thursday,pclober 23 .
}ceeE customers coming m the door.
6:30 P.M. to ?
· • tmplo~ees are important, and they should be kept infonned
the retail climate and the general condition of the busmess.
Mulberry Community Cenler
~ett also encouraged local business oWJit'rS to seek input from
(Old Pomeroy Elementary)
Jjleir ~loyees. Sometimes, they know the customers best.
· • Stay lean. Maintain a minimum inventory, and liquidate
260 Mulberry Avenue
'
dead stQCk in exchange for merchandise that sells fast.
Pomeroy. Ohio
•. • AnticiP,ate the market, and know what wtll sell and
www.mydallysentlnel.com
when it wtll sell.

Pakistan court orders American held in jail

. I
f

SKorea: Nothing unusual in North despite rumors

Emily Deem

The questions U.S. Slate

IVI"CIIIN WANTIN6
YOU TO RECONSIDER
YOUR ENDOR5EIY\ENT 9

Elections letters·advisory
Letters dealmg wuh the Nov 4 e/euirm are welcome and
• wt/1 be accepted up !1111115 p.m. 011 l-'11da\'. Oct 24 Leuen
recetved qft&lt;'l that dl'acl/m,. 11 Ill 1101 "'' tm/Jillired. Le11e1 1
should !Jr 30() """'' 111 lcll~r!r 01 le11 and 11111\1 addre11

.tn·as :tlong the Afghan bortlct .md stcppmg up nulitary
opetdltons agamst militants
At a btl!.tkfast wtth repo11ers
last week . Mullen s.ud that
"the tcccnt dtangeout"' at lSI
\\ ~" ..l'ncouraging."
It mvolved replacmg the
,igency's chief. closmg
down Its "poltttcal cell'' and
oustrng four depattment
heads . tncluthng the chtef of
tt s operations sectton.
.tccusc' d hy the CIA of
mvolvemcnt 111 the Aucust
bombmg of the lndtan
Embassy 111 Afghamstan.
U.S mtclhgence offictals
h,t\e tolu the Paktstams that
lSI &lt;~gents also helped lslamtc
extJemtsts assassmate Bhutto.
Z:udl'!'n declared 111 an intervtew wtth the New York
Tunes l,tst month that he was
dedtcatcd to tightmg terrorists
"becattse they are d cancer to
my society. not only because
ol m) "tfc ·· But he acknowledgtld . "It ts my revenge"
Zardan's .tlltes have
mounted a huge "It's Our
\V,u" puhltc telattons camfldt~n destgned to wm popuf.tt suppolt for :mttterror
pnltctes - .md tt was
dmtbtlcss ,tsststed by the
Sept. 20 sutudc bomb that
dcsttoycd the Mumott
Hold 111 lslant.tbad . ktllmg
mote ltt&lt;tn 60 people
Po"tbly tl1e governm~:nt s must s1g111f1cdn1 step
" organiz:ttton of tnbal
·aw,tkclllng" nitftttas akm
to those e~ahftsl1ed among
Sunnts Ill Iraq, to fight the
T,thb.m and AI Q.1eda
Prcvtously. t11bal leaders
were bnbcd .tnd mtttntd.tted
hy Oltht.mts. but some have
1111 ned agamst them 111 re,tctton to thctr L'Xtlemtsm ,md
brutality - &lt;tnd also pecause
the Paktst:tm government ts
now p.1ymg them.
In tetaltatton, a tetronst
bomb ktlled 40 tnbal elders
at a mectmg l.tst week.
H.tyyant told me , "The
more we htt•them, the mote
they me ltkely to light ba~k
and hit us llllllll ctttes ··

The Da1ly Sentinel • Page As

www.mydailysentinel.com

•
•

l

ViISitUS
online at

,

.

�PageA4

·The Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, October 21, 2008

Tuesday, October 21; 200ft

Obituaries

.

Strategic
Pakistan
steps
up
terror
fight,
needs
aid·
.
The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

(740) 992·2156 ·FAX (740) 992·2157
www.mydallysentlnel.com

·)

Ohio Valley Publishil)g Co.
Dan Goodrich
Publisher
Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager-News Editor

Congress shall make flo larv respectiug an
establishment of religion, or prohibiting the
free exercise tl1ereof; or abridgiug tl1e freedom
of speech, or of the press; or the ·right of the
people peaceably to assemble, and to petitiot1
the Govert~ment for a redress ofgriel•ances.
:.... The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

TODAY IN HISTORY
Today is Tuesday, Oct 21. the 295th day of 2008 There
are 71 days left in the year

Today 's Highlight tn Htstory: On Oct 21, 1805, a British
fleet commanded by Admtral Horatio Nelson defeated a
French-Spantsh fleet m the Battle of Tmfalgar, Nelson,
however, was ktlled.
On thts date: In 1797, the US Navy fngate
' Constitution, also known as "Old lronstdes." was christened in Boston\ harbor
In 1879. Thom:" Edtson pcrlectt·d a 1\otkable electllc
hght at hts lab01atmy tnl\lrnlo P.ttk. N J
In 1917. mcmbcts olthe lsi Dtvtston ol the US A11ny
training m Luncvtlle. hdncc. became the first Amencans to
·see action on the lront hncs of Worlu War I
In 1944, dunng World War II, US. troops captured the
German ctty of Aachen.
In 1959, the Solomon R Guggenhetm Museum tn New
York Qpened to the pub he.
In 1960, Democrat John F. Kennedy and Republican
Richard M. Nixon clashed m thetr fourth and fmal presidential debate in New York.
In 1967. ten~ of thou~ands of Vtetnam War protesters
began two days of demonstt.tttons 111 Washington. D.C.
In 1967, the lsrach dcsttoycr INS Etlat was sunk by
Egyptian rnisstle boats ncar Port Smd. 47 lstaelt new
members wet e lust
'
In 1971 , Prestdent Ntxon mHntnatcd Lc\\ts F. Powell and
Wtlltam H Rdmqutst to the US . Supreme Court.
Today's l:litthtl,tys Adrc·ss luyc:e Randolph IS ~3 Rock
'singer Manfted Mann ts 68 . Mustcmn Steve Croppct
(Booker T. &amp; the MG's) IS 67 Singer Elvm Btshop ts 66
TV's Judge Judy Shemdlin ts 66. Actor Evctett McGtll ts
63. Musician Lee Loughnane (Chtcugo) ts 62. Fmmer
Israeli Pnme Mimster Benpmin Netanyahu is 59 Mustctan
Charlotte Caffe} (The Go Go's) is ~5. Actress-author
Carrie Ftsher is 52 Smget Julian Cope ts 51. Rock must ·
-cmn Steve Lukathet (Toto) ts 51. Actor Ken Watanabe ts
49 Rock mustcian Che Colovtt&lt;~ Lemon ts 18 Rock smgcrmusictan Nick Oliven (Mondo Gcnerdtot) ts 37. Chmtmn
rock musician Chatlte Lowell I Jars of Clay) 1~ 35 Actor
Jet~my Mtflct ts 1] i\cllll Will Estes ts 30 Acttcss Knn
Kardashtdn is 2X i\clnt M.ttl D.tfl,ts IS 26.
fhougltt fm li&gt;d.ty "There &lt;~rc three thmgs whtdl the
j:mbhc will .dw&lt;~ys d,tmor lot. soonct 01 later namely,
Novelty, novelty, novelty" - Thomas Hood. Brtttsh poet
(1799-1845).

Alnng with a deep tecessum , Prestdent Bush ts
bequeathmg hts successor a
detenorating sttuatton m
Afghamstan - but there are
posttive stgns across the
Morton
border 111 Paktstan
Kondracke
Puktstan 's new ciVIlian
g(&gt;Vernment .111&lt;1 mtlttary
high comm.md me at last
t.tking steps to .tttack the
safe huvcns th,tt lslamtc
mthtants use to menace ol the cotpot ate .tnd bankAfghani stan . the Untted mg b.ulout&gt; currentl y bemg
States and Paktstan ttself
workctl 0111 ..
"We have a tnbal.tw.tkenWtth tts teserves bled dry
by tormct Prestdent Pcrvcz
mg program whereby the Mushanaf. who used govtnbes are bemg mobtltzed emmcnt money to keep fuel
to fight AI Qaeda and the pnces lo-.. ,1s fJ:ut of an effot1
Tahban," Paktstan's ambas- to keep htnJself in power.
sador to the Umtcd States, Pukt st,m ts seekm~ $10 btlHusum Hayqmu. told me
lion to $12 htllton ~n gu.u.tn"The Puktstunt anny hus tees from 1l1e lntcm,tttonal
conumtted ttsclf. esJJCCinlly Moncwv Funtl , Wmld Bank.
111 un mea called BaJur. which
Unttcd ·st,ttes, Chma and
botdets Kunar province m Gulf Antbs to ttde 1t over
Afgnanistun, whtch has been
The Untied States 1, helpa stronghold for AI Qaeda
mg wtth ,111 IMF pl.1n - like
"And . we have used our ly to be $5 htlhontn $10 btlatr force for the first time, han . a St.ttc Dep.u1ment ollithereby dtmtntshmg the need eta! satd _ ,md Secretary ol
for Amenca to come mto the State ComloleczL,t Rtce has
Paktst.mt stde and bomb."
tnecl to lmm a "Fnends ol
State Depal1ment ofhctal s P&lt;tktstan" consm1tum but st&gt;
confirm that the anuterronst fdt has gotten only "ptomtseffnrt be mg mounted by cs. not pledges nt numbers ·
Wh.tt P.tktstan ts tt ytn" to
Pakistam President Astf Ah
Zatdari und At my Chtef of do , H.tqq.un s,11 d, is "fight,,
Stuff Ashfay KiyMtl ts w.tr .md resttucturc .m econ"much mme scrimts than omy smlltlt.tucously It\ not
ever before," though they c.tstlv done ·•
- ,!long with Jomt Chiefs
State Dcpat tmcnt nfltu.tls
gtve Z:td.ui .111d H&lt;~qq.ttll
Chatrman Mtke Mullen say that the eftort h,ts to he uedtt fot dcdK,ttm~ them
sustamed. and ,,, lot more sch es to ftghtmg. "lsl,unrc
needs to be done
cxtremtsm even though w Haqqam. a formet ptoles- opct&lt;ttion 1\tth the Untted
sm at Boston Untverstty St,ltcs rcnwn s unpopul.tt 111
and close advtser to assasst- • Puktstan .
nated
former
Prttne
U.S
olftl'tal s
.tlso
Mimster Bendzir Bhutto .llknowkdcc that Zardatt
u~d now to Zardan. hct .md Kty.tm.h.tw tdken steps
wtdowctl husband. IS cur- to tcfol'm P.tktstan's mtellitently muktltg ,m appeal lot gcnce setvtce . the lSI.
tnternationnl aid to holstct thought to be ttddled wtth··
the PakiStam economy
pt o-Tu ltb,tn e Iemen! s, and
'' If i\IG IS deservmg nf ,, to tt:patr prev10uslv tense
hailnut . then Stitely sttategt - tdattons with Alghan
cally located Paktst.m Prestdent Hamtd K,uz:u .
desetVL'S a bailout .. he said
And they gtve Ktyum
"And (Paktstan's) IS not credtt 1•11 stattomng dll ,tddtgomg to he as large as some tton.tl 10 UOO troops 111 tnbal

hsue\ not fJCJ.Smraltfll'\ I r&gt;lf (' l ' t ndon/111.{ lo£al 01 natwn"ai candtdarcr,; m

'rHlftiiiiiHJ: IW'

\onaf otfw kL

1t

rlluut be

11ccepted
-

- - - - - -- · - -- -- ----'-

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR
l..ette1s to the edl/or we welcome . They 1hould be less
than 300 word1. All /eifel&gt; we 111bject /o edtlmg, musr be
signed, and mclude addreH and trleplwne number No
unstgned lel/ers tw// be puhlt~lted Letten ~ltould !Je 111
good tasre add1e111ng 111111' 1, 1101 pt•l\mlalille\ Lell&lt;'ll of
thanks ro In ~:am :allll/1\ and wrlmdua/1 to ill 11m /J&lt;' "" epred for pubil((lfton.

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J Edgar Hoover lives!
Even 111 tts final weeks , the
Bush admmistratton contmues tts war on our ~tvtlltber­
llcs. On De~ I, l:lush ultraloy.tltst Attorney General
Michael Mukascy wtll put
mto effect his new exp.mdcd
"Guidelines for Domcsttc
FBI Operations." To search
for any possibthties of terronst acttvtties, the FBI ~an
now conduct "thteat assessments" - in plain language.
investtguttons - on mtltvtdu,tls and organwtttons wtth
out any specific evtdcnce of
wrongdnmg
No JUdtctal watT.Ints ate
rcqutred as Muka;cy and
FBI duel Robert Mueller
suspend
the
Fourth
Amendment's "right of the
people to be secure m thetr
persons. houses. papers and
effects" - outstde theit
homes as well, and in their
use of phones, Internet, et al.
Moreover, m the course
of searching for patterns of
su sptctous terronst hnk s.
FBI agents. free from Btl! ol
Rtghts constramts. can as 111 the glory days of J
Etl~ar Hoover covertly
tnltlttate lawful groups.
deploy infmmants and
"assess'' such potential
mdenttfiers m suspects as
race, ethnicity and religion
So, under these new FBI
powers, am I under susptcion of subversiOn for
ul'jdermm10g Mukasey and
Mueller by publicly recallmg that on Sept. 12. 200 I,
President Bush declared·
"We wtll nut allow thts
cnemv to wtn the war 11~
changmg our way of Ilk ,;,
testnctmg one~ freedoms &lt;..
Ah, but FBI agents. say
Mukasey and Mueller. must
be careful to "avotd unncc-

Nat
Hentoff

essary mtrustmls mto the
ltves of law-abtdmg people ." Thmk about that ptoblem for them. As Anthony
D' An&gt;&lt;lto. pt 11fcssm uf Ltw
at Nmthwcstctn Untvetsity.
tea&gt;on,Jbly .tsks - .on the
Untverstty of Ptttsbutgh
School ol !caw's Web stte ,
"Junst'' - "how can the
FBI know that anyone IS a
law-abidmg person wtthout
makmg an mvcsttgall ve
mtrus10n mto hts 01 her ptt ·
vate atfatrs?"
Smce there is no JUdictal
superv tston. and no reqmrement that FBI :tgcnts bcgm
thctr '\1ssessments · wtth
an y spectftc evtdence of
wrnngd01n g.
[)' AnMto
asks, '' Dn the Guidelines
pto vtdc :til) ltmtt,tltons to
the po w ~rs of the Fl:ll r·
The .mswct - by plamspoken
Carolme
Frederickson , dtrector of the
American Civil Ltbet1tes
Umon 's
W.tsh ington
Legtslattve Office "Though
the De pat tme'nl of Justtce
(headed by Mukdsey) and
FBI claim they are domg
what they must to meet the
law enforcement neecb of the
luturc. they me onl y doomed
tn tcpeat the .tbuscs of the
p:"t .. She &lt;:tllllmues. " Under
these gllldelmes. smre ,1 generalized 'threat' ts enough to
begm an mvesugatton, the
FBI wt II be gt ven carte

blanche to begm ~urvetllance
without factual evidence.
The standatd of susptcion ts
so low and the ptedicate of
tnvesttgattOns so flimsy that
tt's tnevttable we will all
become suspects ,.
Well, not all of us.
Cell,unly Mukasey, Mueller
and other guatdtans of
natton,tl secunty m this
admimstratton wtll be
tmmunc
!rom
the
Gutdclmcs · mtrusmn mto
thctr public and pn vate
ltvcs . But 111 Vtcw of the
abtmdant 1ecord of past and
ptcsent FBI agents' dtsregard of thetr previous
Gutdelmcs . it ts hardly p.uanoid to be mtsttustful of letting v.arrentless FBI agents
loose into such fet\celess
ndllonal grazmg pastures
I. .111 unyteldmg anttCommumst from the ttme,
at 15 , when I read Arthur
Koestler's "Darkness at
Noon ," am old enough to
remember the ~are many of
us nonsubversives took durmg the years of J. Edgar
Hoover's measunng of
Amencans patnottsm. Thete
were ~enam magazmes ,
bo(Jkstorcs and meett ngs to
IJc avotded - and petitions
to·be stgned only gmgerty, tf
at all . And we heard - and
read - of careers bemg broken by McCarthyism and
Hoovct CBS 's Edward R.
Murrow dtdn 't have enough
TV tune to rehabilitate all
the suspects'
But tjnally. we did have a
Btllol Rtghrs hero back then
Sen Frank Chul'ch of Idaho
- chamnan or the Senate
Select Committee ro Study
Government Operations wtth
Respect to Jntelltgence
Acttvlltcs - prestded over

and Defense Department
offictals
ask
concent
Pakistan's ability and wtllingness to carry on the antiterror
fight over the long run.
"Is thts a surge or a sus•
tamed effort?" one · official
asked. Mullen said. for
example. that the Pa~tst~i
mtlitary needs to shtft Its
enttre emphasis from conventional conflict with IndilJ
to counterinsurgency against
mtlitants, which the United
States is assisting.
The stakes could not be
higher. As Mullen warned
- echoing reports of a
forthcommg
National
Intelligence Estimate "the trends across the board
(tn Afghani~tan) are not
going in the right directton.''
Much of the Afghan trouble lies with dysfunction and
corruption m the Afghan gov;
emment, too few and badly
coordinated NATO forces
and a booming opmm trade.,
But the terrorist safe
haven in Paktstan is a cructal problem, too. Pakistan
ts trymg to address it. but it
needs help.
Congress could play its part
by passing legislation s~­
sored by Sens. Joseph Btden.
D-Del.. and Dtck Lu¥ar, R•
lnd . to provide $1.5 btllion n
yea~ in economic aid.
Endorsed by both presidential candtdates, the legis..
latton was approved by the
Senate Foreign Relations
Committee But it was
never voted upon by the full
Senate. and no appropria.
tton has even been intro!
duced in the House.
The next president cer1
tainly wtll put more forcel!
intn Afghamstan . But a$
1ong as Congress is spend·
mg ztlhons on baiiQuts and
sttmuh, it ought to be able
to come up wtth a billion for
strategic Paktstan.
(Morton Kondracke is
eucutlve editor of Roll
Call, the netv~paper oj
Capttol Ht/1.)

Margaret Cremeans

Election

-

George Ralph Diddle

.

hearings that starkly illumi~
nated, With concrete eva••t
dence, the utter contempt
the Bill ()f Rtghts by the FB
and various co!l~~ession~
un-Amencan acttvtttes com&gt;,
n11ttees.
1
In 1975, Church, address•
ing the un-American record
of J Eel gar Hoover, said that
the FBI had engaged in "11
sophtsticated
vigilante
operation aimed squarely af
preventing the exercise ot
Ptrst Amendment rights of
~peech and association,.,
The senator then pledged: .i
' "The Amencan peopl"
need to be reassured thaf
never again will an agenc~
of the government be perr
muted to co.nduct a secre
war against those citizens i
considers a threat to the
established order."
That assurance, so passiOI!-'
ately and patriotically given~
has since, of course, ~
betrayed by many govem1
mcnt survetllance agents 111111
thctr superiors over the yeani;
That Mukasey and Muel~
- with no obJections front
George W Bush - have chosen to revtve that secret war
agamst the Constitution I~
to a very pel1ment question~:•'
Wtll the next president a
Congress
retain
the
Mukasey-Mueller Guideline
for
Domestic
Operations? The silence
Obama and McCain has ·
alas. not been surprising. 1
(Nat Hentoff is a nation!
ally renowned authority Olf
rite Frr'st Amendmem artd
the Bill of Rights and autho~
of numy books, includinf,
"71/e ~fur 011 the Bill of
Rtghts and tile Gatherin8.
Resisrance" (Seven Storlej
Press, 2004) .

.Economy rrom

a

Add value

MEIGS COUNTY
REPUBLICAN PARTY

r:'J

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SEOUL, South Korea reported over the weekend regardmg
ctvthan reported
announcement
(AP) - There was no that the communist nation exchanges between the mtght be
unusual activity in North had ordered its diplomats South and the Nonh They
....
About otie week ago,
' PO.MEROY - Emily Grace Deem, II, of Pomeroy, left Korea on Monday, South abroad to be on standby and are going on as scheduled ., North Korea released phoKorean offtcials satd, planned to ban foretgners
The spokesman added, tos showmg Ktm mspectmg
th1s life to be Wtth our ~eavenly Father on Oct. 18, 2008.
despite
reports
that
from
entenng
the
country
"All
of North Korea's mter- a mtlltary unn and appearShe ~as born on Apnl 21, 1997, in Gallipolis, daughter
f
potsed
to
Pyongyang
was
ahead of an "tmportant nal broadcast111g as well as mg healthy. Howe~er. tt dtd
i&gt; Ja~11e Lynn and David' Lee Deem.
mternattonal and domesttc · not say when the ptctures
E.mtly, who wtll be very sadly missed, was a student at make an announcement announcement "
amtd
speculatiOn
about
the
Tokyo
's
Sankei
newspaevents
are proceedmg nor- were taken sparkmg specu,Met~s Mtddle School where she excelled in all of her acahealth
of
tts
leader,
Kim
per
t
~
ported
the
North
mally."
lation the photos m1ght have
dcnuc subjects. She was active in a number of sports and
Jong
II.
In a dispatch Sunday from been taken earher because
planned to make an
extra-curricular activtties and particularly loved playing
The
autocratic
North
announcement
Monday
the
northeastern Chinese the lush ' green foliage
lloftb~ll, while wearing number "9" for the Pomeroy
Korean leader has been the and It could be about ctty of Shenyang , South appeared not to match the
. Mystics. •
· ~mily, along with her Mom and Dad, loved music and focus of intense speculalton Kim's death or a govern- Korea's Yonhap news Korean pentnsula 's current
en)oyed spendmg many, many hours supporting the Meigs since he disappeared from ment change induced by a agency also quoted an autumn season
public view in mid August. coup.
'On Sunduv. the North's
unnamed source 111 BetJmg
Htgh School Marching Band.
U.S.
and
South
Korean
offi"There
were
some
media
as
saying
some
North
offictal
Korean Central News
• She also loved being surrounded by all of her many
cials
,suspect
he
suffered
a
reports about (the North) Korean Embassy officials Agency publtshed typtcal
friends and family.
stroke
and
had
bram
ban·nmg foretgners," satd who left on bus111ess tnps propaganda dtspatches pratswas
a
member
of
the
Sacred
Heart
Catholic
Emily
surgery. North Korea has Ktm Ho-nyeon, spokesman have not returned
mg Ktm 's regime and cnu(:hurch
flatly
denied
there
is
anyfor
Seoul
's
Umftcatton
CIZing
In
Washmgton.
State
the South Korean gov· She is ~umved by hbr Mom and Dad, Jami&lt;! Lynn Deem
thing
wrong
with
its
66Mimstry m charge of moni- Department
spoke sman ernment. There were no artt·
1111d Davtd Lee Deem; . her sister, Jessica Blaettnar and
year-old
lead~
r
.
.
tonng
Nonh
Korea.
"But
Noel
Clay
smd
he
could not cles mdtcatmg any Imminent
Derek Mtller of Pomeroy; her brother, Michael BlaeUnar of
Japanese
newspapers
there
are
no
unusual
stgns
comment
on
what
the government announcement.
Po~eroy; her grandmother, Jamce (Robert) Curry of
Racme; her grandfather, Norman (Carole) Deem of Racine;
her grandmother, Ke1th Ann Sisson . of Middleport; her
gr~dfather, J;~mes (Judy) Sisson of Pomeroy; her aunt,
:Ju_lle (Bryan) Ztrkle of Pomeroy; her aunt, Jodie (BJ.)
Ntcho~son of Mtddleport; her aunt. Dentse (Steve)
ISLAMABAD, Pakistan is taking serious mihtary bonng Afghamstan . where explodes there. the U S is
Hen~ncks of Lo11an; h.er uncle. Tony (Wendy) Deem of (AP) - A Pakistani court actton agamst the terronsts ," , vtolence is runnmg at record accttsed of domg tt." he
Racme; her spec1al fnends, "The Skittles;" as well as has ordered an Amencan Boucher told repo11ers after levels , leavmg many doubt- satd
numerous other cousins, relatiEand other friends too detained for two more three days of meet111gs wtth mg whether the seven-yearIn the l.ttest vtolence
numerous to list, all of whom lo ed her very much. '
weeks after he was accused Paktstam leaders, mcludmg old war there can be won.
close to the border. twelve
Friends may call on the f mtly from 4-9 p.m on of trying to enter a militant the president. "We have seen
Boucher dtsmtssed reports su spected mtlttants were
Wednesday at the Anderson-McDaniel Funeral Home in stronghold near the Afghan the government has shown of
negottat10ns ktlled m BaJur 111 shelling or
peace
Pomeroy.
·
border, police satd Monday the determ111ation and will- between the government an strikes ovenught and into
Funeral wm be held at I:30 p.m. on Thursday, Oct 23,
The extended detention of ingness to see this through to and Taliban in Afghanistan Monday. satd Jamil Khan,
2008, at the Anderson McDaniel Funeral Home, with 20-year-old Jude Kenan of the end."
after mtlitants sat down wtth ' the No 2 reptesentattve of
Michael Kennedy, a local educator and family fnend mak- Raleigh, North Carolina
Kenan, the Amencan Afghan offtctals in Saudt the government m the largeing remarks for all present. ·
ly mttonomous area
comes as Amertca 's top deta1pee, tried to enter th~ Arabta last month
A full Mass of Christian Burial will follow at 2.30 p.m., diplomat m the reg10n, Mohmand tnbal regton a
"At thts pomt I can say
The mtfttar) does not
at Sacred Heart Church on Mulberry Avenue m Pomeroy, Asststant Secretary of State week ago. Authonties have there ts not much there," release ftgures on ctvthan
with Rev. Father Leonard Cencula officiating.
deaths. though BaJur restRichard Boucher, pratsed not satd whether tlley sus- Boucher satd.
- Burial will follow at the Beech Grove Cemetery, Paktstan for its mtlltary pect htm of contact wttb
Boucher 's vistt comes dent s have reported that
Pomeroy, Wtth a celebration and remembrance of her life to offensive agamst ai-Qatda Tallban or ai-Qatda mili- am1d a surge m vmlence on many have been killed
J&gt;e held in the reception ball of the church thereafter
and Taliban m1htants in the tants Kenan's famtly says both stdes of the border and
In the nmthwest\ Swat
• A regtstry is available on-line at www. andersonmc- lawless tribal regions bor- he was in the country to tensions over US misstle Valley. the army ratsed the
daniel.com.
denng Afghanistan
visit his Pakistani father
strikes on targets withtn death toll from clashes the
Some U.S. offictals doubt
It was not immedtately Pakistan The mtsstle stnkes prevtous day to 25 suspectthat Islamabad ts wtlhng or clear tf Boucher dtscussed - and a htghly unusual ed mtlttanrs whtle saymg a
able to take on the mtlitants Kenan's case durmg meet- ground ratd by Amencan ltnther seven were ktlled
and cntictzed earher army mgs wtth Paktstan 's prest· commandos la~t month Monday
POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. - Margaret Ellen operations that ended in dent and other offictals.
have angered ctHI and mtltSunda} \ bombs htt an
~remeans, 75, died on Monday morning, Oct. 20,2008, at
short-lived peace deals they
Mtlitants m the tribal tary leaders. who say they ammunition dump 111 the
Pleasant Valley Hospital in Pomt Pleasan,t, W.Va., after a say gave the extremists time regions have put up strong fan mihtancy
Barthana mea , causing
long illness. Margaret was born on August 12, 1933, in to regroup
In line with apparent extenstve damage
resistance to the Pakistan
Honaker, Va., to the late Elijah Jake and Ollie Gaye Helton.
The army satd tt had no
But Boucher said he was military offensive and have American pohcy of not con'After graduating from Garden Creek High School, she encouraged by what he was stepped up suicide attacks f1rming or denying the repolts on ctvtltan casualattended Hiwassee College in Tennessee, earning a degree seeing in the border reg10n around the country, 111clud- stnkes, Boucher dtd not ttes there But Anwer Alt, a
In education.
mg last month's blast at the dtrectly answer or ignored Barthana restdent. told The
,She returned home and taught grade school at Garden of Bajur, where troops
launched a maJOr offenstve Marriott hotel 111 Islamabad questions about the ratds, Assocwted Press 111 a phone
Creek Grade School until she moved to Ohio. It was here 10
but dtd say that some mtentew the bombmg by
August that offictals that ktlled 54 people.
1'he met her husband, Ted. She taught at Middleport Middle claim has ktlled 1,000 mthThe insurgents are also reports bltlm111g America for ftghtet jets had htt a house,
School and then, after she and Ted moved to Columbus, she tants.
ktllmg a woman and two of
blamed for attacks on U S. attacks were wrong
taught in a Columbus city grade school for several years.
"Every tune somethmg her chtldren
"!think it ts good Pakistan · and NATO troops in neighMargaret and Ted moved back to Meigs County some
years later and she began working in accounting until she
retired at thetr current restdence outside of Rutland.
She is leavmg behmd her husband of 53 years, Frankhn
from Page AI
Theodore (Ted) Cremeans; sisters: Lois Stump of
The ftght over a proposed much red tape to cut througl)
Columbus, Ruth Smith of Rowe, Va., Barbara Blankenship new-voter cards submitted ends up in the courts.
Florida
constitutiOnal to get an tssue before voters.
In Anzona, Mancopa
of Oakwood, Va.; Lola Rainey of Richlands, Va.; several by ACORN and other grass"It's so dtfftcult, there are
roots groups. That's less County Superior Court amendment landed m federnieces, nephews and many friends.
Judge Edward Burke called al court over questions of so many barners, that what
In addition to her parents, Margaret was preceded in than 2 percent.
death by: sisters: Berntce McClanahan, Maggie Daniels,
It's not the numbers that the srtuatmn "a mess" after whether the state's stgna- we'te seeing is people
methods doing whatever 11 takes to
Myrtle Clark and Juanita McGlothlin.
are driving ·the outrage. It's he was caught 111 the middle ture-counting
Service will be held at the Kingdom Hall of Jehovah's political positioning, said of a nasty oattle pitting the improperly blocked 11 from get on the ballot," she satd.
In the case of the ACORN
the University of Southern rights of a ballot mitiative's the November ballot. The
Witness at a later date.
amendme"nt
would
requtre
accusations.
whtch the
California's
Kareem
the
state's
supporters
against
Arrangements are being handled by Anderson-McDaniel
Republican
Pany
has taken
Funeral Home m Pomeroy.
Crayton, a professor of law. duty to start preparing for voters to approve changes
m local growth manage- to courts around the natton,
On-line condolences may be sent to www. andersonmcd- and J?Oiitics.
the upcoming election.
Smtth smd they wtll serve to
"Smce 2000, no person 10
Suppol1ers of the afftrma- ment plans
daniel.com.
slow down the momentum
Litigating
the
process,
the pohtical world would tive action measure ultiof
Democt aile prestdenttal
try to proceed 111 an election mately abandoned their rather than stmply taking
wtthout a team of lawyers effort, saying they were the issue ftght to voters, ts nommee Barack Obama,
ready to litigate at every "cheated" by time and other an 111creasing trend, Smtth whose campatgn ts 111 the
GALLIPOLIS - George Ralph Diddle, 70, of single stage of the process. circumstances.
posttton to benefit most from
said.
Gallipolis, passed away at his residence on Sunday, Oct. There is close scrutiny of
"My sense 1s that It 's newly regtstered voters
A Missouri JUdge stded
,19, 2008, following a courageous battle with cancer.
"Instead of targetmg those
every rule," he said. "In a last month wtth opponents attacking the process at an
He was born Jan, 7, 1938, in Racine, son of the late Oval lot of people's mmds, thts of proposed eminent domatn earlier stage," he satd. "Thts newly tegis1ered .for their
and Sarah Roush Diddle.
can actually dectde an elec- restrictions who wanted to ts just one of many arrows vote and try111g to persuade
: He was a U.S. Army veteran who St!rved in the Vietnam tion before tt begins.
Join a court fight over plac- 111 the quiver of partisan them 111 thetr dtrectiOD.
War, and a retired truck driver
"No stde wants to be on ing the issue on the ballot. groups who want to game they've got ro go back a
In addition he was member of the Gallipohs First the losing end of an elec- Proponents had sued after- the system."
.step." Smtth satd. "That's
Presbyterian Church for more than 30 years.
But Sandy Thets, a consul- the whole tdea of these
tion, so politicians on both the secretary of state's office
; He is survived b): his wtfe of 40 years, Victoria Gueltig sides battle tooth and nail." concluded they didn't have tant who has worked on bal- early challenges: It dtverts
Diddle, and two sons and two daugfiiers, Wayne (Marla)
As a result, the signature- enoug)l sillJla!Ures to place lot campatgn~. S31d the btgger attention. it burns fuelm the
Diddle of Dayton, David (Bethany) Diddle of Point gathermg process often the questton before voters.
concern ts that there is too end days of the campatgn"
Pleasant. W.Va., and Kedron (Bob) Campbell of Winston
~alem, N C., and Jtll (Mark Miller) Diddle of Gallipolis;
1111~ six grandchildren, Coltin, Derrick, Ashleigh,
Page At
Savan'nah,.Biake and Keira.
'
'
:· Also surviving are brothers and sisters, Bernard (Opal)
"Servmg a mche market
due to dwmdhng sales tax
Reed said the course restaurant, mstead
Diddle, Tom (Pam) Diddle, Don (Carol) Diddle, Libby
wtth
these httle thmgs make
"As
I
am
seatmg
'guests,
Gallla
revenue
,
and
draws
disc
golfers
from
:Pisher. Carolyn (Boone) Adams, and Marilyn Powell, all of
a
busmess
more recessiOn·
will
tell
me
it's
thetr
County
has
also
expenthey
Racine; sister-in-law, Betty Diddle of Kentucky; brother- around the region and even
several other states. The first vistt," Berry said. enced a drop m revenue. proof." Varn.ttloe &gt;atd.
~-law, Art Dials of Ohio.
Varnadoe satd the county
discs
cost $10 to $15 , and "When I ask w.here they are according to Economtc
·,&lt;~e was preceded in death by one son, John Frederick
economtc
development
to
say
from,
I
expect
them
Development
Dtrector
Diddle, in 1992; sister, Adria Diddle; and a brother, Waid golfers also stock up on
office ts prepanng to launch
snacks, gasoline and other tbey are vtsiting from Perry Varnadoe.
llid(Ue.
.
Charleston,
or
Huntmgton
a "shop locally" ad camat
the
store.
satd
mche
marsupplies
whtle
Varnadoe
• Services wtll be 11 a.m. Wednesday, Oct. 22,2008, in the
or
Parkersburg,
but
more
of
Guests from out of town
kets like the disc go! fers patgn for the holiday ~ea­
McCoy-Moore Funeral Home Wetherholt Chapel in
November
and
GaJiipolis, with wrth the Rev. Tim Luoma officiating. have been a btg part of busi- them are telling me they are from Forked Run can pro- son
Friends may call at the funeral home on 1\tesday, Oct. 21, ness at the Wild Horse Cafe from a community here in vide retailers with a son of December. he satd, are
(2008, from 5 to 8 p.m., and on Wednesday from 9 to II a.m. in Pomeroy, but according the county."
insurance agamst a weak "make or break.. ttme for
"Because of the price of retail economy Rather than local retatlers . and tht s year,
• In lieu of flowers, memorial gifts niay be mailed to The to General Manager Dave
Memorial Fund, First Presbyterian Church, 51 State St., Berry, tourist bus mess is gasoline, people who used dedtcatmg thetr businesses local shoppers may spend
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631. Condolences may be sent to down from last year. The to leave the county to dine to one ttem or market . more money m local stores
good news is that locals are out are n&lt;lw celebrating dtverstfymg thetr mventory r,lthet than ttavelmg to shop
www.timeformemory.com/mm.
eat111g there more often and their special occasions can be a safe bet.
out ol necesstty
here."
in bigger numbers.
Once again . Meigs
Those celebrat10g btrthfrom PageAl
days, anmversaries and County ts an exception of
; Mallett presented tips he has learned to lower the nsks of other milestones, are dri- sorts . Many other counties
ving
less 'often
to in the rejpon hal'\: seen a
business failure when the economy ts tough.
W.Va .. dip in sales tax revenue,
: • Before lowering prices in order to entice customers, Parkersburg,
. or Washington County cut its
Huntington,
W.Va
Annual Bean Dinner
f&lt;4allett said, retatlers should consider adding 'value' to the
general
fund
budget
by
a
Athens
to
celebrate.
and
are
,product. Even extra customer services can make the differdollars
choosing the Pomeroy quarter-million
Bean Soup, Vegetable Soup and Chili
ence in a sale without a loss in pt:alit.
'
• A ti~ht retatl economy is not a good reason to reduce or
Donations Accepted but not required.
(lisconhnue adverttsmg Advertism~ when times are dtffitult is one of the most important thmgs a retailer can do to
Thursday,pclober 23 .
}ceeE customers coming m the door.
6:30 P.M. to ?
· • tmplo~ees are important, and they should be kept infonned
the retail climate and the general condition of the busmess.
Mulberry Community Cenler
~ett also encouraged local business oWJit'rS to seek input from
(Old Pomeroy Elementary)
Jjleir ~loyees. Sometimes, they know the customers best.
· • Stay lean. Maintain a minimum inventory, and liquidate
260 Mulberry Avenue
'
dead stQCk in exchange for merchandise that sells fast.
Pomeroy. Ohio
•. • AnticiP,ate the market, and know what wtll sell and
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when it wtll sell.

Pakistan court orders American held in jail

. I
f

SKorea: Nothing unusual in North despite rumors

Emily Deem

The questions U.S. Slate

IVI"CIIIN WANTIN6
YOU TO RECONSIDER
YOUR ENDOR5EIY\ENT 9

Elections letters·advisory
Letters dealmg wuh the Nov 4 e/euirm are welcome and
• wt/1 be accepted up !1111115 p.m. 011 l-'11da\'. Oct 24 Leuen
recetved qft&lt;'l that dl'acl/m,. 11 Ill 1101 "'' tm/Jillired. Le11e1 1
should !Jr 30() """'' 111 lcll~r!r 01 le11 and 11111\1 addre11

.tn·as :tlong the Afghan bortlct .md stcppmg up nulitary
opetdltons agamst militants
At a btl!.tkfast wtth repo11ers
last week . Mullen s.ud that
"the tcccnt dtangeout"' at lSI
\\ ~" ..l'ncouraging."
It mvolved replacmg the
,igency's chief. closmg
down Its "poltttcal cell'' and
oustrng four depattment
heads . tncluthng the chtef of
tt s operations sectton.
.tccusc' d hy the CIA of
mvolvemcnt 111 the Aucust
bombmg of the lndtan
Embassy 111 Afghamstan.
U.S mtclhgence offictals
h,t\e tolu the Paktstams that
lSI &lt;~gents also helped lslamtc
extJemtsts assassmate Bhutto.
Z:udl'!'n declared 111 an intervtew wtth the New York
Tunes l,tst month that he was
dedtcatcd to tightmg terrorists
"becattse they are d cancer to
my society. not only because
ol m) "tfc ·· But he acknowledgtld . "It ts my revenge"
Zardan's .tlltes have
mounted a huge "It's Our
\V,u" puhltc telattons camfldt~n destgned to wm popuf.tt suppolt for :mttterror
pnltctes - .md tt was
dmtbtlcss ,tsststed by the
Sept. 20 sutudc bomb that
dcsttoycd the Mumott
Hold 111 lslant.tbad . ktllmg
mote ltt&lt;tn 60 people
Po"tbly tl1e governm~:nt s must s1g111f1cdn1 step
" organiz:ttton of tnbal
·aw,tkclllng" nitftttas akm
to those e~ahftsl1ed among
Sunnts Ill Iraq, to fight the
T,thb.m and AI Q.1eda
Prcvtously. t11bal leaders
were bnbcd .tnd mtttntd.tted
hy Oltht.mts. but some have
1111 ned agamst them 111 re,tctton to thctr L'Xtlemtsm ,md
brutality - &lt;tnd also pecause
the Paktst:tm government ts
now p.1ymg them.
In tetaltatton, a tetronst
bomb ktlled 40 tnbal elders
at a mectmg l.tst week.
H.tyyant told me , "The
more we htt•them, the mote
they me ltkely to light ba~k
and hit us llllllll ctttes ··

The Da1ly Sentinel • Page As

www.mydailysentinel.com

•
•

l

ViISitUS
online at

,

.

�.....
\.

N
PageA6
n.CRQSS THE ATIO::..=N..:.___.:.;:Tu:;:::esda::::.:..:;Y•O~ctob~er
A.

The Daily Sentinel
'

M&amp;~~wtlc tJUise to ea~e

Inside

2....;....1'
2o_o8

The Daily Sentinel

'fl&amp;er caddies at T1111"ey PIMs, Page B2 .

•

Moore llts Pittsburgh perfectly, Page B2

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

Battle for~ Big Ten, Page 86

·A~ proc:ecUe lo help tight dtip a ·" 1Cllad
r•.aartiiiiiiiiJIIIIIc sdmulalion, or TMS,- a11111J1111iC pUll
lo ........ brllrleellslhltt control moocl.
.

......

Umblcay1Um

1Uesday,Ck1ober21,2008

. . .. .. .... ~to 00111101.

Federal Reserve
Chairman Ben
Bernanke testifies
on Capitol Hill in
Washington. Monday
before the House
Budget Committee.

· =~~ ·~

~

•

&lt;

&lt;

; i

i!hort ·;: .;
pulses ol
magnetic

energy are·
tocueed at

;"
N6uron

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

the Umble

POt.tEAOY -A tehedule o1 upcoming hiQtl
aehool VII'Jity IPOf11ng ewtnll lnt.'olving
•am• from ~end Gallle coul'llie1 .

AP photo

causing neurons to·
beconie active.

(APJ

Magnet device aims to
treat depression patients

new

Bv LAURAN NEERGAARD
AP ME DICAL WRITER

WASHINGTON - The government has approved the
first noninvasive brain stimulator to treat depression - a
device that beams magnetic pulses through the skull.
If it sounds like science-fiction. welL those woodpeckerlike pulses trigger small electrical charges that spark brain
cells to fire . Yet it doesn't .cause the risks of surgically
implanted electrodes or the treatment of last resort, shock
·
therapy.
Called transcmnial magnetic stimulation or TMS, this
gentler approach isn't for everyone. The Food and Drug
Administration approved .Neuronetics Inc.'s NeuroStar
therapy specifically for patients who had no relief from
their first antidepressant, offering them a different option
than trying pill after pill. ·
"We're opening up a whole new area of medicine," says
Dr. Mark George of the Medical University of South
Carolina in Charleston, who helped pioneer use ofTMS in
depression. "There's a whole field now that 's moving forward of noninvasive electrical stimulation of the brain."
While there's a big need for inno\'ative approaches - at
least one •in five depression patients is treatment-resistant
- the question is just how much benefit TMS offers.
. The FDA cleared the prescription-only NeuroStar based
.on data thRt found patients did modestly better when treated withTMS than when they unknowingly received a sham
treatment that mimicked the magnet. It was a study fraught
with statistical questions that concerned the agency's own
scientific advisers.
·
For a more clear answer, the National Institutes of Health
has an independent study under way now that tracks 260
patients and may have initial results as early as next. year.
Quantifying the benefit is key, considering the price tag.
TMS is expected to cost $6,000 to $10,000, depending on
how many treatments a patient needs , says '"::. Philip
Janicak of Rush University Medical Center in Chicago,
who helped lead the NeuroStar study. That's far more
expensive than medication yet thousands of dollars cheaper than invasive depression devices.
Neuroscientists have !)een using TMS for years as a
research tool in brain studies. Zap a powerful magnet over
a certain spot on the head - where motion is contro.lled and someone's arm can suddenly. involuntarily, lash out.
Beyond the "wow" factor, magnetized pulses were triggering brain activity.
The question was how to harness that activity in a way
that might improve disease. TMS also is being studied in
stroke rehabilitation and other brain disorders .
"Nobody thought this would work; it was a crazy idea. I
had to do it at 6 in the morning before the real scientists
came · in,'' South Carolina's George laughs as he recalls
work he began in 1993.
But , "the brain is an electrical organ,'' George adds ,
explaining the rationale, "Electricity is the currency of the
brain . lt's how the brain ctoes what it does ."
For depression, psychiatrists aim the magnet at the left
front of the heaa , the prefrontal cortex. Since everyone's
brain is different, they first zap the top of the head to find a
patient's motor-control region, and then carefully move 5
centimeters forward . Then, the NeuroStar beams about
3,000 pulses a minute during a 40-minute treatment, done
'
about five times a week for up to six weeks.
The. theory : Stimulating brain cells in the prefrontal ~or­
rex tnggers a chain reaction that also stimulates deeper
brain regions involved with n10od.
'{MS did prove to be very safe : Patients in the NeuroStar
study suffered no seizures or memory problems like shock
therapx can cause.• or other reactions throughout the body.
The ch1ef complamt from the sessions was headaches.
The FDA cleared the device after focusing just on a subset of t~e patients initially enrolled - 164 who had failed
one antidepressant during their current bout of depression,
not thos.e who were more severel y treatment-resistant.
What s a n10dest benefit? Aoout 24 percent who got TMS
scored .s1gmflcantly better on standard depression measures
·after s1x weeks, compared with li percent who got the
sham ! says Jan.~cak. That's about as well as patients respond
to a smgle antidepressant, he says.
Some reported remarkable improvement.
"One day it was like a light switch went off," says Steve
Newman, 60 •. of Washmgton . D.C., who enrolled in the
NeuroStar study at tHe University of Pennsylvania in 2005.
Newman had suffered repeated bouts of depression since
he was a teenager, and drug after drug barely blunted it. He
was considering ·shock therapy when he heard about TMS.
After two weeks of treatment, Newman was wondering if
he was getting the sham - when suddenly, he started feel ing lots better. and doctors spotted a corresponding major
improvement in his depression measurements.

BY JEANNINE AVERSA
AP ECONOMICS WRITER .

WASHINGTON
Momentum is building for ·a
fresh dose of economic
stimulants to boost the
country out of the doldrums
- perhaps by p·utting more
money in Americans' pockets. The White House said
Monday that President Bush
was open to some sort of
action after Federal Reserve
Chairman Ben Bernanke
warned the slump could
drag on without the extra
bracing tonic.
·
On Wall Street, stocks
bolted higher, with the Dow
Jones industrials rising 413
points. There also · were
some new signs that2re it
conditions were thawin a
bit.
The national eco omy,
already wobblin~, has been
rocked by a tno of hard
punches from the housing,
credit and financial crises.
With a · recession widely
seen as inevitable, if not
already under way, the
focus in Washington has
shifted ta. the questions of
how bad. how ,long and how
to limit the pain .
\1lere is increasing talk of
a post-election special session calling Congress back
to the Capitol. But urgency
varies greatly according to
whom you talk to - and
when .
"We're continuing to have
conv.ersations with . members of Congress, and we're
open to ideas that they
would ptlt forward ... that
would stimulate the economy and help us pull out of
th1s downturn faster," White
House press secretary Dana
Perino said around noon
Monday, shortly after
Bernanke endorsed the need
for a fresh and "significant"
ro;mnd of government action.
A couple of hours later,
Bush seconded Perino's
remarks, but he also said in
·a more optimistic tone: ... ,
have heard that people's
attiludes are beginning to
period of
change from

a

intense concerns - I would.
call it near panic - to being
more relaxed." He commented after a closed meeting with business leaders in
Alexandria, La,
If congressional leaders
and Bush - who has been
cool to more federal stimuIus spending given already
exploding budget deficits
- were to hash out an
acceptable package , it
would require a special sessian after the Nov. 4 elections.
If an .agreement can't be
worked out, the effort probably would be taken up by
the next Congress and the
next president. Democrat
Barack Obama has strongly
advocated more government stimulus,
while
Republican John McCain is
keeping his options open .
House Speaker ·Nancy
Pelosi of California and fellow
congressional
Democrats are pushing a
package that could cost as
·much as $150 billion. Some
economists, however, have
advised them in recent days
that .to have a real impact,
the total would have to be
far larger, as much as $300'·
billion.
As · part of that package,
Democrats want to resurrect
a $61 billion House-passed
measure that included about
$37 billion in public works
spending, $6 billion to
extend jobless benefits, $15
billion to help states to pay
their Medicaid bills and $3
billion in food stamp assistance for the poor.
The Democrats also are
considering a second round
of tax .rebates to follow the
$600 to $1 ,200 checb most
individuals and couples got
earlier this year. That
money, going directly to
consumers in hopes ·they
would spend it , could push
the price tag much higher.
Unemployment - ·now at
. 6.1 percent - is expected to
hit 7.5 percent or higher
next year. And millions of
Americans
have
been
watching their retirement

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SPECIAL TO THE SENTINEL

goal by Chris Cruikshank in
the ~5th minute. He fired a
shot from about 30 yards
and whizzed it past Walzer
in the upper right half of the
net.
3-2 would be as close as
Houghton would get in the
game . Rio avenges last
year's loss to Houghton and
rebounds from the loss to
Roberts Wesleyan on Friday.
Rio Grande held a 21-6
advantage in shots, including . 11--4 on goal. Walzer
had one save ·with the
RedStofl11 having one team
save. Lefebvre registered
eight saves.
"It was great to see the
guys bounce back ," said Rio
GraQde head coach Scott
Morrissey. " Yesterday
against Roberts was a tough
loss, we didn't play particularly .well , but even having
said that, I still felt like we
had a ton of chances, created
a lot of opportunities ~ester-

day.
"But today, we got back to
playing tl)e way I would
expect
us
to play,"
Morrissey added . "!thought
the first 45 minutes we were
fantastic . We created a lot
of chances. I really thought
tonight we played well."
"The second goal (for
Houghton), to be fair, the
young man's goal was a
career shot. but none the
less, two opportunities. two
goals and the next thing it's
a 3-2 game," Morrissey said .
"I was proud of how we
played; we played with a lot
of energy. which didn 't happen the day before. It was a
good result for us."
Rio. Grande will face
NAIA No. 16 Notre Dame
College
on
Saturday,
October 25, on the road ,
with the AMC championship
possibly hanging in the bal.ance . . Kick-off is set for
2:30p.m.

Browns confll11l
Winslow had
staph infection

BEREA (AP) - Calling
Kellen Winslow's critical
comments a distraction;
Browns coach Romeo
Crennel confirmed the tighi
end was t10spitalized for a
staph infection and said he
may discipline the emotional Pro Bowler for his conduct following Sunday's
loss to the Washington
Redskins.
Winslow spent three
nights at the Cleveland
Clinic for an illness that he
did not disclose untii
Sunday. He said he didn't
panel of aport$ writers ar1d broadcasters
reveal that he had staph
rates Ohio hi~ school football teams in
because the team, which has
the seventh of eight Associated Press
had an alarming number of
weekly polio or 2008. by OHSAA divisions, with won·IOst record and total
staph cases in recent years,
points (first-place votes in parentheses) :
.
.
"didn't want it to get out."
Winslow said he came forDIVISION I
ward ·to protect his team1. Cle. Glenville (17) 9-0
226
mates.
2. Pickerlng1on Cent (3) 9-0 211
Crennel, though , felt
3, Cin. Colerain (1) 8-1
175
Winslow's
postgame
. 4, Cin. Elder 1218-1
158
· 5, Cle. Sl.lgnallus (1) 8-1
150
. reTa;ks were ina.ppropriate.
· 6. Hilliard Davidson 8-1
87
It s a dtstract1on for the
· 7, Strongsville 8-1
85
. organization . and
for
8, N. Can. Hoover 8-1
80
' 9, Cots. Upper Arlington 8-1 . 54
Kellen," Crennel said at his
10, Cols. Broo~haven 8-1
22
M01iday news conference.
"He
should've come to the
· Othtrl l'tc81vlng 12 or more paints:
11, Clayton Northmont 21 . 12, Amherst
organization first if he had a
Steele 20. 13, Brunswtck 18.
problem."
The Browns, Who initially
DIVISION II
cited privacy laws and
I , Cols. DeSales (18) 9-0
230
Winslow's wishes for keep2. LoulsviRe (4) 9-o
192
ing his illness a secret, have
3, Tot Cent. Cath. 9...()
181
had
at least six known cases
. 4. \,exlngton 9-0
151
of
staph
- a bacterial infec.. 5, Logan (1) 9-0
132
· 6, Sylvania Soulhvlew (2) 9.() 109
tion that can cause different
· 7, N. Carlisle Tecumseh (1) 9-0 107
types of illnesses - ·since
. 8, E. Cle. Shaw 9.()
70
2005. Winslow got staph
9, Medin~;~. Highland 9-o
65
following knee surgery after
to; ern.Wln~&lt;&gt;n Woods !1-Q
42
a near-fatal motorcycle
Olherl receiving 12 or more polnta:
accident in '05. Wide
11 . Milytleld 16.
receivers Brayton Edwards
and Joe Jurevicius, as well
DIVISION Ill
as center LeCharles Bentley
1, ihonwille Sheridan (17) 9-Q 226
and
safety Brian Russell, all
2, Avon (4) 9·0
195
contracted
staph.
Circleville Logan Elm (2) 9-o 195
4, Conal WlndleS1er (11 9·0
182
Winsl6w, who as recently
5, Bellevue e-1
91
as
Friday said he didn't
6, TIPt&gt; City Tippecanoe 8·1
85
want
his ill~ss known, a) so
7. Youngs. Liberty 8· t
n
8, Nowark L~klng Valle)' 8-1
51
criticized the Browns' han•
. 9. Clyde 8·1
49
dling of his situation and
·
· ·
.
· J. Michael Jacobs/submitted photo
· 10, DoVer 8-1
45
•
Members of the River Valley varsity volleyball team pose for a fun picture after winning the program's second straight sec· complained that general
:ott.. rKelvlng 12 or more polntl: ttonal .title last Saturday against Nelsonville-York in Cheshire. The Lady Raiders - who made it to the district finals last limnager Phil Savage didn't
"',Cuyahoga f•lls Walsh Jesuit 25. 12.
year- will open district tournament play lonight when they travel to Athens High School in The Plains to take on Minford check on him while he was
New Philadelphia 22. 13, Urbana 14. 14,
t;hllllcothe13.
in the second. of two district semifinals to be played this evening.
· Plene see Browns, 8:1

AP

Lady Raiders open distrid play tonight

a

DIVISION IV
1. Coldwaler (20) 9·0
· 2, SleubenviHo (3) 9-0

236
202

3, New Lexington 9.0
153
4 , Clarttsvtlte CUnton-Massie 9-o 131 .
103
5, Genoa Area 9-0
8, Kettering Alter(!) 7-2
93
7. Younge. Mooney 7-2
75

8, Fos1Ma 8·1

65

9, Marlort Pleasant 8-1

58
50

10, 6100kvllle 9·0

Both Rio. Grande CC teams
finish lOth at Fall Classic
· BY MARK WILLIAMS
SPECIAL TO THE SENTINEL

WILMINGTON - It was
the strongest performance to
11, Lorain Clearvlew 44. 12, Massillon
date for both University of
~slaw 38. 13, Plain City Jonatharl Alder
"".f· 14, Martina Ferry 19. 15, Akr. SVSM Rio Grande RedStorm cross
13.
country teams on Friday at
the Wilmington College Fall
DIVISIONV
Classic. The men and
1. Youngs. Ursuline (17) -e-o , 228 ·women
finished
lOth
2, Hamler Patrick Henry 9-0
189
respectively.
The
men's
3. And. "berty·llen10" (2) 9-0 170
4, Whoele&lt;sburg (2)9.()
138 event consisted of 23 teams
5. Kl"land 9-0
126 while the women totaled 24.
Maria Sleln MilriOn Lei. (3) 8·1 128
The RedStorm men posted
7, Anna 8-1
89
227
points and missed ninth
: S, Cln. Hils 9-o
75
· 9, Bucyrus Wyntord 9.0
69
by only two points, which
•to, Archbold 8·1 .
34
went to Wheeling Jesuit
.
..othtr8 twcetvlng12 or more polnt1: (225).
11. For11mou1h W. 33. 12. W. Llber!y·
Sophomore
Matthew
~ltm 22.
Spencer, as he has done for
hts. entire Cl!feer, paced the
•
DIVISION VI
men's team, finishing 16th
• 1, Hopewei~Lo!Jdon (1 D) 9-0
220
·overall, covering the SK
, 2, Mochanlclburg (4) 9.0
180
• 3, MogadOre (I) 9.()
1n course in 26:01.23 . .
Freshman Brandon Crislip
171
• 4, Norwollc St. Paul (8) 9-0
. 5, Ada (I) 9.o
140 was the second Rio runner
8, Hannibal Ahler (2) 9-0
126
• 7, Malvern 9-0
109 to eross the finish line, in
: 6, McDonald 9.0
101 45th position with a time of
9, Carey 6·1
43
26:54.08. Fellow fre shman
tO, Sidney Lehman 7-1
23
Bryce Wilson , who has batOthon rocolvlng 12 or.....,. polnlo: . tied Crislip for the ·No. 2
11. DelphOs St.John'o12.
spot all season, was close
behind his classmate in 49th
spot with a time of 27:03.54.
Freshman Chad McCarty
CoNrACI'US
was next in 64th place ; post• 1·740-446·2342 ext. 33
ing a time of 27:29.98 .
. Other men's results: freshFox - t-740 448 3008
man Justin Hartley was
E-moll- sportoOrnydallyunlinel.com ' 13rd, (27:53.08); freshman
lllla!II.JIIII
· Andrew Edmunds was 76th ,
Bry~~nW.Itera,SportaWrtter
(27:55.94); and Lucas
1740) -Me-2342, oxt. 33
Murphy
was
IDOth,
bwaltorsOmydallylnburie.com
. (28:22.68).
'
Larry 'Cruni, Sports Writer·
There were 238 runners in
1740)+4e-2342.oxt.33
·
the men's race. David
":"'mOmydaltyreglsler.oorn
· Mutuse of Lindsey Wilson

. Othtri ,...lvtng 12 or more pointe:

..

.....

.DINING ROOM

Smile.! Naw yoo can own the p1dure of that unforgettatie
moment captured in the~· Pholos become bmeles&amp;
wheo fram&amp;cl or printed"" a mLJ9 or mouse ~d.

nest eggs and home values the Congress at this juncture
seems appropriate;' Bemanke
shrivel.
One-third of Americans told the House Budge~
are_ worried . about losing Committee. It marked the first
their jobs, half fret they will time Bernanke endorsed the
be unable to keep up with need for another round of
mortgage and credit card economic stimulus.
The Fed chief suggested
payments, and seven in 10
are anxious that their stocks that Congress design the
and retirement investments package to limit the longer~
are losing value, according term affects on the govern ~
to an Associated Press- . ment's budget deficit. which
Yahoo News poll of likely hit a record in the recently
ended budget year and i~
voters released Monday.
Sen. Charles Schumer. D- undoubtedly headed higher.
Bernanke said the package .
N.Y., a member of the
Democratic leadership, pre- also should include provi;
dieted Congress would sions "to hell? improv~
return in Noxember. "We · access to cred1t by con•
couldn't have gotten a better sumers', home buyers, busi;
supporter for ~ stimulus nesses and other oorrowers.':
He also left the door opel\
package
than
Ben
Bernanke," Schumer said. to further interest ·rate
"His support will change reductions by die Federal
:
the stimulils from a possi- Reserve Itself.
· Fed policymakers meet
bility to a reality.:'
Pelosi said, "I call on next on Oct. 28-29, and
President Bush and con- many economists believe
gressional Republicans to they will again lower theit
once agai,n hee~ Chaim:tan key mte - now at 1.50 per'
Bernanke s adv1ce and as cent - to bolster the eco!ID'
they did il1 January; work my. Just a few weeks ago, the
with Democrats in Congress Fed and the world's othet '
·to enact a targetei;l, -timely&gt; major central banks joined
and fiscally r~:;s,ponsible forces ,to mrchet dow.n J:lltes,
economi~ recov~Q: --~_Ild job the first coordinated action of
!creation packagf;1 ·_._.•_,,\,-•, ., that kind in the Fed's history.
However, in an interview · There were some signs
with The A$sociated Press that credit problems were
last Friday, Pelosi had said . improving a bit. Bank-toCongress is · unlikely to bank lending rates fell for a
approve a tax rebate before sixth straight day on
Bush leaves office , and she Monday. Demand for
signaled that pro~pects were Treasury bills, regarded as
dim that Democrats wo.uld the world's safest invest~
be able to strike a deal with ment. lessened somewhat
. the president on an econom- but remained relatively high
ic aid package during a in a sig11 that there was still
much ·fear in the markets. .
post-election session.
Last week, the Treasury
· In February, Congress
enacted a $168 billion stim- Department announced .it
ulus package that included would inject up to $250 bil.tax rebates for people and lion in U.S. banks in return
tax breaks · for businesses . for partial ownership. So far
The rebate checks did help this year, 15· banks have
to lift economic growth in failed, including the largest
the spring. After that, U.S. bank failure in history,
though , consumers cut back compared with three last
sharply and businesses have year. And major Wall Street
retrenched in turn.
mvestment firms have been
"With the economy likely swallowed by other compato be weak for several quar- nies, have filed bankruptcy or
ters, and with some risk of a have converted themselves
protracted slowdown, consid- into commercial banks to
eration of a fiscal package by weather the financial storm.

RedStorin ·men -rebound with win over H~ughton

The RedStorm added a
second goal in the 42nd
minute from t' sophomore
(4) Ook Hll,wrsus (1) Adena, 6p.m..
RIO GRANj)E _ · The defender Ste ven O'Hara
(3) RIYer Valley vorsus (2) Minford al
Alhenl HS, 30 minutes after Match '
University of Rio Grand·e beat Houghton goalkeeper
,
Volloybtll
RedStorm , men 's soccer ·Eric Lefebvre to put the
Grace CMstian al ovcs. 6·p.m.
team.the top ranked team in RedStorm 2-0. Junior midlburtde- ttt 23
the NAIA Top 25 mting, at fielder Jason Massie was
D4 Volloylloll - Dlt1rlct SOmla
least
until Tuesday when the credited with the first of two
(5) Pika Eastern vs. (1) For!Bmoolh Clay
al WeHIIDn, 6 p.m.
.
new poll is released, assists.
(3) Pika WeS1ern vs. (2) Easlern a1
Houghton (8-6-1, 5-3-1
bounced back from a tough
Vfellston, 30 minutes arter Match 1
loss to Roberts Wesleyan on AMC) would cut the deficit
Frklly Oc:Ww 21
Friday with a well-pla~ed 3- in half before the first half
Footblll
2. VIctory over vtslttng , came to a close as Justin
Marietta al Oallia Academy, 7:30p.m.
·Belpre at Meigs, 7:30 p.m.
.
Hou~hton
on Saiurday Farnsworth found the back
flocf( Hill at River Valley, 7:30 p.m.
evemng
at
Evan
Davis Field.. of the net in 43rd minute.
South Gallla at Sym"'es Valley, 7:30
p.m.
.
Rio Grande (13-1- 1, 7-1- 1 He put the ball past Rio's
Wahama at Athens, 7:30 p.m.
AMC) was the aggressor senior goalkeeper Nate
from the outset, but didn't Walzer as he was caught up
'*'mFootblll
OetQbtr 25
break through the scoring in a mass of players al' the
Southern at Eutern, 7:30p.m.
column unrilthe 35th minute ball slid by him.
CrauCountry
Divisions 11-111 Regional meets at
when sophomore forward
Mahoney would give the
Pickertngton. 10 a.m.
Ederson Lopes and fresh- RedStorm a 3-1 advantage
man Matt Mahoney for the with a goal in the 54th
first goal of the game. which minute. Mahoney 's ulti.~ WEEKLY 2008
put Rio Grande up 1-0. mately wound up the gameHIGH SCHOOL Lopes nailed his 17th goal of winner. .
. FOOTBALL PolL the season with Mahoney Houghton would keep the
pressure with an incredible
COLUMBUS (AP) - How a s1a1e collecting the assist.
D dg C'!c1pber Z1
D3 .......II - Dletrlct Mmla

electrical Charges.

$1ructures.

•

'

LocAL SCHEDULE

The pulses lrigg« ·

. system

Bl

.

'

(KY) College
was ·
the
men 's individual champion. His
time
was
24:46.66.
Denison University won
the men's event with a score
of 59 points. Centre (KY)
College (64), University of
Cumber! ands ( 126) , Rose
Hulman ( 138) ·and Lindsey
Wilson ( 175) rounded out
the top five . .
Other American Mideast
Conference sc hools were:
Mount Vernon Nazarene
(12th,
297),
Ohio
Dominican (18th, 525) and
Wilberforce (22nd, 681).
The RedStorm women are
getting healthy and the
results are showin~ with a
lOth place fimsh . The
women garnered 292 points.
Junior Stacey Arnett was
again the top runner for Rio
Grande, finishing 23rd overall , covering the 5K course
in
20:06 .82. Freshman
Kayla Renner crossed the .
finish line in 33rd place with
a time of 20:37.35.
Sophomore
:rracey
Newcomer was next ~o .
finishing 64th with a time of
21 :20.32 .
.
Other RedStorm women
results: sophomore Brooke
was
!lOth
Wampler
(22:5 1·.88);
freshman
Danielle Stockham was
!15th (22:58.30) and sophomore Hillary Haines was
152nd (24:13.7 1).

Please see Rio, B:Z

P~iladelphia Phillies manager Charlie Manuel chats with Jimmy Rollins, left,
ling practice at Tropicana Field in St. Petersburg, Fla., on Monday. The Philadelphia PhillliA~
will meet the Tampa Bay Rays in Game 1 of the World Series on Wednesday.

Who would've thunk it? Tampa
Bay-Philadelphia in World Series
Bv RONALD BLUM
AP BASEBALL WRITER

Worst in baseball to World
Series winner.
The Tampa Bay Rays can
become the first team in the
majors to complete the ultimate
fast
turnaround .
Doormats .no more, they'll
.have the swagger of a pennant-winner when they play
the Philadelphia Phillies
starting Wednesday night.
"By the time we got to the
I

point where we had won our
league . our guys knew we
had a good team." said
Atlanta Braves president
John Schuerholz. remembering back to ·when his team
fell just shan of a worst-towinner transformation, losing Game 7 to Minnesota ! 0 in 10 innings back in 199L
It will be a World Series of
contrasts that opens at
Tropicana Field: Nonh vs.
. South . Old vs. New. Rest vs.
rust. Beloved vs. belittled .

Well , both have disparaged over the years.
The frustrated Phillies
have beeh around since
1883 but the losingest team
in the history of U.S. major
l~ag ues has had just one tltle
to ce lebrate, back ill 1980.
The Rays'? The franchise
didn 't start play until 1998 ,
didn 't have a winning season until this year and didn't
even shed the Devil from its

Please see Series, B:Z

�.....
\.

N
PageA6
n.CRQSS THE ATIO::..=N..:.___.:.;:Tu:;:::esda::::.:..:;Y•O~ctob~er
A.

The Daily Sentinel
'

M&amp;~~wtlc tJUise to ea~e

Inside

2....;....1'
2o_o8

The Daily Sentinel

'fl&amp;er caddies at T1111"ey PIMs, Page B2 .

•

Moore llts Pittsburgh perfectly, Page B2

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

Battle for~ Big Ten, Page 86

·A~ proc:ecUe lo help tight dtip a ·" 1Cllad
r•.aartiiiiiiiiJIIIIIc sdmulalion, or TMS,- a11111J1111iC pUll
lo ........ brllrleellslhltt control moocl.
.

......

Umblcay1Um

1Uesday,Ck1ober21,2008

. . .. .. .... ~to 00111101.

Federal Reserve
Chairman Ben
Bernanke testifies
on Capitol Hill in
Washington. Monday
before the House
Budget Committee.

· =~~ ·~

~

•

&lt;

&lt;

; i

i!hort ·;: .;
pulses ol
magnetic

energy are·
tocueed at

;"
N6uron

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

the Umble

POt.tEAOY -A tehedule o1 upcoming hiQtl
aehool VII'Jity IPOf11ng ewtnll lnt.'olving
•am• from ~end Gallle coul'llie1 .

AP photo

causing neurons to·
beconie active.

(APJ

Magnet device aims to
treat depression patients

new

Bv LAURAN NEERGAARD
AP ME DICAL WRITER

WASHINGTON - The government has approved the
first noninvasive brain stimulator to treat depression - a
device that beams magnetic pulses through the skull.
If it sounds like science-fiction. welL those woodpeckerlike pulses trigger small electrical charges that spark brain
cells to fire . Yet it doesn't .cause the risks of surgically
implanted electrodes or the treatment of last resort, shock
·
therapy.
Called transcmnial magnetic stimulation or TMS, this
gentler approach isn't for everyone. The Food and Drug
Administration approved .Neuronetics Inc.'s NeuroStar
therapy specifically for patients who had no relief from
their first antidepressant, offering them a different option
than trying pill after pill. ·
"We're opening up a whole new area of medicine," says
Dr. Mark George of the Medical University of South
Carolina in Charleston, who helped pioneer use ofTMS in
depression. "There's a whole field now that 's moving forward of noninvasive electrical stimulation of the brain."
While there's a big need for inno\'ative approaches - at
least one •in five depression patients is treatment-resistant
- the question is just how much benefit TMS offers.
. The FDA cleared the prescription-only NeuroStar based
.on data thRt found patients did modestly better when treated withTMS than when they unknowingly received a sham
treatment that mimicked the magnet. It was a study fraught
with statistical questions that concerned the agency's own
scientific advisers.
·
For a more clear answer, the National Institutes of Health
has an independent study under way now that tracks 260
patients and may have initial results as early as next. year.
Quantifying the benefit is key, considering the price tag.
TMS is expected to cost $6,000 to $10,000, depending on
how many treatments a patient needs , says '"::. Philip
Janicak of Rush University Medical Center in Chicago,
who helped lead the NeuroStar study. That's far more
expensive than medication yet thousands of dollars cheaper than invasive depression devices.
Neuroscientists have !)een using TMS for years as a
research tool in brain studies. Zap a powerful magnet over
a certain spot on the head - where motion is contro.lled and someone's arm can suddenly. involuntarily, lash out.
Beyond the "wow" factor, magnetized pulses were triggering brain activity.
The question was how to harness that activity in a way
that might improve disease. TMS also is being studied in
stroke rehabilitation and other brain disorders .
"Nobody thought this would work; it was a crazy idea. I
had to do it at 6 in the morning before the real scientists
came · in,'' South Carolina's George laughs as he recalls
work he began in 1993.
But , "the brain is an electrical organ,'' George adds ,
explaining the rationale, "Electricity is the currency of the
brain . lt's how the brain ctoes what it does ."
For depression, psychiatrists aim the magnet at the left
front of the heaa , the prefrontal cortex. Since everyone's
brain is different, they first zap the top of the head to find a
patient's motor-control region, and then carefully move 5
centimeters forward . Then, the NeuroStar beams about
3,000 pulses a minute during a 40-minute treatment, done
'
about five times a week for up to six weeks.
The. theory : Stimulating brain cells in the prefrontal ~or­
rex tnggers a chain reaction that also stimulates deeper
brain regions involved with n10od.
'{MS did prove to be very safe : Patients in the NeuroStar
study suffered no seizures or memory problems like shock
therapx can cause.• or other reactions throughout the body.
The ch1ef complamt from the sessions was headaches.
The FDA cleared the device after focusing just on a subset of t~e patients initially enrolled - 164 who had failed
one antidepressant during their current bout of depression,
not thos.e who were more severel y treatment-resistant.
What s a n10dest benefit? Aoout 24 percent who got TMS
scored .s1gmflcantly better on standard depression measures
·after s1x weeks, compared with li percent who got the
sham ! says Jan.~cak. That's about as well as patients respond
to a smgle antidepressant, he says.
Some reported remarkable improvement.
"One day it was like a light switch went off," says Steve
Newman, 60 •. of Washmgton . D.C., who enrolled in the
NeuroStar study at tHe University of Pennsylvania in 2005.
Newman had suffered repeated bouts of depression since
he was a teenager, and drug after drug barely blunted it. He
was considering ·shock therapy when he heard about TMS.
After two weeks of treatment, Newman was wondering if
he was getting the sham - when suddenly, he started feel ing lots better. and doctors spotted a corresponding major
improvement in his depression measurements.

BY JEANNINE AVERSA
AP ECONOMICS WRITER .

WASHINGTON
Momentum is building for ·a
fresh dose of economic
stimulants to boost the
country out of the doldrums
- perhaps by p·utting more
money in Americans' pockets. The White House said
Monday that President Bush
was open to some sort of
action after Federal Reserve
Chairman Ben Bernanke
warned the slump could
drag on without the extra
bracing tonic.
·
On Wall Street, stocks
bolted higher, with the Dow
Jones industrials rising 413
points. There also · were
some new signs that2re it
conditions were thawin a
bit.
The national eco omy,
already wobblin~, has been
rocked by a tno of hard
punches from the housing,
credit and financial crises.
With a · recession widely
seen as inevitable, if not
already under way, the
focus in Washington has
shifted ta. the questions of
how bad. how ,long and how
to limit the pain .
\1lere is increasing talk of
a post-election special session calling Congress back
to the Capitol. But urgency
varies greatly according to
whom you talk to - and
when .
"We're continuing to have
conv.ersations with . members of Congress, and we're
open to ideas that they
would ptlt forward ... that
would stimulate the economy and help us pull out of
th1s downturn faster," White
House press secretary Dana
Perino said around noon
Monday, shortly after
Bernanke endorsed the need
for a fresh and "significant"
ro;mnd of government action.
A couple of hours later,
Bush seconded Perino's
remarks, but he also said in
·a more optimistic tone: ... ,
have heard that people's
attiludes are beginning to
period of
change from

a

intense concerns - I would.
call it near panic - to being
more relaxed." He commented after a closed meeting with business leaders in
Alexandria, La,
If congressional leaders
and Bush - who has been
cool to more federal stimuIus spending given already
exploding budget deficits
- were to hash out an
acceptable package , it
would require a special sessian after the Nov. 4 elections.
If an .agreement can't be
worked out, the effort probably would be taken up by
the next Congress and the
next president. Democrat
Barack Obama has strongly
advocated more government stimulus,
while
Republican John McCain is
keeping his options open .
House Speaker ·Nancy
Pelosi of California and fellow
congressional
Democrats are pushing a
package that could cost as
·much as $150 billion. Some
economists, however, have
advised them in recent days
that .to have a real impact,
the total would have to be
far larger, as much as $300'·
billion.
As · part of that package,
Democrats want to resurrect
a $61 billion House-passed
measure that included about
$37 billion in public works
spending, $6 billion to
extend jobless benefits, $15
billion to help states to pay
their Medicaid bills and $3
billion in food stamp assistance for the poor.
The Democrats also are
considering a second round
of tax .rebates to follow the
$600 to $1 ,200 checb most
individuals and couples got
earlier this year. That
money, going directly to
consumers in hopes ·they
would spend it , could push
the price tag much higher.
Unemployment - ·now at
. 6.1 percent - is expected to
hit 7.5 percent or higher
next year. And millions of
Americans
have
been
watching their retirement

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Bv M~K WILLIAMS

SPECIAL TO THE SENTINEL

goal by Chris Cruikshank in
the ~5th minute. He fired a
shot from about 30 yards
and whizzed it past Walzer
in the upper right half of the
net.
3-2 would be as close as
Houghton would get in the
game . Rio avenges last
year's loss to Houghton and
rebounds from the loss to
Roberts Wesleyan on Friday.
Rio Grande held a 21-6
advantage in shots, including . 11--4 on goal. Walzer
had one save ·with the
RedStofl11 having one team
save. Lefebvre registered
eight saves.
"It was great to see the
guys bounce back ," said Rio
GraQde head coach Scott
Morrissey. " Yesterday
against Roberts was a tough
loss, we didn't play particularly .well , but even having
said that, I still felt like we
had a ton of chances, created
a lot of opportunities ~ester-

day.
"But today, we got back to
playing tl)e way I would
expect
us
to play,"
Morrissey added . "!thought
the first 45 minutes we were
fantastic . We created a lot
of chances. I really thought
tonight we played well."
"The second goal (for
Houghton), to be fair, the
young man's goal was a
career shot. but none the
less, two opportunities. two
goals and the next thing it's
a 3-2 game," Morrissey said .
"I was proud of how we
played; we played with a lot
of energy. which didn 't happen the day before. It was a
good result for us."
Rio. Grande will face
NAIA No. 16 Notre Dame
College
on
Saturday,
October 25, on the road ,
with the AMC championship
possibly hanging in the bal.ance . . Kick-off is set for
2:30p.m.

Browns confll11l
Winslow had
staph infection

BEREA (AP) - Calling
Kellen Winslow's critical
comments a distraction;
Browns coach Romeo
Crennel confirmed the tighi
end was t10spitalized for a
staph infection and said he
may discipline the emotional Pro Bowler for his conduct following Sunday's
loss to the Washington
Redskins.
Winslow spent three
nights at the Cleveland
Clinic for an illness that he
did not disclose untii
Sunday. He said he didn't
panel of aport$ writers ar1d broadcasters
reveal that he had staph
rates Ohio hi~ school football teams in
because the team, which has
the seventh of eight Associated Press
had an alarming number of
weekly polio or 2008. by OHSAA divisions, with won·IOst record and total
staph cases in recent years,
points (first-place votes in parentheses) :
.
.
"didn't want it to get out."
Winslow said he came forDIVISION I
ward ·to protect his team1. Cle. Glenville (17) 9-0
226
mates.
2. Pickerlng1on Cent (3) 9-0 211
Crennel, though , felt
3, Cin. Colerain (1) 8-1
175
Winslow's
postgame
. 4, Cin. Elder 1218-1
158
· 5, Cle. Sl.lgnallus (1) 8-1
150
. reTa;ks were ina.ppropriate.
· 6. Hilliard Davidson 8-1
87
It s a dtstract1on for the
· 7, Strongsville 8-1
85
. organization . and
for
8, N. Can. Hoover 8-1
80
' 9, Cots. Upper Arlington 8-1 . 54
Kellen," Crennel said at his
10, Cols. Broo~haven 8-1
22
M01iday news conference.
"He
should've come to the
· Othtrl l'tc81vlng 12 or more paints:
11, Clayton Northmont 21 . 12, Amherst
organization first if he had a
Steele 20. 13, Brunswtck 18.
problem."
The Browns, Who initially
DIVISION II
cited privacy laws and
I , Cols. DeSales (18) 9-0
230
Winslow's wishes for keep2. LoulsviRe (4) 9-o
192
ing his illness a secret, have
3, Tot Cent. Cath. 9...()
181
had
at least six known cases
. 4. \,exlngton 9-0
151
of
staph
- a bacterial infec.. 5, Logan (1) 9-0
132
· 6, Sylvania Soulhvlew (2) 9.() 109
tion that can cause different
· 7, N. Carlisle Tecumseh (1) 9-0 107
types of illnesses - ·since
. 8, E. Cle. Shaw 9.()
70
2005. Winslow got staph
9, Medin~;~. Highland 9-o
65
following knee surgery after
to; ern.Wln~&lt;&gt;n Woods !1-Q
42
a near-fatal motorcycle
Olherl receiving 12 or more polnta:
accident in '05. Wide
11 . Milytleld 16.
receivers Brayton Edwards
and Joe Jurevicius, as well
DIVISION Ill
as center LeCharles Bentley
1, ihonwille Sheridan (17) 9-Q 226
and
safety Brian Russell, all
2, Avon (4) 9·0
195
contracted
staph.
Circleville Logan Elm (2) 9-o 195
4, Conal WlndleS1er (11 9·0
182
Winsl6w, who as recently
5, Bellevue e-1
91
as
Friday said he didn't
6, TIPt&gt; City Tippecanoe 8·1
85
want
his ill~ss known, a) so
7. Youngs. Liberty 8· t
n
8, Nowark L~klng Valle)' 8-1
51
criticized the Browns' han•
. 9. Clyde 8·1
49
dling of his situation and
·
· ·
.
· J. Michael Jacobs/submitted photo
· 10, DoVer 8-1
45
•
Members of the River Valley varsity volleyball team pose for a fun picture after winning the program's second straight sec· complained that general
:ott.. rKelvlng 12 or more polntl: ttonal .title last Saturday against Nelsonville-York in Cheshire. The Lady Raiders - who made it to the district finals last limnager Phil Savage didn't
"',Cuyahoga f•lls Walsh Jesuit 25. 12.
year- will open district tournament play lonight when they travel to Athens High School in The Plains to take on Minford check on him while he was
New Philadelphia 22. 13, Urbana 14. 14,
t;hllllcothe13.
in the second. of two district semifinals to be played this evening.
· Plene see Browns, 8:1

AP

Lady Raiders open distrid play tonight

a

DIVISION IV
1. Coldwaler (20) 9·0
· 2, SleubenviHo (3) 9-0

236
202

3, New Lexington 9.0
153
4 , Clarttsvtlte CUnton-Massie 9-o 131 .
103
5, Genoa Area 9-0
8, Kettering Alter(!) 7-2
93
7. Younge. Mooney 7-2
75

8, Fos1Ma 8·1

65

9, Marlort Pleasant 8-1

58
50

10, 6100kvllle 9·0

Both Rio. Grande CC teams
finish lOth at Fall Classic
· BY MARK WILLIAMS
SPECIAL TO THE SENTINEL

WILMINGTON - It was
the strongest performance to
11, Lorain Clearvlew 44. 12, Massillon
date for both University of
~slaw 38. 13, Plain City Jonatharl Alder
"".f· 14, Martina Ferry 19. 15, Akr. SVSM Rio Grande RedStorm cross
13.
country teams on Friday at
the Wilmington College Fall
DIVISIONV
Classic. The men and
1. Youngs. Ursuline (17) -e-o , 228 ·women
finished
lOth
2, Hamler Patrick Henry 9-0
189
respectively.
The
men's
3. And. "berty·llen10" (2) 9-0 170
4, Whoele&lt;sburg (2)9.()
138 event consisted of 23 teams
5. Kl"land 9-0
126 while the women totaled 24.
Maria Sleln MilriOn Lei. (3) 8·1 128
The RedStorm men posted
7, Anna 8-1
89
227
points and missed ninth
: S, Cln. Hils 9-o
75
· 9, Bucyrus Wyntord 9.0
69
by only two points, which
•to, Archbold 8·1 .
34
went to Wheeling Jesuit
.
..othtr8 twcetvlng12 or more polnt1: (225).
11. For11mou1h W. 33. 12. W. Llber!y·
Sophomore
Matthew
~ltm 22.
Spencer, as he has done for
hts. entire Cl!feer, paced the
•
DIVISION VI
men's team, finishing 16th
• 1, Hopewei~Lo!Jdon (1 D) 9-0
220
·overall, covering the SK
, 2, Mochanlclburg (4) 9.0
180
• 3, MogadOre (I) 9.()
1n course in 26:01.23 . .
Freshman Brandon Crislip
171
• 4, Norwollc St. Paul (8) 9-0
. 5, Ada (I) 9.o
140 was the second Rio runner
8, Hannibal Ahler (2) 9-0
126
• 7, Malvern 9-0
109 to eross the finish line, in
: 6, McDonald 9.0
101 45th position with a time of
9, Carey 6·1
43
26:54.08. Fellow fre shman
tO, Sidney Lehman 7-1
23
Bryce Wilson , who has batOthon rocolvlng 12 or.....,. polnlo: . tied Crislip for the ·No. 2
11. DelphOs St.John'o12.
spot all season, was close
behind his classmate in 49th
spot with a time of 27:03.54.
Freshman Chad McCarty
CoNrACI'US
was next in 64th place ; post• 1·740-446·2342 ext. 33
ing a time of 27:29.98 .
. Other men's results: freshFox - t-740 448 3008
man Justin Hartley was
E-moll- sportoOrnydallyunlinel.com ' 13rd, (27:53.08); freshman
lllla!II.JIIII
· Andrew Edmunds was 76th ,
Bry~~nW.Itera,SportaWrtter
(27:55.94); and Lucas
1740) -Me-2342, oxt. 33
Murphy
was
IDOth,
bwaltorsOmydallylnburie.com
. (28:22.68).
'
Larry 'Cruni, Sports Writer·
There were 238 runners in
1740)+4e-2342.oxt.33
·
the men's race. David
":"'mOmydaltyreglsler.oorn
· Mutuse of Lindsey Wilson

. Othtri ,...lvtng 12 or more pointe:

..

.....

.DINING ROOM

Smile.! Naw yoo can own the p1dure of that unforgettatie
moment captured in the~· Pholos become bmeles&amp;
wheo fram&amp;cl or printed"" a mLJ9 or mouse ~d.

nest eggs and home values the Congress at this juncture
seems appropriate;' Bemanke
shrivel.
One-third of Americans told the House Budge~
are_ worried . about losing Committee. It marked the first
their jobs, half fret they will time Bernanke endorsed the
be unable to keep up with need for another round of
mortgage and credit card economic stimulus.
The Fed chief suggested
payments, and seven in 10
are anxious that their stocks that Congress design the
and retirement investments package to limit the longer~
are losing value, according term affects on the govern ~
to an Associated Press- . ment's budget deficit. which
Yahoo News poll of likely hit a record in the recently
ended budget year and i~
voters released Monday.
Sen. Charles Schumer. D- undoubtedly headed higher.
Bernanke said the package .
N.Y., a member of the
Democratic leadership, pre- also should include provi;
dieted Congress would sions "to hell? improv~
return in Noxember. "We · access to cred1t by con•
couldn't have gotten a better sumers', home buyers, busi;
supporter for ~ stimulus nesses and other oorrowers.':
He also left the door opel\
package
than
Ben
Bernanke," Schumer said. to further interest ·rate
"His support will change reductions by die Federal
:
the stimulils from a possi- Reserve Itself.
· Fed policymakers meet
bility to a reality.:'
Pelosi said, "I call on next on Oct. 28-29, and
President Bush and con- many economists believe
gressional Republicans to they will again lower theit
once agai,n hee~ Chaim:tan key mte - now at 1.50 per'
Bernanke s adv1ce and as cent - to bolster the eco!ID'
they did il1 January; work my. Just a few weeks ago, the
with Democrats in Congress Fed and the world's othet '
·to enact a targetei;l, -timely&gt; major central banks joined
and fiscally r~:;s,ponsible forces ,to mrchet dow.n J:lltes,
economi~ recov~Q: --~_Ild job the first coordinated action of
!creation packagf;1 ·_._.•_,,\,-•, ., that kind in the Fed's history.
However, in an interview · There were some signs
with The A$sociated Press that credit problems were
last Friday, Pelosi had said . improving a bit. Bank-toCongress is · unlikely to bank lending rates fell for a
approve a tax rebate before sixth straight day on
Bush leaves office , and she Monday. Demand for
signaled that pro~pects were Treasury bills, regarded as
dim that Democrats wo.uld the world's safest invest~
be able to strike a deal with ment. lessened somewhat
. the president on an econom- but remained relatively high
ic aid package during a in a sig11 that there was still
much ·fear in the markets. .
post-election session.
Last week, the Treasury
· In February, Congress
enacted a $168 billion stim- Department announced .it
ulus package that included would inject up to $250 bil.tax rebates for people and lion in U.S. banks in return
tax breaks · for businesses . for partial ownership. So far
The rebate checks did help this year, 15· banks have
to lift economic growth in failed, including the largest
the spring. After that, U.S. bank failure in history,
though , consumers cut back compared with three last
sharply and businesses have year. And major Wall Street
retrenched in turn.
mvestment firms have been
"With the economy likely swallowed by other compato be weak for several quar- nies, have filed bankruptcy or
ters, and with some risk of a have converted themselves
protracted slowdown, consid- into commercial banks to
eration of a fiscal package by weather the financial storm.

RedStorin ·men -rebound with win over H~ughton

The RedStorm added a
second goal in the 42nd
minute from t' sophomore
(4) Ook Hll,wrsus (1) Adena, 6p.m..
RIO GRANj)E _ · The defender Ste ven O'Hara
(3) RIYer Valley vorsus (2) Minford al
Alhenl HS, 30 minutes after Match '
University of Rio Grand·e beat Houghton goalkeeper
,
Volloybtll
RedStorm , men 's soccer ·Eric Lefebvre to put the
Grace CMstian al ovcs. 6·p.m.
team.the top ranked team in RedStorm 2-0. Junior midlburtde- ttt 23
the NAIA Top 25 mting, at fielder Jason Massie was
D4 Volloylloll - Dlt1rlct SOmla
least
until Tuesday when the credited with the first of two
(5) Pika Eastern vs. (1) For!Bmoolh Clay
al WeHIIDn, 6 p.m.
.
new poll is released, assists.
(3) Pika WeS1ern vs. (2) Easlern a1
Houghton (8-6-1, 5-3-1
bounced back from a tough
Vfellston, 30 minutes arter Match 1
loss to Roberts Wesleyan on AMC) would cut the deficit
Frklly Oc:Ww 21
Friday with a well-pla~ed 3- in half before the first half
Footblll
2. VIctory over vtslttng , came to a close as Justin
Marietta al Oallia Academy, 7:30p.m.
·Belpre at Meigs, 7:30 p.m.
.
Hou~hton
on Saiurday Farnsworth found the back
flocf( Hill at River Valley, 7:30 p.m.
evemng
at
Evan
Davis Field.. of the net in 43rd minute.
South Gallla at Sym"'es Valley, 7:30
p.m.
.
Rio Grande (13-1- 1, 7-1- 1 He put the ball past Rio's
Wahama at Athens, 7:30 p.m.
AMC) was the aggressor senior goalkeeper Nate
from the outset, but didn't Walzer as he was caught up
'*'mFootblll
OetQbtr 25
break through the scoring in a mass of players al' the
Southern at Eutern, 7:30p.m.
column unrilthe 35th minute ball slid by him.
CrauCountry
Divisions 11-111 Regional meets at
when sophomore forward
Mahoney would give the
Pickertngton. 10 a.m.
Ederson Lopes and fresh- RedStorm a 3-1 advantage
man Matt Mahoney for the with a goal in the 54th
first goal of the game. which minute. Mahoney 's ulti.~ WEEKLY 2008
put Rio Grande up 1-0. mately wound up the gameHIGH SCHOOL Lopes nailed his 17th goal of winner. .
. FOOTBALL PolL the season with Mahoney Houghton would keep the
pressure with an incredible
COLUMBUS (AP) - How a s1a1e collecting the assist.
D dg C'!c1pber Z1
D3 .......II - Dletrlct Mmla

electrical Charges.

$1ructures.

•

'

LocAL SCHEDULE

The pulses lrigg« ·

. system

Bl

.

'

(KY) College
was ·
the
men 's individual champion. His
time
was
24:46.66.
Denison University won
the men's event with a score
of 59 points. Centre (KY)
College (64), University of
Cumber! ands ( 126) , Rose
Hulman ( 138) ·and Lindsey
Wilson ( 175) rounded out
the top five . .
Other American Mideast
Conference sc hools were:
Mount Vernon Nazarene
(12th,
297),
Ohio
Dominican (18th, 525) and
Wilberforce (22nd, 681).
The RedStorm women are
getting healthy and the
results are showin~ with a
lOth place fimsh . The
women garnered 292 points.
Junior Stacey Arnett was
again the top runner for Rio
Grande, finishing 23rd overall , covering the 5K course
in
20:06 .82. Freshman
Kayla Renner crossed the .
finish line in 33rd place with
a time of 20:37.35.
Sophomore
:rracey
Newcomer was next ~o .
finishing 64th with a time of
21 :20.32 .
.
Other RedStorm women
results: sophomore Brooke
was
!lOth
Wampler
(22:5 1·.88);
freshman
Danielle Stockham was
!15th (22:58.30) and sophomore Hillary Haines was
152nd (24:13.7 1).

Please see Rio, B:Z

P~iladelphia Phillies manager Charlie Manuel chats with Jimmy Rollins, left,
ling practice at Tropicana Field in St. Petersburg, Fla., on Monday. The Philadelphia PhillliA~
will meet the Tampa Bay Rays in Game 1 of the World Series on Wednesday.

Who would've thunk it? Tampa
Bay-Philadelphia in World Series
Bv RONALD BLUM
AP BASEBALL WRITER

Worst in baseball to World
Series winner.
The Tampa Bay Rays can
become the first team in the
majors to complete the ultimate
fast
turnaround .
Doormats .no more, they'll
.have the swagger of a pennant-winner when they play
the Philadelphia Phillies
starting Wednesday night.
"By the time we got to the
I

point where we had won our
league . our guys knew we
had a good team." said
Atlanta Braves president
John Schuerholz. remembering back to ·when his team
fell just shan of a worst-towinner transformation, losing Game 7 to Minnesota ! 0 in 10 innings back in 199L
It will be a World Series of
contrasts that opens at
Tropicana Field: Nonh vs.
. South . Old vs. New. Rest vs.
rust. Beloved vs. belittled .

Well , both have disparaged over the years.
The frustrated Phillies
have beeh around since
1883 but the losingest team
in the history of U.S. major
l~ag ues has had just one tltle
to ce lebrate, back ill 1980.
The Rays'? The franchise
didn 't start play until 1998 ,
didn 't have a winning season until this year and didn't
even shed the Devil from its

Please see Series, B:Z

�•

Page B2 • The Daily Sentinel

Tllesday, October 21, 2008

Tuesday, October 21, 2008

www.mydailyscntincl.com

f!Crtbune - Sentinel - l\e

Tiger Woods back at Torrey&amp;es as caddie
SAN DIEGO (API Four month&gt; aft~r h" eptc
U S Open vi&lt;:tory. Ttger
Wood, r~turn~d to Torrey
Pmes on Monda1 wnhout
hmp.
·
He dtdn't have golf dub,.
etther
Hoppmg from .1 ~.trl.
Wood ' "alked up to 59yem-old John Abd. dolled
his cap an&lt;l extended ht&gt;
tight hand ··Hey. I heat
you're lookmg for a caddte
I'm Ttger Wood, - pleased
to meer you ··
Out ol .tctton smce be.1tmg
Rocco Me,l t.ne m ,, 19-hole
playolt ''" h" I.Jrh e.rreer
maJor. Wood, c.une back to
Torrey Pme' to dehvcr on lm
en&lt;l of the ·-rec Off wnh
Ttget· onlme 'weep,l.tkes
spmN·He&lt;l by Blllck

a

SilO\\ 111!.! no ~1gns ot hts

~easo11 -en'Jmg kn'ee ~ :-.urgu}

a week .ttret the U.S Open.
WoLld~ \\Ole a e.recn c~lJdte's
btb llhcnbc&lt;l - 111th Abel\
name ,~, he gtnJcd htm
around the hm:k nme ol the
South Cou''"· \\hcte he has
won :,Jx

tim~~ 111

the Butck

lnvttattonal .md once

Ill

a

U.S Open he called ht&gt; best ftom two medta outlets The Associated Press .md the
ever
rPiaymg wtth torn ltga- S.m Diego Umon-Tnbune ments m h" left knee .md a 1\Cre allowed ro watch CU1 tlw
double 'Ires' fradure m hts IOth and 18th hole'
leg, Woods made a 12-foot
Woods dro' e the can He
btrdte on rhe final hole ro handed clubs ro Abel. then
force an 18-hole playoff, wtped them oft wnh a towel
made a 4-foot budie on the and put them back m the bag.
18th m the playoff to stay He squatted to lme up putts
altve and finally won w1th a .md tended the p111 He
w,IJned how f,,,t the gteen'
pat
\\ood' checked mto the were. then chuckled a~ Abel
Lodge at Torrey Pines on five-putted the lOth for a
Sundav mght and noticed the quadrupJecbogey 8
pin m' the- same spot 11 was
"lr was fun." satd Woods
who once caddted tor former
dunng rhe Monday playoff
· I opened the cunams and Stanford teammate Jerry
sa\\ rhe 18th green," Woods Chang "Thts was totally
satd ·' J was ltke, ·You know cool. I've cadd1ed before
what&gt; That IS pretty cool · A many ltmes . For me to be out
ddfcrent .ttmosphcrc. You here and to be able to do 11
can .tctually see They don't again, tt's always fun John's
ha vc the gt and stands m the a good guy It was a fun day
way I saw where the pm v.as lor me"
and was thmkmg , 'You
Abel, from West Berhn ,
know v.har! I rememberthat NJ, ~a td hts round went betputt"
ter than expected
Woods was 111 character
"I wasn ' t as nervous alter
It om rhe mmute he drove up maybe the thtrd or foutth
to the lOth tee. on cue from a hole ." he satd "Nerves come
'tdeo crew thai re~ordcd mto tt, I don't care who you
every one of Abel's shots. are, and these greens arc
Reponet-s and pl10tographets unbehevable Ttget was

teams that won World
Senes tttles m 1992 and
1993, Tampa Bay's cxecufrom Page 81
ttve vtce prestdent fo r baseball operations ts 3 1 yemold
Andrew Fnedman, a
ntckn,tme unlll ,lltet comfo
rmer
Beat Stearns anapletmg pia} 111 20fl7
lyst.
People "ere h.tppy when
"Nobody expects us to
we got our 71 st wm People
wm.
Everybody expected us
v.ete exuted when ~&gt;e got
to
lose
90 games thts yem ,'
out 8 I&gt;I wm saymg you
satd 23-year-ol~ David
guys h&lt;~ve cleated the 500
~nee,
who ~or hts profesmark We sttll kept go mg,"
stonal
sa~e 111 the pennant
satd Rays pucher Matt
chncher. We lost seven 111 a
Garza, the AL cham pt row gomg toto the All-Star
onslltp senes MV P "We ve
break . People thought that
proved doubters wrong th1s
was tl. The Rays are gomg
entue ttme "
to slowly die out But that's
Pluladelphm ts tamous for
not the case."
the Ltberty Bell chee'e'Phtladelphta
bounced
teaks and boo tn g Santa
back in September to overClaus T.tmpa/St Pete ts
cotne the Mets for the secknown for the Gaspanlla
ond straight season. For so
Festtval and st tp clubs
many years, the headhnes
Unttl now. Its most noted
read "Phi!Jies Phold ." , Not
baseball le,tm wa' the
thts
year, at least not yet..
Yankees . who IMve held
"Phtladelphtans, they've
spn11g tJaiiHng ~hc1e s1 nce
been
starv111g for a wmner,"
1996
Manuel satd "Let me put it
But baseb,tll 's glamourhke thts, we 're due We-Ire
pusses have all gone home,
Why not get tt?"
here.
with the Yankees ,md Mets tedms.
There's some lustory
fatlmg to make rhe postseaEven the general manbetween
the ctltes - JUSt
son. and the Cubs. Dodgers agers are a contrast.
and detcndmg champiOn
While the Philhes' GM IS not m baseball.
The Buccaneers won the
Red Sox all gcttmg bounced 7 1-year-old Pat Gtlltck.
out of the playoffs.
who put together Toronkl 2003 Super Bow l over

·Series

Tampa Bay was a 200- 1
shot rn wtn the Senes when
bettmg opened. ahead of
on Iy' Kansas C!ly and
W,tshmgton (both 250-1 ).
Phtladelpbta was 18- 1.
"They'te tesiltent. I thmk
both clubs are sinular m that
way," Phd lies manager
Charhe Manuel
sa td
"We· re not gomg ro qutt · I
thmk thts year they defimtely learned that. They're
young and they ' re flymg on
a high. We're kmd of settled."
After gomg from 66-96
last year to 97-65 this season, Tampa Bay has a-bit of
an aura. Whtle the Phtlhes
opened the season with the
13th-highest payroll in the
major leagues at $98 mtl lion whtle the Rays were
29th at $44 mtlhon, ahead
of only Florida
Philadelphta (42,254) had
the fourth-highest attendance average m the NL,
Tampa Bay (22,370) was
12th among the 14 AL

Browns
from Page Bl
111 the hosptt.tl or w"h htm
wel l v.hcn he tettuned
In .llkilllon. 'Wlllslow s,uJ
the Brul\ns tte,,tl um " ltkc a
ptece ot medt" and that he
co n s 1dt1t~d ._\'·.k.lllg Sdvag~ to
trade htm
C~ennel satd he was dtsappomted by Wtnslow's
deC ISIOll tO make hiS VIeWS
public
"Sometimes the emollons
o[ the game and the emotions of your personal sttuation kind of overflow,"
Crennel satd. ''He probably
said some things that he
dtdn 't need to talk about to
the media He should come
to the otgamzation and talk
to the orgamzat ion first and
try to reach some kind of
agreement ·
Ctennel h,ts spoken wllh
Wmslow abou t hts comment\ The coach plans to
consult 1\llh S,l\ age and
others before dcc tdtng
whether to puntsh the 25yeat-old Wmslo\1. who sat
out the Oct I] upset wt n
O\et the New York Gtants
and c.tught on I} two p.tsses
for 17 y,uds 111 Sund.ty's
loss &lt;~t Wd,hm~ t un
"We II nwe~ligate 1t and
dctetmme II an} thmg needs
to be done. ' Ctenncl s.lld
"M) pul tcy ''to keep famt ly bw.mess 111 the lamtly So
wiHtever I do I do ami I' m
not gomg to bro.ldc.l;t 1t ··
Cre nne I was asked 1t
Winslo w showed
any
remorse about hts acuons
"I didn't gtve htm an
opp01 tuntty to apolog tze,"
Crennel sa1d.
Savage dtd not tmmedt,ately
. re1um an e-mml seekmg comment
Winslow decltned a
Chance 10 spe,lk With
reportets on Mnnd.ty He
walked 111t0 1he Browns'
locker rnom, sIt pped on a
hoode&lt;l sweat shtrt and left
wtthoul comment
Wmslow's assertton th.lt
lhe Browns wanted to keep

AP photo

Cleveland Browns tight end Kellen Wtnslow runs after a pass
receptton agatnst-the San Francisco 49ers in an NFL football
game 1n Cleveland. Browns coach Romeo · Crennel conftrmed that W1nslow was hospitalized with a staph tnfectton
and that the Pro Bowler might be disctplined for comments
made followtng a Sunday loss to ine Washington Redskins
hts tllness undtsclosed con- tnfection s and how to prentcts v.ith the team's stance vent them
that 11 was abidmg by the
"No one has come to me
player's preference to con- and s,ud he felt hke there
ceal hiS med tcal pnvacy On wa~ a problem or tell hke
was we needed to do more or we
Fnday. W111slow
adamant about kccpmg hts were n' t do mg enough.''
tl lness a secret. sa} mg Crennel satd, "and t! seems
"because I play p10fesstonal hke maybe someone would
football and can catch a have come and at least
football, It doesn't mean I whtspered in my ear that we
should let people into my have an tSsue or something
personal busmess ."
like that. No one has done
, But Winslow dtd JUSt that that."
after Sunday's loss, saymg
Cleveland's staph .cases
the Browns still have a ha;e little m common,
problem w1th staph "and we Crennel said, wh tch IS why
have to fix tt."
a's so difficult to pinpoint
Crennel said the club has the tr ongm
not had a recurrence of
"There are dtfferent types
staph cases. and that the of staph. all the snuallons
Browns ha ve been proacttve have been dtfferent," he
111 combatmg the mfect1on
satd "Some of them have
by havmg thetr tramtng been pre-op. some have
facti tty regularly cleaned been post-op , some of them
,mel mspected by a company have been after the guy's
speculiiZl ng tn tnfecttous left the hospttal and gone
control Pl.tyers have been home We don 'r know
~ducated on the risks of whetc they are ptckmg tt up

•

The Daily Sentinel • Page 83

www.mydallysentinel.com

CLASSIFIED

klltng me th at thl') 're actu-

,.llv ; ket slower than what
t h~y pl.l\ed ftll th~ Open

· It ",,, fusr ,u,·h ,, hoot ro
pl.t) "llh h11n .. i.lld Abel.
\\ho
l)(),

IC~ul.trh

'hooh m lhc

II~ shtmed me thmgs I

nC\ cr e'en thuughl abOut
Lt kc 11hen he"·"'- nllo a
s.tnd It "P· lw feeb "ith hts
feet It "a' I'"' ,,. neat. tt
re.1lh \\ . l'.. ••
Sei •ously. tmag.me handtng l Otll f.ltrW.t) wood to
Ttgcr \\ n,lds .li ter a shot
fh.tt \ the funny thmg,"
Abcl lsatd 'I'm JUSt so used
to taktng my dub and puttmg
11 m the hag. and he keeps
holcltng hts hand our. It 's
ltke. 'OK · You don'l want
to. What else can you say 0
You JUSt don't tlunk about
thmgs ltke that ,.
Th~ pm on 18 v.as moved
Monday to whete 11 was durmg the final10und of regulanon .11 the U S Open It onr nghr - when Woods
t.tpped that 12-toor btrdte
putt that bumped along
toward the hole and swtrled
mto the h,tck comer of the
cup wtthnut anmch to spare.

Gallia
County

OH
E-mail
classifled@mydailytnbune com

tt.u

~rtbune

Sentinel

~egt~ter

ca~r;:.::;... (740) 446-2342 (740) 992-2156 (304) 675-1333

AP Phol!l
Pttlsburgh Stealers running back Mewelde Moore (21) SCOJ'e!l

on a 13,yard run tn the second half of an NFL football game
agatnst lhe Ctnctnnatt Bengals on Sunday tn Cincinnati.
:

....,.--~-------O::;r:..;F,;,;;ax To

league
Parker ts one of the NFL)
true finds of the last decade,
a former Universtty of North
Carolina backup who rushed
for 4,012 yards from 2005;
07. Hamson isn't fl!1'
behmd. undrafted out 01
Kent State, he led thll
Steelers with eight sacks an~
6 112 forced fumbles last
season, made the Pro Bo\,\(1
and was the team MVP..
Parker was the MVP in
2006.
.
Hamson and Parker alone
would have represented II
productive draft for any
NFL team m 2004, yet each
was ignored by every NFL
team that April
.
Moore played for the
Vikings from 2004-07, struim g eight games in 2005 but
none after that. He was lc:t
go after gaimng 113 yards
on only 20 cames in 12
games last season, and
signed with the Steelers I(!
March to compete for their
third-down back 's job.
:
Tomlin was the Viking~'
defensive coordinator i(l
2006 and felt Moore would
be a good ftt.
"It's awesome to come
here. be the new guy, step in,
study hard, work hard an!l
see your work paying off,"
Moore said. "I'm JUSt wor&amp;ing hard to get respect.''
Still,
Moore
wasn't
expected to see any regular
duty, not with Parker anil
first-round
draft
pick
Rashard Mendenhall in
front of him Mendenhall,
one of the nahan's top cotlege backs at Mlinois laS:
season, was added as a
power back to complement
Parker
When Parker injured a
Sept.
21
and
knee
Mendenhall was lost for the
season with a shoulder
mjury durmg hts first career
start a week later, the ·
Steelers were down to
Moore - and, well, no one
else.
They were so thm at running liack before going to
Jacksonville on Oct. 5, quarterback Ben Roethlisberger
was jokingly asked how
many bootlegs he could run .
But Moore , who had gone
nearly thre~ years without a
start , went out and ran for 99
yards, nearl7 equaling hts
2007 season s output.
P1ttsburgh 's roster is prQOf
that •creative , resourceful
teams can be more successful than those with everopen checkbooks :
The Steelers (5- I) lead the
AFC North by two games
and have won three m a row
going mto Sunday's home
game agamst the Super
Bowl champton New York
Gtants (5-1), yet nearly onethird of their regulars could
have signed anywhere in the
league.

(134) rounded out the top .
five . " '
Two other AMC schools
competed on the women's
fromPageBl
stde ,
Mount
Vernon
Nazarene
was
17th
with
412
There were 210 runners m
the women's race. Katie points and Ohio Dominican
Navarre of Denison was the was 18th with 451 points.
women's mdividual wmner • Rio Grande will get the
week off from competition
with a ttme of 18:23.14. .
return to the course on
and
John Carroll University
31 wtth their secOctober
was the women's team
champton with 71 points. ond home meet of the sea:
Wittenberg (85), Wheeling son, the Red &amp; White
Jesutt ( 109), Wilmington Invitational. The meet wilt
College ( 132) and Demson start at 4 p.m.

,

'

Or Fax To

446-3008

'

;

Wgrd Ads

Moore you can do - RB
fits perfectly in Pittsburgh

Rio

Crennel
dtsmissed
Wm slow's ·'ptece of meat"
comment and contention
that he felt unwanted as
fru stration.
"In the emotton of the
moment somettmes thmgs
get ''"d that are not exactly
nght and not exactly accu rate and I rhmk you have to
t.1ke 11 with a gram of salt,"
he satd "That doesn 'l mean
he doesn't f~el that way."

Websites:
www.mydallytribune com .
www.mydatlysenftnel com
www myda tlyregtster.co m

p

.· ~ Place

PITTSBURGH (AP) - In
Oakland after defe,llmg the
Eag les 27-10 m the NFC the NFL, they' te known as
ch.lmptunshtp
The UFAs - unrestncted free
lt ghtnmg defeated Calgary agents Players that other
to wt n the Stanley Cup m teams dtdn 't want, dtdn't
2004 aftet beatmg the need, d1dn 't stgn or d1dn't
Fljers 2 I 111 Game 7 of the care about.
In Ptttsburgh, UFAs have
conler~nce finals
Phdadelphta is just 1-4 in a way of beconung MVPs.
The Steelers tradtltonally
the Wo 11d Series, beatmg
pay megadollars for
don't
the Kansas Ctty Royals tn
they 're never guarplayers;
1980, bul losmg to the
Boston Red Sox (1915), anteed any regu Jar more
New York Yankees (1950), than $36 million, a relative
Baltimore OttOies (1983) pittance these days. Yet t)ley
· and Toronto. Blue Jays won a Super Bowl in 2006
and have averaged 10-pius
(1993 )
victories since 2001.
B d 011 h 1•
They've stayed compc;tiase
t e ast two
years. the stx-day layoff ti ve - three seasons of 11 or
~tween thetr ftve-game more wins and three 'AFC
VIctory ov~r the Dodge~s tttle game appearances durand the Senes opener w~m t mg that span - by drafting
well, keeping the right
help
.
Followmg etght ~ays off, starters for salary capt.he Colorado Rocktes were fnetfdly 'dollars apd digging
swept by Boston last year up players who are overDetrOit had a SIX-day rest looked or unwanted elsetn 2006 , then JQst to the where.
Players !tke Mewelde
Cardmals m SIX games.
.
"It's debated, obvmusly , Moore
the
latest
In
a
lru\.g
Moore,
every year," Manuel said
··so much of •t depends on hoe of where-'did-he-com~:­
from finds l:ly dtrector of
the 25 guy s - If they ' re football operations Kevin
beat up and they need the Colbert, ftHed in for mjUJCd
test, ot tf they' te still Pro .)3owl running back
go mg on adrehahne."
Willie PariCer by gaining
120 _yards. catching ftve
NSses and scoring three
01 where II comes irom. If touchdowns during a 38-18
we knew that, we could pm- rout of the winless Bengals
pmnt 11 and be able to on Sunday
address tt "
"He ',s become the locker
It' s not known where room favonte ," coach Mike
Wtnslow go t staph thi s Tomltn satd of Moore , who
ttme. But despttc hts conru shed for 219 yards m
cerns ol a wtdesptead prob- has
hts last two games - or
km at Cleveland 's trammg neatly
as many yards as the
complex. lmebacker Andr a 244 he had in 2006 and 2007
Da'ts said he's not ovetl}
mcd. "Tht s guy, is
concetned about gett ing comb
stc k .md th,lt the team has delivering time and time
t.lken adequate precauttons agam wllh ht s legs, with hi s
hands."
·
to ensure the player's proEven
if
,
ome
casual fans
tcct ton.
"Out equtpment guys and mtght nor ha ve known
ou t lJ,llllll\g toom guys do Moore was on the team
evet}thmg to make sure when the season began .
we're comfortable," he Much hke they once dtdn ' t
st11d ··we have our own know ·much about Parker,
rags mn ov.n towels , our hnebacket James Hamson
own cvc1yt hmg. lt 's not or left guard Darnell
Staplelon, thtee undrafted
sca1y ''
One of Cle;eland 's team players who also stgned
captatns. Davts said he with the Steelers as umewasn't
bothered
by stncted free agents but now
Wmslo\v's clatms or thetr are staners
Nose tackle Chns Hoke ,
tl llllllg.
who
has ftl(ed m for a month
"To e&lt;~c h hts own.'' Davts
satd. "Kellen\ out team- wilh Pro Bow l lineman
mate, we' ll never turn our Casey Hampton tDJured,
back on htm We ' ll defmtte- also was undrafted. So was
recetver
Nate
ly support him I00 per- w1de
Washmgton,
a
once-overcent "
Ttght
end
Darnell looked player at Divtsion II
Dmkms. the Browns' play- Tiffm who had a 50-yard TD
Ct tcptesentattve
stud catch Sund,ly.
Center Justin Hartwig was
Wtnslow's latest bout wtth
gq by Carolma after last
let
staph h&lt;1s some players conseason. but ts starti ng m
' CCI ned
"Anybody who has staph, Ptttsburgh . Ki cker Jeff Reed
you're talkmg about your was passed over by every
life.'' he s.ttd "It's bigger NFL team before stgning
thll n footb~ll tt 's btgger wtth the Steelers in
than a game. Kellen is a November 2002, but hi s
good fncnd of mme. 94.3 percent (33-of-35) the
Anyone who has a condi- last two seasons leads the
tion or tssue hke that, you
want to make sute he's protected and he's healthy I'm
glad he's health~ and I hope

we can contam

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992-2157

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KIT &amp; CARLYLE
30 00
Ofllo Valley
Publlahlng reMfYH

~girt

nt(oct
any
the or cancel
to edit,

ad at any time
Errors "ult
~
RtlfiOIIted 011 the

1 ~1~=~~

..

~:::::::~CM

krtncarlyle~eomcast

Will do House Ck!anlll1J
etc Call 304-ti75· t 870

lost &amp; Found

I

LOST 1 lg &amp; 1 sm Black
Lab
Letart
Reward
&lt;
304-89~3274
or
304-593-3702

Nalicos

OHIO VALLEY

NOTICE
PUBLISHING ' CO, ree·
ommends that yoo dO
business wl1tl people you
know, and NOT to send
money through the mad
unttl you have 1nvest1gat·
I the

=~~~~~~
PI ofuaionol s.nices
TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAl SECURITY SSI
No Fee Unless We Win!
1·888·582 3345
.lOU

FPPllll, 111

:

ra1n a loan BEWARE of
requests tor any large
advance payments of
Gas fired heating boiler 5 fees or Insurance CaU
yr old w1th all CXf!lrols lhe Offtee of Consumer
must see 740-992-2974
Afflars
toll
free
at
1·666·278-()()()3 to leam
HOlM lmprow.....m
II the mortgage broker or
lender

Is

property

net

;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;i;Pols
......;;;;;;;;;;;;;;

M1n1ature Plncher pups
CKC reg black &amp; rust
COlor
Ta1ls
docked
shots and wormed F
$300,
M
$250
740 367 0210 11 no an·
swer leave

w~w. 'f++ts

a message

hund

pups

1'1tlt.lb(
~y

Hou111 For

f'~I&lt;R.S

LD~D(

2 br 1 b lull baseme£1t
above ground pool de·
tached double garage
lenced-m back yard nice
neighborhood 1n Aac1ne
(740)992- 1424
•

Females

$450 740·256 1498

~~---::-~~
AKC Parson Russell Ter·
ners Tan/White &amp; • Trl
c~or, hghtly broken coal,
will mature 12 15 Inches
S1re &amp; Dam on prem1ses

N Dam needs 6 points to

, 0~ ~I

4~

~~

censed (This Is a public trnish AKC Champion- @ 2008 by NEA,Inc.
www.comlcs com
un!~:= :~me service an11ouncement ship, excellent quality ~~;:;;~~;;;;;;-;;,;;;;;;;-:;;;;;;:;!,
from the OhiO Valley Puppies 304-675-7071
guarantee local refer·
1 c
)
ences fumrshed ES1ab
Publish ng ompany
Pefl
Motorcydea
~shed 1975 Call 24 Hrs
CKC Maltese pups Fe· ""'==~~""'=
~----.-~~:""~
males $550 Males ssoo FREE Pupptes 1/2 JacX
99 Honda XA70R Good
740•446-oe7o, Rogers
Basement Waterproofina
740·256·1498
Russell &amp; 1/2 m1x 6 wks
Condrt1on
runs good
~~~~~.,......,.. old3046755313
Hobby/Hvnt&amp;Spclrt $500 obo 7403677251
Cur SquIrre I 0 og Ior sa le
lulintll &amp; Trade
GUN SHOW • LANCAS· :~or=7=40=·6=4=5=·4=64=7===·
•.....L __ \
or trade for a gun ~F-T~~---m-lx~ed TEA OH Nov 1 from
304 675 6132
ree-,erner
Pet Cremations
Call ii!i
~-·~·~.,...,..--- puppy,
4 112 mo old, F, 9·5 &amp; Nov 2 from 9·3
740-446-3745
Galllpolla C.reer
~
Fa1rt1eld
County
Fa1r·
740
Colltge
For sale DalmatJon Pups ( )992' 7335
grounds AAA Building
AKC reg 1Sl shots &amp;
Aula•
(Careers Close To Home) wormed
$J2S 00 ~-~~--~~ Adm $4 135 6' TBLS
Guttar Lessons tnstruc- Can Todayl740 4-46-4367
_
Grveawayl Small Gold $35 740 667·041 2
304 675 6767
03 Stratus Automattc 4

11

-.:=-'oaiOOI;;;;;;;,=--

~
~~~~~~~~~~or~w~/~B~a:ch:e~lor~D:eg:r:ee~~~~~-8~00~-2~1~4-0~4~5~2~j~~~~~~~~::~:::
-n

740·388-6655
FREE Pitt Bull m1x pup· Lab
Female
Call
1
~-d
H
tng couoollor Independent
pes
o \,WI,/
orne !"!'"~--~~~
C~llegesand Sehools 12746
304·812-0418
Mlnlture
oact1shund
CKC reg1stered , shots,
CLASSIFIED INDEX
wormed
Males &amp; FeLegal1 ........ ......... ........................:................. 100 Recreational Vehlclea ............................... 1DOO
males,
longhair
&amp;
• Announcemanta .......................................... 200 AT'V .................................... ..................... 1005
shortha1r red &amp; black/tan
Blrthdey/Annlveraery ........: ..................... 205 Bicycle•~ ..............,..... . ... ........ ...... .... 1010
'S200 304-593·3B20
Happy Adl ...... ; ............ ........................... 210 Boata/Accuaorl• ................................. 1015
!'""----~Loat &amp; Found ............................................... 215 CamperiRVa &amp; Trallen ............................. 1020
Two black/sliver schnauMemoryn'hankYou ..................................... 220 Motorcyclea .......................... ··• ............. 1025
zer, 2 1~ months old

=::::.1;:::::::::·::·::::::::::·::::::::
..:::::::::::::::::: :
Wented ........................................................ 235

gatiii)OIIseareercoHegudu

S.rvlce• ....................................................... 300
, Appliance S.rvlce ....................................... 302
Automotive ............................................... 304
Bulkllng Materlala ....................................... 308
BullnMS ...................................................... 308
Catering ...................................................... 310
Chlldi'Eidltrty CIN ....................................... ~2

Autamotlve ................................................ 2DOO
Auto RentaliLeatM ..................................... 2005
Aulot ......................................................... 2010
Claaelc/Antlquea .. ........ o\ . .......................... 2015
Commercl•ll1nduatrlal .............................. 2020
Parte &amp; Acceuorlee ..............................2025
Sportl Utility ............................................ 2030
Trucka ......................... .'~ ...................... ... 2035

31 :
• DomeatlciiJinltorlal............................... 318
Eleclrlcel ..................................................... 320
Flnancl•l.. ..................................................... 322

...::::...
Wlntto buwo ... ·""· ..................................2050
Real Eatllte Salel ...................................... 3000
C.metary Plota .......................................... 3005

g:::::~~~::::::::. ::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::

:

:~~~--~~~~~~'-~.:::::::·:.:::::

:::::::·.::::::::::::::~=

~rea; ~ups44:27~~l1 each
ery ovog

•

2
Wapak Skillets #8 &amp;
12, one wtth Indian Head
on bottom $145, Also H
&amp; R 20 Ga S1ngle Barrel
a~ Magnum , 32~ full
clean
$165
740 533 3870

________

Jet Aerahon Motors reparred new &amp; rebUilt rn
stock Call Ron
1·800 537·9528

Evans

Cylinde r $2600
OBO
256·1 652 or 256· 1233
02 Dodge 4x4 truck
crwse hit an good con
drtron
109,000 m1les,
$4500 OBO 256-903 1 or
256·1233
=::-~~:""":~~
2006 Durango 4 wheel
dnve leather, sun roof &amp;
ovo player, $10 000
256 1618

~~~~--~

93 Ford Tempo 4cyl ,
2dr , blue good work
NEW AND USED STEEL
car,
$650,
Steel Beams P1pe Rebar J.:l7,;40o;l5;;,9;,
1·;;;69;3;;,:6,.,,.,=
lor
Concrete
Angle
Channel Flat Bar Steel
Sports UHiity
farM Equipment
Grahng fo r Drarns Cnve·
~~~~~~~ ways &amp; Walkways L&amp;L 00 Suburban-Black &amp;

=

~~~ap M~=~

M~~ ~~~~ackEx~rd

145 New Holland ' MaOp:n
,:;
nure Spreader/ Like new,
0
C
heavy,
duty.
Call Sam-4 3 pm
losed S7500 740 245"5788
740·256-6864
Thurs
Sat
&amp;
Sun
T cb

59 ~~

In
mpuran.. ..................................................... 332

Lawn Service .............................................. 334
' MualciDancWOrama ................... ............. 338
Other Befvlcu ............................................. 338
Plumblng!l!loctrical ......................,.............. 340
•pro.,..alonal S.rvlcee .............................. : :
Repairs ..........,............................................

HouHI lo r 8~·(.......................... ............. .. 3025
Land (Acreage).......... .......................... 3030
Lot• ............ ........... . .. .. ................ 3035
Want to buy............................. ........ ..... .3()40
Aeol Eatato Aenlala................................... 3500
ApenmenttiTownhoueea .................... 3506
Commercial ..........................................3510

=~:.-:::·:::::~:'::::::::~::::::::~::::.::::::~::::::::::::::::!: ~=~J~u.:~t·:. ·:::::.:::.:::::::::::::::::.:::::::. ~:~~

Tlx/Accountlng ........................................ 360 Land (Acree'") ................................... 3&amp;26
TraveVEntertalnment ........ •................312 Storage .................. . .... ••• • . ... ... . .3536
• Financial .....................................................400 Wlnt to Rent ................................. ...... 3540
Fln1111cl1l Servlcea .......................................405 Manutecturecl Houiii1Sil ............................. 4000
' lneurance ................................................. 410 Lot..........................................................4005
Money to Lend ............................ .............. 415 Movere ................................ .... .......4010
' Education ............... .. ...............................1500 Rental&amp; ............................................. 4015
.BUIIne•• 6 Trade School .......... ,..,_...,,••• .. 605 S.lea ...........................................................4020
' lnllNCtlon &amp; Tralnlng ................................. 510 Supplln ................................................... 4025
, LIIIOAI ....... •...................... ! ······ ........515 Want to Buy . ...... ....... ............. ........... .4030
Peraanal ................................................... 520 R110rt Property ................................ 5000
Anlmala ............................................ ........... 800 Aeeort Property for aale ........................ 5025
Animal Suppllee ..........................................I05 Reeort Property for rent ........................... 5050
Horoeo ......................................................810 Employment..........................................8000
Llvntock.................... •... •.....................815 Accountlngfflnenclal ............................8002
Polo.............................................................820 AdmlnlotrollvWProfaaalonot ...... . ... .....6004
W1nt lo buy ...............................................625 Caahler/Cierk ....................................... ~..... eooe
Agriculture ................,..................................TOO ChUdiEiderly C•re .......,............................. eooa
1 F1rm Equipment .....................................705
Cl•rlcll ........ ........ ..... .... •....................1010 ...
I Garden a Produa. .......................................710
Conltructlon .............................................8012
Hoy, Food, Seod, arotn ............................... 715 Dr!Yaro &amp; Delivery........ ........................... 6014
, HuntinG &amp; Land ........................................... 720 Education .................................................8018
Want to buy .................................................72&amp; Elec1rlcal Plumblng ...................................6il18
MerchondiH........ ............ • ...................... 900 Emptoymonl AgenciH....................... ....6020
Antlq- .......................................................905 Entorlolnmon1 ............................................6022
Appliance...... ............................................110 Food SonriCft....................... ..... ..... .....6024
Auctlone ..... ..........................................915 Gov.rnment &amp; Federal Joba .. ... .... ... 6028
Borgoln Boaomenl ...................... ,.........120 , Help ontod- Gonfiol ............................. 6028
Colleellbteo ................................................925 t.aw Enlorcernent ...................................... 8030
comput......................................................ll30 Malntononco/Domeollc ........................... 6032
Equlpmenl1Supplloa ....................................ti3S Mon-menliSupenrlaory ..... ...... .. .... 6034
FIN Morkoto ....... ................................. ~ Mechanlce ............................................ 603e
Fuel Dll Coal/Wood/Gao ......................... MS Modlcol ....................................................... 603e
Furniture ......................................................950 Mualc•l..... ............. .............. .... ............. 8040
HObby/Hunt &amp; Spor1 ....................................955 Part· Tlm•Temporar-.e ............................ 6042
Kld'a Comer.........:................................. 980 RHtluntnto .... ..................... ......... . .... 51144
Ml&amp;Cillaneouo.......................................... 988 Saleo ........................................................... ~
W1nt to buy .................................................. t70 Tachnlcal Tradn ..................................... 6050
Yard Solo ..................................................... 17~ ToxtiiH/Factory ...................................... 6052

•

,.

4 46 7

1
nlng gears &amp; a 8 ft Br~l· Grave ''" 60 1nch
Iron
Seeder 27 HP Mov1ng
_ _
sell 367·7 129
740 245 5788

deck
must

,.,__ _"""""""""""' -""';;W;;;;o;;;;n;;;;t;;;;To=luy"'-""'•
EBY,
INTEGRITY, ~
KIEFER BUILT,
Buying tools sell or trade

wLth you when you vrslt
our commumty to get
th1s speaal diScount
Move-rn 1n Oct and get
S100 DO oH your 2BR
Apt rn Nov Currently
renlrng 1 &amp; 2 BR umts
Spac1ous floor plans,
ranch &amp; townhome style
11v1ng playground &amp;
basketball court, on-site
laundry facFIIIy, 24 hr
emergency marnle·
nance qu1et country lo·
cat1on close to major
med1cal
racthtLes
pharmacies grocery
store JUSt m1nutes
away from other major
shopp1ng 1n lhe area
Honeysuckle Hille

Apartment•
266 Colomal Onve #11 3
Bidwell Oh1o 45614
740 446-J344
Office Hours M W, F
9AM • 5PM

3 Bed 2 Bath HUD
Homes I Only $19 900 for
ltst1ngs BOO 620 4946 ex
R019
4 bed 2 bath &amp; offrce m
town
hw &amp; trle floors
updated kitchen &amp; baths,
prrvacy fence &amp; aoove
ground
pool
secunty
system much more 130
Basl1anl Dr
$129000

ll------.....1

,...,,.,...,..,.
446·2923 ...-~...,.. 1BA Apt WID hookups
6 AM 1 bath con blk 1n satellite TV 1ncl wlrent
sulated full base ut111ty close to hosp1tal Call
bldg carport
lg
lot 740·339·0362
366·6661
2 BR Apartment &amp; 2 BR
House for .sale/ram 3BR House on 5th St PI
2 bath cemral Sir 1 story Pleasant
304·812·4350

~

; .Do;;.n~~~--

Extraordinary
Prortarty·
In Gallipolis 446 2692
•Spectacular view of the
Ohio River
Pnvatl3 dnve off lincoln
Hill
Pomeroy
Ohto
woods on three Sides
(4+)acres to a hrstorrcal
home C1ma 1900, 5
bedrooms , 2 frreplaces 2
full baths 2 sta1rcases,
beautiful ong1na1 wood·

3 rooms and bath up·
::••;;;'.;;'o:;.r
stBirs
Completely fur·
mshed w1th WID No
pets Ref Aeq 441 0245
Apartment available now
Alverbend
Apts
New
Haven wv Now accept·
rng
applica.ttons
tor
HUO·subsldiZed.
one
Bedroom Apts Utilitres
mcluded Based on 30~

work, many piCture wm
dows, mostly new w1n
dows, large krtchen and
breaklaSI room, boaull·
tully landscaped w1th 1n
ground pool
1t on the
wrap around porch and
enjoy the spectacular
view of the Ohio River 2
car detached garage and
2 out burldtngs Would
make a wonderful fam1ly
home or bed &amp; breakfast

ol adJUSted
Call
304-882·312 1
available
for Sen1or and Drsabled
~ people

s

1ome..tlngl'm''Ap"ri;'o~~:o:::330:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::: g:::'dr::f~r~n;·
r-m'H
;::::::::~:..::::..·:::::::·:::::·:::::·:·:~g ------~::-:o---~~~-m--m-o-w-er ; ;Fo"'r~Sa-le'"o'"r'=:"'e•"'•;;;Off~e"'r= Pr~v~~ec~~~~~~~i~~ 1
For Sell by Owner........... ......................3020
2 Gravity wagons + run11 .-.,.......

1

Mlacillaneoua

Aecrl!ldledMemberAceredlt

w:::.~··.;-~y·,:::::::::::::::::::::::::::..::.::::::::::. ,.~g::

Solo

186 No rth Park Or call
304·675-5640
or
304 593 1204 w11\ sell on
Land Contract or Out
Rtghl Also a Wellrngton
P1ano call for appo1nt·
me~t to see them bOth

1

!

ov• n pee a
Clip this AD and take It

For
sale
or
lease
office/warehouse/storage
great locatron m GalhpO·
Irs
1800
sq
ft
$400/month Call Wayne
404·456·3802

Baeement

1n
music/guitar
740-446-0947
Please

Apar!monls/
Townflou..,

S~les

Commercial

• 6 CKC Registered Boxer
pupp1es for sale
5
Monoy To Lond
weeks old 2 Fawn &amp; 4
....~~~ii.i~-­ Bnndle 3 mali 3 female
NOTICE 8(1rrow Smart mother 8 father both on
Contact the Ohio DIVI· s1te $375 each
sion or F1nanc1al lnstitu· 740-&amp;15-4692
or
lions Office o1 Consumer 740-446-1940
Aftatrs BEFORE you reft· ..,,..,...,_____
nance your home or ob· AKC Mini Dapple Dach,.. • _ _,

~=;~~;:

Rea l Estate

1985
Ford
F 250 5 enous
1nqUifes
on y,
992 3676
4 wheel dnve
flat-bed please ca 11 740
•
truck,
mechamcally
sound, 2000 m11es on 4
yr old 302 eng1ne call
after
8prn
~
304 458 1727
;;;;;,;;;,;,;,;,;,;,;,.,,.,=
Want To Buy
~:-T~o~wnh""'o~u::'..,~~

1ncom~

~~~~~-":"'!:"
CONVENIENTLY
LO
CATED
&amp;
AFFORD

~~~~r To:~~~;e

houses tor
740 _441 _1111
1

;:::n &amp;

a:,:ll
rent Call
lor apph·

:::ano:~all!l
----

2&amp;38R and up Central
A1r W/0 hookup tenant
pays electnc EHO Elm
V1ew
Apts
c:(304
.;.;;
)Ba
;:;;;.
2~
30;..1~
7 -~-·

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

Tw,1n R1vers Tower 1s ac

Apartments/

VALLEY
HORSE/LIVE- mechaniC-carpenter lawn
cepllng applrcat1ons for
STOCK
TRAILERS, &amp; gar~en power tools
w~lhn~ ll~t ~~ HUDrt sub;
LOAD
MAX
EQUIP· can 74 ·38e·1515 or cell ~i:""""":""'"F~~ ~
s1 1ze
·
apa men
MENT
TRAILERS, 740-208--0320
Want to buy JunK Cars, 28A APT CIA (740) tor the eR1ertyldlsabtecl,
CARGO EXPRESS &amp; ~~'""!--~:-..-~ can 740·388 0884
441 -0 194
call 675·6679
HOMESTEADER
, Absolute Top Dollar { s1l
..,.,,.--------------,
CARGO/CONCESSION
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�•

Page B2 • The Daily Sentinel

Tllesday, October 21, 2008

Tuesday, October 21, 2008

www.mydailyscntincl.com

f!Crtbune - Sentinel - l\e

Tiger Woods back at Torrey&amp;es as caddie
SAN DIEGO (API Four month&gt; aft~r h" eptc
U S Open vi&lt;:tory. Ttger
Wood, r~turn~d to Torrey
Pmes on Monda1 wnhout
hmp.
·
He dtdn't have golf dub,.
etther
Hoppmg from .1 ~.trl.
Wood ' "alked up to 59yem-old John Abd. dolled
his cap an&lt;l extended ht&gt;
tight hand ··Hey. I heat
you're lookmg for a caddte
I'm Ttger Wood, - pleased
to meer you ··
Out ol .tctton smce be.1tmg
Rocco Me,l t.ne m ,, 19-hole
playolt ''" h" I.Jrh e.rreer
maJor. Wood, c.une back to
Torrey Pme' to dehvcr on lm
en&lt;l of the ·-rec Off wnh
Ttget· onlme 'weep,l.tkes
spmN·He&lt;l by Blllck

a

SilO\\ 111!.! no ~1gns ot hts

~easo11 -en'Jmg kn'ee ~ :-.urgu}

a week .ttret the U.S Open.
WoLld~ \\Ole a e.recn c~lJdte's
btb llhcnbc&lt;l - 111th Abel\
name ,~, he gtnJcd htm
around the hm:k nme ol the
South Cou''"· \\hcte he has
won :,Jx

tim~~ 111

the Butck

lnvttattonal .md once

Ill

a

U.S Open he called ht&gt; best ftom two medta outlets The Associated Press .md the
ever
rPiaymg wtth torn ltga- S.m Diego Umon-Tnbune ments m h" left knee .md a 1\Cre allowed ro watch CU1 tlw
double 'Ires' fradure m hts IOth and 18th hole'
leg, Woods made a 12-foot
Woods dro' e the can He
btrdte on rhe final hole ro handed clubs ro Abel. then
force an 18-hole playoff, wtped them oft wnh a towel
made a 4-foot budie on the and put them back m the bag.
18th m the playoff to stay He squatted to lme up putts
altve and finally won w1th a .md tended the p111 He
w,IJned how f,,,t the gteen'
pat
\\ood' checked mto the were. then chuckled a~ Abel
Lodge at Torrey Pines on five-putted the lOth for a
Sundav mght and noticed the quadrupJecbogey 8
pin m' the- same spot 11 was
"lr was fun." satd Woods
who once caddted tor former
dunng rhe Monday playoff
· I opened the cunams and Stanford teammate Jerry
sa\\ rhe 18th green," Woods Chang "Thts was totally
satd ·' J was ltke, ·You know cool. I've cadd1ed before
what&gt; That IS pretty cool · A many ltmes . For me to be out
ddfcrent .ttmosphcrc. You here and to be able to do 11
can .tctually see They don't again, tt's always fun John's
ha vc the gt and stands m the a good guy It was a fun day
way I saw where the pm v.as lor me"
and was thmkmg , 'You
Abel, from West Berhn ,
know v.har! I rememberthat NJ, ~a td hts round went betputt"
ter than expected
Woods was 111 character
"I wasn ' t as nervous alter
It om rhe mmute he drove up maybe the thtrd or foutth
to the lOth tee. on cue from a hole ." he satd "Nerves come
'tdeo crew thai re~ordcd mto tt, I don't care who you
every one of Abel's shots. are, and these greens arc
Reponet-s and pl10tographets unbehevable Ttget was

teams that won World
Senes tttles m 1992 and
1993, Tampa Bay's cxecufrom Page 81
ttve vtce prestdent fo r baseball operations ts 3 1 yemold
Andrew Fnedman, a
ntckn,tme unlll ,lltet comfo
rmer
Beat Stearns anapletmg pia} 111 20fl7
lyst.
People "ere h.tppy when
"Nobody expects us to
we got our 71 st wm People
wm.
Everybody expected us
v.ete exuted when ~&gt;e got
to
lose
90 games thts yem ,'
out 8 I&gt;I wm saymg you
satd 23-year-ol~ David
guys h&lt;~ve cleated the 500
~nee,
who ~or hts profesmark We sttll kept go mg,"
stonal
sa~e 111 the pennant
satd Rays pucher Matt
chncher. We lost seven 111 a
Garza, the AL cham pt row gomg toto the All-Star
onslltp senes MV P "We ve
break . People thought that
proved doubters wrong th1s
was tl. The Rays are gomg
entue ttme "
to slowly die out But that's
Pluladelphm ts tamous for
not the case."
the Ltberty Bell chee'e'Phtladelphta
bounced
teaks and boo tn g Santa
back in September to overClaus T.tmpa/St Pete ts
cotne the Mets for the secknown for the Gaspanlla
ond straight season. For so
Festtval and st tp clubs
many years, the headhnes
Unttl now. Its most noted
read "Phi!Jies Phold ." , Not
baseball le,tm wa' the
thts
year, at least not yet..
Yankees . who IMve held
"Phtladelphtans, they've
spn11g tJaiiHng ~hc1e s1 nce
been
starv111g for a wmner,"
1996
Manuel satd "Let me put it
But baseb,tll 's glamourhke thts, we 're due We-Ire
pusses have all gone home,
Why not get tt?"
here.
with the Yankees ,md Mets tedms.
There's some lustory
fatlmg to make rhe postseaEven the general manbetween
the ctltes - JUSt
son. and the Cubs. Dodgers agers are a contrast.
and detcndmg champiOn
While the Philhes' GM IS not m baseball.
The Buccaneers won the
Red Sox all gcttmg bounced 7 1-year-old Pat Gtlltck.
out of the playoffs.
who put together Toronkl 2003 Super Bow l over

·Series

Tampa Bay was a 200- 1
shot rn wtn the Senes when
bettmg opened. ahead of
on Iy' Kansas C!ly and
W,tshmgton (both 250-1 ).
Phtladelpbta was 18- 1.
"They'te tesiltent. I thmk
both clubs are sinular m that
way," Phd lies manager
Charhe Manuel
sa td
"We· re not gomg ro qutt · I
thmk thts year they defimtely learned that. They're
young and they ' re flymg on
a high. We're kmd of settled."
After gomg from 66-96
last year to 97-65 this season, Tampa Bay has a-bit of
an aura. Whtle the Phtlhes
opened the season with the
13th-highest payroll in the
major leagues at $98 mtl lion whtle the Rays were
29th at $44 mtlhon, ahead
of only Florida
Philadelphta (42,254) had
the fourth-highest attendance average m the NL,
Tampa Bay (22,370) was
12th among the 14 AL

Browns
from Page Bl
111 the hosptt.tl or w"h htm
wel l v.hcn he tettuned
In .llkilllon. 'Wlllslow s,uJ
the Brul\ns tte,,tl um " ltkc a
ptece ot medt" and that he
co n s 1dt1t~d ._\'·.k.lllg Sdvag~ to
trade htm
C~ennel satd he was dtsappomted by Wtnslow's
deC ISIOll tO make hiS VIeWS
public
"Sometimes the emollons
o[ the game and the emotions of your personal sttuation kind of overflow,"
Crennel satd. ''He probably
said some things that he
dtdn 't need to talk about to
the media He should come
to the otgamzation and talk
to the orgamzat ion first and
try to reach some kind of
agreement ·
Ctennel h,ts spoken wllh
Wmslow abou t hts comment\ The coach plans to
consult 1\llh S,l\ age and
others before dcc tdtng
whether to puntsh the 25yeat-old Wmslo\1. who sat
out the Oct I] upset wt n
O\et the New York Gtants
and c.tught on I} two p.tsses
for 17 y,uds 111 Sund.ty's
loss &lt;~t Wd,hm~ t un
"We II nwe~ligate 1t and
dctetmme II an} thmg needs
to be done. ' Ctenncl s.lld
"M) pul tcy ''to keep famt ly bw.mess 111 the lamtly So
wiHtever I do I do ami I' m
not gomg to bro.ldc.l;t 1t ··
Cre nne I was asked 1t
Winslo w showed
any
remorse about hts acuons
"I didn't gtve htm an
opp01 tuntty to apolog tze,"
Crennel sa1d.
Savage dtd not tmmedt,ately
. re1um an e-mml seekmg comment
Winslow decltned a
Chance 10 spe,lk With
reportets on Mnnd.ty He
walked 111t0 1he Browns'
locker rnom, sIt pped on a
hoode&lt;l sweat shtrt and left
wtthoul comment
Wmslow's assertton th.lt
lhe Browns wanted to keep

AP photo

Cleveland Browns tight end Kellen Wtnslow runs after a pass
receptton agatnst-the San Francisco 49ers in an NFL football
game 1n Cleveland. Browns coach Romeo · Crennel conftrmed that W1nslow was hospitalized with a staph tnfectton
and that the Pro Bowler might be disctplined for comments
made followtng a Sunday loss to ine Washington Redskins
hts tllness undtsclosed con- tnfection s and how to prentcts v.ith the team's stance vent them
that 11 was abidmg by the
"No one has come to me
player's preference to con- and s,ud he felt hke there
ceal hiS med tcal pnvacy On wa~ a problem or tell hke
was we needed to do more or we
Fnday. W111slow
adamant about kccpmg hts were n' t do mg enough.''
tl lness a secret. sa} mg Crennel satd, "and t! seems
"because I play p10fesstonal hke maybe someone would
football and can catch a have come and at least
football, It doesn't mean I whtspered in my ear that we
should let people into my have an tSsue or something
personal busmess ."
like that. No one has done
, But Winslow dtd JUSt that that."
after Sunday's loss, saymg
Cleveland's staph .cases
the Browns still have a ha;e little m common,
problem w1th staph "and we Crennel said, wh tch IS why
have to fix tt."
a's so difficult to pinpoint
Crennel said the club has the tr ongm
not had a recurrence of
"There are dtfferent types
staph cases. and that the of staph. all the snuallons
Browns ha ve been proacttve have been dtfferent," he
111 combatmg the mfect1on
satd "Some of them have
by havmg thetr tramtng been pre-op. some have
facti tty regularly cleaned been post-op , some of them
,mel mspected by a company have been after the guy's
speculiiZl ng tn tnfecttous left the hospttal and gone
control Pl.tyers have been home We don 'r know
~ducated on the risks of whetc they are ptckmg tt up

•

The Daily Sentinel • Page 83

www.mydallysentinel.com

CLASSIFIED

klltng me th at thl') 're actu-

,.llv ; ket slower than what
t h~y pl.l\ed ftll th~ Open

· It ",,, fusr ,u,·h ,, hoot ro
pl.t) "llh h11n .. i.lld Abel.
\\ho
l)(),

IC~ul.trh

'hooh m lhc

II~ shtmed me thmgs I

nC\ cr e'en thuughl abOut
Lt kc 11hen he"·"'- nllo a
s.tnd It "P· lw feeb "ith hts
feet It "a' I'"' ,,. neat. tt
re.1lh \\ . l'.. ••
Sei •ously. tmag.me handtng l Otll f.ltrW.t) wood to
Ttgcr \\ n,lds .li ter a shot
fh.tt \ the funny thmg,"
Abcl lsatd 'I'm JUSt so used
to taktng my dub and puttmg
11 m the hag. and he keeps
holcltng hts hand our. It 's
ltke. 'OK · You don'l want
to. What else can you say 0
You JUSt don't tlunk about
thmgs ltke that ,.
Th~ pm on 18 v.as moved
Monday to whete 11 was durmg the final10und of regulanon .11 the U S Open It onr nghr - when Woods
t.tpped that 12-toor btrdte
putt that bumped along
toward the hole and swtrled
mto the h,tck comer of the
cup wtthnut anmch to spare.

Gallia
County

OH
E-mail
classifled@mydailytnbune com

tt.u

~rtbune

Sentinel

~egt~ter

ca~r;:.::;... (740) 446-2342 (740) 992-2156 (304) 675-1333

AP Phol!l
Pttlsburgh Stealers running back Mewelde Moore (21) SCOJ'e!l

on a 13,yard run tn the second half of an NFL football game
agatnst lhe Ctnctnnatt Bengals on Sunday tn Cincinnati.
:

....,.--~-------O::;r:..;F,;,;;ax To

league
Parker ts one of the NFL)
true finds of the last decade,
a former Universtty of North
Carolina backup who rushed
for 4,012 yards from 2005;
07. Hamson isn't fl!1'
behmd. undrafted out 01
Kent State, he led thll
Steelers with eight sacks an~
6 112 forced fumbles last
season, made the Pro Bo\,\(1
and was the team MVP..
Parker was the MVP in
2006.
.
Hamson and Parker alone
would have represented II
productive draft for any
NFL team m 2004, yet each
was ignored by every NFL
team that April
.
Moore played for the
Vikings from 2004-07, struim g eight games in 2005 but
none after that. He was lc:t
go after gaimng 113 yards
on only 20 cames in 12
games last season, and
signed with the Steelers I(!
March to compete for their
third-down back 's job.
:
Tomlin was the Viking~'
defensive coordinator i(l
2006 and felt Moore would
be a good ftt.
"It's awesome to come
here. be the new guy, step in,
study hard, work hard an!l
see your work paying off,"
Moore said. "I'm JUSt wor&amp;ing hard to get respect.''
Still,
Moore
wasn't
expected to see any regular
duty, not with Parker anil
first-round
draft
pick
Rashard Mendenhall in
front of him Mendenhall,
one of the nahan's top cotlege backs at Mlinois laS:
season, was added as a
power back to complement
Parker
When Parker injured a
Sept.
21
and
knee
Mendenhall was lost for the
season with a shoulder
mjury durmg hts first career
start a week later, the ·
Steelers were down to
Moore - and, well, no one
else.
They were so thm at running liack before going to
Jacksonville on Oct. 5, quarterback Ben Roethlisberger
was jokingly asked how
many bootlegs he could run .
But Moore , who had gone
nearly thre~ years without a
start , went out and ran for 99
yards, nearl7 equaling hts
2007 season s output.
P1ttsburgh 's roster is prQOf
that •creative , resourceful
teams can be more successful than those with everopen checkbooks :
The Steelers (5- I) lead the
AFC North by two games
and have won three m a row
going mto Sunday's home
game agamst the Super
Bowl champton New York
Gtants (5-1), yet nearly onethird of their regulars could
have signed anywhere in the
league.

(134) rounded out the top .
five . " '
Two other AMC schools
competed on the women's
fromPageBl
stde ,
Mount
Vernon
Nazarene
was
17th
with
412
There were 210 runners m
the women's race. Katie points and Ohio Dominican
Navarre of Denison was the was 18th with 451 points.
women's mdividual wmner • Rio Grande will get the
week off from competition
with a ttme of 18:23.14. .
return to the course on
and
John Carroll University
31 wtth their secOctober
was the women's team
champton with 71 points. ond home meet of the sea:
Wittenberg (85), Wheeling son, the Red &amp; White
Jesutt ( 109), Wilmington Invitational. The meet wilt
College ( 132) and Demson start at 4 p.m.

,

'

Or Fax To

446-3008

'

;

Wgrd Ads

Moore you can do - RB
fits perfectly in Pittsburgh

Rio

Crennel
dtsmissed
Wm slow's ·'ptece of meat"
comment and contention
that he felt unwanted as
fru stration.
"In the emotton of the
moment somettmes thmgs
get ''"d that are not exactly
nght and not exactly accu rate and I rhmk you have to
t.1ke 11 with a gram of salt,"
he satd "That doesn 'l mean
he doesn't f~el that way."

Websites:
www.mydallytribune com .
www.mydatlysenftnel com
www myda tlyregtster.co m

p

.· ~ Place

PITTSBURGH (AP) - In
Oakland after defe,llmg the
Eag les 27-10 m the NFC the NFL, they' te known as
ch.lmptunshtp
The UFAs - unrestncted free
lt ghtnmg defeated Calgary agents Players that other
to wt n the Stanley Cup m teams dtdn 't want, dtdn't
2004 aftet beatmg the need, d1dn 't stgn or d1dn't
Fljers 2 I 111 Game 7 of the care about.
In Ptttsburgh, UFAs have
conler~nce finals
Phdadelphta is just 1-4 in a way of beconung MVPs.
The Steelers tradtltonally
the Wo 11d Series, beatmg
pay megadollars for
don't
the Kansas Ctty Royals tn
they 're never guarplayers;
1980, bul losmg to the
Boston Red Sox (1915), anteed any regu Jar more
New York Yankees (1950), than $36 million, a relative
Baltimore OttOies (1983) pittance these days. Yet t)ley
· and Toronto. Blue Jays won a Super Bowl in 2006
and have averaged 10-pius
(1993 )
victories since 2001.
B d 011 h 1•
They've stayed compc;tiase
t e ast two
years. the stx-day layoff ti ve - three seasons of 11 or
~tween thetr ftve-game more wins and three 'AFC
VIctory ov~r the Dodge~s tttle game appearances durand the Senes opener w~m t mg that span - by drafting
well, keeping the right
help
.
Followmg etght ~ays off, starters for salary capt.he Colorado Rocktes were fnetfdly 'dollars apd digging
swept by Boston last year up players who are overDetrOit had a SIX-day rest looked or unwanted elsetn 2006 , then JQst to the where.
Players !tke Mewelde
Cardmals m SIX games.
.
"It's debated, obvmusly , Moore
the
latest
In
a
lru\.g
Moore,
every year," Manuel said
··so much of •t depends on hoe of where-'did-he-com~:­
from finds l:ly dtrector of
the 25 guy s - If they ' re football operations Kevin
beat up and they need the Colbert, ftHed in for mjUJCd
test, ot tf they' te still Pro .)3owl running back
go mg on adrehahne."
Willie PariCer by gaining
120 _yards. catching ftve
NSses and scoring three
01 where II comes irom. If touchdowns during a 38-18
we knew that, we could pm- rout of the winless Bengals
pmnt 11 and be able to on Sunday
address tt "
"He ',s become the locker
It' s not known where room favonte ," coach Mike
Wtnslow go t staph thi s Tomltn satd of Moore , who
ttme. But despttc hts conru shed for 219 yards m
cerns ol a wtdesptead prob- has
hts last two games - or
km at Cleveland 's trammg neatly
as many yards as the
complex. lmebacker Andr a 244 he had in 2006 and 2007
Da'ts said he's not ovetl}
mcd. "Tht s guy, is
concetned about gett ing comb
stc k .md th,lt the team has delivering time and time
t.lken adequate precauttons agam wllh ht s legs, with hi s
hands."
·
to ensure the player's proEven
if
,
ome
casual fans
tcct ton.
"Out equtpment guys and mtght nor ha ve known
ou t lJ,llllll\g toom guys do Moore was on the team
evet}thmg to make sure when the season began .
we're comfortable," he Much hke they once dtdn ' t
st11d ··we have our own know ·much about Parker,
rags mn ov.n towels , our hnebacket James Hamson
own cvc1yt hmg. lt 's not or left guard Darnell
Staplelon, thtee undrafted
sca1y ''
One of Cle;eland 's team players who also stgned
captatns. Davts said he with the Steelers as umewasn't
bothered
by stncted free agents but now
Wmslo\v's clatms or thetr are staners
Nose tackle Chns Hoke ,
tl llllllg.
who
has ftl(ed m for a month
"To e&lt;~c h hts own.'' Davts
satd. "Kellen\ out team- wilh Pro Bow l lineman
mate, we' ll never turn our Casey Hampton tDJured,
back on htm We ' ll defmtte- also was undrafted. So was
recetver
Nate
ly support him I00 per- w1de
Washmgton,
a
once-overcent "
Ttght
end
Darnell looked player at Divtsion II
Dmkms. the Browns' play- Tiffm who had a 50-yard TD
Ct tcptesentattve
stud catch Sund,ly.
Center Justin Hartwig was
Wtnslow's latest bout wtth
gq by Carolma after last
let
staph h&lt;1s some players conseason. but ts starti ng m
' CCI ned
"Anybody who has staph, Ptttsburgh . Ki cker Jeff Reed
you're talkmg about your was passed over by every
life.'' he s.ttd "It's bigger NFL team before stgning
thll n footb~ll tt 's btgger wtth the Steelers in
than a game. Kellen is a November 2002, but hi s
good fncnd of mme. 94.3 percent (33-of-35) the
Anyone who has a condi- last two seasons leads the
tion or tssue hke that, you
want to make sute he's protected and he's healthy I'm
glad he's health~ and I hope

we can contam

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~
RtlfiOIIted 011 the

1 ~1~=~~

..

~:::::::~CM

krtncarlyle~eomcast

Will do House Ck!anlll1J
etc Call 304-ti75· t 870

lost &amp; Found

I

LOST 1 lg &amp; 1 sm Black
Lab
Letart
Reward
&lt;
304-89~3274
or
304-593-3702

Nalicos

OHIO VALLEY

NOTICE
PUBLISHING ' CO, ree·
ommends that yoo dO
business wl1tl people you
know, and NOT to send
money through the mad
unttl you have 1nvest1gat·
I the

=~~~~~~
PI ofuaionol s.nices
TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAl SECURITY SSI
No Fee Unless We Win!
1·888·582 3345
.lOU

FPPllll, 111

:

ra1n a loan BEWARE of
requests tor any large
advance payments of
Gas fired heating boiler 5 fees or Insurance CaU
yr old w1th all CXf!lrols lhe Offtee of Consumer
must see 740-992-2974
Afflars
toll
free
at
1·666·278-()()()3 to leam
HOlM lmprow.....m
II the mortgage broker or
lender

Is

property

net

;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;i;Pols
......;;;;;;;;;;;;;;

M1n1ature Plncher pups
CKC reg black &amp; rust
COlor
Ta1ls
docked
shots and wormed F
$300,
M
$250
740 367 0210 11 no an·
swer leave

w~w. 'f++ts

a message

hund

pups

1'1tlt.lb(
~y

Hou111 For

f'~I&lt;R.S

LD~D(

2 br 1 b lull baseme£1t
above ground pool de·
tached double garage
lenced-m back yard nice
neighborhood 1n Aac1ne
(740)992- 1424
•

Females

$450 740·256 1498

~~---::-~~
AKC Parson Russell Ter·
ners Tan/White &amp; • Trl
c~or, hghtly broken coal,
will mature 12 15 Inches
S1re &amp; Dam on prem1ses

N Dam needs 6 points to

, 0~ ~I

4~

~~

censed (This Is a public trnish AKC Champion- @ 2008 by NEA,Inc.
www.comlcs com
un!~:= :~me service an11ouncement ship, excellent quality ~~;:;;~~;;;;;;-;;,;;;;;;;-:;;;;;;:;!,
from the OhiO Valley Puppies 304-675-7071
guarantee local refer·
1 c
)
ences fumrshed ES1ab
Publish ng ompany
Pefl
Motorcydea
~shed 1975 Call 24 Hrs
CKC Maltese pups Fe· ""'==~~""'=
~----.-~~:""~
males $550 Males ssoo FREE Pupptes 1/2 JacX
99 Honda XA70R Good
740•446-oe7o, Rogers
Basement Waterproofina
740·256·1498
Russell &amp; 1/2 m1x 6 wks
Condrt1on
runs good
~~~~~.,......,.. old3046755313
Hobby/Hvnt&amp;Spclrt $500 obo 7403677251
Cur SquIrre I 0 og Ior sa le
lulintll &amp; Trade
GUN SHOW • LANCAS· :~or=7=40=·6=4=5=·4=64=7===·
•.....L __ \
or trade for a gun ~F-T~~---m-lx~ed TEA OH Nov 1 from
304 675 6132
ree-,erner
Pet Cremations
Call ii!i
~-·~·~.,...,..--- puppy,
4 112 mo old, F, 9·5 &amp; Nov 2 from 9·3
740-446-3745
Galllpolla C.reer
~
Fa1rt1eld
County
Fa1r·
740
Colltge
For sale DalmatJon Pups ( )992' 7335
grounds AAA Building
AKC reg 1Sl shots &amp;
Aula•
(Careers Close To Home) wormed
$J2S 00 ~-~~--~~ Adm $4 135 6' TBLS
Guttar Lessons tnstruc- Can Todayl740 4-46-4367
_
Grveawayl Small Gold $35 740 667·041 2
304 675 6767
03 Stratus Automattc 4

11

-.:=-'oaiOOI;;;;;;;,=--

~
~~~~~~~~~~or~w~/~B~a:ch:e~lor~D:eg:r:ee~~~~~-8~00~-2~1~4-0~4~5~2~j~~~~~~~~::~:::
-n

740·388-6655
FREE Pitt Bull m1x pup· Lab
Female
Call
1
~-d
H
tng couoollor Independent
pes
o \,WI,/
orne !"!'"~--~~~
C~llegesand Sehools 12746
304·812-0418
Mlnlture
oact1shund
CKC reg1stered , shots,
CLASSIFIED INDEX
wormed
Males &amp; FeLegal1 ........ ......... ........................:................. 100 Recreational Vehlclea ............................... 1DOO
males,
longhair
&amp;
• Announcemanta .......................................... 200 AT'V .................................... ..................... 1005
shortha1r red &amp; black/tan
Blrthdey/Annlveraery ........: ..................... 205 Bicycle•~ ..............,..... . ... ........ ...... .... 1010
'S200 304-593·3B20
Happy Adl ...... ; ............ ........................... 210 Boata/Accuaorl• ................................. 1015
!'""----~Loat &amp; Found ............................................... 215 CamperiRVa &amp; Trallen ............................. 1020
Two black/sliver schnauMemoryn'hankYou ..................................... 220 Motorcyclea .......................... ··• ............. 1025
zer, 2 1~ months old

=::::.1;:::::::::·::·::::::::::·::::::::
..:::::::::::::::::: :
Wented ........................................................ 235

gatiii)OIIseareercoHegudu

S.rvlce• ....................................................... 300
, Appliance S.rvlce ....................................... 302
Automotive ............................................... 304
Bulkllng Materlala ....................................... 308
BullnMS ...................................................... 308
Catering ...................................................... 310
Chlldi'Eidltrty CIN ....................................... ~2

Autamotlve ................................................ 2DOO
Auto RentaliLeatM ..................................... 2005
Aulot ......................................................... 2010
Claaelc/Antlquea .. ........ o\ . .......................... 2015
Commercl•ll1nduatrlal .............................. 2020
Parte &amp; Acceuorlee ..............................2025
Sportl Utility ............................................ 2030
Trucka ......................... .'~ ...................... ... 2035

31 :
• DomeatlciiJinltorlal............................... 318
Eleclrlcel ..................................................... 320
Flnancl•l.. ..................................................... 322

...::::...
Wlntto buwo ... ·""· ..................................2050
Real Eatllte Salel ...................................... 3000
C.metary Plota .......................................... 3005

g:::::~~~::::::::. ::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::

:

:~~~--~~~~~~'-~.:::::::·:.:::::

:::::::·.::::::::::::::~=

~rea; ~ups44:27~~l1 each
ery ovog

•

2
Wapak Skillets #8 &amp;
12, one wtth Indian Head
on bottom $145, Also H
&amp; R 20 Ga S1ngle Barrel
a~ Magnum , 32~ full
clean
$165
740 533 3870

________

Jet Aerahon Motors reparred new &amp; rebUilt rn
stock Call Ron
1·800 537·9528

Evans

Cylinde r $2600
OBO
256·1 652 or 256· 1233
02 Dodge 4x4 truck
crwse hit an good con
drtron
109,000 m1les,
$4500 OBO 256-903 1 or
256·1233
=::-~~:""":~~
2006 Durango 4 wheel
dnve leather, sun roof &amp;
ovo player, $10 000
256 1618

~~~~--~

93 Ford Tempo 4cyl ,
2dr , blue good work
NEW AND USED STEEL
car,
$650,
Steel Beams P1pe Rebar J.:l7,;40o;l5;;,9;,
1·;;;69;3;;,:6,.,,.,=
lor
Concrete
Angle
Channel Flat Bar Steel
Sports UHiity
farM Equipment
Grahng fo r Drarns Cnve·
~~~~~~~ ways &amp; Walkways L&amp;L 00 Suburban-Black &amp;

=

~~~ap M~=~

M~~ ~~~~ackEx~rd

145 New Holland ' MaOp:n
,:;
nure Spreader/ Like new,
0
C
heavy,
duty.
Call Sam-4 3 pm
losed S7500 740 245"5788
740·256-6864
Thurs
Sat
&amp;
Sun
T cb

59 ~~

In
mpuran.. ..................................................... 332

Lawn Service .............................................. 334
' MualciDancWOrama ................... ............. 338
Other Befvlcu ............................................. 338
Plumblng!l!loctrical ......................,.............. 340
•pro.,..alonal S.rvlcee .............................. : :
Repairs ..........,............................................

HouHI lo r 8~·(.......................... ............. .. 3025
Land (Acreage).......... .......................... 3030
Lot• ............ ........... . .. .. ................ 3035
Want to buy............................. ........ ..... .3()40
Aeol Eatato Aenlala................................... 3500
ApenmenttiTownhoueea .................... 3506
Commercial ..........................................3510

=~:.-:::·:::::~:'::::::::~::::::::~::::.::::::~::::::::::::::::!: ~=~J~u.:~t·:. ·:::::.:::.:::::::::::::::::.:::::::. ~:~~

Tlx/Accountlng ........................................ 360 Land (Acree'") ................................... 3&amp;26
TraveVEntertalnment ........ •................312 Storage .................. . .... ••• • . ... ... . .3536
• Financial .....................................................400 Wlnt to Rent ................................. ...... 3540
Fln1111cl1l Servlcea .......................................405 Manutecturecl Houiii1Sil ............................. 4000
' lneurance ................................................. 410 Lot..........................................................4005
Money to Lend ............................ .............. 415 Movere ................................ .... .......4010
' Education ............... .. ...............................1500 Rental&amp; ............................................. 4015
.BUIIne•• 6 Trade School .......... ,..,_...,,••• .. 605 S.lea ...........................................................4020
' lnllNCtlon &amp; Tralnlng ................................. 510 Supplln ................................................... 4025
, LIIIOAI ....... •...................... ! ······ ........515 Want to Buy . ...... ....... ............. ........... .4030
Peraanal ................................................... 520 R110rt Property ................................ 5000
Anlmala ............................................ ........... 800 Aeeort Property for aale ........................ 5025
Animal Suppllee ..........................................I05 Reeort Property for rent ........................... 5050
Horoeo ......................................................810 Employment..........................................8000
Llvntock.................... •... •.....................815 Accountlngfflnenclal ............................8002
Polo.............................................................820 AdmlnlotrollvWProfaaalonot ...... . ... .....6004
W1nt lo buy ...............................................625 Caahler/Cierk ....................................... ~..... eooe
Agriculture ................,..................................TOO ChUdiEiderly C•re .......,............................. eooa
1 F1rm Equipment .....................................705
Cl•rlcll ........ ........ ..... .... •....................1010 ...
I Garden a Produa. .......................................710
Conltructlon .............................................8012
Hoy, Food, Seod, arotn ............................... 715 Dr!Yaro &amp; Delivery........ ........................... 6014
, HuntinG &amp; Land ........................................... 720 Education .................................................8018
Want to buy .................................................72&amp; Elec1rlcal Plumblng ...................................6il18
MerchondiH........ ............ • ...................... 900 Emptoymonl AgenciH....................... ....6020
Antlq- .......................................................905 Entorlolnmon1 ............................................6022
Appliance...... ............................................110 Food SonriCft....................... ..... ..... .....6024
Auctlone ..... ..........................................915 Gov.rnment &amp; Federal Joba .. ... .... ... 6028
Borgoln Boaomenl ...................... ,.........120 , Help ontod- Gonfiol ............................. 6028
Colleellbteo ................................................925 t.aw Enlorcernent ...................................... 8030
comput......................................................ll30 Malntononco/Domeollc ........................... 6032
Equlpmenl1Supplloa ....................................ti3S Mon-menliSupenrlaory ..... ...... .. .... 6034
FIN Morkoto ....... ................................. ~ Mechanlce ............................................ 603e
Fuel Dll Coal/Wood/Gao ......................... MS Modlcol ....................................................... 603e
Furniture ......................................................950 Mualc•l..... ............. .............. .... ............. 8040
HObby/Hunt &amp; Spor1 ....................................955 Part· Tlm•Temporar-.e ............................ 6042
Kld'a Comer.........:................................. 980 RHtluntnto .... ..................... ......... . .... 51144
Ml&amp;Cillaneouo.......................................... 988 Saleo ........................................................... ~
W1nt to buy .................................................. t70 Tachnlcal Tradn ..................................... 6050
Yard Solo ..................................................... 17~ ToxtiiH/Factory ...................................... 6052

•

,.

4 46 7

1
nlng gears &amp; a 8 ft Br~l· Grave ''" 60 1nch
Iron
Seeder 27 HP Mov1ng
_ _
sell 367·7 129
740 245 5788

deck
must

,.,__ _"""""""""""' -""';;W;;;;o;;;;n;;;;t;;;;To=luy"'-""'•
EBY,
INTEGRITY, ~
KIEFER BUILT,
Buying tools sell or trade

wLth you when you vrslt
our commumty to get
th1s speaal diScount
Move-rn 1n Oct and get
S100 DO oH your 2BR
Apt rn Nov Currently
renlrng 1 &amp; 2 BR umts
Spac1ous floor plans,
ranch &amp; townhome style
11v1ng playground &amp;
basketball court, on-site
laundry facFIIIy, 24 hr
emergency marnle·
nance qu1et country lo·
cat1on close to major
med1cal
racthtLes
pharmacies grocery
store JUSt m1nutes
away from other major
shopp1ng 1n lhe area
Honeysuckle Hille

Apartment•
266 Colomal Onve #11 3
Bidwell Oh1o 45614
740 446-J344
Office Hours M W, F
9AM • 5PM

3 Bed 2 Bath HUD
Homes I Only $19 900 for
ltst1ngs BOO 620 4946 ex
R019
4 bed 2 bath &amp; offrce m
town
hw &amp; trle floors
updated kitchen &amp; baths,
prrvacy fence &amp; aoove
ground
pool
secunty
system much more 130
Basl1anl Dr
$129000

ll------.....1

,...,,.,...,..,.
446·2923 ...-~...,.. 1BA Apt WID hookups
6 AM 1 bath con blk 1n satellite TV 1ncl wlrent
sulated full base ut111ty close to hosp1tal Call
bldg carport
lg
lot 740·339·0362
366·6661
2 BR Apartment &amp; 2 BR
House for .sale/ram 3BR House on 5th St PI
2 bath cemral Sir 1 story Pleasant
304·812·4350

~

; .Do;;.n~~~--

Extraordinary
Prortarty·
In Gallipolis 446 2692
•Spectacular view of the
Ohio River
Pnvatl3 dnve off lincoln
Hill
Pomeroy
Ohto
woods on three Sides
(4+)acres to a hrstorrcal
home C1ma 1900, 5
bedrooms , 2 frreplaces 2
full baths 2 sta1rcases,
beautiful ong1na1 wood·

3 rooms and bath up·
::••;;;'.;;'o:;.r
stBirs
Completely fur·
mshed w1th WID No
pets Ref Aeq 441 0245
Apartment available now
Alverbend
Apts
New
Haven wv Now accept·
rng
applica.ttons
tor
HUO·subsldiZed.
one
Bedroom Apts Utilitres
mcluded Based on 30~

work, many piCture wm
dows, mostly new w1n
dows, large krtchen and
breaklaSI room, boaull·
tully landscaped w1th 1n
ground pool
1t on the
wrap around porch and
enjoy the spectacular
view of the Ohio River 2
car detached garage and
2 out burldtngs Would
make a wonderful fam1ly
home or bed &amp; breakfast

ol adJUSted
Call
304-882·312 1
available
for Sen1or and Drsabled
~ people

s

1ome..tlngl'm''Ap"ri;'o~~:o:::330:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::: g:::'dr::f~r~n;·
r-m'H
;::::::::~:..::::..·:::::::·:::::·:::::·:·:~g ------~::-:o---~~~-m--m-o-w-er ; ;Fo"'r~Sa-le'"o'"r'=:"'e•"'•;;;Off~e"'r= Pr~v~~ec~~~~~~~i~~ 1
For Sell by Owner........... ......................3020
2 Gravity wagons + run11 .-.,.......

1

Mlacillaneoua

Aecrl!ldledMemberAceredlt

w:::.~··.;-~y·,:::::::::::::::::::::::::::..::.::::::::::. ,.~g::

Solo

186 No rth Park Or call
304·675-5640
or
304 593 1204 w11\ sell on
Land Contract or Out
Rtghl Also a Wellrngton
P1ano call for appo1nt·
me~t to see them bOth

1

!

ov• n pee a
Clip this AD and take It

For
sale
or
lease
office/warehouse/storage
great locatron m GalhpO·
Irs
1800
sq
ft
$400/month Call Wayne
404·456·3802

Baeement

1n
music/guitar
740-446-0947
Please

Apar!monls/
Townflou..,

S~les

Commercial

• 6 CKC Registered Boxer
pupp1es for sale
5
Monoy To Lond
weeks old 2 Fawn &amp; 4
....~~~ii.i~-­ Bnndle 3 mali 3 female
NOTICE 8(1rrow Smart mother 8 father both on
Contact the Ohio DIVI· s1te $375 each
sion or F1nanc1al lnstitu· 740-&amp;15-4692
or
lions Office o1 Consumer 740-446-1940
Aftatrs BEFORE you reft· ..,,..,...,_____
nance your home or ob· AKC Mini Dapple Dach,.. • _ _,

~=;~~;:

Rea l Estate

1985
Ford
F 250 5 enous
1nqUifes
on y,
992 3676
4 wheel dnve
flat-bed please ca 11 740
•
truck,
mechamcally
sound, 2000 m11es on 4
yr old 302 eng1ne call
after
8prn
~
304 458 1727
;;;;;,;;;,;,;,;,;,;,;,.,,.,=
Want To Buy
~:-T~o~wnh""'o~u::'..,~~

1ncom~

~~~~~-":"'!:"
CONVENIENTLY
LO
CATED
&amp;
AFFORD

~~~~r To:~~~;e

houses tor
740 _441 _1111
1

;:::n &amp;

a:,:ll
rent Call
lor apph·

:::ano:~all!l
----

2&amp;38R and up Central
A1r W/0 hookup tenant
pays electnc EHO Elm
V1ew
Apts
c:(304
.;.;;
)Ba
;:;;;.
2~
30;..1~
7 -~-·

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

Tw,1n R1vers Tower 1s ac

Apartments/

VALLEY
HORSE/LIVE- mechaniC-carpenter lawn
cepllng applrcat1ons for
STOCK
TRAILERS, &amp; gar~en power tools
w~lhn~ ll~t ~~ HUDrt sub;
LOAD
MAX
EQUIP· can 74 ·38e·1515 or cell ~i:""""":""'"F~~ ~
s1 1ze
·
apa men
MENT
TRAILERS, 740-208--0320
Want to buy JunK Cars, 28A APT CIA (740) tor the eR1ertyldlsabtecl,
CARGO EXPRESS &amp; ~~'""!--~:-..-~ can 740·388 0884
441 -0 194
call 675·6679
HOMESTEADER
, Absolute Top Dollar { s1l
..,.,,.--------------,
CARGO/CONCESSION
verfgold
coms,
an~
TRAilERS
B• W 10Kit4K!18K gold (ow·
d 11
ld
GOOSENECK FlATBED e1ry
en a go
pre
$3999 VIEW OUR , EN·
TIRE TRAILER INVEN·
TORY AT
WWWCAAM!C HAEL·
TRAILERS COM

1'd35
US
wrrency
proof/mrnt
sets,
dla
monds MTS Cou1 Shop
15~ 2nd Avenue Galli·
polls 446 2842

740-446·3825

Yard Sole

Have you pnced a John
ol.~re ·late~? You 11 1&gt;e
surprised! Check out our
used
Inventory
at
www CAREQ com
Car·
m1cl"'ael
Equrpment
740-446-2412

Odds &amp; End's S81e,
Monday
Fr1day
6·4P m Sat 6·12,600
E Main St romeroy Oh

Gordon &amp; Produco

Compen/ RVa &amp;
Troilen

Recret~11onal

1000

VE'hll f"'

Free
Black
Walnuts
Easy Access1bilityl Call RV S
1 Carmi·
740 446--6541 after Spm chael erv~ee _a
Tra1lers
for directions!
740·446·3825

Hay, Food, Seed, Grain

.-------·
RV
Round artd square bales SAfVIC9 at Carrmchael
of
hay
for
sale Trailers
7&lt;40-256-6071
740·446·3625

§ot Somethina to sa
to that Syecia( Someone.

Say it in
1he C(assi ieds1

'

-

'

'

.

�\

-

EQual Housing Opponv ·
nfly. Tl1fo &lt;nslltution Is an
Equal Opportunity PIO·
vfdor and Employeo.

OrwlalJI Uvtng 1 and 2

&amp;eooc:wn Acts.

Mlnof

at Village
Rivet'skte

and

Apts. Wl Middleport. from

1327
to
740-992-51J64 .

$592.
Equal

Housing Opponvnity.
Tara

Townhouse

~a1'1111ents • 2BR, · 1.5
bath, back paHo, pool,
. playground,

(trash, sew ago,
water
pd)
S425Jrent,
$425/sec
dep. can 740-367-0547·
Very nice 1 eR home in
Pomeroy, great neighbomood,large yard,ideal
b 1 or 2 people, new

~.Call

992-5094" and

leave a

mes=-~~·==~t::

:

Commercial

2 · bay service station 1
Jack&amp;OO
Pike .
Lealie
required. Call 446-3644
for more info.

HOUMs For Rent
5238/fllQ! 4 bed . 2 "ath .
Bank Repo! (5'l doY. n. 1~

years, .8% APR! fOf'
~620-4946 ex R027

li~ 1 i n~ ~

$400/mo + deposit, tBR,
Rg&amp;Ref.fum,
W&amp;D
hookup, No steps , Very

clean,

114

Slate

St.

740-441·0596

2 bedroom House $300
month. Plus Utility, Rei &amp;
Deposit
No
304--675-4874

Pets

2 bedroom house. alliliiEible Ott. 1. 6 miles ~low Gallipolis on SR 7
446-1211
2 BR house in Gallipolis,
WID
conn.
$415/mo
$150/dep. You pay all
utilities. No section e • or
HUD.
Call
Wa_yne

4()4-456-3802
2BA

house

In

located

.town, · Gallipolis,

OH

$500/mo plus uillilies. No
· Pets. 740-441 -0110 o1
740-59 1-5 174
2br on the River in Masun HLIO Appr oved Rderences 304 - 882 &lt;~51 2 111
304-488 -7946
3 BD HOUSE IN CHESTER,O~ .CONTACT

740-985-4131

parsonage. 3BR .
2 bath, full basement . 2
ca r
garage.
!ndudus
WID. rtew !ridge artcl
range Sits on nearly 2
acres $700 plus we
dep . For i11to ~~ lnspec Uon caM 2&lt;'1 5-0031

Prices
16K80
2000
bath.
bed ~
1'4 JC70

fann

YOUNG'S

H1 :1s Set

CARPENTER
SERVICE

Storage

· Room Addtttont

R.C.

Road Maintenance

25VP~~tnro~

NOTICE

given that In pursuance of a Resolution
of the Board of Educatlon of the Southern
Local School Dlatrlct,

OFFICE

NOW weekly

sentements,

;n-

n:pair.

Racine, Ohio passed dollars or voluallon, tor 1·666·403-2562
386·9680
8oo. 462-9365
on lhe 14th day of Au- live {5) years. The polls
gual, 08, !here will be lor lhe election will
In Memory
In Memory
submllted to a vote ol open al 6:30 a.m. and
lho people of said iub- remain open unlit 7:30
division as a General p.m. on election day,
- -'-;-- - --=--··-=
Election 10 be held In By order of the Board
Pete Haley
lhe County of Meigs, of Elections, ot Malgs
115148- 10120107
Ohio, at the regular Counly, Ohio
places
of
voting John N. lhle
M11n' tlran tl hmllln
'
I
therein, on the 4th day Chair
My IJt•srji-it'nd.
of November, 08, the Rlla D. Smith
,4 hdping ll~md
ql,le&amp;Uon of levylng .a Director
A,mn· rf'ady to/end.
tax, In excess ollhelei't Doled Sept. 5, 2008
mill llmllallon, lor lhe (10) 21. 28
llunti"g, Fishing . Timt•.\· were helft;r
i'
benefit of Southern
.
With tilt• tlt'o of us , ofwny.\· togellrer.
\
Local School District
Yo11've
been
~one a )'em· roday·
1
Public Notice
lor the purpos_
o ol Curnml Expenses
Ya l .nm miss ''ml ~I
Said tax being a re- · NOnCE OF ELECTION
more rhmt word.'i cwt SCI)"&lt;
·
newal of an existing tax OF TAX LEVY IN EX·
Love, Mark
of 4 mills at a role nol CESS OF THE TEN
---~---- =-~-=,_-.,..·--·-~-=o,::j
exceeding 4 mills for MILL LIMITATION
each one dollar ol va~ R.C.
3501 .11{G),
Help Wanted
Help Wanted
.uatlon, which amounls 5705.,19, 5705.25
to lorly ($0.40) cenls NOTICE Is hereby

(740) 992-5344
R:IMJ am - 4:30pm
Sat. R:OO am - 12
We apf"eciale your
bnsi11es!i

Concrete Removal
and Replacement

28 Years Experience

David Lewis
740-9'92·6971

lnaured

wVt42tl2 .Free Estlmltes

M eig~

l)JKJ a.m . ~ II :UU a.m.
R dcu-,~: April 2~.11Kl'J
A tl·l.' or ~21.r m will be
chargl.'\1 for l!arly ;trti\'lll,
lat\.' :HTin 1L t•:~rl v n~ mo,nl.
lat..: ft' lllv'·:tl. Or tuwti ml!
an:~·.'-\ is wa ntn.i !o
h1ir!!nmm.b 11thct · limn
~ lah: ll
dated. Hurldi nll
~ !l&lt;~l'&lt;'

Public Notice
1

NOTICE OF ELECTION
OF TAX LEVY IN EXCESS OF THE TEN
MILL LIMITATION
R.C.
a50t.11{G),
5705.19, 5705.25
NOTICE Ia hereby
given lhot In pursuance oi a Resolullorl
of life Board ol Townohlp TruoiHa of lho
Townlhlp of Columbia,
Albany, Ohio paoud
on lhtt 7th day of Auguot, 08, lhere will be
.,.bmltled lo a vole of
Jhe people of Hid IUbdiYittion 11 a General
flection lo be hold In
·!he Township of Columbia, Ohio, al the
regular placet· of votIng lhttrtln, on the 4th
day of November, 08,
.lhtt quelllon of levying
1 tlx, In excees ~~ the

not

ex-

of Elections, of Meigs

Counly, Ohio
John N. thle
Chair
Rlla D. Smhh
Director
Dated Sept. 5, 2008
(10) 21, 28

Paul Rowe

.........

Seamless Gutters
Rooting, Siding, Gutters
Insured &amp; Bonded

141912-2

Ell T"'U&lt;IN&amp;

ln•u~

· frH &amp; llm11n
1111..141-1381
"

Shop
Classlfleds!

Quality Seamless
Gutters
Maintenance Plus
CtJtii!II(' ITitrl

&amp; Rnidemia/

Vinyl
Siding/Replacement
WindowS/Remodeling
Bunded &amp; Insured
740-992- 1493 Office
740-416-8339 Cell ·
· Free ESilmated
Porrn:roy, Ohio

Stanley Tra.
Trimming
&amp; Removal

WWEN·ARE i'OU GOING
TO 61VE ME ANOTI-IEil.

· 61RLS
LOVE MUSlC
MliSIC .so;,;.-x.;..1_ _11"1 ,_eo_x_e_s.._,.,.

*Experienced
References Available!
Call Gary Stanley @
740-591-8044

Please leave mes

AS ATIEIETI:AL.
PH'ISDST I'LL DEVELOP

RICK PRICE
31011'1,

'
.• ./

;'

06t' Or1. J. ~IXI8

PART-TIME FACuLTY
MEIGS CAMPUS

•"

•

,,

.

i ~'
• ~':t!9

1;

POSITION ANNOUNCEMENT

..

~

~-

'

,

A!.NIFYING THEORY OF
THE UNIVERSE THAT

Decks,

~W\1~ BEHI\VIOR.

MIND OF

·Vinyl Siding
• Replacement
Wllod.W.s
-Roollng
•,Decks
·Garages
• Pole Buildings
• Room Addlllona
Owner:
James KHsee II

·742-2332

OUC1TI~.

$

ialltpoH' laiJp lri~unt ..
·loloint ~ltalarit_lt~~te~
The Qaily Sentinel
iunbav lhne_s-ienttnel

74(1--387.0544

Freee.HrnotH .

. 740-367.0538

For Remodeling and New HoWle BuHdlf'l
Call: MARCUM CONSTRUCTION

Employer

•'

I•Ew.••-

I
'

740-9854141
Cell: 740-4t6- 1834

I

'\\\~.

15+ years rxperitrrct Frw ElliluirJ

.

'

48 Hozo plus
49 Cash "'.-

50

drawer "-·
Toot~pasie

type
·
51 Galleon
cargo

52 Unduly

10 "'- Girts"

31' ExcL!se me! 54 Khan
32 Ad~anee,
of note
as money

13 Clousl!l;!lu's
valet

34 Put on
eBay

by Luis Campos
Cel.ebnty Ciphl!l crypro,sms are erea1ed 1romquola11ons D)o·1amou! ~pie paSI ano pres&amp;nl
Ea:h l~er 1n lhe (l ~e• stanos lor ;t1c!1er

Todsy's clue: leq11a!S.P,

I

YN

" LGKLF

LFK

UE ,KX

LFIVL

UTSXGPOXPL

LTUXLFXG.

JTOAGTOVNX

VN

OWDXN

LFX

TVE

UTSXGPOXPLN

UXGWER

FTERN

LFWL

UT. "

-

G . - ITGA

PREVIOUS SOLUTION - "II is bener to be defeated Standing lor a nigh
principle than to run by committing sul:lte rtuge .~ ·Grover Cleveland

r::~~~~· S©~ot11A-~£!fs· GAM I
- , - - - - - !dlood by CLAY R. POLLAN :-=---0 lour scrambledlatt:enwordsof thebeWOlD

~earronge

'blr~: .

~low CON 'Ia&gt; lie -NST
Ea1iNG Hea1._~T l'ou'te
HaVt~G- a H&lt;-&gt;1 DoG '1'

Advertise
in this space for
$64 per month
,

46 Nat crisp

CELEBRITY CIPHER

AstroGraph

I't~ Ll\&lt;t,"'' SOUP TO NUTZ
~~~
,·?-------~~
~~6

47239 Riebel Road, Long Boetom, OH

•

43 Tiny

low to term four simple .wordt

0 0 YT I D
50 J U·T
r--.,..-.,..-,---,~

SHOT!

Whtle leavmg the gyfn 1
overheard one woman sigh,

'

h:-.--r---r----r.rl ~
I'

l

I I I Is :

"D1eting is going to great
lengths to avoiding going to

/,"'~~~-~~~.' ' the
I
· I I I' I I
ORGREIJ

_

chockle quatod
the tniS$Ing VfOrc4
you di1Vtlap from ~ep No. 3 below:

by .filli"'W

i"

UNSCRAMBLE ABOVE LETmS
10 GET AN SWER

SCRAMLETS ANSWERS 10'20108
Chalet - Lapel - Nylon- Magnet · PLANE for HOME
"It's hard to disguise your feelmgs, " grinned my neighbor.
"when you put relalives on a PLANE for HOME."'

ARLO &amp; JANIS

(May 21 -June 20) -ll you hear.
L- - - - - - - - - - ' ' GEMINI
only what you want to Mar, you will
Ignore the tacts and totally miss the
essenc&amp; of somelhing iflllOrt&amp;nt. Your
judgment will be only as good as )'OUr
YOU'R6 RIGHT, ()!)liS. 'THAT
intake.
OTHeR P06- 16 5TUPIP
CANCER (June 21-July 22) - Some
LOOKING&lt;
possessions are just as-lmpor1anl to you
on an emotional level as th~ are on a
monetary one. If you are careless with
something you like, you could lose on
both count s.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) - Think twice
before making an Idle promise, because
your listener will take you at your word.
Whal you com~lde r to be merely a polite
agreement ~uk:l be a binding eomml!·
mentto another. ,..
:VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sepl. 22) .... Whet you
say and what you do could be at. Odds,
and lhla dichotomy could lotll.ly confuse
thaN wtth whOm you have dMIInga. Try
to bt consilient In both WOfd and de~ .

Loctl Contrlictor

•..Room Additions • Garages • Vinyl
·and Wood Siding • Roofing • Pole
Barns • Patio's, Porches and Decks

(

4~74

I

TEPA TE DUM

*Reasonable Rates

Room Addilions, Remodoiin1,

.

fax

J Ll\ DOM TE DA DUM

MAJ&lt;I~~
THE~TEST

www .extendjcare.com

Rio Grande, Ohio
e-mail:

A MUSIC 60X!

*Insured

PSI CONSTRUCTION

'

. Din'(:tor nr Humnn Rt~mrc"'
Uninrsity of Rio (frnndc
P.O. Box SUI
.

LOOK AT ME .. I1M

*Prompt and Quality
Work

Construction

The Universily·ofRio Grande is taking applications
for part-time facully ~mbers for 1he Spring Semester
for Academic Year 2008-09 for the Meigs Campu s.
Instructors arc needed in tht areas or biolog)'. 1.oology
environmental science and history. A bachelor's
degree is re~ired . Master 's prererred.
All candidates should submit a letter of intcrc~l .
Current resume and Ihe names of atklrl''i'ieS nr thn:c
reference-s. Re-s umes will be revic"cLt a~ 1'1.:-.:dl'~.."\1 .
lnfurmalion mulil he 'iUhmiucd to :
M ~ Ptwlli~ Ma ~on. MHA . SPIIR

MONT+t?

Complete Tree Care

·~. Hoffie~Q\Vn ·News
, ·'Are@ shappiht.· · ·
•L6cal s·ports "'~ .
•Con1i'nqnity
Calendar
..:and much more..

person

movement. Once completed, hOwever, il
· will be a smooth path thai awails you.
LIBRA (Sept. 23 -0ct. 23) - Information
· or !Ips from well-Intentioned friends
should not be acted upon without flrsl
verifying their claims. It doesn't maller
whether it involves money or gossip;
erroneous data could be costly.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov:. 22)- Be a wise
listener, and do not take that which could ·
make a difference In your life for granled.
Inaccurate information could lead you to
make a mistake and cause big trouble.
SAGIITARIUS (Nov. 23-0ec. 21} Unless you are on you~ toes, someone
clever could gel you to reveal information
about another thai, If misused, WO:Uid be
harmful. This person's interest mlghl be
rljiOre devious !han curious.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) - It is
n~ver a good idea to share an Bllpensive
pastime with another who, in ream~ . can'!
· afford it. When the bill comes, your friend
might be short ol cash al'ld have no credil cards.
·
AQUARIUS (Jan . 20-Feb. 19) - If you
need some good advice, you would be
be«er off seeking It from more than one
source. It might take a combination of .
several counaelora to help nryd the .rlght
answer.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) - Planned
activities mlght not be as aaay to engage
as you thought. A number of une)(pec1ed
obligations might take prl!Cedenca and
force you to spend time on them.
ARIES {March 21-April19)- Someone
with whom You sociatlze from lime to
time might try manlpulalion to gel you to
do his or her bidding. Don't believe that
eve'l)'one you know Is e!hlcal. Keep your
guard up.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) - It doesn't
mat!er II something Is of small or large
consequence to you: unless you handle
yourseH sk\1\tutly, you could make a mistake if you're not on your 'oes . Be careful.
f

. Service

Opportunities

I 'IIJII ~~

TRASH

TO US EVERY HOUil OF
EVEfi.Y D"'Y FOR THE
P,._ST

9 Lipstick
color

41 Arraganl

tea leaves

sages
26 Archipelago
4 Do not give
dol ·
consent to 27 This, in
5 Nomad
Havana
dwelling
29 Actress
-Williams
6 -you....,?
7 Turndowns 30 Scale
8 And,lo Fritz
meas.

39 Principles

We'c tnuday, Oct. 2~, 2008
By B•mlc• Btde 01ot
In the year ahead, you might be lorced to
clear out the deadwood and the weeds
that have been hamparing your forward

HAS TOlUC MOL.~ ?
PIP YOU KNOW THEYVE

740-653·9657

3 Urgent mea·

44 Conditions

45 Make ftt

you dO now?
As we covered yesterday, wt1en one of a
major is raised to two of that major, the
one·major bid\lar usually passes or
jumps 10 game. If he does anything else,
'he is assumed to be making a help-sull

G

DID YOU KNOW WE
HIWE TO Go To SCHooL
WITH THESE GUYS
BEC,._U.S.E OUR SCHOOL

Guttering

....

sealovol
37 Uptight
38 Health club

heart ruff.

.

St.ll124P

36 Mi. above

hean, one diamond, lour clubs and the

t n~ idc Fe n ~~: ~ I.OC I!If

IDGEIIYSEllS
BAilliE

oppoailes

draws trumps, pitching his low diamond,
and claims. "He takes six spades, one

Ju&lt;, idt· Stontgt' $~ .t)(Jflf
Upl' ll S1mn: $! .00/lf
c, , I ' .

34 Tall graso
35 Cheers '

Easl
Pass

• king, and plays a low club lo dummy.
Whan the bod break comes 10 light,
declorer ruffs a heort high ln his hanQ,

ON BOTH 1\ LARGE 00
OOANTUM SCALE,

, FT and PT 12hr shifts available
Nursing- STNAs
• All shif1S available
Apply at3759 Rocksprings Road,
Pomeroy. OH 45769
•

· co~~ l-IlT~ IAA.i?

f&gt;.L~M Cl-m.l,

email:

Johnson's Tree

Nurlng- RNs

-

mill at a rate

Owners:

~ ~~T~l~G&gt;

~CI'\&gt; C.

' t-12111.

ol
November,
08, thea _'========E~
O=Ii=======
quesllon
at levying
tax, In elllcess of the ten
Help Wanled
Help Wanted
mill limitation, for the
banellt of Sutton Township. lor the purpoH of
Fire f&gt;I'Oiecllon
--j,·~
····.:~-~~---1 .. '
Said talll being a re~
,.-~,
pfacemenl of lax of 1
~·
ceeding 1 mill lot oach
One dollar of valuation,
which amounlo 10 len
cents {$0.10) lor oach
ono hundred dollar• pi
v.alulllon, far live {5)
yeoro. The polls lor the
eltctlon will open al
6:30 a.m. and remain
open unlll 7:30 p.m. on
elecllon day.
By order of the Bqard

Cell: 740-416-5047

Jon Van Meter &amp;

,..SOU~I&gt;~ GOOt&gt;,

OUF:. !&gt;PE.Cit&gt;-L,
TOI&gt;t..'{I l ~ T~F.U.

lir&gt;l l'tlllll' 1ir.l

j,

~~

Current Employment

~~~~~:~8~~ of Malgs ~~r.::~ ~ :ar~~u~
division as a Geneial
Elecllon to be hold In
the Township of Suiton, Ohio, ol tho rogufar places of vollng
therein, on the •th day

Racine, Ohio 74Q-247·2019 ·

Co . f1airgrounds

o,·t. 25. 2nos

33 Slalom run

maximum, making four spades seem
clear. But ... sometimes partner wiU be
thinking about a slam. Just in case he is,
when you have a super hand for your
sequence so far, convey that to partner.
Here, raise to four clubs. This announces
a four-spacte rebid with good club support 190.
Now partner can take control with
BlackwoOd, then bid seven clubs.
Note that in spades or no-trump, there
are only 12 tricks. However, after West
leads the heart king against seven clubs,
South wfhs with his ace, cashes the dub

Coa~rete .Work

WINTER STORAGE

30 Laze around

25 lnferpret

game-try. Partner is being asked to look
primarily al his holding in the surt just
oamed and to jump to game unless lle is
weak in that suit.
In t~;s case, North has good clubs and a

· AN' WE SAVED A LOTTA
MONEY BY RE·USIN' 'i'.ORE
OL' WANTED POSTERS !!

,--'-~~--:--,

makt• a diffc'rt'"(·t• Cl't'ry dti_\i.

Sutton 1

I0-21

AIITypes,Ot

Usi"g _wirrr .1·ki/h. WIIIJiflSSi on flml mrinx tv

remain open unlll 7:ao Racine, Ohio paosed
p.m. on election day.
on the 15th ~ay of AuBy order of the Board gual, 08, there will be
John N. lhle
Chair
Alta D. Smllh
Director
Doled Sept 5, 2008
(10~ 21,28

I AIN'T SO SHORE
DON'T WORI;IY,
''BOUT THEM
SNUFFY, FOLKS
CAMPAIGN
WON'T MIND TH'
POSTERS,
RECYCLED PAPER !!
LUI&lt;EY ...

www.tlllllle..-koalltattrJ.-

Rocksprings Rehabilitation Center ·

five {5) years. The polls of the Board of Town. lor lhe elecllon will ship Trustees of tho
open at 6:30 a.m. and Township ol

"'

Hardwood Ca~lneitf AI• fl"*t .

Ul\'d It! I If()\

1?

w~e

Recently a fellow columnist recommended a bid that I considered second-best.
However, I was unable to construct a
deal using his hand to make my point, so
today 's North !land will have to suffice.
Partner opens one spade, you raise to
lwo ·spades, and he rebids three dubs.
What does that mean, and wt1at would

~LfC.TlON
YM~.

Mon -Fri .

-,I

y

for each one hundred given that In pur·
dollars of valu.atton1 for suance of a Resolution

:1nd

RV "'

I I \I i'
ll1,( 1(flf

u

t Allowed

2 Prince Val's 23 Remnant

28 Before,
·
to Blake

A game-try bidder
might aim higher

PUTTING YOU lN TOIJCtt
wiTtt ll~ALITY IS
60IN(j TO
,~ TlliCICY
I&gt;IJ#liNG AN

#5548

WL· -.c rvicc am.!

Pass

North

39 Appte rival
40 Big name
19 Wtndhoek's
in trains
cont..
42 Sighs of
22 Lack
delight
ai~hts

DOWN

Spooky

Opening lead: • K

E-mail: captblll65@yahoo.com
www.auctlonzlp.com

oil

ch;tng-co,;. \ m;r ll t=llt;! ine

boa t-;

s•••

BIIIJ R. Galllllr.
740-416-1164

nll.·dwnil· V.1 1rk.

West
PUs

59 Nerve
60 Mossy place 15 Ex11 ramp

18 Gathered
dull
20 Wears well
21 Loving
24 More

• KQ63

IUCdiRIIr:

ali gnmc'nt s. li~h t

\\ intcrit:c

cook

• ;. s

Stop &amp; Compare

55 Poyche's
beloved
56 Give the eye
57 Sticker 11a1
58 Old card
· game

(2 wds.)

4KQJ9 87
• A

South

&amp; U ~d Ti re..,,
W..: buy .w-.cd ti re ....
complltl'r "'h~r..· l •·

'-~.:rvi_CL'

• A J 10 8
Eul
• 10
• 8 64 3
• K Q J 10

Dealer: South
Vulnerable: North-South

. N ~w

• .-ompk1e

auccesaor
UCyprHS
' featu"'
14 Sanitary
16 Mixealn
17 Did not

Soulb

1/1411 mo. pd

(:' Poinh'

•="""=""'""'""'""""

1.5 mills lor each one HIRING avy. Pay $20/hr eluding fuel surch8rge &amp;
Mtchania
c;lollar· of valuation, or
$57Kiyr,
includes trailer rental. Operators
which amounts to flf· Fed Be,n, OT. Place by hould have newer equip- ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;=
teen (15) cents ($0.15) adSource, not affiliated men!. For more lnlorma- Auto Tech experience refor each one hundred with · USPS who hires. lion , • contact Dennis at . qui red. Call
tor info

'

-144187 Witlptc Rd.
l'omcroy. Oil

portunilies 'available for ' Ua Co~nty Board of
Owner operators within MR/0~ rs an Equal Opthe region. we feature portumty Emplol{er

tiona! tax of 1.5 mills at

E1e1r•r

w-~------------~ - ·1

invader

53 Cruising
place
{2 wdo.)

12 Franc

ID-! 1-{18

•PH

L &amp; L Tire !Jarn

!unities R&amp;J Truo:king . t;pol;s. o~;o 45631 or call
Govornmenf &amp; Fodtf'OI MarieHa, .Qhb ~as 00 . 740-446-6902. T~e Gal-

Is · hereby a rate not exceeding POST

'l

' .'

":'="""""'"":":"':"'"':"

3501.11 (GJ, Said tax being an add!·

5705.19, 5705.25

'
Hours
7:00AM - 8:00PM

992-021 J

5, 2008.

Jobs

to 1{)•JC31f·· .:,

V.C. YOUNG Ill
Cr

• Complete
Remodeling

. J41112-1U1

·wv 036725

Pnmf'IO)

• Garases

so r!.

name

...

Stz9tt li'ite'' ··

· Patio and Porch Deeks

N-

• 9 750

West
• 54 2
• K Q J 10
+97632

chanta
49 Lake Erie

8 Weba~e
It Collon gin

Nonll
• A63

•New Homes

amounts
47 Mantra

t Lemon411ogor

i

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

· VInyl Siding &amp; PeinHng

on

MILL LIMITATION

a.

Remodefing
·New Gar~gH
· E~triad . &amp; ptumblng
• Rooftng 1 ounera

=

OF TAX LEVY IN EK- . the benefit of Columblo
CESS OF THE TEN Twp. lor the purpose of

ACROSS

Phillip
Alder

ftGEit.l\.Jliniii)l

NOTICE OF ELECTION

NEA Crossword Puzzle

BRIDGE

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

bath

The Daily Sentinel • Page 85

Jobs

Change lhtt w011d • Med1cal office position
Reduced 2 2006
opening Solaty aryd pay
2 bed 2 b~tll . 1
one call at a timet
FEDERAL
16)(70 2 bed 1
Help Childrer\ and adulls Wilt be diSCUSSed upor1
POSTAL JOBS
1ntervrew
Plea se • send
1 1999 t6x80 2
lighting cancer bY·
resume to Cl.A Bok t03
ba1tl gas. 1 199 7 ~
~ 7 89-$28 27'HA ..
n~w
makrng calls asking !Of
CIO Gallipolfs. Dady Trib2 bed 2 beth gas. hrn .
Fm
application
vo lt~nleer support.
une PO So) 469. Galli2002 16x80 3 bed 2 and ee govemm~t tob
polis, 01-145631
bath
Priced
defivered into. cat! American As - $250 Sign on BomJo
blocked. leve~ and an- soc
ol
Labor
A &amp; l Home Care and
Day
Ph. l 913-599-B226.
24/llrs
; No Experk&gt;nce
Well rna~ntained 4 br. chQfed.
Training Cenlor. LLC m
&amp; emp serv.
R~ired
house &amp; 2 br. cabin on 740-388-QOOO
Proctorville. Qh10 is now
&amp; . ...,..,;..,..,..,.....
i weekly Pay &amp;
200
acres
close
to 740-388-IJ:; 13
hmng a part-time LPN tor
" Bonuses·
E"nings Ho1p WanNd. G-ral
Pomeroy, -availablf! im- 740-245-9215
respite
nurs•ng
and
&amp;
weekends
Ph.
; Set SChedules
mediately.
sk11ted nurs1ng v1sits ancl
; Medea!, Dental and
or 740-388-8017
&amp;
S250$
1740)992-459Q
a PT1per diem RN in the
740-245-92t5
&amp;
Vision
740·416-7538
Lav·.t•cnce/Gama
County
740-794-()460
Sign On Bonusll
; Paid
areas. Must Mave an ac-.
·traimng..11olidaytvaca~on
hve Ollio license or be
We aJe hiring!!!
On site Doctor
eligible !Of Ohio licensure, a caring attitude,
•
N~ eKperience required.'
New tralnlf'l9 clas~s
be dependaPie arltl have
Rental•
startklg right now!
No Credil Card Sales! No
reliable
transpol1ation.
~~~~~;;;;::!'::'~
derical
Collections}
We olfer
competitive
HI88~1!C-PAYU
2BR 1' bath at 3675 Bu- •-.--;;;;~~'::'"~~
wages
llel(ible schedIaviiie Pk Must See! No Fast pa ced. . challenging
Ext 1931
ules and weekly comRaise funds and renew
http:J,o1obl.lnloclsion.com
Pels .. 740-440-4234 tn ottM::e looking _ for moti·
pensallon For immedimemberships
tor
the
740-208 -7861
vated worker 101 part
ate cunsidetat•on. caH
tlflle position Must type National Rifle Association
740-886·7623 and speak
~BR, Bidwell area. $375 and
have
excellent
Diesel Mechanic
tow w1th Dawnetla or Aulhie.
renL'deposit. NO PETS. phone/customer ,. service
Weekly Pay and Borius bOa t e)(periece des110d. EOE
388·9880
skUis. Please submit regood wages, exc. berle!i!
Incentives'
CNA 's &amp; Resident Assis--::!~~":"~~~~ ~ume and reteren~es by
-::
package 304 -675 -4545
Full and Part·time
tants ·
Positions!
2Bfl.
Interview Are Now BBing
$500 per month on
Includes· November
resumas lo CLA Send
~?ox
Professional Work
DireCt Care ·Stall In resi· Coadm;ted For CNA &amp;
utilities 540-752-0826 or lOt , PO Bo)l 469, GalllEnvironment!
clential ' youth program . Res1den1 Assista11t Posi540 . 720 . 1331
polis, Ohfo45631
Modk:al. Donia!, EA~
Must be 2 1 years .of age . tions If You Are A Car401K!.
Pay baSed on e.llperi- ing, Enlhusiastic,
Federal Fvnds jus! re- ·
Driven
.
&amp; Deliv.ry
Deence.
Call Pendable Person, Then
On-site Doctor!
teased tor Land Owners. :;;;;~~:"':~"":;;;;o":';;;
(740)379-9083
Mon·Fri We Want You To Join
No closing co st ilnd Llgllt duly tow truck op9am-3pm,
ZERO DOWN' Will do era lor. Clean 'driving · reOw Team. Come On
Call TODAY!
lmnf
improvements cord. 388-9880'
Over &amp; Check Us Out!
Interview TOMORR0Wff
Bank.rupky &amp; Bad Credll
MDS
Yov 'lt Be Glad You Ok:f!
Wort NEXT WEEK!!!
OK. 2, 3. 4 and 5 bed·
COORDINATOR
oCompetitl'le
CNA
HIQ~MC · PAYU
Educ:alion
roorns
available.
Edgewood Manor
Wages, Paid Vacations,
7 40-446-3384
Ext 23tt
ot Wellston
Pard Mea ls. Many Other
50 skilled bed Facility
The Athens-Meigs ESC ~~-~:--~:-­
Benefits.
RavensWOOd
For Rent
has a position opening Ohio
valley ·
Home
"AN
Care Center. 111 3 WashMobile homes &amp; lots , as Part-Ttme Assistant 10
'2 yrs MDS
il,19fon Sl., Ravenswood,
(no pets) in Ashton WV the PreschOol Coordlna- Heatlh, Inc. hl~ng Home
EJo:peti~ n Ce
WV
References
ReHealth
Aides.
STNA.
3 04 5 7 6 2 94 2
tor
for
the
2006-2009
CNA,
CHHA,
PCA
may
·Exceptional
quired
,
E.O.E.
~,._·,._-,._-.,.·- .....
communication &amp;
Scenic location, conven- School Year. Applicants apply at 14aon Jacks'ltn
Homo Health Cp re ol
people skills
ie ~t to town and alford- ~:ould have ere~~:~~ Pike, G311i,polls, OhiO m
So.ulheasl Ohio Inc., IS
' lntarperc;ona l &amp;
able. 2 &amp; 3 bedrooms Certil!calionflicensure
phone 740-441-1393 for
currently
hiring
home
organizational skills
more info . Competitive
call
available
l1ealtll
'alclt3S.
Certified
or
that woulcl allow them to w.ages,
mileage . re1mTo apply, vi sil:
{740)99'.2·5639
'
experience.
Bonuses
supelvise preschool op- bursement and benefit s
www.consuf ~temgtcaAvailable.
' Call
era tions;
Intervention
reers.corn
including health lnsurSales
1 866 -~66 - 11 00.
Spncialist in Early Child- ance &amp; much mbre
405 North Park A;Je
::::~~~~~~;o;;;;;;;
Wellston, OH 45692.
2004 Doublewide in new hoo d Education degree - - - . . , . - - . , . . Rostouranh
740-364-56 t 1
condition. 4 bedroom , 2 prelerred. Salary will be Gallipolis Career College
bath, an appliances In· based on credentials and Is seeking part-time inEOEISFIDF
Now Hiring Experienced.
eluded, $37,000 located experience. II you are In- structors who possess a
wailstaff,
cooks.
dishat 176 Zuspan Lane Ma- terested lfl thi s position, master's degree in gen- Service Manager &amp; Serv- washers &amp; delivery drivplease submit a letter ol era! education subject arson City 304-675-2117
ice Technician posllions ers appty
rn person
inlerest, resume and ref- eas such as: English,
Famous
Hot
available. Health care &amp; ! larry's
erences
to:
John 0 . Co- Math , and Social Sci·
Brand neYJ~ 3bed 2bath
Retirement plans avail- Dog.s Now Haven
Superintendent, ences. E-mail resumes
on + -hall acre In Pt. stanza,
able. Pl9ase send reAthens-Meigs ESC. 507 to
jdanicki@gallipoliscaSales
Plea"'nl. OWNER FIsume
to
NANCE
AVAILABLE Ricllland Avenue, SUite remcollege.edu or call LLC@ CAREQ COM
'0 1
,., · s
#108. Alh8nS, 0!] 4570t . 800-214-0452
(740)446- 3~ 70
lax to 740 -446 -9104
PE~rt-Time
re!ail
" 10
Appticatiofl
Deadline:
t 2·15 hrslwk. Starting
:~":"
. 3 October
30,
2008, 60-llr. EMT Miner Class
1 "':t"':4 ":,,:-:o~on-:ob:"'il:"'o"':~-0-,n-e'"'::
pay $7lhr. Send resum.es
hr.. 2 IJJIIl. ready to be 3:30pm . . The AMESC , is &amp; Aalresllers 40-hr. Sur- ,.,..,..,..,..,..,.,..,., to Box 102, C/0 PO Box
faco
Apprentice 80-hr.
Managomenf I
469,
Gallipolis,
011io
rno~J e cl .
$10,500. an equal opportur1lly Eli1Underground Apprentice
ployeri1Provider.
4563 1
.
Supervisory
1740)591 -8936
16-hr.
Tre~
Clearing
Serv1ce , Bus
Nm'l 3 Bedroom homes """"':'Foo""'d:"Sorvi:"'"'."'ce"'•""""' Mine Underground For9000
man Class. Minor Safety SSAISe•vice Administmtnm• $2 14 36 pe1 month,
01tec\01y
Equipment Store.
For lor. Bachelor Degree and
inCludes m;my upg1ades.
able
to
oblain
appropriinlormatiorr . call
delivery
&amp;
sel-up. Admin. approx 30 hrs per more
certi fication.
The
week.
Computer
skills
reWhii-Co
Training ate
740-365-2434
Concreto
SSA will · determine eligiquired. Apply in person 304-372-8346
bility tor services _within All types Ma sonry,_ brick.
at Sode)(o Food Services
All EJ(cellent way to eam the Gallia County Board block. slone . Fr~Q Esti at Rio Grande University.
money The New AVon. of
MRIDO
pmgrams. mate,
740-416-7305,
Call .
Marilyn Must hold a valid drivers 304 _593 _6421
On · C:aiiiParf Tim~ cater- 304-8B2 -2645
license
Experience in
lng. lood 'service workers -"""-..,..--...,.~ the MAIDU lielcl is pre&amp; experienced cook . Ap· AVON! All Areas!
To terred.~ Po sitiol1 is twelve
ply in person at Sodexo Buy
or
Sell Shirley months. Apply to· Gaflia
SAVINGS
Food Services at Rio Spears 304-6751429
County Board ol MRfDD ,
- -....
- -....
77 M'll
I
1 CreP. k Roa d · G aten mill limitation, for Grande University.
.Owner
Operator
Oppor-

Chur~h

Apto. ot Joci&lt;l8tlllla. 52 WestWOOd Dr., from $365 to
-740-446-2568

•

IDn

www.mydallysentinel.com
Medical

Htlp Wanlod • G.ntral

Sales

HCM~~MforRent

··'iomJ a Ill·

Tuesday, October 21, 2001

. www.mydallysentinel.com

Pllge B4 • The Daily Sentinel

CZ!ll!Ao

If OUR IW.li&lt;. WEr.!£. &amp;oill(l.
iO F~l ~. IJOW W0U1.0 !IE.

eww...

A GOOD TIM€..'

I

s...-

-·

0.. ... ~ ""

I Pol'iT WaNT To (I&gt;S£
M«-1: Votce ~ T~IS l.s&amp;J&amp;

�\

-

EQual Housing Opponv ·
nfly. Tl1fo &lt;nslltution Is an
Equal Opportunity PIO·
vfdor and Employeo.

OrwlalJI Uvtng 1 and 2

&amp;eooc:wn Acts.

Mlnof

at Village
Rivet'skte

and

Apts. Wl Middleport. from

1327
to
740-992-51J64 .

$592.
Equal

Housing Opponvnity.
Tara

Townhouse

~a1'1111ents • 2BR, · 1.5
bath, back paHo, pool,
. playground,

(trash, sew ago,
water
pd)
S425Jrent,
$425/sec
dep. can 740-367-0547·
Very nice 1 eR home in
Pomeroy, great neighbomood,large yard,ideal
b 1 or 2 people, new

~.Call

992-5094" and

leave a

mes=-~~·==~t::

:

Commercial

2 · bay service station 1
Jack&amp;OO
Pike .
Lealie
required. Call 446-3644
for more info.

HOUMs For Rent
5238/fllQ! 4 bed . 2 "ath .
Bank Repo! (5'l doY. n. 1~

years, .8% APR! fOf'
~620-4946 ex R027

li~ 1 i n~ ~

$400/mo + deposit, tBR,
Rg&amp;Ref.fum,
W&amp;D
hookup, No steps , Very

clean,

114

Slate

St.

740-441·0596

2 bedroom House $300
month. Plus Utility, Rei &amp;
Deposit
No
304--675-4874

Pets

2 bedroom house. alliliiEible Ott. 1. 6 miles ~low Gallipolis on SR 7
446-1211
2 BR house in Gallipolis,
WID
conn.
$415/mo
$150/dep. You pay all
utilities. No section e • or
HUD.
Call
Wa_yne

4()4-456-3802
2BA

house

In

located

.town, · Gallipolis,

OH

$500/mo plus uillilies. No
· Pets. 740-441 -0110 o1
740-59 1-5 174
2br on the River in Masun HLIO Appr oved Rderences 304 - 882 &lt;~51 2 111
304-488 -7946
3 BD HOUSE IN CHESTER,O~ .CONTACT

740-985-4131

parsonage. 3BR .
2 bath, full basement . 2
ca r
garage.
!ndudus
WID. rtew !ridge artcl
range Sits on nearly 2
acres $700 plus we
dep . For i11to ~~ lnspec Uon caM 2&lt;'1 5-0031

Prices
16K80
2000
bath.
bed ~
1'4 JC70

fann

YOUNG'S

H1 :1s Set

CARPENTER
SERVICE

Storage

· Room Addtttont

R.C.

Road Maintenance

25VP~~tnro~

NOTICE

given that In pursuance of a Resolution
of the Board of Educatlon of the Southern
Local School Dlatrlct,

OFFICE

NOW weekly

sentements,

;n-

n:pair.

Racine, Ohio passed dollars or voluallon, tor 1·666·403-2562
386·9680
8oo. 462-9365
on lhe 14th day of Au- live {5) years. The polls
gual, 08, !here will be lor lhe election will
In Memory
In Memory
submllted to a vote ol open al 6:30 a.m. and
lho people of said iub- remain open unlit 7:30
division as a General p.m. on election day,
- -'-;-- - --=--··-=
Election 10 be held In By order of the Board
Pete Haley
lhe County of Meigs, of Elections, ot Malgs
115148- 10120107
Ohio, at the regular Counly, Ohio
places
of
voting John N. lhle
M11n' tlran tl hmllln
'
I
therein, on the 4th day Chair
My IJt•srji-it'nd.
of November, 08, the Rlla D. Smith
,4 hdping ll~md
ql,le&amp;Uon of levylng .a Director
A,mn· rf'ady to/end.
tax, In excess ollhelei't Doled Sept. 5, 2008
mill llmllallon, lor lhe (10) 21. 28
llunti"g, Fishing . Timt•.\· were helft;r
i'
benefit of Southern
.
With tilt• tlt'o of us , ofwny.\· togellrer.
\
Local School District
Yo11've
been
~one a )'em· roday·
1
Public Notice
lor the purpos_
o ol Curnml Expenses
Ya l .nm miss ''ml ~I
Said tax being a re- · NOnCE OF ELECTION
more rhmt word.'i cwt SCI)"&lt;
·
newal of an existing tax OF TAX LEVY IN EX·
Love, Mark
of 4 mills at a role nol CESS OF THE TEN
---~---- =-~-=,_-.,..·--·-~-=o,::j
exceeding 4 mills for MILL LIMITATION
each one dollar ol va~ R.C.
3501 .11{G),
Help Wanted
Help Wanted
.uatlon, which amounls 5705.,19, 5705.25
to lorly ($0.40) cenls NOTICE Is hereby

(740) 992-5344
R:IMJ am - 4:30pm
Sat. R:OO am - 12
We apf"eciale your
bnsi11es!i

Concrete Removal
and Replacement

28 Years Experience

David Lewis
740-9'92·6971

lnaured

wVt42tl2 .Free Estlmltes

M eig~

l)JKJ a.m . ~ II :UU a.m.
R dcu-,~: April 2~.11Kl'J
A tl·l.' or ~21.r m will be
chargl.'\1 for l!arly ;trti\'lll,
lat\.' :HTin 1L t•:~rl v n~ mo,nl.
lat..: ft' lllv'·:tl. Or tuwti ml!
an:~·.'-\ is wa ntn.i !o
h1ir!!nmm.b 11thct · limn
~ lah: ll
dated. Hurldi nll
~ !l&lt;~l'&lt;'

Public Notice
1

NOTICE OF ELECTION
OF TAX LEVY IN EXCESS OF THE TEN
MILL LIMITATION
R.C.
a50t.11{G),
5705.19, 5705.25
NOTICE Ia hereby
given lhot In pursuance oi a Resolullorl
of life Board ol Townohlp TruoiHa of lho
Townlhlp of Columbia,
Albany, Ohio paoud
on lhtt 7th day of Auguot, 08, lhere will be
.,.bmltled lo a vole of
Jhe people of Hid IUbdiYittion 11 a General
flection lo be hold In
·!he Township of Columbia, Ohio, al the
regular placet· of votIng lhttrtln, on the 4th
day of November, 08,
.lhtt quelllon of levying
1 tlx, In excees ~~ the

not

ex-

of Elections, of Meigs

Counly, Ohio
John N. thle
Chair
Rlla D. Smhh
Director
Dated Sept. 5, 2008
(10) 21, 28

Paul Rowe

.........

Seamless Gutters
Rooting, Siding, Gutters
Insured &amp; Bonded

141912-2

Ell T"'U&lt;IN&amp;

ln•u~

· frH &amp; llm11n
1111..141-1381
"

Shop
Classlfleds!

Quality Seamless
Gutters
Maintenance Plus
CtJtii!II(' ITitrl

&amp; Rnidemia/

Vinyl
Siding/Replacement
WindowS/Remodeling
Bunded &amp; Insured
740-992- 1493 Office
740-416-8339 Cell ·
· Free ESilmated
Porrn:roy, Ohio

Stanley Tra.
Trimming
&amp; Removal

WWEN·ARE i'OU GOING
TO 61VE ME ANOTI-IEil.

· 61RLS
LOVE MUSlC
MliSIC .so;,;.-x.;..1_ _11"1 ,_eo_x_e_s.._,.,.

*Experienced
References Available!
Call Gary Stanley @
740-591-8044

Please leave mes

AS ATIEIETI:AL.
PH'ISDST I'LL DEVELOP

RICK PRICE
31011'1,

'
.• ./

;'

06t' Or1. J. ~IXI8

PART-TIME FACuLTY
MEIGS CAMPUS

•"

•

,,

.

i ~'
• ~':t!9

1;

POSITION ANNOUNCEMENT

..

~

~-

'

,

A!.NIFYING THEORY OF
THE UNIVERSE THAT

Decks,

~W\1~ BEHI\VIOR.

MIND OF

·Vinyl Siding
• Replacement
Wllod.W.s
-Roollng
•,Decks
·Garages
• Pole Buildings
• Room Addlllona
Owner:
James KHsee II

·742-2332

OUC1TI~.

$

ialltpoH' laiJp lri~unt ..
·loloint ~ltalarit_lt~~te~
The Qaily Sentinel
iunbav lhne_s-ienttnel

74(1--387.0544

Freee.HrnotH .

. 740-367.0538

For Remodeling and New HoWle BuHdlf'l
Call: MARCUM CONSTRUCTION

Employer

•'

I•Ew.••-

I
'

740-9854141
Cell: 740-4t6- 1834

I

'\\\~.

15+ years rxperitrrct Frw ElliluirJ

.

'

48 Hozo plus
49 Cash "'.-

50

drawer "-·
Toot~pasie

type
·
51 Galleon
cargo

52 Unduly

10 "'- Girts"

31' ExcL!se me! 54 Khan
32 Ad~anee,
of note
as money

13 Clousl!l;!lu's
valet

34 Put on
eBay

by Luis Campos
Cel.ebnty Ciphl!l crypro,sms are erea1ed 1romquola11ons D)o·1amou! ~pie paSI ano pres&amp;nl
Ea:h l~er 1n lhe (l ~e• stanos lor ;t1c!1er

Todsy's clue: leq11a!S.P,

I

YN

" LGKLF

LFK

UE ,KX

LFIVL

UTSXGPOXPL

LTUXLFXG.

JTOAGTOVNX

VN

OWDXN

LFX

TVE

UTSXGPOXPLN

UXGWER

FTERN

LFWL

UT. "

-

G . - ITGA

PREVIOUS SOLUTION - "II is bener to be defeated Standing lor a nigh
principle than to run by committing sul:lte rtuge .~ ·Grover Cleveland

r::~~~~· S©~ot11A-~£!fs· GAM I
- , - - - - - !dlood by CLAY R. POLLAN :-=---0 lour scrambledlatt:enwordsof thebeWOlD

~earronge

'blr~: .

~low CON 'Ia&gt; lie -NST
Ea1iNG Hea1._~T l'ou'te
HaVt~G- a H&lt;-&gt;1 DoG '1'

Advertise
in this space for
$64 per month
,

46 Nat crisp

CELEBRITY CIPHER

AstroGraph

I't~ Ll\&lt;t,"'' SOUP TO NUTZ
~~~
,·?-------~~
~~6

47239 Riebel Road, Long Boetom, OH

•

43 Tiny

low to term four simple .wordt

0 0 YT I D
50 J U·T
r--.,..-.,..-,---,~

SHOT!

Whtle leavmg the gyfn 1
overheard one woman sigh,

'

h:-.--r---r----r.rl ~
I'

l

I I I Is :

"D1eting is going to great
lengths to avoiding going to

/,"'~~~-~~~.' ' the
I
· I I I' I I
ORGREIJ

_

chockle quatod
the tniS$Ing VfOrc4
you di1Vtlap from ~ep No. 3 below:

by .filli"'W

i"

UNSCRAMBLE ABOVE LETmS
10 GET AN SWER

SCRAMLETS ANSWERS 10'20108
Chalet - Lapel - Nylon- Magnet · PLANE for HOME
"It's hard to disguise your feelmgs, " grinned my neighbor.
"when you put relalives on a PLANE for HOME."'

ARLO &amp; JANIS

(May 21 -June 20) -ll you hear.
L- - - - - - - - - - ' ' GEMINI
only what you want to Mar, you will
Ignore the tacts and totally miss the
essenc&amp; of somelhing iflllOrt&amp;nt. Your
judgment will be only as good as )'OUr
YOU'R6 RIGHT, ()!)liS. 'THAT
intake.
OTHeR P06- 16 5TUPIP
CANCER (June 21-July 22) - Some
LOOKING&lt;
possessions are just as-lmpor1anl to you
on an emotional level as th~ are on a
monetary one. If you are careless with
something you like, you could lose on
both count s.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) - Think twice
before making an Idle promise, because
your listener will take you at your word.
Whal you com~lde r to be merely a polite
agreement ~uk:l be a binding eomml!·
mentto another. ,..
:VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sepl. 22) .... Whet you
say and what you do could be at. Odds,
and lhla dichotomy could lotll.ly confuse
thaN wtth whOm you have dMIInga. Try
to bt consilient In both WOfd and de~ .

Loctl Contrlictor

•..Room Additions • Garages • Vinyl
·and Wood Siding • Roofing • Pole
Barns • Patio's, Porches and Decks

(

4~74

I

TEPA TE DUM

*Reasonable Rates

Room Addilions, Remodoiin1,

.

fax

J Ll\ DOM TE DA DUM

MAJ&lt;I~~
THE~TEST

www .extendjcare.com

Rio Grande, Ohio
e-mail:

A MUSIC 60X!

*Insured

PSI CONSTRUCTION

'

. Din'(:tor nr Humnn Rt~mrc"'
Uninrsity of Rio (frnndc
P.O. Box SUI
.

LOOK AT ME .. I1M

*Prompt and Quality
Work

Construction

The Universily·ofRio Grande is taking applications
for part-time facully ~mbers for 1he Spring Semester
for Academic Year 2008-09 for the Meigs Campu s.
Instructors arc needed in tht areas or biolog)'. 1.oology
environmental science and history. A bachelor's
degree is re~ired . Master 's prererred.
All candidates should submit a letter of intcrc~l .
Current resume and Ihe names of atklrl''i'ieS nr thn:c
reference-s. Re-s umes will be revic"cLt a~ 1'1.:-.:dl'~.."\1 .
lnfurmalion mulil he 'iUhmiucd to :
M ~ Ptwlli~ Ma ~on. MHA . SPIIR

MONT+t?

Complete Tree Care

·~. Hoffie~Q\Vn ·News
, ·'Are@ shappiht.· · ·
•L6cal s·ports "'~ .
•Con1i'nqnity
Calendar
..:and much more..

person

movement. Once completed, hOwever, il
· will be a smooth path thai awails you.
LIBRA (Sept. 23 -0ct. 23) - Information
· or !Ips from well-Intentioned friends
should not be acted upon without flrsl
verifying their claims. It doesn't maller
whether it involves money or gossip;
erroneous data could be costly.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov:. 22)- Be a wise
listener, and do not take that which could ·
make a difference In your life for granled.
Inaccurate information could lead you to
make a mistake and cause big trouble.
SAGIITARIUS (Nov. 23-0ec. 21} Unless you are on you~ toes, someone
clever could gel you to reveal information
about another thai, If misused, WO:Uid be
harmful. This person's interest mlghl be
rljiOre devious !han curious.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) - It is
n~ver a good idea to share an Bllpensive
pastime with another who, in ream~ . can'!
· afford it. When the bill comes, your friend
might be short ol cash al'ld have no credil cards.
·
AQUARIUS (Jan . 20-Feb. 19) - If you
need some good advice, you would be
be«er off seeking It from more than one
source. It might take a combination of .
several counaelora to help nryd the .rlght
answer.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) - Planned
activities mlght not be as aaay to engage
as you thought. A number of une)(pec1ed
obligations might take prl!Cedenca and
force you to spend time on them.
ARIES {March 21-April19)- Someone
with whom You sociatlze from lime to
time might try manlpulalion to gel you to
do his or her bidding. Don't believe that
eve'l)'one you know Is e!hlcal. Keep your
guard up.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) - It doesn't
mat!er II something Is of small or large
consequence to you: unless you handle
yourseH sk\1\tutly, you could make a mistake if you're not on your 'oes . Be careful.
f

. Service

Opportunities

I 'IIJII ~~

TRASH

TO US EVERY HOUil OF
EVEfi.Y D"'Y FOR THE
P,._ST

9 Lipstick
color

41 Arraganl

tea leaves

sages
26 Archipelago
4 Do not give
dol ·
consent to 27 This, in
5 Nomad
Havana
dwelling
29 Actress
-Williams
6 -you....,?
7 Turndowns 30 Scale
8 And,lo Fritz
meas.

39 Principles

We'c tnuday, Oct. 2~, 2008
By B•mlc• Btde 01ot
In the year ahead, you might be lorced to
clear out the deadwood and the weeds
that have been hamparing your forward

HAS TOlUC MOL.~ ?
PIP YOU KNOW THEYVE

740-653·9657

3 Urgent mea·

44 Conditions

45 Make ftt

you dO now?
As we covered yesterday, wt1en one of a
major is raised to two of that major, the
one·major bid\lar usually passes or
jumps 10 game. If he does anything else,
'he is assumed to be making a help-sull

G

DID YOU KNOW WE
HIWE TO Go To SCHooL
WITH THESE GUYS
BEC,._U.S.E OUR SCHOOL

Guttering

....

sealovol
37 Uptight
38 Health club

heart ruff.

.

St.ll124P

36 Mi. above

hean, one diamond, lour clubs and the

t n~ idc Fe n ~~: ~ I.OC I!If

IDGEIIYSEllS
BAilliE

oppoailes

draws trumps, pitching his low diamond,
and claims. "He takes six spades, one

Ju&lt;, idt· Stontgt' $~ .t)(Jflf
Upl' ll S1mn: $! .00/lf
c, , I ' .

34 Tall graso
35 Cheers '

Easl
Pass

• king, and plays a low club lo dummy.
Whan the bod break comes 10 light,
declorer ruffs a heort high ln his hanQ,

ON BOTH 1\ LARGE 00
OOANTUM SCALE,

, FT and PT 12hr shifts available
Nursing- STNAs
• All shif1S available
Apply at3759 Rocksprings Road,
Pomeroy. OH 45769
•

· co~~ l-IlT~ IAA.i?

f&gt;.L~M Cl-m.l,

email:

Johnson's Tree

Nurlng- RNs

-

mill at a rate

Owners:

~ ~~T~l~G&gt;

~CI'\&gt; C.

' t-12111.

ol
November,
08, thea _'========E~
O=Ii=======
quesllon
at levying
tax, In elllcess of the ten
Help Wanled
Help Wanted
mill limitation, for the
banellt of Sutton Township. lor the purpoH of
Fire f&gt;I'Oiecllon
--j,·~
····.:~-~~---1 .. '
Said talll being a re~
,.-~,
pfacemenl of lax of 1
~·
ceeding 1 mill lot oach
One dollar of valuation,
which amounlo 10 len
cents {$0.10) lor oach
ono hundred dollar• pi
v.alulllon, far live {5)
yeoro. The polls lor the
eltctlon will open al
6:30 a.m. and remain
open unlll 7:30 p.m. on
elecllon day.
By order of the Bqard

Cell: 740-416-5047

Jon Van Meter &amp;

,..SOU~I&gt;~ GOOt&gt;,

OUF:. !&gt;PE.Cit&gt;-L,
TOI&gt;t..'{I l ~ T~F.U.

lir&gt;l l'tlllll' 1ir.l

j,

~~

Current Employment

~~~~~:~8~~ of Malgs ~~r.::~ ~ :ar~~u~
division as a Geneial
Elecllon to be hold In
the Township of Suiton, Ohio, ol tho rogufar places of vollng
therein, on the •th day

Racine, Ohio 74Q-247·2019 ·

Co . f1airgrounds

o,·t. 25. 2nos

33 Slalom run

maximum, making four spades seem
clear. But ... sometimes partner wiU be
thinking about a slam. Just in case he is,
when you have a super hand for your
sequence so far, convey that to partner.
Here, raise to four clubs. This announces
a four-spacte rebid with good club support 190.
Now partner can take control with
BlackwoOd, then bid seven clubs.
Note that in spades or no-trump, there
are only 12 tricks. However, after West
leads the heart king against seven clubs,
South wfhs with his ace, cashes the dub

Coa~rete .Work

WINTER STORAGE

30 Laze around

25 lnferpret

game-try. Partner is being asked to look
primarily al his holding in the surt just
oamed and to jump to game unless lle is
weak in that suit.
In t~;s case, North has good clubs and a

· AN' WE SAVED A LOTTA
MONEY BY RE·USIN' 'i'.ORE
OL' WANTED POSTERS !!

,--'-~~--:--,

makt• a diffc'rt'"(·t• Cl't'ry dti_\i.

Sutton 1

I0-21

AIITypes,Ot

Usi"g _wirrr .1·ki/h. WIIIJiflSSi on flml mrinx tv

remain open unlll 7:ao Racine, Ohio paosed
p.m. on election day.
on the 15th ~ay of AuBy order of the Board gual, 08, there will be
John N. lhle
Chair
Alta D. Smllh
Director
Doled Sept 5, 2008
(10~ 21,28

I AIN'T SO SHORE
DON'T WORI;IY,
''BOUT THEM
SNUFFY, FOLKS
CAMPAIGN
WON'T MIND TH'
POSTERS,
RECYCLED PAPER !!
LUI&lt;EY ...

www.tlllllle..-koalltattrJ.-

Rocksprings Rehabilitation Center ·

five {5) years. The polls of the Board of Town. lor lhe elecllon will ship Trustees of tho
open at 6:30 a.m. and Township ol

"'

Hardwood Ca~lneitf AI• fl"*t .

Ul\'d It! I If()\

1?

w~e

Recently a fellow columnist recommended a bid that I considered second-best.
However, I was unable to construct a
deal using his hand to make my point, so
today 's North !land will have to suffice.
Partner opens one spade, you raise to
lwo ·spades, and he rebids three dubs.
What does that mean, and wt1at would

~LfC.TlON
YM~.

Mon -Fri .

-,I

y

for each one hundred given that In pur·
dollars of valu.atton1 for suance of a Resolution

:1nd

RV "'

I I \I i'
ll1,( 1(flf

u

t Allowed

2 Prince Val's 23 Remnant

28 Before,
·
to Blake

A game-try bidder
might aim higher

PUTTING YOU lN TOIJCtt
wiTtt ll~ALITY IS
60IN(j TO
,~ TlliCICY
I&gt;IJ#liNG AN

#5548

WL· -.c rvicc am.!

Pass

North

39 Appte rival
40 Big name
19 Wtndhoek's
in trains
cont..
42 Sighs of
22 Lack
delight
ai~hts

DOWN

Spooky

Opening lead: • K

E-mail: captblll65@yahoo.com
www.auctlonzlp.com

oil

ch;tng-co,;. \ m;r ll t=llt;! ine

boa t-;

s•••

BIIIJ R. Galllllr.
740-416-1164

nll.·dwnil· V.1 1rk.

West
PUs

59 Nerve
60 Mossy place 15 Ex11 ramp

18 Gathered
dull
20 Wears well
21 Loving
24 More

• KQ63

IUCdiRIIr:

ali gnmc'nt s. li~h t

\\ intcrit:c

cook

• ;. s

Stop &amp; Compare

55 Poyche's
beloved
56 Give the eye
57 Sticker 11a1
58 Old card
· game

(2 wds.)

4KQJ9 87
• A

South

&amp; U ~d Ti re..,,
W..: buy .w-.cd ti re ....
complltl'r "'h~r..· l •·

'-~.:rvi_CL'

• A J 10 8
Eul
• 10
• 8 64 3
• K Q J 10

Dealer: South
Vulnerable: North-South

. N ~w

• .-ompk1e

auccesaor
UCyprHS
' featu"'
14 Sanitary
16 Mixealn
17 Did not

Soulb

1/1411 mo. pd

(:' Poinh'

•="""=""'""'""'""""

1.5 mills lor each one HIRING avy. Pay $20/hr eluding fuel surch8rge &amp;
Mtchania
c;lollar· of valuation, or
$57Kiyr,
includes trailer rental. Operators
which amounts to flf· Fed Be,n, OT. Place by hould have newer equip- ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;=
teen (15) cents ($0.15) adSource, not affiliated men!. For more lnlorma- Auto Tech experience refor each one hundred with · USPS who hires. lion , • contact Dennis at . qui red. Call
tor info

'

-144187 Witlptc Rd.
l'omcroy. Oil

portunilies 'available for ' Ua Co~nty Board of
Owner operators within MR/0~ rs an Equal Opthe region. we feature portumty Emplol{er

tiona! tax of 1.5 mills at

E1e1r•r

w-~------------~ - ·1

invader

53 Cruising
place
{2 wdo.)

12 Franc

ID-! 1-{18

•PH

L &amp; L Tire !Jarn

!unities R&amp;J Truo:king . t;pol;s. o~;o 45631 or call
Govornmenf &amp; Fodtf'OI MarieHa, .Qhb ~as 00 . 740-446-6902. T~e Gal-

Is · hereby a rate not exceeding POST

'l

' .'

":'="""""'"":":"':"'"':"

3501.11 (GJ, Said tax being an add!·

5705.19, 5705.25

'
Hours
7:00AM - 8:00PM

992-021 J

5, 2008.

Jobs

to 1{)•JC31f·· .:,

V.C. YOUNG Ill
Cr

• Complete
Remodeling

. J41112-1U1

·wv 036725

Pnmf'IO)

• Garases

so r!.

name

...

Stz9tt li'ite'' ··

· Patio and Porch Deeks

N-

• 9 750

West
• 54 2
• K Q J 10
+97632

chanta
49 Lake Erie

8 Weba~e
It Collon gin

Nonll
• A63

•New Homes

amounts
47 Mantra

t Lemon411ogor

i

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

· VInyl Siding &amp; PeinHng

on

MILL LIMITATION

a.

Remodefing
·New Gar~gH
· E~triad . &amp; ptumblng
• Rooftng 1 ounera

=

OF TAX LEVY IN EK- . the benefit of Columblo
CESS OF THE TEN Twp. lor the purpose of

ACROSS

Phillip
Alder

ftGEit.l\.Jliniii)l

NOTICE OF ELECTION

NEA Crossword Puzzle

BRIDGE

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

bath

The Daily Sentinel • Page 85

Jobs

Change lhtt w011d • Med1cal office position
Reduced 2 2006
opening Solaty aryd pay
2 bed 2 b~tll . 1
one call at a timet
FEDERAL
16)(70 2 bed 1
Help Childrer\ and adulls Wilt be diSCUSSed upor1
POSTAL JOBS
1ntervrew
Plea se • send
1 1999 t6x80 2
lighting cancer bY·
resume to Cl.A Bok t03
ba1tl gas. 1 199 7 ~
~ 7 89-$28 27'HA ..
n~w
makrng calls asking !Of
CIO Gallipolfs. Dady Trib2 bed 2 beth gas. hrn .
Fm
application
vo lt~nleer support.
une PO So) 469. Galli2002 16x80 3 bed 2 and ee govemm~t tob
polis, 01-145631
bath
Priced
defivered into. cat! American As - $250 Sign on BomJo
blocked. leve~ and an- soc
ol
Labor
A &amp; l Home Care and
Day
Ph. l 913-599-B226.
24/llrs
; No Experk&gt;nce
Well rna~ntained 4 br. chQfed.
Training Cenlor. LLC m
&amp; emp serv.
R~ired
house &amp; 2 br. cabin on 740-388-QOOO
Proctorville. Qh10 is now
&amp; . ...,..,;..,..,..,.....
i weekly Pay &amp;
200
acres
close
to 740-388-IJ:; 13
hmng a part-time LPN tor
" Bonuses·
E"nings Ho1p WanNd. G-ral
Pomeroy, -availablf! im- 740-245-9215
respite
nurs•ng
and
&amp;
weekends
Ph.
; Set SChedules
mediately.
sk11ted nurs1ng v1sits ancl
; Medea!, Dental and
or 740-388-8017
&amp;
S250$
1740)992-459Q
a PT1per diem RN in the
740-245-92t5
&amp;
Vision
740·416-7538
Lav·.t•cnce/Gama
County
740-794-()460
Sign On Bonusll
; Paid
areas. Must Mave an ac-.
·traimng..11olidaytvaca~on
hve Ollio license or be
We aJe hiring!!!
On site Doctor
eligible !Of Ohio licensure, a caring attitude,
•
N~ eKperience required.'
New tralnlf'l9 clas~s
be dependaPie arltl have
Rental•
startklg right now!
No Credil Card Sales! No
reliable
transpol1ation.
~~~~~;;;;::!'::'~
derical
Collections}
We olfer
competitive
HI88~1!C-PAYU
2BR 1' bath at 3675 Bu- •-.--;;;;~~'::'"~~
wages
llel(ible schedIaviiie Pk Must See! No Fast pa ced. . challenging
Ext 1931
ules and weekly comRaise funds and renew
http:J,o1obl.lnloclsion.com
Pels .. 740-440-4234 tn ottM::e looking _ for moti·
pensallon For immedimemberships
tor
the
740-208 -7861
vated worker 101 part
ate cunsidetat•on. caH
tlflle position Must type National Rifle Association
740-886·7623 and speak
~BR, Bidwell area. $375 and
have
excellent
Diesel Mechanic
tow w1th Dawnetla or Aulhie.
renL'deposit. NO PETS. phone/customer ,. service
Weekly Pay and Borius bOa t e)(periece des110d. EOE
388·9880
skUis. Please submit regood wages, exc. berle!i!
Incentives'
CNA 's &amp; Resident Assis--::!~~":"~~~~ ~ume and reteren~es by
-::
package 304 -675 -4545
Full and Part·time
tants ·
Positions!
2Bfl.
Interview Are Now BBing
$500 per month on
Includes· November
resumas lo CLA Send
~?ox
Professional Work
DireCt Care ·Stall In resi· Coadm;ted For CNA &amp;
utilities 540-752-0826 or lOt , PO Bo)l 469, GalllEnvironment!
clential ' youth program . Res1den1 Assista11t Posi540 . 720 . 1331
polis, Ohfo45631
Modk:al. Donia!, EA~
Must be 2 1 years .of age . tions If You Are A Car401K!.
Pay baSed on e.llperi- ing, Enlhusiastic,
Federal Fvnds jus! re- ·
Driven
.
&amp; Deliv.ry
Deence.
Call Pendable Person, Then
On-site Doctor!
teased tor Land Owners. :;;;;~~:"':~"":;;;;o":';;;
(740)379-9083
Mon·Fri We Want You To Join
No closing co st ilnd Llgllt duly tow truck op9am-3pm,
ZERO DOWN' Will do era lor. Clean 'driving · reOw Team. Come On
Call TODAY!
lmnf
improvements cord. 388-9880'
Over &amp; Check Us Out!
Interview TOMORR0Wff
Bank.rupky &amp; Bad Credll
MDS
Yov 'lt Be Glad You Ok:f!
Wort NEXT WEEK!!!
OK. 2, 3. 4 and 5 bed·
COORDINATOR
oCompetitl'le
CNA
HIQ~MC · PAYU
Educ:alion
roorns
available.
Edgewood Manor
Wages, Paid Vacations,
7 40-446-3384
Ext 23tt
ot Wellston
Pard Mea ls. Many Other
50 skilled bed Facility
The Athens-Meigs ESC ~~-~:--~:-­
Benefits.
RavensWOOd
For Rent
has a position opening Ohio
valley ·
Home
"AN
Care Center. 111 3 WashMobile homes &amp; lots , as Part-Ttme Assistant 10
'2 yrs MDS
il,19fon Sl., Ravenswood,
(no pets) in Ashton WV the PreschOol Coordlna- Heatlh, Inc. hl~ng Home
EJo:peti~ n Ce
WV
References
ReHealth
Aides.
STNA.
3 04 5 7 6 2 94 2
tor
for
the
2006-2009
CNA,
CHHA,
PCA
may
·Exceptional
quired
,
E.O.E.
~,._·,._-,._-.,.·- .....
communication &amp;
Scenic location, conven- School Year. Applicants apply at 14aon Jacks'ltn
Homo Health Cp re ol
people skills
ie ~t to town and alford- ~:ould have ere~~:~~ Pike, G311i,polls, OhiO m
So.ulheasl Ohio Inc., IS
' lntarperc;ona l &amp;
able. 2 &amp; 3 bedrooms Certil!calionflicensure
phone 740-441-1393 for
currently
hiring
home
organizational skills
more info . Competitive
call
available
l1ealtll
'alclt3S.
Certified
or
that woulcl allow them to w.ages,
mileage . re1mTo apply, vi sil:
{740)99'.2·5639
'
experience.
Bonuses
supelvise preschool op- bursement and benefit s
www.consuf ~temgtcaAvailable.
' Call
era tions;
Intervention
reers.corn
including health lnsurSales
1 866 -~66 - 11 00.
Spncialist in Early Child- ance &amp; much mbre
405 North Park A;Je
::::~~~~~~;o;;;;;;;
Wellston, OH 45692.
2004 Doublewide in new hoo d Education degree - - - . . , . - - . , . . Rostouranh
740-364-56 t 1
condition. 4 bedroom , 2 prelerred. Salary will be Gallipolis Career College
bath, an appliances In· based on credentials and Is seeking part-time inEOEISFIDF
Now Hiring Experienced.
eluded, $37,000 located experience. II you are In- structors who possess a
wailstaff,
cooks.
dishat 176 Zuspan Lane Ma- terested lfl thi s position, master's degree in gen- Service Manager &amp; Serv- washers &amp; delivery drivplease submit a letter ol era! education subject arson City 304-675-2117
ice Technician posllions ers appty
rn person
inlerest, resume and ref- eas such as: English,
Famous
Hot
available. Health care &amp; ! larry's
erences
to:
John 0 . Co- Math , and Social Sci·
Brand neYJ~ 3bed 2bath
Retirement plans avail- Dog.s Now Haven
Superintendent, ences. E-mail resumes
on + -hall acre In Pt. stanza,
able. Pl9ase send reAthens-Meigs ESC. 507 to
jdanicki@gallipoliscaSales
Plea"'nl. OWNER FIsume
to
NANCE
AVAILABLE Ricllland Avenue, SUite remcollege.edu or call LLC@ CAREQ COM
'0 1
,., · s
#108. Alh8nS, 0!] 4570t . 800-214-0452
(740)446- 3~ 70
lax to 740 -446 -9104
PE~rt-Time
re!ail
" 10
Appticatiofl
Deadline:
t 2·15 hrslwk. Starting
:~":"
. 3 October
30,
2008, 60-llr. EMT Miner Class
1 "':t"':4 ":,,:-:o~on-:ob:"'il:"'o"':~-0-,n-e'"'::
pay $7lhr. Send resum.es
hr.. 2 IJJIIl. ready to be 3:30pm . . The AMESC , is &amp; Aalresllers 40-hr. Sur- ,.,..,..,..,..,..,.,..,., to Box 102, C/0 PO Box
faco
Apprentice 80-hr.
Managomenf I
469,
Gallipolis,
011io
rno~J e cl .
$10,500. an equal opportur1lly Eli1Underground Apprentice
ployeri1Provider.
4563 1
.
Supervisory
1740)591 -8936
16-hr.
Tre~
Clearing
Serv1ce , Bus
Nm'l 3 Bedroom homes """"':'Foo""'d:"Sorvi:"'"'."'ce"'•""""' Mine Underground For9000
man Class. Minor Safety SSAISe•vice Administmtnm• $2 14 36 pe1 month,
01tec\01y
Equipment Store.
For lor. Bachelor Degree and
inCludes m;my upg1ades.
able
to
oblain
appropriinlormatiorr . call
delivery
&amp;
sel-up. Admin. approx 30 hrs per more
certi fication.
The
week.
Computer
skills
reWhii-Co
Training ate
740-365-2434
Concreto
SSA will · determine eligiquired. Apply in person 304-372-8346
bility tor services _within All types Ma sonry,_ brick.
at Sode)(o Food Services
All EJ(cellent way to eam the Gallia County Board block. slone . Fr~Q Esti at Rio Grande University.
money The New AVon. of
MRIDO
pmgrams. mate,
740-416-7305,
Call .
Marilyn Must hold a valid drivers 304 _593 _6421
On · C:aiiiParf Tim~ cater- 304-8B2 -2645
license
Experience in
lng. lood 'service workers -"""-..,..--...,.~ the MAIDU lielcl is pre&amp; experienced cook . Ap· AVON! All Areas!
To terred.~ Po sitiol1 is twelve
ply in person at Sodexo Buy
or
Sell Shirley months. Apply to· Gaflia
SAVINGS
Food Services at Rio Spears 304-6751429
County Board ol MRfDD ,
- -....
- -....
77 M'll
I
1 CreP. k Roa d · G aten mill limitation, for Grande University.
.Owner
Operator
Oppor-

Chur~h

Apto. ot Joci&lt;l8tlllla. 52 WestWOOd Dr., from $365 to
-740-446-2568

•

IDn

www.mydallysentinel.com
Medical

Htlp Wanlod • G.ntral

Sales

HCM~~MforRent

··'iomJ a Ill·

Tuesday, October 21, 2001

. www.mydallysentinel.com

Pllge B4 • The Daily Sentinel

CZ!ll!Ao

If OUR IW.li&lt;. WEr.!£. &amp;oill(l.
iO F~l ~. IJOW W0U1.0 !IE.

eww...

A GOOD TIM€..'

I

s...-

-·

0.. ... ~ ""

I Pol'iT WaNT To (I&gt;S£
M«-1: Votce ~ T~IS l.s&amp;J&amp;

�Page B6

o

'
www.mydailysentinel.com

The Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, October 21, zoos;

'

Lions, B~ckeyes to decide firSt place in ~ig ·Ten
COLUMBUS (AP)
Having proven for at least one
game that they're better ·than
the_y've ~med, the No. 10
· Oh1o State Buckeyes now
have to impress No. 3 Penn
State.
"The mindset was, 'Let's
show how ~ood we are: I
think we did, ' offensive guard
Jim Cordle said after
Saturday's 45-7 rout of No.' 20
Michigan State, undoubtedly
the Buckeyes' most impressive game of the season. "We
wanted to get some momentum going for the back end of
the Big Ten sea,on ."
That "back ·end" of the season kicks oil with a national
spotlight game under the
hghts Saturday night at Ohio
Stadium. On the line is first
place in the Big Ten for both
the Buckeyes (7-1, 4-0) and
Nittany Lions (8-0; 4-0).
For the Buckeyes, it's a last
chance to redeem themselves
after falling apart in the last
• two national championship
· games and a 35-3 blowout
loss at Southern California
earlier this season.
"I defmitely think if we
could come out with a win it
would force some people to
respect us·again," cornerback
Malcolm
Jenkins
said
Monday. ''It seems right now
they don't have any (respect
for us) nationwide. But we're
more worried about ~etti ng a
. wm and t:rrmg to ,;vm a B1g
Ten champ1onsh1p.
The Buckeyes had played
lethargic, uninspired ball for
most of the season, barely
scraping by against teams
su'Ch as Ohio (26-14), Troy
(28-10), Minnesota (34-21 ),
Wisconsin (20-17) and
Purdue ( 16-3). That was not

the case against Michigan
Stare. Thev had more than
160 yards just in fumble
retum yardage in the ~arne,
and jumped on every 1m stake
the Spartans (6-2, 3-1) made.
And Michigan Stare made a
lot of them. tuming the ball
over five times.
'·It's what I would tenn a
good. tough win on the road,"
coach Jim Tressel said. "This
is huge . It was a.ranked opponent, a team playing with a lot
of confidence. It was a great
atmosphere."
The Nittany Lions. one of
the biggest surprises in the
nation so far, rolled over
everything in their path while
winning their first seven
games. Faced with a
Michigan team that was coming oil a humiliating 13-10
home loss to Mid-American
Conference member Toledo
the week before, Penn State
was favored to swainp the
embarrassed Wolverines.
·But the Wolverines not only
hung around, they led 17-14
at the half and were ried at 17
late in the third quarter. Then
things fell apart. with the
Nittany Lions going into
h~perdrive to roll to a 46-17
wm .
Now there are only two
teams left atop the standings
in the conference.
'This week is so big for us
and it's so big in the Big Ten
conference," Ohio State linebacker James Laurinaitis said.
One of the reasons why the
Buckeyes were clicking so
well was the play of freshman
quarterback Te1Telle Pryor. He
had shown tlashes of the talent that marked him as the
nation 's No. I QB recruit last
spring, but had also shown a

UNIVERSITY OF

I~~OG~

a

For good cause, A3

'Fiye generations, A3
•

"

AP photo

Michigan quarterback Steven Threet·(1 O) is hauled down by
Penn State linebacker Tyrell Sales (46) alter a second quarter scramble cturing an NCAA college football game in S\ate
College, Pa., on Saturday.
propensity to take a lot of neg- scored at will against
ative plays.
Michigan State.
. He sure · didn't against
"If feels good to know we
Michigan State, going 7-of-11 stepped forward as an
passing for 116 yards includ- offense." said receiver Brian
mg a 56-yard TD throw Robiskie. who caugh.t also
against a bhtz to·wide receiv- caught a TD pass from Pryor.
er Brian Hartline - the
In addition, Chris "Beanie"
Buckeyes' longest play from Wells rushed ·forl40 yards on
scrimma'ge this .year:·
a season-high 31 carries and
They raced to 21 quick two tc,uchdowns.
points in the opening quarter
Pryor is from Jeannette. Pa.,
and never looked back, one of and Penn State was among his
the few times this sea~on final three choices in colleges
they've been able to put a before picking Ohio State. So
team away early.
he knows the magnitude of
A week after not scoring an what's ahead on Saturday.
offensive touchdown against
"It's going to be fun
Purdue's lightly regarded because
they're
a
defense. the Buckeyes almost Pennsylvania team," he said.

BY MARK WILLIAMS

SPECIAl TO THE SENTINEl

RIO GRANDE - · The
University of Rio Grande
RedStorm women's soccer
team closed out the home
portion of the 2008 schedule with a 4-0 loss on
Saturday afternoon versus
American
Mideast
Conference frontrunner
Houghton at Evan Davis
Field. ·
Rio Grande (3-11-2, 1-82 AMC) played defense
almost the entire game and
just could not generate any
offense.
HoughtoR (11-2-1, 9cJ.J
AMC) scored the only goal
it would need in the 17th
minute When Bethany
Kowalczyk. She
was
assisted by Kay lin Bull.
The Highlanders added a
second goal in the 25th
minute on · an unassisted
goal from Bull to go up 2-0
on the scoreboard.
The 2-0 held up until the
late in the game when the
fatigue began to show for
Rio Grande and the
RedStorm gave up a pair of
goals in a span of 43 seconds to give the visitors a
sizeable cushion.
Amy-Kaye Mitchell put
home a shot off a carom
after Rachel Cross missed
off the crossbar. That

made the score 3-0 with q
minutes remaining tho
game. Samantha Choma
scored the final goal;
Cross collected her second
assist of the game on thai
goal.
:
Houghton out-shot Ri&lt;j
Grande 31 -0 and 11-0 ill
shots on goal. Rio senior
goalkeeper Sarah Sandlin
registered seven saves
while Houghton goa]keep~
er Erin Asquith was nol
tested in collecting the
shutout.
.
Rio Grande bid farewell
to three seniors MollY. .
Corson , Chrissie Garrett
and Krista King. Corsorl
was the first player iq
women's soccer history to
·play all four years.
:
Garrett played her sec~
ond season as a .member o(
the women's soccer team,
She also runs on the track
team.
King , who did n!Jt play iri
the game because of aJI
injury, was . back with the
squad this year after a oneyear
hiatus. She
has
played three seasons foe
Rio. Grande . Sandlin has
one year of eligibility
remaining and plans ori
using it.
Rio Grande will travel to
Cedarville on Tuesday
night. Kick-off is set for 7
p.m.

•
Prinl&lt;!d on loti %

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
.) o ( 'I\ 1S. \ 'ol. ;;H . :'\o. 7:3

SPORTS
Buckeyes' goals still ih ·
reach. See Page Bl

·o

.

\\'ED:-;I·.Sil'\Y,

OCI&lt;H~ER

2:!,

2008

CARl KEARNS
of Mason

HOLZER CUNIC
We're Everywhere You Are!

1-·----------------~-•

446·2404

Now that Ohio allows
Board . of /~ Eie&lt;:tions
early voting a month .before Drrector R1ta-s'm1th sa1d the
Election Day, more voters .board staff has been busy
POMEROY - ·At least are taking advantage of the processing early . voting
I ,400· Meigs County voters convenience of no-fault applications and ellfly balhave requested or cast absentee balloting. Voters lots. Registered voters can
absentee ballots , with just are no longer required to vote by mail or in the board
two weeks remaining before provide a reason for absen- ·office until Nov. 3, but
tee balloting.
applications
must
be
the general election.

.

Bv BRIAN J.

REE;D

.

eAeEoCMYDAilYSENTINEL.COM

Page AS
o Shirley Myers, 65
· o Earl Phelps, 56

•· 'Walter Reed' for
c6inbat dogs opens
at Texas base.
SeePageA2
-o Interim administrator
.
•begins at O'Bieness.

.

'SeeiA3

; ~ jJ_
'See·

5.·--------------.,.-------'--

~riefs.

AS .

•

PLEASANT
VALLEY
HOSPITAL

WEAmER

''TIE BREAKER"- •
Total Points ht the M9nday Nitc{'.
.Football Game!
Indianapolis @ Tennessee

The Family of Professionals

·.Gatling pennits
NAME::....
· -------

BY BETH SERGENT
eSEAClENTC~YOAILYSENTINEb.COM

~II• on Page A3

ADDRESS:"-------

Prirllt Uft Cllah
WHY PRIDE LIFT CHAIRS

.

--

Stand and sit with ease in
a Pride lilt Chair - a fine furnishing
that will accent your home white
. enhancing your life.
• Single switch hand control lor easy operation

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• Patented, quiet and smooth llltsjllllem
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a

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OXYGEN

MEDICAL EQUIPMENT
IIIC04Nill , SUYICI fCHI OUUVI'

' Fun You

. RACINE - An upcoming public hearing
by the Ohio Environmental Protection Agency
will focus on the draft Permit to Install and a
Pollutant
Discharge
draft · National
El,imination System associated with the con~:,.
'
struction of, and discharge from the cons~c- .
•,I ·a SI!CTIONS - 12 PAGES
tion of wastewater disposal system servmg
Gatling,
Ohio's Yellowbush mine.
Annie's Mailbox . A3
The public hearing has been set for 6:30
Cal~ndars
A3 p.m., Nov. 25 at Southern Elementary. SchooL
The hearing will end when everyone m atten· Classifieds
B3-4 dance has had ~n oppPrtunity to ptyvide testimony related to the project.
·
The
Ohio
EPA
says
the
discharges
from the
CQmics
.·~ ~,
facility, jf approved, would result in degradation to, or lowering of, the water quality of
Ed.itonals
"•\ .
Yellowbush Creek and Jennie ·watts Run.
~~ituaries
However, the chemical-specific water &lt;lual~ty
criteria developed to protect the aquatic hfe
B Section and human health set for in the Ohio
Administrative COlle will not be ellceeded.
Weather .
If unable to attend the public hearing , wri!r · :1( ' ~
ten commems can be sent to the Ohio EPA's
~ .ooe Ohio volley Publlohlna eo.
director before a decision on the .drafts are
·issued . To be on the interested parties mailing list for the project or to submit comments for Ohio EPA's consideration on the
\ .:

.,I

JNnEX
..

PHONE: ________~---

J ..

Each Thesday through Dec:. 9,a numbered game will
appear in each participating merchant's ad.
Indicate your pick of winners and write it beside the
corrrspoilding number.
Entries must be dropped off at the:
Gallipolis ·Daiiy Tribune or mailed tm
Football Smackdown
clo Gallipolis' Daily Tribune
825 3rd Avenue
Gallipolis, OH 45631
Entries must be postmarked by Thursday to qualify
for that week's contest. The prize Will be awarded
weekly on the basis of most winners selected correc:tly
. and in case df ties, winner
be determined by blind
draw. You must be J6 years of age or older' to enter.
_,....
Only one entry per person per week.
· ·

will

Police
officers

Hearing set on . State Board of Education names superintendent

25.20 Valh•y Urh·4.: • Point Ph•uslmt. \\'\' • :!OI·hcd fadlitJ'

304-675-4340

Wanted:
Racine paying
more to get them

1·888·446·2684

3.·------------~----4. ____________________

Those who casr. absentee
ballot.s m person must also
. llrov1de .a .Photo ldenllficatwn. (~h1o 1s one of~4 st~teS
reqUtnng
ldt!ntlflcallon
from. voters as pan of the
elect1ons reforms begun. by
the . federal
Helpmg
Amencans Vote Act.

The Meigs County Farm
Bureau held its annual
meeting Tuesday, electing ·
trustees, adopting resolutions on a number of agri·
culture-related issues, and
recognizing long-time members. State Trustee .Patti
DeBruin, pictured at left,
Bv BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYDAilYSENTINEL.COM
and Joyce Payne, u~dated
members on Ohio Farm
RACINE - This week
Bureau activities, and Jeff
Racine
· Village Council
Warner discussed member
decided to increase the
benefits. Recognized for
starting
of its police
membership of 50 years or officers topay
be
"comparable"
more were, pictured below, with the larger villages of
from left: Sam Michael,
Middleport and Pomeroy to
Paul Reed, president of
attract applicants.
Farmers Bank and Savings
The Pomeroy Police
Co., Janet and Carl Morris, Department is the highest
Deloris and Ralph Ballard,
paying police . depanment
Rex Shenefield, Grace and where patrolmen start out at
Harry Holler, Mary and
over $10 per hour. Mayor J ,
Wilma Davidson, Mary K.
. Scott Hill and Racine
Yost and Su5an Sheppard,
Council decided that in order
and Delbert and Ruth
to attract applicants. the pa~
Smith. The dinner was
rate had to be compellllve,
especially during a time
hosJed by Middleport
when the village is without a
Masonic Lodge.
marshal
and there have been
Brian J. Reed/photos
a rash of burglaries.
Racine Officer Kevin
Dugan is currently on duty
and Hill said he worked 37
hours last week. With the
pay increase , Hill said he
and council hope to put at
least two part-time officers
on the .streets of Racine 40
hours a week with a third to
eventually follow if funding
is available. These officers .
will rotate shifts during not
only the day but nighttime
hours for 40 hours of total
coverage per week.
Council did have a discussion about hiring a full-time
officer but with a benefit
and retirement package to
consider, Clerk Treasurer
Dave Spencer said the vii;
!age was looking at least ~
$65,000 expense. Spencer
also said that full-time offi- .
. cer still would not be on call
365 a year/24 hours a day
and wou'ld have to have time
off, leaving the village with;
out coverage at some point. :
Please see Pollee, AS

INSIDE

License CC 70007Hl00 and 00.1
license Cl750048.()()() and 001

tl&gt;

""'" · rnydait~"· ntim·l.rum

received for mail service no
later tha~ Nov .. !. .
.
There 1s ·an ·1denhficahon
requ1rement.for anyone who
goes to the. poll~ ~n Nov. 4.
A photo 1dent1ftcat1~n. or
ot~er document venfymg
res1dence address must be
presented at the polls.

Fann Bureauineeting

216 Upper River Rd. Gallipolis, Ohio
112 mile south of the Silver Bridge

2. ____________________

.

Newsprint

Early voters reach ·1,400 in Meigs CountY

0BITUARIFS

Week 5Winner

Rttycled

Suspension&amp;

BodyliftJ
FuiServlce
Shop

Cu.tom
Wh....
&amp;Exhlluat

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Si&gt;Om.

PINH- HMrlnl- AS
'

.

P~bli9
8roadcasting
in
HOEFLICHOMYDAILYSENTINEL.COM
Washington. D.C.
"I deeply appreciate the
COLUMBUS - Deborah opportunity to work with the
Delisle .has been named as the State Board on the s'election of
next state superintenden.t of pub- Deborah as our next state superlic education by The State Board intendent of public instruction,"
of Education , replacing Susan said Govemor Ted Strickland. "I
Tave Zelman, who has served in believe Deborah is exactly the
right person for the job at the
the position since 1999.
"I am confident that Deborah · right time . I look forward to
will continue our strong reforms working with her to accomphsh
of the past decade and bring a our shared goal of building a
new vision that will elevate our world-class education system
educational system to one of for Ohio students."
world prominence," said State · In June the State Board hired
Board President Jennifer L. Hudepohl &amp; Associates, a
Columbus based executive
Sheets of Pomeroy attorney .
"We were looking for an indi- search firm. to manage the
vidual that would bring together search. The State Board interstakeholders and advocate for . viewed five candidates for the
public education. I am certain position. In addition to members
Deborah brings the right skills of the State Board, Governor
and experience to lead Ohio's Strickland's chief of staff John
Haseley and State Senator Joy
education systern ."
Sheets, who has served on the Padgett served as mem~rs of
State Board of Education since the Board's search commntee.
"I am honored to be selected
1995, with eight of those years as
president, said that Delisle was as state superintendent of publi\:
selected by unanimous vote to instruction ," said Delisle. "I am
replace Zelman who has served as excited to jump right in and
state superintendent since 1999. work with the State Board, govShe resigned to accept employ- emor, legislature. our districts
ment with the Corporation for and the many other educallon
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH

•
tl

stakeholders to ensure our stuc ·
dems are prepared for success i11
today's global economy?
.
· As · state superintendent,
Sheets said Delisle will lead and
supervise the state's elementary
and secondary education sys•
tem;
oversee the Ohio
Departmeni of Education
(ODE); administer licensing of
Ohio 's early childhood .through
high school educators: serve as
the State Board's secretary; and
manage relationships with key
stakeholders. such as the governor. state legislature. chancellor
of Ohio's university system and
local school districts .. Delisle
will start rio later than Dec. I ,
2008 with an annual salary of
$194.500, an option of a car
allowance of $550 per month or
use of a Sta.te vehicle and up to
$7,500 relocation assistance for
reasonable and customary
expenses to facilitate her relocation to cemral Ohio.
Since 2003. Delisle has been
the superintendent of the
Cleveland Height s-U niversity
Heights School District. She
'previously held ,the position of
Please see Eduutlon, AS

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