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                  <text>Page D6 • Sunday Times-Sentinel

Middleport • Pomeroy• Gallipolis, OH • Pt. Pleasant, WV

Sunday. November 2, 2008

·Southem.seniors ··
learn about
'the real world,' As

GCC names new
director of
admissions, Aa

c

•

•

'.

~

l'rlllted 011 100%
R.. yclod Newsprlnl ~..-

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
:; ( I (

.

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• \ "I.

.
SPORTS

,,,...

; l-1. "

•• Crusaders Iaiiy
~ wahama,.37·34.

I

' )( ) '\ II \ \ .

BY BRIAN

J. REED

BAEEOOMYOAILYSENTINEL.COM

See

TacoMa

II. ){

POMEROY - The Ohio
Eleclions Commission has
scheduled a probable cause
hearing· for Monday morning on 1wo complainls filed
by
Debbie
Phillips,
Democratic candidate for
the 92nd Ohio House
District. One of those complaints is against the Meigs

DonWoodFordLM.com
E. STATE ST., ATHENS, OHIO
ISaiiBS Hotline 888·286·8325

"tI\ I' '\ 1111 ){ :I ·

County Republican Party.
· Phillips alleges !hat information included in a newspaper advertisement purChSSCld by the Meigs county
ReP,ublican Party in The
Da1ly · Senlinel, endorsing
Phillips' Republican opponent, Athens County Aud1tor
Jill Thompson. is false.
Republican
Party
Chairman David Warner and
· Treasurer Marjorie Fetty are

:! " " H

· also named in the complaint
filed against the local GOP.
A second complaint
against the Ohio Republican
Party will also be . considered today. Respondents in
the second complaint
include Athens County
Republican Chairman Pete
Couladis, Denni~ Normile,
whose voice is on the radio
ad, and Thompson .
Phillips said the probable

\\\\ "

cause hearing set for 8:30
today will be before select
members ·of the Ohio
Elections Commission. If
the members find probable
cause that the ads contained
false information, the matter
would go to a full hearing
before lhe Commission.
Phillips is challenging the
newspaper ad's alle~~tions
thai she was m oppos1tton to
the construction of U.S. 33

DonWoodHyundai.com

Il l\

d . II h "

II I II "

I • " I"

from Darwin 10 Alhens, and
is opposed to lhe proposed
AMP-Ohio ·power plan! in
Meigs County. She denies
both allegations, and said
Friday she was supportive
of both projects.
She said she was asked to
sign a petition years ago in
opposition 10 the pror.sed
alignment of U.S. 3 , but
said she never opposed the
road's construction.

Southern .
renewal
levy 'crucial'

E. STATE ST., ATHENS, 0"10.
Sales Hotline 888·286·9451

District deemed
academically effective,
operating in ·'black'
Bv BETH SERGENT
BSERGENTIIMY!li\ILYSENTINELCOM

OurruARIFS
Page AS
• Gayle Price, 98
. • David A. Slater, 84
· ~Delbert H. Steams, 93
. 'r

~~ ......

-··

·~.

,"

INSIDE
• Campaigns unoork
get-out·the-~te

· QPerations, See Page A2
: ~ Iraq expects answer
·on security deal after US
· ~te. See Page A2
·• OB TraceVue
monitoring system

showCased.

,,

.1ca.n xD'

RoleQM S•riot 1.0, AutO.,
Air, CO Player, CruiM,
Pioneer 160 watt Radio,
Modo16232

com

900 E. STATE ST., ATHENS, OHIO .
-~

· DonloodAutornotlve.corn

Sales Hotline 888·286·8291

12916 St. Rpute 664 South, LOGAN
Sales Hotline 888·284·8230

COitl

OHIO

SeePageAJ
• Past Co!Jncilors Club
meets. See Page A3
• • Bazaar planned.
. See Page A3
• Meigs County Clerk
of Courts candidates.
See Page A6

WEA1HER

Ohio State
.~epre'sentative,
State Senate are
open seats ·
BY BRIAN

RACINE - With 1he
entire dislrict earning an
"effe_ctive" academic rating
from the state of Ohio for
the first time ; a five-year
financial forecast that has
been certified to show the
district operating in "the
black" and a tentative plan
to be released from fiscal
emergency on Wednesday,
the Southern Local School
District has learned to do
more with less for several
years. though one cpnstant
has been funds from an
operating levy up for
renewal tomorrow.
The four-mill renewal
levy asks for no new addilional funds and will run for
a period of five years, bringing in an annual , estimated
The Middleport Community Association's
income of $232,519.34 used
Pumpkinport Halloween party offered many activi- to meet current .expenses in
ties for children, including a bounce house and
the district.
inflatable slide, a fishing pond and games, like this
"We still managed to hit
football toss sponsored by the Middleport Church
an effeclive raring while at
of the Nazarene. Dave Diles Park and the freight
a
staffing
minimum
depot were busy Saturday afternoon, as families
according to slate guideenjoyed free refreshments, too. The weather could lines, we've shown fiscal
not have been nicer, with sunny skies and warm
responsibility but we still
breezes In what might be one of the last warm
need lhe voters' help to
continue our progres s,"
weekends before aulumn and winte.r temperaSoulhern Superimendent
tures arrive lor good.
Tony Deem said.
·
Brion J. Reed/photos
Deem said if the renewal
levy is defeated, it will not
lower the taxes of a resident
paying to fund the school
district but will eliminate the
.business/industrial taxes the
district receives from the
renewal levy which amounts
to the $232,000. As such. a
•"
PluH ... Southern, AS

Early start
..~·

•

'

1.."'

'i

.

J. REED

Toney
Dingess was
one of the
POMEROY - Meigs
Pomeroy
Counly voters will help
merchants
elecl
.a
new
Slate
getting a
Representative and a new
jump
start on
Stale Senator as part of
decorating
Thesday's general election.
downtown ·
,The Stale Representative .
Pomeroy
seat is open because State
for the
Rep. Jimmy Stewart, RChrlstmas
Albany, is a candidate for the
shopping
State Senale. Phillips lost to
Slewart in 2006. Senator Joy
season
Padgett, R-Coshocton, is not
Sunday
seeking re-election.
afternoon.
The race for the 92nd
With the
House District spot has been
sun shining
contenlious at times, an~ the
above and
candidates go into Election temperatures
Day under the shadow of an in the 70's, it
eleetions complaint filed by
might be
the Democratic candidale.
hard to
The complaint, however,
believe that
does
not name · the
Christmas Is
Republican candidate. (See so close, but
relaled story.)
·
there are
Debbie Phillips, a memonly45
bet of Athens City Councif
shopping
and a second-time candidays left!
date, has filed separate complaints with the Ohio
INn J.
Eleclions
Commission
Reed/photo
againsl the Meigs County
R ~publican Party and Ohio
kepublican Party. The complain! against
local GOP

98 ~r OrM H611761J."' 12Jhlo .......... 5,999
00 Nisson Ma•ima 211521J,bloo, 0o1o1 ........ 5,490

01 ~~~~kRegal LS 2901D114 ,..., mo~o.. ..

6, 999

01 VW Jelta 110472M. . .. .. . .... ,........ 6, 999
01 PonliacGrondPri•Gll90DilJA. ~ . .. 8,999
02 Ch~r PT Crui11r FI19D915.. ,,, .. ,........ 6:999
03 Mazda MP'I F61171,. . . . . .. ........ 7,999
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05 ~ Cabalt H61912M.,.,,vo:.o. .... . .. 10,~

07 ~ Sf!o!toge IX H617MW. "' 21loloo ..... 14,
07 HyunGai Acctftl H61164MA. ""'·Ill,.; .. .. ,
07
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07 HYun&lt;!ai Sonata GlS M11D7W.
!J.999
07 Hyundai Azera H61106M.,~i, llolo ........ 17,950
08 Hyundoi Tucson H6177W,llolo,. ....... 15,000

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00 F'!fd Ra!'ifr F61714. .. .. .. ............. "$ ,
01 N~n X1im1 XE F6111611, olio,"' .. . . .. .. . ,
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07
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07
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ft.I201M. 1!1 .... ..
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,

,

,

,

INDEX
2 SI!CI10N8 -

l2 PAGES

A3
A3

Annie's Mailbox
Calendars
Classifieds

B2~4

Comi~

Bs

Editorials
Obituaries

A4
As

Sports
Weather

..

8 Section

. ·As

e - Ohio vo~~oy Publloldni eo.

.IL
.~

.

me

,. ....... state.~

i,

'The Refuge'
from addiction

'

BREEDOMY!li\ILYSENTINEL.COM

Delllll• on Pip AS

~·

I

BY

BETH SERGENT

BSERGENTOMY!li\ILYSENTINELCOM

..
''

•

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McARTHUR
In
Vinton County sits a small
. farm where men who struggle with alcohol and drug
addiction are given the
opportunity to not only
reflect on but change their
lives by participaling in a
free program called ·'The
Refuge ."
','The Refuge" has been
featured in "The Columbus
Dispalch" and is a Christian
ministry that serves men 18
years old or over who are
searching for answers.
slruggling with drug and
alcohol addictions or just
feel hopeless and lost . Now
in it's ninth year of exislence , "The Refuge" was
founded by Pastor Tom
Thompson who had a vision
about I0 years ago to quit
his high-paying job, sell his
business , home and car and
moved to Vinton County to
begin the program.
to
Bob .
According
Holycross , an elder on "The

PIMH ... Refu... AS
..•

•

�•

The Daily Sentinel

.•

PageA2

NATION • WORLD

November

:The Daily Sentinel

2008

PageA3

·BY THE BEND

Monday, November 3, 2008

ANNIE'S MAILBOX

~Coddling

is more
; for her benefit
,
:

·
AP photoa
'Democratic presidential candic;late Sen: Barack Obama, D-111., waves on the tarmac at the
_airport in Columbus Sunday.

Dear Annie: Due to
Jinancial setbacks, my sister
:and her two ·children have
-been living with my huslland and me for over a year.
:The problem is that her 6:year-old so·o is a mama's
;boy. "Alan" refuses to listen
:to anyone. He throws
:tantrums when his mother is
;not around and even kicks
·his sister and tells his cousin
:he hates her. When we
;infonn his mother of this,
;she ignores us. It is quite
•aggravating. ·
: We've tried to discipline
:Alan numerous times, but
·as soon as his mom comes
·home from work, she
'rewards him by letting
him play video ~ames.
,Another problem ts that
-my sister refuses to let
'Alan sleep by himself. She
says he is not ready to be
~alone at night, so she puts
him in bed. with her.
:. Annie, is this a healthy
·relationship for either of
them? How can I talk to her
·seriously about Alan when
she will noi listen to any:one? - Annoyed Aunt
Dear Aunt: For whatever
reason , your sister feels the
need to coddle Alan. This is
more for her benefit than
his because she is doing
him no favor. Good parent:ing is hard work, and she is
taking the path of least
resistance. You may pro·vide appropriate discipline
when Alan s mother is not
_prese.nt. What she does
when she comes home is
out of your control. If you
cannot convince her that
"She i~ doing hei- son a disservice, you might pick up
some books on parenting
and leave them in her bed_room. We hope she cares
enough about her son to
read them.
· De11r Annie: I'm a 25. ye'ar-old woman in a committed
relationship.
Because I work in a public
setting, I interact with
,dozens of people every day.
-Frequently, men ask me for
~ersonal information I
lion 't wish to share :Whether i'rn married, my
telephone number, et~. I
have no problem answering
a direct question, but what
do I do when the situation
is vague?
·
Often I can tell when
someone is working up to
asking me for my number,
and I'd like to head them off
before
it
happens.
Sometimes they ask for
something
seeminglY.
innocuous , like my e-matl

Republican presidential candidate Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., emphasizes a point during
a campaign rally in Wallingford, Pa., Sunday morning.
"

:C alllpaigns uncork get-out-the-vote operations
BY NEDRA PICKLER
AND LIZ StbOTI
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITERS
· COLUMBUS - . Barack
.Obania and Johri McCain
uncorked massive · get-out.the-vote operations in more
than a dozen battleground
states Sunday, millions of
telephone calls, mailings
:and door-knockings in a
-frenzied, fitting climax to a
.record-shattering $1 billion
campaign. Together, they'll
.spend .about $.8 per presi·
dential vote. .
With just two days to go,
·most national polls show
.Obama ahead of McCain.
State surveys suggest the
Democrat's path to the
·requisite 270 electoral
votes - and perhaps far
beyond - is 'much easier
to navigate than ·McCain's.
· Obaina exuded confi·deuce. "The last couple of
days, I've been just feeling
good," he told 80,000 gathered to hear him - and
singer Bruce Springsteen in Cleveland. "The crowds
seem to grow and everybody's got a smile on their
face. You start thinking that
maybe we might be able to
win an election · on
November 4th."
· Earlier, in Columbus,
Obama urged a crowd that
police estimated · at 60,000
. to vote at a nearby polling
_place before it closed
.Sunday evening.
"Do not delay because
we have work to do." he
said from the Ohio
Statehouse steps.
A show of hands showed
that most' in the crowd
'already had voted .
· Columbus
Mayor
Michael
Coleman.
a
Democrat, said it was the
largest gathering ever for a
local political event, while
Gov. Ted Strickland predicted that Ohio "will be in the
Obanta-Biden column."

In PeterbOrough, N.H ., phone calls.
McCain held his final 'town
In a new TV ad, Obama
hall-style event in the state highlighted Vice President
that put him on the national Dick Cheney. 's support for
map in 2000 and launched McCain. The ad features
his GOP primary comeback Cheney, an . extremely
eight years later. "I come to unpopular figure among the
the people of New general public, at an event
Hampshire" to ask them to Saturday in Wyoming, saylet me go on one more mis- ing: "I'm delighted to supsion," said McCain , who is port John McCain."
looking for liD upset victory
Not to be outdone, the
against Ol&gt;ama.
.
Republican
National
Polls show the six closest · Committee rolled out battlestates l!fe Aorida, Indiana, !lround phone calls that
Missouri, North Carolina, mclude Hillary Rodham
Nevada and Ohio. All were Clinton·~ criticism of
won by Bush and made Obama .
during · the
·competitive by Obama's Democratic primary." She is
record-shattering fundrais- heard saying: "In the White
ing. The campa.igns also House, there is no time for
are running aggressive speeches and on-the-job
!lround games else~¥here, training. Sen. McCain will
mcludirig Iowa, New · bring a lifetime of experiMexico,
Pennsylvania, enc'e to the campaign, and
New Hampshire, Colorado Sen. Obama will bring a
and Virgima.
·
speech that he gave in
. · All that's left now for the 2002.'' A Clinton spokescandidates is make: sure woman said she disappeople vote Tuesday - if proves of the ad. .
·
til~&gt;: haven't already.
Another phone caU to
. Indeed, Election Day is Pennsylvania and Ohio vatbecoming a · misnomer. ers takes 0(,ama's • words
About .27&lt;million absentee about coal-burning technoland early votes were cast in ogy out of context and
30 states as of. Saturday claims he will "bankrupt the
night, m,ore than ever. coal industry.''
· ·
Democrats outnumbered
The Pennsylvania GOP
Republicans in pre-Election also unveiled a TV ad fea,
Day voting in key states.
turing Obama's former pasThat has Democrats - and tor, the Rev. · Jeremiah
even some Republicans Wright, declaring "God·
privately
questioning damn America!" in a serwhether McCain can over- mon.
take Obama, eveit · if GOP
Obama and McCain camloyalists tum out in droves paigned on each other's turf
on Tuesday. Obama may Sunday. Obama was in
already have too big of a Ohio, a bellwether state
head start in critical states Bush won four years ago
like Nevada and Iowa, which and where polls show
Bush won four years ago .
Obania tied or winning.
"This is off the chans in McCain
visited
some of these states," said Pennsylvania and New
Michael P. McDonald , a Hampshire, states won . by
political scientist at George Democrat John Kerry in
Mason University. .
2004. He trails in both.
As the campaign closes.
"I've been in a lot of camvot~rs were being inundat- paigns, I know the momened with a crush of televi- tum is there.'' McCain told
sian ads and automated supporters at a rally in

Iraq expects answer on security deal after US vote
Bv 'QASSIM ABDUL·ZAHRA
ASSOCIATED PREss WRITER

U.N. mandate that allows
coalition forces to operate
here legally.
BAGHDAD
Iraq
Without an agreement or
expects
an
American a new U.N . mandate, the
response to requested U.S. military would have to
changes in a draft security suspend its mission, and the
pact soon after this week's U.S. military:s future in Iraq
·u.s. presidential election, would be up to the man who
·an aide to the prj me minis- takes office in January.
ter said Sunday.
.
McCain supported the
Another Iraqi official said 2003 invasion of Iraq and
the U.S . indicated it would the troop surge which
accept all the proposed helped tum the tide.
:changes except one ~
Obama op~ the inva.greater Iraqi legal control sion and srud negotiations
over American soldiers and on a security agreement
contractors.
should be conducted as part
. Yassin Majeed said the of a "broader commitment"
. U.S. response would come to begin withdrawing the
_after Tuesday's vote so the troops. Obama's campaign
,president-elect - either Web
site
says
the
:Barack Obama or John Democratic
candidate
:McCain - could be briefed believes the agreement also
:on the Iraqi proposals. should be approved by
:which were submitted by Congress.
:Iraq's Cabinet last week .
Among other things. the
, Iraqi lawmakers say the Iraqis are now asking for a
:changes are essential in ban on using their territory
:order to win parliamentary to attack neighboring coun:approval for the deal , tnes, removal of language
•Which
would
keep that might allow the U.S. to
:American troops in this stay here past 2011 . and
:country until2012 and give changes in a clause provid·
:the Iraqis a greater role in tng ltmited Iraqi jurisdiction
cthe conduct of U.S . mili- · over U.S . troops.
·.tary operations.
The current draft provides
, Parliament must approve for ltmtted Iraqi jurisdiction
.the agreement before the for maJor crimes committed
year-end expiration of the pff post and off duty.

--··-.

Pennsylvania. Overall, polls
His campaign reported
sho": Obama winning or that Saturday was its largest
tied in more than a dozen or volunteer day, with more
so .states won by B!lsh While · volunteers showing up .to
McCain trails .fn .&lt;!very work the phones and walk
Kerry state.
· neighborhood
precincts
McCain and the RNC dra- than ever before in the cammatically ramped up their paign.
s'aid
Obama
spending in the campaign's spokesman Bill Burton,
fmal days and now are "Our volunteers are commatching Obama ad for ad, pletely en~aged,"
if not exceeding him, in key
McCain screw says theirs
battleground markets in are, too.
"There's no dot,1bt that
states such as Aorida, Ohio,
North Carolina, Virginia we've got an uphill battle,"
and Pennsylvania. ·
said Rich Beeson, the
. After mortths ofplanning. RNC's political dire~tor.
tile · Republican
Party But, he said, "I'm not going
launched.the last stage of its · into !'llection Day with any
vaunted "72-hour pro- . trepidation that they've put
gram," when voluntee..S any state away" by banking
descend on competitive early votes. "We still have a
states for the final stretch. lot of voters that we 'can and
Democrats unleashed their
tum out."
The RNC "reported mak"persuasion army" of backers scouring their own back- ing- 5.4 million voter conyards to en~ourage people tacts last week, compated
to back Obama in Jhe cam- witb 1.9 million in the same
paign's waning hours.
. week in 2004, and it says
More than 10,000 Obama it'lvvolume has steadily
volunJ~ers in Ohio were , im;reased,.. since October
knocking on doors and . began. Overall, it says 26
planning to hit their one million voters have been
millionth home . Sunday contacted by . volul)teers
after a five-day push.
over four months.

will

· On Saturday alone, the
RNC says an estimated 3
million voters were contact.ed by phone or in person, and
it saw so many volunteers
show up to help that in at
least one state, Colorado, the
party ran out of canvassing
packets. Some 180.000 were
gone by midday Saturday;
more were printed.
McCain planned visits to
media markets that hit battlegrounds
Florida,
Virginia, Indiana, New
Mexico, and Nevada on
Monday. A repeat trip to
Pennsylvania also was slated before McCain returns
·
home to Arizona.
. Obama planned visits to
Florida, North Carolina and
Virginia on Monday and a
quick stop in .Indiana
Tuesday morning.
Obama told reporters he
would hold a news conference on Wednesday. Later,
Obama
spokeswoman
Linda Dougfass . walked
back Obama's plans, saying
he'll meet the ptess before
the end of the ·week, but
"don't
count
on
Wednesday."

PHILLIPS OPPOSES JOBS &amp; PROGRESS
IN SOUTHEASTERN OHIO
.
.
.

Debbie Phillips is proudly endorsed by "CASH" and "The SIERRA CLUB" {see
,,
2. "CASH" opposed the new US33 route from Darwin to Athe~s
(See ''CASH" petition, page 89 signed hy Deborah M. Phillips) ·
I.

http:lw~w.debbiephillips.net}

3. The delays in·the construction caused by the petition cost Ohio millions ot' extra dollars not to memion the
• •• ,
unnecessary accidents on old 33 &lt;tue to the delay.
'
1

Debbie (Deborah) PhilliP,. and her allies at the. radical green llnvironmentalist organization, (The Sierra Club)
have been leading the fig~t against the AMP-Ohio Coal-filed power plant in Letart, Meigs County. Ohio
*(Opposing nearly three billion dollitrs in construction)
*(Opposing the creation of approximately 1600 new jobs to build)
*(Opposing the creation of one hundred fifty permanent jobs)
*(Opposing the creation of fifteen permanent jobs at the related.fenilizer plant)
*(Opposing real concrete progress for reaL good paying jobs near the homes of families in Southeastern
Ohio)
5. Debbie Phillips allies at the Sierra Club are opposed to &amp; new coal .mines and coal fired power plants:
4.

-

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•

•

;

•

•

OB TraceVue monitoring system showcased

Community Calendar
Church events

Public meetings

Clubs and
organizations

Birthdays

'

NOW JUST WHO IS IT THAT
WANTS PROGRESS

A Petition

address. I don't want to give
it out, but don't know on
what grounds I can refuse.
There is no way to casually
drop my boyfrtend into the
conversation. How do I stop
t~ese advances before they
start? - Not Flattered
Anymon
·
Dear Not Flattered:
Your problem is easily
solved with normal etiquette rules .• The proper
response is to smile politely and say, "I'm sorry, but
I don't give out my personal information. You ~an
q :mtact anr of us through
the office.' That tells them
you are not interested,
while remaining professional.
Dear Annie: A couple of
yeats ago, I wrote you
B' h' C
p
.
·
Submitted photo
.
regarding my husband's Th. e CreaI1ons
_1rt 1ng enter at le~sant Valley Hospttal recently showcased a new OB TraceVue monitoring system that
interest in hang gliding. I wtll allo':" for opttll')al h~althcare servtces for expectant mothers and newborns. Pictures with the new system is left to right
never told anyone of that Mane Liberatore, chatrman of the Pleas.ant Valley 1-jospital Foundation; Michael Lieving, chairman of the PVH Board of
letter. I wrote that he trav- Trustees; Den1se Queen, RN, nurse manager of the Obstetics and Pediatrics Departments and Alvin R. Lawson JD
eled for his sport and that I FACHE , chief executive officer and president ·
.
' '
had gone with him and carried his gear. but then I got
interested in . biking and
stopped. He·claimed I wasPOINT . · J&gt;LEASA_NT, tion exchange · and data 'with the most current and protocols making it fast and
. n 't being supportive. You
.
W.Va.
- The Crea".~ns acces~ from each_ room, comprehensive
fe~tures easy for clini~ians to con·
'told me it's OK to have
separate interests and that Btnhmg Center at Pleasant t~cudmg our outpatient set- allowmg them to detatl_care firm and follow appropriate
we should compromise So Valley Hospttal · recently tmg. Currend~. we ar_e abl~ more prec~sely and effi~tent- procedures to help support a
ly for theu timest pattents. patient-safe environment. ."
that each of us accompa- showcased a. new OB to. momtor mne patients,
TraceVue
momtonng
sysexplamed
Denise
Queen
,
Thedewborn
record creates
"OB TraceVue presents
nies t~ other on occasion.
I took your advice and put te~ that will allow for RN, Nurse Manager of the a more complete perinatal patient infonnation the way
no pressure on him to opttmal healthcare servtces Obstetncs , and Pedtatncs surveillance and documen- ·physicians work" praised
tation system and demon- Queen. "Whethe; is be at
for expectant mothers and Departments.
change hobbies.
The ben_efits of the OB str~tes otir c~~~itment to the patient's bedside, delivSince then, my husband newborns.
Thts
p~en~tal
an_d
gyneco-.
Trace
Vue _mclude outs!and- pennata! care, sard Wood.
ery room or nurses' station,
bought a tandem bicycle.
logtcal
mtormatton
.
m
anmg
~urvetllance,
provtdmg
Other
enhancements
to
patient infonnation cal) be
· After riding casually for
a!le~ent
system
p;ovtdes
contmuous
trace
dtsplays
of
qB
Trace_Yue
help
cliniaccessed.
This allows our
seven months, we entered a
time trial and did · fairly chmctans addttiOnal patient fetus and mother (even sup- ctans m()mtor maternal and Pleasant V.alley Hospital
welL We upgraded and tnfonnation more qUickly, portmg tnplets); timely fetal. care more efficiently physicians . to focus more
have participated in several a~cordmg. to Sandy Wood, responses to cnttcal events . while safeguarding patient attention on patients and
tandem competitions since . Vtce-Prestdent of Pallen! through baste and advanced confidentiality. The new achieve better quality of
chalkboard care."
We both enjoy it. He's Service .. The OB TraceVue alarming achieved through color-coded
momtonng
system
was
purfetal
trace
pattern
analysis
makes
it
simple
to identify
For more i•tformation
found a way for us to spend
chased
for
the
not-for-profit
and
access
to
information
del!"ery
status
or
to
11roup
about
the
Creations
time together, both casually and competitively, and facthty . by the PVH from any locatu;m. at ~ny pallents by (Jhystcian. Birthing Cellter or the OB
ttme, . through tnteracttve Access to a departmental or Trace Vue monitoring sysnow he's traming to ·do his F~~ndatton.
OB.
Trace
Vue
connects
re~~~te access.
hosl?tlal .resource. book or tern at Pleasant Valley
first triathlon.
the
enltre
department
to
the
.
\t
s
cructal
that
we.
~onchntcl!l
mformatton portal Hospital please call, (304)
I'm grateful for your sensystem
for
smoot~
mformaltnue
to
provtde
clmtctans
connects
caregivers to unit 675-4340, Ext. 1230.
sible advice. We're very
happy, and I thank you for
your perspective when I
couldn't find mine. Count"
us as one of your successes.
-Hang· Widow No More
Dear
Hang-Widow:
Tuesday, Nov. 4. Cards may Planning
Supervision Order 134, OES 7:30 p.m.
Thanks for making our day.
be sent to him at the Commission for Southern at the hall. (hstallation of
Happy trails!
.
Ravenswood Village. 200 Local School District, regu- officers. ·
_ Stmday, Nov. 9
Annie's Mailbox is writSouth
Ritchie
Ave .,
Tuesday, Nov. 4
POMEROY - Revival Ravenswood, W.Va. 26164. lar meeting, 10:30 a.m. ,
ten by Kathy Mitchell and
high
school
media
room.
POMEROY
Drew
Marcy Sugar, longtime ,di· services at the Mt. Hennan
Nov.
6
Thursday,
Webster
Ladies
Auxiliary
tors of the Ann Landers United Brethren Church.
CHESTER '- Chester meeting postponed to Nov.
column. Please e-mail your each evening starting Nov. 9
Township Trustees, 7 p.m. 18, I p.m. at the hall.
questions to anniesmail- continuing through Nov. 12
at the town hall.
CHESTER - Chester
Monday, Nov. 3
box@comcast.net, or write with the Rev. Clifford
Council, · Daughters of
LETART
Letart
· to: Annie's Mailbox, p,o. CoJeman . . Following the
America, 7 p.m . .at the hall.
Box 118190, Chicago, /L · morning service on Nov. 9, Township Trustees 5 p.m. at
Thursday, Nov. 6 ,
building.
6'!1_11. To find out more a carry-in dinner will ·be the office
RACINE
Thesday, Nov. 4 ·
aiJout Annie's Mailliox, held. ·Special music each
.Pomeroy/Racine
Lodge
ALFRED
Orange
·
and ret¢ features by other evening.
#164
Monday,
Nov.
3
sp'ecial
meetmg
.
Township Trustees, 7:30
Creators Syndicate writers
POMEROY - Meigs .6p.m., at lodge in Racine.
p.m. at the home of fiscal
and cartoonists, visit the
County
Cancer Initiative, Past Master 's night with
office,
Osie
Follrod.
Creators Syndicate Web
regular
meeting, noon, work in rhe E.A . degree . All
Nov.
5
Wednesday,
page at www.creators.com.
Thesday, Nov. 4
REEDSVILLE - Olive Meigs County Health Past Masters are encourSYRACUSE - Edward Township Trustees, 6:30 Department, new members aged to attend, Chili dinner
Wells , Syracuse, will cele- p.m., township garage.
welcome,' 992-6626;
follows. Call Randy Smitli,
brate his 92nd birthday on
RACINE - Financial
RACINE · Racine ·508-0816 with questions. ·

Birth announced

DEBBIE PHILLIPS SAYS SHE WANTS ECONOMIC
DEVELOPMENT IN THIS REGION
It doesn't sound like jl!!

The Iraqis want a joint'
JILL THOMPSON SUPPORTS THE AMP-OHIO POWER PLANT
U .S .-Iraqi committe.e to
decide whether accused solWITH JOBS AND PROGRESS FOR SOUTHEASTERN OHIO
diers were off duty or on
authorized missions.
Ano,ttier aide to Prime
Minister Nouri al-Maliki
· said he met with U.S. officials Saturday and was told
that Washington was prepared to accept all those
changes except the one
involving jurisdiction.
We the undersjgned, concerned citizens of Southeastern Ohio, in
The official said he urged
consideration of the Ohio Department of Transportation proposal (Ath!Megthe Americans to compromise on the jurisdiction · 033-30.980 (19.25)/0.0000.00) to establish a new right-of-way for U.S. Rt. 33
request.
tw~llch extends through Athens and Meigs Counties from the city of Athens to
U.S. Embassy spokesVillage Darwin. hereby petition the oWcla!s of the State gf Ob!g NOT
woman Susan Ziadeh said
the U.S. was "still in the
process of considerinjl.carefully the Cabinet reVIsions"
and would respond soon.
This proposed project is a-WASTE of TAXPAYER'S MONEY with NO CLEAR ·
U.S . officials -in Washington
NEED. It will result in the LOSS of FOREST &amp; FARM LAND, and HARM th~ RURAL
have described the jurisdiction demand as a non-negoCHARACTER of the REGION, while NOT RESULTING in the ECONOMIC
· liable "red liqe."
DEVELOPMENT that Athens and Meigs counties NEED.
Iraqi President Jalal
Talabani said there was "no
Iraqi consq~sus" in support
l.ip Ct.it
of the agreement, but he
expected one to emerge in
the coming weeks.
"If the 'American side
agrees to our amendments
to the pact, it will be a good
pact and we can be proud of
tt ," he said in an interview
aired Sunday night by govemment television .

BY· KATHY MITCHELL
AND MARCY SUGAR

I
'

COOLVILLE - Chad
and Jackie Nelson of
Coolville announce the birth
of their daughter, McKayla
Rae Nelson, born on Sept. 3
at Carriden Clark Memorial
Hospital. She weighed 7
pounds,and 7 ounces.
She
has a
sister,
McKenzie Mae Long, fi\_,e
.Maternal grandparents are
Teresa and Ernte Calaway
of Coolville and Jack and
Anita Parker of Pomeroy.
Maternal great-grandparents are Ray and Leoma
Hall of Coolville, the late
Mary Parker, the late Roy
Parker and paterna1 grand•
parents are Gary and Diana Roger and June Epple of
Nelson· of Racine. Paternal .Chc;ster, and Donna and the
great-grandparents
are late Jim Nelson of Pomeroy.

GCC names new director of admissions .
GALLIPOLIS.
Bo
has been named
Director of Admissions at
Gallipolis Career College.
Shirey, a graduate of Ohio
University
where
he
received a ·bachelor degree
in economics. has served as
assistant director for the
past four years. He replaces
Jack L. Henson who held
the post for the past 12
years . Henson is pursuing a
.business venture with his
son Drew in Columbus .. He
will be missed by staff, faculty, and students for his
positive affects on them and
the community.
GCC president Robert L.
Shirey~

Shirey praised Henson for
his loyalty and dedication to
the college and its students.
The school's library has
been named in his honor:
Mick Childs was named as
the new Assistant Director
of Admissions . Childs
received a . bachelor 's
degree -in education from
the · Universitv of Rio
Grande and 'a master's
degree in political science
from Marshall University. ·
For i11formati01t abo!lt '•
classes or programs offere(j
at GCC , call 446-4367 .
800-2 14-0452. or visit the
new website at www .g al ~
lipoliscareerco/lege .ed11 .

Past Councilors Club meets
CHESTER - Plans for a · Prayer. A reading on the
Christmas dinner to be held most ·
embarrassing
pn Dec. 8 at 6 p.m. at the moments was given by
. jlall was planned when the 'Laura Mae Nice . The story
Past Counctlors Club ·· met of the cracked pot was
recently at the 'hall.
given by Goldie Frederick
: The dinner will be catered witli another reading being
by the Eastern Star and held given by Julie Curtis.
at the Masonic Hall build•
Doris
Grueser
and
il)g.. There will be a $3 gift Thelma White served
· exchange . Arrangements refreshments to . Doris
were made for members to Grueser, Ruth Smith ,.
take two items to be given . Charlotte Grant, Thelma
to disabled members. ·
White, Julie Curtis, Laura
Laura Nice presided at Nice, Esther Smith, Opal
the meeting which opened Hollon, and Goldie Frednck
with
scripture
from and visitors, Richard White
Romans and the Lord's and Sandy White.

•

Submitted photo

Bo Shirey, sta~ding, has been named director of admissions,
and Mick Childs, assistant, of Gallipolis Career College.

Bazaar planned
POMEROY - There will
be a bazaar. Friday, Nov. 7,
from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. at The
Maples , E. Memorial Drive,
Pomeroy. Featured will be
crafts and baked goods. with
food available for a donation
from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m .
Proceeds from the bazaar

will go to the Residents
Activity Fund to help with
expenses to do holiday dinners. refreshments when
guest singers and musicians
entertain, bingo prizes. holiday decorations. outside
flower planting and other
activities .

capable

Responsible

Respectful

Dedicated

Brenda Phalin
Appreciates your vote for
Meigs County Clerk of Lmu

�•

The Daily Sentinel

.•

PageA2

NATION • WORLD

November

:The Daily Sentinel

2008

PageA3

·BY THE BEND

Monday, November 3, 2008

ANNIE'S MAILBOX

~Coddling

is more
; for her benefit
,
:

·
AP photoa
'Democratic presidential candic;late Sen: Barack Obama, D-111., waves on the tarmac at the
_airport in Columbus Sunday.

Dear Annie: Due to
Jinancial setbacks, my sister
:and her two ·children have
-been living with my huslland and me for over a year.
:The problem is that her 6:year-old so·o is a mama's
;boy. "Alan" refuses to listen
:to anyone. He throws
:tantrums when his mother is
;not around and even kicks
·his sister and tells his cousin
:he hates her. When we
;infonn his mother of this,
;she ignores us. It is quite
•aggravating. ·
: We've tried to discipline
:Alan numerous times, but
·as soon as his mom comes
·home from work, she
'rewards him by letting
him play video ~ames.
,Another problem ts that
-my sister refuses to let
'Alan sleep by himself. She
says he is not ready to be
~alone at night, so she puts
him in bed. with her.
:. Annie, is this a healthy
·relationship for either of
them? How can I talk to her
·seriously about Alan when
she will noi listen to any:one? - Annoyed Aunt
Dear Aunt: For whatever
reason , your sister feels the
need to coddle Alan. This is
more for her benefit than
his because she is doing
him no favor. Good parent:ing is hard work, and she is
taking the path of least
resistance. You may pro·vide appropriate discipline
when Alan s mother is not
_prese.nt. What she does
when she comes home is
out of your control. If you
cannot convince her that
"She i~ doing hei- son a disservice, you might pick up
some books on parenting
and leave them in her bed_room. We hope she cares
enough about her son to
read them.
· De11r Annie: I'm a 25. ye'ar-old woman in a committed
relationship.
Because I work in a public
setting, I interact with
,dozens of people every day.
-Frequently, men ask me for
~ersonal information I
lion 't wish to share :Whether i'rn married, my
telephone number, et~. I
have no problem answering
a direct question, but what
do I do when the situation
is vague?
·
Often I can tell when
someone is working up to
asking me for my number,
and I'd like to head them off
before
it
happens.
Sometimes they ask for
something
seeminglY.
innocuous , like my e-matl

Republican presidential candidate Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., emphasizes a point during
a campaign rally in Wallingford, Pa., Sunday morning.
"

:C alllpaigns uncork get-out-the-vote operations
BY NEDRA PICKLER
AND LIZ StbOTI
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITERS
· COLUMBUS - . Barack
.Obania and Johri McCain
uncorked massive · get-out.the-vote operations in more
than a dozen battleground
states Sunday, millions of
telephone calls, mailings
:and door-knockings in a
-frenzied, fitting climax to a
.record-shattering $1 billion
campaign. Together, they'll
.spend .about $.8 per presi·
dential vote. .
With just two days to go,
·most national polls show
.Obama ahead of McCain.
State surveys suggest the
Democrat's path to the
·requisite 270 electoral
votes - and perhaps far
beyond - is 'much easier
to navigate than ·McCain's.
· Obaina exuded confi·deuce. "The last couple of
days, I've been just feeling
good," he told 80,000 gathered to hear him - and
singer Bruce Springsteen in Cleveland. "The crowds
seem to grow and everybody's got a smile on their
face. You start thinking that
maybe we might be able to
win an election · on
November 4th."
· Earlier, in Columbus,
Obama urged a crowd that
police estimated · at 60,000
. to vote at a nearby polling
_place before it closed
.Sunday evening.
"Do not delay because
we have work to do." he
said from the Ohio
Statehouse steps.
A show of hands showed
that most' in the crowd
'already had voted .
· Columbus
Mayor
Michael
Coleman.
a
Democrat, said it was the
largest gathering ever for a
local political event, while
Gov. Ted Strickland predicted that Ohio "will be in the
Obanta-Biden column."

In PeterbOrough, N.H ., phone calls.
McCain held his final 'town
In a new TV ad, Obama
hall-style event in the state highlighted Vice President
that put him on the national Dick Cheney. 's support for
map in 2000 and launched McCain. The ad features
his GOP primary comeback Cheney, an . extremely
eight years later. "I come to unpopular figure among the
the people of New general public, at an event
Hampshire" to ask them to Saturday in Wyoming, saylet me go on one more mis- ing: "I'm delighted to supsion," said McCain , who is port John McCain."
looking for liD upset victory
Not to be outdone, the
against Ol&gt;ama.
.
Republican
National
Polls show the six closest · Committee rolled out battlestates l!fe Aorida, Indiana, !lround phone calls that
Missouri, North Carolina, mclude Hillary Rodham
Nevada and Ohio. All were Clinton·~ criticism of
won by Bush and made Obama .
during · the
·competitive by Obama's Democratic primary." She is
record-shattering fundrais- heard saying: "In the White
ing. The campa.igns also House, there is no time for
are running aggressive speeches and on-the-job
!lround games else~¥here, training. Sen. McCain will
mcludirig Iowa, New · bring a lifetime of experiMexico,
Pennsylvania, enc'e to the campaign, and
New Hampshire, Colorado Sen. Obama will bring a
and Virgima.
·
speech that he gave in
. · All that's left now for the 2002.'' A Clinton spokescandidates is make: sure woman said she disappeople vote Tuesday - if proves of the ad. .
·
til~&gt;: haven't already.
Another phone caU to
. Indeed, Election Day is Pennsylvania and Ohio vatbecoming a · misnomer. ers takes 0(,ama's • words
About .27&lt;million absentee about coal-burning technoland early votes were cast in ogy out of context and
30 states as of. Saturday claims he will "bankrupt the
night, m,ore than ever. coal industry.''
· ·
Democrats outnumbered
The Pennsylvania GOP
Republicans in pre-Election also unveiled a TV ad fea,
Day voting in key states.
turing Obama's former pasThat has Democrats - and tor, the Rev. · Jeremiah
even some Republicans Wright, declaring "God·
privately
questioning damn America!" in a serwhether McCain can over- mon.
take Obama, eveit · if GOP
Obama and McCain camloyalists tum out in droves paigned on each other's turf
on Tuesday. Obama may Sunday. Obama was in
already have too big of a Ohio, a bellwether state
head start in critical states Bush won four years ago
like Nevada and Iowa, which and where polls show
Bush won four years ago .
Obania tied or winning.
"This is off the chans in McCain
visited
some of these states," said Pennsylvania and New
Michael P. McDonald , a Hampshire, states won . by
political scientist at George Democrat John Kerry in
Mason University. .
2004. He trails in both.
As the campaign closes.
"I've been in a lot of camvot~rs were being inundat- paigns, I know the momened with a crush of televi- tum is there.'' McCain told
sian ads and automated supporters at a rally in

Iraq expects answer on security deal after US vote
Bv 'QASSIM ABDUL·ZAHRA
ASSOCIATED PREss WRITER

U.N. mandate that allows
coalition forces to operate
here legally.
BAGHDAD
Iraq
Without an agreement or
expects
an
American a new U.N . mandate, the
response to requested U.S. military would have to
changes in a draft security suspend its mission, and the
pact soon after this week's U.S. military:s future in Iraq
·u.s. presidential election, would be up to the man who
·an aide to the prj me minis- takes office in January.
ter said Sunday.
.
McCain supported the
Another Iraqi official said 2003 invasion of Iraq and
the U.S . indicated it would the troop surge which
accept all the proposed helped tum the tide.
:changes except one ~
Obama op~ the inva.greater Iraqi legal control sion and srud negotiations
over American soldiers and on a security agreement
contractors.
should be conducted as part
. Yassin Majeed said the of a "broader commitment"
. U.S. response would come to begin withdrawing the
_after Tuesday's vote so the troops. Obama's campaign
,president-elect - either Web
site
says
the
:Barack Obama or John Democratic
candidate
:McCain - could be briefed believes the agreement also
:on the Iraqi proposals. should be approved by
:which were submitted by Congress.
:Iraq's Cabinet last week .
Among other things. the
, Iraqi lawmakers say the Iraqis are now asking for a
:changes are essential in ban on using their territory
:order to win parliamentary to attack neighboring coun:approval for the deal , tnes, removal of language
•Which
would
keep that might allow the U.S. to
:American troops in this stay here past 2011 . and
:country until2012 and give changes in a clause provid·
:the Iraqis a greater role in tng ltmited Iraqi jurisdiction
cthe conduct of U.S . mili- · over U.S . troops.
·.tary operations.
The current draft provides
, Parliament must approve for ltmtted Iraqi jurisdiction
.the agreement before the for maJor crimes committed
year-end expiration of the pff post and off duty.

--··-.

Pennsylvania. Overall, polls
His campaign reported
sho": Obama winning or that Saturday was its largest
tied in more than a dozen or volunteer day, with more
so .states won by B!lsh While · volunteers showing up .to
McCain trails .fn .&lt;!very work the phones and walk
Kerry state.
· neighborhood
precincts
McCain and the RNC dra- than ever before in the cammatically ramped up their paign.
s'aid
Obama
spending in the campaign's spokesman Bill Burton,
fmal days and now are "Our volunteers are commatching Obama ad for ad, pletely en~aged,"
if not exceeding him, in key
McCain screw says theirs
battleground markets in are, too.
"There's no dot,1bt that
states such as Aorida, Ohio,
North Carolina, Virginia we've got an uphill battle,"
and Pennsylvania. ·
said Rich Beeson, the
. After mortths ofplanning. RNC's political dire~tor.
tile · Republican
Party But, he said, "I'm not going
launched.the last stage of its · into !'llection Day with any
vaunted "72-hour pro- . trepidation that they've put
gram," when voluntee..S any state away" by banking
descend on competitive early votes. "We still have a
states for the final stretch. lot of voters that we 'can and
Democrats unleashed their
tum out."
The RNC "reported mak"persuasion army" of backers scouring their own back- ing- 5.4 million voter conyards to en~ourage people tacts last week, compated
to back Obama in Jhe cam- witb 1.9 million in the same
paign's waning hours.
. week in 2004, and it says
More than 10,000 Obama it'lvvolume has steadily
volunJ~ers in Ohio were , im;reased,.. since October
knocking on doors and . began. Overall, it says 26
planning to hit their one million voters have been
millionth home . Sunday contacted by . volul)teers
after a five-day push.
over four months.

will

· On Saturday alone, the
RNC says an estimated 3
million voters were contact.ed by phone or in person, and
it saw so many volunteers
show up to help that in at
least one state, Colorado, the
party ran out of canvassing
packets. Some 180.000 were
gone by midday Saturday;
more were printed.
McCain planned visits to
media markets that hit battlegrounds
Florida,
Virginia, Indiana, New
Mexico, and Nevada on
Monday. A repeat trip to
Pennsylvania also was slated before McCain returns
·
home to Arizona.
. Obama planned visits to
Florida, North Carolina and
Virginia on Monday and a
quick stop in .Indiana
Tuesday morning.
Obama told reporters he
would hold a news conference on Wednesday. Later,
Obama
spokeswoman
Linda Dougfass . walked
back Obama's plans, saying
he'll meet the ptess before
the end of the ·week, but
"don't
count
on
Wednesday."

PHILLIPS OPPOSES JOBS &amp; PROGRESS
IN SOUTHEASTERN OHIO
.
.
.

Debbie Phillips is proudly endorsed by "CASH" and "The SIERRA CLUB" {see
,,
2. "CASH" opposed the new US33 route from Darwin to Athe~s
(See ''CASH" petition, page 89 signed hy Deborah M. Phillips) ·
I.

http:lw~w.debbiephillips.net}

3. The delays in·the construction caused by the petition cost Ohio millions ot' extra dollars not to memion the
• •• ,
unnecessary accidents on old 33 &lt;tue to the delay.
'
1

Debbie (Deborah) PhilliP,. and her allies at the. radical green llnvironmentalist organization, (The Sierra Club)
have been leading the fig~t against the AMP-Ohio Coal-filed power plant in Letart, Meigs County. Ohio
*(Opposing nearly three billion dollitrs in construction)
*(Opposing the creation of approximately 1600 new jobs to build)
*(Opposing the creation of one hundred fifty permanent jobs)
*(Opposing the creation of fifteen permanent jobs at the related.fenilizer plant)
*(Opposing real concrete progress for reaL good paying jobs near the homes of families in Southeastern
Ohio)
5. Debbie Phillips allies at the Sierra Club are opposed to &amp; new coal .mines and coal fired power plants:
4.

-

•

•

•

;

•

•

OB TraceVue monitoring system showcased

Community Calendar
Church events

Public meetings

Clubs and
organizations

Birthdays

'

NOW JUST WHO IS IT THAT
WANTS PROGRESS

A Petition

address. I don't want to give
it out, but don't know on
what grounds I can refuse.
There is no way to casually
drop my boyfrtend into the
conversation. How do I stop
t~ese advances before they
start? - Not Flattered
Anymon
·
Dear Not Flattered:
Your problem is easily
solved with normal etiquette rules .• The proper
response is to smile politely and say, "I'm sorry, but
I don't give out my personal information. You ~an
q :mtact anr of us through
the office.' That tells them
you are not interested,
while remaining professional.
Dear Annie: A couple of
yeats ago, I wrote you
B' h' C
p
.
·
Submitted photo
.
regarding my husband's Th. e CreaI1ons
_1rt 1ng enter at le~sant Valley Hospttal recently showcased a new OB TraceVue monitoring system that
interest in hang gliding. I wtll allo':" for opttll')al h~althcare servtces for expectant mothers and newborns. Pictures with the new system is left to right
never told anyone of that Mane Liberatore, chatrman of the Pleas.ant Valley 1-jospital Foundation; Michael Lieving, chairman of the PVH Board of
letter. I wrote that he trav- Trustees; Den1se Queen, RN, nurse manager of the Obstetics and Pediatrics Departments and Alvin R. Lawson JD
eled for his sport and that I FACHE , chief executive officer and president ·
.
' '
had gone with him and carried his gear. but then I got
interested in . biking and
stopped. He·claimed I wasPOINT . · J&gt;LEASA_NT, tion exchange · and data 'with the most current and protocols making it fast and
. n 't being supportive. You
.
W.Va.
- The Crea".~ns acces~ from each_ room, comprehensive
fe~tures easy for clini~ians to con·
'told me it's OK to have
separate interests and that Btnhmg Center at Pleasant t~cudmg our outpatient set- allowmg them to detatl_care firm and follow appropriate
we should compromise So Valley Hospttal · recently tmg. Currend~. we ar_e abl~ more prec~sely and effi~tent- procedures to help support a
ly for theu timest pattents. patient-safe environment. ."
that each of us accompa- showcased a. new OB to. momtor mne patients,
TraceVue
momtonng
sysexplamed
Denise
Queen
,
Thedewborn
record creates
"OB TraceVue presents
nies t~ other on occasion.
I took your advice and put te~ that will allow for RN, Nurse Manager of the a more complete perinatal patient infonnation the way
no pressure on him to opttmal healthcare servtces Obstetncs , and Pedtatncs surveillance and documen- ·physicians work" praised
tation system and demon- Queen. "Whethe; is be at
for expectant mothers and Departments.
change hobbies.
The ben_efits of the OB str~tes otir c~~~itment to the patient's bedside, delivSince then, my husband newborns.
Thts
p~en~tal
an_d
gyneco-.
Trace
Vue _mclude outs!and- pennata! care, sard Wood.
ery room or nurses' station,
bought a tandem bicycle.
logtcal
mtormatton
.
m
anmg
~urvetllance,
provtdmg
Other
enhancements
to
patient infonnation cal) be
· After riding casually for
a!le~ent
system
p;ovtdes
contmuous
trace
dtsplays
of
qB
Trace_Yue
help
cliniaccessed.
This allows our
seven months, we entered a
time trial and did · fairly chmctans addttiOnal patient fetus and mother (even sup- ctans m()mtor maternal and Pleasant V.alley Hospital
welL We upgraded and tnfonnation more qUickly, portmg tnplets); timely fetal. care more efficiently physicians . to focus more
have participated in several a~cordmg. to Sandy Wood, responses to cnttcal events . while safeguarding patient attention on patients and
tandem competitions since . Vtce-Prestdent of Pallen! through baste and advanced confidentiality. The new achieve better quality of
chalkboard care."
We both enjoy it. He's Service .. The OB TraceVue alarming achieved through color-coded
momtonng
system
was
purfetal
trace
pattern
analysis
makes
it
simple
to identify
For more i•tformation
found a way for us to spend
chased
for
the
not-for-profit
and
access
to
information
del!"ery
status
or
to
11roup
about
the
Creations
time together, both casually and competitively, and facthty . by the PVH from any locatu;m. at ~ny pallents by (Jhystcian. Birthing Cellter or the OB
ttme, . through tnteracttve Access to a departmental or Trace Vue monitoring sysnow he's traming to ·do his F~~ndatton.
OB.
Trace
Vue
connects
re~~~te access.
hosl?tlal .resource. book or tern at Pleasant Valley
first triathlon.
the
enltre
department
to
the
.
\t
s
cructal
that
we.
~onchntcl!l
mformatton portal Hospital please call, (304)
I'm grateful for your sensystem
for
smoot~
mformaltnue
to
provtde
clmtctans
connects
caregivers to unit 675-4340, Ext. 1230.
sible advice. We're very
happy, and I thank you for
your perspective when I
couldn't find mine. Count"
us as one of your successes.
-Hang· Widow No More
Dear
Hang-Widow:
Tuesday, Nov. 4. Cards may Planning
Supervision Order 134, OES 7:30 p.m.
Thanks for making our day.
be sent to him at the Commission for Southern at the hall. (hstallation of
Happy trails!
.
Ravenswood Village. 200 Local School District, regu- officers. ·
_ Stmday, Nov. 9
Annie's Mailbox is writSouth
Ritchie
Ave .,
Tuesday, Nov. 4
POMEROY - Revival Ravenswood, W.Va. 26164. lar meeting, 10:30 a.m. ,
ten by Kathy Mitchell and
high
school
media
room.
POMEROY
Drew
Marcy Sugar, longtime ,di· services at the Mt. Hennan
Nov.
6
Thursday,
Webster
Ladies
Auxiliary
tors of the Ann Landers United Brethren Church.
CHESTER '- Chester meeting postponed to Nov.
column. Please e-mail your each evening starting Nov. 9
Township Trustees, 7 p.m. 18, I p.m. at the hall.
questions to anniesmail- continuing through Nov. 12
at the town hall.
CHESTER - Chester
Monday, Nov. 3
box@comcast.net, or write with the Rev. Clifford
Council, · Daughters of
LETART
Letart
· to: Annie's Mailbox, p,o. CoJeman . . Following the
America, 7 p.m . .at the hall.
Box 118190, Chicago, /L · morning service on Nov. 9, Township Trustees 5 p.m. at
Thursday, Nov. 6 ,
building.
6'!1_11. To find out more a carry-in dinner will ·be the office
RACINE
Thesday, Nov. 4 ·
aiJout Annie's Mailliox, held. ·Special music each
.Pomeroy/Racine
Lodge
ALFRED
Orange
·
and ret¢ features by other evening.
#164
Monday,
Nov.
3
sp'ecial
meetmg
.
Township Trustees, 7:30
Creators Syndicate writers
POMEROY - Meigs .6p.m., at lodge in Racine.
p.m. at the home of fiscal
and cartoonists, visit the
County
Cancer Initiative, Past Master 's night with
office,
Osie
Follrod.
Creators Syndicate Web
regular
meeting, noon, work in rhe E.A . degree . All
Nov.
5
Wednesday,
page at www.creators.com.
Thesday, Nov. 4
REEDSVILLE - Olive Meigs County Health Past Masters are encourSYRACUSE - Edward Township Trustees, 6:30 Department, new members aged to attend, Chili dinner
Wells , Syracuse, will cele- p.m., township garage.
welcome,' 992-6626;
follows. Call Randy Smitli,
brate his 92nd birthday on
RACINE - Financial
RACINE · Racine ·508-0816 with questions. ·

Birth announced

DEBBIE PHILLIPS SAYS SHE WANTS ECONOMIC
DEVELOPMENT IN THIS REGION
It doesn't sound like jl!!

The Iraqis want a joint'
JILL THOMPSON SUPPORTS THE AMP-OHIO POWER PLANT
U .S .-Iraqi committe.e to
decide whether accused solWITH JOBS AND PROGRESS FOR SOUTHEASTERN OHIO
diers were off duty or on
authorized missions.
Ano,ttier aide to Prime
Minister Nouri al-Maliki
· said he met with U.S. officials Saturday and was told
that Washington was prepared to accept all those
changes except the one
involving jurisdiction.
We the undersjgned, concerned citizens of Southeastern Ohio, in
The official said he urged
consideration of the Ohio Department of Transportation proposal (Ath!Megthe Americans to compromise on the jurisdiction · 033-30.980 (19.25)/0.0000.00) to establish a new right-of-way for U.S. Rt. 33
request.
tw~llch extends through Athens and Meigs Counties from the city of Athens to
U.S. Embassy spokesVillage Darwin. hereby petition the oWcla!s of the State gf Ob!g NOT
woman Susan Ziadeh said
the U.S. was "still in the
process of considerinjl.carefully the Cabinet reVIsions"
and would respond soon.
This proposed project is a-WASTE of TAXPAYER'S MONEY with NO CLEAR ·
U.S . officials -in Washington
NEED. It will result in the LOSS of FOREST &amp; FARM LAND, and HARM th~ RURAL
have described the jurisdiction demand as a non-negoCHARACTER of the REGION, while NOT RESULTING in the ECONOMIC
· liable "red liqe."
DEVELOPMENT that Athens and Meigs counties NEED.
Iraqi President Jalal
Talabani said there was "no
Iraqi consq~sus" in support
l.ip Ct.it
of the agreement, but he
expected one to emerge in
the coming weeks.
"If the 'American side
agrees to our amendments
to the pact, it will be a good
pact and we can be proud of
tt ," he said in an interview
aired Sunday night by govemment television .

BY· KATHY MITCHELL
AND MARCY SUGAR

I
'

COOLVILLE - Chad
and Jackie Nelson of
Coolville announce the birth
of their daughter, McKayla
Rae Nelson, born on Sept. 3
at Carriden Clark Memorial
Hospital. She weighed 7
pounds,and 7 ounces.
She
has a
sister,
McKenzie Mae Long, fi\_,e
.Maternal grandparents are
Teresa and Ernte Calaway
of Coolville and Jack and
Anita Parker of Pomeroy.
Maternal great-grandparents are Ray and Leoma
Hall of Coolville, the late
Mary Parker, the late Roy
Parker and paterna1 grand•
parents are Gary and Diana Roger and June Epple of
Nelson· of Racine. Paternal .Chc;ster, and Donna and the
great-grandparents
are late Jim Nelson of Pomeroy.

GCC names new director of admissions .
GALLIPOLIS.
Bo
has been named
Director of Admissions at
Gallipolis Career College.
Shirey, a graduate of Ohio
University
where
he
received a ·bachelor degree
in economics. has served as
assistant director for the
past four years. He replaces
Jack L. Henson who held
the post for the past 12
years . Henson is pursuing a
.business venture with his
son Drew in Columbus .. He
will be missed by staff, faculty, and students for his
positive affects on them and
the community.
GCC president Robert L.
Shirey~

Shirey praised Henson for
his loyalty and dedication to
the college and its students.
The school's library has
been named in his honor:
Mick Childs was named as
the new Assistant Director
of Admissions . Childs
received a . bachelor 's
degree -in education from
the · Universitv of Rio
Grande and 'a master's
degree in political science
from Marshall University. ·
For i11formati01t abo!lt '•
classes or programs offere(j
at GCC , call 446-4367 .
800-2 14-0452. or visit the
new website at www .g al ~
lipoliscareerco/lege .ed11 .

Past Councilors Club meets
CHESTER - Plans for a · Prayer. A reading on the
Christmas dinner to be held most ·
embarrassing
pn Dec. 8 at 6 p.m. at the moments was given by
. jlall was planned when the 'Laura Mae Nice . The story
Past Counctlors Club ·· met of the cracked pot was
recently at the 'hall.
given by Goldie Frederick
: The dinner will be catered witli another reading being
by the Eastern Star and held given by Julie Curtis.
at the Masonic Hall build•
Doris
Grueser
and
il)g.. There will be a $3 gift Thelma White served
· exchange . Arrangements refreshments to . Doris
were made for members to Grueser, Ruth Smith ,.
take two items to be given . Charlotte Grant, Thelma
to disabled members. ·
White, Julie Curtis, Laura
Laura Nice presided at Nice, Esther Smith, Opal
the meeting which opened Hollon, and Goldie Frednck
with
scripture
from and visitors, Richard White
Romans and the Lord's and Sandy White.

•

Submitted photo

Bo Shirey, sta~ding, has been named director of admissions,
and Mick Childs, assistant, of Gallipolis Career College.

Bazaar planned
POMEROY - There will
be a bazaar. Friday, Nov. 7,
from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. at The
Maples , E. Memorial Drive,
Pomeroy. Featured will be
crafts and baked goods. with
food available for a donation
from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m .
Proceeds from the bazaar

will go to the Residents
Activity Fund to help with
expenses to do holiday dinners. refreshments when
guest singers and musicians
entertain, bingo prizes. holiday decorations. outside
flower planting and other
activities .

capable

Responsible

Respectful

Dedicated

Brenda Phalin
Appreciates your vote for
Meigs County Clerk of Lmu

�~The D&amp;ily

OPINION·

Sentinel

Media~

rThe Daily Sentinel
l'

111 Court Street • PomefiOY, Ohio

....•
..

(740) 992-2156 ·FAX (740) 992·2157

•

~

-.mydaltysentlnel.com ·

..••
~·

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

••
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Dan Goodrich

.•..
••
•.

.

.

Publisher

'

Charlene Hoeflich
~eneral

PageA4

Manager-News Editor

"

~

Congress shall make no law respecting an
! establishment of religion, or prohibiting the
; free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom
:: of speech, or of the press; or the right of the
-·people peaceably to assemble, and .to petition .
the Government for a redress ofgrievances.
- The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

TODAY 'IN HISTORY
Today is Monday, Nov. 3, the 308th day of 2008. There
·
are 58 days left in the year.
.. Today's.Highlight in History: One hundred years ago, on
Nov. 3, 1908, Republican William Howard Taft was elect·
ed president, outpolling Democrat William Jennings Bryan.
· .· On this date: In 1839, the first Opium War between China
and Britain broke out.
In 1868, Republican Ulysses S. Grant won the presiden·
tial election over Democrat Horatio Seymour.
In 1896, Republican William McKinley defeated
Democrat William Jennings Bryan for the presidency.
ln 1903, Panama proclaimed its independence from
Colombia.
· In 1936, President Franklin Roosevelt won a lan~slide
election victory over Republican challenger Alfred M. .
:'Alf' Landon.
'· In 1957, the Soviet Union launched·Sputnik 2, the second
:manmade satellite, into orbit; on board was a dog named
Laika who was sacrificed in the experiment .
' In 1964, President J.ohnson soundly defeated Republican
Barry Goldwater to win a White House·term in his own right.
· In 1979, five radicals were killed when gunfire erupted
'during an anti-Ku Klux Klan demonstration in Greensboro,
N .C., after a caravan of Klansmen and neo-Nazis had dri·
ven into the area.
' In 1986, the Iran-Contra affair.began to come to light as
Ash,Shiraa. a pro-Syrian Lebanese magazine, first broke
the story of U.S. arms sales to Iran .
Ten years ago: In national elections, Democrats gained
five House seats, trimming the Republican majority.
Minnesotans elected former pro wrestler Jesse "The Body"
Ventura to be their governor. The death toll from Hurricane
Mitch grew to 9,000 in Honduras.
' Five years ago: Congress voted its final approval for
$87.5 billion for U.S. military operations and aid in Iraq
and Afghanistan . Russia's richest man, Mikhail
Khodorkovsky, already jailed on fraud and tax evasion
-charges; resigned as head of the Russian oil giant Yukos.
: One year ago: Gen. Pervez Musharraf declared a state of
:emergency in Pakistan . United Auto Workers agreed to a
tentative contract witli Ford Motor Co. 1\vo astronauts con~ucted a successful spacewalk to save a ripped solar wing
on the space station.
Today's Birthdays: Baseball Hall-of-FamerBob Feller is
90 . Actress Lois Smith is 78. Former Massachusetts Gov.
Michael S. Dukakis is 75. Actor-dancer Ken Berry is 75 . .
Movie composer John Barry is 75. Actor Shadoe Stevens is
(i2. Singer Lulu is 60. Comedian-actress Roseanne Barr is
56. Actress Kate Capshaw is 55. Comedian Dennis Miller
is 55. Actress Kathy Kinney is 55 . Singer Adam Ant is 54.
Actor Dolph Lundgren is 51. Rock musician CJ. Pierce
(Drowning Pool) is 36.
·
Thought for Today: "You must be true to yourself. Strong
enough to be true to yourself. Brave enough to be strong
enough to be true to yourself. Wise enough to be brave
-enough , to be strong enough to shape yourself from what
you actually are.'' - Sylvia Constance Ashton-Warner,
New Zealander author and educator (1908-1984).

al bomb-thrower Obama
brushed off as just "a guy
in my neighborhood." But
the media saw nothing to it
- not even a piece of
·
Obama's questionable pat·
Diana
tern of collaboration with a
series of people best
West
descri~ed as unregenerate
leftists.
But
Colin
Powell
endorsed Obama, right? We
least until a blog named heard all about that. . Guess
Global Labor and Poli.tics who else endorsed him?
anti-Semite
pointed · this fact out. Anti-white,
Klonsky's musings were Louis
Farrakhan, . the
summarily scrubbed from Ahmadinejad-lite speaker
the campaign Web site in of Iran's parliament Ali
June. Why? The media· Lari~
'ani, Hamas and the.
never asked.
·
'
ro- amas
National
And so it · goes. The P
assorted radicals _ from Association of Muslim
ACORN to Ayers, .from American Women. Did we
anti-white Jeremiah Wright hear about that? No.
to Saudi-adviser Khalid alAnd what about this one?
Mansour to former PLO Obama - potentially the
. associate Rashid Khalidi _ next leader of the Free
who have peopled Obama's World,· after all - once
ideological passage from belonged to a socialis~ party
rising leftist to post-ideo- called the New Party (and
logical cipher, have been there are giant scans of a
lost in the blur to a media 1996 New Party News story
focused solely on their own claiming Obama as a memprize: Obama in the White ber, courtesy the blog New
H
Zeal) . Smoking gun for the
s~S:h focus has created a media, no?
.
drastically blinkered jourNo. The ·media didn't
nalism, particularly in these · consider this worth any ink,
final weeks. Take the . fact ·not even after · Joe the
that the ·supposedly "post- Plumber prompied Obama
racial" Obama once funded to -let slip, ·c learly and
Afrocentric, race-focused unequivocally,
his
education programs sup- antipathies to basic capital·
ported by Jeremiah "G - _ ism: "When you spread the
D - - America" Wright. wealth around ," Obama
That was a juicy blend of famously said, "I t~nk it's
hypocrisy a11d extremism good for everybody.
Despite the code of
(dug up by Stanley Kurtz).
but the media just averted silence (omerta) main·
lained by the prObamedia
their eyes.
Or how about good, ol' (prObamerta), these sto·
Willi.am "America Makes nes and others like them
Me Want to Puke" Ayers, have still come out in
whose own relationship dribs , drabs. and funny
with Klonsky (the Maoist feelings, infusing the body
mentioned. above) goes politic . with
enough
back to the days of the SDS uneasiness about Obama's
(Students for a Democratic ideological affinities for
Society)? Obama worked the left to keep John
closely with Ayers to fund McCain surprisingly and
radical programs (such as perhipS even resiliently '
Klonsky's) in Chicago, competitive . Despite the
endorsed /.1 ,rs' work, and disgrace of our free-but· launched his political self-caged press. many
career in Ayers' home. This voter·s have managed to
is the ideological and liter- learn for themselves that

OUR READERS' VIEWS

Degrading
Dear Edilor:

good thing those two campaign volunteers didn't get
dog bitten because all the
dogs in Meigs County have
rabies, that's about as
ridic.ulous as "The New
Yorker Story."
Kenneth DeUlng .

I am writing concerning
the article, Meigs County
and "The New Yorker" that
appeared in the Daily
Lifelong resident
Sentinel on Friday Oct. 24t,
of Meigs County
2008.
The article in "The New
Yorker" degraded Meigs
County, Pomeroy and
some of its citizens, was
wrjtten clearly to make a
political statement. I quote
"you see all these poor
Dear Edilor:
people that don't have any· I am delighted to say
thing , but they're still sup- that I am a 3-1/2 year
porting the wrong party, breast cancer survivor. As
that's the reason they don'l such, I am one of IS
have anything."
Meigs County women
That is a. complete false diagnosed each year from
.
statement, just like the · 2000-04 with this disease
. Letters to the editor are welcome . They should be less statement about the coal · according to the 2007
than 300 words . All letters are subject to. editing, must be loading dock, and I quote, American .Cancer Society
signed, and include address and telephone number. No ''I drove do)Nn . Route 33 Ohio Cancer Facts and
14nsigned letters will be published. Letters should be in from Athens into ·Meigs Figures.
_good taste, addressing issues, not personalities. Letters of County and ~ town ' called . My experience with
thanks to organizations and individuals will not be accept· Pomeroy whtch once had breast cancer resulted in
ed for publication.
been a loading dock for coal my support of and particibarges and ,now lay pros- pation in Meigs County
trate and bliphted along the Relay for Life and ultimately in my becoming a
Ohio River.'
The co~tl loading dock trained
" Reach
to
was
no
loriger
needed
at
that
Recovery"
volunteer.
(USPS 213-980)
1 · Reader Services
site, l!rger and more effi- While I was blessed' with
•
Ohio Valley Publishing
cient loading facility have tremendous support from
Co.
Correction Polley
Published every after,noon, Monday
been bu1lt out of town. Can family and friends during .
Our main concem in all stories Is to through Friday, 111 Court Street,
a political party , restore my cancer jou_rney, I fully
.be accurate. If you know of an error Pomeroy, Ohio. Second-class pOstage
more coal into the hills appreciate how important 1t
·in a story, call the newsroom at (740) paid at Pomeroy.
around Pomeroy, to be is for newly diagnosed
Member: The Associated Press and
992·2156.
mined and . loaded on breast cancer patients·to be
the Ohio Newspaper Association.
harli!es. Have the Pomeroy in touch with people 'who
Po1tma•ter:
Send
address
correc·
Our main number Is
lions to The Dally Sentinel, 111 Court
busmesses been victims of have not only survived ·
(740) 992·2156.
Street. Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.
changing
times and flood· breast cancer but continue
. Department extensions ara:
ing
but
.have
always risen to live productive lives.
Subecrlptlon Rates
above
those
challenges.
Like the ACS · and its
By carrier or motor route
News
The officials and volun- many volunteers, I believe
One month
'1 0.27
,Edlto&lt;: Charlene Hoeflich, Ext. 12
One year
'1 15.84
teer organizations of that no one should' have to
Dally
50'
Reporlllr: Brian Reed, Ex1. 14"
Pomeroy
and Meigs face breast cancer alone.
Senior Citizen rataa
Reporter: Beth So~ont ; Ext. 13
County (both political par- There currently are three
One month
'10.27
'
"Reach
to
ties) have labored to revi- trained
One y•r
'103.90
talize
the
village
and
have
Recovery"
volunteers
servStbia
.
.
.
shouk1
remit
tn
advaR:;e
Advertising
b tho DIOty Sentinel. No sub·
done a very good job. ·ing Meigs County includOut.lde Sllel: Dave Harris, Ext. 15 scription ~ mail permitted In ar'BBS
myself,
Maxine
Upon entering Pomeroy ing
Outalde S.lu: Brenda Davis, Ext 16 where home can1er service Is avail·
on·
the
Griffith
and
Dr.
Wilma
we
see
a
mini
park
CI-.JCirc.: Judy Clark, Ext. 10
able.
left, the beautiful Ohio Mansfield .
River in front and a one · Through the "Reach to
Mall Subscription
General Manager
lnllde Melga County
and a half mile lighted Recovery" program, we
Charlene Hoeflich , Ext. 12
13 w-.ks
'32.26
walking path, what a beau- can provide information
26 Weeks
'64.20
tiful sight at evening and and support before, during
52 Weeks
' 127.11
E· mall:
night, not only for passers· l)nd after a breast cancer
newfi@ mydallysentinel.com
by but for a beautiful quite · diagnosis through one-onOul81de Melgo County
13 Weeks
'53.55
stroll, not prostrate and one contacts . Talking with
web:
26 Weeks
'107.10
.. www.mydailysentlnel.com
a program volunteer helps
blighted after all.
52 Weeks
•
'214.21
And by the . way, its a those facing breast cancer

.11each to
Recovery'

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR
.

The Daily Sentinel

•

..

Obama has spent a lifetime
associating with the kind
of anti-Americans and
subvef$ives that, by rights ,
lDake him ineligible for a
federal security clearance
- something Daniel Pipes
has noted. Many voters
understand that when you
"spread
the
wealth
around" you are enacting abasic premise of Marxism,
or communism, or socialism, or something once
upon ·a time derided as
plain old commie-pinko.
But that was a long time
ago, and the fact is , we just
don't know how manl.
Americans are still put o f .
d b
h
if not outrage , y sue
things .
.
maybe
this
becomes
And
the most important question
tobesettledonNov.4:How
many Americans still consider mixing with and supporting bomb-throwers and
radicals to ])!: un-presidential? How many Americans
still consider a Marxist
basis for economics to be , in
fact,
downright
unAmerican?
That such questions neec:t
to be asked, that such
answers are in doubt, indi·
cates the extent to which
we have already changed
as apeople, and that is not
a hopeful tl)ing . Perhaps
the miscalculation many
conservatives
made
throughout this campaign
was in assuming thai
Obama 's alliances and
working relationships with
leftists and leftist causes
· were
things
mosl
Americans would . vigorously and automatically
reject.
Then again, maybe they
still will.
(Diana West ·is a colum·
nist for The Washington
Times . She is the aut/'lor oj
"The Death of the Grown11p: How America's Arrested
Development Is Bringing
Down
Western
Civilization," and has a
blog at dianawest.net. She ·
can be contacted via
dianawesl@verizon,net.)

'

find the · strength . and
resources to cope with their
experience and to move
forward as a survivor.
Other issues we can help
people
with
include :
Lumpectomy or mastectomy; breast reconstruction,
lymphedema; treatment;
breast cancer reoccurrence
or advance breast cancer.
There is no charge for ,lhe
services provided. Por
more information about the
program contact me at 992·
0805 or the ACS at (800)
227-2345.
"Reach to Recovery" is
one of the many services the
ACS is able to offer our
counry's residents with RFL
money rai.sed within Meigs
County.
Rhonda Cullums
Ponreroy

Helping,_
teaching
Dear Editor:
My husband is a graduate
of Meigs High School and
he still has family located in
Meigs County.
We live in Jac~son,
Ohio, and have been plir"
ticipating in this wonderful
project for two years . We
are collecting shoe boxes
for . soldiers through Nov.
15. We will be at Powell's
on that date from 10 a.m.
to 2
AI three of your local
school districts are trying
to find ways to participate.
They are hoping to use
this as a way to help teach
students about Veterans
Day.
We will be passing out
flyers next week to the local
businesses. Any help you
could give us to get the
word out would be greatly
appreciated.
.
Please go to shoeboxforasoldier.com . and see what it
is about. Also, check
Jackson Telegram's web
site. Both papers in Jackson
have given us tremendomt
help through the written
word. The- Telegram is even
a drop sile for us.

r-m.

.

' We are trying to get
· names of Meigs soldiers
currently stationed in Iraq
or Afghanistan to add to our
mailing list. Maybe one of
them would want to play .
Santa Claus to his/her unit.
Please contact me if you
have any questions.
Becky Lipscomb
. Jackson

Decide this

by

(Editor's note: The following letter was .received
· prior to the Oct. 24 dead· 11
~
1
d 11
ne . or etters ea ng
with the Nov. 4 election.)

Dear Edilor:

"He who knows that he
knows not is far wiser than
he who knows not that he
knows not."
·
I first saw this saying in
Mrs. Carla Shuler's freshman algebra class (many
years ago). How simple
but true.
As this election season
comes to an end, please
inform' yourself on all candidates and issues, on both
sides. Just listening to the
Big 3 6:30 new~ will not let
you know botli sides due to ·
the spin. They have become
commentators, not reporters
·
·
of facts.
They delete, add, twist,
distort the comments made
by politicians until it suits
wh~t . they w»&gt;fl you to
beheve . Sqme'lllllnes it is
hard to find but the facts are
there if we just take a little
time to look for them.
I WOI!Id ask us to watch
the Big 3, Fox News, Meet
the Press, talk radio, read
newspapers and · maga. ·
zines, get the facts , and
make up your own mind .
Don't let one or lwo do it
for you .
We make decisions based
on , infonna!ion we ha ve, so
let s get that information
and make our own infornied
decision . We owe it to ourselves, our children and our
. country.
Dennis Wolfe

Racine

The Daily Sentinel • P-.e Ao

www.mydallysentinel.com

Monday, November 3, 2008

0-colored glasses . blank out liftist truth

On Iy three weeks ago I
wrote . about the presidential race's "third candi·
date ." By that I meant lhe
phenomenon of Barack
Obama's hard-left affilia·
tions just then bursting into
public view and catching
up with the front-runner as
the candidates headed into
the
campaign's · final
stretch.
Turned out, of course,
this was not a "candidate"
the prObamedia was ever
going to cover, not even as
evidence of Obama 's lifelong association and collaboration with radicals · self-identified communists.
even - gained definition
and detail, mainly on
Internet journals and blogs.
At the beginning of
Obama's life, for exipnple,
there
was
"Prank;"
Obama 's boyhood ment\)r
who appears in his 1995
memoir "Dreams· from My
Father." . Accuracy
hi
Media's Cliff Kincaid has
identified "Frank" as Frank
Marshall Davis , a known
Stalinist. in a Soviet-spansored communist network
in Hawaii. But Obama
obscures Frank's identity in
his · book, even, as Sean
Hannity has reported, going
so far as lo drop passages
about "Frank" from the
more recent, recorded version of the book. Why? The
media never asked.
Later in Obama 's life
there was Mike Klonsky.
an unreconstructed Marxist
and erstwhile leader of an
honest-to-goodness Maoist
splinter group in the United
States. Klonsky, like his
buddy,
ex: Weatherman
William . Ayers, spreads
Marxism through education "reform.'' As the
National Review Online's
Andrew C . McCarthy
reported, Obama directed
nearly 2 million foundation
dollars to fund Klonsky's
1deas in the 1990s. More
recently, Klonsky wrote a
"social justice education"
blog on the official Obama
campaign Web site - at

· Monday, November 3, 2008

'-.

Obituaries

Southern seniors learn about 'the real world'

: PORTLAND _ Gayle Henderson I'Qce of Portland
.passed away Saturday, November lst. ue was 98 .
r•
· He was born in Portland in the Price family home. The
·night that he was born, there was a storm with a
wind
ed h' G 1e ~ tha
d h. f 'I
·an. ·~ am1 y nam
1m ay .or
t wind. ,Re wa_s
rrused m Portland and in Parkersburg, W.Va.
·· · ·
· G6le attended Marietta College, Ohio State University
·and h10 University. It was his desire to become a doctor,
·but -at the i11sistence of his · family he became a science
.teacher. He taught for 40 years at schools in Portland,
Somerset, Ohio, Parkersburg , W.Va ., and· Racine at Racine
H' h s h 1 d
· 1g c oo an Southern High School.
·
· He was a teacher and a fanner. He raised prime breeding
· cattle for most of his life. Upon retirement, Gayle became
·a basket maker, a broom maker, and a blacksmith. Many
will remember him for his letters to the editor in The Dailf· 1H
Sent,lne
. e was also a .local histOrian with people tr~ve ,ing. from all over the United States to con_sult with him.
Af~r y~ars of. research, he wrote the story of Morgan's
Ra1d from stones that were pas.sed down to him.
.
. Gayle is survived by his wife Edna whom he married in
.1939. He often referred to her as the love of his life-and said
that he fell head over heels for her. He is also survived by
a son , James and Joann of Columbus , Ohio and a daughter,
Suzanne and Ron of Portland; grandchildren, Laura Price,
.Sherrie Cole , Brenda Litton and Sara Cammarata,· greatgrandchildren, Amber and Zachary Litton and Christopher
Andrew Robinson, II; a great-great grandchild, Logan; a
niece Bev Brougher, nephews Sam Price and Larry Price
·
.and his faithful companion Rusty.
He is preceded in death by his parents and his brother
Hubert and sister Ernestine .
Services will be held at the convenience of the family. At.
Mr. Price's request there is to be no visitation .
Arrangements are being handled by the Anderson
McDaniel Funeral Homes.
In lieu of .flowers donations may be made to the Meigs
County Humane Society. An online registry is available at
'
·
www .andersonmcdaniel.com. · · ,

fierce

Delbei1 H. ·5 -.ms ·
POMEROY - Delbert H..Stearns, 93, Pomeroy, passed
away on Nov. I, 2008 al his residence. He was born on Aug.
23, 1915 in Fostoria, Ohio to the late Judd and Pearl (Spinks)
Stearns. He worked as a general contractor most of his life.
He is survived by his children: April .Stearns of
Pomeroy, Laura Stearns of Pomeroy, Donna Stearns ,
Cross Junction, Va.; four graJ\dchildren; 'brothers, Albert
· Steams, Fostoria, Ohio, ;md Warren Stearns of Rutlarid,
and several nieces and nephews .
He was preceded in death by 'his parents, his wife
·
Marguerite, two brothers. and a· sister.
. Services will be held atthe convenience of the family.
Arrangements were handled by the Anderson McDaniel
Funeral Homes.
An online registry is available at .www.andersonmcdaniel.com.
·

David A. Slater

POMEROY
OSU
Extension
4-H
Youth
Development launched a
new financial literacy program for area high school
sseniors lasth s week at
outhern Hig chool .
With the generous support
of local bus messes and community members 30 seniors
completed th.e "Real Money
.. ReafWorld" program. "Real
Money Real World " is a

FINISH LINE

..,
'

financial literacy program
developed to help students
understand where their
·
· ,
money wtll go 10 a .ew years
when they are out on their
own . The program is made
up of 5 sessions.
The· students look at different careers in lesson one
d'
·
h
d
·
•scussmg ow e ucatwn
affects possible salaries and
positions
in
different
careers. The students are
also assigned a career with
an average salary for some· h
· · Le
one 10 t at pos•tion. sson
two look at all the different
monies that come oul of the
gross salary. Students figure
their
income
taxes,
Medicare, social security,
and health insurance to
come up with a net-salary.
In lesson _three, checking
account and savings are
examined and the students
learn to ·write checks and
manage a checking ledger.
Lesson four, the students
learn about the different areas
of bills they will have on a
month to month .basis. Titis
includes utilities, communi- contributions either with
cations, food, housing, trans- money or time.
portation, and much more.
Tina Cotteri II from lie art
The · students are also of the Valley Head Start
assigned a basic scenario: helped the teens figure their
he or she is 25 years old, child care costs . Mark Porter
married , his or her spouse is GMC Supercenter sent
unemployed but actively Jessie Lee Kimes as the ·vol·
seekin,g work,. and ~number unteer for Transportation .
of children 1s ass1llned to He assisted the teens as they
the participant. W1th this determined what vehicle
information lhe students they could afford.
enter the fifth part of the
Jean Trussell from Meigs
series the Real World County
Fair
Housing
Simulation.
Authority served as the
Fourteen volunteers from Housing volunteer. Students
throughout the county assist- , visited her station to find out
ed in the Real Money Real about mortgage and rental
World simulation manning payments as well as saving
the different booths the ' to buy a home. The students
Seniors visited as they tried then visi~ed the Utilities
to figure out how to make a booth manned by Patty
budget work and get as much Pickens from AMP Ohio.
She helped them figure their
as possible for their money.
For this first simulatiOn utility needs for the type of
Hom!! NatiQnal Bank pro· home they had chosen.
Alyssa Holter assisted the
. vided the youth with actual
check ledgers and starter students in selecting their
checks for practice. Home corrununication needs. This
National also provided lhr!le included cell phones , intervolunteers: Christina Wood ,•. net, cable tv, and land line
Ann Engle, and · Roma phone
service.
Jenny
Sayre. They helped the Ridenour and Riana Fulks
youth with financial advice, from Meigs County Soil
paying their credit card bill, and Water District helped
· and bein~ involved with the the students figure out what
&lt; commumty throUgh making ·kind of entertainment they

POMEROY - David A. ·s later, 84, ofPoineroy, passed
away at .his residence on Saturda_y, Nov. I, 2008.
.
. - He was·born on April 8, 1924 10 Wellsburg, W.Va. to the
late August and Virginia (Gould) Slater. Mr. Slater retired
from Kyger Creek Power plant, was-a member of the NRA,
a member of' the Pomeroy United Methodist Church and
served in the United States Army.
He is survived by his wife, Audrey Slater, Pomeroy; children , Mark Slater of Athens, Lynn and Darrell Melton of
.Pomeroy; grandchildren, Jennifer and Allen Peoples both
·of Pomeroy; brothers. Paul and Loraine Slater, Beaver
.Creek and Harold and Marion Slater, Florida; and several
nieces and nephews.
He· was preceded in death by his parents, four brothers
and two sisters .
Funeral services will be held on Thursday; Nov. 6,,2008
at II a.m .. at the Anderson McDaniel Funeral Home in
Pomeroy with the Rev. Brian Dunham officiating. Friends
may call at the funeral home on Wednesday, Nov. 5, 2008
from 6 to 8 p.m.
.
Online condolences may . be sent to www .andersonmcdaniel.com.
"no" vote tomorrow would and industry which Sting
not affect a residential · tax- that $232,000 into the dispayer who pays the state trict via the renewal levy.
minimum of a 20-mill floor Deem said even though
in ofder for Southcrrn to every indication is the state
receive state fundiil~. It Financial
Planning
costs $43.29 a day to edu- Supervision Commission
Monday... Mostly sunny. Lows in the mid 40s.
Thursday...Mosily sunny. cate a student in the district will adopt a resolution
Highs in the lower 70s.
with the resident'S share · releasing the district from
South winds around 5 mph. Highs in the lower 70s.
bein~
$6.74 •. making state fiscal
emergency
on
Monday night ...Mostly
Thursday night...Partly
in
the fundmg essential in a rural ·Wednesday, the district will
·clear. Lows in the lower· cloudy
'l!Os.
Southeasi
winds ·e vening ...Then becoming district like Southern, but . still be in a situation where
around 5 mph in the mostly cloudy. Lows in the that is not the millage issue it needs to replace buses and
up for a vote tomorrow. ,
text books . The district is
evening ... Becoming light upper 40s.
The
focus
tomorrow
is
on
currently
running two, 1995
Frlday
...
Cloudy
with
a
40
and variable .
fr?m
businesses
buses
on
the roads and by
the
taxes
· Tuesday...Sunny. Highs percent chance of showers.
·in the lower 70s. South Highs in the lower 60s.
Friday night ...Mostly
winds around 5 mph.
•.
Tuesday nlght ...Mostly cloudy with a 40 percent
clear. Lows in the lower chance of showers . Lows
'40s. East winds around 5 around 40.
Saturday and· Saturday Refuge's" .board of direc- life," Holycross said.
mph.
·
Hofycross said the avercloudy . tors, the program isn't jQst
· Wednesday
and night ...Mostly
in
Vinton
County
but
h.as
its
age
age. of those partici~t­
Wednesday nl&amp;ht...Mostly Highs in the mid 50s. Lows
ing
in
the free program ts in
main office in Chillicdthe
·clear. Highs around 70. in the mid 30s.
with
orientation
in the mid-30's and as he put it
Cincinnati, work programs "our ministry is full ofmirin Franklin County and a acles.'' Holycross tells sto-·
new farin in Adams County. ries of men who tell him ·
from Page At
However, that first step they wonder how they made
. alleges that statements Green Party Candidate begins in Chillicothe where it to and then through the
those interested in partici- program. Then , there have
.
made in a newspaper adver- Tunothy Kettler.
·Both candidates have pating in the program can been others that turned the
tisement still runmng in The
Dail,r Sentinel are untrue .. devoted much of their cam- attend an information ses·- ministry-down and in a couSimilar allegations are con- paign work in the northern sion held every Tuesday at ple weeks were dead.
"This is real life or
tained in the complaint part of the Senate district, 10 a.m. at lleadquarters at
North
Paint
Street.
This
death
," Holycross said of
75
whicb
l'!laches
as
far
nonh
against the state party. It
hour
overview
will
two
the
issues
these men bring
alleges false statements in as Coshocton County.
"The
Refuge"
and
explain
to the program.
Kettler is not a stranger to
radio ads purchased by the
These day common drug
what
the
man
can
expect
the
political
scene,
having
Ohio GOP.
and
what
is
expected
of
issues
Holycross sees are
run
for
secretary
of
state
Repl!blican Jill Thom~son
them.
After
fhis
session
prescription
pill abuse
is Athens County Auditor. under the Green Party ban' Thompson's campaign has ner. He is a lifelong resident they'll have an opportunity because they are eas1er to
oot responded to the latest of Warsaw, and is a small for an interview with a staff obtain .
member. . A government . The program has many
allegations from Phillips. but business owner.
Green Party Candidate issued phot~ !Dis required, components but basically if
·Thompson herself accused
a man decides to take it on
Phillips of allowing a .rn~l­ Dennis S(&gt;isak appears on pre-reg1strahon ts not.
after the orientation in
"We
have
no
doctors
on
the
ballot.
m
the
race
for
.he
ing ·in September attacking
Chillicothe
, they are then
Sixth
Congressional
District.
staff,
we're
a
Christian
minThompson's use of sick
leave as a county ,employee. Democrat Charlie Wilson, istry that serves men h,avirtg moved to the induction
Stewart is challenged in the completing his fii'St term, is alcohol and . drug · prob- enter in Cincinnati where
State Senate race by Morgan also opposed by Republican lems ... what we try to work they spend about a month
County Conunissioner Rick Richard Stobbs, a former · on is bringing the real man where if the leadership of
out but bringing him back to the program and the man
Shriver, a Democrat, and sheriff in Belmont County.
.. .,. .. ... .. . . . '

\

.

... .,,

I

Above: These two·
Southern seniors were ·
first to the finish line and
earned their ' Pay Day' by
having money left over
after paying their bills.
Left: Tina Wood of Home
National Bank helps two·
teens ligure out how
..
much credit debt they will
need to pay.
SubmiHed photo&amp;

.

·could afford in a month
(including eating out) and
what kind of insurance · the
student would need for their
house and car.
Linda King, Joyce Brown,
and Hal Kneen from OSU
Extension mafll)ed the Food,
Clothing and Chance booth'.
Students learned food was a
'lot more expensive then they
thought. They also learned
about how much miiht be
speni on clothes.
At the Chance booth the
students drew a care and
found out what either good
or bad thing had happened
that month to them unexpectedly. Once the students
had visited all of the booths
tf:tey ,were able to mate it to
the Finish Line . Here the
stude.nts that had made .it
through with ' money left
over · received Pay Day
Candy Bars and those that
had a negative balance
received a Life Saver Candy
roll. The candy was donated
by Powell Food Fair of
Pomeroy.
The Real lv .oney Real
World program will be in all
three high schools this fall
and next spring. Real Money
Real World is a signature

Southern rrom Page At

·Local Weather

...,.

getting out of debt will now
have to put more money
aside to purchase textbooks ,
as well as finance other
upgrades and maintenance.
At one of its more recent
meetinl's the .Commission.
which IS comprised of local
residents and independent
consultants of the Ohio
Department of Education,
said the passage of the
renewal levy would be of
critical financial importance
now that the district is
attempting to end it's nearly

program of OSU Extension.
Any questions should be
directed to Cassie Turner 4-H
Educator for Meigs County
and coordinator of the Real
Money Real World program
at OSU Extension MeigS
County at either 992-6696 or
at
turner.280@osu.edu.
Information about all of the
OSlJ
programs
that
Extension - Meigs Count)'
offers in Family Consumer
Science , Agriculture/Natural
Resources,
4-H ,
or
Community Development
are encouraged to either contact the office located at 121
E. Memorial Dr, Pomeroy ...;.
next to Holzer Medical
Clinic in the County Anne):.
Buildin~ . You caii also check
out Metgs County Extension
at www.meigs .osu.edu
.
Ohio State Universily
Extension embraces huma.R
diversity and is committed .
to ensuring that all researcb
and related educationalJ?rO:•
grams are available to cheu;tele on a nondiscriminatory
basis without regard to race,
color, reli~ion, sex, age-,
national ongin, sexual ori·
entation, gender identity oi'
expression, disability, or
veteran status . .

•

nine-year record of operat,ing in fiscal emergency. As
such that $232 ,000 is a big
piece of the five-year finan;~
cia! forecast the district sub·
mined to the Commission
and the Office of the Ohio
Auditor of State last month.
If the resolution is passed
releasing the district from
fiscal · emergency
op
Wednesday, there will th~n
be a process of paperwork
and tying up other lose ends
which would take around 6e
days, according to Deem . '

Refuge from Page At

'

State

'

decide the program is good
fit, he moves on. During the
stint
in
Cincinnati,
Holycross said only about
30 percent move on to the
next component "because a
man may come in for the
wrong reasons, we're only
interested in men who want
to change their lives.''
Af\er Cincinnati, the men
can go to the two fanns,
either in McArthur or
Adams County to do farm
work and have some quiet
tome to, as Holycross put it,
. "re1111y get in contact with
God/Christ and start gaining
those things the Lord had
promised us we will have."
Then, the men. go to work in
Columbus , working with
Christian employers the
program has been paired
with and the men stay in
housing in Columbus. The
men work about four days a
week with some of that
money going back to The
Refuge to finance the program, this part of Ihe program lasts about six months
with the last two months

concentrated on an exis,l
strategy.
'
Holycross s~d the ex~
strategy exammes every·
thing from where the .mail
will live, go to church , his
job and addresses fmanc iaj
problems as well as any
other issues thai might bt
standing in the way of mllll
living a successful life..
· 'l)lere is even a graduatioft
. at the end of the program for
the men who have gone the
distance. With nine yeaJ'li
under i\s belt, the program
seems to keep growing,
reaching out to those whO
have find 1)0 other succes$
in traditional drug rehabili·
tation programs.
·
"We are not affiliated
with any church, just $
Christian ministry with aR
denomination
workin2
together," Holycross said:
"We're interested in helpin~
these men follow the Bible
and provide a spiritual sid~
of healing."
·
~
For more information call
740-772-2202 or email
i'![o@m(ns/iveschanged.org.

...

�~The D&amp;ily

OPINION·

Sentinel

Media~

rThe Daily Sentinel
l'

111 Court Street • PomefiOY, Ohio

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..

(740) 992-2156 ·FAX (740) 992·2157

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-.mydaltysentlnel.com ·

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Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

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Dan Goodrich

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Publisher

'

Charlene Hoeflich
~eneral

PageA4

Manager-News Editor

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~

Congress shall make no law respecting an
! establishment of religion, or prohibiting the
; free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom
:: of speech, or of the press; or the right of the
-·people peaceably to assemble, and .to petition .
the Government for a redress ofgrievances.
- The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

TODAY 'IN HISTORY
Today is Monday, Nov. 3, the 308th day of 2008. There
·
are 58 days left in the year.
.. Today's.Highlight in History: One hundred years ago, on
Nov. 3, 1908, Republican William Howard Taft was elect·
ed president, outpolling Democrat William Jennings Bryan.
· .· On this date: In 1839, the first Opium War between China
and Britain broke out.
In 1868, Republican Ulysses S. Grant won the presiden·
tial election over Democrat Horatio Seymour.
In 1896, Republican William McKinley defeated
Democrat William Jennings Bryan for the presidency.
ln 1903, Panama proclaimed its independence from
Colombia.
· In 1936, President Franklin Roosevelt won a lan~slide
election victory over Republican challenger Alfred M. .
:'Alf' Landon.
'· In 1957, the Soviet Union launched·Sputnik 2, the second
:manmade satellite, into orbit; on board was a dog named
Laika who was sacrificed in the experiment .
' In 1964, President J.ohnson soundly defeated Republican
Barry Goldwater to win a White House·term in his own right.
· In 1979, five radicals were killed when gunfire erupted
'during an anti-Ku Klux Klan demonstration in Greensboro,
N .C., after a caravan of Klansmen and neo-Nazis had dri·
ven into the area.
' In 1986, the Iran-Contra affair.began to come to light as
Ash,Shiraa. a pro-Syrian Lebanese magazine, first broke
the story of U.S. arms sales to Iran .
Ten years ago: In national elections, Democrats gained
five House seats, trimming the Republican majority.
Minnesotans elected former pro wrestler Jesse "The Body"
Ventura to be their governor. The death toll from Hurricane
Mitch grew to 9,000 in Honduras.
' Five years ago: Congress voted its final approval for
$87.5 billion for U.S. military operations and aid in Iraq
and Afghanistan . Russia's richest man, Mikhail
Khodorkovsky, already jailed on fraud and tax evasion
-charges; resigned as head of the Russian oil giant Yukos.
: One year ago: Gen. Pervez Musharraf declared a state of
:emergency in Pakistan . United Auto Workers agreed to a
tentative contract witli Ford Motor Co. 1\vo astronauts con~ucted a successful spacewalk to save a ripped solar wing
on the space station.
Today's Birthdays: Baseball Hall-of-FamerBob Feller is
90 . Actress Lois Smith is 78. Former Massachusetts Gov.
Michael S. Dukakis is 75. Actor-dancer Ken Berry is 75 . .
Movie composer John Barry is 75. Actor Shadoe Stevens is
(i2. Singer Lulu is 60. Comedian-actress Roseanne Barr is
56. Actress Kate Capshaw is 55. Comedian Dennis Miller
is 55. Actress Kathy Kinney is 55 . Singer Adam Ant is 54.
Actor Dolph Lundgren is 51. Rock musician CJ. Pierce
(Drowning Pool) is 36.
·
Thought for Today: "You must be true to yourself. Strong
enough to be true to yourself. Brave enough to be strong
enough to be true to yourself. Wise enough to be brave
-enough , to be strong enough to shape yourself from what
you actually are.'' - Sylvia Constance Ashton-Warner,
New Zealander author and educator (1908-1984).

al bomb-thrower Obama
brushed off as just "a guy
in my neighborhood." But
the media saw nothing to it
- not even a piece of
·
Obama's questionable pat·
Diana
tern of collaboration with a
series of people best
West
descri~ed as unregenerate
leftists.
But
Colin
Powell
endorsed Obama, right? We
least until a blog named heard all about that. . Guess
Global Labor and Poli.tics who else endorsed him?
anti-Semite
pointed · this fact out. Anti-white,
Klonsky's musings were Louis
Farrakhan, . the
summarily scrubbed from Ahmadinejad-lite speaker
the campaign Web site in of Iran's parliament Ali
June. Why? The media· Lari~
'ani, Hamas and the.
never asked.
·
'
ro- amas
National
And so it · goes. The P
assorted radicals _ from Association of Muslim
ACORN to Ayers, .from American Women. Did we
anti-white Jeremiah Wright hear about that? No.
to Saudi-adviser Khalid alAnd what about this one?
Mansour to former PLO Obama - potentially the
. associate Rashid Khalidi _ next leader of the Free
who have peopled Obama's World,· after all - once
ideological passage from belonged to a socialis~ party
rising leftist to post-ideo- called the New Party (and
logical cipher, have been there are giant scans of a
lost in the blur to a media 1996 New Party News story
focused solely on their own claiming Obama as a memprize: Obama in the White ber, courtesy the blog New
H
Zeal) . Smoking gun for the
s~S:h focus has created a media, no?
.
drastically blinkered jourNo. The ·media didn't
nalism, particularly in these · consider this worth any ink,
final weeks. Take the . fact ·not even after · Joe the
that the ·supposedly "post- Plumber prompied Obama
racial" Obama once funded to -let slip, ·c learly and
Afrocentric, race-focused unequivocally,
his
education programs sup- antipathies to basic capital·
ported by Jeremiah "G - _ ism: "When you spread the
D - - America" Wright. wealth around ," Obama
That was a juicy blend of famously said, "I t~nk it's
hypocrisy a11d extremism good for everybody.
Despite the code of
(dug up by Stanley Kurtz).
but the media just averted silence (omerta) main·
lained by the prObamedia
their eyes.
Or how about good, ol' (prObamerta), these sto·
Willi.am "America Makes nes and others like them
Me Want to Puke" Ayers, have still come out in
whose own relationship dribs , drabs. and funny
with Klonsky (the Maoist feelings, infusing the body
mentioned. above) goes politic . with
enough
back to the days of the SDS uneasiness about Obama's
(Students for a Democratic ideological affinities for
Society)? Obama worked the left to keep John
closely with Ayers to fund McCain surprisingly and
radical programs (such as perhipS even resiliently '
Klonsky's) in Chicago, competitive . Despite the
endorsed /.1 ,rs' work, and disgrace of our free-but· launched his political self-caged press. many
career in Ayers' home. This voter·s have managed to
is the ideological and liter- learn for themselves that

OUR READERS' VIEWS

Degrading
Dear Edilor:

good thing those two campaign volunteers didn't get
dog bitten because all the
dogs in Meigs County have
rabies, that's about as
ridic.ulous as "The New
Yorker Story."
Kenneth DeUlng .

I am writing concerning
the article, Meigs County
and "The New Yorker" that
appeared in the Daily
Lifelong resident
Sentinel on Friday Oct. 24t,
of Meigs County
2008.
The article in "The New
Yorker" degraded Meigs
County, Pomeroy and
some of its citizens, was
wrjtten clearly to make a
political statement. I quote
"you see all these poor
Dear Edilor:
people that don't have any· I am delighted to say
thing , but they're still sup- that I am a 3-1/2 year
porting the wrong party, breast cancer survivor. As
that's the reason they don'l such, I am one of IS
have anything."
Meigs County women
That is a. complete false diagnosed each year from
.
statement, just like the · 2000-04 with this disease
. Letters to the editor are welcome . They should be less statement about the coal · according to the 2007
than 300 words . All letters are subject to. editing, must be loading dock, and I quote, American .Cancer Society
signed, and include address and telephone number. No ''I drove do)Nn . Route 33 Ohio Cancer Facts and
14nsigned letters will be published. Letters should be in from Athens into ·Meigs Figures.
_good taste, addressing issues, not personalities. Letters of County and ~ town ' called . My experience with
thanks to organizations and individuals will not be accept· Pomeroy whtch once had breast cancer resulted in
ed for publication.
been a loading dock for coal my support of and particibarges and ,now lay pros- pation in Meigs County
trate and bliphted along the Relay for Life and ultimately in my becoming a
Ohio River.'
The co~tl loading dock trained
" Reach
to
was
no
loriger
needed
at
that
Recovery"
volunteer.
(USPS 213-980)
1 · Reader Services
site, l!rger and more effi- While I was blessed' with
•
Ohio Valley Publishing
cient loading facility have tremendous support from
Co.
Correction Polley
Published every after,noon, Monday
been bu1lt out of town. Can family and friends during .
Our main concem in all stories Is to through Friday, 111 Court Street,
a political party , restore my cancer jou_rney, I fully
.be accurate. If you know of an error Pomeroy, Ohio. Second-class pOstage
more coal into the hills appreciate how important 1t
·in a story, call the newsroom at (740) paid at Pomeroy.
around Pomeroy, to be is for newly diagnosed
Member: The Associated Press and
992·2156.
mined and . loaded on breast cancer patients·to be
the Ohio Newspaper Association.
harli!es. Have the Pomeroy in touch with people 'who
Po1tma•ter:
Send
address
correc·
Our main number Is
lions to The Dally Sentinel, 111 Court
busmesses been victims of have not only survived ·
(740) 992·2156.
Street. Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.
changing
times and flood· breast cancer but continue
. Department extensions ara:
ing
but
.have
always risen to live productive lives.
Subecrlptlon Rates
above
those
challenges.
Like the ACS · and its
By carrier or motor route
News
The officials and volun- many volunteers, I believe
One month
'1 0.27
,Edlto&lt;: Charlene Hoeflich, Ext. 12
One year
'1 15.84
teer organizations of that no one should' have to
Dally
50'
Reporlllr: Brian Reed, Ex1. 14"
Pomeroy
and Meigs face breast cancer alone.
Senior Citizen rataa
Reporter: Beth So~ont ; Ext. 13
County (both political par- There currently are three
One month
'10.27
'
"Reach
to
ties) have labored to revi- trained
One y•r
'103.90
talize
the
village
and
have
Recovery"
volunteers
servStbia
.
.
.
shouk1
remit
tn
advaR:;e
Advertising
b tho DIOty Sentinel. No sub·
done a very good job. ·ing Meigs County includOut.lde Sllel: Dave Harris, Ext. 15 scription ~ mail permitted In ar'BBS
myself,
Maxine
Upon entering Pomeroy ing
Outalde S.lu: Brenda Davis, Ext 16 where home can1er service Is avail·
on·
the
Griffith
and
Dr.
Wilma
we
see
a
mini
park
CI-.JCirc.: Judy Clark, Ext. 10
able.
left, the beautiful Ohio Mansfield .
River in front and a one · Through the "Reach to
Mall Subscription
General Manager
lnllde Melga County
and a half mile lighted Recovery" program, we
Charlene Hoeflich , Ext. 12
13 w-.ks
'32.26
walking path, what a beau- can provide information
26 Weeks
'64.20
tiful sight at evening and and support before, during
52 Weeks
' 127.11
E· mall:
night, not only for passers· l)nd after a breast cancer
newfi@ mydallysentinel.com
by but for a beautiful quite · diagnosis through one-onOul81de Melgo County
13 Weeks
'53.55
stroll, not prostrate and one contacts . Talking with
web:
26 Weeks
'107.10
.. www.mydailysentlnel.com
a program volunteer helps
blighted after all.
52 Weeks
•
'214.21
And by the . way, its a those facing breast cancer

.11each to
Recovery'

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR
.

The Daily Sentinel

•

..

Obama has spent a lifetime
associating with the kind
of anti-Americans and
subvef$ives that, by rights ,
lDake him ineligible for a
federal security clearance
- something Daniel Pipes
has noted. Many voters
understand that when you
"spread
the
wealth
around" you are enacting abasic premise of Marxism,
or communism, or socialism, or something once
upon ·a time derided as
plain old commie-pinko.
But that was a long time
ago, and the fact is , we just
don't know how manl.
Americans are still put o f .
d b
h
if not outrage , y sue
things .
.
maybe
this
becomes
And
the most important question
tobesettledonNov.4:How
many Americans still consider mixing with and supporting bomb-throwers and
radicals to ])!: un-presidential? How many Americans
still consider a Marxist
basis for economics to be , in
fact,
downright
unAmerican?
That such questions neec:t
to be asked, that such
answers are in doubt, indi·
cates the extent to which
we have already changed
as apeople, and that is not
a hopeful tl)ing . Perhaps
the miscalculation many
conservatives
made
throughout this campaign
was in assuming thai
Obama 's alliances and
working relationships with
leftists and leftist causes
· were
things
mosl
Americans would . vigorously and automatically
reject.
Then again, maybe they
still will.
(Diana West ·is a colum·
nist for The Washington
Times . She is the aut/'lor oj
"The Death of the Grown11p: How America's Arrested
Development Is Bringing
Down
Western
Civilization," and has a
blog at dianawest.net. She ·
can be contacted via
dianawesl@verizon,net.)

'

find the · strength . and
resources to cope with their
experience and to move
forward as a survivor.
Other issues we can help
people
with
include :
Lumpectomy or mastectomy; breast reconstruction,
lymphedema; treatment;
breast cancer reoccurrence
or advance breast cancer.
There is no charge for ,lhe
services provided. Por
more information about the
program contact me at 992·
0805 or the ACS at (800)
227-2345.
"Reach to Recovery" is
one of the many services the
ACS is able to offer our
counry's residents with RFL
money rai.sed within Meigs
County.
Rhonda Cullums
Ponreroy

Helping,_
teaching
Dear Editor:
My husband is a graduate
of Meigs High School and
he still has family located in
Meigs County.
We live in Jac~son,
Ohio, and have been plir"
ticipating in this wonderful
project for two years . We
are collecting shoe boxes
for . soldiers through Nov.
15. We will be at Powell's
on that date from 10 a.m.
to 2
AI three of your local
school districts are trying
to find ways to participate.
They are hoping to use
this as a way to help teach
students about Veterans
Day.
We will be passing out
flyers next week to the local
businesses. Any help you
could give us to get the
word out would be greatly
appreciated.
.
Please go to shoeboxforasoldier.com . and see what it
is about. Also, check
Jackson Telegram's web
site. Both papers in Jackson
have given us tremendomt
help through the written
word. The- Telegram is even
a drop sile for us.

r-m.

.

' We are trying to get
· names of Meigs soldiers
currently stationed in Iraq
or Afghanistan to add to our
mailing list. Maybe one of
them would want to play .
Santa Claus to his/her unit.
Please contact me if you
have any questions.
Becky Lipscomb
. Jackson

Decide this

by

(Editor's note: The following letter was .received
· prior to the Oct. 24 dead· 11
~
1
d 11
ne . or etters ea ng
with the Nov. 4 election.)

Dear Edilor:

"He who knows that he
knows not is far wiser than
he who knows not that he
knows not."
·
I first saw this saying in
Mrs. Carla Shuler's freshman algebra class (many
years ago). How simple
but true.
As this election season
comes to an end, please
inform' yourself on all candidates and issues, on both
sides. Just listening to the
Big 3 6:30 new~ will not let
you know botli sides due to ·
the spin. They have become
commentators, not reporters
·
·
of facts.
They delete, add, twist,
distort the comments made
by politicians until it suits
wh~t . they w»&gt;fl you to
beheve . Sqme'lllllnes it is
hard to find but the facts are
there if we just take a little
time to look for them.
I WOI!Id ask us to watch
the Big 3, Fox News, Meet
the Press, talk radio, read
newspapers and · maga. ·
zines, get the facts , and
make up your own mind .
Don't let one or lwo do it
for you .
We make decisions based
on , infonna!ion we ha ve, so
let s get that information
and make our own infornied
decision . We owe it to ourselves, our children and our
. country.
Dennis Wolfe

Racine

The Daily Sentinel • P-.e Ao

www.mydallysentinel.com

Monday, November 3, 2008

0-colored glasses . blank out liftist truth

On Iy three weeks ago I
wrote . about the presidential race's "third candi·
date ." By that I meant lhe
phenomenon of Barack
Obama's hard-left affilia·
tions just then bursting into
public view and catching
up with the front-runner as
the candidates headed into
the
campaign's · final
stretch.
Turned out, of course,
this was not a "candidate"
the prObamedia was ever
going to cover, not even as
evidence of Obama 's lifelong association and collaboration with radicals · self-identified communists.
even - gained definition
and detail, mainly on
Internet journals and blogs.
At the beginning of
Obama's life, for exipnple,
there
was
"Prank;"
Obama 's boyhood ment\)r
who appears in his 1995
memoir "Dreams· from My
Father." . Accuracy
hi
Media's Cliff Kincaid has
identified "Frank" as Frank
Marshall Davis , a known
Stalinist. in a Soviet-spansored communist network
in Hawaii. But Obama
obscures Frank's identity in
his · book, even, as Sean
Hannity has reported, going
so far as lo drop passages
about "Frank" from the
more recent, recorded version of the book. Why? The
media never asked.
Later in Obama 's life
there was Mike Klonsky.
an unreconstructed Marxist
and erstwhile leader of an
honest-to-goodness Maoist
splinter group in the United
States. Klonsky, like his
buddy,
ex: Weatherman
William . Ayers, spreads
Marxism through education "reform.'' As the
National Review Online's
Andrew C . McCarthy
reported, Obama directed
nearly 2 million foundation
dollars to fund Klonsky's
1deas in the 1990s. More
recently, Klonsky wrote a
"social justice education"
blog on the official Obama
campaign Web site - at

· Monday, November 3, 2008

'-.

Obituaries

Southern seniors learn about 'the real world'

: PORTLAND _ Gayle Henderson I'Qce of Portland
.passed away Saturday, November lst. ue was 98 .
r•
· He was born in Portland in the Price family home. The
·night that he was born, there was a storm with a
wind
ed h' G 1e ~ tha
d h. f 'I
·an. ·~ am1 y nam
1m ay .or
t wind. ,Re wa_s
rrused m Portland and in Parkersburg, W.Va.
·· · ·
· G6le attended Marietta College, Ohio State University
·and h10 University. It was his desire to become a doctor,
·but -at the i11sistence of his · family he became a science
.teacher. He taught for 40 years at schools in Portland,
Somerset, Ohio, Parkersburg , W.Va ., and· Racine at Racine
H' h s h 1 d
· 1g c oo an Southern High School.
·
· He was a teacher and a fanner. He raised prime breeding
· cattle for most of his life. Upon retirement, Gayle became
·a basket maker, a broom maker, and a blacksmith. Many
will remember him for his letters to the editor in The Dailf· 1H
Sent,lne
. e was also a .local histOrian with people tr~ve ,ing. from all over the United States to con_sult with him.
Af~r y~ars of. research, he wrote the story of Morgan's
Ra1d from stones that were pas.sed down to him.
.
. Gayle is survived by his wife Edna whom he married in
.1939. He often referred to her as the love of his life-and said
that he fell head over heels for her. He is also survived by
a son , James and Joann of Columbus , Ohio and a daughter,
Suzanne and Ron of Portland; grandchildren, Laura Price,
.Sherrie Cole , Brenda Litton and Sara Cammarata,· greatgrandchildren, Amber and Zachary Litton and Christopher
Andrew Robinson, II; a great-great grandchild, Logan; a
niece Bev Brougher, nephews Sam Price and Larry Price
·
.and his faithful companion Rusty.
He is preceded in death by his parents and his brother
Hubert and sister Ernestine .
Services will be held at the convenience of the family. At.
Mr. Price's request there is to be no visitation .
Arrangements are being handled by the Anderson
McDaniel Funeral Homes.
In lieu of .flowers donations may be made to the Meigs
County Humane Society. An online registry is available at
'
·
www .andersonmcdaniel.com. · · ,

fierce

Delbei1 H. ·5 -.ms ·
POMEROY - Delbert H..Stearns, 93, Pomeroy, passed
away on Nov. I, 2008 al his residence. He was born on Aug.
23, 1915 in Fostoria, Ohio to the late Judd and Pearl (Spinks)
Stearns. He worked as a general contractor most of his life.
He is survived by his children: April .Stearns of
Pomeroy, Laura Stearns of Pomeroy, Donna Stearns ,
Cross Junction, Va.; four graJ\dchildren; 'brothers, Albert
· Steams, Fostoria, Ohio, ;md Warren Stearns of Rutlarid,
and several nieces and nephews .
He was preceded in death by 'his parents, his wife
·
Marguerite, two brothers. and a· sister.
. Services will be held atthe convenience of the family.
Arrangements were handled by the Anderson McDaniel
Funeral Homes.
An online registry is available at .www.andersonmcdaniel.com.
·

David A. Slater

POMEROY
OSU
Extension
4-H
Youth
Development launched a
new financial literacy program for area high school
sseniors lasth s week at
outhern Hig chool .
With the generous support
of local bus messes and community members 30 seniors
completed th.e "Real Money
.. ReafWorld" program. "Real
Money Real World " is a

FINISH LINE

..,
'

financial literacy program
developed to help students
understand where their
·
· ,
money wtll go 10 a .ew years
when they are out on their
own . The program is made
up of 5 sessions.
The· students look at different careers in lesson one
d'
·
h
d
·
•scussmg ow e ucatwn
affects possible salaries and
positions
in
different
careers. The students are
also assigned a career with
an average salary for some· h
· · Le
one 10 t at pos•tion. sson
two look at all the different
monies that come oul of the
gross salary. Students figure
their
income
taxes,
Medicare, social security,
and health insurance to
come up with a net-salary.
In lesson _three, checking
account and savings are
examined and the students
learn to ·write checks and
manage a checking ledger.
Lesson four, the students
learn about the different areas
of bills they will have on a
month to month .basis. Titis
includes utilities, communi- contributions either with
cations, food, housing, trans- money or time.
portation, and much more.
Tina Cotteri II from lie art
The · students are also of the Valley Head Start
assigned a basic scenario: helped the teens figure their
he or she is 25 years old, child care costs . Mark Porter
married , his or her spouse is GMC Supercenter sent
unemployed but actively Jessie Lee Kimes as the ·vol·
seekin,g work,. and ~number unteer for Transportation .
of children 1s ass1llned to He assisted the teens as they
the participant. W1th this determined what vehicle
information lhe students they could afford.
enter the fifth part of the
Jean Trussell from Meigs
series the Real World County
Fair
Housing
Simulation.
Authority served as the
Fourteen volunteers from Housing volunteer. Students
throughout the county assist- , visited her station to find out
ed in the Real Money Real about mortgage and rental
World simulation manning payments as well as saving
the different booths the ' to buy a home. The students
Seniors visited as they tried then visi~ed the Utilities
to figure out how to make a booth manned by Patty
budget work and get as much Pickens from AMP Ohio.
She helped them figure their
as possible for their money.
For this first simulatiOn utility needs for the type of
Hom!! NatiQnal Bank pro· home they had chosen.
Alyssa Holter assisted the
. vided the youth with actual
check ledgers and starter students in selecting their
checks for practice. Home corrununication needs. This
National also provided lhr!le included cell phones , intervolunteers: Christina Wood ,•. net, cable tv, and land line
Ann Engle, and · Roma phone
service.
Jenny
Sayre. They helped the Ridenour and Riana Fulks
youth with financial advice, from Meigs County Soil
paying their credit card bill, and Water District helped
· and bein~ involved with the the students figure out what
&lt; commumty throUgh making ·kind of entertainment they

POMEROY - David A. ·s later, 84, ofPoineroy, passed
away at .his residence on Saturda_y, Nov. I, 2008.
.
. - He was·born on April 8, 1924 10 Wellsburg, W.Va. to the
late August and Virginia (Gould) Slater. Mr. Slater retired
from Kyger Creek Power plant, was-a member of the NRA,
a member of' the Pomeroy United Methodist Church and
served in the United States Army.
He is survived by his wife, Audrey Slater, Pomeroy; children , Mark Slater of Athens, Lynn and Darrell Melton of
.Pomeroy; grandchildren, Jennifer and Allen Peoples both
·of Pomeroy; brothers. Paul and Loraine Slater, Beaver
.Creek and Harold and Marion Slater, Florida; and several
nieces and nephews.
He· was preceded in death by his parents, four brothers
and two sisters .
Funeral services will be held on Thursday; Nov. 6,,2008
at II a.m .. at the Anderson McDaniel Funeral Home in
Pomeroy with the Rev. Brian Dunham officiating. Friends
may call at the funeral home on Wednesday, Nov. 5, 2008
from 6 to 8 p.m.
.
Online condolences may . be sent to www .andersonmcdaniel.com.
"no" vote tomorrow would and industry which Sting
not affect a residential · tax- that $232,000 into the dispayer who pays the state trict via the renewal levy.
minimum of a 20-mill floor Deem said even though
in ofder for Southcrrn to every indication is the state
receive state fundiil~. It Financial
Planning
costs $43.29 a day to edu- Supervision Commission
Monday... Mostly sunny. Lows in the mid 40s.
Thursday...Mosily sunny. cate a student in the district will adopt a resolution
Highs in the lower 70s.
with the resident'S share · releasing the district from
South winds around 5 mph. Highs in the lower 70s.
bein~
$6.74 •. making state fiscal
emergency
on
Monday night ...Mostly
Thursday night...Partly
in
the fundmg essential in a rural ·Wednesday, the district will
·clear. Lows in the lower· cloudy
'l!Os.
Southeasi
winds ·e vening ...Then becoming district like Southern, but . still be in a situation where
around 5 mph in the mostly cloudy. Lows in the that is not the millage issue it needs to replace buses and
up for a vote tomorrow. ,
text books . The district is
evening ... Becoming light upper 40s.
The
focus
tomorrow
is
on
currently
running two, 1995
Frlday
...
Cloudy
with
a
40
and variable .
fr?m
businesses
buses
on
the roads and by
the
taxes
· Tuesday...Sunny. Highs percent chance of showers.
·in the lower 70s. South Highs in the lower 60s.
Friday night ...Mostly
winds around 5 mph.
•.
Tuesday nlght ...Mostly cloudy with a 40 percent
clear. Lows in the lower chance of showers . Lows
'40s. East winds around 5 around 40.
Saturday and· Saturday Refuge's" .board of direc- life," Holycross said.
mph.
·
Hofycross said the avercloudy . tors, the program isn't jQst
· Wednesday
and night ...Mostly
in
Vinton
County
but
h.as
its
age
age. of those partici~t­
Wednesday nl&amp;ht...Mostly Highs in the mid 50s. Lows
ing
in
the free program ts in
main office in Chillicdthe
·clear. Highs around 70. in the mid 30s.
with
orientation
in the mid-30's and as he put it
Cincinnati, work programs "our ministry is full ofmirin Franklin County and a acles.'' Holycross tells sto-·
new farin in Adams County. ries of men who tell him ·
from Page At
However, that first step they wonder how they made
. alleges that statements Green Party Candidate begins in Chillicothe where it to and then through the
those interested in partici- program. Then , there have
.
made in a newspaper adver- Tunothy Kettler.
·Both candidates have pating in the program can been others that turned the
tisement still runmng in The
Dail,r Sentinel are untrue .. devoted much of their cam- attend an information ses·- ministry-down and in a couSimilar allegations are con- paign work in the northern sion held every Tuesday at ple weeks were dead.
"This is real life or
tained in the complaint part of the Senate district, 10 a.m. at lleadquarters at
North
Paint
Street.
This
death
," Holycross said of
75
whicb
l'!laches
as
far
nonh
against the state party. It
hour
overview
will
two
the
issues
these men bring
alleges false statements in as Coshocton County.
"The
Refuge"
and
explain
to the program.
Kettler is not a stranger to
radio ads purchased by the
These day common drug
what
the
man
can
expect
the
political
scene,
having
Ohio GOP.
and
what
is
expected
of
issues
Holycross sees are
run
for
secretary
of
state
Repl!blican Jill Thom~son
them.
After
fhis
session
prescription
pill abuse
is Athens County Auditor. under the Green Party ban' Thompson's campaign has ner. He is a lifelong resident they'll have an opportunity because they are eas1er to
oot responded to the latest of Warsaw, and is a small for an interview with a staff obtain .
member. . A government . The program has many
allegations from Phillips. but business owner.
Green Party Candidate issued phot~ !Dis required, components but basically if
·Thompson herself accused
a man decides to take it on
Phillips of allowing a .rn~l­ Dennis S(&gt;isak appears on pre-reg1strahon ts not.
after the orientation in
"We
have
no
doctors
on
the
ballot.
m
the
race
for
.he
ing ·in September attacking
Chillicothe
, they are then
Sixth
Congressional
District.
staff,
we're
a
Christian
minThompson's use of sick
leave as a county ,employee. Democrat Charlie Wilson, istry that serves men h,avirtg moved to the induction
Stewart is challenged in the completing his fii'St term, is alcohol and . drug · prob- enter in Cincinnati where
State Senate race by Morgan also opposed by Republican lems ... what we try to work they spend about a month
County Conunissioner Rick Richard Stobbs, a former · on is bringing the real man where if the leadership of
out but bringing him back to the program and the man
Shriver, a Democrat, and sheriff in Belmont County.
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Above: These two·
Southern seniors were ·
first to the finish line and
earned their ' Pay Day' by
having money left over
after paying their bills.
Left: Tina Wood of Home
National Bank helps two·
teens ligure out how
..
much credit debt they will
need to pay.
SubmiHed photo&amp;

.

·could afford in a month
(including eating out) and
what kind of insurance · the
student would need for their
house and car.
Linda King, Joyce Brown,
and Hal Kneen from OSU
Extension mafll)ed the Food,
Clothing and Chance booth'.
Students learned food was a
'lot more expensive then they
thought. They also learned
about how much miiht be
speni on clothes.
At the Chance booth the
students drew a care and
found out what either good
or bad thing had happened
that month to them unexpectedly. Once the students
had visited all of the booths
tf:tey ,were able to mate it to
the Finish Line . Here the
stude.nts that had made .it
through with ' money left
over · received Pay Day
Candy Bars and those that
had a negative balance
received a Life Saver Candy
roll. The candy was donated
by Powell Food Fair of
Pomeroy.
The Real lv .oney Real
World program will be in all
three high schools this fall
and next spring. Real Money
Real World is a signature

Southern rrom Page At

·Local Weather

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getting out of debt will now
have to put more money
aside to purchase textbooks ,
as well as finance other
upgrades and maintenance.
At one of its more recent
meetinl's the .Commission.
which IS comprised of local
residents and independent
consultants of the Ohio
Department of Education,
said the passage of the
renewal levy would be of
critical financial importance
now that the district is
attempting to end it's nearly

program of OSU Extension.
Any questions should be
directed to Cassie Turner 4-H
Educator for Meigs County
and coordinator of the Real
Money Real World program
at OSU Extension MeigS
County at either 992-6696 or
at
turner.280@osu.edu.
Information about all of the
OSlJ
programs
that
Extension - Meigs Count)'
offers in Family Consumer
Science , Agriculture/Natural
Resources,
4-H ,
or
Community Development
are encouraged to either contact the office located at 121
E. Memorial Dr, Pomeroy ...;.
next to Holzer Medical
Clinic in the County Anne):.
Buildin~ . You caii also check
out Metgs County Extension
at www.meigs .osu.edu
.
Ohio State Universily
Extension embraces huma.R
diversity and is committed .
to ensuring that all researcb
and related educationalJ?rO:•
grams are available to cheu;tele on a nondiscriminatory
basis without regard to race,
color, reli~ion, sex, age-,
national ongin, sexual ori·
entation, gender identity oi'
expression, disability, or
veteran status . .

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nine-year record of operat,ing in fiscal emergency. As
such that $232 ,000 is a big
piece of the five-year finan;~
cia! forecast the district sub·
mined to the Commission
and the Office of the Ohio
Auditor of State last month.
If the resolution is passed
releasing the district from
fiscal · emergency
op
Wednesday, there will th~n
be a process of paperwork
and tying up other lose ends
which would take around 6e
days, according to Deem . '

Refuge from Page At

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decide the program is good
fit, he moves on. During the
stint
in
Cincinnati,
Holycross said only about
30 percent move on to the
next component "because a
man may come in for the
wrong reasons, we're only
interested in men who want
to change their lives.''
Af\er Cincinnati, the men
can go to the two fanns,
either in McArthur or
Adams County to do farm
work and have some quiet
tome to, as Holycross put it,
. "re1111y get in contact with
God/Christ and start gaining
those things the Lord had
promised us we will have."
Then, the men. go to work in
Columbus , working with
Christian employers the
program has been paired
with and the men stay in
housing in Columbus. The
men work about four days a
week with some of that
money going back to The
Refuge to finance the program, this part of Ihe program lasts about six months
with the last two months

concentrated on an exis,l
strategy.
'
Holycross s~d the ex~
strategy exammes every·
thing from where the .mail
will live, go to church , his
job and addresses fmanc iaj
problems as well as any
other issues thai might bt
standing in the way of mllll
living a successful life..
· 'l)lere is even a graduatioft
. at the end of the program for
the men who have gone the
distance. With nine yeaJ'li
under i\s belt, the program
seems to keep growing,
reaching out to those whO
have find 1)0 other succes$
in traditional drug rehabili·
tation programs.
·
"We are not affiliated
with any church, just $
Christian ministry with aR
denomination
workin2
together," Holycross said:
"We're interested in helpin~
these men follow the Bible
and provide a spiritual sid~
of healing."
·
~
For more information call
740-772-2202 or email
i'![o@m(ns/iveschanged.org.

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CoMMuNn·y
Meigs Cm1uty Clerk of Cou1·ts candidates

..rite Daily Sentinel
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Monday, November 3, 2008

;_ Editor's N tm: A portion
'bf the responses from
Brenda Phalin to The
f)aily Sentinel's .-oter's
fUide was unintentionally
omitted. Her responses and
~hose of her opponent,
f)iane Lynch, are included
.for your consideradon.
• They are cantJidntes for
Clerk of Courts.

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times, taxpayer dollars can
be spent on the vital needs
'-.of
the community, not on
rent campaign, If any:
_costly on-the-job training. I
Meigs County Democratic
·
am looking forward to the
Party.
'
:
.!challenge
of continuing our
In 50 words or less and
computer updates and caras speclftcally as possible,
rying on with our efficient,
please explain why you
friendly
service without
are seeking public office:
delay.
•.
I am seeking public office
Other
than
for
the
ofllce
because I have great pride
you now seek, lulve_ you
in the county in wh1ch I
sought
public . office
was raised and have been
before? When, and what
privileged to raise my chiloffice? No.
.
dren. The people of Meigs
In
100
words
or less,
County are one of its'
please IdentifY the number
greatest resources and I
one
priority In the oftl.ce
believe .that it is each of our
you
seek,
and as speclftcalresponsibility to work
ly as possible, explain bow
together, give back and
you would address that
make our county a good ''
Diane Lynch
priority:
place to both live and raise
Lvnch (R)
The most important issues
our families. I appreciate
'J ••
Your current occupatilln in ·our office are always
Middleport
the concept and understand
and work experience, par- keeping accurate records
the difference between
Candidate for
ticularly any work experi· and providing excellent cuspublic record and common
Clerk of Courts
ence
relating specifically tomer service. My goal is to
knowledge. My mission
Name: Diane Lynch
to the office you seek: I " upgrade the computer sysstatement is "Performance,
Address:
Pearl
Street,
have had the privilege_of tem. Our present system has
not promises." ·
Middleport
serving
the citizens of been in use since 1996. The
Other than for the office
Place of birth: Middleport Meigs County for 29 years new system will allow an
you now seek, have you
background as a deputy Clerk of Couns. increased record storage
Family
sought public
office .
before? When, and what (parents, spouse, children, . This provides me with an capacity and streamline the
office? Apfroximately 15 grandchildren, etc.): I am in-depth know ledge of the process, meaning faster and
years ago, rari for Meigs the daughter of Pearl H. and office, including being more efficient service · for
Mary Ami Van Cooney and keeper of the records of our customers.
Local Board of Education.
In 100 words or less, the widow of the late civil, domestic, criminal · What do you feel is the
please IdentifY the number Herman Lynch. I have two and appeals cases, with most important qualiftca·
one priority in the oll"tce children, Heidi Ann (Will) numerous other duties .
tion for the office you seek,
Endorsements you have and how do you feel you
you seek, and as speclftcal· Rittenour and Robert S.
ly as possible, explain how Caruthers. I have eight received during your cur- meet that qualification?
Cassidy, rent campaign, if any: I My experience is a valuable
you would address ·that grandchildren:
priority: I wish to provide Taylor. Trae, Maci; Ben and have received numerous asset to me as a candidate
high-quality, non-partisan Brad Hood, and Bailey and personal endorsements from for this office. I have attendmembers of the community, ed training seminars on the
service, regardless of who Zachary Caruthers.
Educational
back· but endorsements from Founh District Coun of
you know or what political
any you're affiliated with. ground: Middleport High organizations
are
not Appeals and passport · serf want to create an atmos- School graduate.
applicable to my race.
vices. I am also trained on
In SO words or less and the current .computer system
phere when: everyone that · Organizations, includ·
walks through the door is lng church . affiliations, as specifically as possible, for the Clerk ofCourts.
civic groups, etc.: I serve as please explain why you
valued and respected.
I feel . my hands-on
What do you feel is the secretary for the Middleport . are seeking public office: I know ledge of the office and
School
Alumni am seeking office because I training with the current
most Important quallftca- High
tlon for the office you Association and Me"igs desire to continue my ser- clerk will allow me to be a
seek, and how do you feel County Ladies of the vice to the citizens-of Meigs working clerk on the frrst
you meet that quallfica· Republican Party. Member County. My experience and day. My experience and
tlon? Integrity and efficien- of
Republican
Pany working relationships will training will also save the
cy. I have a strong sen~e of Executive
Committee. allow me to transition in the county taxpayers money by
community pride; I give Member of · Middleport clerk's role immediately. In not requiring costly on-the100 percent of myself and I • Church of Christ.
these difficult economic job traming.

Endonemeats you lulve
received during your cur-

:Brenda Phalin (D)

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Middleport
Candidate for
Clerk of Courts

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: Name: Brenda S. Phalin
: Address: Lincoln Street,
Middleport
Brend11 Phalln
. Place of birth: Mason.
, W.Va.
~ Family
background Stan; board member of
{parents, spouse, cbll· Meigs County Chamber of
dren,
grandchildren, Commerce, president of the
Community
etc.): My parents are Bob Middleport
Association
and
vice presiand Patty Banon and Nelia
Seyler and the late Dick dent of the Middleport
Seyler. r am married to Development Group.
Your current occupation
Keith Phalin and together
!we have six children: five and work experience, par•
sons, two of whom serve tlcularly any work experiwith the U.S. military, and ence · relating speclftcally
have each served tours in . to the office you seek: I
Iraq, and a daughter. We work for the University of
are blessed with wonderful Rio Grande/Crossroads Pl"9·
daughters-in-law and a gram ..I have been with this
son-in-law, and eight pre- successful program from
the stan and for almost
cious grandchildren.
back- eight years we have served
: Educational
jlround: I am a Meigs High the people of Meigs County
~chool graduate; ·I have and worked with various
earned an Associate Degree businesses and agencies.
of Ans, Bachelor's Degree The program is grant fundin Social Work graduating ed so I am familiar with
cum laude, State Tested budget allocations, computcertified LSW and a er reponing systems,Jederal
Master's
Degree
in and county guidelines and
Education all from the boundaries. Through my
current and past employUniversity of Rio Grande.
: Organizations, indud· ment I have become familing church affiliations, . iar witll the coun system, at
Civic groups, etc.: I am a times working in partnerboard member of the ship with various departj'.1iddlepon Church -of the ments. I understan!l the
Nazarene; board member of importance of organizationCarleton
School/Meigs al skills, good managerial
Industries; board member of skills, communication skills
!-lean of the Valley Head and good people skills.

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Rav- 11111 past Clevdaud, Page B6 .
Weekeud Scoreboard, Paf1e B6

believe in leading by' exam·
ple and that no one pan of a
· team is more imgonant than
another.
People should have pride
and expectation . of their
elected officials and elected
officials owe their community appreciation
and
respect. I want to offer
"change that will make a
difference." Status quo may
·be comfortable but it is
does not mean it's efficient
or effective. There is
always room for improvement in both process and
atmosphere.

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Week 'lt Resulu
FRIDAY, OCT.

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,· •:f~~··-··'"

'f\....,.1"· ' ' '"' 'f... ,.

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· . ollie,._,
Ironton 41. wool!.n 31.

··
..... .....lngton 42: . . . . 14
Trlml&gt;!e 28, ~I 7 '

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Pairings for the ·
OHSAA regional
football semifinals

Crusaders rally·past Wahama, 37-34
Loss forces must-win for Falcons
Friday night against rival Buffalo
Bv GARY CLARK
SPORTS CORRESPONOENT

- -- -- - - - - . , . .
PARKERSI!URG, W.Va.
:.,. So. close yet so far away.
Ho$t Parkersburg Catholic
drove 80 yards for the winning score with just 47 seconds remaining to complete
a thrilling · come-frombehind 37-34 jlridiron victory over visitmg Wahama
Saturday evenin~ and postpone the possibility of the
White Falcons clinching a
2008 post-season playoff
benh.
Tommy Brunoni, the

Crusaders bruising senior
fullback, ran for 214 yards
on 40 carries and tossed a
pair of founh quarter touchdown passes as Parkersburg
Catholic rallied from · I0
· points down in the final
quarter for the victory. The
win
likely
placed ·the
Crusaders in the· Class A
playoff field while Wahama
dropped its third consecutive
road contest. The WHS loss
sets up a season ending
opportunity at making the
16-team post-season party
if the Mason County team
can secure a victory over

Buffalo in
the Bend
Area teams
regular season finale
on Friday.
The
last
minute triu m p h
. improved
..____...._....__. Parkersburg
Zerkle
Catholic's
record .to
6-3 on the year while the
heart-breaking
setback
dropped Wahama tq 6-3
also.
The WHS loss dampened
the outstanding offensive
effons from a trio of Bend
Area gridders. Senior running back Kyle Zerkle had a

night
to
remember
in running
for
197
yards
in
only 12 car·ries, catching
two
passes for
48 yards,
" ' - - - - - ' s c·or in g
Underwood three touchdowns and
booting four extra point. conversions. Senior wide out
Ga:-rett Underwood also
enjoyed an outstanding
evening in snatching nine
passes on the night for 104
_yards and two scores in
addition to tossing a founh
quarter touchdown pass.

wll work to eniAII't that these projeCts have a home in the region."
•

"Dt'oWt PlWiip$ hu ablcii«Wolf\'\Odi 1'Cto ~ fGIIIthtut.a
. Ohio.Shtlllldmtad.tthe jn,aat ,... ~pity~·totht...,

(10o-1), Dublin Coffman Stadium:

Plci&lt;orlngton Cen..l (11-0) ""· Upper

Arlington . (1 1)-1), Gahanna Lincoln
· Stadium; Cln. Elder (11).1) VI. Clayton
Nonhrnont (1Q-1), Nippert Sladium

Alabama;.

...

next up
vs.
I
DeSalts Alumni
(B-3) VI. Clrclovlllo Login Elm (11.0),
Teays Valloy VIking Stadium

AI

YOungs.
Steubenville
Stadium; Perry
'1\Jalaw ( t 0-1). ~~ni~'!~
Stadium; Genoa Area
FOIIO!Ia (1Q-1), Fremont
Stadium at Harmon
I ;
Pleasant (11).1) vs. ~~~i~~~~~
(7-1). Flndloy Donnell Stadium;
Belmont Union Local (U&gt;-1) vs.
Martina Ferry (1D-1), Steubenville
Reno Field at Harding Stadium;
Ironton (B-3) vs. Now Lexlng!011 (1().
1). Jacl!ton Holzor Field; Day.
Otkwood (8-3) vs. Coldwater (11.0),
Piqua Alexander Stadium Purk FJeld;
Kettering Alter (9-2) vs. Hamilton
Badin (8-3), Dayton Welcome
Stadium

"We need Debbie Philips
in the Statehou1e
to help get our economy
moving and create
good-payingjob1 for
Southeastern Ohio."
Goveroor Ted
STric:kland

. . . . Nt\ttac!Mr.aCOI!MeJit ......,pOd . . . . . . . Co~b
pawu plms.IBEW ·~ yarato ,..,. clJ iilppoJI NllitPlsiDip
fort. OlliOik:rattl."
'hqr.n.,p t' t,..WLu.am

Edwards wins second ~tratght race
Bv MIKE

HARRIS

ASSOCIATED PRESS

FORT WORTH, TexasCarl Edwards won for the
second
straight
week,
sgueezing a victory out of
his last tank of gas. And this
time Jimmie Johnson ran out
ofmagic.
\
The combination of the
win by·Edwards and a 15thplace fmish by Johnson in
Sunday's Dickies 500 at
Texas Motor Speedway
moved the race winner within 106 points of NASCAR
Sprint Cup J?Oints leader
Johnson w1th JUSt two races
-remaining.
Although Edwards dominated most of the race, leading 199 of the first 264 laps
on the 1.5-mile oval,.it was a
daring call by crew chief

Bv

KAv

JoE
AI&gt;SOCIATEO PRESS

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••-b•••• tr 4Iu•••Je.Jet

Carl Edwards responds to cheers from fans at the finish line after winning the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series' Dickies 500
auto race at Texas Motor Speedway in Fort Worth, Texas, Sunday.
.
.
.e .
.

2008 Sprint Cup Standing•
A,....T_
Name

1. Jimmie Johnson
2. Carl Edwards
3. Greg llltllo
4. Jeff Burton
5. Jeff Gordon
6. Cllnl Bowyer .

7. Kovln Harvk:k
8. Matt Kenaelh

9. Tony .S t-rt

Wins Pta.
6
6366

a

-toe

2
2

·143
·212

0
1

-255
. ·267
·279
·393
-404

0

0
1

10. Kyle Busch
8
11. DaJa Earnhardt Jr. 1
12. Den,Y Hamlin

1

-428
-429
.-431

Bob Osborne that got
Edwards this win after several other drivers used twotire strategies to get ahead of
him near the finish .
"I thought Bob made a
mistake on the four-tire
change," Edwards said. "But
I;!ob came up with a way to

win that thing anyway."
Osborne breathed a sigh of
relief after seeing his driver
chop 77 points off Johnson's
.lead.
"We were very close, very
close," the crew chief sail:i.
But Edwards, who inherited the lead when Greg Biffle
pitted with 13 laps remainmg. beat ·runner-up Jeff
Gordon by more than 8 seconds - most of the front
straightaway - and still had
enough gas left to.do a couple of victory doughnuts.
Even before he got out of
his car, Edwards, who began
the day a daunting 183
points behind Johnson in the
Chase for the championship,
asked Osborne on the radio:
"Hey, where did Jimmie
Johnson finish?"
The answer certainly

pleased Edwards, who is
hoping to keep Johnson .
from winning a record-tying
third straight Cup title.
A week earlier at Atlanta,
Edwards won but was
stunned to find out that
Johnson had made a late
charge to finish second and
maintain most of his points
margin. Edwards called
Johnson "magic."
But this time it was
Edwards who pulled off the
big finish, winning for the
eighth time. this season and
the 15th time in his .career.
Edwards, who also won
here in April, had leads of up
to a quaner of a lap at times.
but fell to seventh when
Osborne chose_to put on four
tires on lap 265 of the 334-

Pieese see Eclwerds, B:Z

at T.
No.1
m •op 25
aA~S~~~~~D~~E~o
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NEW YORK - Next up
at No. I, Alabama.
Crimson
Tide
The
became the fifth team this
season to sit atop the AP
Top 25, moving up a spot
Sunday after previously
top-ranked Texas was top-,
pled by Texas Tech.
The Red Raiders, who
scored a touchdown with a
second left at home to beat
39-33
the Longhorns
Saturday night, jumped four ·
spots and past No. 3 Penn
State to No.2. The unbeaten
Nittany Lions were idle.
No. 4 Florida moved up
one place after its 49-10
rout of Georgia and Texas
dropped four spots to No.5.
The Crimson Tide. which

PI- see Poll, B:Z

Bengals get first win,.
21~19 over Jacksonville

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'T,.ople . . . . . . qthitc to N¥0l\ thl iH"aet, tltqjwttly
to ••hitl•i.!f01up 1o smur&amp;P04~•- We.• t,.... ~
-~ PJr11ipt f'oi'Sta ~ Mc.,.walnlow•ht .
lllpJIOJb a-plutt lllllolhtrpldpayircjo\1 f'ol'~ nciolL"

Pleese see Reily, B:Z ·

GlenOak (9-2),
I
I
T~or Stadium; Wonhlngton
Kllboumo (9-2) vs. Hilliard Oavldsoo

Debbie Phillips :is·.enc~Qrsed by many organizations:which support working people and the creation
and developmentofne.wjobs arid clean coal, includins:
The United Mine. .Wot'ket-s, Lahot·et'S _Local 639 (Mauietta), Carpenter's
Distdct Union 356, IBEW ~cal 972, Ohio Dlsttict Councn Baiddayet-s, and
the Paa·ket'Sbm•g..:Matietta RelioDal Building T1-ades Co unci
.

William Zuspan added
another productive evening
for Wahama after connecting
on 13 of 20 passes for 129
yards and two scores to give
the junior signal caller 19
TD tosses on the season .
The difference in the game
however was the Bend Area
teams defensive inability to
stop Brunoni and his
Parkersburg Catholic teammates. The Crusaders never
punted in the outing with
Catholic runnin~ an amazing 74 offens1ve plays.
Parkersburg Catholic also
successfully convened three
of four founh down situations with two of those com-

I Brown

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Philips website says: "In Meigs County AEP is slated to bepl eonstruttion In the llt8l'
futuft on a dean 0081 plant that wm bring stable employment to the ane. Debbie Philips

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Monday, November 3, 2008

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Goventor Ted Strickland's plan for clean energy in Ohio.
The highlights of the plan aa·e to invest in advanced and ·
renewable energy, sptu· bybrid manufacttuing, aud support
for clean coal. technologies. , .

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21; Choprnanvlll• 13

ChllllcO!ho 31, C..-t'WinChetttl 7
~ unk.ri 1s, Ne••4 Ym ~•
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Parte. c~ 37. Wlll~n~~~ 3il :·
Monb;elm 3,1,
Hannan
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Debbie Phillips suppqrts clean coal and

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.. · SATURDAY,' '

Ttm di\Teprd for the truth leads Debbie Philips' l:ampaip to ooDSider further LEGAL ACTION against the
Meigs County Republlcaft Party awl all others involved in the FALSE &amp;tatemenls.

0

IIIAoriVIAI-48, Poca 2&amp; .' .'

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FALS'E STATEMENTS

i

me · ..

Pt. P~oJUn~-41, -~ Hooyo; is

Don't believe everytllii1g you.teadf An El.ections Complaint
has been filed against the Me~gs Cotmty Republican Party
because their ad in the Sentinel is filled with
.

31

login 23. Dublin Joroine 7

Diane

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The Daily Sentinel

Auaels 11oi1b 13th at state meet, Page B6

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··~

Inside

Calh. Cent. (11-3) Yl. Sl&lt;lnoy
Cat~ .
(9-1 ), Clayton

GoOd Somorltan Stadium.

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CoNTAcrUs
:

1-74()-446-2342 ext. 33

tu -

1-740 446 30011

~ - rtpOrtsOmydallyHnllnel.com

IPO"'SWf
illry~~n Wllter8, Sports Writer
1,7&lt;10) 4411-23421.... 33
_lte,.Omydallytrlbuno.com

•
Lttrry Crum, Spona Writer
('Tfl) 448-2342, ""'· 33
~~pUmOm,o.I'J•"'"'r.oom

CINCINNATI - Inspired
by what passes for motivation around these pans, the
Cincinnati Bengals found
their resolve and got a win.
Finally. And barely.
Ryan Fitzpatrick threw a
pair of touchdown passes to
Chad Ocho Cinco, who ce~l­
ebrated .by giving the head
coach a k1ss, and Cincinnati
stopped a late 2-point . conversiOn try Sunday, preserving a 21-19 victory over the
Jacksonville Jaguars.
With the losses mounting
and history beckoning, several Bengals tried to fire up
their teammates . Offensive
tackle Andrew Whitworth
talked to the offense after
practice on Satu;day, and
receiver
T.J.
Houshmandzadeh spoke up
in the locker room before

the game.
The message: Don't be a
doormat.
"We're 0-8 , but I think
we're a good 0-8 team, jf
that's
possible,"
Houshmandzadeh said . "I
was just telling them: Are
we going to the ptaroffs?
Probably not . But were all
men and play with pride.
Basically, play with pride
and let's try to make this
thing
look · somewhat
respectable."
For one day, they were.
At 1-8, the Bengals are no
longer on pace to be historically bad. Now ·merely
dreadful, they were too
much for . the . stunned
Jaguars (3-5), who fell
behind 21-3 before making
it close.
AP photo
Montell Owens rerumed a
fumble 18 yards for a Cincinnati Bengals receiver Chad Ocho Cinco (85) catches a two-yard touchdown pass
against Jacksonville Jaguars cornerback Rashean Mathis (27) in the first quarter of an
PIIIH- .....~. B:Z
NFL football game, Sunday In Cincinnati.
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PageA6

CoMMuNn·y
Meigs Cm1uty Clerk of Cou1·ts candidates

..rite Daily Sentinel
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Monday, November 3, 2008

;_ Editor's N tm: A portion
'bf the responses from
Brenda Phalin to The
f)aily Sentinel's .-oter's
fUide was unintentionally
omitted. Her responses and
~hose of her opponent,
f)iane Lynch, are included
.for your consideradon.
• They are cantJidntes for
Clerk of Courts.

••

times, taxpayer dollars can
be spent on the vital needs
'-.of
the community, not on
rent campaign, If any:
_costly on-the-job training. I
Meigs County Democratic
·
am looking forward to the
Party.
'
:
.!challenge
of continuing our
In 50 words or less and
computer updates and caras speclftcally as possible,
rying on with our efficient,
please explain why you
friendly
service without
are seeking public office:
delay.
•.
I am seeking public office
Other
than
for
the
ofllce
because I have great pride
you now seek, lulve_ you
in the county in wh1ch I
sought
public . office
was raised and have been
before? When, and what
privileged to raise my chiloffice? No.
.
dren. The people of Meigs
In
100
words
or less,
County are one of its'
please IdentifY the number
greatest resources and I
one
priority In the oftl.ce
believe .that it is each of our
you
seek,
and as speclftcalresponsibility to work
ly as possible, explain bow
together, give back and
you would address that
make our county a good ''
Diane Lynch
priority:
place to both live and raise
Lvnch (R)
The most important issues
our families. I appreciate
'J ••
Your current occupatilln in ·our office are always
Middleport
the concept and understand
and work experience, par- keeping accurate records
the difference between
Candidate for
ticularly any work experi· and providing excellent cuspublic record and common
Clerk of Courts
ence
relating specifically tomer service. My goal is to
knowledge. My mission
Name: Diane Lynch
to the office you seek: I " upgrade the computer sysstatement is "Performance,
Address:
Pearl
Street,
have had the privilege_of tem. Our present system has
not promises." ·
Middleport
serving
the citizens of been in use since 1996. The
Other than for the office
Place of birth: Middleport Meigs County for 29 years new system will allow an
you now seek, have you
background as a deputy Clerk of Couns. increased record storage
Family
sought public
office .
before? When, and what (parents, spouse, children, . This provides me with an capacity and streamline the
office? Apfroximately 15 grandchildren, etc.): I am in-depth know ledge of the process, meaning faster and
years ago, rari for Meigs the daughter of Pearl H. and office, including being more efficient service · for
Mary Ami Van Cooney and keeper of the records of our customers.
Local Board of Education.
In 100 words or less, the widow of the late civil, domestic, criminal · What do you feel is the
please IdentifY the number Herman Lynch. I have two and appeals cases, with most important qualiftca·
one priority in the oll"tce children, Heidi Ann (Will) numerous other duties .
tion for the office you seek,
Endorsements you have and how do you feel you
you seek, and as speclftcal· Rittenour and Robert S.
ly as possible, explain how Caruthers. I have eight received during your cur- meet that qualification?
Cassidy, rent campaign, if any: I My experience is a valuable
you would address ·that grandchildren:
priority: I wish to provide Taylor. Trae, Maci; Ben and have received numerous asset to me as a candidate
high-quality, non-partisan Brad Hood, and Bailey and personal endorsements from for this office. I have attendmembers of the community, ed training seminars on the
service, regardless of who Zachary Caruthers.
Educational
back· but endorsements from Founh District Coun of
you know or what political
any you're affiliated with. ground: Middleport High organizations
are
not Appeals and passport · serf want to create an atmos- School graduate.
applicable to my race.
vices. I am also trained on
In SO words or less and the current .computer system
phere when: everyone that · Organizations, includ·
walks through the door is lng church . affiliations, as specifically as possible, for the Clerk ofCourts.
civic groups, etc.: I serve as please explain why you
valued and respected.
I feel . my hands-on
What do you feel is the secretary for the Middleport . are seeking public office: I know ledge of the office and
School
Alumni am seeking office because I training with the current
most Important quallftca- High
tlon for the office you Association and Me"igs desire to continue my ser- clerk will allow me to be a
seek, and how do you feel County Ladies of the vice to the citizens-of Meigs working clerk on the frrst
you meet that quallfica· Republican Party. Member County. My experience and day. My experience and
tlon? Integrity and efficien- of
Republican
Pany working relationships will training will also save the
cy. I have a strong sen~e of Executive
Committee. allow me to transition in the county taxpayers money by
community pride; I give Member of · Middleport clerk's role immediately. In not requiring costly on-the100 percent of myself and I • Church of Christ.
these difficult economic job traming.

Endonemeats you lulve
received during your cur-

:Brenda Phalin (D)

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Middleport
Candidate for
Clerk of Courts

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: Name: Brenda S. Phalin
: Address: Lincoln Street,
Middleport
Brend11 Phalln
. Place of birth: Mason.
, W.Va.
~ Family
background Stan; board member of
{parents, spouse, cbll· Meigs County Chamber of
dren,
grandchildren, Commerce, president of the
Community
etc.): My parents are Bob Middleport
Association
and
vice presiand Patty Banon and Nelia
Seyler and the late Dick dent of the Middleport
Seyler. r am married to Development Group.
Your current occupation
Keith Phalin and together
!we have six children: five and work experience, par•
sons, two of whom serve tlcularly any work experiwith the U.S. military, and ence · relating speclftcally
have each served tours in . to the office you seek: I
Iraq, and a daughter. We work for the University of
are blessed with wonderful Rio Grande/Crossroads Pl"9·
daughters-in-law and a gram ..I have been with this
son-in-law, and eight pre- successful program from
the stan and for almost
cious grandchildren.
back- eight years we have served
: Educational
jlround: I am a Meigs High the people of Meigs County
~chool graduate; ·I have and worked with various
earned an Associate Degree businesses and agencies.
of Ans, Bachelor's Degree The program is grant fundin Social Work graduating ed so I am familiar with
cum laude, State Tested budget allocations, computcertified LSW and a er reponing systems,Jederal
Master's
Degree
in and county guidelines and
Education all from the boundaries. Through my
current and past employUniversity of Rio Grande.
: Organizations, indud· ment I have become familing church affiliations, . iar witll the coun system, at
Civic groups, etc.: I am a times working in partnerboard member of the ship with various departj'.1iddlepon Church -of the ments. I understan!l the
Nazarene; board member of importance of organizationCarleton
School/Meigs al skills, good managerial
Industries; board member of skills, communication skills
!-lean of the Valley Head and good people skills.

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Rav- 11111 past Clevdaud, Page B6 .
Weekeud Scoreboard, Paf1e B6

believe in leading by' exam·
ple and that no one pan of a
· team is more imgonant than
another.
People should have pride
and expectation . of their
elected officials and elected
officials owe their community appreciation
and
respect. I want to offer
"change that will make a
difference." Status quo may
·be comfortable but it is
does not mean it's efficient
or effective. There is
always room for improvement in both process and
atmosphere.

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Week 'lt Resulu
FRIDAY, OCT.

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Ironton 41. wool!.n 31.

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Trlml&gt;!e 28, ~I 7 '

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Pairings for the ·
OHSAA regional
football semifinals

Crusaders rally·past Wahama, 37-34
Loss forces must-win for Falcons
Friday night against rival Buffalo
Bv GARY CLARK
SPORTS CORRESPONOENT

- -- -- - - - - . , . .
PARKERSI!URG, W.Va.
:.,. So. close yet so far away.
Ho$t Parkersburg Catholic
drove 80 yards for the winning score with just 47 seconds remaining to complete
a thrilling · come-frombehind 37-34 jlridiron victory over visitmg Wahama
Saturday evenin~ and postpone the possibility of the
White Falcons clinching a
2008 post-season playoff
benh.
Tommy Brunoni, the

Crusaders bruising senior
fullback, ran for 214 yards
on 40 carries and tossed a
pair of founh quarter touchdown passes as Parkersburg
Catholic rallied from · I0
· points down in the final
quarter for the victory. The
win
likely
placed ·the
Crusaders in the· Class A
playoff field while Wahama
dropped its third consecutive
road contest. The WHS loss
sets up a season ending
opportunity at making the
16-team post-season party
if the Mason County team
can secure a victory over

Buffalo in
the Bend
Area teams
regular season finale
on Friday.
The
last
minute triu m p h
. improved
..____...._....__. Parkersburg
Zerkle
Catholic's
record .to
6-3 on the year while the
heart-breaking
setback
dropped Wahama tq 6-3
also.
The WHS loss dampened
the outstanding offensive
effons from a trio of Bend
Area gridders. Senior running back Kyle Zerkle had a

night
to
remember
in running
for
197
yards
in
only 12 car·ries, catching
two
passes for
48 yards,
" ' - - - - - ' s c·or in g
Underwood three touchdowns and
booting four extra point. conversions. Senior wide out
Ga:-rett Underwood also
enjoyed an outstanding
evening in snatching nine
passes on the night for 104
_yards and two scores in
addition to tossing a founh
quarter touchdown pass.

wll work to eniAII't that these projeCts have a home in the region."
•

"Dt'oWt PlWiip$ hu ablcii«Wolf\'\Odi 1'Cto ~ fGIIIthtut.a
. Ohio.Shtlllldmtad.tthe jn,aat ,... ~pity~·totht...,

(10o-1), Dublin Coffman Stadium:

Plci&lt;orlngton Cen..l (11-0) ""· Upper

Arlington . (1 1)-1), Gahanna Lincoln
· Stadium; Cln. Elder (11).1) VI. Clayton
Nonhrnont (1Q-1), Nippert Sladium

Alabama;.

...

next up
vs.
I
DeSalts Alumni
(B-3) VI. Clrclovlllo Login Elm (11.0),
Teays Valloy VIking Stadium

AI

YOungs.
Steubenville
Stadium; Perry
'1\Jalaw ( t 0-1). ~~ni~'!~
Stadium; Genoa Area
FOIIO!Ia (1Q-1), Fremont
Stadium at Harmon
I ;
Pleasant (11).1) vs. ~~~i~~~~~
(7-1). Flndloy Donnell Stadium;
Belmont Union Local (U&gt;-1) vs.
Martina Ferry (1D-1), Steubenville
Reno Field at Harding Stadium;
Ironton (B-3) vs. Now Lexlng!011 (1().
1). Jacl!ton Holzor Field; Day.
Otkwood (8-3) vs. Coldwater (11.0),
Piqua Alexander Stadium Purk FJeld;
Kettering Alter (9-2) vs. Hamilton
Badin (8-3), Dayton Welcome
Stadium

"We need Debbie Philips
in the Statehou1e
to help get our economy
moving and create
good-payingjob1 for
Southeastern Ohio."
Goveroor Ted
STric:kland

. . . . Nt\ttac!Mr.aCOI!MeJit ......,pOd . . . . . . . Co~b
pawu plms.IBEW ·~ yarato ,..,. clJ iilppoJI NllitPlsiDip
fort. OlliOik:rattl."
'hqr.n.,p t' t,..WLu.am

Edwards wins second ~tratght race
Bv MIKE

HARRIS

ASSOCIATED PRESS

FORT WORTH, TexasCarl Edwards won for the
second
straight
week,
sgueezing a victory out of
his last tank of gas. And this
time Jimmie Johnson ran out
ofmagic.
\
The combination of the
win by·Edwards and a 15thplace fmish by Johnson in
Sunday's Dickies 500 at
Texas Motor Speedway
moved the race winner within 106 points of NASCAR
Sprint Cup J?Oints leader
Johnson w1th JUSt two races
-remaining.
Although Edwards dominated most of the race, leading 199 of the first 264 laps
on the 1.5-mile oval,.it was a
daring call by crew chief

Bv

KAv

JoE
AI&gt;SOCIATEO PRESS

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••-b•••• tr 4Iu•••Je.Jet

Carl Edwards responds to cheers from fans at the finish line after winning the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series' Dickies 500
auto race at Texas Motor Speedway in Fort Worth, Texas, Sunday.
.
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.e .
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2008 Sprint Cup Standing•
A,....T_
Name

1. Jimmie Johnson
2. Carl Edwards
3. Greg llltllo
4. Jeff Burton
5. Jeff Gordon
6. Cllnl Bowyer .

7. Kovln Harvk:k
8. Matt Kenaelh

9. Tony .S t-rt

Wins Pta.
6
6366

a

-toe

2
2

·143
·212

0
1

-255
. ·267
·279
·393
-404

0

0
1

10. Kyle Busch
8
11. DaJa Earnhardt Jr. 1
12. Den,Y Hamlin

1

-428
-429
.-431

Bob Osborne that got
Edwards this win after several other drivers used twotire strategies to get ahead of
him near the finish .
"I thought Bob made a
mistake on the four-tire
change," Edwards said. "But
I;!ob came up with a way to

win that thing anyway."
Osborne breathed a sigh of
relief after seeing his driver
chop 77 points off Johnson's
.lead.
"We were very close, very
close," the crew chief sail:i.
But Edwards, who inherited the lead when Greg Biffle
pitted with 13 laps remainmg. beat ·runner-up Jeff
Gordon by more than 8 seconds - most of the front
straightaway - and still had
enough gas left to.do a couple of victory doughnuts.
Even before he got out of
his car, Edwards, who began
the day a daunting 183
points behind Johnson in the
Chase for the championship,
asked Osborne on the radio:
"Hey, where did Jimmie
Johnson finish?"
The answer certainly

pleased Edwards, who is
hoping to keep Johnson .
from winning a record-tying
third straight Cup title.
A week earlier at Atlanta,
Edwards won but was
stunned to find out that
Johnson had made a late
charge to finish second and
maintain most of his points
margin. Edwards called
Johnson "magic."
But this time it was
Edwards who pulled off the
big finish, winning for the
eighth time. this season and
the 15th time in his .career.
Edwards, who also won
here in April, had leads of up
to a quaner of a lap at times.
but fell to seventh when
Osborne chose_to put on four
tires on lap 265 of the 334-

Pieese see Eclwerds, B:Z

at T.
No.1
m •op 25
aA~S~~~~~D~~E~o
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NEW YORK - Next up
at No. I, Alabama.
Crimson
Tide
The
became the fifth team this
season to sit atop the AP
Top 25, moving up a spot
Sunday after previously
top-ranked Texas was top-,
pled by Texas Tech.
The Red Raiders, who
scored a touchdown with a
second left at home to beat
39-33
the Longhorns
Saturday night, jumped four ·
spots and past No. 3 Penn
State to No.2. The unbeaten
Nittany Lions were idle.
No. 4 Florida moved up
one place after its 49-10
rout of Georgia and Texas
dropped four spots to No.5.
The Crimson Tide. which

PI- see Poll, B:Z

Bengals get first win,.
21~19 over Jacksonville

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'T,.ople . . . . . . qthitc to N¥0l\ thl iH"aet, tltqjwttly
to ••hitl•i.!f01up 1o smur&amp;P04~•- We.• t,.... ~
-~ PJr11ipt f'oi'Sta ~ Mc.,.walnlow•ht .
lllpJIOJb a-plutt lllllolhtrpldpayircjo\1 f'ol'~ nciolL"

Pleese see Reily, B:Z ·

GlenOak (9-2),
I
I
T~or Stadium; Wonhlngton
Kllboumo (9-2) vs. Hilliard Oavldsoo

Debbie Phillips :is·.enc~Qrsed by many organizations:which support working people and the creation
and developmentofne.wjobs arid clean coal, includins:
The United Mine. .Wot'ket-s, Lahot·et'S _Local 639 (Mauietta), Carpenter's
Distdct Union 356, IBEW ~cal 972, Ohio Dlsttict Councn Baiddayet-s, and
the Paa·ket'Sbm•g..:Matietta RelioDal Building T1-ades Co unci
.

William Zuspan added
another productive evening
for Wahama after connecting
on 13 of 20 passes for 129
yards and two scores to give
the junior signal caller 19
TD tosses on the season .
The difference in the game
however was the Bend Area
teams defensive inability to
stop Brunoni and his
Parkersburg Catholic teammates. The Crusaders never
punted in the outing with
Catholic runnin~ an amazing 74 offens1ve plays.
Parkersburg Catholic also
successfully convened three
of four founh down situations with two of those com-

I Brown

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Philips website says: "In Meigs County AEP is slated to bepl eonstruttion In the llt8l'
futuft on a dean 0081 plant that wm bring stable employment to the ane. Debbie Philips

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Monday, November 3, 2008

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Goventor Ted Strickland's plan for clean energy in Ohio.
The highlights of the plan aa·e to invest in advanced and ·
renewable energy, sptu· bybrid manufacttuing, aud support
for clean coal. technologies. , .

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21; Choprnanvlll• 13

ChllllcO!ho 31, C..-t'WinChetttl 7
~ unk.ri 1s, Ne••4 Ym ~•
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Parte. c~ 37. Wlll~n~~~ 3il :·
Monb;elm 3,1,
Hannan
24
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Debbie Phillips suppqrts clean coal and

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way~

.. · SATURDAY,' '

Ttm di\Teprd for the truth leads Debbie Philips' l:ampaip to ooDSider further LEGAL ACTION against the
Meigs County Republlcaft Party awl all others involved in the FALSE &amp;tatemenls.

0

IIIAoriVIAI-48, Poca 2&amp; .' .'

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FALS'E STATEMENTS

i

me · ..

Pt. P~oJUn~-41, -~ Hooyo; is

Don't believe everytllii1g you.teadf An El.ections Complaint
has been filed against the Me~gs Cotmty Republican Party
because their ad in the Sentinel is filled with
.

31

login 23. Dublin Joroine 7

Diane

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Bl

The Daily Sentinel

Auaels 11oi1b 13th at state meet, Page B6

...

"
··~

Inside

Calh. Cent. (11-3) Yl. Sl&lt;lnoy
Cat~ .
(9-1 ), Clayton

GoOd Somorltan Stadium.

•

CoNTAcrUs
:

1-74()-446-2342 ext. 33

tu -

1-740 446 30011

~ - rtpOrtsOmydallyHnllnel.com

IPO"'SWf
illry~~n Wllter8, Sports Writer
1,7&lt;10) 4411-23421.... 33
_lte,.Omydallytrlbuno.com

•
Lttrry Crum, Spona Writer
('Tfl) 448-2342, ""'· 33
~~pUmOm,o.I'J•"'"'r.oom

CINCINNATI - Inspired
by what passes for motivation around these pans, the
Cincinnati Bengals found
their resolve and got a win.
Finally. And barely.
Ryan Fitzpatrick threw a
pair of touchdown passes to
Chad Ocho Cinco, who ce~l­
ebrated .by giving the head
coach a k1ss, and Cincinnati
stopped a late 2-point . conversiOn try Sunday, preserving a 21-19 victory over the
Jacksonville Jaguars.
With the losses mounting
and history beckoning, several Bengals tried to fire up
their teammates . Offensive
tackle Andrew Whitworth
talked to the offense after
practice on Satu;day, and
receiver
T.J.
Houshmandzadeh spoke up
in the locker room before

the game.
The message: Don't be a
doormat.
"We're 0-8 , but I think
we're a good 0-8 team, jf
that's
possible,"
Houshmandzadeh said . "I
was just telling them: Are
we going to the ptaroffs?
Probably not . But were all
men and play with pride.
Basically, play with pride
and let's try to make this
thing
look · somewhat
respectable."
For one day, they were.
At 1-8, the Bengals are no
longer on pace to be historically bad. Now ·merely
dreadful, they were too
much for . the . stunned
Jaguars (3-5), who fell
behind 21-3 before making
it close.
AP photo
Montell Owens rerumed a
fumble 18 yards for a Cincinnati Bengals receiver Chad Ocho Cinco (85) catches a two-yard touchdown pass
against Jacksonville Jaguars cornerback Rashean Mathis (27) in the first quarter of an
PIIIH- .....~. B:Z
NFL football game, Sunday In Cincinnati.
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. Page Ba • The Daily Sentinel

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Poll

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Rally-

Top 25 Fared:

from PageBl

Nil 1 T - (&amp;-1) looiiD No.8 T Tcii:JII.33.
'
.... 2 ~ (9-0) boat~
Slol831!-0.
No.3 Penn- (9-0) did nol po,.
Nll40tdollomo(&amp;-1)-82·28.
No. 5 Florido (M) boat No. I

rromPagest
ing on its game winning
dnve . PCHS ran 52 running plays and another 23
passing opponunities and
of those 74 · offensive
Parkersburg
attempts
Catholic had only two .plays
go for negative yardage and
four other snaps that failed
to
generate
positive
yardage.
PCHS totaled 24 first
downs .and held a 429-365
edge in total yaroage in the
hard-hitting affair but
despite the offensive statistical adyantage Wahama
had the Crusaders on their
heels thanks to a 20 point
third quarter that turned a
17-14 halftime deficit into a
34-24 lead. A fourth down
desperation pass from
Brunoni to quarterback
JlJ,son Williams proved to be
the deciding factor as
Williams went ~hove a pair
of Falcon defenders in the
_end zone for the II yard,
winning TD with just 47
seconds
remaining.
Wabama nearly pulled off
some last-second heroics
of its own by taking the
ensuing kickoff and marching to the Crusader 20 but
Zuspan 's pass into the end
zone as time ' ran out fell
untouched
onto
the
Pa~ke~sburg High School
anificial. turf.
Wahama capitalized on a
pair of Catholic turnovers,
the first of which came on
the ope~ing kickoff. when
Garrett Underwood came

;beat Arkansas State 35-0,
;received 46 of a possible 65
:first-place votes from the Goorgla 48-1Q,
jnedia panel and 1,600
No. 6 T- Ted! ~ - No.;
.
:points . Texas Tech got 12 r-3&amp;-33.
No. 7
Col (7:1i . ~!-place votes and I ,528
· pomts and Penn State had six t&gt;.1'C~(7-2f looi 19 Na. 5
•
~ and 1,525. The Gators -48-10.
..,.
•
;a
r
•
....
(1.11 l!oot
:received the other No. I vote,
~~t.:
,,
: The ·top spot in the poll t~JG r,:;:'.ftl':. ~~ ,L_"
"~
:hasn't been ·held by this
No. 11 llotl!e Ill* (Fa) ~t :many teams since 1990, l'l!llo(11'-1)
&lt;10-().. . .
. •.....,;
~~'. ~M,:
• '
No. 12TCU
. ·when Miami, Notre Dame,
No. 13 ~$loll (7-1) did l'lbt ....
:'Colorado, Michigan and :.1~~ (7-1)~ .........~1·
.Vrrginia all had a tum at No
No.15 ~2) ""',.,.. 3&amp;-)0;
·I
No. ~·
·,!lllolt'"'"&gt;lilooltp'
,: .Georgia started this season Go!irvio
'fo/ilta1tll,'{r , . ' .
:No. I and was replaced by . No. 17 IMJ&gt;(f-1) ~.tot Coiocldol
:SOuthern California after the ~re:t-~,:..,nol~·
No. 18 1IJioil (&amp;.1f toil .. AiMnou
:opening week.
•
.
' USC lasted four weeks 3Q.-23.
No. 20 MtnnliiOta (1-2) toot to
:before being upset by Noo•••wtem _U-17. ·
No. 21 Norlh ,Comllna (6'2) did 1101
.Oregon State and Oklahoma
pt'¥
'' '
,. '
:took the top spot. The
Nd. 22. Mlcliigan State '(8'2)· bOat
;sooners were No. I for two Wilconilln ·2M!4.
No. 20 Q.,gon (8-3) too'llil catlloml•
•weeks, then lost to Texas, 26-16,
'
.
:which held the top spot for
No. 24 South (6-3) loJt to
Clncir1NII24-10, 'lhutoday. · •
~three weeks.
. No. 25 ~nd (6-2) did JIOII'I&amp;I'.
: Now it's Alabama's tum .
.
.· The Crimson Tide hasn't got a shake-up, too.
Sou!hem
California
is
No.
:been No . I since finishing
:mat way after the 1992 sea- · 7, and the final two spots in
:son, when coach Gene the top 10 are held by poten:Stallings, quarterback· Jay tial BCS Busters - No. 9
Barker and a ferocious Boise State of .the Western
defense won the' last of the Athletic Conference and No.
10 ·· Utah, which hosts ·
·Tide's six AP national chamMountain
.West Conference
J1ionships.
rival and No. II TCU in a
Alabama's first game as a Thursday
night game that
'No. I team since October, could decide the league title.
.27, 1980, will be Saturday at
Ohio State is No. 12, folLSU, a date that was one of lowed by Missouri , Georgia
the most anticipated in the and LSU .
southeastern Conference
j:&lt;o . 16 Ball State is the
even before this season.
lowest ranked of the six
Tide coach Nick Saban remaining unbeaten major
will be coaching in Baton college teams in the country.
'.
Rouge, La., for the first time The Cardinals of the Mid~since he left the Tigers forth~ American Conference play
NFL after the 2004 season. Wednesday night against
Saban led LSU to a BCS Nonhem Illinois.
.from Page
national title in 2003.
No. 17 BYU, Michigan
-: So the Tide, with its new State, Nonh Carolina and ·
:lofty status, will face a stiff West Virginia, back in the lap event.
. But, as the laps wound
:test immediately. Same goes rankings after falling out in
down
and the cars ahead of
·for Texas Tech, which had mid-September, complete
Edwards' No . 99 Ford ·
never been ranked higher the top 20.
than No . 5 . The Red Raiders
No. 21 California, No. 22 began pitting for two tires
:host No. 8 Oklahoma State Georgia Tech and No. 25 and gas, Osborne told
:on Saturday, then have a Pittsburgh re-entered ·the Edwards to stay on the
track. ·
·
:week off before a road trip to rankings.
Still,
it
was
guesswork
to
:No. 6 Oklahoma.
Maryland is No. 23 and
the
end,.
with
Osborne
first
:. Penn State next plays at No. 24 Florida State dropped
:'Iowa.
·
eight spots after losing at · telling his driver to con: Seven ranked teams lost Georgia Tech.
· · serve fuel because he was
last weekend, most from the · Falling out of the Top · 25 going tp be a half-lap short,
:lower half of the rankings, so were Minnesota, . Tulsa, · then saying he was four laps
short. In the end, he went
;the back end of the Top 25 Oregon and South Florida.

-o:

f

Edwards
.Bl

Bengals·

right now."
Fitzpatrick, who studied
the laws of economics at
Harvard. helped the law of
fromPageBl
a.~erages catch up with his .
wmless team. The scram~ founh-quarter touchdown ,
bling
quanerback looked a
:and David Garrard led a late lot more
comfortable in his
·drive that culminated in fourth straight start for .the
:Maurice Jones-Drew's !yard
with I: 17 to go. injured Carson Palmer,
going 21-of-31 for 162
:Garrard failed to squeeze a yards.
:pass into double-covered
He gave them hope on the
::Jerry Poner on the conver- opening
drive.
::sion try.
In their eight previous
: The game ended on one
opening
drives this season,
·of those multiple-lateral
the
Bengals
failed to get a
:plays t!Jat ended with the
first
down
.
This time,
ball dribbling out of
completed
bounds . The 64,238 fans Fitzpatrick
seven
of
eight
passes
and
raised their arms in celebrabroke
loose
on
a
pair
of
,tion of an unexpected win.
· The Bengals were com- long scrambles. Ocho
ing off the most lopsided Cinco made a diving 2-yard
back-to-hack losses in fran- c'atch in the corner of the
chise ' history. One more end zone, then ran along the
would have left them 0-9 sideline with both arms outfor only the second time in stretched ·in wonder.
Indeed , it was a wonder:
'team history.
The
offense's first touch"Being 0-for-whatever-itin the first quaner
was coming in, there was a down
this season. .
lot of pressure and lot of
Fitzpatrick was inspired
frustration for everybody,
from the staff to the equip- by Whitwonh's get-tough
ment managers," said running back Cedric Benson,
·who ran for 104 yards and a
touchdown . "Everybody's
trying to figure out what's
wrong."
.
Now, the Jaguars have to
do some figuring .
~gain, they had problems
trymg to run the ball behind
a patched-up line . Garrard
!hrew fus frrst interception
m five · games, breaking a
streak of 166 passes with_out one. That rare, poor
·throw set up a touchdown
that put the Bengals ahead
21-3.
Frustration boiled over as
'the Bengals pulled ahead.
Jaguars defensive tackle
'1ohn
Henderson
and
Whitworth were ejected for
trading blows while block·ing each other on a play.
"We're not fum;tioning
·with a ·high level of confi:dence," coach Jack Del Rio
said. "We're missing a
spark, and we're trying to
find it. It hasn 't been good
enough, and I've said . it
enough different ways.
"I'm not in a good mood

run

a

up with the loose pigskin to
give the White Falcons the
football at the Crusader 36
yard line. Seven plays later
Zuspa{l scrambled around
th~ left side and found
Underwood in the end zone
for a 12 yard scoring pass
for the six points . zerkle
kept the Bend Area teams
drive alive earlier in the
series with a 22 yard run on
a founh down, fake punt.
Zerkle's bOot for the PAT
gave WHS an early 7-0
advantage.
Catholic answered with a
long 73 yard. 16 play drive
· to even the count late in the
opc:ning period. Brunoni,
who toted the ball nine
times in the series went the
final three yards with Gino
DeMaio knocking down the
p()int after attempt to even
the count at 7-7.
The hosts surged into the
lead on its next possession
but had to settle for a 28
yard Gino DeMaio field
goal after Colby Davis
stopped Brunoni for no gain
at the White Falcon II yard
line on a fourth and two 'sitnation. DeMaio's
boot
gave Parkersburg Catholic
· a 10-7 lead with 5:52 to
play in the second quarter.
The Crusaders increased
its advantage to 17-7 with
I :47 left in the half when
Williams connected with
Cole Cwynar on a 49 yard
scl)ring
toss. Again
DeMaio drove the PAT Jcick
through the uprights on the
point after try.
Wahama closed .the gap
just before the half ended
when, after successive
penalties · backed · the
the fmal 103.5 miles on his
last fill-up.
"I ,knew by default he
wa~n t too sure about it,"
Edwards said. ''I'm glad it
worked out. Unreal."
Johnson, who won this
race a year ago, staned seventh Sunday but quickly
found himself in trouble,
struggling with the handling
on his No. _48 Chevrolet and
sliding back through the
field.
Edwards put him a hip
down on lap 96 as Johnson
, slippel,l a_ll th~ way to 33rd,
after a:pit stop on lap 113.
At that point, with Edwards
leadinJ!·· Johnson was only
64 pomts ahead. But· his

www.Dtydallysentlnel.com

Monday, November 3, 2008

www.mydailysentinel.com

Falcons up to its own five
yard line, Zerkle broke free
thanks to a pair of open
field blocks by . Trey
Anderson and Underwood.
The fleet-footed running
back outraced the entire
Catholic defense and ran 95
yards to paydin with the
successful PAT kick making
it a 17-14 score at the half.
The third quaner was .
nearly all Wahama as th~
Bend Area team tallied 2()
poinh in the period on II one
yard ruri by Zerkle, a 21
yard pass from · Zuspan to
'Underwood and a 30 yard
pass from Underwood ·to
Zerkle. Brunoni continued
to pound the White Falcon
defense to avoid the third
quarter
shutout
by
Parkersburg Catholic with
the senior fullback capping
another long· Crusader drive
with his second three yard
touchdown run of the night
to make it a 34-24 contest ·
with 12 minutes to play.
Wahama came up big
with another huge stop midway through the final period
with Davis once again
bringing Brunoni down
short of the first down
marker at the Falcon six
yard
line. The
White
Falcon good fortunes were
short-lived however as the
. Bend Area team fumbled
the ball back to Parkersburg
Catholic seconds later and
the Crusader~ capitalized ·
on the ~S turnover with .
· a Brunom .to Zack Romine,
23 ·yard touchdown pass
pulling the ~ost team to
within four a:1 34-31 with
8:31 to play. .
Later in 'the quarter

Parkersburg
Catholic .
marched 80 yards in · 12
plays with Brunoni coming
up big on a pair of fourth
down opportunities for the
Crusaders. Brunoni ran 34
yards on a fourth and two
situation from the Crusaders
28 before capping off the
winning drive with a fourth
down, II yard pass to
Williams with just :47 to
play.
.
Wahama staged an exciting last minute finish following the go · ahead
Parkersburg Catholic score
as Zerkle returned the kickoff 19 yards to the Falcon
39. Zuspan hit Underwood
for a 26 yard gain .to the ·
Crusader 35 before a· pass
interference penalty moved
the football to the Catholic
20 with just three ·seconds
remaining. On the ~ Falcons
final play Zuspan tried a
last ditch· pass attempt into
the end zone but the toss fell
to
the
turf and
the
Parkersburg Catholic throng
breathed a sigh of relief
while the large Wahama
contingent stared in disbelief at the unfortunate turn
of events.
The White Falcons grueling four game road swing is
now history with Wahama
returning hom~ next week
for its senior night regular
season finale against visiting Buffalo, A victory over
the Bison would give the
Bend Area · gridders that
elusive seventh win of the
season and should also provide the Mason County
gridders
with enough
points to vault Wahama
mto the post season picture.

CLASSIFIED
Gallia
County
OH l~,.;...~·

In One Week With Us
classifiect@!;::~ribune.com REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS
D NOW

c:.r;:.::;...

M~""'"

Monday thru Friday
8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m
HOW

"""'''!Crures'1m"""
havebaen .
LOST-Forest Run At 7
placed In ada at
Area.2 DOGS,Smalt yel·
the Gallipolis
lowlsh color M.and F.
Dally Tribune
10123. pLEASE CALL:
must
be picked
74ll·416·0799-·····REWARD!!f!!l
within 30 daye.
Any pictures
Found on At 35, Jim .Hill
that are not
Ad ~ · craam color dog,
very
lriendly
picked will be
304·675·5560.
discarded.
Found· In tNT area
The Tribune
MDnday,
female
dog,
Olllce
has many
well
trained
unclaimed
304-674-4679.
pictures that will
Lost- Missing in Ambrosia area Fit 62 Scottish
be.discarded o~ .
Highland Bulf If found -call
December
31, 08.
304-456-1727.
i • 'If you think you
may have
forgotten
to pick
NOTICE OHIO VALLEY
up a picture you
PUBLISHING CO. reooni11'18fld8 th8t you do
have placed In
. ~~ 'wllh people yq~
the paper, p!Nse
khow, and NOT . to send
ffti'free to come·
.. mc.. ev through 1t1e mail
Into the office ·
until you have InvestigatIng the offering.
and took through
·the !hem.

•

Bu•ln•••

Jn Next Day'• Paper

Publication

Sunday In-Column: 9:00a.m.
For Sunday5 Paper

Now you can have borders and ~;~raphlcs
~ · addedto.yourclasslfledads
{.~
Borders $3.00/per ad
l!_iilll
Graphics SOC for small
$_1.00 for lal'(je

Sunday Dl•play: 1:00
Thuraday for Sunday•

• All ads must be prepaid"

KIT &amp; CARLYLE
300

Trvdls

SN\ h..~-.

Land(.......)

For public bid: The Meigs Exception al
200
acre
Senior Center will be ac· cattle farm In Gallia Co.
cepting sealed bids for OH.
60+
&amp;cfl\S
the purchase of our old well-drained
bottomland
meal trucks, Each truck along Raccoon CreeK.

Child 1 Elclorly ea..
Take care of elder1y or

someone close to Galli·
Days or nights.

Is equipped with a hot· 60+ acres pasture, bal·
shot utility truck bed; ance wooded. Stock wa·

polls,

&amp;45-5440

199\1 Dodge Dakota with te r pond, 2 aptings, well.
147,940 mites,
needs Farm has tarried 40-45
new head gaskets. 2001 cows wleatves. Modem
Chevy 8·10 with 63,941 brick ranch· style house

HOIIMIImpto•omw.ts
Small Home Repair and
.brush cutting tree Est. 20
yrs Exp. (740) 446-3682

miles,

Basement

parts.

won't start, prob· wl

lem unknown end 2001
Chevy

S-10

good

Unconditional lifetime
guarantee. ~ocal refer·
encies furnished. Established ~ 975. Call 24 Hrs.

any reason. For
tional
info
740·992·2161

0
t&gt;

•

740·446.()870, Rogers
Basement Waterproofing.

Rt.ll bl.l'~
Rt&gt;n!.1h
addi· ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ;
call

Call

coookmotors.com)
II•

Free l~tlngs With · up· to 3

· pictures. . www.740Ciassi:
fieds.com

www.comlcs.com

@ 2008

Cook Motors 326 Jacll·

3

eon Pike . 740-446.0103 ·

~

by NEA, Inc.

'

George's Portable Saw·
mifl, don't haul your Logs
to the Mill lust . call

1\fwtttmem/ .
Townhou,.,

Cars, Trucks, and GMC,
Salum, Buick SUV's with
warranty. Visit us at (go·

Sell your items online!

JSOO

WantToluy

OtMr Senicea
Pet
Cremations.
74{)-446-3745

walk-out

for=======

We reserve the
right to reject any bid for

Wllterprooltng

finished

basement. 937-596·6774 · ·

Clip this AD and take it
with you when you visit
our community to get
this special discount
.Move-in in Nov and get
$100.00 on your 2BR
Apt. in Dec. Currently
rfJnting 1 &amp; 2 BR units
SpaCious floor
rancl1 &amp; townhome I
living, playground &amp;

.

·
'

·

basketball coun, on-site
laundry facility, 24 hr

Wan1To luy

emergency mainte·
cation close to major
medical
facilities ,
pharmacies, grocery
store ...just minutes
away from other major
shopping in the area.

Honeysuckle Hills
,

CLASSIFIED INDEX

Legaii ......................................................... -10Q
Announcamente ............................ :............. 200
Blrthday/Annlvereary................................. 205
:da..
.2!0
01
oun ............................................... 215 .
' MtmO&lt;y/Thllnk You ..................................... 220
• Notlcea ............................., ........................... 225
Peraonola ................................. " .................. 230
f
Wanled ......................................::................ 235
Servlcea ....................................................... 300
Appliance Servlco ....................................... 302
Automotlve .................................................. 304
' Building Mllterlalo ....................................... 308

roprx

d..........................,....................

• Bualneu ...................................................... 308
Cllterlng ........................................................310
Chl~ldwly C......................................... 312
Computera ............................ ............. :......... S14
Controcto .................................................... 316
Domeetlca/Jonltorilll .............................~ ..... 318
Elf!'llrlcol .............. - ........~ ............................ 320

Flnanclal............................~····-············· ~······322
HaaHh ............................................ ,......,....... 328

Huttng &amp; Coollng ...........;:.......................... 328
. • Home Improvement• 330 '

21 .......
DIAIII! LYNCH - putllor
up£ ..nu..e._.dll on

'
,

tD'Miftc:tar ......

,Cou!IIJ.

'

DIAIII! LYNCH ... -

,

....

*'4 I .., . • OUR a.ll; vi
DIAN! LYNCH ......·.tong

etr!l ..... ~.
•
l

•
•
4

Cemetery Plota .......................................... 3005
Commerclal.....................................:..........3010
Conclomlnlumo ......................... ... .......... :... 3015

For Sa~e by Owner.....................................3020

Mual~rlfnll , •• .,............................... 338

Roollng .........................................................348

W..t 10 bUy" .............................................. 3040
Raal
Kon,.la .......,...................... , ....3500
A~
...-18/Townhauteo
,...,.,_,
_
......................... 3"co........clal......................................... ......3510
Condomlnlumo ..... ,.................................... 351ti

• uwn

•

Rocrutlonol VehiCIH ............................... 1000
ATV .................... :........................................ 1005
Blcycloa .................~ .................................... 1010
8011a/Acc-orlea ........ ,.:......................... 1015
CainperiRVol Trallora .. ........................... 1020
MotorcyciH ............................................... 1025
Other ..........................................................1030
Won11o buy ...............................................1035
Automotlva ................................................ 2000
Auto Rentai/LooH ............................ .........2005 ·
Auto1 ................... ....................................... 2010
Claoolc1Antlquaa ....................................... 2015
Cornmerclalllndu4trla1........................... ... 2020
Partl &amp; Acceaeorlea .•..•••••••...•. ••••:.............Z025
Sporto U1111ty .................. ......... ................... 2030
Trucko.........................................................2035
Utility Trallera ............................................ 2040
Vano ............................................................2045
Wan! to buy .............................. .......... .......2050
ROll Estate Saleo ..................................... . 3000

HoUIIe:l tor Sale ............... ...................... ~ ...3025
Land (AcrHge) .......................................... 3030
Lota ................................................:...........3035

lnaurance .............................................'.•...•.. 332
Servlee ...................... - ........... :........... 334

•.

Tax/Accounting .......:................................... 350
Trovoi/Entartalnrnont ................c................. 352
Flnanclal ..c............................................... .....&lt;IOO
Flnan&lt;:lal Sarvlcoe....................................... 405
lnourance ................................................. ... 410
Money to Lond ........................... , ................. 415
Educatlon ..................................................... 500
BuoiMH &amp; T.- School ........................... 505
lna1rUctlon &amp; Trolnlng ................................. 510
LHoona ....................................................... 515
Peroonol ...............- ...................................... 520
Anlmala .•.••••..•......•••.••••.•••••...•.••••••.••••.•.•••...•&amp;OO
Anl~l Supplloo .......................................... 805.
Ho!'HI .......................................................... 810
Uveatock......................... :..................... ""'"l15
l20
Pota...............................................................
.
Want to buy .................................................. ns
Agriculture ...........- ........................ .............. 700
Fann Equipment....................................... ... 70S
Gorden a Procluce ......................................:710
Hay, Feed, s.d, G.. ln ............................... 715
Hunting A I.MKI ........................................... 720
Went to buy ...............................................:.. m
MorcllllndiM ................................................ IOO
Antlquea .....................................c.................I06
Appltance.: ................................................... 910
Auctlono ...... .. ................................... ............ 815
Blrgaln 811111111nt ....................................... l20
CollectlbiM .................................................. ns
Computera ........................... ........................ l30
Equl"""'nt1Supplloo .................................... l35
Ftea Mertc:eta ................................................ MO
Fuol Oil COei/WoodiGao ............................. 1145
Furnlture ...................................................... eso
Hobby/Hunt &amp; Sport .................................... tl55
Kid's ConMr .................................................!IIO
Mlacellaneoua ..............................................l85

Want to touy .................................................. il70
• Yarct Sail ..................................................... 175

e.-

~•

Hou•• far Rent ..................... -,.................. 3520
l.and (Acreege) ................. ,....;...................3525
S1oroge ....................................................... 3535
W..t 10 Rent .......................................... .... 3540
Manufactured Houolng.~ ........................... 4000
Lata .............................................................&lt;I005
- . .........................................................4010
Rontala ....................................................... 4015
Saloo ...................., ...................................... 4020
Suppllol ........................... .......................... 4025
W..t 10 Buy ........................:...... .. .............c4030
Reac&gt;rt Prvperty .......................... ............... sooo
R..ort Property tor aale ........................... 5025
Rooort Property lor 1'11nt ........................... 5050
Employmoon1...............................................11000
A•·~···•.untln-IE:'Inanclol
8002
~
"'"
...............................
Admtnlatrotlva/ProfeHional.
.....................6004
Call!lor/Cierk .................................. c.......... 8006
Child/Elderly Core ..................................... 8008
Clerlcal ........................... ....... ,...; ................ 8010
Conatructlon .............................................. 8012
DriYIII'I &amp; O.ll..ry ......,.............................. 8014
Educallon ................................................... 8016 ·
Electrical Ptumblng ................... ................ 6018
EmplOyment Agencloo ......................... .....8020
Entartalnment ............................................ 8022
Food Servfcoe............................................8024
Gc.•••onent I F-ral Jobs ....................8026
Help ented- Gonoral ...........................:..... ,8028
lllw' Entorcernent ...................:.................. 6030
Malnt~atlc .............. ...............6032
ManegementiSupervloory ........................ 80~
Mectulnlca ..................................................eo36
- ... 1.......................................................1038
Mualcal ....................................................... 6040

Part-TI1ii11-Tampo"'rlol .......................... ... 8042
-uranta ... ,........................................... 8044
S.lea ...........................................................I048
--hnlcel ~.
8050 .
Ttitlllea/Foctory ......................................... 8052

.....

.._ .......................................

.~~----------------~~~~~

•

I

Apartments

266 Colonial Drive lf:113
Bidwell, Ohio 45614 ·
.
740·446·3344
Office Hours M, W, F
9AM · 5PM

•

DIANE LYNCHIIoo-la

t' '

Dally In-Column: 9:00 a.m.
Mond~y-Prlday for In•ertton

YOUR CLASSIFJED LINE AD NOTICED

nance, quiet country lo·

... Cloltl , _ _ tlor

r

OearlliirM

304-675-1957

IIUI.IIIIIr lllrllll11ns.

,.....c-~r-..-

· .

kitncarlyle@comcast.net

· "'· • 5ecurlty .......~ ................................................ 348

Je

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• Stlrt Your Ad1 With A K..,word • Jnduda Complete
Detcrtptton • Jndude A Pric. • Avoid Abbrevbltlon1
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1UcciiST.ii'Ads
Should Include These Items
, To Help Get Response •••

l\egt~ter

(740) 446-2342 (740) 992-2156 (304) 675-1333

________.....;:O~r,.;,F,::ax To (740) 446-3008

Olho• s.. . -..,............. ,............................338
Plumblng/Eioclrl.. l..................................... 340
ProfeHional
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epa .................................................:......... 344

lmo I

Sentinel

Wprd Ad!i

team kept making adjust- from over. We've got to
ments ani! Johnson was able 'fight hard , and continue to
to regain some of his lost fight hard. We go to a weat
ground, although he never track for us next week.' .
got back on the lead lap.
Biffle, who finished fifth,
"Not the day we wanted," also kept his hopes alive in
Johnson said. "It's frustrat- the Chase, remaining third
ing."
as "he came from 185 points
Asked about Edwards behind Johnson to 143 back.
gambling on running the
Fourth-place Jeff Bunon,
final69li!P.s without;.ntting, who began the day 218
Johnson said, "I don t know points behind, finished 13th
all the details Y.llt. But, from and gained only six points,
where'I''hi sitting, theyhad vinually elimmating him
a J!OOd ·cbailce to make up from contention.
ramts .,on. qs, they ,didn't
Jamie ·McMurray, who
, ave to:,wm ~ ~-., .
, led late in the race before
" 'llild what IUs 1ea'd ts now, having .,to pit, wound liP
with races at Phoenix and · third, followed by Clint
Homest.ead
remaining, Bowyer, Biffle and Kyle
Johnson said, "It's still far · Busch.

speech to the rest of the
offense a day earlier.
"We were staning to let
teams think they could
come in here and wall&gt; over
us," Whitworth said. "I told
the guys the last thing we
are going to do is be a joke
or a punk to somebody."
After his 10-yard touchdown catch ma.de it 14-0,
Ocho Cinco flipped the ball
to the official , went to the
sideline and gave coach
Marvin Lewis a peck on the
cheek, the second time he's
done that this season. ·
The Bengals were sweating it out at the end. The
Jaguars are the only team.in
the league with all of its
games decides by seven
points or fewer this season,
and made ttiis one close,
too. It ended as another
near-miss.
"I know we're a good
team, so to be behind the 8ball like this is unbelievable," Jaguars defensive
lineman Reggie Hayward
said. "Gettin~ upset won't
stop the pain . '

~rthunt

To Place ·.

NLIN

W8bsrtes:
www.mydailytribune.com
www.mydailys11nlinel.com
www.mydailyregister.com

.'

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Private drivB oH Uncoln
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Pomeroy,
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RV SeNice at Carmi- woods on lt1ree sides
':'
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' Trailers (4+)acres, to a historical
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home. · Circa 1900, 5
GoldBn Retr. pick up Nov HEAP
locepted,
bedrooms, 2 fireplaces, 2
. 21 $350. 367.()637
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full baths. 2 staircases.
CKC Rat terriers 6 wks
beautiful original wood·
Miact'ansaUI
wor11., many picture win·
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$100
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or Jet Aeration Moton~ re-~.-.,;;~,;-,..!!"""-~ paired, new &amp; rebuit In
3 Jack Russel Terriers 1 stock. ·Call ~on Evans,
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Meigs
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740-985·4 138
CKC Mahese pups. F11male $550. Male $500
740-256·1498
malo
FOUND:
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from
Wilcoxen
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Completely tut·
with WID . No
pets, Ref. Req. 441·0245

Apa11ment av~ilable now
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Apts .
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$

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03 Cavalier, 20A, 4 cyt.
auto, · AC , power locka,

23,300

miles,

available

dows, large kitchen and ror Senior and Disabled

4 Boston Temers. 2 m, 2
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remote entry, CO. 72K.
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ea For
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iT40)992·27~
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AKC Aeg.Lab puppies 304-675·3325.
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3 rtm~s and bath up-

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wrsp around porct! and
enjoy tl1e spec;tacular
_._ of ~- Oh' A'
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10 Ner. 2
car detached garage and
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8

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SPECTACULAR VIEW
2BR garage Apartment,
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only, downtown , S-425 mlt1 rent
Specie!. 20 oz. Commer· 97 Dodge Intrepid auto- plaase call740-992·3678
+ utllities, NO PETS.

speed, T Top. $12,500.

5

cial Carpet $6.95/yard. metic VB $1800 000. For s1 i&lt; 2 •01)' " 241 J Mt ~446-04:::;::;:.:;!~-..,..~,;,
Several
Colors. 256·1 652 or 256-1233
Vernon , Ave Pt Pleasanl, Free
Rent
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Low Prieasl
Trucb
Air, WID hookup, torlant
pays electric. EHO Elm
NEW AND USED STEEL ·
t 985 Ford f·250, ~
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Stool Beams. Pipe Rebar
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Angle, rnech. sound $2000.00 Trade- t 995 ctrevy Con·
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CloSed ract&lt;s , CD player, 350
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740-591-517~
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�--· -···- ·--- ·--- ... -

. Page Ba • The Daily Sentinel

r

'

'•

Poll

'

Rally-

Top 25 Fared:

from PageBl

Nil 1 T - (&amp;-1) looiiD No.8 T Tcii:JII.33.
'
.... 2 ~ (9-0) boat~
Slol831!-0.
No.3 Penn- (9-0) did nol po,.
Nll40tdollomo(&amp;-1)-82·28.
No. 5 Florido (M) boat No. I

rromPagest
ing on its game winning
dnve . PCHS ran 52 running plays and another 23
passing opponunities and
of those 74 · offensive
Parkersburg
attempts
Catholic had only two .plays
go for negative yardage and
four other snaps that failed
to
generate
positive
yardage.
PCHS totaled 24 first
downs .and held a 429-365
edge in total yaroage in the
hard-hitting affair but
despite the offensive statistical adyantage Wahama
had the Crusaders on their
heels thanks to a 20 point
third quarter that turned a
17-14 halftime deficit into a
34-24 lead. A fourth down
desperation pass from
Brunoni to quarterback
JlJ,son Williams proved to be
the deciding factor as
Williams went ~hove a pair
of Falcon defenders in the
_end zone for the II yard,
winning TD with just 47
seconds
remaining.
Wabama nearly pulled off
some last-second heroics
of its own by taking the
ensuing kickoff and marching to the Crusader 20 but
Zuspan 's pass into the end
zone as time ' ran out fell
untouched
onto
the
Pa~ke~sburg High School
anificial. turf.
Wahama capitalized on a
pair of Catholic turnovers,
the first of which came on
the ope~ing kickoff. when
Garrett Underwood came

;beat Arkansas State 35-0,
;received 46 of a possible 65
:first-place votes from the Goorgla 48-1Q,
jnedia panel and 1,600
No. 6 T- Ted! ~ - No.;
.
:points . Texas Tech got 12 r-3&amp;-33.
No. 7
Col (7:1i . ~!-place votes and I ,528
· pomts and Penn State had six t&gt;.1'C~(7-2f looi 19 Na. 5
•
~ and 1,525. The Gators -48-10.
..,.
•
;a
r
•
....
(1.11 l!oot
:received the other No. I vote,
~~t.:
,,
: The ·top spot in the poll t~JG r,:;:'.ftl':. ~~ ,L_"
"~
:hasn't been ·held by this
No. 11 llotl!e Ill* (Fa) ~t :many teams since 1990, l'l!llo(11'-1)
&lt;10-().. . .
. •.....,;
~~'. ~M,:
• '
No. 12TCU
. ·when Miami, Notre Dame,
No. 13 ~$loll (7-1) did l'lbt ....
:'Colorado, Michigan and :.1~~ (7-1)~ .........~1·
.Vrrginia all had a tum at No
No.15 ~2) ""',.,.. 3&amp;-)0;
·I
No. ~·
·,!lllolt'"'"&gt;lilooltp'
,: .Georgia started this season Go!irvio
'fo/ilta1tll,'{r , . ' .
:No. I and was replaced by . No. 17 IMJ&gt;(f-1) ~.tot Coiocldol
:SOuthern California after the ~re:t-~,:..,nol~·
No. 18 1IJioil (&amp;.1f toil .. AiMnou
:opening week.
•
.
' USC lasted four weeks 3Q.-23.
No. 20 MtnnliiOta (1-2) toot to
:before being upset by Noo•••wtem _U-17. ·
No. 21 Norlh ,Comllna (6'2) did 1101
.Oregon State and Oklahoma
pt'¥
'' '
,. '
:took the top spot. The
Nd. 22. Mlcliigan State '(8'2)· bOat
;sooners were No. I for two Wilconilln ·2M!4.
No. 20 Q.,gon (8-3) too'llil catlloml•
•weeks, then lost to Texas, 26-16,
'
.
:which held the top spot for
No. 24 South (6-3) loJt to
Clncir1NII24-10, 'lhutoday. · •
~three weeks.
. No. 25 ~nd (6-2) did JIOII'I&amp;I'.
: Now it's Alabama's tum .
.
.· The Crimson Tide hasn't got a shake-up, too.
Sou!hem
California
is
No.
:been No . I since finishing
:mat way after the 1992 sea- · 7, and the final two spots in
:son, when coach Gene the top 10 are held by poten:Stallings, quarterback· Jay tial BCS Busters - No. 9
Barker and a ferocious Boise State of .the Western
defense won the' last of the Athletic Conference and No.
10 ·· Utah, which hosts ·
·Tide's six AP national chamMountain
.West Conference
J1ionships.
rival and No. II TCU in a
Alabama's first game as a Thursday
night game that
'No. I team since October, could decide the league title.
.27, 1980, will be Saturday at
Ohio State is No. 12, folLSU, a date that was one of lowed by Missouri , Georgia
the most anticipated in the and LSU .
southeastern Conference
j:&lt;o . 16 Ball State is the
even before this season.
lowest ranked of the six
Tide coach Nick Saban remaining unbeaten major
will be coaching in Baton college teams in the country.
'.
Rouge, La., for the first time The Cardinals of the Mid~since he left the Tigers forth~ American Conference play
NFL after the 2004 season. Wednesday night against
Saban led LSU to a BCS Nonhem Illinois.
.from Page
national title in 2003.
No. 17 BYU, Michigan
-: So the Tide, with its new State, Nonh Carolina and ·
:lofty status, will face a stiff West Virginia, back in the lap event.
. But, as the laps wound
:test immediately. Same goes rankings after falling out in
down
and the cars ahead of
·for Texas Tech, which had mid-September, complete
Edwards' No . 99 Ford ·
never been ranked higher the top 20.
than No . 5 . The Red Raiders
No. 21 California, No. 22 began pitting for two tires
:host No. 8 Oklahoma State Georgia Tech and No. 25 and gas, Osborne told
:on Saturday, then have a Pittsburgh re-entered ·the Edwards to stay on the
track. ·
·
:week off before a road trip to rankings.
Still,
it
was
guesswork
to
:No. 6 Oklahoma.
Maryland is No. 23 and
the
end,.
with
Osborne
first
:. Penn State next plays at No. 24 Florida State dropped
:'Iowa.
·
eight spots after losing at · telling his driver to con: Seven ranked teams lost Georgia Tech.
· · serve fuel because he was
last weekend, most from the · Falling out of the Top · 25 going tp be a half-lap short,
:lower half of the rankings, so were Minnesota, . Tulsa, · then saying he was four laps
short. In the end, he went
;the back end of the Top 25 Oregon and South Florida.

-o:

f

Edwards
.Bl

Bengals·

right now."
Fitzpatrick, who studied
the laws of economics at
Harvard. helped the law of
fromPageBl
a.~erages catch up with his .
wmless team. The scram~ founh-quarter touchdown ,
bling
quanerback looked a
:and David Garrard led a late lot more
comfortable in his
·drive that culminated in fourth straight start for .the
:Maurice Jones-Drew's !yard
with I: 17 to go. injured Carson Palmer,
going 21-of-31 for 162
:Garrard failed to squeeze a yards.
:pass into double-covered
He gave them hope on the
::Jerry Poner on the conver- opening
drive.
::sion try.
In their eight previous
: The game ended on one
opening
drives this season,
·of those multiple-lateral
the
Bengals
failed to get a
:plays t!Jat ended with the
first
down
.
This time,
ball dribbling out of
completed
bounds . The 64,238 fans Fitzpatrick
seven
of
eight
passes
and
raised their arms in celebrabroke
loose
on
a
pair
of
,tion of an unexpected win.
· The Bengals were com- long scrambles. Ocho
ing off the most lopsided Cinco made a diving 2-yard
back-to-hack losses in fran- c'atch in the corner of the
chise ' history. One more end zone, then ran along the
would have left them 0-9 sideline with both arms outfor only the second time in stretched ·in wonder.
Indeed , it was a wonder:
'team history.
The
offense's first touch"Being 0-for-whatever-itin the first quaner
was coming in, there was a down
this season. .
lot of pressure and lot of
Fitzpatrick was inspired
frustration for everybody,
from the staff to the equip- by Whitwonh's get-tough
ment managers," said running back Cedric Benson,
·who ran for 104 yards and a
touchdown . "Everybody's
trying to figure out what's
wrong."
.
Now, the Jaguars have to
do some figuring .
~gain, they had problems
trymg to run the ball behind
a patched-up line . Garrard
!hrew fus frrst interception
m five · games, breaking a
streak of 166 passes with_out one. That rare, poor
·throw set up a touchdown
that put the Bengals ahead
21-3.
Frustration boiled over as
'the Bengals pulled ahead.
Jaguars defensive tackle
'1ohn
Henderson
and
Whitworth were ejected for
trading blows while block·ing each other on a play.
"We're not fum;tioning
·with a ·high level of confi:dence," coach Jack Del Rio
said. "We're missing a
spark, and we're trying to
find it. It hasn 't been good
enough, and I've said . it
enough different ways.
"I'm not in a good mood

run

a

up with the loose pigskin to
give the White Falcons the
football at the Crusader 36
yard line. Seven plays later
Zuspa{l scrambled around
th~ left side and found
Underwood in the end zone
for a 12 yard scoring pass
for the six points . zerkle
kept the Bend Area teams
drive alive earlier in the
series with a 22 yard run on
a founh down, fake punt.
Zerkle's bOot for the PAT
gave WHS an early 7-0
advantage.
Catholic answered with a
long 73 yard. 16 play drive
· to even the count late in the
opc:ning period. Brunoni,
who toted the ball nine
times in the series went the
final three yards with Gino
DeMaio knocking down the
p()int after attempt to even
the count at 7-7.
The hosts surged into the
lead on its next possession
but had to settle for a 28
yard Gino DeMaio field
goal after Colby Davis
stopped Brunoni for no gain
at the White Falcon II yard
line on a fourth and two 'sitnation. DeMaio's
boot
gave Parkersburg Catholic
· a 10-7 lead with 5:52 to
play in the second quarter.
The Crusaders increased
its advantage to 17-7 with
I :47 left in the half when
Williams connected with
Cole Cwynar on a 49 yard
scl)ring
toss. Again
DeMaio drove the PAT Jcick
through the uprights on the
point after try.
Wahama closed .the gap
just before the half ended
when, after successive
penalties · backed · the
the fmal 103.5 miles on his
last fill-up.
"I ,knew by default he
wa~n t too sure about it,"
Edwards said. ''I'm glad it
worked out. Unreal."
Johnson, who won this
race a year ago, staned seventh Sunday but quickly
found himself in trouble,
struggling with the handling
on his No. _48 Chevrolet and
sliding back through the
field.
Edwards put him a hip
down on lap 96 as Johnson
, slippel,l a_ll th~ way to 33rd,
after a:pit stop on lap 113.
At that point, with Edwards
leadinJ!·· Johnson was only
64 pomts ahead. But· his

www.Dtydallysentlnel.com

Monday, November 3, 2008

www.mydailysentinel.com

Falcons up to its own five
yard line, Zerkle broke free
thanks to a pair of open
field blocks by . Trey
Anderson and Underwood.
The fleet-footed running
back outraced the entire
Catholic defense and ran 95
yards to paydin with the
successful PAT kick making
it a 17-14 score at the half.
The third quaner was .
nearly all Wahama as th~
Bend Area team tallied 2()
poinh in the period on II one
yard ruri by Zerkle, a 21
yard pass from · Zuspan to
'Underwood and a 30 yard
pass from Underwood ·to
Zerkle. Brunoni continued
to pound the White Falcon
defense to avoid the third
quarter
shutout
by
Parkersburg Catholic with
the senior fullback capping
another long· Crusader drive
with his second three yard
touchdown run of the night
to make it a 34-24 contest ·
with 12 minutes to play.
Wahama came up big
with another huge stop midway through the final period
with Davis once again
bringing Brunoni down
short of the first down
marker at the Falcon six
yard
line. The
White
Falcon good fortunes were
short-lived however as the
. Bend Area team fumbled
the ball back to Parkersburg
Catholic seconds later and
the Crusader~ capitalized ·
on the ~S turnover with .
· a Brunom .to Zack Romine,
23 ·yard touchdown pass
pulling the ~ost team to
within four a:1 34-31 with
8:31 to play. .
Later in 'the quarter

Parkersburg
Catholic .
marched 80 yards in · 12
plays with Brunoni coming
up big on a pair of fourth
down opportunities for the
Crusaders. Brunoni ran 34
yards on a fourth and two
situation from the Crusaders
28 before capping off the
winning drive with a fourth
down, II yard pass to
Williams with just :47 to
play.
.
Wahama staged an exciting last minute finish following the go · ahead
Parkersburg Catholic score
as Zerkle returned the kickoff 19 yards to the Falcon
39. Zuspan hit Underwood
for a 26 yard gain .to the ·
Crusader 35 before a· pass
interference penalty moved
the football to the Catholic
20 with just three ·seconds
remaining. On the ~ Falcons
final play Zuspan tried a
last ditch· pass attempt into
the end zone but the toss fell
to
the
turf and
the
Parkersburg Catholic throng
breathed a sigh of relief
while the large Wahama
contingent stared in disbelief at the unfortunate turn
of events.
The White Falcons grueling four game road swing is
now history with Wahama
returning hom~ next week
for its senior night regular
season finale against visiting Buffalo, A victory over
the Bison would give the
Bend Area · gridders that
elusive seventh win of the
season and should also provide the Mason County
gridders
with enough
points to vault Wahama
mto the post season picture.

CLASSIFIED
Gallia
County
OH l~,.;...~·

In One Week With Us
classifiect@!;::~ribune.com REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS
D NOW

c:.r;:.::;...

M~""'"

Monday thru Friday
8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m
HOW

"""'''!Crures'1m"""
havebaen .
LOST-Forest Run At 7
placed In ada at
Area.2 DOGS,Smalt yel·
the Gallipolis
lowlsh color M.and F.
Dally Tribune
10123. pLEASE CALL:
must
be picked
74ll·416·0799-·····REWARD!!f!!l
within 30 daye.
Any pictures
Found on At 35, Jim .Hill
that are not
Ad ~ · craam color dog,
very
lriendly
picked will be
304·675·5560.
discarded.
Found· In tNT area
The Tribune
MDnday,
female
dog,
Olllce
has many
well
trained
unclaimed
304-674-4679.
pictures that will
Lost- Missing in Ambrosia area Fit 62 Scottish
be.discarded o~ .
Highland Bulf If found -call
December
31, 08.
304-456-1727.
i • 'If you think you
may have
forgotten
to pick
NOTICE OHIO VALLEY
up a picture you
PUBLISHING CO. reooni11'18fld8 th8t you do
have placed In
. ~~ 'wllh people yq~
the paper, p!Nse
khow, and NOT . to send
ffti'free to come·
.. mc.. ev through 1t1e mail
Into the office ·
until you have InvestigatIng the offering.
and took through
·the !hem.

•

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KIT &amp; CARLYLE
300

Trvdls

SN\ h..~-.

Land(.......)

For public bid: The Meigs Exception al
200
acre
Senior Center will be ac· cattle farm In Gallia Co.
cepting sealed bids for OH.
60+
&amp;cfl\S
the purchase of our old well-drained
bottomland
meal trucks, Each truck along Raccoon CreeK.

Child 1 Elclorly ea..
Take care of elder1y or

someone close to Galli·
Days or nights.

Is equipped with a hot· 60+ acres pasture, bal·
shot utility truck bed; ance wooded. Stock wa·

polls,

&amp;45-5440

199\1 Dodge Dakota with te r pond, 2 aptings, well.
147,940 mites,
needs Farm has tarried 40-45
new head gaskets. 2001 cows wleatves. Modem
Chevy 8·10 with 63,941 brick ranch· style house

HOIIMIImpto•omw.ts
Small Home Repair and
.brush cutting tree Est. 20
yrs Exp. (740) 446-3682

miles,

Basement

parts.

won't start, prob· wl

lem unknown end 2001
Chevy

S-10

good

Unconditional lifetime
guarantee. ~ocal refer·
encies furnished. Established ~ 975. Call 24 Hrs.

any reason. For
tional
info
740·992·2161

0
t&gt;

•

740·446.()870, Rogers
Basement Waterproofing.

Rt.ll bl.l'~
Rt&gt;n!.1h
addi· ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ;
call

Call

coookmotors.com)
II•

Free l~tlngs With · up· to 3

· pictures. . www.740Ciassi:
fieds.com

www.comlcs.com

@ 2008

Cook Motors 326 Jacll·

3

eon Pike . 740-446.0103 ·

~

by NEA, Inc.

'

George's Portable Saw·
mifl, don't haul your Logs
to the Mill lust . call

1\fwtttmem/ .
Townhou,.,

Cars, Trucks, and GMC,
Salum, Buick SUV's with
warranty. Visit us at (go·

Sell your items online!

JSOO

WantToluy

OtMr Senicea
Pet
Cremations.
74{)-446-3745

walk-out

for=======

We reserve the
right to reject any bid for

Wllterprooltng

finished

basement. 937-596·6774 · ·

Clip this AD and take it
with you when you visit
our community to get
this special discount
.Move-in in Nov and get
$100.00 on your 2BR
Apt. in Dec. Currently
rfJnting 1 &amp; 2 BR units
SpaCious floor
rancl1 &amp; townhome I
living, playground &amp;

.

·
'

·

basketball coun, on-site
laundry facility, 24 hr

Wan1To luy

emergency mainte·
cation close to major
medical
facilities ,
pharmacies, grocery
store ...just minutes
away from other major
shopping in the area.

Honeysuckle Hills
,

CLASSIFIED INDEX

Legaii ......................................................... -10Q
Announcamente ............................ :............. 200
Blrthday/Annlvereary................................. 205
:da..
.2!0
01
oun ............................................... 215 .
' MtmO&lt;y/Thllnk You ..................................... 220
• Notlcea ............................., ........................... 225
Peraonola ................................. " .................. 230
f
Wanled ......................................::................ 235
Servlcea ....................................................... 300
Appliance Servlco ....................................... 302
Automotlve .................................................. 304
' Building Mllterlalo ....................................... 308

roprx

d..........................,....................

• Bualneu ...................................................... 308
Cllterlng ........................................................310
Chl~ldwly C......................................... 312
Computera ............................ ............. :......... S14
Controcto .................................................... 316
Domeetlca/Jonltorilll .............................~ ..... 318
Elf!'llrlcol .............. - ........~ ............................ 320

Flnanclal............................~····-············· ~······322
HaaHh ............................................ ,......,....... 328

Huttng &amp; Coollng ...........;:.......................... 328
. • Home Improvement• 330 '

21 .......
DIAIII! LYNCH - putllor
up£ ..nu..e._.dll on

'
,

tD'Miftc:tar ......

,Cou!IIJ.

'

DIAIII! LYNCH ... -

,

....

*'4 I .., . • OUR a.ll; vi
DIAN! LYNCH ......·.tong

etr!l ..... ~.
•
l

•
•
4

Cemetery Plota .......................................... 3005
Commerclal.....................................:..........3010
Conclomlnlumo ......................... ... .......... :... 3015

For Sa~e by Owner.....................................3020

Mual~rlfnll , •• .,............................... 338

Roollng .........................................................348

W..t 10 bUy" .............................................. 3040
Raal
Kon,.la .......,...................... , ....3500
A~
...-18/Townhauteo
,...,.,_,
_
......................... 3"co........clal......................................... ......3510
Condomlnlumo ..... ,.................................... 351ti

• uwn

•

Rocrutlonol VehiCIH ............................... 1000
ATV .................... :........................................ 1005
Blcycloa .................~ .................................... 1010
8011a/Acc-orlea ........ ,.:......................... 1015
CainperiRVol Trallora .. ........................... 1020
MotorcyciH ............................................... 1025
Other ..........................................................1030
Won11o buy ...............................................1035
Automotlva ................................................ 2000
Auto Rentai/LooH ............................ .........2005 ·
Auto1 ................... ....................................... 2010
Claoolc1Antlquaa ....................................... 2015
Cornmerclalllndu4trla1........................... ... 2020
Partl &amp; Acceaeorlea .•..•••••••...•. ••••:.............Z025
Sporto U1111ty .................. ......... ................... 2030
Trucko.........................................................2035
Utility Trallera ............................................ 2040
Vano ............................................................2045
Wan! to buy .............................. .......... .......2050
ROll Estate Saleo ..................................... . 3000

HoUIIe:l tor Sale ............... ...................... ~ ...3025
Land (AcrHge) .......................................... 3030
Lota ................................................:...........3035

lnaurance .............................................'.•...•.. 332
Servlee ...................... - ........... :........... 334

•.

Tax/Accounting .......:................................... 350
Trovoi/Entartalnrnont ................c................. 352
Flnanclal ..c............................................... .....&lt;IOO
Flnan&lt;:lal Sarvlcoe....................................... 405
lnourance ................................................. ... 410
Money to Lond ........................... , ................. 415
Educatlon ..................................................... 500
BuoiMH &amp; T.- School ........................... 505
lna1rUctlon &amp; Trolnlng ................................. 510
LHoona ....................................................... 515
Peroonol ...............- ...................................... 520
Anlmala .•.••••..•......•••.••••.•••••...•.••••••.••••.•.•••...•&amp;OO
Anl~l Supplloo .......................................... 805.
Ho!'HI .......................................................... 810
Uveatock......................... :..................... ""'"l15
l20
Pota...............................................................
.
Want to buy .................................................. ns
Agriculture ...........- ........................ .............. 700
Fann Equipment....................................... ... 70S
Gorden a Procluce ......................................:710
Hay, Feed, s.d, G.. ln ............................... 715
Hunting A I.MKI ........................................... 720
Went to buy ...............................................:.. m
MorcllllndiM ................................................ IOO
Antlquea .....................................c.................I06
Appltance.: ................................................... 910
Auctlono ...... .. ................................... ............ 815
Blrgaln 811111111nt ....................................... l20
CollectlbiM .................................................. ns
Computera ........................... ........................ l30
Equl"""'nt1Supplloo .................................... l35
Ftea Mertc:eta ................................................ MO
Fuol Oil COei/WoodiGao ............................. 1145
Furnlture ...................................................... eso
Hobby/Hunt &amp; Sport .................................... tl55
Kid's ConMr .................................................!IIO
Mlacellaneoua ..............................................l85

Want to touy .................................................. il70
• Yarct Sail ..................................................... 175

e.-

~•

Hou•• far Rent ..................... -,.................. 3520
l.and (Acreege) ................. ,....;...................3525
S1oroge ....................................................... 3535
W..t 10 Rent .......................................... .... 3540
Manufactured Houolng.~ ........................... 4000
Lata .............................................................&lt;I005
- . .........................................................4010
Rontala ....................................................... 4015
Saloo ...................., ...................................... 4020
Suppllol ........................... .......................... 4025
W..t 10 Buy ........................:...... .. .............c4030
Reac&gt;rt Prvperty .......................... ............... sooo
R..ort Property tor aale ........................... 5025
Rooort Property lor 1'11nt ........................... 5050
Employmoon1...............................................11000
A•·~···•.untln-IE:'Inanclol
8002
~
"'"
...............................
Admtnlatrotlva/ProfeHional.
.....................6004
Call!lor/Cierk .................................. c.......... 8006
Child/Elderly Core ..................................... 8008
Clerlcal ........................... ....... ,...; ................ 8010
Conatructlon .............................................. 8012
DriYIII'I &amp; O.ll..ry ......,.............................. 8014
Educallon ................................................... 8016 ·
Electrical Ptumblng ................... ................ 6018
EmplOyment Agencloo ......................... .....8020
Entartalnment ............................................ 8022
Food Servfcoe............................................8024
Gc.•••onent I F-ral Jobs ....................8026
Help ented- Gonoral ...........................:..... ,8028
lllw' Entorcernent ...................:.................. 6030
Malnt~atlc .............. ...............6032
ManegementiSupervloory ........................ 80~
Mectulnlca ..................................................eo36
- ... 1.......................................................1038
Mualcal ....................................................... 6040

Part-TI1ii11-Tampo"'rlol .......................... ... 8042
-uranta ... ,........................................... 8044
S.lea ...........................................................I048
--hnlcel ~.
8050 .
Ttitlllea/Foctory ......................................... 8052

.....

.._ .......................................

.~~----------------~~~~~

•

I

Apartments

266 Colonial Drive lf:113
Bidwell, Ohio 45614 ·
.
740·446·3344
Office Hours M, W, F
9AM · 5PM

•

DIANE LYNCHIIoo-la

t' '

Dally In-Column: 9:00 a.m.
Mond~y-Prlday for In•ertton

YOUR CLASSIFJED LINE AD NOTICED

nance, quiet country lo·

... Cloltl , _ _ tlor

r

OearlliirM

304-675-1957

IIUI.IIIIIr lllrllll11ns.

,.....c-~r-..-

· .

kitncarlyle@comcast.net

· "'· • 5ecurlty .......~ ................................................ 348

Je

Or Fax To .

• Stlrt Your Ad1 With A K..,word • Jnduda Complete
Detcrtptton • Jndude A Pric. • Avoid Abbrevbltlon1
• Include Phone Number An" Addreu Wh•n N..clecl
• ~· Should Run 7 Dip

· Notlceo

lYIIIIs

----- - -

m WRliE. Afi 6Q

1UcciiST.ii'Ads
Should Include These Items
, To Help Get Response •••

l\egt~ter

(740) 446-2342 (740) 992-2156 (304) 675-1333

________.....;:O~r,.;,F,::ax To (740) 446-3008

Olho• s.. . -..,............. ,............................338
Plumblng/Eioclrl.. l..................................... 340
ProfeHional
Servleoe ................................. 342
R
I
epa .................................................:......... 344

lmo I

Sentinel

Wprd Ad!i

team kept making adjust- from over. We've got to
ments ani! Johnson was able 'fight hard , and continue to
to regain some of his lost fight hard. We go to a weat
ground, although he never track for us next week.' .
got back on the lead lap.
Biffle, who finished fifth,
"Not the day we wanted," also kept his hopes alive in
Johnson said. "It's frustrat- the Chase, remaining third
ing."
as "he came from 185 points
Asked about Edwards behind Johnson to 143 back.
gambling on running the
Fourth-place Jeff Bunon,
final69li!P.s without;.ntting, who began the day 218
Johnson said, "I don t know points behind, finished 13th
all the details Y.llt. But, from and gained only six points,
where'I''hi sitting, theyhad vinually elimmating him
a J!OOd ·cbailce to make up from contention.
ramts .,on. qs, they ,didn't
Jamie ·McMurray, who
, ave to:,wm ~ ~-., .
, led late in the race before
" 'llild what IUs 1ea'd ts now, having .,to pit, wound liP
with races at Phoenix and · third, followed by Clint
Homest.ead
remaining, Bowyer, Biffle and Kyle
Johnson said, "It's still far · Busch.

speech to the rest of the
offense a day earlier.
"We were staning to let
teams think they could
come in here and wall&gt; over
us," Whitworth said. "I told
the guys the last thing we
are going to do is be a joke
or a punk to somebody."
After his 10-yard touchdown catch ma.de it 14-0,
Ocho Cinco flipped the ball
to the official , went to the
sideline and gave coach
Marvin Lewis a peck on the
cheek, the second time he's
done that this season. ·
The Bengals were sweating it out at the end. The
Jaguars are the only team.in
the league with all of its
games decides by seven
points or fewer this season,
and made ttiis one close,
too. It ended as another
near-miss.
"I know we're a good
team, so to be behind the 8ball like this is unbelievable," Jaguars defensive
lineman Reggie Hayward
said. "Gettin~ upset won't
stop the pain . '

~rthunt

To Place ·.

NLIN

W8bsrtes:
www.mydailytribune.com
www.mydailys11nlinel.com
www.mydailyregister.com

.'

~~~ ~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; Extrlordlnery Property:
RV
Splc:blculer vtew of the
Setvice at carmichael Ohio Atver
~~~""""~--"! Trallerl
Private drivB oH Uncoln
Seasoned
Firewood :::740-«6-~~382~5-.-::--. Hill,
Pomeroy,
Ohio,
~~-:;;;;Pell~~~~ Hardwood. 446·11204
RV SeNice at Carmi- woods on lt1ree sides
':'
~~~~~""!:":~ ehaet
' Trailers (4+)acres, to a historical
· 1 - .Female 1 Mile AKC Seitsoned FireWood CAA
home. · Circa 1900, 5
GoldBn Retr. pick up Nov HEAP
locepted,
bedrooms, 2 fireplaces, 2
. 21 $350. 367.()637
. 645·5946 or 441~1
full baths. 2 staircases.
CKC Rat terriers 6 wks
beautiful original wood·
Miact'ansaUI
wor11., many picture win·
okl ·
$100
eactl .
·
740.379-9515

or Jet Aeration Moton~ re-~.-.,;;~,;-,..!!"""-~ paired, new &amp; rebuit In
3 Jack Russel Terriers 1 stock. ·Call ~on Evans,
Jecll · Po., $l25ea, 'Ia- HlOO:s37·9528.
. calad
Meigs
, fair·
.
groundS,
Angie For Sale Wood Burner.
'" ooo
C
7~··~·.7215
$350.00 aR 740-2370.

740-985·4 138
CKC Mahese pups. F11male $550. Male $500
740-256·1498
malo
FOUND:
dog ,
wl&lt;ollar &amp; leash, acros&amp;
from
Wilcoxen
F-H
675-5416 or 593.()29()

Completely tut·
with WID . No
pets, Ref. Req. 441·0245

Apa11ment av~ilable now
Rivert&gt;end
Apts .
Now .
Haven WV. Now acCept·
tng
applications
fdr
HUO-stbsidized,
Bedroom · Apts. Utililie's

oM

Sa~ on 30"k
of adi'Ust"... -~....... me . Call

included.

~ ·~

$

~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; breakfast room, beauti· poop~.
02 Honda Acconj ·ve, lui~ landSCaped witt! In
ioaded,
92,000
miles. ground pool. Sit on the

~

Col 740-245- 5526

03 Cavalier, 20A, 4 cyt.
auto, · AC , power locka,

23,300

miles,

available

dows, large kitchen and ror Senior and Disabled

4 Boston Temers. 2 m, 2
Sa
remote entry, CO. 72K.
f
$150
ea For
le· top light curio clean. $4300 379·2748
iT40)992·27~
., ~:~~~·W-18'0.. ~1~a~ 1999
Z26
Cornaro

AKC Aeg.Lab puppies 304-675·3325.
.for ea~ 1st shots &amp;
wormed.
$250. Mollohan
Carpet

stairs.

nished

~s. mostly new win· 304-882·3121 .

~

?40-645-685?

3 rtm~s and bath up-

Y·8,

wrsp around porct! and
enjoy tl1e spec;tacular
_._ of ~- Oh' A'
•w•
"~
10 Ner. 2
car detached garage and
2 out buildingS. Would
make a wonderful ran) ily
home or bed &amp; braaktast.

8

;:CO;::N~V~EN~I~EN;T;LY:--:'Lo,.::'
GATED
&amp;
AFFORO·
ABLEI ~
. . •own house apart·
ments,
and/or
small
houses for rent. CEJ:II
74lH4H t11 for appl•·

6 Prtvaie 8:nd Picturesque

cauon &amp; lnformat•on.
SPECTACULAR VIEW
2BR garage Apartment,
Fall 740-256-6989
Sarious
inquires
only, downtown , S-425 mlt1 rent
Specie!. 20 oz. Commer· 97 Dodge Intrepid auto- plaase call740-992·3678
+ utllities, NO PETS.

speed, T Top. $12,500.

5

cial Carpet $6.95/yard. metic VB $1800 000. For s1 i&lt; 2 •01)' " 241 J Mt ~446-04:::;::;:.:;!~-..,..~,;,
Several
Colors. 256·1 652 or 256-1233
Vernon , Ave Pt Pleasanl, Free
Rent
Special!!!
"hr., lba .. lf2 _bast. aU:ing 2&amp;3BR and up, Central
740-446-7444. Qualfly at
Low Prieasl
Trucb
Air, WID hookup, torlant
pays electric. EHO Elm
NEW AND USED STEEL ·
t 985 Ford f·250, ~
View
Apll.
Stool Beams. Pipe Rebar
dr. new eng.,
(304)882-301 7
tor
Concrete
Angle, rnech. sound $2000.00 Trade- t 995 ctrevy Con·
Spring
Valley
Green

-1

Free 1o good 'warm home Channel, Fla1 Bar, Steel
ASAP kittens call Jennl· Grating fof Oflin&amp;, Drivefer 304-682·3892.
,
ways &amp; Wabays. L&amp;L
~--~--- Scrap Metals Open Mon.
Giveawa~ Oacar·Fish 3 Tue.
Wed
&amp;
Fri.
112 Inches long, Black WI 8am-4:30pm.
Oran(Je
stripes Thurs.
Sat
~74-3826 .
7-10-446-7300

304--458·1727.

W11ite 95 GMC. Sterro, 4
WO, high m•~. runs
good, ext. cab, ladder
CloSed ract&lt;s , CD player, 350
&amp;
Sun. V-8
motor,
$2500,
(7-10)416-2969

llind .(..........)

version Van. excellent
condition, easy on gas Apartments 1BA . for rartt

also

wltrailer '76'x16,
2-3501M axtos, 2 wheel
b - . wl ramp tor 5
....,. in Meigs Coonty
(7-101992.017~
'
·

~~-1599

month.

3BA, 1000 sq h . HaldWOO&lt;l floonl, W/0. No pet
$650rant
740-591-517~
or44Hltt0

,

�~ 84

www.mydlllysentlnel.com

• The Daily Sentinel

.

• I

;

Telr
'"

I '¢ 16

•

........ NoiJwnb,er 3, 2008
ALLEYOOP
.

J

The Daily Sentinel • Page B5
NI!:A Cro11word Puzzle

BRIDGE

ACROSS , 42 Cold onop

Phillip
Alder
I

YOUN G'S

I

~

C\RPENTER
SERViCE

...........
=-=,.
-.·lflttrl-.•-

~

:::::

'.

IJ I 4

A

•New Homes

•Ga,..es

---Docb

•Complete
Remodeling

WV0311721

• 10 9 8 6

•

.98742
t J 10 B 3

7 52

•Q
Soafll
• Q J4
• KQJ

tAKQ

• A 95 4

Dealer: South
Vulnenble: Botb

AUCTIONS/ANTIQUES
IICIIIDIIr: .

2 NT

Openiug lead: • 10

811111~-llr.

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

·JU-411-1184

··

J: TtfiN~

E·mall: eaptblll65@yahoo.com
www.auctlonzlp.com

TtfiS T~~ IINbf~STANI&gt;S" st4APeS ANI&gt; ANGLtS...
/

Utf-Otf, wttn'S tlf

15548

60tNG WITtf TtfiS1

WtlfN AN AC~N
JfC:OMfS AN OA~. THE
Now accepting
applications at:
• Valley View Apor1men1S
• 800 Slate Route 325

WI• \

r•

I

&gt;'

I

''

flllST TtfiNG IT SAY~
. IS "'GtOMtT~Y~ ·

'

)

~~~~··•
c..~~earrh="
w atq
flllla.e
www..: $ $
...

-- -~

: Thu=z=~

I)Mi

• 1-2 Bedroom Aportments
: with appliances furnished
On site laundry lacility.
Call for details or pick up
application at rental

53 u.tondtr
5411ai&lt;oo
14 Acbwooohoro
Tbompeon 55 IMfl parrot
15 W.rcltdog 54 . . _ ,
btood
. Cunio
16 F1n11 ....... 57 Purpo•
17 Wa In
5I Congor
cltorgool
1t Drib color
.DOWN
21 PB91undtr
22 Co. honcho 1 Thin
23 GoddMa
coeting
2 Dlatrict
H "--n jill'
30 VIII Gogh' I 3 Burrito
moclurn
mol'ltl
31 Kootfl kin
4 --frolh
32 Nolgi..t
33 GMn.o
5 a.tw-

......

Woll Norlb Eul
Paaa 6NT
AU pua

Soallt

,.Tum-.
35 Rlclllkt

:Jei:'~a

38Crookld

. The combination
can be unlocked

40 HMO

""'"*'

41 -voua
plolt

HERE'S WHAT

Tl-iA T SETTER NOT

I OWE 'fA,
DOC!!

'DANG··

. BE STOLEN

PROPeRTY, SNUFFV !!·

I'ICI('(, PICK'( I
PICKY !!

assistance.
Equal Housing

Opportunity
"This Institution is an

Equal Opportunity

liAS
SOMETIIING
·FOR YOU!!

Seamless Gutters
Roofing, Siding, Gutters

lnsured&amp;ElondBd
740-653-9657

Ownera:
Jon Van Meter &amp;
Paul Rowe

Cell: 740-4111-5047
81111111:
jrlhadfnn@aol.com ',

P"
.
"""
'I'E.~, !'It\ C.Olt-lC. TO VOTE.... .
'(E:,~, !'1-\ ~TILL.U~~C.I\:&gt;E.t&gt;.

304-6?5-3753
7
1 9725

40--1 6-

OH

XMT'U ITMF GTPMTJ FOM EGT XM DU
VJUUJN UOGT D EGT." • CMOT A.
IJTTJXP

PREVIOUS SOLUTKlN -'Those cttslhaf dash lhrou!jllthe al~yways mu!f

"'tely be thl ghosts of the farn&lt;ius dead m feline disguise.'· Erica Jong

'=~:~' s~~~~-~t.!fse
_,_ _....;._ WlttHy CIA! I. POU.A

condition. 4 bedroom, 2

304-882·3512
304-488·7946

or son City 304-675-2117

Jean Roush

Room (Downstairs)
Public is cordially Invited!

Light refreshments
will be served.
ELECTION DAY NOV. 4
CoHee &amp; Donuts 7:30 Am
Soup- Hoi Dogs- Dessert &amp; drink
ttam -?
Delivery &amp; take out available ·
· East Letart Methodist Church

COiflnl#rcial cl: R~sidcmtial

Vinyl
· Siding/Replacement

Windows/Remodeling
Bonded &amp; Insured .
740;99:Z.l493 Office
740-416-11339 Cell
Free Estimated

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

Special Reception
for
PVH Volunteer
of the Year,
Northwestern Qistrict
Volunteer of the Year &amp;
West Virginia State
Volunteer of the Year
Thursday,
November 6, 2008
2pmto4pm
Buxton Conference

Malntenante Plus

when you pay for a 6 or 12
month subscription on your
home delivered subscription!

2br on the River In Ma- bath, all appliances inson. $500.00 a mon. eluded, $37,000 located
References
at 176 Zuspan Lane Ma-

Pomeroy, Ohio

loW

In the year ahead, be sure to lllCreaae
your expertiH in your chosen field of
eodeewr when you SIMI what other&amp; are
doing all around yoo. If you don't keep
up,
could be left out or the fray.

J&amp;L
Construction

•allipolt- mail!' «rtbune
Joint flea•ant 1\egi-ter

• VInyl Siding
•Repl-nt
Wlndowl
• Roollng ,

• DM:kl

The Daily· Sentinel
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Caii'Gary ·stanley @
740-591-8044

,.:;...:..:.-------, r---------,

CORNER STONE
CONSTRUCTION
Roofing, Siding,
Soffit, Decks,
Doors, Windows,
Electric, Plumbing,
Remodeling, Room
Additions
LOC8I Conlrlctor

740-387-G644

1

avoid them .
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22·Jan. 191 Someone you ljke socially could be out
oho•ts and'""" badly, so ru.n the othe•

I'u GOI"" TO STOP
"'
,...,
REPLAVING T~E SAME.
CYCL£ OF IG!mANCE
OVEI1 AND 0\IEI1 AGAIN.
I WANT TO BQEAK DOWN
.tHE BARI!IERS THAT 1&lt;E£P
SOCIETY FI1AGMEIITED
AND ()jiTE IJS

.,~Nil~~

L

TH~

WHITTLING.

r----:-----;::~

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) - If you
know you are a bit edgy and are Involved
in a tough negotiation of some ~rt. better bring atong someooe who can tunc·
lion as a buffer ao that you don't lose the
deal.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) - Should
reaponslbllltlel or uslgnmenla at wort\
be relasued arn;t you don't like the new
' itructure, be extra c:art~lut how you rea&lt;:t
- It could damage what othera lhlnk of

lliWI•

make you la,el quill uncomfortable,
because mlngUng with them will only

~

YES, COW,

TH~
WHITTLING.
_)

'
'

~·

IS• GOB
••

.

~~';;iN I

'

noty

ohoutd~'t

(May · 21-Juno 201 ..:..
mind- you

OCcalionalty, your

agll~

,.ctt

to uaggarat• or embellish the
when you want to ma,ke tnlnga more ool·
orful. but doing t10 might cause problems

NII:.K

'
\ .

"-.__)

Don't

on Lady Luck to ,._, you out ot trouble
wl"' aomo.,lng you
be doing In
tlrst pl...,. Follow the rules, don't
ruato anything, and 110 ''" eatety 11 ..t at all

STOOING.
.. ·

refuel ltlne feeling a and cauoe greater

~=~~A,ri; 20-Moy 201 _

tile

A

l"'\\'tU

.

r---:----:---,

lM'~·

you never anticipated, .

Io::....,...;;.._

__. '--,_..,.._ _ _ __,

CANCER (Juno 21·July 22) - eo
careful In aft your bualneea ,Of

~remely

GARFIELD

worlt·raleted affairs , because making

l'I.J. WAU&lt;

than UIUII, Most lmpol11nt. don't pretend
to know something yau don't

YOU 1'0 YOUR

CAA,L.IZ ...

mlatltkea · c.n

OH, .ION, YOU'Re
!lOCH A PPFSCT

ee~

a blgger price

tao

LEO (Juty 23-Aug. 22)- 'lbu oro a wiM
perfOn who usually appr-.clates the
value of making compromlaea or oonceaslons when lhe oocaslon ClllllS ror it.
However. 1 stubborn srr.att m~ not le1

Qe!H1l..flMAN!

F-1E111rnate1 ·

you be that smart .
VIRGO CAug, 23-Sept. 22) aelf become

11.

patsy for a aaHiah manip- .

• ulator who Ia trying to get you to do his or
her work. You'll hate yourMtf fof being
used In that mannar.
LIBRA (Sept. 23..Qct 23) - Recognize
when your pe~lon1 aren't u cryatal
clear aa they usually are. or you might
end up lrMting serious matters recKlessly and giving trMii matters more weight
1han they deserve.
.

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

~1\lEY'~ \l!a:'1 SOUP TO NUTZ
f:W RAiiCIP
AU.~If[•• ~i

1\I£Y 1,\\($: .
~'lE';:I..

lo?WAWo#l!

Advertise
in this space for
$64 er month
•

Extend a

helping hand to others, bt.d,don'11et yowr·

For Remodeling and New Howe Building
Call: MARCUM CONSTRUCTION

I'

lorm four

1imple

words.

4

I

L.....L-.1-.J.....L..-J ~
PO

I.

l'""':'""':'"':'-:-7:"':-i
.,

•

L A p Q Wl .

"I've always figured~"
mused the gent, "that you
un 'I be comfortable
withoul your own .

I' I I I 18 O by filling
........."

Comp1ete tht chuckle QUOftd

day.

ARIES (March 21 ·April 19) - If you can,
avokl a group or clique whose memberB

740-387-Cl538

25+ yurt t;rporinco ""'' £rll_.,

to

NA P l T

cheek and don't change your opinion or
this Individual baaed only on this one

you.

PleasC leave messa e

Cell: 740-41~1834
I

I

HERE, LINUS,

*lnsp.red

47239 Riebel Road, Long Bottom, OH

I

:•
1 Ohio Valley Publishing P.O. Box 469, Galllpolll, OH 451!31

CO'r'OTES AROUND

Wori&lt;
•Reasonable Rates

740-985-4141
Phone~------------------

COI{OTES CAN'T
READ SO I

111111. IIIC.IWIEI

I

1
I
I

• Pole Bulldlnge
• Room Addltlona
Owner:
Je_K_II
742-2332

11-IERe'AR£ NO

•Prompt and Quality

Drywall,

' • Qal'llgeS

6unlaap ttlmd ~6mtinel
1

Stanley TreeTrimming
&amp; R•rnoval

· Advertise in
this space
for 532 per
month

WOIO .
GAM I

TUHdoy. Nov••• 2001

so, you qualify for a

or 2'004 Doublewlde in new

eity

~oancnga ltnors ol tho
O four
ICnimbled words bt-

your help. It'll only hul'l your reputation. '
,.SAOmARIUS (No\'. 23-0ec. 21) - You
fi!ren't likely to have the patlanca to put
up with the i'ud&amp;ness ot people who ere
pushy and . Impose their Ideas or will
upon others; rather than react badly,

Quallty·Seamless
Gutters

lobol wonl

• R B N J D U ' R G V D L' C M V, ; V B iJ D

vou

Senior 'Discou-nt*

Trovol

atopa
35 Nobel Prizo

...-m

SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) - Don't
allow emotions to make you too thiCk·
skinned when It oomes to lhe trouble&amp; of
someone yc~u don't like who could use

~~~Sales;;;;:;~~~

29 Unhurriod

31

fuol
47 Swian11at
48 Animo! tltol
barka •
51 Perfumo

By-BodoOoal

For Rent
1800
Chelnut . Street, Mobile homes &amp; lots ,
Galllpolio,OH 3 Bdrm, 1 (no pets) In A$hton WV
7
batll,
carport, , Heat ~304-;...;56-~2942--.:-.---.~
puf1lp, Refridge &amp; Stove Seen~ location, conven·

348 Lin·

YiiiM
H Slutt.d
lhirt
27 Liolon
eiOHiy
28 Soft mud

"""""''

TO&lt;IIy) clue: Eequals C

W~!r!,

RICK PRICE
New Homes, Room Additions, Remodeling,
Metal &amp; ShlocJe Roofs, Sldlna, Decks,
Bathroom~~!!!l Ucensed &amp; Insured

(740)992·5639

(hoi

rapubfie
25 Soino ·

.

by Luis Campos

n

PSI CONSTRUCTION

304·593-2021

24

Stall

Ctletrity Ctpwr CI)'IXO;IIIIlllll !J'IIDI!rcm ~· Dy fnooe p!q»t, peal rd JQIIII'It.
·
EICI'IInt' 1'1 lilt eiplll!
fOr JIICI!Mr.

~Astro-

lnck.ded. $500 mo, $300 lent to town ' and afford·
deposit. No Pots, Ref &amp; able, 2 &amp; 3 bedrooms
Security ..Ck.
Required available
call

41 Cltty
42 Know
aomehow
43 Byh44 Formarly
45 Tallv. . .
46 Hot-burning

fill

3~

CELEBRITY CIPHER

suit.
·
I thought lhe right play was to sta·rt with
a low card from the North hand, slowing·
fur Eaors having a singleton honor. I
have dlscoverad, ltlough, fhet the per·
centages are identical, whether you start
wtth a low card or an honor from the
dummy. '!bu will geltllraa tricks 59.9 percent of the time.
eirt duf1lmy heo J-6·J.2 and jOU have
A-11J.5-4, yoo ohou~ al8rt wnh a klw
card to your 10. If k loSes lo an honor,
cash the ace next. Your chances have
dropped to 37.3 percent

Provider and Employer"

Racine, Ohio 74o-247·2019

23 Unhsppy

22Pora.-

NOYeHst and editor Peter de Vries, who
died in 1993, said, "The Universe is like a
sire to which there is a combination, 00t
the combination is IO&lt;ied up in the sate.•
Sof1le people feel ltlal w~r~ about su~
combinations at bridge. If you are one ol
lhose, ,8ither try to remember the more
common combinations or calm~ wort
them out at tile table,
tn this deal, how woold you play tile club
au~ lor three t•Cks? What would you do
~ dummy's club 10 were tile three alld
South's nina were the 10?

dummy was tablad, Soultl aaw that he
had nine winnem outside clubs, so
needad to btlng In fhrae Irides ~om tllaf

H&amp;H ·
Guttering

oaom..

UHo
8 Quick look
t Oldllodgo
modo I
11 Sly
12 Buckot
ofaong

quantitativejlJilll to six no-trump.
After West ted tile spede 10 and tile .

T001419·52tHJ4S6

Middleport,

1

37 PM unfto
38 Compullr·
chipmekor

opened two no-trump 10 show a
balanced 21 "' 22 po;nts, with a good 20
counting ao 21. (When would you
upgrade 20 10 21? Arr; time you had a
flve-oard su~. or you had good lnterm"'
diatao, the 10s and 9o of oor wortd. '!bur
contrms provide another uaeful guideline. Art ace counts as two contrOls anct
a king as one. Upgr80e ~ you have
....., controls, tile normal nllllber fer a
two·no·frump opening.) Norltl made a

office.

coin,

6Fotch

11 Picrlic
Intrudera
20 Thil,
toe... .

South

Possibility ol ren1al

1BR, House

-

on~t~lld

" 10' 3
• g 62
• K B7 3

V C YOUNG Ill

41 Poriod
oltiml
50 Llkoo

13 Topor or

• J 10 6 2
Eall

Woll

4 Kloalc buy,
....lly
7 lllltlly

tOSpl-.
52YM,Iol
11 ClrWd ill"'
-

ll..fl3-08

• A as
• 75&lt;

'

' l

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olDon

lddr.

Non~

• AK3
.::, t

'- . '

1•JhnWo

,.._..

•

'

Anlwer to PNvkM.II Pu!ltl

45 L-•tlto

in

tht

rnlplng wcrcis

you develop !rem dep Nc. 3 b.J6w:

f)

e

·2

~RINT Nl!M8ERED

lETTERS IN SQUARES
UNSCRAMBlE lEITERs

FOR ANSWER

1

l

4

tl'lJJ

IIIIIIII

SCMM·LETS ANSWERS 101311()8
KiUen- Quidt - Wooly - Muslin - QUICKLY
.
"In business mauers;•the boss told his emp~ "you mu.it
sp¢c slowly but think QUICKLY."
ARLO &amp;JANIS

�~ 84

www.mydlllysentlnel.com

• The Daily Sentinel

.

• I

;

Telr
'"

I '¢ 16

•

........ NoiJwnb,er 3, 2008
ALLEYOOP
.

J

The Daily Sentinel • Page B5
NI!:A Cro11word Puzzle

BRIDGE

ACROSS , 42 Cold onop

Phillip
Alder
I

YOUN G'S

I

~

C\RPENTER
SERViCE

...........
=-=,.
-.·lflttrl-.•-

~

:::::

'.

IJ I 4

A

•New Homes

•Ga,..es

---Docb

•Complete
Remodeling

WV0311721

• 10 9 8 6

•

.98742
t J 10 B 3

7 52

•Q
Soafll
• Q J4
• KQJ

tAKQ

• A 95 4

Dealer: South
Vulnenble: Botb

AUCTIONS/ANTIQUES
IICIIIDIIr: .

2 NT

Openiug lead: • 10

811111~-llr.

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

·JU-411-1184

··

J: TtfiN~

E·mall: eaptblll65@yahoo.com
www.auctlonzlp.com

TtfiS T~~ IINbf~STANI&gt;S" st4APeS ANI&gt; ANGLtS...
/

Utf-Otf, wttn'S tlf

15548

60tNG WITtf TtfiS1

WtlfN AN AC~N
JfC:OMfS AN OA~. THE
Now accepting
applications at:
• Valley View Apor1men1S
• 800 Slate Route 325

WI• \

r•

I

&gt;'

I

''

flllST TtfiNG IT SAY~
. IS "'GtOMtT~Y~ ·

'

)

~~~~··•
c..~~earrh="
w atq
flllla.e
www..: $ $
...

-- -~

: Thu=z=~

I)Mi

• 1-2 Bedroom Aportments
: with appliances furnished
On site laundry lacility.
Call for details or pick up
application at rental

53 u.tondtr
5411ai&lt;oo
14 Acbwooohoro
Tbompeon 55 IMfl parrot
15 W.rcltdog 54 . . _ ,
btood
. Cunio
16 F1n11 ....... 57 Purpo•
17 Wa In
5I Congor
cltorgool
1t Drib color
.DOWN
21 PB91undtr
22 Co. honcho 1 Thin
23 GoddMa
coeting
2 Dlatrict
H "--n jill'
30 VIII Gogh' I 3 Burrito
moclurn
mol'ltl
31 Kootfl kin
4 --frolh
32 Nolgi..t
33 GMn.o
5 a.tw-

......

Woll Norlb Eul
Paaa 6NT
AU pua

Soallt

,.Tum-.
35 Rlclllkt

:Jei:'~a

38Crookld

. The combination
can be unlocked

40 HMO

""'"*'

41 -voua
plolt

HERE'S WHAT

Tl-iA T SETTER NOT

I OWE 'fA,
DOC!!

'DANG··

. BE STOLEN

PROPeRTY, SNUFFV !!·

I'ICI('(, PICK'( I
PICKY !!

assistance.
Equal Housing

Opportunity
"This Institution is an

Equal Opportunity

liAS
SOMETIIING
·FOR YOU!!

Seamless Gutters
Roofing, Siding, Gutters

lnsured&amp;ElondBd
740-653-9657

Ownera:
Jon Van Meter &amp;
Paul Rowe

Cell: 740-4111-5047
81111111:
jrlhadfnn@aol.com ',

P"
.
"""
'I'E.~, !'It\ C.Olt-lC. TO VOTE.... .
'(E:,~, !'1-\ ~TILL.U~~C.I\:&gt;E.t&gt;.

304-6?5-3753
7
1 9725

40--1 6-

OH

XMT'U ITMF GTPMTJ FOM EGT XM DU
VJUUJN UOGT D EGT." • CMOT A.
IJTTJXP

PREVIOUS SOLUTKlN -'Those cttslhaf dash lhrou!jllthe al~yways mu!f

"'tely be thl ghosts of the farn&lt;ius dead m feline disguise.'· Erica Jong

'=~:~' s~~~~-~t.!fse
_,_ _....;._ WlttHy CIA! I. POU.A

condition. 4 bedroom, 2

304-882·3512
304-488·7946

or son City 304-675-2117

Jean Roush

Room (Downstairs)
Public is cordially Invited!

Light refreshments
will be served.
ELECTION DAY NOV. 4
CoHee &amp; Donuts 7:30 Am
Soup- Hoi Dogs- Dessert &amp; drink
ttam -?
Delivery &amp; take out available ·
· East Letart Methodist Church

COiflnl#rcial cl: R~sidcmtial

Vinyl
· Siding/Replacement

Windows/Remodeling
Bonded &amp; Insured .
740;99:Z.l493 Office
740-416-11339 Cell
Free Estimated

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

Special Reception
for
PVH Volunteer
of the Year,
Northwestern Qistrict
Volunteer of the Year &amp;
West Virginia State
Volunteer of the Year
Thursday,
November 6, 2008
2pmto4pm
Buxton Conference

Malntenante Plus

when you pay for a 6 or 12
month subscription on your
home delivered subscription!

2br on the River In Ma- bath, all appliances inson. $500.00 a mon. eluded, $37,000 located
References
at 176 Zuspan Lane Ma-

Pomeroy, Ohio

loW

In the year ahead, be sure to lllCreaae
your expertiH in your chosen field of
eodeewr when you SIMI what other&amp; are
doing all around yoo. If you don't keep
up,
could be left out or the fray.

J&amp;L
Construction

•allipolt- mail!' «rtbune
Joint flea•ant 1\egi-ter

• VInyl Siding
•Repl-nt
Wlndowl
• Roollng ,

• DM:kl

The Daily· Sentinel
••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
I
.
I

))atlp Wribune
(740) 446·2342

The Daily Sentinel
. (740) 992·2155

I

Subscriber's Name

:
. I

I
I

·I

:1 Address--~--~~---

I

I

I

: City/State/Zip~------

Joint l}lea~ant l\egi~ter
(304) 675·1333

:
I
I
1

I
I

Mall or drop ott this coupon along
with • copy of your photo ID to

:
:

·····-·····------------·---····

I

,

HIDE IN THE

800KCASE ..

•E•perienced

References Available!
Caii'Gary ·stanley @
740-591-8044

,.:;...:..:.-------, r---------,

CORNER STONE
CONSTRUCTION
Roofing, Siding,
Soffit, Decks,
Doors, Windows,
Electric, Plumbing,
Remodeling, Room
Additions
LOC8I Conlrlctor

740-387-G644

1

avoid them .
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22·Jan. 191 Someone you ljke socially could be out
oho•ts and'""" badly, so ru.n the othe•

I'u GOI"" TO STOP
"'
,...,
REPLAVING T~E SAME.
CYCL£ OF IG!mANCE
OVEI1 AND 0\IEI1 AGAIN.
I WANT TO BQEAK DOWN
.tHE BARI!IERS THAT 1&lt;E£P
SOCIETY FI1AGMEIITED
AND ()jiTE IJS

.,~Nil~~

L

TH~

WHITTLING.

r----:-----;::~

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) - If you
know you are a bit edgy and are Involved
in a tough negotiation of some ~rt. better bring atong someooe who can tunc·
lion as a buffer ao that you don't lose the
deal.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) - Should
reaponslbllltlel or uslgnmenla at wort\
be relasued arn;t you don't like the new
' itructure, be extra c:art~lut how you rea&lt;:t
- It could damage what othera lhlnk of

lliWI•

make you la,el quill uncomfortable,
because mlngUng with them will only

~

YES, COW,

TH~
WHITTLING.
_)

'
'

~·

IS• GOB
••

.

~~';;iN I

'

noty

ohoutd~'t

(May · 21-Juno 201 ..:..
mind- you

OCcalionalty, your

agll~

,.ctt

to uaggarat• or embellish the
when you want to ma,ke tnlnga more ool·
orful. but doing t10 might cause problems

NII:.K

'
\ .

"-.__)

Don't

on Lady Luck to ,._, you out ot trouble
wl"' aomo.,lng you
be doing In
tlrst pl...,. Follow the rules, don't
ruato anything, and 110 ''" eatety 11 ..t at all

STOOING.
.. ·

refuel ltlne feeling a and cauoe greater

~=~~A,ri; 20-Moy 201 _

tile

A

l"'\\'tU

.

r---:----:---,

lM'~·

you never anticipated, .

Io::....,...;;.._

__. '--,_..,.._ _ _ __,

CANCER (Juno 21·July 22) - eo
careful In aft your bualneea ,Of

~remely

GARFIELD

worlt·raleted affairs , because making

l'I.J. WAU&lt;

than UIUII, Most lmpol11nt. don't pretend
to know something yau don't

YOU 1'0 YOUR

CAA,L.IZ ...

mlatltkea · c.n

OH, .ION, YOU'Re
!lOCH A PPFSCT

ee~

a blgger price

tao

LEO (Juty 23-Aug. 22)- 'lbu oro a wiM
perfOn who usually appr-.clates the
value of making compromlaea or oonceaslons when lhe oocaslon ClllllS ror it.
However. 1 stubborn srr.att m~ not le1

Qe!H1l..flMAN!

F-1E111rnate1 ·

you be that smart .
VIRGO CAug, 23-Sept. 22) aelf become

11.

patsy for a aaHiah manip- .

• ulator who Ia trying to get you to do his or
her work. You'll hate yourMtf fof being
used In that mannar.
LIBRA (Sept. 23..Qct 23) - Recognize
when your pe~lon1 aren't u cryatal
clear aa they usually are. or you might
end up lrMting serious matters recKlessly and giving trMii matters more weight
1han they deserve.
.

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

~1\lEY'~ \l!a:'1 SOUP TO NUTZ
f:W RAiiCIP
AU.~If[•• ~i

1\I£Y 1,\\($: .
~'lE';:I..

lo?WAWo#l!

Advertise
in this space for
$64 er month
•

Extend a

helping hand to others, bt.d,don'11et yowr·

For Remodeling and New Howe Building
Call: MARCUM CONSTRUCTION

I'

lorm four

1imple

words.

4

I

L.....L-.1-.J.....L..-J ~
PO

I.

l'""':'""':'"':'-:-7:"':-i
.,

•

L A p Q Wl .

"I've always figured~"
mused the gent, "that you
un 'I be comfortable
withoul your own .

I' I I I 18 O by filling
........."

Comp1ete tht chuckle QUOftd

day.

ARIES (March 21 ·April 19) - If you can,
avokl a group or clique whose memberB

740-387-Cl538

25+ yurt t;rporinco ""'' £rll_.,

to

NA P l T

cheek and don't change your opinion or
this Individual baaed only on this one

you.

PleasC leave messa e

Cell: 740-41~1834
I

I

HERE, LINUS,

*lnsp.red

47239 Riebel Road, Long Bottom, OH

I

:•
1 Ohio Valley Publishing P.O. Box 469, Galllpolll, OH 451!31

CO'r'OTES AROUND

Wori&lt;
•Reasonable Rates

740-985-4141
Phone~------------------

COI{OTES CAN'T
READ SO I

111111. IIIC.IWIEI

I

1
I
I

• Pole Bulldlnge
• Room Addltlona
Owner:
Je_K_II
742-2332

11-IERe'AR£ NO

•Prompt and Quality

Drywall,

' • Qal'llgeS

6unlaap ttlmd ~6mtinel
1

Stanley TreeTrimming
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for 532 per
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WOIO .
GAM I

TUHdoy. Nov••• 2001

so, you qualify for a

or 2'004 Doublewlde in new

eity

~oancnga ltnors ol tho
O four
ICnimbled words bt-

your help. It'll only hul'l your reputation. '
,.SAOmARIUS (No\'. 23-0ec. 21) - You
fi!ren't likely to have the patlanca to put
up with the i'ud&amp;ness ot people who ere
pushy and . Impose their Ideas or will
upon others; rather than react badly,

Quallty·Seamless
Gutters

lobol wonl

• R B N J D U ' R G V D L' C M V, ; V B iJ D

vou

Senior 'Discou-nt*

Trovol

atopa
35 Nobel Prizo

...-m

SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) - Don't
allow emotions to make you too thiCk·
skinned when It oomes to lhe trouble&amp; of
someone yc~u don't like who could use

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fOr JIICI!Mr.

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aomehow
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CELEBRITY CIPHER

suit.
·
I thought lhe right play was to sta·rt with
a low card from the North hand, slowing·
fur Eaors having a singleton honor. I
have dlscoverad, ltlough, fhet the per·
centages are identical, whether you start
wtth a low card or an honor from the
dummy. '!bu will geltllraa tricks 59.9 percent of the time.
eirt duf1lmy heo J-6·J.2 and jOU have
A-11J.5-4, yoo ohou~ al8rt wnh a klw
card to your 10. If k loSes lo an honor,
cash the ace next. Your chances have
dropped to 37.3 percent

Provider and Employer"

Racine, Ohio 74o-247·2019

23 Unhsppy

22Pora.-

NOYeHst and editor Peter de Vries, who
died in 1993, said, "The Universe is like a
sire to which there is a combination, 00t
the combination is IO&lt;ied up in the sate.•
Sof1le people feel ltlal w~r~ about su~
combinations at bridge. If you are one ol
lhose, ,8ither try to remember the more
common combinations or calm~ wort
them out at tile table,
tn this deal, how woold you play tile club
au~ lor three t•Cks? What would you do
~ dummy's club 10 were tile three alld
South's nina were the 10?

dummy was tablad, Soultl aaw that he
had nine winnem outside clubs, so
needad to btlng In fhrae Irides ~om tllaf

H&amp;H ·
Guttering

oaom..

UHo
8 Quick look
t Oldllodgo
modo I
11 Sly
12 Buckot
ofaong

quantitativejlJilll to six no-trump.
After West ted tile spede 10 and tile .

T001419·52tHJ4S6

Middleport,

1

37 PM unfto
38 Compullr·
chipmekor

opened two no-trump 10 show a
balanced 21 "' 22 po;nts, with a good 20
counting ao 21. (When would you
upgrade 20 10 21? Arr; time you had a
flve-oard su~. or you had good lnterm"'
diatao, the 10s and 9o of oor wortd. '!bur
contrms provide another uaeful guideline. Art ace counts as two contrOls anct
a king as one. Upgr80e ~ you have
....., controls, tile normal nllllber fer a
two·no·frump opening.) Norltl made a

office.

coin,

6Fotch

11 Picrlic
Intrudera
20 Thil,
toe... .

South

Possibility ol ren1al

1BR, House

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~RINT Nl!M8ERED

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UNSCRAMBlE lEITERs

FOR ANSWER

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IIIIIIII

SCMM·LETS ANSWERS 101311()8
KiUen- Quidt - Wooly - Muslin - QUICKLY
.
"In business mauers;•the boss told his emp~ "you mu.it
sp¢c slowly but think QUICKLY."
ARLO &amp;JANIS

�.

'

•= B6 • The Daily Sentinel

p

·'

Monday, November 3, aoo8

•

Angels rmish 13th at state meet

Weekend·Scoreboard
t~

PREP FOOTBALL

1 2

Slllunllly's 8oJc11:0111

WESTERN COld LECE
IIOiw' 'n
. . tl
WL Pot G8

Pnenburg c.thollc 37,

W•t.M-34

Wahama 7 7 20 0 - 34
Pari&lt; Calh 7 10 7 13 - 37
Sool1ng IUIIIINiry

Flm Quertlr

.

W-Gamlll UndeiWOOd 12 pus
from William Zuspan (Kyle Zer1de
kick) 9:09
PC-Tommy Brunoni 3 run (Gino
Demaio kick) 1:36
Second
PC -Gino Demaio 28 field goal

au.n.r

5:52

W-Zet1de 95 run {Zet1de kick) :31
.
Thlnl Quertlr
W-Zet1de 1 run (Zeltde kick) 9:57
W-Undaowood 21 pass from
Zuspan (kick failed) 3:5t
W-Zerkle 30 pass from
Underwood {Zertde kick) 2:37
· FourthQooaleo
PC-Zad&lt; Romine 23 pass from
Brunoni (Demaio kick) 8:3t
PC-Jason Williams 11 pass from

Brunoni (kick failed) :47
W
11

First Downs
Rushes-yards
Passing yards
Total yards
Comp-att-int

PC

24
22-206 52·270
149
t59
355

Fumbles~lost

Panalties-yards

429

14-2t.() t3-22.()
2-1
2-2

6-50

5-50

.333

'

which has led them to where
BWALTHISOIMWIYTRtiiUNE.COM
we are today." .
As for the underclassmen,
COLUMBUS
The
three of the fOil!' had never
Gallia ACIIdemy girls' cross
competed at Scioto Downs
country team concluded a
until Saturday, The experi.remarkable season on
ence they take with them will
Saturday at Scioto Downs,
be key to a possible return
finishing 13th overall at the
next year:
2008 OHSAA State Cross
As for the seniors
Countty Championships for
. Townsend and I,.auren
Division II.
Adkins - they leave a legaThe Blue Angels - ·wincy behind that few in Gallia
ners of both the Southeastern
Academy history can boast .
Ohio Athletic League and Dof, particularly being at the
2 district titles this fall . state at least three times.
ended up in the . bottom
For Townsend, her final
fourth of the 16-team field
fall day in Blue ;md White
with a score of 293 points,
was rewarding after not
but the Blue and White did
making it a year ago. She
have one competitor make it
couldn't think of a better
to the podium for All-Ohio
way to end her PreP cross
honors.
country career than exactly
Freshman Peyton Adkins
where she was.
finished in the top-15 indi"It's always been fun comvidually, placing · eighth
ing
up -here. Everyone has
ovenill with a time of
worked
really hard to get
18:59.04. It was only the
here this year and I'm just
third time this season that
proud to once again be part
someone finished ahead of
of
the
experience,"
the frosh phenom during a
Townsend said. "Having
race .
been here three times since
Seniors Lauren Adkins
my
freshman year is truly
(20:41.46) and Lee Ann
Bryan
WallerWphoto one of. the highlights of my
Townsend (21: 14.00) were Gallia Academy freshman Peyton Adkins finds her stride athletic career, and I'm very
next for the Angels, placing. during the opening"moments of the girts' Division II OH.SAA proud of that."
69th and 97th, respecti'vely. Cross Country championships held Saturday .at Scioto
As for the elder Adkins _
' .It was Townsend's third Downs in Columbus. Peyton Adkins finished eighth overall who was a two-·iime&lt; Allappearance at the state meet, - earning All-Ohio honors - with a lime of 18:59.04.
Ohio selection as a freshman
while the elder Adkins competed in her fourth state race title with a score of 51 . Angels finished also 13th in and sophomore - having
points.
2006 and were 12th overall some company at state was
m.as many chances.
Behind CVCA in the top- in 2005.
so much belter than last year,
Freshman
McKenna
It may not have been a when Adkins was the lone
Warner (21 :45.06) was next 12 - in order - were
for GAHS in !20th, while Keltering Alter (95), Milton- state championship, but first- qualifier for GAHS.
junior
Genna
Baker Union (118), Woodridge year GAHS coach Todd
Adkins says her fmal 5K
(23: 14.45) rounded. out the (!50), Perry (166), Canal Mayes was just of proud of race was perfect in the fact
team scoring by placing Winchester (186), Akron St. these girls for getting to the that her teammates were
143rd. This was also Baker's Vincent-St. Mary (204), final race of the 2008 season. along side her. She also notes
second career race at Scioto Spingfield
Northwestern
"They have worked as a that the underclassmen will
Downs.
(223), Wauseon (243), team all year. The seniors have some big shoes to fill
River
(260), have done . a great job of. over the next few years.
Sophomores .
Kayla Rocky
Hamson. (24:19.91) and Brookville
(269) · and leading this team and the · "The main thing for us this
Katie Dunlap (26:04 .39) also Johnstown-Monroe (292).
underclassmen have done a year was to get the team
had respective placements of
Gallia Academy fmished wonderful job of picking up here. It's taken a lot of hard
146 and 147 in the 147-com- ahead of Tiffin Columbiana the pace. There has been no work and dedication for us to
petitor field.
(294}, Milan Edison (307) · dissention in the ranks," get here, so I'm very happr,
Katie
Gillespie
of and St. Clairsville (308). It Mayes commented. "I've with how the day has ·gone.'
Cuyahoga Valley Christian was also the third time in never trusted a team more to Adkins said. "I just hope that
Academy won the individual four years that GAHS had do what it needs to do than I "now the_ younger girls can
title with a time of 18:00.43. been to the D-2 state champi- have this group. ,That speaks carry on the tradition that we
CVCA also won the team onships as a team. The a lot about their character, have helped start."

- ---

3 0 t.OOO
3 0 t.OOO
Ootloo
t
.!!00 t~
t 2' .333 2
Mlnlphio
S..Antooio
0 2 .000 2~
No! I awl Diu' ' I
WL Pot G8
2 .o 1.000
Utoll
t 2 ·.333 tl\
Oenver
t 2 .333 Ill
Mlnnoaota
01dolioma City t 2 ,333 tll
t 2 .333 tl\
Wl Pot GB
L.A.Ulolni
3 0 t.OOO
2 t ..687 t
t 2 .333 2
-State
LA. Ctippofs
0 3 .000 3
0 3 .000 3
9* dlr'IGMIM

ont.ndo 121. Seaameuto 103
96, Phitodolpliia 88
Clioltotto t 00, MlaJnj 87
Indiana 95, BOston 79
Ootrolt 117, WuliJng1on t 09

Jersey 97
Oellas 96. Mlnnlieota 85
Now 011eano t04, c-..a 92
Houotoo 69, Oklahoma City n
Chicago 96, Memphis 88
Toronto 91, Milwaukee 87
L.A. Lo- 104, Oenver 97
Utln 101, LA Clippers 79

- . State tos, -

t07, Purttand 96
S&amp;lndr(•-

MIIwaullle 94, -Yort\88
Oldahomo City 88, Mlnneoola 85

. . . . . . OimM

Chicago at Orlando, 7 p.m.

sacramento &amp;t Phlaclllphia, 7 p.m.
Detroit at Char1otte, 7 p.m.
Golden State at Mon¢1s, 8 p.m.

Individual statlsllcs
Ruohlng: W-Kyle Zerkle 12-t96, CleY8tand at Dallal, 8:30 p.m.
Mlcaiah Branch 5-16, Jacob Roach Utah II LA. Clippe,., t0:30 p.m.
l'Ueldlr'• Gamel
3-6, William Zuspan 2-(-12).
at New Jersey, 7:30 p';m.
PC-Tommy Brunoni 40-214, Phoenb:
Booton at Houotoo, 8:30 p.m.
Joson Williams 9-44, John Boetter Callu
at San A-lo. 8;30 p.m.
2-6, Sean Early t-6.
P.uslng: W-William Zuspan 13PRo HOCKEY
20.0 t29, Garrett Underwood 1-1.0

30.

PC-Jason Williams 1t-2().0 t25,
Tommy Brunoni 2-2.0 34.
RICtllvlng: W--Garrett Underwood
9-104, Kyle Zerkle 2-48, Colin
Pierce 2-11, Micalah Branch t-(-4).
PC-Cole Cwynar 3-65, Zach
Romine 4-54, Andiew Christy 2-22.
Jason Williams 1-tt, John Boetter
2-5, Tommy Brunoni t-2.

PRo FOOTBALL
NotiOIIIII F - 1 ~

AMERICAN CONF£RENCE .

Eut

WLTPctPFPA
New England 5 3 0 .625 t68 t50
N.Y. Jete'
5 3 0 .625 208 tB7
Buf1alo
5 3 0 .625 t62 t69
Miami

4 4 0 .500 171 163
South

WL TPct
8 0 0 t.OO
4 4 o .500
Jacksonville 3 5 ·o .375

PA
t03
tn
t72
Houston
3 5 0 .375 t96 213
WL TPot pf PA
:Piltaburgh
5 2 0 .714 t55 110
'Baltimore
5 3 . 0 .625 t?t t37
Ctevet.Brid
3 5 0 .375 t42 t80
Cincinnati
t 8 0 .11t t25 23!1
WLTPotPF. PA
.Denver
4 4 0 .500 t90 22t
San Diego
3 5 0 .375 224 t99
Paktand
2 6 0 .250 t07 20t
1&lt;an88e City . t 7 0 .t25 t28 223
NATIONAL CONF£11ENCE
Eoll
WL TPot PF PA
·N.Y. Giants
7 t 0 .875 226 t29
Washington 6 2 0 .750 t65 t45
Philadelphia 5 3. 0 .625 220 t4&lt;1
:Oatlas
5 4 0 .556 2t6 2t9
South
WL TPot PF PA
Carolina
· 6 2 0 .750 174 121
Tampa Bsy , 6 3 o .667 200 t47 ·
Tennessee
Indianapolis

-

PF
t99
t87
t80

-ttoc:ar~

EASTERN CONFERENCE
. Atlontlc Dlvlllon
OTPtsGFGA

WL
N.Y.Rongors t03 t 2t 36 30
N.., Jersey 6 2 2 t4 3t 25
l'tttlburgli .
6 4 2 t4 32 29
Phlladolphla
4 4 3 11 43 4t
N.Y.'Istanders 2 7 t 5 25 37
Hoi It II Dlvllfon
WL OTPtsGFGA
Montreal
8tt173724
7 2 2 t6 3!1 25
BuBoston
6 3 3 t5 34 3t
TOJonto
5 4 3 t3 35 4t
Ottawa
4 5 2 tO 3t 3t
-Diillllon
WL OTPtsGFGA
carOlina
6 3 2 . t4 32 32
Waohtngton ·54t 113234
TampaBsy
433112224
florida
4 .6 t92.535
Attanta
3 7 2 8 3t 46
WESTERN CONF£RENCE
cenln1 DMI1on
WL OTPtsGFGA
Oetrolt
8 2 2 t8 44 39
NaohYillo
6 4 t 13 36 38

Chicago
St. Loult

3 ~ t3 3!1
5 5 0 tO 32

5

Columbus

32

30

4 8 1 9 31 37
Nooth- OMolon
WL OTPtsGFGA
Minnesota
1 .2 t is 29 22
Calgary
7 4 t t5 3!1 34
Edmonton
6 4 t 13 28 31
Vancouver
6 6 0 t2 4t 38
Colorado
5 8 b to 35 3!1
PoiclftcoMIIIon
W L OT Pts GF GA
San J088 .
t02 0 20 42 28
Anilhllm
7 5 t t5 43 4&lt;1
Dallas
4 8 2 tO 35 50
Phoenix
45082t211
Loa Angeles 35t72730

_Flac.co thro;ws 2 TOs, RavensbeatBrowns 37~27

'

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'; .• ' . ·,. .

.

&lt;

--1

: ·' '

•

•

. '

•

•

---

--···- ·--

-----·------

·•

:~

l'rintro on 100%
Recycled Nc~·sprint t]~

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio •
.1 11 I I'\ 1-, • \ ,.1, .11-o . '\o. ~:.&gt;

.

ll 'ESil \\ . '\()\ 1.\IBI-.I&lt; ~· :.!OOK -

"'"' · "'~dail~st·nlind. t•tun

Brunner: Turnout could exceed 80 percent

SPORTS
• ~ Steelers down.,,'. ~;
Redskins,. ~ Pajie Bl

BY BRIAN J. REED
BREEDCMYDAILVSENTINELCOM

The Secretary of State did
not make turnout projections for individual counties
POMEROY _ .. Today is this year, but in the pasl,
Election Day.
Meigs County's voter
The Ollio Secretary of turnout lias been higher than
State projects an 80 percent the statewide average.
voter turnout statewide.
At least a quarter of the
Kevin Kidder, spokesman ballots cast in this year's
for · Secretary of State general election are expectJennifer Brunner, said that ed to be from early voting,
projection for a high turnout either absentee ballots· cast
is expected to apply to indi- in person or mailed to the
vidual counties, as well. · county- boards of election·,

IEC: Probable
-lhatGOP
. . .1181.

Kidder said.
lenges - two , races for
Polls are cipen until 7:30 Meigs County Cop1missioner
p.m. this evening. Those who and another for Clerk of
have moved from one Courts, as well as district and
precinct to another within the presidential races and several
county. should cast ballots at ioc1i tax issues.
the Board of Elections, localThere have been some
ed in the county office annex changes in polling locations
· behind Holzer Meigs Clinic. since the March primary.
They are the only voters who Voters in Bradbury, Letart,
will be pennitted to cast hal- Laurel
Cliff
and
lots at the board office tod[\y. Ro~ksprings precincts will
The Meigs County ballot vote in new locations.
includes three local . chalVoters in the Laurel Cliff

OBnuARIES
. Page AS

• Kathleen Gonzalez, 62

• Ann Longstaff, 79
. • Gayle Price, 98

..

'

• After election, new
president has to wail 77
9av5. See Page A2
• Candidates speak
: to retired teachers.
SeePageA3
i. Shoebox for a
; Soldier project under
~· See Page AS
: • Meigs· Medicare
checki4J day.coming.
See Page A6
~

O'Bieness opens

:x.ray service at Meigs
. ~tar. See Page A6
·! Holzer l:fosPice
· announces coordinator.
See Page A6

WEAtHER

'

a...tlle on hge A3

' ' a SI!CmONll - l:t PAGES
'

Annie's Mailbox

A3

Calendars

A3

'

Classifieds

82-4

Comics

Bs

Editorials

A4

Obituaries
Sports ·

As
B Section

Weather

A3

•
•

POMEROY - · Members
of · the Ohio Elections
Commission
determined
Monday there is reasonable
-cause to believe a paid advertisement from the Meigs
.County Republican Party in
The Daily Sentinel contains
false information about
·Athens City Councilwoman
Debbie Phillips.
A second complaint, filed
against the bhio Republican
Party and members of the
Athens County Republican ·
Party was dismissed due to
a technical error in its filing,.
PhH!ips said.
·
Phillips is a candidate for
the 92nd Ohio House of
Representatives district.
The advertisement was purchased by the local
Republican Party and
endorses Phillips' opponent,
Athens County Treasurer
Jill Thompson . .
Phillips filed a complaint
Thursday against the local
party; its chairman, David
Warner, and its treasurer,
Marjorie Fetty, alleging that
her position on the construction of the American
Municipal
Power-Ohio
plant is misrepresented in
the advertisement.
The ad was scheduled to
run through Tuesday, but
the Sentinel pulled the
advertisement · yesterday
afternoon
after . the
Commission·~ ruling.
. The ad states that Phillips
and the Sierra Club "have
been leading the fi~ht
against" the plant: Philhps
maintains she has always
lleen supportive of the plant
and other infrastructure.
Phillips said last week her
involvemeni with the Sierra
Club has been limited to a
brief meetil!g . with three
~mbers at her campaign
office. During that meeting,
Phillips said, the members
expressed their dissatisfaction w\th her position in
support of clean-coal techno1ogy, but the organization
later endorsed her.
Specifically, the Elections
Commission
c'omplaint
•
alleges:
· • 'The advertisment made
a false statement that Debbie
Phillips was endorsed by
Citizens Against Superfluous
Hi~hways, when in fact
Phillips was not endorsed by
CASH. CASH no longer
exists ·and did · not endorse
Phillips in the past.
• "The advertisement
made a false statement that
delays in the construction of
U.S. 33 were caused by a
petition Phillips signed."
• "The . advertisement .
made a false statement that
the petition 'cost Ohio mil lions of extra dollars.'"
• "The adveriisement
made a false statement that
the petition caused unneces~ary accidents on old 33 due
to the alleged delay."
PIMH ... Phillips. AS

Please see Voting. AS

BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENTOMVDAILVSENTINEL,CQM
COLUMBUS -American
Municipal Power-Ohio yesterday updated the anticipated
cost to build its proposed
American Municipal Power
Generation Station (AMPGS)
power plant, an extension on
the construction time franie
and the approval of LimitedNotice-To-Proceed (LNTP)
in tenns of the EngineerProcure-Construct (EPC)
contractor. .
According to AMP-Ohio
which cited a feasibility
study , done by its engiqeering firm RW Beck, the pro- ·
ject's compl~tion date will
be extended by six months
and the projected cost of the
plant went from an estimated
$2.9 billion to $3.2 billion.•
· AMP-bhio said a revised
project costs and construction schedule reflects current realities in the industry.'
"There is a tremendous
world market impact on
steam turbine manufacturers who are curremly over. Charlene Hoelllch/photo
whelmed by power plant
Paving of the employee parking lot at the Meigs County Courthouse will continue through development
in other counTuesday, according to Meigs County Commissioner Jim Sheets. Shelly Co. is completing . tries." AMP-Ohio
President
thE! work using funds commissioners secured for park districts through the Ohio and CEO Marc Gerken said.
Department of Transportation. Commissioners hope to develop a picnic area near the lot, "This has led to a six month
located on- the old Masonic Temple property on Mulberry Avenue. The lot will be closed extension on the project
until Wednesday.
schedule. meaning both
units are scheduled Ia begin
operation in 20 14. This is a
conservative
schedule,
which we believe is realistic
on a going forward basis."

l'lease see ·AMP, AS

Racine hires
police marshal
Bv BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

Charlene Hoelllch{photo

.Qee Rader, right, accepts a check for $1,000 from the Middleport-Pomeroy Rotary Club for
!f!e God's Net nutrition program.

Rotary c~ntributes to God's Net
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH . Net and .also spoke during
HOEFLICHOMYDAIL\"SENTINEL.COM the meeting on the programs at the Mulberry
POMEROY - A check Community Cemer.
for $1,000 'was presented io
Rader noted that in addi God's Net for 1ts nutrition tion to God's Net the Center
program at Monday's meet- houses Cooperative Parish
mg of the Middleport- · programs, a parish clothing
Pomeroy Rotary Club held shop, the Comfort Club, and
at the Wildhorse Cafe.
a food pantry. She also
The money incuded pro- noted that a pre-school
ceeds from a chili supper operates iu ihe building .
plus a match from Rotary
She talked about the varifunds . The Rev.
Walter ous projects carried out to
Heines introduced Dee improve the facility which
Rader who accepted the have cost thousands of dolcheck on behalf of God's lars, the hundreds of donat-

Fr.

ed hours of .labor, and the
debt which is now around
$125,000.
She ·also reported on the
numerous youth groups who
have come into Meigs County
to work at the site during the
past 19 years she and her husband Keith have been
involved in the Cooperative
Parish programs .
During the Rotary busi ness meeting , the group discussed meeting locations.
the need of repienshing
pantries, and goals for lhe
2009 ) ''ar of Rotary .
t·

•

.and· Rocksprings precincts
will cast ballots at the '
. Meigs Local School District .
. administrative offices the
old
Salisbury
Elementary School building. Letart precinct voters
wi II go to the East Letart
United Methodist Church .
Voters in Bradbury will vote
at lhe Bradford Church of
Christ activitY building.

·AMP updates
plant costs,
contractor,
time frame

:raving continues

BY BRIAN J. REED
BREEDCMVDAILYSENTINELCOM

Bv TOM WITHERS
ASSOCIATED PRESS

-Sportt-·

·--

'

'

CLEVELAND -,- · His
fiery, fearsome eyes scanned
Baltimore's sideline loo~
for any teammate who didn t
believe a comeback was
possible.
Ray Lewis wasn't giving
Two points for a wil, one point for over· up, and he wasn't about to
time loss or shootout loas.
let the Ravens quit either.
"He told the whole team,
Solurdoy'o'We're going to win this
Edmonton 3, Carolina 1
Boston S, Dallas 1
game'," linebacker Terrell
Bulllllo 5, Waohlngton o
Atlanta
5 3 0 .625 1n 1"54
Suggs said. "You could see
New
Jltf'HY 6, Atlanta 1
New Orleans 4 4 0 .500 216 195
the truth in his eyes."
Toronto 5, N.Y. Ra~ro 2
North
Ch~go 4, Columbus 3, SO
Inspired by their emotionWL TPct PF PA Montreal 5, N.V. Islanders 4
:Ch~go
5 3 0 .625 223 t73 Tampa Bay 3, 01towa 2, .SO
al middle linebacker's
Green Bay
4 4 0 .500 2t0 178 Naohvtlle 3, Florida 2, SO
words, the Ravens scowl"14
lv1innesota
4 4 0 ,500 t62 t88
Pi111burgh
6, St. Louis 3
unanswered points in the
Detroit
0 8 0 .000 t37 239
Minnesdfo·3, Phoenix 2
' '
final
16 minutes and rallied
Wool
Los Angllee 2
WL TPot PF PA Gatgary e. S&amp;lncloy'l
for
a
37-27
win over the upClilmH
Arizona
5 3 0 .625 234 184
Edmonton 5, Philadelphia 4
and-down
Cleveland
·seattte
2 8 o .250 t5t 2t0 AUanta 5, Aorlda 3
Browns
on
Stinday.
San Francisco 2 6 0 .250 171 230
carolina 6, Toronto 4
51. Louis
2 6 o .250 125 235
Matt Stover kicked three
Anaheim 3, Calgary 2
San JoH 5, Colorado 3
field
goals, rookie quarterS&amp;lndoy't Gtmoo
Detroit 3, Vancouver 2
back Joe Fiacco threw two .
·Chicago 27, Detroit 23 ·
Mondoy'•touchdown passes and firstMinnesota 28, Houston 21
Bu- at New Je110y, 7 p.m. ·
Tennessee 19, Green Bay 16, OT
Columbus at N.Y. Islanders, 7 p.m.
year running back Ray Rice
N.Y. Jets 26, Buffalo 17
Colorado at Chicoeo. 8:30 p.m.
ran for 154 yards to lead the Baltimore Ravens running back Ray Rice_(27) fights off Cleveland Browns safety Sean
Arizona 34, St.louis 13
1\JMdoy'IRavens (5-3), who seemed Jones on a ·so-yard run in the fourth quarter of an NFL football game Sunday in Cleveland.
Baltimore 37, Cleveland 27
N.Y. ISlanders II N.Y. Rangero, 7 p.m.
Tampa Bay 30, Kansas City 27, OT
Washington at Ottawa, 7:30 p.m.
to be in bi$ trouble when
Cincinnati 21, Jacksonville 19
Carolina et Toronto, 7:30 p.m.
The play summed up
they fell behmd 27-13 in the fourth quarter with the score goal made it 30-27 with 5:36
"Miam126, Denver 17
PlioeniK at Gatgary, to p.m.
third quarter. But will) Lewis tied. By the time the ball feft, the Ravens' defense Cleveland's season, now on
N.Y. Giants 35, Dallas ,_.
Nashville at Vancouver, 10 p.m.
Minnesota at San Jose, , 0:30 p.m.
Atlanta 24, Oakland 0
leading the way, Baltimore slipped through his hands pressured Anderson, who a downward spiral.
Philadelphia 26, Seattle 7
Anaheim at los Angeles, 10:30 p.m.
"It's alwar.s deflating
bounced back and won its lll'ld fell to the ground, the threw the ball directly to
Indianapolis 18. New England 15
Browns·
·
promising
season
Suggs.
The
line&amp;ackt!l'
snared
when
you don t make a ptar,
third straight.
MoMoy'aGomo
TRANSACTIONS
Pittsburgh at Washington, 8:30p.m.
"Ray Lewis is the greatest had fallen ·into serious jeop- the gift and raced untouched because we needed plays, '
.
to the end zone where he Browns coach ·. Romeo
· Tl!urodoy't Gomoo
general, the greatest leader ardy.
BASEBALL
.
Denver at Claveland, 8:15p.m.
"We
didn't
fmish,"
said
taunted
Cleveland's famed Crennel said. "It's· deflating •
- hands down - of our
Sundoy, Nov. 9
-niiLMgue
Seattle at Miami, 1 p.m.
PHILADELPHIA PHILLIE5-Namod time," said Sug$s, whose runni11g back Jamal Lewis, Dawg Pound· bleacher sec- when they IUD the ball in for
St.louis at N.Y. Jets, 1 p.m."
Ruben Amaro Jr. tJeneral manager.
42-yard interceP!IOn return who was held to 49 yards on . lion with a spike and dance. a touchdown. It's deflating
Tennessee at Chicago. 1 p.m. 1•
Oecllnod ltillr 2009 option on RHP Tom for
Anderson finished l7-of- when they throw the ball
a TD with 2:43 remain- 19 attempts. "That's the lesGordon.
'Green Bay at Minnesota, 1 p.m.
son
of
the
day
finish.'"
·
33
for 219 yards but the Pro over your head.lt'sdeflating
ing put it away.
BASKETBALL
JaekaonvUie at Detroit. 1 p.m.
Stover, who ranks fifth in Bowler left the field with when you don't make a catch
New Orleans at Atlanta, 1 p.ITj.
Lewis refused to take
Notlonst-~­
INDIANA
PACER&amp;-Signed
F Donnv credit
league
scoring history, made Browns fans screaming in the open. It's ·deflating
BuffalO at New E~tand, 1 p.m.
for the comeback, but
Granger to a five-year contract exten"Baltimore at Houston, 1:01 p.m.
fteld
goals
of 41,32 and 22 "Bra-dy! Bra-dy!" for popu- when you lose a game."
knew his comments awaksion.
Carolina at Oakland, 4:05 p.m.
yards.
.
Jar backuP. Brady Quinn.
The Ravens led 10-0 when
FOOTBALL
JndianapoRs at Pittsburgh, 4:15p.m.
ened the Ravens.
Notlonol
Footlilll
~
Kansas City at San Diego. 4:15p.m.
Fiacco, who threw touch- . "1 dido t want to hold onto Cribbs caught Stover's kick
"I told every one of them,
CLEVELAND BROWNs-Ptacod OL
-N.Y. Giants at Philadelphia, 8:15p.m.
down
passes to Mark it and take a sack," Anderson at the 8 and took it all the
'Look me in the eye';"
Opon: Dallas. Wollhlngton, Tampa Bey, Ryan Tucker on injured reserve. Signed
Clayton
and
Derrick Mason, said of his ill-fated .pass to way back for his fifth career
WR Steve Sanders.
Baltimore
Lewis said. "I told them we
DENVER
BRONC05-Signod
QB
17
of 29 passes · Suggs. "I wish 1 would have kickoff return for a TD and
completed
Mondoy, Nov. tO
are going to win this game.
Darrell Hackney from the practice squad.
san Francisoo at Arizona, 8:30 p.m.
Waived OT Man Murphy,
We have to believe that. for 248 yards. Mason, tl)e handled that a Iinle belter, frrst this season, Cribbs' also
DETROIT LION5-Agraed to Ierma Adversity builds character." sure-handed 13-year veter- but I'm trying to win brought a punt back 32 yards
PRo BASKETBALL with
OB Daunte Culpepper.
and finished with 278 return
•'
The Browns (3"5) had an, had nine catches for 136 games."
GREEN BAY PACKERs--A- DE
llotlcJMI-11 AoiOCIIIIon
yards
and
Rice,
filling
in
for
Anderson
may
not
have
to
yards - 237 on kickoffs and
Kabeer Gbaja-Biamlla. Activated OT
built their 14-point advan- the injured Willis McGahee, worry about that pass. if 41
EASTERN CONFERENCE
on ~unts.
Justin Harrtll from the pliy8ically unable tage thanks to return specialAttantk Dtvlllon
to
~rtorm list.
had
a
breakout
game
that
Edwards
had
come
through.
"He
s tough," ,Stover said.
WL Pot GB
NEW 'IORK JET5-Activatod LB Jason ist Joshua Cribbs' 92-yard included a critical 60-yard
..Toronto
3 0 1.000
After
Fiacco's
28-yard
TO
"I
kicked
it left, right,
Trusnik from "the physically-unable-tokickoff return for a TD, two run In the fourth to set up pass to Mason tied it ar 27, poj!(led it up and
'Boston
2 1 .667 1
tried everyperform list. Waived Ol Kateem Brown.
scoring passes by quarter- Stover's last field goal.
.New Jersey
1 1 .500 1~
HOCKEY
thing.
He's
that
good."'
·
Edwards
got
behind
New voo.
t 2 .333 2
back Derek Anderson and
Notlonol Hoc:Uy ~
Fiacco
and
Rice
are
get-·
Baltimore's
secondary
on
Notes:
The
Ravens
won
Philadelphia
t 2 .333 2
CAROLINA HURRICANE5-IIocallod two field goals by Phil
ting better with each game, third down but the talented despite missing three starters
F Patrlcl&lt; CWyor trom Albany (AHL).
Dawson, who closed the just
WL
Pot
GB
COLUMBUS BLUE JACKETs- first
receiver failed to in their secondary as Chris
half by banging a hor,c:d.as the Ravens had wide
. ...2 0 t.OOO
Activated F Aaffi Torres from injured
squeeze
perfectly thrown McAllister, Samari Rolle
'Chartono
t t .500 t
reaerve.
career-long
54-y.arder ,.' WheQ they get drafted by ball from aAnderson
:Miami
t 2 .333 t ~
while he and Dawan Landry sat out
DALLAS STAR5-Aaslgntid C Marte through the uprights.
'Or'llncJo
1 2 .333
1:..
Fillric and F :lames Neal to Mllllltollo
the
Baltimore
Ravens,
we
was
in
full
stride.
It
was the with injuries. ... Stover
But Clevefand collapsed expect them to play like latest drop by the
:Waohlngtoo
0 2 .000 2
(AHL),
· Pro played in his 279th game,
c:.m.t DIWIIon
PHOENIX COYOTE5-Actfvatod D and no play hun more than
WL Pot GB Jonas Ahnelcw from injured reeerw and wide receiver Braylon that,'' rookie coach John Bowler, who has been tying him with Bruce Smith
2 0 1.000
asalgned him 10 San Antonio (AHL),
Harbaugh said. "Are we sur- plagued by them all season. for 12th all~time and he
2 t .687 li
PITISBURGH PENGUINs-:.Aocallod Edwards' drop of a certain prised?No."
Edwards declined inter'• passed Jim Bakken for 13th
22 .SOOt
F Jannt Peaonan from Wilke•·
long touchdown early in the
After Stover's third field view requests afterward.
place with 536 PATs.
tt .SOOI
- ( A H L ).
~-

purchase, A3

Bv BRYAN WALTERS

NewOttoonl

-

Gun Club assists
scouts with b-ailer

RACINE - Racine Police
Officer Kevin Dugan has
been hired as the village's
police marshal. replacing
Curtis Jones who resigned
his position last .month.
Mayor J. Scott Hill said
Dugan has been authorized .
to work al least 20 hours a
week as well as some additional hours until the village
can hire another part-time
police officer. At its recessed
session last month, Racine
mised its starting pay for
police officers to $10.50 per
hour lo altract applicants ,
making it Meigs County's
highest paying village police
department in tem1s of the
starting salary for a police
officer. AI tliis point the village has only received some
interest in the part-time officer's position but no one has
been hired.
As for financing the police
department's hiring of more
officers. Hill said he consulled the village solicitor as
to how the village might
raise funds tn pay more parttitl)e of'ficers. Legal options
available to the village are a
permissive license fee. a

Pluse see Racine, AS

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