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'

•= 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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·•

:~

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

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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-·

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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

�il
,I

:The Daily Sentinel

ACROSS THE NATION

PageA2

'

· Tuesday, November 4, 2_o o8

Tuesday, November 4, 2008 .

ANNIE'S MAilBOX

Community Calendar

Son, wife holding children hostage

.After election, new
·.·president has to
.wait 77 days .

In this July 27,
2007, file photo ,
signs for American
Express, Master
Card and Visa credit
cards are shown on
a New York store's
door. Banks tight·
ened up further on
all sorts of lending
from home· morf
gages to credit
cards and business
loans as the worst
financial crisis in .
seven decades took
a bigger toll on the ·
economy.
AP photo

BY JENNIFER LOVEN
APWHITE HOUSE CORRESPONDENT

WASHINGTON -The world is anxipusly awaiting new
. ideas and fresh leadership from America 's new president to .
, deal with the economic ' crisis that has encircled the globe
. with sickening speed. Unemployment is climbing, the
,stock market has plummeted and bu sinesses are teetering.
. But for 77 days after the election, the problems will be
, George Bush's - and both Barack Obama and John
McCain .have signaled they will defer to him .
Both Obama and McCain understand the enormous pres. sure that the Election Day victor will be under to begin tak. ing aggressive action virtually as soon as the votes are
counted. But reality likely will prevent much of that from
, happening.
,.
.
The president-elect. willliave the nation's affirmation but
. not any actual authority over government. Most politicians
' also would resist assuming public responsibility for tri,cky
, issues when someone else is still in charge, especially when
. that someone 's approval ratings are nearly equal to the
· worst for any president since Gallup first starting compil. ing them 70 years ago. ·
Bv MARTIN CRUTSINGER
plans to buy billions in dis- and medium-sized busi - the third quarter~ afier post' Finally, there is the .traditional protocol of respect in the
AND
tressed
mortgage-related nesses.
· ing a profit of $2.2 billion , or
. U.S . political system, between presidents and former presMARCY GORDON
assets that banks hold.
A large number of banks 44 cents a share, a year earliidents and incoming presidents.
AssociATED PRESS WAITERS
The unprecedented gov- also reported they were er. Profit at JPMorgun Cl)ase
"He understands there is only one president,'' an Obama
ernment
moves
are tightening standards for &amp; Co. tumbled 84 percel)t to
adviser said.
WASHINGTON
designed to 'bolster banks' both credit cards and other $527 million. or ll cents a
"There would be a lot of involvement. but that doesn't Banks tightened the spig, balance.sheets and break the types of consumer loans.
share, . while Bank of
mean you'd replace the cmTent president. Far from it." said ots further on all sorts of logjam jn bank lending to
Besides the nearly 60 per- America Corp.'s earJ)ing$ - .
Doug Holtz-Eakin, McCain's senior policy adviser.
lending, from home mort, get tire credit system rnov - cent of l:!anks tightening dropped 68 percent to $.1 .2
"A president-elect could only make matters worse if there gages to · credit cards and ing again - and avoid the standards on credit card billion, or 15 cenfl! a slub'e. '
, is any suggestion that he is moving in a direction different business loans, as ,the country sinking into a deep debt, 65 percent said they
·Coritilluilig a patteinjeen
:. from the current president ," said Normah Ornstein , a resi- worst financial crisis in ahd prolonged recession.
had tightened lending stan- since the ''housing- bubble
dent scholar at the American Enterprise Institute and a tran- seven decades took a big·The Fed survey of. 55 dards for other types of con- burst, large ,majorities qf
:· sition expert. "You can l'feate a real lack of confidence ger toll on the economy.
domestic banks and 21 U.S. sumer loans over the past banks· reported tigb~f l~nd•
~here. And the more delicate the situation. and the situation
The Federal Reserve said offices of· foreign banks · three months:
ing _standards -oo ' : P#II1,e
~ we're in is very delicate, the more carefully you have to
Monday that its latest quar- found that sizable percentAbout 20 percent of the mortgag.e_loans, as: wei~ : as
tread."
.
terly survey of bank lending ages of banks had "contin- domestic banks reported nontraditional ·mo"¥ilge
· · Bush 's biggest final job is managing the massive $700 practices found high num- . ued to tighten their lending cutting limits for existing loans and subprime . mortbillion financial industry rescue package, which includes hers of banks reporting standards and terms on all credit ca~d accounts held by tages extended to borrowers
-·myriad tools aimed at shoring up firms '.balance sheets so tighter credit standards major loan categories over prime, or strong credit, cus- · With weak credit histories.
- they will get credit flowing through the U.S. economy across a broad range of loan the previous three months." . tamers. Around 60 percent ' The Fed survey found 70
again. The plan's direction has changed several times as the products. Nearly 60 percent · The figures reflect the of .domestic banks had percent.of the banks respondadministration scrambles to keep up with events. .
· of banks responding to the . condition of bank lending reduced those limits for · mg said they had. tightened
The administration 'also is debating whether to intervene survey said they had tight- "as the economy has "non prime" borrowers.
lending standards further-for
aggressively to help struggling automakers. · And it is ened lending .Standards on . entered inlo a recession ," . Amid the souring econo- prime mortgages. That was ·
weighing whether to find a new way to help homeowners credit card debt.
said Keith Leggett, senior my and rising job losses, on top of 75 percent who
· avoid foreclosure.
"We're into the eye of the economist at the American defaults on credit card debt were tightening such stan.· Ornstein, whose transition expertise has been enlisted by storm here ,'' said Brian Bankers Association. '
have mounted and banks datds in the previous survey.
ihe Bush White House , said officials there may even offer Bethune, chief U.S. finan- , The Fed found 85 percent already staggering f~om the· Thelatest results for that area
to take unpopular action before leaving oftice and take it cial economist at IHS of. the domestic banks mortgage and credit crises covered 52 institutions that
off the new president's hands - if the president-elect's Global · · Insight,
in responding to ' the survey are losing billions inore from account for about 78 percent
,team wants it.
Lexington , Ma~.
reported that they . had unpaid credit card bills.
of residential real estate loans
Ornstein said a smart president-elect would name his
The latest Fed survey 'was tightened their le)lding · . Credit card lenders have as of June.
, treasury secretary and economic team quickly. and perhaps conducted . in the first two stan'dards for a major type been reducing 'customers'
Reconj defaults that
hold high-protlle talkfests on key, long-term issues, but not weeks. of October, 1oo soon of Qusiness loans known as · credit lines, raising interest began in the area of subdo much else. As soon as the campaign is over, being ·seen to reflect possible effects of "commercial and ·industri- · rates . or even closing · prime mortgages . have
"' as bashing Bush - by either Obama or McCain ~ turns the govemmeqt's pro~ to . a!" loans, up. from 60 per- accoun!S as they tighten the resulted in billions of dol,: from a campaign-season plus to a nev,:-administration lia- . inject about $250 billion into . cent , in the June survey. reins to reduce their risk.
Iars in losses for financiill ..
bility.
.
U.S. banks by directly buy- Nearly all banks - 95 perBanks' earnings haye institutions and triggered
· • · "You don't gain anything politically from it anymore , ing shares in them as part·of cen,t ...: . re.pqrted ~ighter reflected the financial car- the most severe financial
and y&lt;lu could hul't yourself - and the country," he s~id.
a broader financial rescue standards for ·the lines of nage. Citigroup Inc . lost $2.8 . crisis to hit this country
. Another issue facing the new president is what to do effort: The goyemment aJso · ·credit they extend to large billion, or 60 cents a share, in since· the 1930s.
·
: about a big spending plan being pushed by Con~ress'
·- Democratic leadership, perhaps in excess of $150 billion,
for a new economic stimulus package that would be a
;. sequel !o the tax rebates earlier this year. A series of hearings has been staged to start generating support for hold- , HONOLULU (AP) · ~
·ing a special postelection session on such a package, to Bar11ck Obama 's grandinclude items such as roads and other infrast(Ucture mother, whose · personality
_ improvements, aid for cash-strapped states, boosting food- and :bearing shaped much of
. st~mp allotments and an extensiOn of unemployment ben- · the life of the Democratic
efitS.
presidential contender, has
McCain and Senate Republicans have indicated they died, Obama announced
could accept another extension of jobless benefits. But Monday, one day .before 'the
Bush's resistance seems to ,doom passage of anything else election. Madelyn Payne
in an immediate lame-duck session, and a McCain win Dunham was 86.
probably would doom it for. good.
Obama announced the
· I.f Obarha wins, he could chocise to actively campaign, news from the campaign
not just among fellow senators but around the co,untry, to trail in Charlotte; N.C. The
build pressure on Bush to reverse course on a stimulus joint statement ·with his sismeasure : His aides are studying historical precedent on ter Maya Soetoro-Ng said
transitions to help them plot out how - .and how much ~ Dunham died late Sunday at
he should be.·seen if he becomes· president-elect.
.
her Honolulu apartment ·
If Obama opted to wait until Bush is gone, it seems like- after a battle with cancer.
ly that a Stimulus II would be one of the first pieces of leg"She's gone home,"
islative business accoll)plished under his administration. Obama said as tens of thou- ·
That could hand him a quick viCtory, b\lt also pose some sands of rowdy supporters
complications,. as he has broader economic and tax pro- at the University of North
posal s as well. They include business tax breaks for job
creation , penalty-free retirement-account withdrawals, a CarolinacCharlotte grew
90-day freeze on so me foreclosures and small business silent in an evening driZzle.
"And she died peacefully
help. .
,
·
,
in
her sleep with my sister at ·
, Holtz-Eakin said McCain would spend his transition trymg to reassure the public without getting in Bush's way. her side, And so there is
McCain's main priority would be to try to start gaining great joy as well as tears.
traction on his $300 billion plan for the government to buy I'm not going to taJk about
bad mortgages and renegotiate them at a reduced price, it too long because it is hard
fgr me to talk about." .
·
·
Holtz-Eakin said.
AP' photo/Obama far America
But he said he wanted This undated photo relea~d by Obama for America shows Barack Obama with his grand;: Neither Democrat Obama nor Republican McCain will
: atten,J an _economic summit of world leader-s tieing hosted people to know alittle .about parents, Stanley' Armour 'D.unham and Madelyn Lee Payrie Dunham in New York City, dur; by Bush 111 Washmgtoll less than two weeks after Election . her - that she lived ing a vis~ With Obama, ~ was a student at Columbia University. A day before the presthe
·Great idential election, Barack Obama announced the death. Monday of his grandmother, who
• Day. The question hanging over the meeting is what course through
: will be set by America "s next president to save the econo- Depression and World War , helped raise hil):i and who·he praised as the cornerstone of his family.
·
II, working the· latter .on a
. .
.,.
: my:
.
British Prime Minister Gordon Brown said Monday that ,bomber assembly line with, · ·Republican . ; .1
.ohn · ment l~bby -~~ed the pub- · uated from high school.
: U.S . leadership "wi ll and must.continue" during the transi- a baby at home and a hus- McCain · ''issued" condo- Iic to 'keep out
Their daughter, Stanley
• t10n penod . H1s spokesman , M1chael Ellam said economic band serving ·his country. lences·. '"Our thoughts ' itnd
. The
Kansas-born Ann , was born in 1942. ·
· : solutions would be "effective and lasting" ~nly if the U.S. He said she was humble and prayers go out to them as Dunham and her husband, After several moves to and
plain · spoken, one of the they remember and cele- Stanley, raised their grand- from California; Texas,
: showed "full engagementc"
'
.
: Led by Brown and French President Nicolas Sarkozy, "quiet heroes that we have brate the ·life of someone son for . several years in Washington and Kansas,
. Europeans are seekmg amb1t1ous regulatory reforms coor- all across America" work- who had · such a profound Honolulu while their daugh- Stanley Dunham's job lan,d: dma1ed among nation s. aimed at preventing a repeat ofthe ing hard and hoping to see iiYJpact in their lives," the ter and her second husband · ed the family in Hawaii.
.; U.S. housmg market collapse that turned into a global cred- their children and grand- statement by John and lived overseas. ,Her influIt was there , in a Russian
j tt freeze and 1s threat~m.ng jobs and economic activity. children thrive .
ence on Obama 's manner cla'ss at the University of
Cindy McCain said.
Obama
learned
of
1 They want to consider ent1rely revamping the international
J,..ast month, Obama took and the way he viewed the Hawaii , that Stanley Ann
: financtal and monetary system, and 'Sarkozy has said he Dunham's death Monday a break from campaigning world was substantial, the met · Obama's father, a
'morning whi!e he was cam- and flew to Hawaii to be candidate told millions Kenyan named Barack
• hoped the 'summit would yield concrete decisions.
, : The _Bush~ ,,ite House is promising nothing ofthe sort. paigning in Jacksonville , with Dunham ,as her health watching him · accept his . Hussein Oil'" a. Their son
. Pres1denuai s~okeswoman Dana Perino sald Monday Fla. The family said a pri- 'declined. He told CBS that partis nomination in was born iii August 1961,
; that the meetmg s purpose was to come to agreement on vate ceremony would be he "got there too late" when Denver in August.
but the marriage didn't last.
• underlymg causes O'f the problem, review actions taken so. held later.
"She's the one who taught
Stanley ·Ann later marhis mother died. of ovarian
"So many of us were hop- cancer in 1995 at age 53 and me about hard work," he ried an Indonesian , and
: far and outline "principles. for reform" - a description that
: IS a far cry from overhauling regulations . .
ing and praying that his wanted to a vqid that mis- said . "She's the one who put Obama moved to · that
grandmother
would have take again. .
: Indeed , one reason t~at Bush included in the gathering
off buying a · new car or a country with his mother
: not JUS_! nch countnes, but also majo r developing the opportunity to witness
Outside the apartment new dress for herself so that and stepfather at age 6. But
. econom1es such as Chma , Brazil and India, was to let the her grandson become ·our building where Dunham I could have a better life . in 1971. her mother sent
: latter function as a brake on hard-charging new regulations. next president," said Hawaii died , reporters and TV cam- She poured everything she him back to Hawaii to live
Wah the Bu sh-led meetmg on Nov. 15 intended to be nnly state Rep. Marcus Oshiro, eras lined,,the sidewalk as had into me."
with her pilrents. He stay~
the first among many, all the leaders may put off schedul- an Obama supporter. "What two police officers were
Madelyn and Stanle)' with. the Dunhams until he
from
high
. ing the later ones to bring in not Bush, but their new U.S. a bittersweet victory it will posted near the elevator. Dunham married in 1940, a graduated
partner.
· be for him ."
in
1979.
·
school
Signs hanging in the apart- few weeks before she grad.. '
••

Fefs

Obama's ·grandmother dies just before Election Day

'

'

work in the E.A. degree . All
Past Masters are encouraged to attend. Chili dinner
Thesday, Nov. 4
follows.
Randy Smith,
ALFRED Orange 508-0816Call
with questions.
Township Trustees, 7:30
Friday,
Nov. 7 .
p.m. at . the home of fiscal
·
RACINE
Meigs
oftice, Osie Follrod.
County Pomona Grange offiWednesday, Nov. 5
cers
conference, followed by ,
REEDSVILLE - Olive
regular
meeting, 6:30 p.m.,
Township Trustees, 6:30
Racine
Grange
Hall .
p.m., township gara!le .
POMEROY
RACINE . - Fmancial
Alzheimer's
Support Group
Planning
· Supervision
for
·caregivers
of those
Commission for Southern
Local School District, regu • affected by Alzheimer 's and
Iar meeting, !Q:30 a.m., other dementia, 1:15 p.m.,
Meigs Senior Center, light
high school media room.
refreshments
served.
PAGEVILLE - Scipio ·
Monday, Nov. 10
Township Trustees, 6:30
POMEROY
- Partners
p.m. at the Pageville town
in
Care,
interactive
program
hall.
POMEROY - Meigs for those with memory loss ..
County . Board of Health, 9 a.m. - 1. p.m., regular
regular meeting, 5 p.m., meetings today and Fridays,
Meigs County Health Meigs Senior Center.
CHAUNCEY- Area 14
·
Department.
Youth
. Council. regular
Thursday, Nov. 6
me.
e
ting,
9 a.m., Athens
CHESTER - Chester
CDJFS
office.
Townsi)ip Trustees, 7 p.m .
Thursday, Nov. 13
at the town haiL .
CHESTER
Shade
Thesday, Nov. 11
·
River
Lodge
Lodge
452,
at
POMEROY - Salisbury
Township Trustee, 6:30 the hall . Officers to be electp.m. home of Manning ed. time to pay dues .
Refreshments.
Roush.

Public meetings

Bv KATHY MITCHELL
AND MARCY SUGAR

riglH away, and then other guests what a monDear Annie: 1 read the
promise to do whatever they ster my daughter was. Two letter from "Desperate,"
want ·in the future. We know days later, her mother whose husband spends four
, Dear Annie: My son and y_ou feel1t .IS W(lrth any sac- · called me to say she wants nights a week at a gym and
daughter-in-l~w arc no nf1ce to see your grandchil- nothing to do with any of then socializes with his budloqger- on speaking terms dren , but we suspect your us ever again.
·
dies, including a younger
With my husband and me . A son and hi s wife will pull
It's been two years since woman of whom he is
year ago, they wanted us to this stunt repeatedly. The we' v.e spoken and I. miss apparently quite enamored.
Instead. of crying,. she
sign something for them only way it will stop is if lier terribly. She was like a
and said if We didn't sign, you are Willing to be · sister to me . Were we should 1.do
something.
they would no longer let us estl'anged . Sorry.
, . wrong to a~k Joelle to be a Surprise him .' Get a , babysee our grandchildren. My , Dear Annie: My daugh- bridesmaid? Carly's moth- sitter and workout' gear and
husband refused and ·they ter has two .cousins. er has moved to another go to the 'gym with him. His
took tile children away. "Carly" and "Joelle ." She city and my pride won 't let hean has drifted. She needs
These children live next was always Closer to Joelle , me call her. If I mean that to believe in her marriage
door to us. The oldest is 10 so when it tame time to much to her, why hasn' t ,and creatively cultivate their
and the youngest is 5. They plan her wedding, she she tried to call me? What love back into existence. ,...- .
spent more time with us opted to have her two best should ' I
do?
Fullilled in Omaha
than they did at home . They friends stand up for her Heartbroken in Montreal
·Dear Omaha: We agree
mean the world to us.
instead of either cousin. · Dear Montreal: These that it might help if she did
After a few months, I She d1dn 't want to hurt petty arguments have a_ way these activities with him,
convinced my husband to , Curly's feelings. .
.
of taking on a life of their but surprising him at tl\e
sign the paper. He ,did so.
Thr_ee days before , the . own. Brides are entitled to gym may have "unintended
but my son and daughter- weddmg , one of the bndes- ' select whomever they wish consequences.
in: law still refuse to let .us maods became very ill and as bridesmaids. Carly acted
Annie's Mailbox is writ: see the children. We gave could not attend . My daugh- boorishly. !vlom no doubt ten by /(athy Mitchell imd
' them what they wanted , tcr was desperate to fill the felt it necessary to take her Marcy Sugar, longtime edibut we sti II lose. What role and asked Joel'le, who daugh.ter's side, and every- tors of .the Ann Landers
· should we do ? - Fed Up was happy tO oblige. With thing escalated from there . column. Please e-moilyour
· with Our Son
all the last-minute chaos, it A gracious cousil) would que~tions to anniesmailDear Fed Up: How love- totally slipped my mind to have Jet it go, and a sensible box@comcast.net, or write
ly. Your sor\ and daughter~ mention thi s to cCarly's mother would have stayed t&amp;: Annie's Mailbox, P.O.
, in-law are holding their mother, who also happens out of it. If you want her Box 118190, Chicago, IL
, ·children hostage to get· to be my dearest friend .
back in your life. you 60611. To find out more
, whatever they want from
Well . when Carly and her should make the first move . about Annie's Mailbox,
you, and it's working. In mother saw Joe lie walk Call and say you're sorry and read f~atures by other
order to see the kids now. · down the. aisle, that was it. . Curly's feelings were hurt, Creators Syndicate writer.~
you will have to go on bend- They made a fuss during tell her you miss her and ask and cartoonists, visit ,the
_cd knee and beg forgivene ss the dinner, Carly got drunk · if you· can start over. We · Creators Syndicate · Web
for not signing those papers and cried, and then told. the hope she's missed you, too. page.at www.creators.com.

· Sunday, No.v. 9
POMEROY - Rev.ival.
services at the Mt. Hermon
Thesday, Nov. 4 .
CHESTER - Chester United Brethren Church,
Council, Daughters of each evening starting Nov. 9
America, 7 p.m. at the hall. continuing through Nov. 12
with the Rev. Clifford
Thursday, Nov. 6
Coleman. Following the
RACINE
Lo~ge morning service on Nov. 9,
Pomeroy/Racine
#16.4 · special meetmg. a carry-in dinner will be
6p.m .. at lodge in R;tcine . held. Special music each
Past Master's night with evening . .

.· Candidates speak to retired teachers
-. POMEROY - Four candidates for Meigs county
. commissioner spoke at the
recent meeting of the Meigs
-County Retired Teachers
. Associatiun held at the Wild
, Horse Cafe. .
. Incumbent Jim Sheets
gave his vision for the coun. ty which is' to have better
, · health
facilities,
He
, _expressed his disappoint, ment in the small enroll-ment at the ·new Bernard
Fultz Branch of Rio Grande
, , University and encouraged
. . more to. take advantage of
_ the facility. He also reminded the retired teachers that
. they can enroll free -of
, 'charge as can all retirees. _
: . Sheets mentioned the pluses: for the county with the
proposed AEP plant which
should be built sooh and the
coal mining operation to take
· place in the Racine area, and
. 'the need for more job oppor: !unities for young citizens.
. ·Sheets' opponent Mike
· i. Ba11rum retired NFL player
· wants to work to improve our
·: communities by developing

programs for the youth. He
stressed the need of leaders
who can work together to
·accomplish goals and the
importance of education al)d
promised to make ·an impact
in communities if elected. Tom Anderson, Tom
Lowery, and Bill Quickel, aJJ
running to fill the vacant seat
.of former commissioner, Jeff
ThorDton
also
spoke.
· An.den;on of Middleport, ·a
Vietnam veteran and retiree
of Goodyear Rubber Co.
after 30 years, spoke of the
need to improve the school
systems, to encourage students to further their education as well as the need to
' upgrade waterandsewersys_ terns in the county as a way
of encouraging and attracting
business and industry.
Lowery, Democratic candictate, commended the
county school systems, but
called for rnPre encouragement from parents to go further in school. He also
stressed the need for more
resources and job opportl!nities to keep youth m the

county and said his goal if
elected commissioner wilt
be to make Meigs County a
better place in which to live . .
Quickel , -an independent,
listed Meigs County as o'ne
of the best pl~ces to live , citing the_ Ohio River and
resources such as coal. His
, concern is that residents are
not motivated to take ad vantage of the job opportunities
available and while some
lack not only a desire to
work but the skills needed.
He encouraged residents to
take advantage of special
training classes as a way or
preparing to enter the work
force. Quickel alsospok~ of
the need for Jhe county to
lower the cost of private septic systems, now between
$15,000 and $20,000, as a
way of encouraging more
. construction. As for tourism
he said Meigs County needs
to have more of the industry
which is rated third in Ohio.
Preceding the luncheon
and program, Debbie Roush
had devotions and prayer. .
President Gay . Perrin wei-

comed the candidates; 14
members and four guests. ,
During the business meeting the president distributed
AARP .Divide(! We Fail
pledge cards, as well as
materials on Do Not Call
and Dead Zone surveys to
be completed.
JoAnn Corder, scholarship chairman, reported on
applications for the association's scholarships due by
Nov. 20. Applicaqts must be
a college junior or senior
maJoring in education and a
res1dent of Meigs County
with a grade point average
of2 :5 or above.
A thank you note was read
from Dee. Rader of God's
Net for the school supplies
.donated by ·the group.
Kathleen Scott was congratulated on her birthday and
recognition on the Today
s)low and in a recent issue
of the ORTA magazine.
Door pdzes were,awarded
to Rush Philson, Barbara
Beegle, Connie Gilkey,
Connie Enslen and Rachel
Downie.

.

Local Weather
~esday ...Sunny. Highs • ing mostly cloudy. A 40 perin the lower 70s. South · cent · chance · of showers.
winds around 5 mph.
· Highs in the lower 60s.
Tuesday night ...Mostly
Friday night ...Cioudy with
clear. Lows in ti1e mid 40s. a 50 percent chance of showEast winds around 5 mph in ers. Low~M!_fhe mid 40s.
the
evening ... Becoming
Saturdilf: ..Cioudy with a
light and variable.
30 percent chance of show. , Wednesday ... Sunny. ers. Highs around 50.
Highs in the lower . 70s.
Saturday night ...Mostly
Southeast winds around 5 cloudy with a chance of rain
mph.
and snow showers. Lows in
Wednesday night...Mostly the lower 30s. Chance of
clear. Lows in the mid 40s. precipitation 30 percent.
East winds around 5 mph.
Sunday... Mostly doudy
Thursday...Sunny. Highs with a 30 percent chance of
in the lower 70s.
rain showers. Highs in the
Thu~day night •.• Partly
upper 40s . .
cloudy. Lows in the upper
Sunday
night
and
40s.
Monday... Mostly cloudy.
· Friday ...Mostly sunny' in Lows in · the lower 30s.
the moming ... Then becom- Highs in the lower 50s.

•

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Church events

Clubs and
organizations

Local Stocks
AEP (NYSE) - 32.31
Akzo (NASDAQ) - 39.25
Ashland Inc. (NYSE) ;.. 22.62
Btg Lots (NYSE) - 23.60
Bob Evans (NASDAQ) - 20.20
BorgWamer (NYSE) - 22.51
Century Aluminum (NASDAQ) ·
- 14.34

Champion (NASDAQ) - 3.15
Charming Shops (NASDAQ) •
•

4.16

•

City Holding (NASDAQ) -

54.71

19.30

Harley-Davldaan (NYSE) 22.89

.'

JP Morgan (NYSE) - 40.73
Kroger (NYSE) - 27.32
Limited Brands (NYSE) 11.79

•

Ohio Valley Bane Corp. (NAS·
DAQ)- 20
BBT (NYSE) - 35.50
Peoples (NASDAQ) .- 20.02
Pepsico (NYSE) - 57.47
Premier (NMDAQ) - 8. 75
Rockwell (NYSE) - 28.21
Rocky Boots (NASDAQ) -

41.74

.

Calllns (NYSE) - 37.83
DuPont (NYSE) - 32.03
US Bank (NYSE) - 30.30
Gannett (NYSE) - 11.64
General Electric (NYSE) -

•
•

58.81

Royal Dutch Shell - 54.81
Seani Holding (NASDAQ) -

1.20

Norfolk Southern .(NYSE) -

Wai-Mart (NYSE) - 55.97
Wendy's (NYSE) - 3.39
WeaBanco (NYSE) - 27:86
Worthington (NYSE) - 12.85
Dally stock reports lire the 4
. p.m. ET closing quotes at
traneactlt;ms for Nov. 3, 2008,
provided by Edwanl Janes
financial advisors Isaac Mills
In Galllpolls·at (740) 441-9441
anil Lesley Marrero In Point
Pleasant at (304) 674;0174.
Member SIPC.

let's talk!

.

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PageA3

BY THE BEND

.The Daily Sentinel

Town Hall Forum
Submitted photo
·Marshall Aanestad, assistant senior patrol leader of Troop 235. accepts ·a check from Horace Karr while Rusty Bookman, .
·· Pomeroy Gun Club president, and Scoutmaster Erik Aanestad shake hal)ds. The money was used toward the purchase
. .of a trailer used to haul equipment.
'

'

·.Gun Club assists scouts with trailer purchase
'

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,.

CHESTER - The Meigs
·, County Boy Scout Troop
235 now has a new equip.· ment trailer, thanks to some
, help from the Pomeroy Gun
· .Club, its sponsor.
, As a part of the Club's
. celebration of its centennial
· ·(1908-2008) ··· members
• donated items to · be auctioned off in an effort to
:-generate funds ·for local
-. youth groups and create

interest in new membership.
A premium· item raffled
off was a limited edition of·
the Ohio Highway Patrol
50th anniversary Ruger 357
Magnum pistol donated by
the late Bernard Fultz via
Horace Karr. "Even after
death Bernard continues to
give to the community. No
one has ever been or will
ever be as great a friend to
Meigs Coul)ty," said Kart.

As a part of it sponsorship,
the club voted to make a
donation of $I ,500 to Troop
235 to assist the troop ·in
acquiring 1\ new equipment
trailer to take camping gear
and supplies on troop outings .
. Troop 235 is part of the '
. MGfV! District and the
Tristate Area Council. Erik
Aanestad has been the scoutmaster of the troop for the
past three years. In accepting
'

the gift, Annestad said "I am
thrilled to have such -strong
local support. We are already
making pltms to take the boys
on a spring hiking/camping
event to the Appalachian
Trail and the trailer will be a
tremendous improvement in
everything . we do. It's all
about the boys."
The troop meetings are
held at the Pomeroy Gun
Club on Sunday afternoons.

· Nov.17 • 6-8 p.m. ·
Rio Grande- Meigs Campus
. Pomeroy ·
·Join us for an informal meeting to voice opinions and
share ideas on how to work toward a better community,
county and region. Join the Buckeye Hills Town Hall
.Forum and let's talk!

Broadband • Water &amp; Sewer • Health Care
Energy • Transportation • Tourism • Housing
Infrastructure • Workforce Development

www.buckeyehill s.org
740-374-9436

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,I

:The Daily Sentinel

ACROSS THE NATION

PageA2

'

· Tuesday, November 4, 2_o o8

Tuesday, November 4, 2008 .

ANNIE'S MAilBOX

Community Calendar

Son, wife holding children hostage

.After election, new
·.·president has to
.wait 77 days .

In this July 27,
2007, file photo ,
signs for American
Express, Master
Card and Visa credit
cards are shown on
a New York store's
door. Banks tight·
ened up further on
all sorts of lending
from home· morf
gages to credit
cards and business
loans as the worst
financial crisis in .
seven decades took
a bigger toll on the ·
economy.
AP photo

BY JENNIFER LOVEN
APWHITE HOUSE CORRESPONDENT

WASHINGTON -The world is anxipusly awaiting new
. ideas and fresh leadership from America 's new president to .
, deal with the economic ' crisis that has encircled the globe
. with sickening speed. Unemployment is climbing, the
,stock market has plummeted and bu sinesses are teetering.
. But for 77 days after the election, the problems will be
, George Bush's - and both Barack Obama and John
McCain .have signaled they will defer to him .
Both Obama and McCain understand the enormous pres. sure that the Election Day victor will be under to begin tak. ing aggressive action virtually as soon as the votes are
counted. But reality likely will prevent much of that from
, happening.
,.
.
The president-elect. willliave the nation's affirmation but
. not any actual authority over government. Most politicians
' also would resist assuming public responsibility for tri,cky
, issues when someone else is still in charge, especially when
. that someone 's approval ratings are nearly equal to the
· worst for any president since Gallup first starting compil. ing them 70 years ago. ·
Bv MARTIN CRUTSINGER
plans to buy billions in dis- and medium-sized busi - the third quarter~ afier post' Finally, there is the .traditional protocol of respect in the
AND
tressed
mortgage-related nesses.
· ing a profit of $2.2 billion , or
. U.S . political system, between presidents and former presMARCY GORDON
assets that banks hold.
A large number of banks 44 cents a share, a year earliidents and incoming presidents.
AssociATED PRESS WAITERS
The unprecedented gov- also reported they were er. Profit at JPMorgun Cl)ase
"He understands there is only one president,'' an Obama
ernment
moves
are tightening standards for &amp; Co. tumbled 84 percel)t to
adviser said.
WASHINGTON
designed to 'bolster banks' both credit cards and other $527 million. or ll cents a
"There would be a lot of involvement. but that doesn't Banks tightened the spig, balance.sheets and break the types of consumer loans.
share, . while Bank of
mean you'd replace the cmTent president. Far from it." said ots further on all sorts of logjam jn bank lending to
Besides the nearly 60 per- America Corp.'s earJ)ing$ - .
Doug Holtz-Eakin, McCain's senior policy adviser.
lending, from home mort, get tire credit system rnov - cent of l:!anks tightening dropped 68 percent to $.1 .2
"A president-elect could only make matters worse if there gages to · credit cards and ing again - and avoid the standards on credit card billion, or 15 cenfl! a slub'e. '
, is any suggestion that he is moving in a direction different business loans, as ,the country sinking into a deep debt, 65 percent said they
·Coritilluilig a patteinjeen
:. from the current president ," said Normah Ornstein , a resi- worst financial crisis in ahd prolonged recession.
had tightened lending stan- since the ''housing- bubble
dent scholar at the American Enterprise Institute and a tran- seven decades took a big·The Fed survey of. 55 dards for other types of con- burst, large ,majorities qf
:· sition expert. "You can l'feate a real lack of confidence ger toll on the economy.
domestic banks and 21 U.S. sumer loans over the past banks· reported tigb~f l~nd•
~here. And the more delicate the situation. and the situation
The Federal Reserve said offices of· foreign banks · three months:
ing _standards -oo ' : P#II1,e
~ we're in is very delicate, the more carefully you have to
Monday that its latest quar- found that sizable percentAbout 20 percent of the mortgag.e_loans, as: wei~ : as
tread."
.
terly survey of bank lending ages of banks had "contin- domestic banks reported nontraditional ·mo"¥ilge
· · Bush 's biggest final job is managing the massive $700 practices found high num- . ued to tighten their lending cutting limits for existing loans and subprime . mortbillion financial industry rescue package, which includes hers of banks reporting standards and terms on all credit ca~d accounts held by tages extended to borrowers
-·myriad tools aimed at shoring up firms '.balance sheets so tighter credit standards major loan categories over prime, or strong credit, cus- · With weak credit histories.
- they will get credit flowing through the U.S. economy across a broad range of loan the previous three months." . tamers. Around 60 percent ' The Fed survey found 70
again. The plan's direction has changed several times as the products. Nearly 60 percent · The figures reflect the of .domestic banks had percent.of the banks respondadministration scrambles to keep up with events. .
· of banks responding to the . condition of bank lending reduced those limits for · mg said they had. tightened
The administration 'also is debating whether to intervene survey said they had tight- "as the economy has "non prime" borrowers.
lending standards further-for
aggressively to help struggling automakers. · And it is ened lending .Standards on . entered inlo a recession ," . Amid the souring econo- prime mortgages. That was ·
weighing whether to find a new way to help homeowners credit card debt.
said Keith Leggett, senior my and rising job losses, on top of 75 percent who
· avoid foreclosure.
"We're into the eye of the economist at the American defaults on credit card debt were tightening such stan.· Ornstein, whose transition expertise has been enlisted by storm here ,'' said Brian Bankers Association. '
have mounted and banks datds in the previous survey.
ihe Bush White House , said officials there may even offer Bethune, chief U.S. finan- , The Fed found 85 percent already staggering f~om the· Thelatest results for that area
to take unpopular action before leaving oftice and take it cial economist at IHS of. the domestic banks mortgage and credit crises covered 52 institutions that
off the new president's hands - if the president-elect's Global · · Insight,
in responding to ' the survey are losing billions inore from account for about 78 percent
,team wants it.
Lexington , Ma~.
reported that they . had unpaid credit card bills.
of residential real estate loans
Ornstein said a smart president-elect would name his
The latest Fed survey 'was tightened their le)lding · . Credit card lenders have as of June.
, treasury secretary and economic team quickly. and perhaps conducted . in the first two stan'dards for a major type been reducing 'customers'
Reconj defaults that
hold high-protlle talkfests on key, long-term issues, but not weeks. of October, 1oo soon of Qusiness loans known as · credit lines, raising interest began in the area of subdo much else. As soon as the campaign is over, being ·seen to reflect possible effects of "commercial and ·industri- · rates . or even closing · prime mortgages . have
"' as bashing Bush - by either Obama or McCain ~ turns the govemmeqt's pro~ to . a!" loans, up. from 60 per- accoun!S as they tighten the resulted in billions of dol,: from a campaign-season plus to a nev,:-administration lia- . inject about $250 billion into . cent , in the June survey. reins to reduce their risk.
Iars in losses for financiill ..
bility.
.
U.S. banks by directly buy- Nearly all banks - 95 perBanks' earnings haye institutions and triggered
· • · "You don't gain anything politically from it anymore , ing shares in them as part·of cen,t ...: . re.pqrted ~ighter reflected the financial car- the most severe financial
and y&lt;lu could hul't yourself - and the country," he s~id.
a broader financial rescue standards for ·the lines of nage. Citigroup Inc . lost $2.8 . crisis to hit this country
. Another issue facing the new president is what to do effort: The goyemment aJso · ·credit they extend to large billion, or 60 cents a share, in since· the 1930s.
·
: about a big spending plan being pushed by Con~ress'
·- Democratic leadership, perhaps in excess of $150 billion,
for a new economic stimulus package that would be a
;. sequel !o the tax rebates earlier this year. A series of hearings has been staged to start generating support for hold- , HONOLULU (AP) · ~
·ing a special postelection session on such a package, to Bar11ck Obama 's grandinclude items such as roads and other infrast(Ucture mother, whose · personality
_ improvements, aid for cash-strapped states, boosting food- and :bearing shaped much of
. st~mp allotments and an extensiOn of unemployment ben- · the life of the Democratic
efitS.
presidential contender, has
McCain and Senate Republicans have indicated they died, Obama announced
could accept another extension of jobless benefits. But Monday, one day .before 'the
Bush's resistance seems to ,doom passage of anything else election. Madelyn Payne
in an immediate lame-duck session, and a McCain win Dunham was 86.
probably would doom it for. good.
Obama announced the
· I.f Obarha wins, he could chocise to actively campaign, news from the campaign
not just among fellow senators but around the co,untry, to trail in Charlotte; N.C. The
build pressure on Bush to reverse course on a stimulus joint statement ·with his sismeasure : His aides are studying historical precedent on ter Maya Soetoro-Ng said
transitions to help them plot out how - .and how much ~ Dunham died late Sunday at
he should be.·seen if he becomes· president-elect.
.
her Honolulu apartment ·
If Obama opted to wait until Bush is gone, it seems like- after a battle with cancer.
ly that a Stimulus II would be one of the first pieces of leg"She's gone home,"
islative business accoll)plished under his administration. Obama said as tens of thou- ·
That could hand him a quick viCtory, b\lt also pose some sands of rowdy supporters
complications,. as he has broader economic and tax pro- at the University of North
posal s as well. They include business tax breaks for job
creation , penalty-free retirement-account withdrawals, a CarolinacCharlotte grew
90-day freeze on so me foreclosures and small business silent in an evening driZzle.
"And she died peacefully
help. .
,
·
,
in
her sleep with my sister at ·
, Holtz-Eakin said McCain would spend his transition trymg to reassure the public without getting in Bush's way. her side, And so there is
McCain's main priority would be to try to start gaining great joy as well as tears.
traction on his $300 billion plan for the government to buy I'm not going to taJk about
bad mortgages and renegotiate them at a reduced price, it too long because it is hard
fgr me to talk about." .
·
·
Holtz-Eakin said.
AP' photo/Obama far America
But he said he wanted This undated photo relea~d by Obama for America shows Barack Obama with his grand;: Neither Democrat Obama nor Republican McCain will
: atten,J an _economic summit of world leader-s tieing hosted people to know alittle .about parents, Stanley' Armour 'D.unham and Madelyn Lee Payrie Dunham in New York City, dur; by Bush 111 Washmgtoll less than two weeks after Election . her - that she lived ing a vis~ With Obama, ~ was a student at Columbia University. A day before the presthe
·Great idential election, Barack Obama announced the death. Monday of his grandmother, who
• Day. The question hanging over the meeting is what course through
: will be set by America "s next president to save the econo- Depression and World War , helped raise hil):i and who·he praised as the cornerstone of his family.
·
II, working the· latter .on a
. .
.,.
: my:
.
British Prime Minister Gordon Brown said Monday that ,bomber assembly line with, · ·Republican . ; .1
.ohn · ment l~bby -~~ed the pub- · uated from high school.
: U.S . leadership "wi ll and must.continue" during the transi- a baby at home and a hus- McCain · ''issued" condo- Iic to 'keep out
Their daughter, Stanley
• t10n penod . H1s spokesman , M1chael Ellam said economic band serving ·his country. lences·. '"Our thoughts ' itnd
. The
Kansas-born Ann , was born in 1942. ·
· : solutions would be "effective and lasting" ~nly if the U.S. He said she was humble and prayers go out to them as Dunham and her husband, After several moves to and
plain · spoken, one of the they remember and cele- Stanley, raised their grand- from California; Texas,
: showed "full engagementc"
'
.
: Led by Brown and French President Nicolas Sarkozy, "quiet heroes that we have brate the ·life of someone son for . several years in Washington and Kansas,
. Europeans are seekmg amb1t1ous regulatory reforms coor- all across America" work- who had · such a profound Honolulu while their daugh- Stanley Dunham's job lan,d: dma1ed among nation s. aimed at preventing a repeat ofthe ing hard and hoping to see iiYJpact in their lives," the ter and her second husband · ed the family in Hawaii.
.; U.S. housmg market collapse that turned into a global cred- their children and grand- statement by John and lived overseas. ,Her influIt was there , in a Russian
j tt freeze and 1s threat~m.ng jobs and economic activity. children thrive .
ence on Obama 's manner cla'ss at the University of
Cindy McCain said.
Obama
learned
of
1 They want to consider ent1rely revamping the international
J,..ast month, Obama took and the way he viewed the Hawaii , that Stanley Ann
: financtal and monetary system, and 'Sarkozy has said he Dunham's death Monday a break from campaigning world was substantial, the met · Obama's father, a
'morning whi!e he was cam- and flew to Hawaii to be candidate told millions Kenyan named Barack
• hoped the 'summit would yield concrete decisions.
, : The _Bush~ ,,ite House is promising nothing ofthe sort. paigning in Jacksonville , with Dunham ,as her health watching him · accept his . Hussein Oil'" a. Their son
. Pres1denuai s~okeswoman Dana Perino sald Monday Fla. The family said a pri- 'declined. He told CBS that partis nomination in was born iii August 1961,
; that the meetmg s purpose was to come to agreement on vate ceremony would be he "got there too late" when Denver in August.
but the marriage didn't last.
• underlymg causes O'f the problem, review actions taken so. held later.
"She's the one who taught
Stanley ·Ann later marhis mother died. of ovarian
"So many of us were hop- cancer in 1995 at age 53 and me about hard work," he ried an Indonesian , and
: far and outline "principles. for reform" - a description that
: IS a far cry from overhauling regulations . .
ing and praying that his wanted to a vqid that mis- said . "She's the one who put Obama moved to · that
grandmother
would have take again. .
: Indeed , one reason t~at Bush included in the gathering
off buying a · new car or a country with his mother
: not JUS_! nch countnes, but also majo r developing the opportunity to witness
Outside the apartment new dress for herself so that and stepfather at age 6. But
. econom1es such as Chma , Brazil and India, was to let the her grandson become ·our building where Dunham I could have a better life . in 1971. her mother sent
: latter function as a brake on hard-charging new regulations. next president," said Hawaii died , reporters and TV cam- She poured everything she him back to Hawaii to live
Wah the Bu sh-led meetmg on Nov. 15 intended to be nnly state Rep. Marcus Oshiro, eras lined,,the sidewalk as had into me."
with her pilrents. He stay~
the first among many, all the leaders may put off schedul- an Obama supporter. "What two police officers were
Madelyn and Stanle)' with. the Dunhams until he
from
high
. ing the later ones to bring in not Bush, but their new U.S. a bittersweet victory it will posted near the elevator. Dunham married in 1940, a graduated
partner.
· be for him ."
in
1979.
·
school
Signs hanging in the apart- few weeks before she grad.. '
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Fefs

Obama's ·grandmother dies just before Election Day

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work in the E.A. degree . All
Past Masters are encouraged to attend. Chili dinner
Thesday, Nov. 4
follows.
Randy Smith,
ALFRED Orange 508-0816Call
with questions.
Township Trustees, 7:30
Friday,
Nov. 7 .
p.m. at . the home of fiscal
·
RACINE
Meigs
oftice, Osie Follrod.
County Pomona Grange offiWednesday, Nov. 5
cers
conference, followed by ,
REEDSVILLE - Olive
regular
meeting, 6:30 p.m.,
Township Trustees, 6:30
Racine
Grange
Hall .
p.m., township gara!le .
POMEROY
RACINE . - Fmancial
Alzheimer's
Support Group
Planning
· Supervision
for
·caregivers
of those
Commission for Southern
Local School District, regu • affected by Alzheimer 's and
Iar meeting, !Q:30 a.m., other dementia, 1:15 p.m.,
Meigs Senior Center, light
high school media room.
refreshments
served.
PAGEVILLE - Scipio ·
Monday, Nov. 10
Township Trustees, 6:30
POMEROY
- Partners
p.m. at the Pageville town
in
Care,
interactive
program
hall.
POMEROY - Meigs for those with memory loss ..
County . Board of Health, 9 a.m. - 1. p.m., regular
regular meeting, 5 p.m., meetings today and Fridays,
Meigs County Health Meigs Senior Center.
CHAUNCEY- Area 14
·
Department.
Youth
. Council. regular
Thursday, Nov. 6
me.
e
ting,
9 a.m., Athens
CHESTER - Chester
CDJFS
office.
Townsi)ip Trustees, 7 p.m .
Thursday, Nov. 13
at the town haiL .
CHESTER
Shade
Thesday, Nov. 11
·
River
Lodge
Lodge
452,
at
POMEROY - Salisbury
Township Trustee, 6:30 the hall . Officers to be electp.m. home of Manning ed. time to pay dues .
Refreshments.
Roush.

Public meetings

Bv KATHY MITCHELL
AND MARCY SUGAR

riglH away, and then other guests what a monDear Annie: 1 read the
promise to do whatever they ster my daughter was. Two letter from "Desperate,"
want ·in the future. We know days later, her mother whose husband spends four
, Dear Annie: My son and y_ou feel1t .IS W(lrth any sac- · called me to say she wants nights a week at a gym and
daughter-in-l~w arc no nf1ce to see your grandchil- nothing to do with any of then socializes with his budloqger- on speaking terms dren , but we suspect your us ever again.
·
dies, including a younger
With my husband and me . A son and hi s wife will pull
It's been two years since woman of whom he is
year ago, they wanted us to this stunt repeatedly. The we' v.e spoken and I. miss apparently quite enamored.
Instead. of crying,. she
sign something for them only way it will stop is if lier terribly. She was like a
and said if We didn't sign, you are Willing to be · sister to me . Were we should 1.do
something.
they would no longer let us estl'anged . Sorry.
, . wrong to a~k Joelle to be a Surprise him .' Get a , babysee our grandchildren. My , Dear Annie: My daugh- bridesmaid? Carly's moth- sitter and workout' gear and
husband refused and ·they ter has two .cousins. er has moved to another go to the 'gym with him. His
took tile children away. "Carly" and "Joelle ." She city and my pride won 't let hean has drifted. She needs
These children live next was always Closer to Joelle , me call her. If I mean that to believe in her marriage
door to us. The oldest is 10 so when it tame time to much to her, why hasn' t ,and creatively cultivate their
and the youngest is 5. They plan her wedding, she she tried to call me? What love back into existence. ,...- .
spent more time with us opted to have her two best should ' I
do?
Fullilled in Omaha
than they did at home . They friends stand up for her Heartbroken in Montreal
·Dear Omaha: We agree
mean the world to us.
instead of either cousin. · Dear Montreal: These that it might help if she did
After a few months, I She d1dn 't want to hurt petty arguments have a_ way these activities with him,
convinced my husband to , Curly's feelings. .
.
of taking on a life of their but surprising him at tl\e
sign the paper. He ,did so.
Thr_ee days before , the . own. Brides are entitled to gym may have "unintended
but my son and daughter- weddmg , one of the bndes- ' select whomever they wish consequences.
in: law still refuse to let .us maods became very ill and as bridesmaids. Carly acted
Annie's Mailbox is writ: see the children. We gave could not attend . My daugh- boorishly. !vlom no doubt ten by /(athy Mitchell imd
' them what they wanted , tcr was desperate to fill the felt it necessary to take her Marcy Sugar, longtime edibut we sti II lose. What role and asked Joel'le, who daugh.ter's side, and every- tors of .the Ann Landers
· should we do ? - Fed Up was happy tO oblige. With thing escalated from there . column. Please e-moilyour
· with Our Son
all the last-minute chaos, it A gracious cousil) would que~tions to anniesmailDear Fed Up: How love- totally slipped my mind to have Jet it go, and a sensible box@comcast.net, or write
ly. Your sor\ and daughter~ mention thi s to cCarly's mother would have stayed t&amp;: Annie's Mailbox, P.O.
, in-law are holding their mother, who also happens out of it. If you want her Box 118190, Chicago, IL
, ·children hostage to get· to be my dearest friend .
back in your life. you 60611. To find out more
, whatever they want from
Well . when Carly and her should make the first move . about Annie's Mailbox,
you, and it's working. In mother saw Joe lie walk Call and say you're sorry and read f~atures by other
order to see the kids now. · down the. aisle, that was it. . Curly's feelings were hurt, Creators Syndicate writer.~
you will have to go on bend- They made a fuss during tell her you miss her and ask and cartoonists, visit ,the
_cd knee and beg forgivene ss the dinner, Carly got drunk · if you· can start over. We · Creators Syndicate · Web
for not signing those papers and cried, and then told. the hope she's missed you, too. page.at www.creators.com.

· Sunday, No.v. 9
POMEROY - Rev.ival.
services at the Mt. Hermon
Thesday, Nov. 4 .
CHESTER - Chester United Brethren Church,
Council, Daughters of each evening starting Nov. 9
America, 7 p.m. at the hall. continuing through Nov. 12
with the Rev. Clifford
Thursday, Nov. 6
Coleman. Following the
RACINE
Lo~ge morning service on Nov. 9,
Pomeroy/Racine
#16.4 · special meetmg. a carry-in dinner will be
6p.m .. at lodge in R;tcine . held. Special music each
Past Master's night with evening . .

.· Candidates speak to retired teachers
-. POMEROY - Four candidates for Meigs county
. commissioner spoke at the
recent meeting of the Meigs
-County Retired Teachers
. Associatiun held at the Wild
, Horse Cafe. .
. Incumbent Jim Sheets
gave his vision for the coun. ty which is' to have better
, · health
facilities,
He
, _expressed his disappoint, ment in the small enroll-ment at the ·new Bernard
Fultz Branch of Rio Grande
, , University and encouraged
. . more to. take advantage of
_ the facility. He also reminded the retired teachers that
. they can enroll free -of
, 'charge as can all retirees. _
: . Sheets mentioned the pluses: for the county with the
proposed AEP plant which
should be built sooh and the
coal mining operation to take
· place in the Racine area, and
. 'the need for more job oppor: !unities for young citizens.
. ·Sheets' opponent Mike
· i. Ba11rum retired NFL player
· wants to work to improve our
·: communities by developing

programs for the youth. He
stressed the need of leaders
who can work together to
·accomplish goals and the
importance of education al)d
promised to make ·an impact
in communities if elected. Tom Anderson, Tom
Lowery, and Bill Quickel, aJJ
running to fill the vacant seat
.of former commissioner, Jeff
ThorDton
also
spoke.
· An.den;on of Middleport, ·a
Vietnam veteran and retiree
of Goodyear Rubber Co.
after 30 years, spoke of the
need to improve the school
systems, to encourage students to further their education as well as the need to
' upgrade waterandsewersys_ terns in the county as a way
of encouraging and attracting
business and industry.
Lowery, Democratic candictate, commended the
county school systems, but
called for rnPre encouragement from parents to go further in school. He also
stressed the need for more
resources and job opportl!nities to keep youth m the

county and said his goal if
elected commissioner wilt
be to make Meigs County a
better place in which to live . .
Quickel , -an independent,
listed Meigs County as o'ne
of the best pl~ces to live , citing the_ Ohio River and
resources such as coal. His
, concern is that residents are
not motivated to take ad vantage of the job opportunities
available and while some
lack not only a desire to
work but the skills needed.
He encouraged residents to
take advantage of special
training classes as a way or
preparing to enter the work
force. Quickel alsospok~ of
the need for Jhe county to
lower the cost of private septic systems, now between
$15,000 and $20,000, as a
way of encouraging more
. construction. As for tourism
he said Meigs County needs
to have more of the industry
which is rated third in Ohio.
Preceding the luncheon
and program, Debbie Roush
had devotions and prayer. .
President Gay . Perrin wei-

comed the candidates; 14
members and four guests. ,
During the business meeting the president distributed
AARP .Divide(! We Fail
pledge cards, as well as
materials on Do Not Call
and Dead Zone surveys to
be completed.
JoAnn Corder, scholarship chairman, reported on
applications for the association's scholarships due by
Nov. 20. Applicaqts must be
a college junior or senior
maJoring in education and a
res1dent of Meigs County
with a grade point average
of2 :5 or above.
A thank you note was read
from Dee. Rader of God's
Net for the school supplies
.donated by ·the group.
Kathleen Scott was congratulated on her birthday and
recognition on the Today
s)low and in a recent issue
of the ORTA magazine.
Door pdzes were,awarded
to Rush Philson, Barbara
Beegle, Connie Gilkey,
Connie Enslen and Rachel
Downie.

.

Local Weather
~esday ...Sunny. Highs • ing mostly cloudy. A 40 perin the lower 70s. South · cent · chance · of showers.
winds around 5 mph.
· Highs in the lower 60s.
Tuesday night ...Mostly
Friday night ...Cioudy with
clear. Lows in ti1e mid 40s. a 50 percent chance of showEast winds around 5 mph in ers. Low~M!_fhe mid 40s.
the
evening ... Becoming
Saturdilf: ..Cioudy with a
light and variable.
30 percent chance of show. , Wednesday ... Sunny. ers. Highs around 50.
Highs in the lower . 70s.
Saturday night ...Mostly
Southeast winds around 5 cloudy with a chance of rain
mph.
and snow showers. Lows in
Wednesday night...Mostly the lower 30s. Chance of
clear. Lows in the mid 40s. precipitation 30 percent.
East winds around 5 mph.
Sunday... Mostly doudy
Thursday...Sunny. Highs with a 30 percent chance of
in the lower 70s.
rain showers. Highs in the
Thu~day night •.• Partly
upper 40s . .
cloudy. Lows in the upper
Sunday
night
and
40s.
Monday... Mostly cloudy.
· Friday ...Mostly sunny' in Lows in · the lower 30s.
the moming ... Then becom- Highs in the lower 50s.

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Church events

Clubs and
organizations

Local Stocks
AEP (NYSE) - 32.31
Akzo (NASDAQ) - 39.25
Ashland Inc. (NYSE) ;.. 22.62
Btg Lots (NYSE) - 23.60
Bob Evans (NASDAQ) - 20.20
BorgWamer (NYSE) - 22.51
Century Aluminum (NASDAQ) ·
- 14.34

Champion (NASDAQ) - 3.15
Charming Shops (NASDAQ) •
•

4.16

•

City Holding (NASDAQ) -

54.71

19.30

Harley-Davldaan (NYSE) 22.89

.'

JP Morgan (NYSE) - 40.73
Kroger (NYSE) - 27.32
Limited Brands (NYSE) 11.79

•

Ohio Valley Bane Corp. (NAS·
DAQ)- 20
BBT (NYSE) - 35.50
Peoples (NASDAQ) .- 20.02
Pepsico (NYSE) - 57.47
Premier (NMDAQ) - 8. 75
Rockwell (NYSE) - 28.21
Rocky Boots (NASDAQ) -

41.74

.

Calllns (NYSE) - 37.83
DuPont (NYSE) - 32.03
US Bank (NYSE) - 30.30
Gannett (NYSE) - 11.64
General Electric (NYSE) -

•
•

58.81

Royal Dutch Shell - 54.81
Seani Holding (NASDAQ) -

1.20

Norfolk Southern .(NYSE) -

Wai-Mart (NYSE) - 55.97
Wendy's (NYSE) - 3.39
WeaBanco (NYSE) - 27:86
Worthington (NYSE) - 12.85
Dally stock reports lire the 4
. p.m. ET closing quotes at
traneactlt;ms for Nov. 3, 2008,
provided by Edwanl Janes
financial advisors Isaac Mills
In Galllpolls·at (740) 441-9441
anil Lesley Marrero In Point
Pleasant at (304) 674;0174.
Member SIPC.

let's talk!

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PageA3

BY THE BEND

.The Daily Sentinel

Town Hall Forum
Submitted photo
·Marshall Aanestad, assistant senior patrol leader of Troop 235. accepts ·a check from Horace Karr while Rusty Bookman, .
·· Pomeroy Gun Club president, and Scoutmaster Erik Aanestad shake hal)ds. The money was used toward the purchase
. .of a trailer used to haul equipment.
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·.Gun Club assists scouts with trailer purchase
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CHESTER - The Meigs
·, County Boy Scout Troop
235 now has a new equip.· ment trailer, thanks to some
, help from the Pomeroy Gun
· .Club, its sponsor.
, As a part of the Club's
. celebration of its centennial
· ·(1908-2008) ··· members
• donated items to · be auctioned off in an effort to
:-generate funds ·for local
-. youth groups and create

interest in new membership.
A premium· item raffled
off was a limited edition of·
the Ohio Highway Patrol
50th anniversary Ruger 357
Magnum pistol donated by
the late Bernard Fultz via
Horace Karr. "Even after
death Bernard continues to
give to the community. No
one has ever been or will
ever be as great a friend to
Meigs Coul)ty," said Kart.

As a part of it sponsorship,
the club voted to make a
donation of $I ,500 to Troop
235 to assist the troop ·in
acquiring 1\ new equipment
trailer to take camping gear
and supplies on troop outings .
. Troop 235 is part of the '
. MGfV! District and the
Tristate Area Council. Erik
Aanestad has been the scoutmaster of the troop for the
past three years. In accepting
'

the gift, Annestad said "I am
thrilled to have such -strong
local support. We are already
making pltms to take the boys
on a spring hiking/camping
event to the Appalachian
Trail and the trailer will be a
tremendous improvement in
everything . we do. It's all
about the boys."
The troop meetings are
held at the Pomeroy Gun
Club on Sunday afternoons.

· Nov.17 • 6-8 p.m. ·
Rio Grande- Meigs Campus
. Pomeroy ·
·Join us for an informal meeting to voice opinions and
share ideas on how to work toward a better community,
county and region. Join the Buckeye Hills Town Hall
.Forum and let's talk!

Broadband • Water &amp; Sewer • Health Care
Energy • Transportation • Tourism • Housing
Infrastructure • Workforce Development

www.buckeyehill s.org
740-374-9436

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_The Daily Sentinel

:·.The Daily Sentinel
•

Bt~n mg

(740) 992-2156 • FAX (740) 992-2157
w-.mydallysentlnal.com

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

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Dan Goodrich
Publisher

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Charlene Hoeflich

.General Manager·News Editor ·

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-· Congress shall make no laav respecting a~;~
- establislnnent of religion, or prollibiting the
:.free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom
. ~ of speech, or of the press; or tl1e rigllt of tlu
·:;:people peaceably to assemble, and to petition
_, the Government for a redress of grievances.

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•••

-The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

TODAY IN HISTORY
,

f

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a phenomen&lt;JI

last-nunutc sur~e to John
McCain . Burack Obanhl IS
ou1 next president The
question is Who is 13arack
Obama'?
Alter 22 months that he·,
been campa1gnmg. altcrthousancb of speeches. dozens of
.debates ami reams of p&lt;.J&gt;ition
papers, 1t's st1ll not clear
whether he is a pragmatic
posl-pm1is;m uniliet or a populist hberul1dcologue.
Some conservati ves thin k
he's f41ther out than that a dangerous radical . who
really 1s a pal of unrepentant
forme( Wc.ttherman 13ill
Aye!' and a disciple of the
Rc,, Je1 m11ah Wnghl but the c' idcnce lor that
from h1 s campa1gn beh:1v im
is next to nonex istent.
But as Obama dcli vc1cd
h1 s ..dosing argument" th1s
week, beginnmg Monday m
Canton. Ohio. it re mained
1mposs1blc to tell how far left
Obama w1ll 1111 on econom1cs
llf l1ow energetically he wt\1
reach out to R c publi ~:a n s
Obama's appeal to mdependents (like me) h~ s
always been in lines li k~
tlu s one 11om Canton:
"U nderstand. 11' we want to
get through thi s (economic )
l:ll s is . we need lo get
beyond the old ideological
debates
and
d1vides
between lett and right
"We do n., need bigger
government or smaller government We need a bener
government ~ a more com-

111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

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PageA4

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Tuesday, November 4, 2008

President Obama: ffi.still don't know .who he really is

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. Today is Tuesday, Nov 4, the 309th day of 2008. The1 e
are 57 days left in the year. Th1s is Ele~:t1on Day.
Today 's Highli ght in History : On Nov. 4. 1979 . the Iran
hostage cris1s began as militants stormed the Umted States
Embassy m Tehran, seizing its occupants. For some of the
hostages, it was the start of 444 days of captivity
On this dafe : In 1884. Democrat Grover Cleveland was
elected to his fit s! term as president . defeating Republican
James G. Blaine.
In 1922, the entrance to Kmg Tutankhamen's tomb was
discovered in Egypt.
·. In 1924, Nellie T. Ross of Wyoming was elected the
nation's first female governor to serve out the remaining
tenn of her late husband , William B. Ross
· In 1942 , during World War II. Ax1s torces retreated trom
Ell Alamein in North Africa 111 a nKIJOr VICtory for British
'forces commanded by Field Marshal Bemard Montgomery.
In 1952, Dwight D. Eisenhower was elected president,
defeating Democrat Adla1 Stevenson
In 1956, Soviet troops moved 111 to crush the Hunganan
Revolution.
.
In 1980, Ronald Reagan won the White House as he
defeated Pres1dent Carter by a strong margm .
In 1988, in a ceremony at O'Hate International A1rport in
Chicago, Pres1dent Reagan Signed a measure providmg for
U.S. participation in an anli-genocide treaty signed by
President Truman in 1948
In 1991, Ronald Reagan opened his pres1denttal library
in Stmi Valley, Calif., with a dedication attended by
President Bush and former Prestdents Car~er, Ford and
Nixon - the first-ever gathenng of fi•e past and present
U.S. chief executives.
In 1995, Israeli Pnme Mmister Yitzhak Rabm was assassinated by a right-wmg Israeli minutes after attendmg a festive peace rally.
One year ago: King Tutankhamen's face was unveiled for
the first time to the public more than 3,000 years afte1 the
pharaoh was buried in his Egypttan tomb. Cittgroup Inc.
·Chairman and Chief Execut1ve Charles Prince, beset by the
company's billions of dollars in losses from mvesting' in
bad aebt, resigned. Paula Radcliffe outlasted Gete Wami to
win her second New York City Marathon in 2:23:09.
Martin Lei of Kenya won hts second men 's lttle.m2:09:04.
Today's Birthdays: Former CBS news anchorman Walter
Cronkite is 92 . Actress Doris Roberts is 78 . Actress Loretta
Swit is 71. Ftrst Lady Laura Bush IS 62 . Actress Markie
Post is 58. Country singer Kim Forester (The Forestet
Sisters) is 48. Actress-comedian Kathy Griffin is 48 . Actor
Ralph Macchto is 47 "Survivor" host Jeff Probst is 47 .
Actor Matthew McConaughey is 39. Rapper-producer Scan
"Puffy" Combs is 39. Rhythm-and-blues singer Shawn
Rivera (Az Yet) is 37. Actress Heather Tom i:, 33 . Rhythm-and-blues/gospel smger George Huff is 28.
Thought for Today : " I know nothing grander, better exercise, better digestion , more poSitive proof of the past. the
triumphant result. of faith in human kmd. than a well -contested American national electiOn." .- Walt Wh1tman,
American poet (1819-1892 ).

pelent government. a gov-

ernment that upholds the
values we hold 111 common
as Ami! I icuns.''
It's p1clly d ear that , unde1
Obama , the size of govem-

nation to be testtai ned 111 though thc1r products have to
her libera li sm either by pass muster a1 the Food m~d
Rcpublic.1ns or conservati ve D1ug Administration. W1ll
Obama suppo111hat ~
Blue Dog Democrats .
·: when it comes to healtl1
And. 11 Senate Majority
care
," Obama sa id m Canton.
Leader Harry Re1d , D-Nev.,
Morton
&lt;:a n mu ster 60 votes to "we don' t lu1ve to choose
Kondracke thwart GOP fil ibusters. it 's between a government-run
Pres ident Obama "ho'JI heallh care system and the
have to IIISISI on inviting unaiTordable one we have
GOP mput into governmg now." But will he listen to
GOP arguments that a major
decis1ons.
ment w1ll grow. It will reguOn energy, fur instance, way to control ri sing costs is
late more It will spend will Obanw I ace the reality to empower consumers to
mot c on health ,· .. re, energy. that Amen&lt;:.! w1ll be-depen- make heallh care choices~
·cduc•JII&lt;ln . o~ nd infrastruc- dent for 20 years 01 more on
In Canton, Obama said. "I
ture. And 11 w1 ll tax more. fossi l fuels ami agree with w1ll put in place commonThe quest 10n is : How
sense regulations .. so that
much '' b Eurnpe hi' 1dea of Republicans on the need for Wall Street can never cause a
offsho1c cli illing - and
the goml enlllomy?
.tl
so . ready- to-build nu&lt;.:lear crisis like this again ." It's
Wt:. nmy ~l.·t some p,u1ial
plant
s - 01 y1c ld to carbon- clear. there needs, to be reguanswers immediately after
lation to make s ur~ creditthe election, 1fOhama takes a phublc CllVIrmHnentalists ratmg
agencies do the1r jobs
dom
mate
his
party'?
who
lcadmg role - as he ~ hou ld
and opaque "derivhonestly
Trade
umnns
havt:
cun- in determining the s1zc
&lt;lllves··
are
made transp'\rent.
and shape of the Democratic lilbot ed ge nerously to the
But t11ere is also a danger
Congrc&gt;.," second slllll\llus commg Demncmtic victory.
of
overregulation that stifles
and
the
y
v.tll
expect
to
be
package , now renamed the
mnovation - and will
repaid .
•·recovery package ."
Obama
agree.
as
In
Canton.
Obama
said
Will
Ob,tma
tell
Republicans
hav'e
long
"When
11
comes
to
Jobs,
the
Democrat"· leaders th.ll he
want&gt; ta x cuts to be part ol c h01c~ 111 thiS electi on is not argucd.that Fannie Mae and
th e pack.age. a .~ V.. ell as gov- between putting up a wall . Freddie Mac also need to be
ernment badoll!s to swtes. ,uoumJ America or allowing regulated. wh1ch congresex panded unemployment every JOh to chsappcm ovcr- sional Democrats oppose?
He has never mentioned it.
bc11efits and mf1 asiiUCture .setlS :·
On fore1gn policy, wtll
But
the
AFL-CIO
has
prog1ams'? Tax cuts do stimulate mvestment and create never seen a fore1gn -trude Obuma really depart Iraq
JObs - and they also appe.tl .tgreemenl 11 could support. "carefull y'"? If he doesn't ,·
Will Ob;tma really abandon that country's collapse into
to Repu bli can s
The chances ate that allies l1ke Colombia - . new secturian strife could
CongrcSS IVI!al Democrats whose cxpcncnce he could be his first disaster.
It was unpolitic for Sen.
will lure even bcller 111 the use 111 eombatmg the drl1g
clect1ons than Obama docs t1.tcle in Afghanistan - 111 Joseph Biden. D-Del. to say
11, but Obmna 's "mettle" will
It they gam . say 30 House mder to sat1sfy the umons''
And what about trial he tested ve1y soon - not
scat&gt; and eight in the Senate
and he beats McCain by. say. lawyers, the' largest group only by foreign foes , but by
53 percent to 46 percent. cont ributing to Obama 'scam- his domestic allies. Let's hope
Congressional leaders may patgn?They will doubtless try he's the man we hope he is.
(Monon Kondracke is
thmk th~y have a mandate to to get Congress to expand
cnvern bicgc1 than hb.
then· ability to lile suits in execlllh e editor of Roll
~ SpeakerNuncy Pelos1 . D- slate courts - against drug c,,/1, th&lt;' new.1paper oj
Cu l1t..l1:" show n little incli- companies. tor instance, even , Capitol Hill .)
1

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NOW ITs liME TO
SAY 60017BYI;,
TOALLOUR

COMPANY,,,

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C:,l\\IFF.. ..

Tuesday, November 4, 2oo8

Obituaries

Slain tric.k-or-treater's dad·says boy saved him
BY SEANNA

Kathleen Myrtle Gonzalez

•
SUMTER, S.C. - The
parents of a 12-year-old
shot to death while trick-ortreating said Monday they
hope the man accused of
killing him suffers for the
rest of his life.
T.J. , · Darrisaw
died
Ha\lo~:~~een
night ·after
pohce say a convicted felon
unleashed a barrage of bullets from inside a home,
pumping at least 29 shots
through the closed door and
front of the house . The
boy's father and brother
also were wounded.
'The mjury to my arm is
not as bad as the injury to
my heart . l've lost a piece ()f
my heart forever," father
Freddie Grinnell Jr. said as
he sat in his living room
Monday .
Police said the suspect,
Quentm Patrick , 22, opened
fire with an AK-47 because
hi! thought he was being
robbed. The family went to
the pome because the porch
light was on , usually a signal that tnck-or-treaters are
welcome.
'
Two of three sib! ings who
went to the door with their
father were wearing ghoulish masks. Their parents .
said. the slain boy was determined to get candy first, so
he was in front when the
shots were ftred.
'T.J. saved us that night,"
Grinnell said. " He took
most of the shots."
When
the
shooting
stopped, Grinnell said, the
door swung open . Patrick
stood there, gun in hand ,
and said, "Oh, no ."
"I was holding my son
while he was bleeding, and
he was liacki ng out of the
yard:· Grinnell recalled .
Grinnell and another son
who was shot were treated
for minor injuries and

LANCASTER , Calif. Kathleen Myrtle Gonzalez
dted Oct. 8, 2008 at her
home in Lancaster, Calif.
She was born on Sept.
12 •. 1946 in Gallipolis ,
Ohto and grew up in
Middleport, Ohio.
She leaves her husband of
43 years , Hector Gonzalez
of Lancaster, Calif., and a
daughter,
Marguerite
Gonzalez of Bristol , Va.
Burial will be at Riverside
National Cemetery.
Kathleen Myrtle Gonzalez

Gayle Henderson Price
PORTLAND - Gayle Henderson Price of Portland
passed away Saturday, November Ist. He was 98.
. He was born in Portland in the Price family home. The
mght ~hat he was born , there was a storm with a fierce wind
and hts fam1ly named htm Gayle for that wind He was
raised in Portland and in Parkersburg , W Va .
·
Gayle atte~ded Marietta C~llege,_ Ohio State University
and Ohto Umverstty. It was hts deSire to become a doctor
but at the insistence of his famtly he became a scienc~
teacher. He taught for 40 years at schools in Portland
Somerset, Ohio, P&lt;vkersburg , W.Va. , and Rac'ine at Racin~
High School and Southern High School.
: He was a. teacher and a. fa~mer. He raised prime breedmg cattle for most of hts hfe. Upon retirement, Gayle
became a basket maker, a broom maker and a . blacksmith. Many wil'l remember him for his letters to the editor in The Daily Sentinel. He was also a local historian
with people traveling from all over the United States to
consult with him. After years of research , he wrote the
story of Morgan 's Raid from stories that. were passed
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 ltfe 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 Pnce,
Sherrie Cole, Brenda Litton and Sara Cammarata; greatgrandchildren, Amber and Za~:hary Litton and Christopher
Andrew Robmson, II; a great-great grandchild , Logan; a
mece 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 famtly. At
Mr. Prtce 's request there is to be no visitation.
Arrangements are being handled by the Anderson
McDaniel Funeral Homes.
In lieu of flowers donattons may be made to the Mei~&amp;
County Jiumane Society, P.O. Box 682, Pomeroy, Ohto
45769. An online registry is available at www.andersonmcdaniel.com.

Deaths

Other polling locations
are:
Bedford - Ohio Valley
Christian
Assembly
Campgrounds,
39560
Rocksprings Rd. , Pomeroy.
. E. Chester - Shade River
Lodge Masonic building ,
46416 Ohio 248 . Chester.
W. Chester - Pomeroy
Gun Club, 42560 Pomeroy
Pike , Pomeroy.
Columbia - Columbia
Township Firehouse , 29466

•

POINT PLEASANT, W.Va . - Ann Longstaff, 79, died
early Monday. Nov. 3, 2008, at Camden-Clark Memorial
Hospital in Parkersbur~ , W.Va.
Funeral arrangem'ents will be announced by CrowHussell Funeral Home in Point Pleasant, W.Va. An online
guest registry is available at www.crowhussellfu .com .
•

When
Colm
Powell
declared h1s support of
Bamck Obama on NBC TV 's
.. Meet the Press." part ofh1s
ex plana11on was. '' I thmk
Senator Obama has reached
the
feelings of the young peoLETTERS TO THE
ple of America,'' But which
EDITOR
young people have signific:mtly raised the pe1centage
Letrers to the .ed11or are we/umw . Ther ~ horrid he ln.\ of Amcricans from 18 to 29
than 300 word.\. All lerrers tne .111/Jiect ro· edirirr!( . 11111.1'1 be who are actively exercising
. signed, and include addre.1.1 wtd · relephone number Nu this v1tal ftmction of citizenuns1gned letters will be tmbiJ,fled. Lerrers should l&gt;e in
Who's mi ~sing 0
·good taste, addrening 1ssues. nor personalrrie1. Lerren of ship?
On Super Tuesday (Feb. 5)
thanks to organizarwns and indrl'idua/s "ill nor /Je accepr- - when 24 states held pned for publication.
maries or caucuses - 79
pe1 cent of the young voters
that day had attended some
college, thereby demonstrattng that a disproportionate
(USPS
213·960)
pe1centage of other eligible
Reader Services
Ohio Valley Publishing
•
yo ung voters had stayed
Co.
away.
Th1s low part1c1pation
Correction Polley
Published every ahernoon Monday
ol
young
Arttencans who did
Our main concern 1n all stones is to through Frldav. 111 Court Street,
not attend college underlines
'be 11ccurate If you knoW of an error Pomeroy, Ohio Secorld-ctBss postage
the failure of our school sys-In a slory, call the newsroom at (740) paid at Pomeroy ,
tem to prepare these stude nts
Member: The Associated Press and
992·2156.
the Oh1o Newspaper Assocmlion
for citizensh ip .
Potlmltter: Send address correcWhen I was a kid in
Our main number Is
tions to The Dally Sentmel, 11 1 Court
school
long ago. there were
(7401 992-2156.
Street, Pomeroy, Oh1o 1\5769
ci
vies
classes
showing us Department extensions are:
through
vivid
examples in
Subscription Rates
our history - how voters
By carrier or motor route
News
One month
'10.27
c:m help detcrmme much of
Editor: Char1ene Hoelhch, Ext 12
One year
' 115.84
what happens in our datly
Oolly
511'
Reporter: Bnan Reed, Ext 14
lives, ,md cspc•cially 111
Senior Citizen rates
•Reporter: Beth Sergenl, E&lt;t 13
times of nutionul u isis. by
One month
'10.27
who they choose to repreOne year
'103.90
sent
them. That's how many
Should
rei'nit
1n
advooce
Subscribers
Advertising
chrecl
to
lhe
Dally
Sentinel.
No
subof us back then gained a
: •OUtlkle S.lfll: Dave Harrts, Ext 15
scrlphon by ma1l perm1tted lfl areas
v~ ry personal mteresl both
- Outalde sales: Brenda Davts. EK! 16 where home camer serviCe IS avail·
Ill
our htstory and the battle' CIINJClrc.: Judy Clar1&lt;, EKI 10
able
fields of cun ent eve nts.
Mall Sub&amp;crlptlon
Now, a l ~men t abl e ~ffect
General Manager
Inside Melga County
of the No Ch1ld Left Bchmd
Charlene l:loellich, Ext 12
13 Weeks
' 32 26
ACI is that civiC' class~&gt; arc
26 Weeks
'64 20
absent
in many ·sc hoob th,lf
52Weeks
'1271t
E"""all:
feel
houncl
to keep tc·st111 ~
news@ myda!lysenl!nel com
Outside Malgs County
and rctt'!sllng on ~ubJCCh
13 Weeks
'53 55
who~e student'· s.:o1cs deterWeb:
26 Weeks
•tQ7. 10
mine
the school's stultiS, or
www mydatlysentHlel com
52 Weeks
'214.21
even its contmucd c~"tence

The Daily Sentinel

..

Nat
Hentoff

A basic source of information on how well students are
Jeaming how to be an organIC, lifelong part of dtscovermg why we are the oldest free
nat ion on the globe, despite
mu rderous threats !rom
abroad and even a teiTibly
costly Civil War. is Circle:
The Center for lnformution &amp;
Research on Civ ic Learning
and Engagemen t at Tufts
University in Medford, Mass.
Its director. Peter Levu1e,
makes a c1uciul point over·
looked 111 our celcbwtion of
the rismg number of you ng
voters Wi thout our realizing
that they are disproportionately college-educated.
Says Levine: "Campmgns
and interest groups mob1lize
yolllh on college campuses.
but 11 's harder to reach noncollege ) out h. ·. Rcsc.1rch
shows !hat school' can boo''
young people ·, pllrlkipation
by providing ... social studle!-1 classes. service opportu·

nitJes. discussions ot ctmenl
events and other 4tctivrties"
But. a Circle report adds,
school svstems around the
tmt10n p1:ovidc more oppm·
tum11es to karn about. and
then partic1pa1e. in our con,ritntlonal svslcm of ,e Jfl'll \t..'r tlllll'!l l .
'"((I
hit• hi!!
~ICOIIIC otUdCIII,, II flllC ':tuJcnts .111d acadenucally successful &gt;ltldents ."
Once, in Mi;uni.
~;a~

asked to speak to a large
number ot h1gh school students in connection with my
book "Living the Bill of
Rights." Before I went on
stage. two teachers told me
not to be disappointed at the
youngsters' Jack of interest
be~:ause "all they care about
are music and clothes."
After ·,m ho ur of telling
them stories about how we
Amencans won and then
fought io preserve our First
Amendment ri ghts and the
1ight of blacks and women
to vote, as well as the essential checks and balances tn
our govern ment to keep ~ us
free citizens. I got a standing ovatmn . Not because I
was so eloquent but because
these youngsters had dis-

The solution is elementary, says Joseph Kahne .
Since school systems below
college "reach a broader section of youth than colleges
(it follows that) if they provide quality civic learning
opportunities to all students,
they can promote more equal
particrpations" in the very
process of democracy.
In "Phi Delta J&lt;appan"
(the professional journal for
education), Kahne and Joel
Westheimer issued a call for
action to parents, educators
and school boards: "At the
same time that lobbyists are
spending hundreds of millions of dollars , many ordinary citi ze ns are passive
and apathetic when it comes
to major tssues that affect
lives ....
co~~~~~eA~~ricaar~ no~ ' is their
"lmprovin$
society
described in a recent Ci~le requires makmg democracy
Working Paper by two very work. And making democcom:emed educators and rac y work requires that
researchers at Mills College schools take this goal seriin Okland, Caltf. - Joseph ously: to edu~ate and nurKahne and Ellen Middaugh ture engaged and informed
of that school's Civic democratic cittzens."
Research
Engage men!
Transcendin~
political
Group:
·
parties and foc using on
They found . says Circle, basic civic education , let us
th at "students 111 hi gher- all - parents, educators,
in~.:ome di~l! ict:-. arc Up to school boards and students
IWILC as likely as those from - go to 11!
average-income districts to
The most enthusiastic
learn how Jaws are made aud ience I've ever had in
and how Cm1£ress works. discussing the stories of the
for mslance. -... African- tumultuous history of the
Amencan students are less Bill of. Rights was a fifthlikely than white students to grade public-school class!
have civic-focused govern(Nat Hemojf is a rwtion·
ment classes and current- all\' reiiOII'IIed authority 011
events discussions."
tire Flrsr Amendmem and
Ther~
is much more rlw Bill of Rrgltt1· wrcl aut/tor
ll'sc'atd l at Circle and at 1\ldls of mt/11\' h,,J....,, im lmlmR
l'ullc"c dut.·umcllllll'' h011 .. 11Je ll·ru on rhe Btl! of
'-"
"
"schools
:~re exacerbatmg
Rrg/11&gt; ami rite Garlrerin/i
inequality in voting when they Re.1i.lfwrce" ( S&lt;' t en Stones
could be narrowing the gap." Pre.n, 20U4).
•

Shoebox for a Soldier
project under way
POMEROY - Residents
working toward making
Christmas bright for those
in the military currently stationed
in
Iraq
or
Afghanistan will be at
Powell 's SuperValu on Nov.
15 collecting, contributions
for the Shoe Box for a
Soldier project.
Becky Lipscomb of
Jacks~n whose ·husband,
Eric, is a graduate of Meigs
High Schoof-an'd still ha&amp;
family here, has participat-'
ed in the project over the
past tWO r.ears and will be
at Powells from 10 a .m. to
2 p .m. that day collecting
boxes and encouraging
others to get involved in
the holiday project. She
said that all three local
school districts in Meigs
County are finding ways to
participate.
.
Yesterday Lipscomb was
in Meigs County distribut·
ing flyers to local businesses and encouraging resi-

' According to AMP-Ohio,
cost estimates for the
AMPGS projett were also
updated based on the most
recent information from the
preferred EPC contractor.
Estimates are based on actu·
al quotes for major equipment, and escalation and
contingency costs were
updated to reflect current
commodity markets.
One of the principal fac·
tors in the· updated. capital
cost is increased costs of the
steam turbines and boilers,
according to AMP·Ohio .
Another f~ct()r, accordi~g to
AMP~Ohto , ts the dtffer·
ence in financing assump·
tions, !!_aying $8Q million
was also added to the escalation projections. AMPOhio feels this provides
protection to participants
when dealing with the commodity markets tmpacting
construction and procurement. The increased capital
costs are financed over a
40-year time frame and only
increase the cost of power
by approximately $4.50 per

dents to get the names and
addresses of Meigs soldiers
currently serving overseas
so they can be remembered
with a shoebox.
Last . year 2,431 shoebox
care packages were shipped
to Iraq and Afghanistan,
according to Lipscomb. On
the list of items appropriate
for filling a shoebox are
protein bats, gum, hot
chocolate mix, a_Pple cider
mix, trail tnJX, nuts,
microwave popcorn, candy,
breath mints, Granola bars,
beef jerky, tea bags, DVDs,
music COs, knit hats, bandanas, · stationary. Also
appropriate are socks, foot
· powder, fabric softener,
baby powder, zip lock bags,
toothbrushes, · sunglasses,
deodorant, and lip balm'.
It was suggested that
those who want to participate but don't want to prepare a box , can take part by
making a donation to help
cover the cost of shipping.

•

released from a hospital.
T.J.'s mother, Daphne
Grinnell, said T.J . liked to
bake cakes, in part because
he relished licking the batter.
and constantly asked what he
could do to help out around
the home. The seventh-grader was on his middle school
drill team and loved math
and board games.
"He was always up for a
challenge," his father said,
recountmg how hts son got
up early for math tutoring.
"I was looking forward to
his graduation, to high
school·, to colle.ge. I was
looking forward to all of it
because
I know he would
k . ..
rna e It.

Patrick , who is charged
with murder and three
counts of assault and battery

with intent to kill , was
demed bond Monday. He
cried and wiped away a tear
as the charges were read . He
did not enter a plea and a
lawyer has . not been
assigned to his case yet.
State · record s
show
Patrick has been charged
with evading police and a
string of drug cnmes since
he turned 18 in 2004 . He
was sentenced to three years
in pnson but re leased in
January 20(1 7 under a program for first-time offenders after servmg just f1ve
months .
Prosecutors have not said
whether they will seek the
death penalty, bm the police
chtef in Sumter, a city of
40,000 about 45 miles east
of Columbia, said she w1ll

recommend they do
,
T.J.'s parents . said th'~
want Patrick to suffe r for a
lifetime behmd bars.
" He should .have to li-.;e
every day in jail and see' it
and feel it every ctay for tile
rest of hts life ," Daphne
Gnnnel\ sa 1d . ''The deal)l
penalty would be a shortcut."
Freddie Grinnell Jr. said
he doesn' t want an apolog)
" 'I'm sorry ' does nqt
bring my child back .'' he
said . "I Wall! JUStiCe."
Meanwhile, he contmues
to relive the nightma1e of
the shootmg.
·
"I see the same thing ,''
Grmnell sa1d. "We were just
standing on the front porcp
for a second, and all hejl
broke loose. It happened so
quickly."
·

Ohio 143, Albany.
. Lebanon
Portland
Community Center, Ohio
124, Portland.
N. Olive - Eastern Local
Admimstrattve
Offices,
50008
Ohio .
681,
Reedsville.
S. Olive - Long Bottom
Community
Building,
' 36709 T.R. 275, Long
Bottom.
Oran~e - Eastern Local
Offices,
Admimstrative

50008
Ohio
681 , Mulberry
Commum(y
Reedsvtlle .
Center. 260 Mulberry Ave,.
·
Rutland
Vtil age.
E. Pomeroy.
Rutland , W. Rutland Racine Village/Racme
Rutland Civic Center, 337 Precinct - Racme Bapttst
Main St., Rutland .
Church Christian Outreach
Salem - Salem Center Center. Fifth Street. Racine.
Scipio
Scipto
Firehouse, 28854 Ohio I 24.
Langsville.
Township Firehouse, 3557,'i
Middleport 2, 3 and 4 Firehou se Rd ., Pomeroy.•'
Church of Christ Family
Syracuse Village
Life Center, 437 Mam St., Syracuse
Communi!:)'
Middleport .
Center. Seventh Street.
Syracuse.
·
Pomeroy I, 2. and 3
':

MWh,AMP-Ohio said.
Yesterday, AMP-Ohio
also announced participating communities in the·
AMPGS project have
approved giving LNTP to
the EPC contractor on the
project. Notice was provid·
ed following a full patticipants meeting held in
Columbus. The EPC contractor is basically one company that designs and builds
the _Plant as well as secures
equtpment.
In a statement, AMP-Ohio
announced: "Giving LNTP
does not mean that construction on the factlily wtll
start, that is sttll contingent
upon recei pi of all necessary permits and successful
negotiations on state and
local incentives. The notification means the EPC contractor can start preliminary
engineenng and procurement of equipment related
to the project. The EPC contractor can get started on
preliminary work and .keep
the project moving forward.
Permitting is proceeding

along· anticipated timelines .
Giving LNTP further allows
the organization to lock in
stabilized costs."
Gerken added: This is a
major step forward on the
AMPGS project'. The decision by the parttcipants followed a lengthy presentatton
by AMP-Ohio staff and consultants, and a recommendation from the 16 member
Participants
Commtttee.
Participants received an
update to the project feasibility study from R.W. Beck.
the owners engineering firm.
Addtlionally,
the
Parttcipants
Committee
retamed the servtces of a
second engineering firm,
Burns &amp; Roe, to perform an
independent revtew of the
evaluation from R. W. Beck.
Both firms recommended
movm~ forward with limit·
ed-nouce-to-proceed."
AMP-Ohio is developtng
the project on behalf of 8 I of
its participating member
communities, along wtth
development partners the
Michigan South Central

'.

Power Agency and the Blue
Ridge Power Agency, located in Virgmia. The AMPGS
project is a proposed I ,OQO
MW generation facility,
which will uttlize the latest m
proven clean coal technology
according to AMP-Ohio .
"The due ·diligence that
has gone into the AMPGS
project thus far clearlv
shows 1t is a prudent invesi·
men! for p,articipating communities, ' Gerken satd .
"They will own an asset that
will provide below market
cost power for many years ,
stabilizing wholesale power
costs for their customers.
When takmg mto account
all of the generation assets
the orgamzation has. under
de velopment , it is a much
more dtverstfied mix with a
responsible com~ina11on of
fossil fuel and renewable
generation. In fact, by 2015
we esumate that AMPGS
participating communities
will have an average of 21
percent renewables in their
portfoho. We are very proud
of this."

Racine from Page At

"The negativity in this
campaign has made the voters unsure of who they
should believe. It damages
the process."
Phillips filed a similar
complaint against the Ohio
Republican Party and officials with the Athens
County GOP, alleging false
s.tatements were made m a
radio
advertisement
endorsing Thompson . That
complaint was dismbsed
yesterday, Phillips said,
because
the
Ohio
Republican
Campaign
Committee, and not the
Ohto Republican Party,
was responsible for the
radio spot's content.

property tax levy or income
tax destgned for police protection. These options were
di scussed but nothing no
action as·taken at last night's
regular meeting of Racine
Village Council.
Hill also announced he
retently ordered new playground equipment for Star
Mill Park in the amount of
$24,500. The equipment was
purchased with funds from
state capital improvement
money, most of which was
used on the skate park but
designated for recreational
~;~se only. The remainder of
the funds were paid by dona·

•

•

As tears stream down h1s cheek, Quentm Patnck, center, clad in a red pnson jumpsuit,
signs paperwork during his bond hearing at the Sumter-Lee County Detent1on center
Monday Ill Sumter, S.C. The convicted felon is accused of gunning down 12-year-old South
Carolina trick·or·treater T.J Darrisaw. His father and 9-year-old brother were wounded . ·

AMP from Page Al

Phillips from Page At
• "The- advertisement
made a false statement that
Phillips has been leading
the fight against the AMPOhio coal-fired power plant
in Letart Falls. In fact,
Phillips supports the plant."
With yesterday's ruling ,
the matter will now go
before the Ohio Elections
Commission for a full hearing, but Phillips said that
hearing has not yet been
scheduled .
"The decision allows people to move forward, knowmg these are false statements about me," Phillips
said. " It is important to take
a' stand when false statements are made."

AP pholo

·Voting from Page At

Ann Longstaff

The still missing: Millions of young voters

ADCOX

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

A

GniffT ~·

.The Daily Sentinel • Page As

www.mydailysentinel.com

tions, including those from
the Racine Area Community
Organization and a recent
$6,000 from Gatling, Ohto.
The new equipment is due ·
for shipment m December
but likely won't be put in
place until 2009 .
The. village also learned
it's refuse provider will
mcrease costs by $5 per ton.
bringing the cost to $45 per
ton after Janu ar~ I. This
translates into an tncrease of
roughly $2.000 aunuall y.
Racine ts the only mumcipality in Meigs County that
offers refuse service to its
rest dents .•

Council also heard a com· considered for pavmg funds
plaint about barking dogs in and felt "out of the loop" on
the village. Dugan said he a lot of issues in tenns of
would contact the county county &gt;government. Hi II.
dog warden about it. Spencer and council said the.
Councif satd the resident focus seems to be on the
would have to fLII out a Pomeroy/Middleport are.as
complaint to cite the dog 's as opposed to outlying areas
owner into mayor's court to in need of paving funds and
possibly curb the problem.
other projects. Htll said tt's
Tom Anderson, candidate not that Racine doesn't want
for
Meigs
County . Pomeroy and Mtddleport to
Commissioner visited coun· prosper but Racine Y.ould
&lt;:il, asking what they were hke to be included in that
looking for in a commission- prosperity. especially since
er if he,, elected. Council. the vi llage hasn't had . its
Hill and Clerk-Treasurer roads paved, or a grant to
Dave Spencer immediately help it wuh pavmg. m nearry
answered it would like to be 20 years.

�~

0

_The Daily Sentinel

:·.The Daily Sentinel
•

Bt~n mg

(740) 992-2156 • FAX (740) 992-2157
w-.mydallysentlnal.com

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

•

....•' ·

Dan Goodrich
Publisher

'

•'

Charlene Hoeflich

.General Manager·News Editor ·

.

'

..

-· Congress shall make no laav respecting a~;~
- establislnnent of religion, or prollibiting the
:.free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom
. ~ of speech, or of the press; or tl1e rigllt of tlu
·:;:people peaceably to assemble, and to petition
_, the Government for a redress of grievances.

..•
•••

-The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

TODAY IN HISTORY
,

f

':
'

a phenomen&lt;JI

last-nunutc sur~e to John
McCain . Burack Obanhl IS
ou1 next president The
question is Who is 13arack
Obama'?
Alter 22 months that he·,
been campa1gnmg. altcrthousancb of speeches. dozens of
.debates ami reams of p&lt;.J&gt;ition
papers, 1t's st1ll not clear
whether he is a pragmatic
posl-pm1is;m uniliet or a populist hberul1dcologue.
Some conservati ves thin k
he's f41ther out than that a dangerous radical . who
really 1s a pal of unrepentant
forme( Wc.ttherman 13ill
Aye!' and a disciple of the
Rc,, Je1 m11ah Wnghl but the c' idcnce lor that
from h1 s campa1gn beh:1v im
is next to nonex istent.
But as Obama dcli vc1cd
h1 s ..dosing argument" th1s
week, beginnmg Monday m
Canton. Ohio. it re mained
1mposs1blc to tell how far left
Obama w1ll 1111 on econom1cs
llf l1ow energetically he wt\1
reach out to R c publi ~:a n s
Obama's appeal to mdependents (like me) h~ s
always been in lines li k~
tlu s one 11om Canton:
"U nderstand. 11' we want to
get through thi s (economic )
l:ll s is . we need lo get
beyond the old ideological
debates
and
d1vides
between lett and right
"We do n., need bigger
government or smaller government We need a bener
government ~ a more com-

111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

•

ION

·-

PageA4

\

Tuesday, November 4, 2008

President Obama: ffi.still don't know .who he really is

•

..

".

.

. Today is Tuesday, Nov 4, the 309th day of 2008. The1 e
are 57 days left in the year. Th1s is Ele~:t1on Day.
Today 's Highli ght in History : On Nov. 4. 1979 . the Iran
hostage cris1s began as militants stormed the Umted States
Embassy m Tehran, seizing its occupants. For some of the
hostages, it was the start of 444 days of captivity
On this dafe : In 1884. Democrat Grover Cleveland was
elected to his fit s! term as president . defeating Republican
James G. Blaine.
In 1922, the entrance to Kmg Tutankhamen's tomb was
discovered in Egypt.
·. In 1924, Nellie T. Ross of Wyoming was elected the
nation's first female governor to serve out the remaining
tenn of her late husband , William B. Ross
· In 1942 , during World War II. Ax1s torces retreated trom
Ell Alamein in North Africa 111 a nKIJOr VICtory for British
'forces commanded by Field Marshal Bemard Montgomery.
In 1952, Dwight D. Eisenhower was elected president,
defeating Democrat Adla1 Stevenson
In 1956, Soviet troops moved 111 to crush the Hunganan
Revolution.
.
In 1980, Ronald Reagan won the White House as he
defeated Pres1dent Carter by a strong margm .
In 1988, in a ceremony at O'Hate International A1rport in
Chicago, Pres1dent Reagan Signed a measure providmg for
U.S. participation in an anli-genocide treaty signed by
President Truman in 1948
In 1991, Ronald Reagan opened his pres1denttal library
in Stmi Valley, Calif., with a dedication attended by
President Bush and former Prestdents Car~er, Ford and
Nixon - the first-ever gathenng of fi•e past and present
U.S. chief executives.
In 1995, Israeli Pnme Mmister Yitzhak Rabm was assassinated by a right-wmg Israeli minutes after attendmg a festive peace rally.
One year ago: King Tutankhamen's face was unveiled for
the first time to the public more than 3,000 years afte1 the
pharaoh was buried in his Egypttan tomb. Cittgroup Inc.
·Chairman and Chief Execut1ve Charles Prince, beset by the
company's billions of dollars in losses from mvesting' in
bad aebt, resigned. Paula Radcliffe outlasted Gete Wami to
win her second New York City Marathon in 2:23:09.
Martin Lei of Kenya won hts second men 's lttle.m2:09:04.
Today's Birthdays: Former CBS news anchorman Walter
Cronkite is 92 . Actress Doris Roberts is 78 . Actress Loretta
Swit is 71. Ftrst Lady Laura Bush IS 62 . Actress Markie
Post is 58. Country singer Kim Forester (The Forestet
Sisters) is 48. Actress-comedian Kathy Griffin is 48 . Actor
Ralph Macchto is 47 "Survivor" host Jeff Probst is 47 .
Actor Matthew McConaughey is 39. Rapper-producer Scan
"Puffy" Combs is 39. Rhythm-and-blues singer Shawn
Rivera (Az Yet) is 37. Actress Heather Tom i:, 33 . Rhythm-and-blues/gospel smger George Huff is 28.
Thought for Today : " I know nothing grander, better exercise, better digestion , more poSitive proof of the past. the
triumphant result. of faith in human kmd. than a well -contested American national electiOn." .- Walt Wh1tman,
American poet (1819-1892 ).

pelent government. a gov-

ernment that upholds the
values we hold 111 common
as Ami! I icuns.''
It's p1clly d ear that , unde1
Obama , the size of govem-

nation to be testtai ned 111 though thc1r products have to
her libera li sm either by pass muster a1 the Food m~d
Rcpublic.1ns or conservati ve D1ug Administration. W1ll
Obama suppo111hat ~
Blue Dog Democrats .
·: when it comes to healtl1
And. 11 Senate Majority
care
," Obama sa id m Canton.
Leader Harry Re1d , D-Nev.,
Morton
&lt;:a n mu ster 60 votes to "we don' t lu1ve to choose
Kondracke thwart GOP fil ibusters. it 's between a government-run
Pres ident Obama "ho'JI heallh care system and the
have to IIISISI on inviting unaiTordable one we have
GOP mput into governmg now." But will he listen to
GOP arguments that a major
decis1ons.
ment w1ll grow. It will reguOn energy, fur instance, way to control ri sing costs is
late more It will spend will Obanw I ace the reality to empower consumers to
mot c on health ,· .. re, energy. that Amen&lt;:.! w1ll be-depen- make heallh care choices~
·cduc•JII&lt;ln . o~ nd infrastruc- dent for 20 years 01 more on
In Canton, Obama said. "I
ture. And 11 w1 ll tax more. fossi l fuels ami agree with w1ll put in place commonThe quest 10n is : How
sense regulations .. so that
much '' b Eurnpe hi' 1dea of Republicans on the need for Wall Street can never cause a
offsho1c cli illing - and
the goml enlllomy?
.tl
so . ready- to-build nu&lt;.:lear crisis like this again ." It's
Wt:. nmy ~l.·t some p,u1ial
plant
s - 01 y1c ld to carbon- clear. there needs, to be reguanswers immediately after
lation to make s ur~ creditthe election, 1fOhama takes a phublc CllVIrmHnentalists ratmg
agencies do the1r jobs
dom
mate
his
party'?
who
lcadmg role - as he ~ hou ld
and opaque "derivhonestly
Trade
umnns
havt:
cun- in determining the s1zc
&lt;lllves··
are
made transp'\rent.
and shape of the Democratic lilbot ed ge nerously to the
But t11ere is also a danger
Congrc&gt;.," second slllll\llus commg Demncmtic victory.
of
overregulation that stifles
and
the
y
v.tll
expect
to
be
package , now renamed the
mnovation - and will
repaid .
•·recovery package ."
Obama
agree.
as
In
Canton.
Obama
said
Will
Ob,tma
tell
Republicans
hav'e
long
"When
11
comes
to
Jobs,
the
Democrat"· leaders th.ll he
want&gt; ta x cuts to be part ol c h01c~ 111 thiS electi on is not argucd.that Fannie Mae and
th e pack.age. a .~ V.. ell as gov- between putting up a wall . Freddie Mac also need to be
ernment badoll!s to swtes. ,uoumJ America or allowing regulated. wh1ch congresex panded unemployment every JOh to chsappcm ovcr- sional Democrats oppose?
He has never mentioned it.
bc11efits and mf1 asiiUCture .setlS :·
On fore1gn policy, wtll
But
the
AFL-CIO
has
prog1ams'? Tax cuts do stimulate mvestment and create never seen a fore1gn -trude Obuma really depart Iraq
JObs - and they also appe.tl .tgreemenl 11 could support. "carefull y'"? If he doesn't ,·
Will Ob;tma really abandon that country's collapse into
to Repu bli can s
The chances ate that allies l1ke Colombia - . new secturian strife could
CongrcSS IVI!al Democrats whose cxpcncnce he could be his first disaster.
It was unpolitic for Sen.
will lure even bcller 111 the use 111 eombatmg the drl1g
clect1ons than Obama docs t1.tcle in Afghanistan - 111 Joseph Biden. D-Del. to say
11, but Obmna 's "mettle" will
It they gam . say 30 House mder to sat1sfy the umons''
And what about trial he tested ve1y soon - not
scat&gt; and eight in the Senate
and he beats McCain by. say. lawyers, the' largest group only by foreign foes , but by
53 percent to 46 percent. cont ributing to Obama 'scam- his domestic allies. Let's hope
Congressional leaders may patgn?They will doubtless try he's the man we hope he is.
(Monon Kondracke is
thmk th~y have a mandate to to get Congress to expand
cnvern bicgc1 than hb.
then· ability to lile suits in execlllh e editor of Roll
~ SpeakerNuncy Pelos1 . D- slate courts - against drug c,,/1, th&lt;' new.1paper oj
Cu l1t..l1:" show n little incli- companies. tor instance, even , Capitol Hill .)
1

~
~.

.r

..::

NOW ITs liME TO
SAY 60017BYI;,
TOALLOUR

COMPANY,,,

~
•~

C:,l\\IFF.. ..

Tuesday, November 4, 2oo8

Obituaries

Slain tric.k-or-treater's dad·says boy saved him
BY SEANNA

Kathleen Myrtle Gonzalez

•
SUMTER, S.C. - The
parents of a 12-year-old
shot to death while trick-ortreating said Monday they
hope the man accused of
killing him suffers for the
rest of his life.
T.J. , · Darrisaw
died
Ha\lo~:~~een
night ·after
pohce say a convicted felon
unleashed a barrage of bullets from inside a home,
pumping at least 29 shots
through the closed door and
front of the house . The
boy's father and brother
also were wounded.
'The mjury to my arm is
not as bad as the injury to
my heart . l've lost a piece ()f
my heart forever," father
Freddie Grinnell Jr. said as
he sat in his living room
Monday .
Police said the suspect,
Quentm Patrick , 22, opened
fire with an AK-47 because
hi! thought he was being
robbed. The family went to
the pome because the porch
light was on , usually a signal that tnck-or-treaters are
welcome.
'
Two of three sib! ings who
went to the door with their
father were wearing ghoulish masks. Their parents .
said. the slain boy was determined to get candy first, so
he was in front when the
shots were ftred.
'T.J. saved us that night,"
Grinnell said. " He took
most of the shots."
When
the
shooting
stopped, Grinnell said, the
door swung open . Patrick
stood there, gun in hand ,
and said, "Oh, no ."
"I was holding my son
while he was bleeding, and
he was liacki ng out of the
yard:· Grinnell recalled .
Grinnell and another son
who was shot were treated
for minor injuries and

LANCASTER , Calif. Kathleen Myrtle Gonzalez
dted Oct. 8, 2008 at her
home in Lancaster, Calif.
She was born on Sept.
12 •. 1946 in Gallipolis ,
Ohto and grew up in
Middleport, Ohio.
She leaves her husband of
43 years , Hector Gonzalez
of Lancaster, Calif., and a
daughter,
Marguerite
Gonzalez of Bristol , Va.
Burial will be at Riverside
National Cemetery.
Kathleen Myrtle Gonzalez

Gayle Henderson Price
PORTLAND - Gayle Henderson Price of Portland
passed away Saturday, November Ist. He was 98.
. He was born in Portland in the Price family home. The
mght ~hat he was born , there was a storm with a fierce wind
and hts fam1ly named htm Gayle for that wind He was
raised in Portland and in Parkersburg , W Va .
·
Gayle atte~ded Marietta C~llege,_ Ohio State University
and Ohto Umverstty. It was hts deSire to become a doctor
but at the insistence of his famtly he became a scienc~
teacher. He taught for 40 years at schools in Portland
Somerset, Ohio, P&lt;vkersburg , W.Va. , and Rac'ine at Racin~
High School and Southern High School.
: He was a. teacher and a. fa~mer. He raised prime breedmg cattle for most of hts hfe. Upon retirement, Gayle
became a basket maker, a broom maker and a . blacksmith. Many wil'l remember him for his letters to the editor in The Daily Sentinel. He was also a local historian
with people traveling from all over the United States to
consult with him. After years of research , he wrote the
story of Morgan 's Raid from stories that. were passed
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 ltfe 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 Pnce,
Sherrie Cole, Brenda Litton and Sara Cammarata; greatgrandchildren, Amber and Za~:hary Litton and Christopher
Andrew Robmson, II; a great-great grandchild , Logan; a
mece 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 famtly. At
Mr. Prtce 's request there is to be no visitation.
Arrangements are being handled by the Anderson
McDaniel Funeral Homes.
In lieu of flowers donattons may be made to the Mei~&amp;
County Jiumane Society, P.O. Box 682, Pomeroy, Ohto
45769. An online registry is available at www.andersonmcdaniel.com.

Deaths

Other polling locations
are:
Bedford - Ohio Valley
Christian
Assembly
Campgrounds,
39560
Rocksprings Rd. , Pomeroy.
. E. Chester - Shade River
Lodge Masonic building ,
46416 Ohio 248 . Chester.
W. Chester - Pomeroy
Gun Club, 42560 Pomeroy
Pike , Pomeroy.
Columbia - Columbia
Township Firehouse , 29466

•

POINT PLEASANT, W.Va . - Ann Longstaff, 79, died
early Monday. Nov. 3, 2008, at Camden-Clark Memorial
Hospital in Parkersbur~ , W.Va.
Funeral arrangem'ents will be announced by CrowHussell Funeral Home in Point Pleasant, W.Va. An online
guest registry is available at www.crowhussellfu .com .
•

When
Colm
Powell
declared h1s support of
Bamck Obama on NBC TV 's
.. Meet the Press." part ofh1s
ex plana11on was. '' I thmk
Senator Obama has reached
the
feelings of the young peoLETTERS TO THE
ple of America,'' But which
EDITOR
young people have signific:mtly raised the pe1centage
Letrers to the .ed11or are we/umw . Ther ~ horrid he ln.\ of Amcricans from 18 to 29
than 300 word.\. All lerrers tne .111/Jiect ro· edirirr!( . 11111.1'1 be who are actively exercising
. signed, and include addre.1.1 wtd · relephone number Nu this v1tal ftmction of citizenuns1gned letters will be tmbiJ,fled. Lerrers should l&gt;e in
Who's mi ~sing 0
·good taste, addrening 1ssues. nor personalrrie1. Lerren of ship?
On Super Tuesday (Feb. 5)
thanks to organizarwns and indrl'idua/s "ill nor /Je accepr- - when 24 states held pned for publication.
maries or caucuses - 79
pe1 cent of the young voters
that day had attended some
college, thereby demonstrattng that a disproportionate
(USPS
213·960)
pe1centage of other eligible
Reader Services
Ohio Valley Publishing
•
yo ung voters had stayed
Co.
away.
Th1s low part1c1pation
Correction Polley
Published every ahernoon Monday
ol
young
Arttencans who did
Our main concern 1n all stones is to through Frldav. 111 Court Street,
not attend college underlines
'be 11ccurate If you knoW of an error Pomeroy, Ohio Secorld-ctBss postage
the failure of our school sys-In a slory, call the newsroom at (740) paid at Pomeroy ,
tem to prepare these stude nts
Member: The Associated Press and
992·2156.
the Oh1o Newspaper Assocmlion
for citizensh ip .
Potlmltter: Send address correcWhen I was a kid in
Our main number Is
tions to The Dally Sentmel, 11 1 Court
school
long ago. there were
(7401 992-2156.
Street, Pomeroy, Oh1o 1\5769
ci
vies
classes
showing us Department extensions are:
through
vivid
examples in
Subscription Rates
our history - how voters
By carrier or motor route
News
One month
'10.27
c:m help detcrmme much of
Editor: Char1ene Hoelhch, Ext 12
One year
' 115.84
what happens in our datly
Oolly
511'
Reporter: Bnan Reed, Ext 14
lives, ,md cspc•cially 111
Senior Citizen rates
•Reporter: Beth Sergenl, E&lt;t 13
times of nutionul u isis. by
One month
'10.27
who they choose to repreOne year
'103.90
sent
them. That's how many
Should
rei'nit
1n
advooce
Subscribers
Advertising
chrecl
to
lhe
Dally
Sentinel.
No
subof us back then gained a
: •OUtlkle S.lfll: Dave Harrts, Ext 15
scrlphon by ma1l perm1tted lfl areas
v~ ry personal mteresl both
- Outalde sales: Brenda Davts. EK! 16 where home camer serviCe IS avail·
Ill
our htstory and the battle' CIINJClrc.: Judy Clar1&lt;, EKI 10
able
fields of cun ent eve nts.
Mall Sub&amp;crlptlon
Now, a l ~men t abl e ~ffect
General Manager
Inside Melga County
of the No Ch1ld Left Bchmd
Charlene l:loellich, Ext 12
13 Weeks
' 32 26
ACI is that civiC' class~&gt; arc
26 Weeks
'64 20
absent
in many ·sc hoob th,lf
52Weeks
'1271t
E"""all:
feel
houncl
to keep tc·st111 ~
news@ myda!lysenl!nel com
Outside Malgs County
and rctt'!sllng on ~ubJCCh
13 Weeks
'53 55
who~e student'· s.:o1cs deterWeb:
26 Weeks
•tQ7. 10
mine
the school's stultiS, or
www mydatlysentHlel com
52 Weeks
'214.21
even its contmucd c~"tence

The Daily Sentinel

..

Nat
Hentoff

A basic source of information on how well students are
Jeaming how to be an organIC, lifelong part of dtscovermg why we are the oldest free
nat ion on the globe, despite
mu rderous threats !rom
abroad and even a teiTibly
costly Civil War. is Circle:
The Center for lnformution &amp;
Research on Civ ic Learning
and Engagemen t at Tufts
University in Medford, Mass.
Its director. Peter Levu1e,
makes a c1uciul point over·
looked 111 our celcbwtion of
the rismg number of you ng
voters Wi thout our realizing
that they are disproportionately college-educated.
Says Levine: "Campmgns
and interest groups mob1lize
yolllh on college campuses.
but 11 's harder to reach noncollege ) out h. ·. Rcsc.1rch
shows !hat school' can boo''
young people ·, pllrlkipation
by providing ... social studle!-1 classes. service opportu·

nitJes. discussions ot ctmenl
events and other 4tctivrties"
But. a Circle report adds,
school svstems around the
tmt10n p1:ovidc more oppm·
tum11es to karn about. and
then partic1pa1e. in our con,ritntlonal svslcm of ,e Jfl'll \t..'r tlllll'!l l .
'"((I
hit• hi!!
~ICOIIIC otUdCIII,, II flllC ':tuJcnts .111d acadenucally successful &gt;ltldents ."
Once, in Mi;uni.
~;a~

asked to speak to a large
number ot h1gh school students in connection with my
book "Living the Bill of
Rights." Before I went on
stage. two teachers told me
not to be disappointed at the
youngsters' Jack of interest
be~:ause "all they care about
are music and clothes."
After ·,m ho ur of telling
them stories about how we
Amencans won and then
fought io preserve our First
Amendment ri ghts and the
1ight of blacks and women
to vote, as well as the essential checks and balances tn
our govern ment to keep ~ us
free citizens. I got a standing ovatmn . Not because I
was so eloquent but because
these youngsters had dis-

The solution is elementary, says Joseph Kahne .
Since school systems below
college "reach a broader section of youth than colleges
(it follows that) if they provide quality civic learning
opportunities to all students,
they can promote more equal
particrpations" in the very
process of democracy.
In "Phi Delta J&lt;appan"
(the professional journal for
education), Kahne and Joel
Westheimer issued a call for
action to parents, educators
and school boards: "At the
same time that lobbyists are
spending hundreds of millions of dollars , many ordinary citi ze ns are passive
and apathetic when it comes
to major tssues that affect
lives ....
co~~~~~eA~~ricaar~ no~ ' is their
"lmprovin$
society
described in a recent Ci~le requires makmg democracy
Working Paper by two very work. And making democcom:emed educators and rac y work requires that
researchers at Mills College schools take this goal seriin Okland, Caltf. - Joseph ously: to edu~ate and nurKahne and Ellen Middaugh ture engaged and informed
of that school's Civic democratic cittzens."
Research
Engage men!
Transcendin~
political
Group:
·
parties and foc using on
They found . says Circle, basic civic education , let us
th at "students 111 hi gher- all - parents, educators,
in~.:ome di~l! ict:-. arc Up to school boards and students
IWILC as likely as those from - go to 11!
average-income districts to
The most enthusiastic
learn how Jaws are made aud ience I've ever had in
and how Cm1£ress works. discussing the stories of the
for mslance. -... African- tumultuous history of the
Amencan students are less Bill of. Rights was a fifthlikely than white students to grade public-school class!
have civic-focused govern(Nat Hemojf is a rwtion·
ment classes and current- all\' reiiOII'IIed authority 011
events discussions."
tire Flrsr Amendmem and
Ther~
is much more rlw Bill of Rrgltt1· wrcl aut/tor
ll'sc'atd l at Circle and at 1\ldls of mt/11\' h,,J....,, im lmlmR
l'ullc"c dut.·umcllllll'' h011 .. 11Je ll·ru on rhe Btl! of
'-"
"
"schools
:~re exacerbatmg
Rrg/11&gt; ami rite Garlrerin/i
inequality in voting when they Re.1i.lfwrce" ( S&lt;' t en Stones
could be narrowing the gap." Pre.n, 20U4).
•

Shoebox for a Soldier
project under way
POMEROY - Residents
working toward making
Christmas bright for those
in the military currently stationed
in
Iraq
or
Afghanistan will be at
Powell 's SuperValu on Nov.
15 collecting, contributions
for the Shoe Box for a
Soldier project.
Becky Lipscomb of
Jacks~n whose ·husband,
Eric, is a graduate of Meigs
High Schoof-an'd still ha&amp;
family here, has participat-'
ed in the project over the
past tWO r.ears and will be
at Powells from 10 a .m. to
2 p .m. that day collecting
boxes and encouraging
others to get involved in
the holiday project. She
said that all three local
school districts in Meigs
County are finding ways to
participate.
.
Yesterday Lipscomb was
in Meigs County distribut·
ing flyers to local businesses and encouraging resi-

' According to AMP-Ohio,
cost estimates for the
AMPGS projett were also
updated based on the most
recent information from the
preferred EPC contractor.
Estimates are based on actu·
al quotes for major equipment, and escalation and
contingency costs were
updated to reflect current
commodity markets.
One of the principal fac·
tors in the· updated. capital
cost is increased costs of the
steam turbines and boilers,
according to AMP·Ohio .
Another f~ct()r, accordi~g to
AMP~Ohto , ts the dtffer·
ence in financing assump·
tions, !!_aying $8Q million
was also added to the escalation projections. AMPOhio feels this provides
protection to participants
when dealing with the commodity markets tmpacting
construction and procurement. The increased capital
costs are financed over a
40-year time frame and only
increase the cost of power
by approximately $4.50 per

dents to get the names and
addresses of Meigs soldiers
currently serving overseas
so they can be remembered
with a shoebox.
Last . year 2,431 shoebox
care packages were shipped
to Iraq and Afghanistan,
according to Lipscomb. On
the list of items appropriate
for filling a shoebox are
protein bats, gum, hot
chocolate mix, a_Pple cider
mix, trail tnJX, nuts,
microwave popcorn, candy,
breath mints, Granola bars,
beef jerky, tea bags, DVDs,
music COs, knit hats, bandanas, · stationary. Also
appropriate are socks, foot
· powder, fabric softener,
baby powder, zip lock bags,
toothbrushes, · sunglasses,
deodorant, and lip balm'.
It was suggested that
those who want to participate but don't want to prepare a box , can take part by
making a donation to help
cover the cost of shipping.

•

released from a hospital.
T.J.'s mother, Daphne
Grinnell, said T.J . liked to
bake cakes, in part because
he relished licking the batter.
and constantly asked what he
could do to help out around
the home. The seventh-grader was on his middle school
drill team and loved math
and board games.
"He was always up for a
challenge," his father said,
recountmg how hts son got
up early for math tutoring.
"I was looking forward to
his graduation, to high
school·, to colle.ge. I was
looking forward to all of it
because
I know he would
k . ..
rna e It.

Patrick , who is charged
with murder and three
counts of assault and battery

with intent to kill , was
demed bond Monday. He
cried and wiped away a tear
as the charges were read . He
did not enter a plea and a
lawyer has . not been
assigned to his case yet.
State · record s
show
Patrick has been charged
with evading police and a
string of drug cnmes since
he turned 18 in 2004 . He
was sentenced to three years
in pnson but re leased in
January 20(1 7 under a program for first-time offenders after servmg just f1ve
months .
Prosecutors have not said
whether they will seek the
death penalty, bm the police
chtef in Sumter, a city of
40,000 about 45 miles east
of Columbia, said she w1ll

recommend they do
,
T.J.'s parents . said th'~
want Patrick to suffe r for a
lifetime behmd bars.
" He should .have to li-.;e
every day in jail and see' it
and feel it every ctay for tile
rest of hts life ," Daphne
Gnnnel\ sa 1d . ''The deal)l
penalty would be a shortcut."
Freddie Grinnell Jr. said
he doesn' t want an apolog)
" 'I'm sorry ' does nqt
bring my child back .'' he
said . "I Wall! JUStiCe."
Meanwhile, he contmues
to relive the nightma1e of
the shootmg.
·
"I see the same thing ,''
Grmnell sa1d. "We were just
standing on the front porcp
for a second, and all hejl
broke loose. It happened so
quickly."
·

Ohio 143, Albany.
. Lebanon
Portland
Community Center, Ohio
124, Portland.
N. Olive - Eastern Local
Admimstrattve
Offices,
50008
Ohio .
681,
Reedsville.
S. Olive - Long Bottom
Community
Building,
' 36709 T.R. 275, Long
Bottom.
Oran~e - Eastern Local
Offices,
Admimstrative

50008
Ohio
681 , Mulberry
Commum(y
Reedsvtlle .
Center. 260 Mulberry Ave,.
·
Rutland
Vtil age.
E. Pomeroy.
Rutland , W. Rutland Racine Village/Racme
Rutland Civic Center, 337 Precinct - Racme Bapttst
Main St., Rutland .
Church Christian Outreach
Salem - Salem Center Center. Fifth Street. Racine.
Scipio
Scipto
Firehouse, 28854 Ohio I 24.
Langsville.
Township Firehouse, 3557,'i
Middleport 2, 3 and 4 Firehou se Rd ., Pomeroy.•'
Church of Christ Family
Syracuse Village
Life Center, 437 Mam St., Syracuse
Communi!:)'
Middleport .
Center. Seventh Street.
Syracuse.
·
Pomeroy I, 2. and 3
':

MWh,AMP-Ohio said.
Yesterday, AMP-Ohio
also announced participating communities in the·
AMPGS project have
approved giving LNTP to
the EPC contractor on the
project. Notice was provid·
ed following a full patticipants meeting held in
Columbus. The EPC contractor is basically one company that designs and builds
the _Plant as well as secures
equtpment.
In a statement, AMP-Ohio
announced: "Giving LNTP
does not mean that construction on the factlily wtll
start, that is sttll contingent
upon recei pi of all necessary permits and successful
negotiations on state and
local incentives. The notification means the EPC contractor can start preliminary
engineenng and procurement of equipment related
to the project. The EPC contractor can get started on
preliminary work and .keep
the project moving forward.
Permitting is proceeding

along· anticipated timelines .
Giving LNTP further allows
the organization to lock in
stabilized costs."
Gerken added: This is a
major step forward on the
AMPGS project'. The decision by the parttcipants followed a lengthy presentatton
by AMP-Ohio staff and consultants, and a recommendation from the 16 member
Participants
Commtttee.
Participants received an
update to the project feasibility study from R.W. Beck.
the owners engineering firm.
Addtlionally,
the
Parttcipants
Committee
retamed the servtces of a
second engineering firm,
Burns &amp; Roe, to perform an
independent revtew of the
evaluation from R. W. Beck.
Both firms recommended
movm~ forward with limit·
ed-nouce-to-proceed."
AMP-Ohio is developtng
the project on behalf of 8 I of
its participating member
communities, along wtth
development partners the
Michigan South Central

'.

Power Agency and the Blue
Ridge Power Agency, located in Virgmia. The AMPGS
project is a proposed I ,OQO
MW generation facility,
which will uttlize the latest m
proven clean coal technology
according to AMP-Ohio .
"The due ·diligence that
has gone into the AMPGS
project thus far clearlv
shows 1t is a prudent invesi·
men! for p,articipating communities, ' Gerken satd .
"They will own an asset that
will provide below market
cost power for many years ,
stabilizing wholesale power
costs for their customers.
When takmg mto account
all of the generation assets
the orgamzation has. under
de velopment , it is a much
more dtverstfied mix with a
responsible com~ina11on of
fossil fuel and renewable
generation. In fact, by 2015
we esumate that AMPGS
participating communities
will have an average of 21
percent renewables in their
portfoho. We are very proud
of this."

Racine from Page At

"The negativity in this
campaign has made the voters unsure of who they
should believe. It damages
the process."
Phillips filed a similar
complaint against the Ohio
Republican Party and officials with the Athens
County GOP, alleging false
s.tatements were made m a
radio
advertisement
endorsing Thompson . That
complaint was dismbsed
yesterday, Phillips said,
because
the
Ohio
Republican
Campaign
Committee, and not the
Ohto Republican Party,
was responsible for the
radio spot's content.

property tax levy or income
tax destgned for police protection. These options were
di scussed but nothing no
action as·taken at last night's
regular meeting of Racine
Village Council.
Hill also announced he
retently ordered new playground equipment for Star
Mill Park in the amount of
$24,500. The equipment was
purchased with funds from
state capital improvement
money, most of which was
used on the skate park but
designated for recreational
~;~se only. The remainder of
the funds were paid by dona·

•

•

As tears stream down h1s cheek, Quentm Patnck, center, clad in a red pnson jumpsuit,
signs paperwork during his bond hearing at the Sumter-Lee County Detent1on center
Monday Ill Sumter, S.C. The convicted felon is accused of gunning down 12-year-old South
Carolina trick·or·treater T.J Darrisaw. His father and 9-year-old brother were wounded . ·

AMP from Page Al

Phillips from Page At
• "The- advertisement
made a false statement that
Phillips has been leading
the fight against the AMPOhio coal-fired power plant
in Letart Falls. In fact,
Phillips supports the plant."
With yesterday's ruling ,
the matter will now go
before the Ohio Elections
Commission for a full hearing, but Phillips said that
hearing has not yet been
scheduled .
"The decision allows people to move forward, knowmg these are false statements about me," Phillips
said. " It is important to take
a' stand when false statements are made."

AP pholo

·Voting from Page At

Ann Longstaff

The still missing: Millions of young voters

ADCOX

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

A

GniffT ~·

.The Daily Sentinel • Page As

www.mydailysentinel.com

tions, including those from
the Racine Area Community
Organization and a recent
$6,000 from Gatling, Ohto.
The new equipment is due ·
for shipment m December
but likely won't be put in
place until 2009 .
The. village also learned
it's refuse provider will
mcrease costs by $5 per ton.
bringing the cost to $45 per
ton after Janu ar~ I. This
translates into an tncrease of
roughly $2.000 aunuall y.
Racine ts the only mumcipality in Meigs County that
offers refuse service to its
rest dents .•

Council also heard a com· considered for pavmg funds
plaint about barking dogs in and felt "out of the loop" on
the village. Dugan said he a lot of issues in tenns of
would contact the county county &gt;government. Hi II.
dog warden about it. Spencer and council said the.
Councif satd the resident focus seems to be on the
would have to fLII out a Pomeroy/Middleport are.as
complaint to cite the dog 's as opposed to outlying areas
owner into mayor's court to in need of paving funds and
possibly curb the problem.
other projects. Htll said tt's
Tom Anderson, candidate not that Racine doesn't want
for
Meigs
County . Pomeroy and Mtddleport to
Commissioner visited coun· prosper but Racine Y.ould
&lt;:il, asking what they were hke to be included in that
looking for in a commission- prosperity. especially since
er if he,, elected. Council. the vi llage hasn't had . its
Hill and Clerk-Treasurer roads paved, or a grant to
Dave Spencer immediately help it wuh pavmg. m nearry
answered it would like to be 20 years.

�..

HEAI,TH

The Daily Sentin;l

PageA6
•

Tuesday, November 4, 2008

Meigs Medicare
checkup day coming
POMEROY - Helping beneficiaries understand Medicare
coverage and detennine which plan may best fit their needs
will be the focus of ~ ~C!Jicwe Check-up Day to be he!~ at
the Meigs C!&gt;UP!Y. §'?!IJ)f.il tlfl Aging on East Memonal Dn~e
in PomeroYi.~Ul ' :l"· :to;!!?'!·Thursday. Nov. 13. The Ohio
. Department ofJns~ .will he hosllng the free event.
The Chec~llp D~ys, ~p!.tment Medicare's annual open
. enrollment ot,:'cd&lt;)l'illl)ated election" period, which starts Nov.
.'15 and ends Dec:.3 l..PepP,jc,¢1 Medicare ~ve several options
they can lelll!! -~~·~L ~ ch?Ose qngmal. Medicare for
!herr health co~&gt;
all(! parr 11 With a stand-alone Part
0 plan to get tiliir ~Oil drug coverage.
.
··They could. select' a Me'~.icare Advarita~e Plan, which
provides comprehe~i~lth benefits mcludmg drug
coverage; or they niay ~.'e.~ine their existing coverage
already meets their healtl'\ I!J,&amp;urance needs.
Drug formularies , proliil:l~j networks and plan benefits
'
can change each ye3r.11:1'e~fore, .benefic1an~s need to
determine if their curre.n1 plall will still meet the1r coverage
needs. Medicare coverage secured through open enrollment
~ill begin Jan. I, 2009.
. .
.
"This event provides a great opportumty for people t.o
learn more about Medicare and how to secure the appropnate coverag~:';' said Mary 1;V,:.l:ludson, Director of the Ohio.
l)epartment.of Insurance·!" {strongly encourage people to
attend or call our OSHIIP."flltline at 1-800-686-1578 with
'
' n
'
any questiOns.
·
·
. Other topics may include sig.nificant savings on prescription drug costs fllr.tl!pse wnh hm1ted mcomes; how to s.ave
-using retai~· discounl ·'drug plans; drug company patient
Submitted photo • assistance prograim{;'Medicare:s preventive benefits and
Vicki Warner, RT, demonstrates a routine X-ray on Erin Bowman in O'Bieness Memorial Hospital's radiology depart- manafing expenses' duifn{the Part D coverage "doughnut
· .
ment. Warner' is assigned I() O'Blimess' satellite imaging service at the Meigs Medical Center located at 113 East hole,' or gap ill cdverage.
For
a
complete
listing
of
available
Parr
D
and
Med1care
Memorial Dr. in Pomeroy.
Advantage pllJ!J~· vi~jt www.medicaregov. Thos~ with
M{'dicare qu_estwns an4' ~~~o need enrollment assiStance
(starring Nov. d)«:an callVSI-HIP at 1-800-686-1578 or
MMicare at 1-800NEDICA'RE .( 1-800-633-4227).
'.
ATHENS
Today order from a physician, mak- MMC, the film less Picture When requested, a CD, with
. .•
O'Bleness
Memorial ing it a convenient choice for Archi vin~
and images for patients to take to
System their physicians will be
Hospital began offering those who live in the area. Commumcation
ro.utme X-ray service at the Patients of physicians who (PACS) is used, so digital available at least 24 hours
GALLIPOLIS - The Holzer Center for Cancer Care
Meigs Medical Center provide care for patients in images are immediately atier the procedure.
will
rresent the "Lilly Oncology on Canvas,'' an interns2006
O'Bleness
The
(MMC), located at 113 East · the MMC can also utilize the available for physicians.
tiona
art competition and exhibition that will be at the canMemorial Dr. in Pomeroy. service . These physicians Radiology Associates of Annual Giving Campaign
cer
center
at 6:30p.m. Thursday, Nov. 20.
·
General ro~tine X-ray ser- specialize in cardiolo~y. gas- Athens continues to provide raised more than $I 53 ,000
ILices available include X- troenterology, obstetncs and physician interpretation ser- for digital radiology imag- · Th'e exhibit will showcase 50 selected pieces of art from
ing equipment for the MMC the 2006 Onco)ngy on Canvas competition. The artwork is
rays of the chest, spine and gynecology. internal medi- vices for both facilities.
"Our digital images go as well as for the· hospital in created by breast cancer survivors and .their oncologists,
extremities. ·
cine as well as podiatry and
nurses, family members and .friends.
·
from our facility !O the radi- Athens. . . . . ,
. O'Bleness' . radiology podiatric surgery.
.
During
the
exhibit,
an
art
auction
of
pieces
contributed
·
The
new
1magm~
serv1ce
the
patieni's.
ologists,
then
to
department will operate the
Vicki Warner, RT, is the
satellite imaging service at radiologic technologist for physician very quicklr," ,shares the waitmg and by local artists will be held. AH money raised will go
the MMC. No appointment is the MMC imaging satellite. Bob Donofrio, RT, chief check-in area at the MMC. toward cancer patients.
"Lilly Oncology on Canvas" provides an ·opportunity to
necessary. The X-ray service In both the hospital imaging technologist for' O'Bieness' The phone number is (740)
reveal
the story of a woman's cancer journey, expressed
992-9158.
.
.
i~ available to anyone with an department and · at the radiology depanment said.
through art by breast cancer survivors and · the imponant
people in their lives. The exhibit was launched in 2004 as a
way to honor the journeys undenaken by women when
confronted by a cancer diagnosis. The first competition
received more than 400 pieces of art from 23 countries. In
harbor the b.ug.
·
Even more worrisome: troversial, and has had 2005. the an began a tour of ~ 00 cities throughout the
WASHINGTON (AP) DT\Ig,resistant staph .bacteMRSA mostly causes skin ma~y of these community,,•. mixed success, said Dr. M. world .. In .2006, the competition was opened to anyone
ria picked up in ordinary infections.
Cleveland strams had features allow- Lindsay Grayson, an infec- impacted \ly cancer and resulted in more than ~.000 entries
commuhity settings are ~rowns tight end Kellen ing them to easily swap· tious diseases expen at the from 43 countries. In 2007, the traveling art exhibit ·
increasingly . . acquiring Winslow was just hospital- genes and beco"!e . even University of Melbourne in inspired people in nearly 200 cities around the ,globe.
"superbug" powers .and i~ed for a ~laph infection, hardier.
. ·
Australia.
For more information, call 740-446-5474. . ·
Also at the conference; .
causing far more senous h1s second m recent years,
illnesses than they have in and the team reponedly has
• Doctors from Spam r--....;..------------------"'T,...~'!"l"":
the past, doctors reported . had at least six cases in the reponed the first ho~pital
last week.
past three years.
outbreak o~ MRSA resistant
· These widespread germs
But the germ can be life- · to hnezohd , a last-reson
Former Sheriff
u·sed to be easier to treat threatening if it gets into the drug sold by Pfizer Inc. as
than the danj:erous forms of bloodstream, lu_ngs . or Zyvox in the United States
staph found m hospitals and organs , Pneumoma, smus and Zyvo:~od m. Europe. A
nursing hollles. · ·
mf~ct1ons and even "flesh-. do~en
mtens1ve . care
"Until recently we rarely eatmg" wounds _due to patients got P.neumoma and
tlioullbt of it as a problem MRSA are on the nse, doc- bloodstream mfections last,
ror
among healthy people in the tors reponed last Monday at spring and the outbreak was
community," said Dr. an infectious di.sease~ con- con_tr?lled after use of the ·
Rachel Gorwitz of the fed- ference m Washmgton.
antibiOIIc was severely
I'm run~ing for congress because I'm tired of "business
About 95,000 serious· curbed, said Dr. Miguel
era! Centers for Disease
as usual" in Washington, D.C.! Like most people I talk to,
Control and Prevention.
infections and 20,000 Sanchez of Hospital Clinico
I've had enough!
Now, the germs causing deaths due to drug-resistant San Carlos in Madri~. .
outbreaks in schools, on staph bacteria occur in the
• Geor~eto~n Umverstty
I want to take some common sense to Washington. I don't take money from
saw a spike m smus mfecspans teatns and in other United States each year.
lobbyists and unlike my opponent, do not own stock in big oil comp~ies and
social situations are posing
To treat them, "we've had tions due to MRSA. The
a growing threat. A CDC to dust off antibiotics so old germ accounted for 69 perbanking interests. Our Congressman has sold us out... it's time for a change!
study found that at least 10 that they've lost their cent of the staph-cau~ed
percent of cases involving patent ," said Dr . . Robert cases m the. hospital
the most common commu- Daum , a pediatrician at the between 2004 and ~006
njty strain were able to University of Chicago. .
compared with 30 percent .
evade the an6biotics typi- . The.CDC used a network from 2001 to 2003. . .
cally us.ed to treatthem.
of hospitals in nine cities
• Henry. Ford Hospital m
"They're becoming more and states to test samples of Detroit found . that .more
resistant and they're coming the most common .commu- than hal~ of staph-caused
into the hospitals," where nity MRSA strain, USA300, pneumoma cases from 2005 ,
they swap gene components over the .las! few years.
through 2007 were. due · to
with other bactena and
MRSA usually is resistant MRSA.
grow even more dangerous, only to penicillin-type
• Doctors 'from Case
said Dr. Keith Klugman, an drugs. But 10 percent of the Western Reserve University
infectious disease expert at 824 samples checked also and the VA Medical Center
Emory University: "It's .could evade clindamycin , in Cleveland found that by
Law Enforcement &amp; Government- 25+ years Experience .
really a major epidemic."
tetracycline, Bactrim or the time hospitals isolated
The germ is methicillin- other antibiotics . .
and tested new patients to
Sheriff, Belmont County 1981-1985
resistant Staphylococcus
"The drugs that doctors see if they harbored MRSA,
aureus, or MRSA. People have typically used to treat many had already contamican carry it on their skin or staph infections are not effec- nated their skin and surMaster of Science in Administration, Central Michigan University
in their noses with no tive against MRSA," and roundings. Within about a
Ohio University, Bachelor of Business Administration
s'ymptoms and still infect family doctors increasingly day of being admitted,
others - the reason many are seeing a problem only roughly a third had already
Jefferson Community College, AAS Law Enforcement
hospitals isolate and test hospital infecllon specialists started w spread the germ.
new patients to see if they once did, Gori.vitz said.
Hospital screening is con-

..

x-rav

Inside
J~vldll!i planning COI\Ieback, Page B2

Cavs breeze past Mavs, Page B2

.
.
Quinn names Browns starter, Page 86

Thesday, November 4, 2008

locAL ScnEDUu:

Nuggets and Pistons swap
Ive~son for Billups, McDyess

pPMEAO'f - A td.:lult of uJ)t'(lmWlg hlgtl
aohool wrli!y !pOI"bb''g Milt&amp; ~ teems
ln:wn Gallla, Muon and Meigs countiee.

friday Ngytmblr 7
Footboll
Chapmanville at Point Pleasant, 7:30

p.m.

.

Burrato at Wahama , 7:30p.m.'
HUndred at Hannan, 7:30p.m.

· Pairings for the
:OHSAA regional
football semifmals
DIV!$10N I

Slturdly, 3p.m;
Huber Hts. Wayne (8·3) vs. Cln.
Colerain (10.1), Nippert Stadium

. A l l - Soturdly, 7 p.m.
Cleve, Glenville (11-&lt;J) va. Cleve. St.
Ignatius· (10.1 ), Lakewood Stadium;
Menlor (9-2) va Strongsville (10.1),
~rma Bye!s Flak!; Twinsburg (9-2)
va. N. CanlOn Hoover ((10.1), Canton
Fawcett Stadlum ~BrunswlcK (1 o-1) vs.
Conton GlanOal&lt; (9-2), Maesll~n Paul

Brown Tiger Stadium; Worthington
Kllbourne (9-2) va. Hllllard Davidson
( 10.1 ), Dublin Co~ man Sladlum;
Plcicarington Con~al (11.()) vs. Upper
ArNngton (10.1), Gahanna Llnooln
Stadium; Cln. Elder {1 0..1) vs. Clayton
Northmonl (10.1), Nippert Stadium

.~ .. l.

Breast cancer art exhibit scheduled

AP photo

Denver Nuggets guard Allen Iverson, center, goes up for a
shot as Los Angeles Clippers forward AI Thornton, left, guards
and Clippers guard Cuttino Mobley looks ·on during the first
haW of their NBA basketball game Friday in Los Angeles.

Richard "Dick" Stobbs
Congress - 6th District

NRS ''A" Rating- NRA, Life Member

Holzer Hospice announces new coordinator

.

GALLIPOLIS - Becky
Buckley, RN, CHPN , has
recently been named as
Clinical Coordinator for
Holzer Hospice by Holzer
Medical Center.
Buckley received her ,
associates degree in nursing
fr(lm the Holzer School of
Nursing at the University of
Rio Grande in 200 I. She
then began her employment
at Holzer Medical Center on
the progressive care unit. In
September 2004, Buckley
to
Holzer
transferred
Becky Buckley
H9spice as a staff nurse and
Buckley
resides
in
in 2006 received her certification in Hospice and Middl~n. with . her husband Tyson, and children,
~alliative Care.

Jake and Ava .
As Clinical Coordinator,
Buckley states her goal .is
"to continue to provide
excellent patient care to the
communities we serve." She
also added. "I feel blessed
to be part of Holzer
Hospice. We are able to
impact the lives of both our
patients and their families
with the care we provide."
Holzer Hospice serves
patients with /ife-limitiiig
illnesses irr Athens. Gallia,
Jackson. Mei11.s w1d surrounding counties . For
more information about
Holzer Hospice, please call
1-800-500-4850.

Farm Bureau Member- Ohio Gun Collectors, Life Member- OFCC l'ylember
Golerain Volunteer Fire Co.- Fonner Firefighter &amp; E-Squad Member U.S.
Anny Veteran, 11th Armored Calvary Regiment (Blackhorse), Vietnam,
VFW, DAY and American Legion Member
Wife- Jo Ann, 4 children - 2 grandchildren

Endorsed by:
Tom White, 18th Secretary of the Army
Colonel Tom Moe, USAF, Retired,
Chair, Ohio Veterans for McCain
Ohioans for Concealed Carry
Ohio Gun Collectors Association
72311

• Mt.

'.

-

.
'Billups

McOyess

off the free-agent market by
giving him a $13.5 million ,
two-year .contract extension , .
and they would love to have
him back if the cost-cutting ·
Nuggets buy out his contract.
"Two teams had one common problem, or challenge,"
Nuggets executive Mark
Warkentien said. "I think the
Pistons looked at (Rodney)
Stuckey and saw him as tlie
point guard of tomorrow,
and you have an All-Star in
Chauncey who was in his
way.
"We're just thrilled with
the way J.R. (Smith) is progressing iind he had a Hall of
Farner in front of him. You
understand the motivation of
both teams."
.The blockbuster deal

comes two games into the
season for Detroit. The
Pi stons have been a model
of consistelicy in recent
years, but they were determined to transform their
core following a third
straight exit from the
Eastern Conference finals
last spring.
The Pistons play Monday
night at Charlotte, where the
Bobcats are coached by
Larry Brown. The Hall of
Fame coach helped Billups
and the Pistons to the 2004
NBA title and g~ided t~e
lvetson-led Philadelphia
76ers to a spot In the finals
in 200 I.
"Trading Marilyn Monroe
for J.?ne Russell . ~hat'~, not
bad : Brown said. Joe
knows what he's domg, and
I'm happy · Chauncey's
gomg back to Denver and
his family is there."
Billups was born in
Denver and played in college at Colorado. McDyess
also will be enjoying a
homecoming of sons. having been a Nugget from
1995-97 and 1998-02.
The addition of Billups

Please .see Trade, B1
'

· .~
QI\IIIIQN N
A l l - Flldoy, 7:30 p.m.
You~s.
Mooney
(8-2)
vs.
Staubonvtlle (11-&lt;J), Canton Fawcett

.· w.

Stadium; Parry (10..1}
Mass.
Tuataw (1Q-1), lWinsburg Tiger
Stadium: Genoa · Area (1 H)) vs·.
Fco10fla (10.1), Fremont Don Paul
Stadium at Harmon Field; Marlon
Ploaaailt (10.1) vo. Ottawa-Giando~
(7·4), Findlay Donnell Stadium;

Qelmont Union l.ocal (1CH) vs.Martins Ferry (10..1), Steubenville
Reno Field at Harding Stadium;
Ironton (11-3) vs. New Lexington (10.
1), Jacl&lt;son Holzer Field; Day.
Oakwood (8-3) ""· Cddwate&lt; (11.()),
Piqua Ale&gt;&lt;ander Staclum Purlc Field;
Kettering Alter (9~2) v&amp;! HamiltonBadin (8-3), Dayton Welcome
Stadium
·

DMSK!'V

tle1urcloy, 2 p.m.
Bucyrus Wyntord (11-Q) vs. Hamler
Patrick Henry (11.Q), Bowling Green
State Unlvtrslty Doyt Pony Stadium

.. All-....,_,7p.m.

Oates Mills Gilmour (10-,)' vs.
'lllungs. Ursuine (11.Q), Stow Bulldog
Sttldlum; Kinland ( 11.Q) vs.
Columbiana Crestview (1~1), Niles
Bo Rein Stadium; Ardlbofd (9--2) vs.
Findlay
liberty-Benton
(11.()),

Bowllnll G- State U~ Doyt

Pony Stadium; Co~. Aalidy (7-2) vs.
PortemotJth W. (11.Q), [_., Chleltaln
Stadium; SaN. Llborty·UniOn (10-t)vs.
W,_rsbulg (10.1), -~Holzer
"~ril:twto_n· Jtrteraon (B-2} vs. o1n. Hills
~·
I
Acad. (11.Q), Ketlerlng
~"'""'" Stadium; Way!\etYIUe (9-2) vs.
r~;;;i;;ngStain MarJon Local (9·2),.
r•
Roush Stal:ltJm

•

LANDOVER, Md. (AP) mates - with his left hand.
- Byron Left'Nich led two
The Steelers held Clinton
touchdown drives after Ben Ponis to 51 yards rushing ,
Roethlisberger relnjured his ending his streak of five
throwing shoulder and the straight games with. at least
Pittsburgh Stee1ers beat the 120 yards. Washington (6-3)
Washington Redskins 23-6 came dose to scoring a
on Mon!lay .night.
touchdown only once The Steelers' top-rated . when Campbell threw
defense had seven sacks, incomplete to eligible lineallowed only 221 yards and man Lorenzo Alexander on
became the first team this fourth-and-goal at the I in
season to intercept Jason the'
fourth ·
quarter.
Campbell.
Campbell, who finished 24Leftwich went 7-of- 10 for of-43 for 206 yards, thought
129 yards and a touchdown he had ·scored on a scramble
as the Steelers (6-2) beat an on the previous play, but a
NFC East team for the first replay challenge sh~ed he
time in three attempts this was down just before the
season.
·
goalline.
Roethlisberger was 5-of'
While
the
Steelers
17 for 50 yards and an inter- remain atop the AFC
ception before leaving the North, the Red skins lost
game at halftime, again hin- ground in the NFC East to
dered by the slightly sepa- the New York Giants.
rated shoulder that has both- Washington enters its · bye
ered him since the second week needing to tweak an
week of the season.
offense that has put togethLeftwich's 50-yard com- . er promising drives all seapletion to Nate Washington son but has often struggled
set up a I -yard TO run by to find the end zone.
Willie Parker, who was back
The game was the first
fr?m a four-y&lt;eek layoff hosted by Washington on
With a knee .mJury. He also the eve of a presidential
had a 5-yard sconng pass to election since · 1984, and
Santonio Holmes. who there was no mistaking the
returned from a one-game combination of football and
benching over a charge for a election fever. One fan alter' mariju~na-related offense. nately waved a white towel
AP photo
Roethhsberger celebrated with Barack Obama's image Washington Redskins defensive end Demetric Evans (92) sacks Pittsburgh Steelers
that touchdown on the s1de.
·
quarterback Ben Roethlisberger (7) during the first quarter of an NFL football game
line by high-fivinghis team- ~- Steelen, B1 , Monday in Landover, Md.

Win gives Bengals r~rst upbeat moment
I
Troy
Sladium;
Cat!\. Cent. (8-3) vs. Sidney
Cath. (8-1), Clayton
Good Sama.rttan Stadium.

Ohio St.~Dlinois
game to .kickoff
Itt
noon Saturday
•
•:COLUMBUS (AP) be Big Ten Conference
ilay$ Ohio State's football
•
game
at
Illinois on
Nov.
15
will kick
off at noon.
The game
•
time was
~t by ESPN, which will be
~irrying the game on either
ESPN or ESPN2.
,
: The
12th-ranked
Buckeyes (7-2,, 4- I) play at
t'forth"!estem on Saturday,
While Illinois (5-4, 3-3)
gpeS' out of the conference
to play Western Michigan at
ford Field in Detroit.

CINCINNATI (AP) · The video advertising board
outside Paul Brown Stadium
flashed a sign on Monday
afternoon that proclaimed,
HWe Win!"
And t~at, pretty much,
·was the extent of the celebration.
No longer winless, the 1' 8
Cincinnati Bengals beaded
into their bye week happy
about a few small accomplishments. ·They will still
go down in franchise history
as one of the worst-starting
teams, but not the · very
worst. And they .can let the
0-8 Detroit Lions field all
the "Think you can go 016?" questions from here on

out.
Not much, but it's something.
A 21-19 victory over
Jacksonville on Sunday
gave the Bengals not only'
their first win of the season,
but their first celebration at
Paul Brown Stadium all
year. They dropped both of

.

•

DETROIT (AP) - The
Detroit Pistons shook the
NBA in a big way Monday
- landing former MVP
Allen Iverson from the
Denver Nuggets.
The Pistons gave up AllStar point guard and former
NBA finals MVP Chauncey
Billups. top reserve Antonio
and
project
McDyess
Cheikh Samb.
"We just fell it was the
right time, to change our
team," Pistons president of
basketball operations Joe
Dumars told The AssoCiated
Press. "Iverson gives us a
dimension that we haven't
had here and we really think
it's going to help us."
Iverson is in the final year
of . his contract, making
$20.8 . million this season.
He could debut with the
Pistons on Wednesday night
in Toronto .
"He was very ex~ited
about the trade," Iverson 's
agent, Leon Rose, told the
AP.
Billups is in the second
season of a four-year contract wonh a guaranteed $46
million with a $14 million
team option for a tifth year.
The Pistons kept McDyess

·steelers gallop past
Washington, 23-6

Staph germs harder than ever to treat, studies say

*** ELECT***

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

'

•

their home preseason games, He wants to play again this
including a 13-0 loss to New season. ·even though there's
Orleans in which Carson no real reason to do so other
Palmer got his nose broken than to show leadership.
and the Bengals never
At some point this month,
advanced beyond the Saints' Palmer will have his elbow
47-yard line. ·
re-evaluated. to see if it's
"Relief is one of the healing properly or if his
·biggest words," quarterback season is over.
Ryan Fitzpatrick said.
"But for now, it's going to
That good feelin~ may not wait." Lewis said.
have much shelf hfe. When
The victory over the selfthe Bengals return, they face destructive Jaguars provided
a daunting schedule and hope that the offense can
some of the same old prob- finally get · going without
'lems that got · them to this Palmer, The Bengals were
point.
'last in the league on offense
Coach Marvin Lewis said headmg mto the game.
Monday there was nothing
Fitzpatrick got his first
new to report on Paliner, NFL victory as a starter.
who has missed the last four throwing a couple of touchgames ·with an icjured pass- down passes to Chad Ocho
ing elbow. Palmer has Cinco. The coaches seem to
declined to talk about the have gotten a better f~l for
injury, sustained when his what he does best: Scnimble
arm WJIS hit while he threw a away from pressure. throw
pass against the Giants on shon passes on the run.
Sept. 21.
"I think it's them knowing
APphoto
Palmer is getting physical . me better and me knowing. Cincinnati Bengals gu;ird Bobbie Williams, bottom, celetherapy, hoping the elbow
brates with fans 11fter defeating the Jacksonville Jaguars
will heal without surgery. Ple.IIH- Ben1•ls, 11
21-19 in an NFL football game on Sunday in Cincinnati.

�..

HEAI,TH

The Daily Sentin;l

PageA6
•

Tuesday, November 4, 2008

Meigs Medicare
checkup day coming
POMEROY - Helping beneficiaries understand Medicare
coverage and detennine which plan may best fit their needs
will be the focus of ~ ~C!Jicwe Check-up Day to be he!~ at
the Meigs C!&gt;UP!Y. §'?!IJ)f.il tlfl Aging on East Memonal Dn~e
in PomeroYi.~Ul ' :l"· :to;!!?'!·Thursday. Nov. 13. The Ohio
. Department ofJns~ .will he hosllng the free event.
The Chec~llp D~ys, ~p!.tment Medicare's annual open
. enrollment ot,:'cd&lt;)l'illl)ated election" period, which starts Nov.
.'15 and ends Dec:.3 l..PepP,jc,¢1 Medicare ~ve several options
they can lelll!! -~~·~L ~ ch?Ose qngmal. Medicare for
!herr health co~&gt;
all(! parr 11 With a stand-alone Part
0 plan to get tiliir ~Oil drug coverage.
.
··They could. select' a Me'~.icare Advarita~e Plan, which
provides comprehe~i~lth benefits mcludmg drug
coverage; or they niay ~.'e.~ine their existing coverage
already meets their healtl'\ I!J,&amp;urance needs.
Drug formularies , proliil:l~j networks and plan benefits
'
can change each ye3r.11:1'e~fore, .benefic1an~s need to
determine if their curre.n1 plall will still meet the1r coverage
needs. Medicare coverage secured through open enrollment
~ill begin Jan. I, 2009.
. .
.
"This event provides a great opportumty for people t.o
learn more about Medicare and how to secure the appropnate coverag~:';' said Mary 1;V,:.l:ludson, Director of the Ohio.
l)epartment.of Insurance·!" {strongly encourage people to
attend or call our OSHIIP."flltline at 1-800-686-1578 with
'
' n
'
any questiOns.
·
·
. Other topics may include sig.nificant savings on prescription drug costs fllr.tl!pse wnh hm1ted mcomes; how to s.ave
-using retai~· discounl ·'drug plans; drug company patient
Submitted photo • assistance prograim{;'Medicare:s preventive benefits and
Vicki Warner, RT, demonstrates a routine X-ray on Erin Bowman in O'Bieness Memorial Hospital's radiology depart- manafing expenses' duifn{the Part D coverage "doughnut
· .
ment. Warner' is assigned I() O'Blimess' satellite imaging service at the Meigs Medical Center located at 113 East hole,' or gap ill cdverage.
For
a
complete
listing
of
available
Parr
D
and
Med1care
Memorial Dr. in Pomeroy.
Advantage pllJ!J~· vi~jt www.medicaregov. Thos~ with
M{'dicare qu_estwns an4' ~~~o need enrollment assiStance
(starring Nov. d)«:an callVSI-HIP at 1-800-686-1578 or
MMicare at 1-800NEDICA'RE .( 1-800-633-4227).
'.
ATHENS
Today order from a physician, mak- MMC, the film less Picture When requested, a CD, with
. .•
O'Bleness
Memorial ing it a convenient choice for Archi vin~
and images for patients to take to
System their physicians will be
Hospital began offering those who live in the area. Commumcation
ro.utme X-ray service at the Patients of physicians who (PACS) is used, so digital available at least 24 hours
GALLIPOLIS - The Holzer Center for Cancer Care
Meigs Medical Center provide care for patients in images are immediately atier the procedure.
will
rresent the "Lilly Oncology on Canvas,'' an interns2006
O'Bleness
The
(MMC), located at 113 East · the MMC can also utilize the available for physicians.
tiona
art competition and exhibition that will be at the canMemorial Dr. in Pomeroy. service . These physicians Radiology Associates of Annual Giving Campaign
cer
center
at 6:30p.m. Thursday, Nov. 20.
·
General ro~tine X-ray ser- specialize in cardiolo~y. gas- Athens continues to provide raised more than $I 53 ,000
ILices available include X- troenterology, obstetncs and physician interpretation ser- for digital radiology imag- · Th'e exhibit will showcase 50 selected pieces of art from
ing equipment for the MMC the 2006 Onco)ngy on Canvas competition. The artwork is
rays of the chest, spine and gynecology. internal medi- vices for both facilities.
"Our digital images go as well as for the· hospital in created by breast cancer survivors and .their oncologists,
extremities. ·
cine as well as podiatry and
nurses, family members and .friends.
·
from our facility !O the radi- Athens. . . . . ,
. O'Bleness' . radiology podiatric surgery.
.
During
the
exhibit,
an
art
auction
of
pieces
contributed
·
The
new
1magm~
serv1ce
the
patieni's.
ologists,
then
to
department will operate the
Vicki Warner, RT, is the
satellite imaging service at radiologic technologist for physician very quicklr," ,shares the waitmg and by local artists will be held. AH money raised will go
the MMC. No appointment is the MMC imaging satellite. Bob Donofrio, RT, chief check-in area at the MMC. toward cancer patients.
"Lilly Oncology on Canvas" provides an ·opportunity to
necessary. The X-ray service In both the hospital imaging technologist for' O'Bieness' The phone number is (740)
reveal
the story of a woman's cancer journey, expressed
992-9158.
.
.
i~ available to anyone with an department and · at the radiology depanment said.
through art by breast cancer survivors and · the imponant
people in their lives. The exhibit was launched in 2004 as a
way to honor the journeys undenaken by women when
confronted by a cancer diagnosis. The first competition
received more than 400 pieces of art from 23 countries. In
harbor the b.ug.
·
Even more worrisome: troversial, and has had 2005. the an began a tour of ~ 00 cities throughout the
WASHINGTON (AP) DT\Ig,resistant staph .bacteMRSA mostly causes skin ma~y of these community,,•. mixed success, said Dr. M. world .. In .2006, the competition was opened to anyone
ria picked up in ordinary infections.
Cleveland strams had features allow- Lindsay Grayson, an infec- impacted \ly cancer and resulted in more than ~.000 entries
commuhity settings are ~rowns tight end Kellen ing them to easily swap· tious diseases expen at the from 43 countries. In 2007, the traveling art exhibit ·
increasingly . . acquiring Winslow was just hospital- genes and beco"!e . even University of Melbourne in inspired people in nearly 200 cities around the ,globe.
"superbug" powers .and i~ed for a ~laph infection, hardier.
. ·
Australia.
For more information, call 740-446-5474. . ·
Also at the conference; .
causing far more senous h1s second m recent years,
illnesses than they have in and the team reponedly has
• Doctors from Spam r--....;..------------------"'T,...~'!"l"":
the past, doctors reported . had at least six cases in the reponed the first ho~pital
last week.
past three years.
outbreak o~ MRSA resistant
· These widespread germs
But the germ can be life- · to hnezohd , a last-reson
Former Sheriff
u·sed to be easier to treat threatening if it gets into the drug sold by Pfizer Inc. as
than the danj:erous forms of bloodstream, lu_ngs . or Zyvox in the United States
staph found m hospitals and organs , Pneumoma, smus and Zyvo:~od m. Europe. A
nursing hollles. · ·
mf~ct1ons and even "flesh-. do~en
mtens1ve . care
"Until recently we rarely eatmg" wounds _due to patients got P.neumoma and
tlioullbt of it as a problem MRSA are on the nse, doc- bloodstream mfections last,
ror
among healthy people in the tors reponed last Monday at spring and the outbreak was
community," said Dr. an infectious di.sease~ con- con_tr?lled after use of the ·
Rachel Gorwitz of the fed- ference m Washmgton.
antibiOIIc was severely
I'm run~ing for congress because I'm tired of "business
About 95,000 serious· curbed, said Dr. Miguel
era! Centers for Disease
as usual" in Washington, D.C.! Like most people I talk to,
Control and Prevention.
infections and 20,000 Sanchez of Hospital Clinico
I've had enough!
Now, the germs causing deaths due to drug-resistant San Carlos in Madri~. .
outbreaks in schools, on staph bacteria occur in the
• Geor~eto~n Umverstty
I want to take some common sense to Washington. I don't take money from
saw a spike m smus mfecspans teatns and in other United States each year.
lobbyists and unlike my opponent, do not own stock in big oil comp~ies and
social situations are posing
To treat them, "we've had tions due to MRSA. The
a growing threat. A CDC to dust off antibiotics so old germ accounted for 69 perbanking interests. Our Congressman has sold us out... it's time for a change!
study found that at least 10 that they've lost their cent of the staph-cau~ed
percent of cases involving patent ," said Dr . . Robert cases m the. hospital
the most common commu- Daum , a pediatrician at the between 2004 and ~006
njty strain were able to University of Chicago. .
compared with 30 percent .
evade the an6biotics typi- . The.CDC used a network from 2001 to 2003. . .
cally us.ed to treatthem.
of hospitals in nine cities
• Henry. Ford Hospital m
"They're becoming more and states to test samples of Detroit found . that .more
resistant and they're coming the most common .commu- than hal~ of staph-caused
into the hospitals," where nity MRSA strain, USA300, pneumoma cases from 2005 ,
they swap gene components over the .las! few years.
through 2007 were. due · to
with other bactena and
MRSA usually is resistant MRSA.
grow even more dangerous, only to penicillin-type
• Doctors 'from Case
said Dr. Keith Klugman, an drugs. But 10 percent of the Western Reserve University
infectious disease expert at 824 samples checked also and the VA Medical Center
Emory University: "It's .could evade clindamycin , in Cleveland found that by
Law Enforcement &amp; Government- 25+ years Experience .
really a major epidemic."
tetracycline, Bactrim or the time hospitals isolated
The germ is methicillin- other antibiotics . .
and tested new patients to
Sheriff, Belmont County 1981-1985
resistant Staphylococcus
"The drugs that doctors see if they harbored MRSA,
aureus, or MRSA. People have typically used to treat many had already contamican carry it on their skin or staph infections are not effec- nated their skin and surMaster of Science in Administration, Central Michigan University
in their noses with no tive against MRSA," and roundings. Within about a
Ohio University, Bachelor of Business Administration
s'ymptoms and still infect family doctors increasingly day of being admitted,
others - the reason many are seeing a problem only roughly a third had already
Jefferson Community College, AAS Law Enforcement
hospitals isolate and test hospital infecllon specialists started w spread the germ.
new patients to see if they once did, Gori.vitz said.
Hospital screening is con-

..

x-rav

Inside
J~vldll!i planning COI\Ieback, Page B2

Cavs breeze past Mavs, Page B2

.
.
Quinn names Browns starter, Page 86

Thesday, November 4, 2008

locAL ScnEDUu:

Nuggets and Pistons swap
Ive~son for Billups, McDyess

pPMEAO'f - A td.:lult of uJ)t'(lmWlg hlgtl
aohool wrli!y !pOI"bb''g Milt&amp; ~ teems
ln:wn Gallla, Muon and Meigs countiee.

friday Ngytmblr 7
Footboll
Chapmanville at Point Pleasant, 7:30

p.m.

.

Burrato at Wahama , 7:30p.m.'
HUndred at Hannan, 7:30p.m.

· Pairings for the
:OHSAA regional
football semifmals
DIV!$10N I

Slturdly, 3p.m;
Huber Hts. Wayne (8·3) vs. Cln.
Colerain (10.1), Nippert Stadium

. A l l - Soturdly, 7 p.m.
Cleve, Glenville (11-&lt;J) va. Cleve. St.
Ignatius· (10.1 ), Lakewood Stadium;
Menlor (9-2) va Strongsville (10.1),
~rma Bye!s Flak!; Twinsburg (9-2)
va. N. CanlOn Hoover ((10.1), Canton
Fawcett Stadlum ~BrunswlcK (1 o-1) vs.
Conton GlanOal&lt; (9-2), Maesll~n Paul

Brown Tiger Stadium; Worthington
Kllbourne (9-2) va. Hllllard Davidson
( 10.1 ), Dublin Co~ man Sladlum;
Plcicarington Con~al (11.()) vs. Upper
ArNngton (10.1), Gahanna Llnooln
Stadium; Cln. Elder {1 0..1) vs. Clayton
Northmonl (10.1), Nippert Stadium

.~ .. l.

Breast cancer art exhibit scheduled

AP photo

Denver Nuggets guard Allen Iverson, center, goes up for a
shot as Los Angeles Clippers forward AI Thornton, left, guards
and Clippers guard Cuttino Mobley looks ·on during the first
haW of their NBA basketball game Friday in Los Angeles.

Richard "Dick" Stobbs
Congress - 6th District

NRS ''A" Rating- NRA, Life Member

Holzer Hospice announces new coordinator

.

GALLIPOLIS - Becky
Buckley, RN, CHPN , has
recently been named as
Clinical Coordinator for
Holzer Hospice by Holzer
Medical Center.
Buckley received her ,
associates degree in nursing
fr(lm the Holzer School of
Nursing at the University of
Rio Grande in 200 I. She
then began her employment
at Holzer Medical Center on
the progressive care unit. In
September 2004, Buckley
to
Holzer
transferred
Becky Buckley
H9spice as a staff nurse and
Buckley
resides
in
in 2006 received her certification in Hospice and Middl~n. with . her husband Tyson, and children,
~alliative Care.

Jake and Ava .
As Clinical Coordinator,
Buckley states her goal .is
"to continue to provide
excellent patient care to the
communities we serve." She
also added. "I feel blessed
to be part of Holzer
Hospice. We are able to
impact the lives of both our
patients and their families
with the care we provide."
Holzer Hospice serves
patients with /ife-limitiiig
illnesses irr Athens. Gallia,
Jackson. Mei11.s w1d surrounding counties . For
more information about
Holzer Hospice, please call
1-800-500-4850.

Farm Bureau Member- Ohio Gun Collectors, Life Member- OFCC l'ylember
Golerain Volunteer Fire Co.- Fonner Firefighter &amp; E-Squad Member U.S.
Anny Veteran, 11th Armored Calvary Regiment (Blackhorse), Vietnam,
VFW, DAY and American Legion Member
Wife- Jo Ann, 4 children - 2 grandchildren

Endorsed by:
Tom White, 18th Secretary of the Army
Colonel Tom Moe, USAF, Retired,
Chair, Ohio Veterans for McCain
Ohioans for Concealed Carry
Ohio Gun Collectors Association
72311

• Mt.

'.

-

.
'Billups

McOyess

off the free-agent market by
giving him a $13.5 million ,
two-year .contract extension , .
and they would love to have
him back if the cost-cutting ·
Nuggets buy out his contract.
"Two teams had one common problem, or challenge,"
Nuggets executive Mark
Warkentien said. "I think the
Pistons looked at (Rodney)
Stuckey and saw him as tlie
point guard of tomorrow,
and you have an All-Star in
Chauncey who was in his
way.
"We're just thrilled with
the way J.R. (Smith) is progressing iind he had a Hall of
Farner in front of him. You
understand the motivation of
both teams."
.The blockbuster deal

comes two games into the
season for Detroit. The
Pi stons have been a model
of consistelicy in recent
years, but they were determined to transform their
core following a third
straight exit from the
Eastern Conference finals
last spring.
The Pistons play Monday
night at Charlotte, where the
Bobcats are coached by
Larry Brown. The Hall of
Fame coach helped Billups
and the Pistons to the 2004
NBA title and g~ided t~e
lvetson-led Philadelphia
76ers to a spot In the finals
in 200 I.
"Trading Marilyn Monroe
for J.?ne Russell . ~hat'~, not
bad : Brown said. Joe
knows what he's domg, and
I'm happy · Chauncey's
gomg back to Denver and
his family is there."
Billups was born in
Denver and played in college at Colorado. McDyess
also will be enjoying a
homecoming of sons. having been a Nugget from
1995-97 and 1998-02.
The addition of Billups

Please .see Trade, B1
'

· .~
QI\IIIIQN N
A l l - Flldoy, 7:30 p.m.
You~s.
Mooney
(8-2)
vs.
Staubonvtlle (11-&lt;J), Canton Fawcett

.· w.

Stadium; Parry (10..1}
Mass.
Tuataw (1Q-1), lWinsburg Tiger
Stadium: Genoa · Area (1 H)) vs·.
Fco10fla (10.1), Fremont Don Paul
Stadium at Harmon Field; Marlon
Ploaaailt (10.1) vo. Ottawa-Giando~
(7·4), Findlay Donnell Stadium;

Qelmont Union l.ocal (1CH) vs.Martins Ferry (10..1), Steubenville
Reno Field at Harding Stadium;
Ironton (11-3) vs. New Lexington (10.
1), Jacl&lt;son Holzer Field; Day.
Oakwood (8-3) ""· Cddwate&lt; (11.()),
Piqua Ale&gt;&lt;ander Staclum Purlc Field;
Kettering Alter (9~2) v&amp;! HamiltonBadin (8-3), Dayton Welcome
Stadium
·

DMSK!'V

tle1urcloy, 2 p.m.
Bucyrus Wyntord (11-Q) vs. Hamler
Patrick Henry (11.Q), Bowling Green
State Unlvtrslty Doyt Pony Stadium

.. All-....,_,7p.m.

Oates Mills Gilmour (10-,)' vs.
'lllungs. Ursuine (11.Q), Stow Bulldog
Sttldlum; Kinland ( 11.Q) vs.
Columbiana Crestview (1~1), Niles
Bo Rein Stadium; Ardlbofd (9--2) vs.
Findlay
liberty-Benton
(11.()),

Bowllnll G- State U~ Doyt

Pony Stadium; Co~. Aalidy (7-2) vs.
PortemotJth W. (11.Q), [_., Chleltaln
Stadium; SaN. Llborty·UniOn (10-t)vs.
W,_rsbulg (10.1), -~Holzer
"~ril:twto_n· Jtrteraon (B-2} vs. o1n. Hills
~·
I
Acad. (11.Q), Ketlerlng
~"'""'" Stadium; Way!\etYIUe (9-2) vs.
r~;;;i;;ngStain MarJon Local (9·2),.
r•
Roush Stal:ltJm

•

LANDOVER, Md. (AP) mates - with his left hand.
- Byron Left'Nich led two
The Steelers held Clinton
touchdown drives after Ben Ponis to 51 yards rushing ,
Roethlisberger relnjured his ending his streak of five
throwing shoulder and the straight games with. at least
Pittsburgh Stee1ers beat the 120 yards. Washington (6-3)
Washington Redskins 23-6 came dose to scoring a
on Mon!lay .night.
touchdown only once The Steelers' top-rated . when Campbell threw
defense had seven sacks, incomplete to eligible lineallowed only 221 yards and man Lorenzo Alexander on
became the first team this fourth-and-goal at the I in
season to intercept Jason the'
fourth ·
quarter.
Campbell.
Campbell, who finished 24Leftwich went 7-of- 10 for of-43 for 206 yards, thought
129 yards and a touchdown he had ·scored on a scramble
as the Steelers (6-2) beat an on the previous play, but a
NFC East team for the first replay challenge sh~ed he
time in three attempts this was down just before the
season.
·
goalline.
Roethlisberger was 5-of'
While
the
Steelers
17 for 50 yards and an inter- remain atop the AFC
ception before leaving the North, the Red skins lost
game at halftime, again hin- ground in the NFC East to
dered by the slightly sepa- the New York Giants.
rated shoulder that has both- Washington enters its · bye
ered him since the second week needing to tweak an
week of the season.
offense that has put togethLeftwich's 50-yard com- . er promising drives all seapletion to Nate Washington son but has often struggled
set up a I -yard TO run by to find the end zone.
Willie Parker, who was back
The game was the first
fr?m a four-y&lt;eek layoff hosted by Washington on
With a knee .mJury. He also the eve of a presidential
had a 5-yard sconng pass to election since · 1984, and
Santonio Holmes. who there was no mistaking the
returned from a one-game combination of football and
benching over a charge for a election fever. One fan alter' mariju~na-related offense. nately waved a white towel
AP photo
Roethhsberger celebrated with Barack Obama's image Washington Redskins defensive end Demetric Evans (92) sacks Pittsburgh Steelers
that touchdown on the s1de.
·
quarterback Ben Roethlisberger (7) during the first quarter of an NFL football game
line by high-fivinghis team- ~- Steelen, B1 , Monday in Landover, Md.

Win gives Bengals r~rst upbeat moment
I
Troy
Sladium;
Cat!\. Cent. (8-3) vs. Sidney
Cath. (8-1), Clayton
Good Sama.rttan Stadium.

Ohio St.~Dlinois
game to .kickoff
Itt
noon Saturday
•
•:COLUMBUS (AP) be Big Ten Conference
ilay$ Ohio State's football
•
game
at
Illinois on
Nov.
15
will kick
off at noon.
The game
•
time was
~t by ESPN, which will be
~irrying the game on either
ESPN or ESPN2.
,
: The
12th-ranked
Buckeyes (7-2,, 4- I) play at
t'forth"!estem on Saturday,
While Illinois (5-4, 3-3)
gpeS' out of the conference
to play Western Michigan at
ford Field in Detroit.

CINCINNATI (AP) · The video advertising board
outside Paul Brown Stadium
flashed a sign on Monday
afternoon that proclaimed,
HWe Win!"
And t~at, pretty much,
·was the extent of the celebration.
No longer winless, the 1' 8
Cincinnati Bengals beaded
into their bye week happy
about a few small accomplishments. ·They will still
go down in franchise history
as one of the worst-starting
teams, but not the · very
worst. And they .can let the
0-8 Detroit Lions field all
the "Think you can go 016?" questions from here on

out.
Not much, but it's something.
A 21-19 victory over
Jacksonville on Sunday
gave the Bengals not only'
their first win of the season,
but their first celebration at
Paul Brown Stadium all
year. They dropped both of

.

•

DETROIT (AP) - The
Detroit Pistons shook the
NBA in a big way Monday
- landing former MVP
Allen Iverson from the
Denver Nuggets.
The Pistons gave up AllStar point guard and former
NBA finals MVP Chauncey
Billups. top reserve Antonio
and
project
McDyess
Cheikh Samb.
"We just fell it was the
right time, to change our
team," Pistons president of
basketball operations Joe
Dumars told The AssoCiated
Press. "Iverson gives us a
dimension that we haven't
had here and we really think
it's going to help us."
Iverson is in the final year
of . his contract, making
$20.8 . million this season.
He could debut with the
Pistons on Wednesday night
in Toronto .
"He was very ex~ited
about the trade," Iverson 's
agent, Leon Rose, told the
AP.
Billups is in the second
season of a four-year contract wonh a guaranteed $46
million with a $14 million
team option for a tifth year.
The Pistons kept McDyess

·steelers gallop past
Washington, 23-6

Staph germs harder than ever to treat, studies say

*** ELECT***

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

'

•

their home preseason games, He wants to play again this
including a 13-0 loss to New season. ·even though there's
Orleans in which Carson no real reason to do so other
Palmer got his nose broken than to show leadership.
and the Bengals never
At some point this month,
advanced beyond the Saints' Palmer will have his elbow
47-yard line. ·
re-evaluated. to see if it's
"Relief is one of the healing properly or if his
·biggest words," quarterback season is over.
Ryan Fitzpatrick said.
"But for now, it's going to
That good feelin~ may not wait." Lewis said.
have much shelf hfe. When
The victory over the selfthe Bengals return, they face destructive Jaguars provided
a daunting schedule and hope that the offense can
some of the same old prob- finally get · going without
'lems that got · them to this Palmer, The Bengals were
point.
'last in the league on offense
Coach Marvin Lewis said headmg mto the game.
Monday there was nothing
Fitzpatrick got his first
new to report on Paliner, NFL victory as a starter.
who has missed the last four throwing a couple of touchgames ·with an icjured pass- down passes to Chad Ocho
ing elbow. Palmer has Cinco. The coaches seem to
declined to talk about the have gotten a better f~l for
injury, sustained when his what he does best: Scnimble
arm WJIS hit while he threw a away from pressure. throw
pass against the Giants on shon passes on the run.
Sept. 21.
"I think it's them knowing
APphoto
Palmer is getting physical . me better and me knowing. Cincinnati Bengals gu;ird Bobbie Williams, bottom, celetherapy, hoping the elbow
brates with fans 11fter defeating the Jacksonville Jaguars
will heal without surgery. Ple.IIH- Ben1•ls, 11
21-19 in an NFL football game on Sunday in Cincinnati.

�•

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•

'

LeBron, ·Mo Williams lead Cavs past Mavs

AP photo

~· tn

this Nov. 25, 2007 fUe photo, Cleveland Browns' Joii
; Jurevicius is shown before the Browns play the Houston
:Texans in an NFL .football game in Cleveland. Jurevicius
:revealed Monday that he has had five procedures to clean
: out a staph infection in his right knee following arthroscop;: ic surgery in January.

·Browns WRJurevicius
·planning comeback

DALLAS
(AP)
LeBron James snapped a.
third-quarter tie with a flying rebound-layup, then
Mo Williams broke things
open early in the fourth,
sending the Cleveland
Cavaliers to a 100-81 victory over the
Dallas
Mavericks on Monday
night. .
James was only 8-of-20,
but scored 29 · points and
took over when his team
needed it. Cleveland let a
16-point lead fritter into a
tie at 63. then Daniel
Gibson . missed a jumP.er
from the comer, only to see ·
James zoom in, grab the
rebound and bank it in, all
in one motion. He followed
with a three-point play and
a pair of free throws.
The Cavs ended the quarter ahead by six, then
Williams scored nine points
during a 13-0 run at the
start of the final period.
Williams capped his spurt
with a 3-pointer so long
that his defender, Dallas'
Jason Terry, walked away
saying, "Whooo ."
Dirk Nowitzki was held
to eight points on 3-of-11
shooting as the Mavericks
fell to 0-2 at home. Their
only lead . was 2-0, on a
jumper by Nowitzki. He
missed his next seven
shots , failing to hit another
until late in the third quar-

ures , each scoring 10.
· Cleveland, which had
been 0-2 on the road ,
scored nine straight points
after Nowitzki 's gameopening basket anp never
trailed · again. The Cavs
were up 28-12 late in the
first quarter, then pushed
the lead into the 20s by the
middle of the fourth. Fans
streamed out early, while
those who stayed offered
plenty of boos.
Zydrunas llgausakas.. had
. 17 points and II rebounds .
Williams and Delonte West
added 14 points , and Wally
Szczerbiak had 10. Ben
Wallace didn't score. but
had 13 rebounds.
James had a season-low
three assists : He came in
averaging 9.3 .
Notes: Dallas' Jerry
Stackbouse did not play.
Coach Rick Carlisle said
Stackhouse is batt! ing a
foot problem. ... Cavs
coach Mike Brown was an
assistant to Carlisle in
Indiana:. "I learned a lot
from him." Brown said.
''I'll always be indebted to
him. Great coach. Brilliant
mind."
.. . Wright returned
APphoto
Cleveland Cavaliers guard Delonte West (13) diives for a lay to the starti.ng lin~up
having
ueen
up against Dallas Mavericks center Eljck Dampier (25) during despite
benched the entire previous
the first half in an NBA basketball game Mend~ in:,Dalla~. . game.
His reward was covter.
· Antoine Wright and Gerald ering James. He covered
Josh Howard led the Green were the only other Tracy McGrady in the
Mavs with 18 points. players to hit double fig-· opener, his other start:

c .LAS S.l FIE D

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. BEREA (AP) - Joe the
Football Player isn't ready to
give up the game he loves.
· · Cleveland wide receiver
· Joe Jurevicius, forced to sit
out the 2008 season because
· of a serious staph infection in ·
his surgically repaired right
·'knee, plans to come back
next season for his beloved
Browns.
"I'm not g1vmg u,,.. he
said. 'Tm playing next year.
It's not I'm going to try. I am
playing next year."
'· The passionate 33-yearold, who grew up in the
~ : Cleveland area and attended
[ Browns games as a kid,
· revealed Monday that he has
' undergone five procedures in
the past 10 months to clean
: out s~aph. ~hich he contracted following arthroscopic
surgery at the Cleveland
Clinic in January.
· Jurevicius is., one of five
known Browns players to get
staph in the past three years,
. an outbreak that led to the
team callin~ in infectious
control specialists for assistance. Kellen Winslow
recently had a second bout
with staph, and the tight end
was briefly sustx:nded by the
. team for criticizing its handling of his hospitalization . .
· Jurevicius I?lans to have
· another operauon on his knee
to remove scar tissue. But
instead of going back to the
Clinic, he'll have his next
procedure performed by Dr.
· Richard Steadp1an in Vail,
Colo. Jurevicius doubts that
he ' ll need microfracture
surgery, an operation that
involves drilling holes in the
. kneecap to promote cartilage
growth and requires a longer

Steelers
from Page Bl
in the left hand and an allburgundy Redskins towel in'
the right hand. Sponsthemed interviews with
Obama and John McCain
. were broadcast by ESPN
· during halftime .
The Redskins also used
. the special occasion to wear
. burgundy jerseys and pants
· together for the first time in
·franchise history. A more
noticeable color. however,
· was the yellow from the sea
of Terrible Towels waved
by Steelers fans who man• aged to secure tickets by the
boatload for the lower bowl
. of the stadium . In a bizarre
· sight , visiting Pittsburgh
players were waving to the
fans all around them to
. make noise crowd during
defensive stands .
. Neither team managed
100 yards in a first half that
included seven sacks and a
' combined 13-of-32 perfor: mance by Roethlisberger
and
Campbell.
The
Redskins didn't convert on
.. third down until Campbell
. lilt tight en!i Chris Cooley
· for a 12-yard gain late in the
third quarter.
Campbell's streak without an interception reached

·'

rehab period.
Jurevicius said he contracted staph within I 112 weeks
of his surgery. He isn't sure
guard Jason Williams in to school since Shaquille Fi!!hting Irish to average 79
. Bv JIM O'CONNELL
where he got it.
AP BASKETBALL•WAITEA
2001-02, and the lastrepeat O'Neal at LSU in 1991.
pomts, tired for the No. 1
'Tm not a doctor," he said.
selection was Michigan
"To no one's surprise spot in the conference.
"I'm not here to point finIt's no surprise Tyler State guard Mateen Cleaves Trier didn't rest on his preCollison, a third-team Allgers, whether it was ·the Hansbrough made The in 1999-00.
vtous accomplishments," America selection after
Cleveland Clinic or the Associated Press' preseason
Hansbrough
'averaged · Williams ·said. "He worked leading the Bruins to a third
Browns' facility. All I know AU-America team - this is 22.6 points and I 0.6 hard in the offseason to straight Final Four appearis that I contracted a staph his record third straight year rebounds in leading the Tar become an even better play-· ance last season, received
infection and wasn't happy as its leadin~ V\)te-getter. Heels to a school-record 36 er. He has grown so much as 46 votes. The 6, I senior
with it. It is what it is. I bat- For the first t1ine, however, wins and the Final four last a person and a player averaged 14.5 points and
tled, still have some work to the North Carolina forward season. He will miss about · throughout his career and it 3.8 assists last season, and
do and we go from there, but was a unanimous selection. two weeks of practice after has been a joy to·watch."
. he will combine with Josh
now is not the time for me to
Joining
Hansbrough
on
being
diagnosed
last
week
Curry,
who
led
Shipp to give UCLA one of
point fingers."
·
with
a
stress
reaction
in
his
Davidson's
surprising
run
to
the nation's top backcourts
the
team
Monday
were
.
He was asked about his · UCLA
guard
Darren right shin.
the re?ional fmals of last this season.
theory on why the Browns Collison, also
repeat
from
"Of
course,
we
are
all
dis'seasons
NCAA tournament,
Griffin, who received 45
a
have had so many staph
last
year's
preseason
team,
appointed
for
Tyler
and
our
w~s second in ' the . voting votes, surprised many when
cases.
"There's been some num- Davidson guard Stephen team, but everybody on the w1th 66. Curry averaged 32 he dec1ded to return to the
bers here and it does 'nake Curry, Notre Dame forward roster has a chance to do a points and was 23-of-51 Sooners for his sopho~ore
Harangody
and little. more and play a little from 3-point range during season. The 6-10, 250people open their eyes," he Luke
fQI'Ward
Blake
better to help make up for the tournament run despite pound Griffin averaged
0klahoma
said. ,;1 just feel that for me
the
loss of the national play- seein~ defenses aimed ai 14.7 points and. 9.1
Griffin.
personally, I've seen enough
Hansbrough. a 6-.foot-9 er of the year," North stoppmg the slender guard. rebounds last seaspn in
of the Cleveland Clinic 111
senior
and the n;igning Carolina
coach . Roy He averaged 25.9 points for leading Oklahoma through
terms of the amount of times
the·
year,
Williams
said.
.
the season and his contribu- a rough Big 12 schedule
national
player
of
I've been in there. For me, I
Hansbrough has played in lion to the team should and' into the NCAA tournawould personally just like to. was placed on all 72 :ballots
start with a clean slate, a by the sall,)e medi~ panetthat all 108 games in his first change some this season ment.
Arizona State .sophomore
fresh chalkboard and write selects the weekly Top 25. three seasons and he did not with the graduation of point
Hansbrough
missed
being
a
miss
a
practice
his
first
two
guard
Jason
Richards,
who
James
Harden, with 25, was
the rest of the story up.
the only Hansbrough .unaniThat's the reason I plan on unanimous pick last season rears and only one as a led the nation in assists.
The 6-8 Harangody, who mous for preseason AP Allgoing o_ut to Vail. But I will by one vote , and he fell JUnior.
be back here after that. But in seven votes shorts as a
Hanstrough was a second- was named on 58 ballots, America
terms of the number of staph sophomore..
team All-America after his · was the Big East player of · .Drew Neitzel of Michigan
infections, it makes you open
The preseason . team was sophomore season and was a the year last season after State. Hibbert was a secyour eyes:" '
first selected before the unanimous pick after last averaging ~0.4 points and and-team selection after the
Jureviaius, who also 1986-87 season. 'The last season. He is the first nation- I 0.6 rebounds . His inside season and Loftori was on
played for the New York unanimous pick was Duke al player of the year to return presence
allowed
the the third team.
Giants, Tampa Bay and
Seattle, signed as a free agent
with the Browns in 2005. It
The Bengals also showed grabbin~ at my eyeballs. I got the feeling that the rest
was his dream to end · his
a little more fight than they really d1dn 't know what to of the league was starting \O
career in Cleveland, and he's ·
had all season. Offensive do when someone 's fingers look at them as doormats .
determined to .see it through.
"I don't know if teams
tackle Andrew Whitworth are trying to dig into my
fromPageBl
Sitting out has been difficult
eyes."
felt
they could come over
took a few left -handed
for Jurevicius, who has
Lewis
didn'
t
fault
here
and ', w;~lk over us ,".
swings at Jacksonville
found driving to Browns them better. in terms of my defensive tackle John Whitworth, who cost the receiver .
.
T.J.
games extremely difficult.
style of play," .s~id Henderson
Bengals
field
position
by
"I
Houshmahdzadeh
said'.
after
he
Fitzpatrick, who went 19- knocked off Whitworth's · taking
felt
that
teams,
when
they
a
swiQg ·at
of-26 while the Bengals helmet. then appeared to try Henderson .
came to play us, everybody
271 attempts - 249 this pulled ahead 21-3. "I felt
thought they were going to
"Whit
was
not
retaliatseason - before corner- really comfortable in the to gouge his eyes. Both ing," Lewi s said. "Whit .win - coaches, players,
back Deshea Townsend first half, and I think it players were penalized and was frying to.defend him- equipment men, trainers. I
·
grabbed a pass tipped by showed in the two touch- ejected.q
self. It's a shame. He feels really thought that they
"I
just
pushed
him
past
P0nis late in the third quar- down drives that we had.''
the quarterback, and he fell . bad about it because it took thought they would win,
ter.
The Bengals got their to the ground," Whitworth us ..out of position, and we everybody we played.
Washington was on the first 100-yard rusher of the said. "But he held onto my lost a very gQod player.
"We're good at 1-8. It's
board early with two field season . Cedric Benson ran facemask and ripped my That's the shame of it."
a terrible thing to say.
goals in the first four min- for 104 overall. and had the helmet off. I turned to go
Whitworth's don 't-back- We'-ve got . a · good team.
utes - wiihout the benefit team's longest run of the back to the play, and the down attitude was appreci- We're just not winning
of a first down. Linebacker season at 30 yards .
next thing I knew, I felt him ated by his teammates, who enough games."
Alfred Fincher alertly
recovered the Steelers sur•
pri se onside kick that
1/2 ·seasons with the fran- longest such stretch since of the past three conference
chise, leading it to the NBA the Los Angeles Lakers finals , with the Pistons
opened the game , and
finals in 2001 . He was trad- dominant run in the 1980s. eliminated in Game 6 each
Cornelill'S Griffin intercepted ·Dec. 19, 2006 , to the He was at his best in the year. He has averaged near- ·
ed a pass tip~ by teamfrom Page 81
Nuggets and helped them 2004 NBA final s when he ly 15 points and 5 112
mate Andre Carter. Both
hell*:d the Pistons win their assi sts for his career.
plays gave Washi.ngton the might placate Nuggets fans reach the playoffs t~.Yice.
McDyes.s revived his
Detroit, which tried to third title under Brown .
ball in Pittsburgh territory, who have watched the once
"It's
kind
of
hard
for
me
career
· with the Pistons,
33-year-old
deal
for
the
leading to field goals of 44 free -spending
franchise
because
of
that
core
playing
321 games over
at
least
once
before,
Iverson
and 43 yards by Shaun trade defensive standout
group
,"
Brown
said
.
four
seasons
after careera superstar it lacked
'Suisham.
Marcus Camby to the Los added
with Iverson and salary-cap "Every time I look out and threatening knee operaThe Steelers didn't cross Angel~s Clippers in the off- space
for .next summer by don't see Ben (Wallace) tions . The 2000 Olympian
midfield
until ·Carlos season and recently decline shedding
there I get a strange feel- and ·200 I All-Star has averBillups' contract.
Rogers grabbed Hines Ward to extend Linas K.leiza 's
Billups is 32 and has ing. Now not to see . aged 13.4 points and 7.7
to commit an obvious 43- contract.
bounced around the league Chancey and Dyess , it's rebounds for his career~
yard pass interference
Iverson brings consider- .arter Boston drafted him going to be different .
Like Billups, the 34-yearpenally, setting up a 35-yard able star power to Detroit. No. 3 overall in 1997. He
"But Allen is really spe- old McDyess is one of the
field goal by Jeff Reed that The 20th-leading scorer in then found an NBA home in cial. If they want excite- league's most popular playcut Washington's lead to 6- NBA history was the league Detroit and becoming a ment in that building ers among peers.
3.
MVP in 2001 - four years three-time · All-Star, and they're going to get it
Detroit acquired the 7The Steelers went ahead after being the Rookie of two-time
fo.
o
t-1 Samb for Maurice
because
every
tit;ne
h~
steps
All-Defensive
after Andre Frillier blocked the Year - and js a nine- player. He was on rosters in on the court he s gomg to Evans from the Lakers durRyan Placktmeier' s punt. time All-Star. He has aver- Boston, Denver, Orlando try to win the game. And I ing the 2006 draft . The 24·
William Gay recovered. aged nearly 28 points for his and Minnesota . in his first don't think you would ever rear-old center played in
consider
giving
up JUSt four NBA games last
givin~ Pittsburgh the ball at career and has led the NBA four seuons.
.
Detroit signed him as a ·chauncey and Dyess season, spending much of
Washmgton 's 13 and setting · in steals three times, tying a
free agent in 2002 111\d he unless you were getting his year in the NBA
U'l Roeihlisberger 1-yard league record.
League,
's~oeak that made it 10-6 in
Philadelphia drafted him led the franchise to six something rou thought was Development
where
be
led
the
league
pretty
spec1al."
the final minute of the first No. 1 overall in 1996 out of straight conference finals
with
four
blocks
a
game.
Billups
struggled
in
each
half.
· Georgetown and he spent 11 appearances , the NBA's

ad at any lime.

Hansbrough . unanimous for preseason APAII-America

Errors

rtell on the firs
ay of publica!
nd lhe Trlbu
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-·

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In lhe flr
vellable edition.

Bengals

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Sentinel
l\egtster
~------------------~-----------

•

'

LeBron, ·Mo Williams lead Cavs past Mavs

AP photo

~· tn

this Nov. 25, 2007 fUe photo, Cleveland Browns' Joii
; Jurevicius is shown before the Browns play the Houston
:Texans in an NFL .football game in Cleveland. Jurevicius
:revealed Monday that he has had five procedures to clean
: out a staph infection in his right knee following arthroscop;: ic surgery in January.

·Browns WRJurevicius
·planning comeback

DALLAS
(AP)
LeBron James snapped a.
third-quarter tie with a flying rebound-layup, then
Mo Williams broke things
open early in the fourth,
sending the Cleveland
Cavaliers to a 100-81 victory over the
Dallas
Mavericks on Monday
night. .
James was only 8-of-20,
but scored 29 · points and
took over when his team
needed it. Cleveland let a
16-point lead fritter into a
tie at 63. then Daniel
Gibson . missed a jumP.er
from the comer, only to see ·
James zoom in, grab the
rebound and bank it in, all
in one motion. He followed
with a three-point play and
a pair of free throws.
The Cavs ended the quarter ahead by six, then
Williams scored nine points
during a 13-0 run at the
start of the final period.
Williams capped his spurt
with a 3-pointer so long
that his defender, Dallas'
Jason Terry, walked away
saying, "Whooo ."
Dirk Nowitzki was held
to eight points on 3-of-11
shooting as the Mavericks
fell to 0-2 at home. Their
only lead . was 2-0, on a
jumper by Nowitzki. He
missed his next seven
shots , failing to hit another
until late in the third quar-

ures , each scoring 10.
· Cleveland, which had
been 0-2 on the road ,
scored nine straight points
after Nowitzki 's gameopening basket anp never
trailed · again. The Cavs
were up 28-12 late in the
first quarter, then pushed
the lead into the 20s by the
middle of the fourth. Fans
streamed out early, while
those who stayed offered
plenty of boos.
Zydrunas llgausakas.. had
. 17 points and II rebounds .
Williams and Delonte West
added 14 points , and Wally
Szczerbiak had 10. Ben
Wallace didn't score. but
had 13 rebounds.
James had a season-low
three assists : He came in
averaging 9.3 .
Notes: Dallas' Jerry
Stackbouse did not play.
Coach Rick Carlisle said
Stackhouse is batt! ing a
foot problem. ... Cavs
coach Mike Brown was an
assistant to Carlisle in
Indiana:. "I learned a lot
from him." Brown said.
''I'll always be indebted to
him. Great coach. Brilliant
mind."
.. . Wright returned
APphoto
Cleveland Cavaliers guard Delonte West (13) diives for a lay to the starti.ng lin~up
having
ueen
up against Dallas Mavericks center Eljck Dampier (25) during despite
benched the entire previous
the first half in an NBA basketball game Mend~ in:,Dalla~. . game.
His reward was covter.
· Antoine Wright and Gerald ering James. He covered
Josh Howard led the Green were the only other Tracy McGrady in the
Mavs with 18 points. players to hit double fig-· opener, his other start:

c .LAS S.l FIE D

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. BEREA (AP) - Joe the
Football Player isn't ready to
give up the game he loves.
· · Cleveland wide receiver
· Joe Jurevicius, forced to sit
out the 2008 season because
· of a serious staph infection in ·
his surgically repaired right
·'knee, plans to come back
next season for his beloved
Browns.
"I'm not g1vmg u,,.. he
said. 'Tm playing next year.
It's not I'm going to try. I am
playing next year."
'· The passionate 33-yearold, who grew up in the
~ : Cleveland area and attended
[ Browns games as a kid,
· revealed Monday that he has
' undergone five procedures in
the past 10 months to clean
: out s~aph. ~hich he contracted following arthroscopic
surgery at the Cleveland
Clinic in January.
· Jurevicius is., one of five
known Browns players to get
staph in the past three years,
. an outbreak that led to the
team callin~ in infectious
control specialists for assistance. Kellen Winslow
recently had a second bout
with staph, and the tight end
was briefly sustx:nded by the
. team for criticizing its handling of his hospitalization . .
· Jurevicius I?lans to have
· another operauon on his knee
to remove scar tissue. But
instead of going back to the
Clinic, he'll have his next
procedure performed by Dr.
· Richard Steadp1an in Vail,
Colo. Jurevicius doubts that
he ' ll need microfracture
surgery, an operation that
involves drilling holes in the
. kneecap to promote cartilage
growth and requires a longer

Steelers
from Page Bl
in the left hand and an allburgundy Redskins towel in'
the right hand. Sponsthemed interviews with
Obama and John McCain
. were broadcast by ESPN
· during halftime .
The Redskins also used
. the special occasion to wear
. burgundy jerseys and pants
· together for the first time in
·franchise history. A more
noticeable color. however,
· was the yellow from the sea
of Terrible Towels waved
by Steelers fans who man• aged to secure tickets by the
boatload for the lower bowl
. of the stadium . In a bizarre
· sight , visiting Pittsburgh
players were waving to the
fans all around them to
. make noise crowd during
defensive stands .
. Neither team managed
100 yards in a first half that
included seven sacks and a
' combined 13-of-32 perfor: mance by Roethlisberger
and
Campbell.
The
Redskins didn't convert on
.. third down until Campbell
. lilt tight en!i Chris Cooley
· for a 12-yard gain late in the
third quarter.
Campbell's streak without an interception reached

·'

rehab period.
Jurevicius said he contracted staph within I 112 weeks
of his surgery. He isn't sure
guard Jason Williams in to school since Shaquille Fi!!hting Irish to average 79
. Bv JIM O'CONNELL
where he got it.
AP BASKETBALL•WAITEA
2001-02, and the lastrepeat O'Neal at LSU in 1991.
pomts, tired for the No. 1
'Tm not a doctor," he said.
selection was Michigan
"To no one's surprise spot in the conference.
"I'm not here to point finIt's no surprise Tyler State guard Mateen Cleaves Trier didn't rest on his preCollison, a third-team Allgers, whether it was ·the Hansbrough made The in 1999-00.
vtous accomplishments," America selection after
Cleveland Clinic or the Associated Press' preseason
Hansbrough
'averaged · Williams ·said. "He worked leading the Bruins to a third
Browns' facility. All I know AU-America team - this is 22.6 points and I 0.6 hard in the offseason to straight Final Four appearis that I contracted a staph his record third straight year rebounds in leading the Tar become an even better play-· ance last season, received
infection and wasn't happy as its leadin~ V\)te-getter. Heels to a school-record 36 er. He has grown so much as 46 votes. The 6, I senior
with it. It is what it is. I bat- For the first t1ine, however, wins and the Final four last a person and a player averaged 14.5 points and
tled, still have some work to the North Carolina forward season. He will miss about · throughout his career and it 3.8 assists last season, and
do and we go from there, but was a unanimous selection. two weeks of practice after has been a joy to·watch."
. he will combine with Josh
now is not the time for me to
Joining
Hansbrough
on
being
diagnosed
last
week
Curry,
who
led
Shipp to give UCLA one of
point fingers."
·
with
a
stress
reaction
in
his
Davidson's
surprising
run
to
the nation's top backcourts
the
team
Monday
were
.
He was asked about his · UCLA
guard
Darren right shin.
the re?ional fmals of last this season.
theory on why the Browns Collison, also
repeat
from
"Of
course,
we
are
all
dis'seasons
NCAA tournament,
Griffin, who received 45
a
have had so many staph
last
year's
preseason
team,
appointed
for
Tyler
and
our
w~s second in ' the . voting votes, surprised many when
cases.
"There's been some num- Davidson guard Stephen team, but everybody on the w1th 66. Curry averaged 32 he dec1ded to return to the
bers here and it does 'nake Curry, Notre Dame forward roster has a chance to do a points and was 23-of-51 Sooners for his sopho~ore
Harangody
and little. more and play a little from 3-point range during season. The 6-10, 250people open their eyes," he Luke
fQI'Ward
Blake
better to help make up for the tournament run despite pound Griffin averaged
0klahoma
said. ,;1 just feel that for me
the
loss of the national play- seein~ defenses aimed ai 14.7 points and. 9.1
Griffin.
personally, I've seen enough
Hansbrough. a 6-.foot-9 er of the year," North stoppmg the slender guard. rebounds last seaspn in
of the Cleveland Clinic 111
senior
and the n;igning Carolina
coach . Roy He averaged 25.9 points for leading Oklahoma through
terms of the amount of times
the·
year,
Williams
said.
.
the season and his contribu- a rough Big 12 schedule
national
player
of
I've been in there. For me, I
Hansbrough has played in lion to the team should and' into the NCAA tournawould personally just like to. was placed on all 72 :ballots
start with a clean slate, a by the sall,)e medi~ panetthat all 108 games in his first change some this season ment.
Arizona State .sophomore
fresh chalkboard and write selects the weekly Top 25. three seasons and he did not with the graduation of point
Hansbrough
missed
being
a
miss
a
practice
his
first
two
guard
Jason
Richards,
who
James
Harden, with 25, was
the rest of the story up.
the only Hansbrough .unaniThat's the reason I plan on unanimous pick last season rears and only one as a led the nation in assists.
The 6-8 Harangody, who mous for preseason AP Allgoing o_ut to Vail. But I will by one vote , and he fell JUnior.
be back here after that. But in seven votes shorts as a
Hanstrough was a second- was named on 58 ballots, America
terms of the number of staph sophomore..
team All-America after his · was the Big East player of · .Drew Neitzel of Michigan
infections, it makes you open
The preseason . team was sophomore season and was a the year last season after State. Hibbert was a secyour eyes:" '
first selected before the unanimous pick after last averaging ~0.4 points and and-team selection after the
Jureviaius, who also 1986-87 season. 'The last season. He is the first nation- I 0.6 rebounds . His inside season and Loftori was on
played for the New York unanimous pick was Duke al player of the year to return presence
allowed
the the third team.
Giants, Tampa Bay and
Seattle, signed as a free agent
with the Browns in 2005. It
The Bengals also showed grabbin~ at my eyeballs. I got the feeling that the rest
was his dream to end · his
a little more fight than they really d1dn 't know what to of the league was starting \O
career in Cleveland, and he's ·
had all season. Offensive do when someone 's fingers look at them as doormats .
determined to .see it through.
"I don't know if teams
tackle Andrew Whitworth are trying to dig into my
fromPageBl
Sitting out has been difficult
eyes."
felt
they could come over
took a few left -handed
for Jurevicius, who has
Lewis
didn'
t
fault
here
and ', w;~lk over us ,".
swings at Jacksonville
found driving to Browns them better. in terms of my defensive tackle John Whitworth, who cost the receiver .
.
T.J.
games extremely difficult.
style of play," .s~id Henderson
Bengals
field
position
by
"I
Houshmahdzadeh
said'.
after
he
Fitzpatrick, who went 19- knocked off Whitworth's · taking
felt
that
teams,
when
they
a
swiQg ·at
of-26 while the Bengals helmet. then appeared to try Henderson .
came to play us, everybody
271 attempts - 249 this pulled ahead 21-3. "I felt
thought they were going to
"Whit
was
not
retaliatseason - before corner- really comfortable in the to gouge his eyes. Both ing," Lewi s said. "Whit .win - coaches, players,
back Deshea Townsend first half, and I think it players were penalized and was frying to.defend him- equipment men, trainers. I
·
grabbed a pass tipped by showed in the two touch- ejected.q
self. It's a shame. He feels really thought that they
"I
just
pushed
him
past
P0nis late in the third quar- down drives that we had.''
the quarterback, and he fell . bad about it because it took thought they would win,
ter.
The Bengals got their to the ground," Whitworth us ..out of position, and we everybody we played.
Washington was on the first 100-yard rusher of the said. "But he held onto my lost a very gQod player.
"We're good at 1-8. It's
board early with two field season . Cedric Benson ran facemask and ripped my That's the shame of it."
a terrible thing to say.
goals in the first four min- for 104 overall. and had the helmet off. I turned to go
Whitworth's don 't-back- We'-ve got . a · good team.
utes - wiihout the benefit team's longest run of the back to the play, and the down attitude was appreci- We're just not winning
of a first down. Linebacker season at 30 yards .
next thing I knew, I felt him ated by his teammates, who enough games."
Alfred Fincher alertly
recovered the Steelers sur•
pri se onside kick that
1/2 ·seasons with the fran- longest such stretch since of the past three conference
chise, leading it to the NBA the Los Angeles Lakers finals , with the Pistons
opened the game , and
finals in 2001 . He was trad- dominant run in the 1980s. eliminated in Game 6 each
Cornelill'S Griffin intercepted ·Dec. 19, 2006 , to the He was at his best in the year. He has averaged near- ·
ed a pass tip~ by teamfrom Page 81
Nuggets and helped them 2004 NBA final s when he ly 15 points and 5 112
mate Andre Carter. Both
hell*:d the Pistons win their assi sts for his career.
plays gave Washi.ngton the might placate Nuggets fans reach the playoffs t~.Yice.
McDyes.s revived his
Detroit, which tried to third title under Brown .
ball in Pittsburgh territory, who have watched the once
"It's
kind
of
hard
for
me
career
· with the Pistons,
33-year-old
deal
for
the
leading to field goals of 44 free -spending
franchise
because
of
that
core
playing
321 games over
at
least
once
before,
Iverson
and 43 yards by Shaun trade defensive standout
group
,"
Brown
said
.
four
seasons
after careera superstar it lacked
'Suisham.
Marcus Camby to the Los added
with Iverson and salary-cap "Every time I look out and threatening knee operaThe Steelers didn't cross Angel~s Clippers in the off- space
for .next summer by don't see Ben (Wallace) tions . The 2000 Olympian
midfield
until ·Carlos season and recently decline shedding
there I get a strange feel- and ·200 I All-Star has averBillups' contract.
Rogers grabbed Hines Ward to extend Linas K.leiza 's
Billups is 32 and has ing. Now not to see . aged 13.4 points and 7.7
to commit an obvious 43- contract.
bounced around the league Chancey and Dyess , it's rebounds for his career~
yard pass interference
Iverson brings consider- .arter Boston drafted him going to be different .
Like Billups, the 34-yearpenally, setting up a 35-yard able star power to Detroit. No. 3 overall in 1997. He
"But Allen is really spe- old McDyess is one of the
field goal by Jeff Reed that The 20th-leading scorer in then found an NBA home in cial. If they want excite- league's most popular playcut Washington's lead to 6- NBA history was the league Detroit and becoming a ment in that building ers among peers.
3.
MVP in 2001 - four years three-time · All-Star, and they're going to get it
Detroit acquired the 7The Steelers went ahead after being the Rookie of two-time
fo.
o
t-1 Samb for Maurice
because
every
tit;ne
h~
steps
All-Defensive
after Andre Frillier blocked the Year - and js a nine- player. He was on rosters in on the court he s gomg to Evans from the Lakers durRyan Placktmeier' s punt. time All-Star. He has aver- Boston, Denver, Orlando try to win the game. And I ing the 2006 draft . The 24·
William Gay recovered. aged nearly 28 points for his and Minnesota . in his first don't think you would ever rear-old center played in
consider
giving
up JUSt four NBA games last
givin~ Pittsburgh the ball at career and has led the NBA four seuons.
.
Detroit signed him as a ·chauncey and Dyess season, spending much of
Washmgton 's 13 and setting · in steals three times, tying a
free agent in 2002 111\d he unless you were getting his year in the NBA
U'l Roeihlisberger 1-yard league record.
League,
's~oeak that made it 10-6 in
Philadelphia drafted him led the franchise to six something rou thought was Development
where
be
led
the
league
pretty
spec1al."
the final minute of the first No. 1 overall in 1996 out of straight conference finals
with
four
blocks
a
game.
Billups
struggled
in
each
half.
· Georgetown and he spent 11 appearances , the NBA's

ad at any lime.

Hansbrough . unanimous for preseason APAII-America

Errors

rtell on the firs
ay of publica!
nd lhe Trlbu
lne~Roglottr

Trade

I

-·

I

'

wft

rasponolble for
ore than lilt'colt
he IPJCO occupl
y the error and On
he first lnoertlon.
hall nol be liable fo
ny 1011 ·01 expen
It rsou~o trom
bllcatlon
laaton
of
vertlaemont.
rrectlono will
In lhe flr
vellable edition.

Bengals

-

Must .

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accepted. White 95 GMC Sierra, 4
645·5946 or 441·0941
WD , high miles, runs
good, ext. cab, ladder
racks, CD player, 350
seasoned .
Firewood V·B
motor,
$2500.
Hardwood. 446·9204

Miocolla,.....

Want To

300

'1

Buy

Peal Eslate
Si11fH.

�Page B4 • The Daily Sentinel

. '-' "'-•••1

...

~
.:.,t
TOWfthou...

HouiU For Ron!

...

Ch~rch par"onage. 3BR,
...,... 111116 Chevy eon- ~!l"'i~;;;;;~~
• Yon, · OliCIIIIenl 3Bfl. tOOO sq H. Hard- 2 bath, tun basement, 2

garage.
Includes
oorldltlon, easy on gas wood floors, WID. No pet car
.-o· wll:raller "76"K16, S650Jent 740·591 -5174 WID, ·new fridge and
range. Sits on nearly 2
J-3500t axles, 2 wheel or441 -0IIO

~-

w/~

lor 5 ::-~~~~""!"'".,. acres. $700 plus sec.
acreo tn Meigs County, -utHul Ap1e. at Jac:k- dep. For info or inspec~740)992.0174

Holp Wa~ . Genoral HelpWantod - General
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=;;;;:;
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Move-In In Nov and get

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Apt. in Dec. Currently
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shopping In the area.

Honoyouc.klo Httto
Apartmen1s

266 Colonial Drive N113
Bidwell, Ohio 45614
740·446-3344
Office Hours M, W, F

9AM- 5PM

SchOol

area.

~- Call740-441·1124

&lt;! BA Apamnent &amp; 2 BR
"House on 5th St. Pt
Pleasant
304-812-4350
'aSk for Don
2BR APT.
441 ..o194

CIA.

(740)

3 rooms and bath upstairs. Completaly fur·
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pets. Ret. Req. 441·0245
Apartment available noW
Riverbend
Apls.
New
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for
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Bedroom Apts. Utilities
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ayailabte
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ACROSS

Phillip
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YOUNG'S

CARPENTER
SERVICE
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· Roollng &amp; OuHe11
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WY 036725

V.C. YOUNG Ill

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month.
•o .,6·1599
7....,.._
Twin Rt'o'ers Tower is accepting applk:aUons for
waiting list for HUO sr.b-

coin ,
Mldctleport,
304 •675 •3753
740 _416 _9725

West Virginia. Duties in"'~,_;;i;;;.==·
elude group presents~
2004 Doublewlde in new tions,
developing
recondition. 4 bedroom, 2 ·sources,
facilitating
bath, all appliances in- meetings and workshops
eluded, $37,000 located assessments, data 8ntry,
at 176 Zuspan Lane Ma· file . management and
son Oity 304-675·2117
progressl\le case man·
agement.
Must enjoy

OH
or

441-0583, 256·6718

:;;.;.:;;;::,:;:.:;~,:.;..;.,...,..Clean · 3SA, LR, kitchen,
t mile from city. No Pets.
$475
+
deposit.
~4;;;46:,.·;::3292;;;;._...,._ _ _
sidized, 1-BA apartment -:
3 bd. house for rent lfl
for the elderly/disabled.
cal 675 _6679
Middleport
$650
mo. ptus on
dep.river,
includes
Beech St., Middleport, 2 water. sewer: trash. alec··
br. lumished apartment, tric &amp; 2 rooms direct TV,
utilities paid, no pets, call {740)992-5620 for
&amp;
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(740)S92·0 l65
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Hills Seif
Storage
29670 Bashan Road.
Racine, Ohio
I
4577t
' 740·949·2217

.SJ-f)!1lr ·.

: t9 ,6·x3o'
'·
' ...
·,.:
'
'

\.

Y92·6215
f''lrneroy On n
2S '{c,l•s loc 11 Ex per ~nc~
,..-------,

L &amp; L Tire Barn
-1-1087 Wippk Kd .

7:DQ

~

IJlct:han il· "111l .

rcpatr.

w. · . .(·n i ~· ..· and
'' illiL'I"II.e

.• K 4 3 2
• 7 62

•New Homes

MONTY

• Garages

We•t

• Complete
Remodeling

• 7 6 4
.Q8 7 "6

740·912·1811
Stop &amp; Compare

"AK 2
t A J 10 5
•A !CO

Dealer: South
Vulnerable: East-West

,.

Soutla

2NT

E-mail: captblll65@yahoo.com ·
.www.auctlonzlp,com
#5548

S;~t.M : 00al!1·12

'\(• lippredute ) IO/Ir
bu,\·i,e.'l.\"

Hardwoad CablnMry And FurnHure

BARNEY

·........,.,titnbo.-er•okeobltl.....,..eom

WHO'RE YOU VOTIN'
FER PREZ'1)ENT I
SNUFFY?

9:00 ll.lll - \I :00 a.m.
Rl.'ka!&gt;c: ,\l lri125.1(~1 9
A li.·l· llf :i-.~0 .IMl will be
dJ&lt;tq_:cll for Carl )" :rniv;rl.
l:rtt' arrin1l. earl y rcmo\"BI.
l~ t c rl'JIIO\"al. nr anylime
w.:n·~~
;,
'' an l ~.o'd lo
fair ~m und'
ulht: r thau
~ laird
datl.'d . Bu ilding

NOBODY

!!

l FIGGJ:R ENNYONE WHO WANTS
THAT ..&gt;08 IS TOO CRAZV TO
HAVE IT!!

i4.00/lf

OJ"-'11 Span: ~J.OOi lf
.(

~-

' ., .

FcnLl': $1.00/lf

H&amp;H
Gutt~ring
Seamless Gutters
Rootin g, Siding, Gutters
Insured &amp; Bonded

740-653-9657

working w"h
" 1he youth
population!
Tra,et required.

Posi tion requires

a BNBS and a! .le&lt;ist 1
years eKp6rience in identltylng. - developing and
securing resources for
diverse population. Ek·
cellent luii·Ume opportu~ily
with
benefits.

SETTLEMENT OF AC·
COUNTS, PROBATE
COURT
MEIGS
COUNTY, OHIO
Accounts and vouch~
ers of the following
named fiduciary has
been flied In the Pro·
bate Court1 Meigs
County, Ohio for ap·
proval and settlement.
ESTATE NO. 33188·
Third and llnal account
of Shirley A. Paynter
guardian of the estate
ot Kyle Lee Hoover a
minor.
·
.
Unless exceptions are
flied thereto, said 8C·

count will be consld·
ered and continued
trom day to day until II·
nally disposed of.
Any person Interested
may file written excep-tlon to said account or
to matters pertaining to
the execution of the
trust, not less than live
days prior to the date
selfor hearing.
J S Powell
Judge
Comi)10n Pleas Court,
Probate Division
Meigs County. Ohio
( 111 4

Racine, Ohio 740·247·2019
Owners:
Jon Van Meter &amp;

F'L.t::.IEN, \0 \1-\.IS- /&gt;-

Cell: 74().416--5047
email:

~TUI&gt;'l'

~E".W ""'~ ~"'sii\OKE.~ Sf-\oVLI&gt; I&gt;Ri!-IK;' ~"'M'&lt;&amp;. r ~1-\out..t&gt; ~~E. up""'~
6L~S

51&gt;.'1'5 ...

ot R£.1&gt; Wl~E:..t)JE.R'!'

~1&lt;\0KIN,G! '!'UK '!'UK!

1&gt;1&gt;.'&lt; &gt;Oll-. ii-\EI li:.

PauiRowe
'

r
~-~~---­
New 3 Bedroom homes
from $214.36 per month,
includes many upgrades,
delivery
&amp;
set-up.
740 _38 5- 2434

TEAM

I'IAN"-G.ERS.\

II

for

$64
per

month ·

.....

740-388-0000
740-388-8513
740-245-9215 · Evenings
weekends
Ph.
&amp;
74o-Jsa-aot 7

Oman &amp; Delivery

*Insured
* Ex1x:rienced

References AvailAble!
Call Gary Stanley ®
740-591 -8044
Ple:lse leave messa e

.........

Comptete TrH C..

141-992-51112

7~t .t3f17

. J&amp;L
Construction

CORNER STONE
CONSTRUCTION

Windows
·Roofing
·Decks
·Garages
• Pole Buildings
• Room Addition~

Seeking
driv~r
w/CDUHazmat qualifica·
lions lor lull time em~oy·
ment @ propane busi·
ness, send resumes to:
Daily Sentinel: PO Bok
729·23, Pomeroy, Oh

fftt~

C.OW and BOY

Owner:
Keesee II

James

.

742-2332

&lt;''

ISOLATION LEADS TO

AN EARLY GilAVE. LONELY
PEOPLE ARE AT HIGHER
' 11151&lt; OF CANCE~. HEAIIT
DISEASE. YOU NA!If. IT.

• FtM Eattrnet.

Roofing, Siding,
Soffit, Decks,
Doors. Windows,
Electric, Plumbing,
. Drywall,
Remodeling, Room
Additions

Jobs

.GARAELD

1 ~-~~~ti Wffi\IQ

Local Contractor

A~,

740.367.0544
FreeEotlmat..

1'\~\-\T

740.367-G536

For Remodeling and New House Building

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

Call:

MilE W. MDCII, OWNER ·
Holp Wantod · Genoraf
An Eli:cellent way to eam
money. The New AVon.
ca 11
Marilyn

304·882·2645

Public Is cordially Invited!

· Service Manager &amp; Serv-

Light refreshments
will be served.

Technician positions
av~ilable , Heallh care &amp;
Retirement plans avail·
able. Please send
sume
ice

LLC@CAAEO.COM
fa• to 740-446-9104

/·

47239 Riebel Road. Long Bouom : OH

740-985-4141

..

Cdl : 740-4 16-1834

•' I

Ot{;t ~allipoU• Jlaflp·~ribune
~be Joint ~lcnMnt
1\egister
.
The paily Sentinel
'

Calllbrtly ~~ cr)"plcglllms •a craatacflrom qoot111ion~D)' l&lt;r11ous p&amp;opla paE1 &lt;r1d prasen1 '
.
f;&amp;Ch l•ner ~~ thtCI!t1&amp;r !!taMs t::r anOiheJ
.
..

ol the..lime. Much better is to play on

Todiy'S Clv9: 0 BqUIIS Y

by Luis Campos

spades, where you can eventually estab·
Iish a trick . .However, because dummY
has only ooe entry, yoli cannot aHoid to
play a spade toward your hand. Instead,

"RHPXANPXR WXHWIX BCII P. X CD ·.
NUXCINRA. VXII, ALCA NR ALX
VCO N FDHV N CP CD CPXJNBCD . "
•

VH'HUJHV

VNIRHD

PREVIOUS SOLUTION- '$ute ~·sa big job : but I donl know anyone wh~
can do~ better than 1can."· John F. Kennedy
·

l5+ ~ars exptriem:_e Free Estl'mates

qbir'lltrllldltl!':

W.Snuday, Nov. 5, 2008
By Bemtce Bede 0.01
Thart1 is nothing wrong wfth pOrsuln"g
larger goals In the year ahead, but make
sure that they are based on ·realistic
pramlses, Onoe that primary require--'
ment iJ I'Jlel. go a!l out tor what you hope
to aCcomplish.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24·Nov, 22) - lrideciatven&amp;ss' can cauee a great deal of
inner cOnflict and, consequently, a lacll of
Interaction. with others. FocUs on one
tople only, and act on lt.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23·0tc . , ~1) ...,...
Although you're a gutsy person and wiH
do most anything. lear of making a mistake coUld immobilize you . .Return tp
character, and gal bact&lt;o In the aCtion.
CAPRICORN (Dec .. 22-Jan . 10) - Be
sure that the designated acli't~lty Isn't so
~!»~pensive that it .becomes .a financial
burden to some of the participants.
Check wi1h eve·ryone first befOre oomrTtll·
ting people to take part
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) - Avoid
being goaded into a risky interaction with
othe~. such as a competitive situation
where the odds are stacked against you.
There's nothing to gain, and everything
to lose.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) - L.og;c
must be the only governing factor when
an important de(;lsion needs to be made,
If you allow emotion to overrule sound
reasoning , you might gMa11y r&amp;gM:t mal&lt;·
in9 a judgment ,.all .
ARIES (March 21-Aprll i9) - Be oareful
io keep your irwotvement with frle.nds
Purely on a social basis. II you want to
have a pleasant time, leave lUI commer·
cial, political or religious affairs out of the
lnleraclton.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) -

'

GRIZZWELLS
I ~ 'ti:Al '*-~ '+IWI~-tu
A~.
1=1~\-\T

'

Advertise
in this space for
$64 p~r month
'

,,

f

t

If you're
smart, you'll steer clear of making
arrangemttnls with someone who has a
reputation as a dominating pe1ti011 . You
can be just as stubborn as the next guy.
and you won't take being bossed around.
GEMINI (May 21 ·June 20) - ,Problems
will definitely arise if you dem&amp;nd more ·
from others than you are pref)ared to ·
give back In return. Let this advice serve
as a warning so that you can a...,.d trou·
t)le.

Gotommont &amp; Federal

Room (Downstairs)

:

Work
* Reasonable Rate&amp;

llM.124PIIII Iii..

• Replacein~nt

45769

• Prompt and Quality

Joh§W'sTree
_Ice

• Vinyl Siding

PVH Volunteer
of the Year,
Northwestern District
Volunteer of the Year &amp;
West Virginia State
Volunteer of. the. Year
Thursday,
November 6, 2008
2pmto4pm
Buxton Conference

IF" TJ.IE PHONE RIN65, IT'LL BE F"OR ME ...
I TOLD GENERAL PER5J.IIN6 I'D BE i-IERE .

.121111.

740-794-0460

Jean Roush

Stanley Tree·
Trimming
&amp; Removal

18811 HYSIUS

740..245·92 1 ~

Special Reception
for

.YO\J
60TTA

space

Ollicc
740-416-lll39 Cell
Free Estimated
Pomeroy, Ohio

bath. Pnced delivered
blocked. leveled and
chored.
Day

CELEBRITY CIPHER

two clubs.
You could hope lor a 3-3 club break,
when you would get a third dub trick. But
that would happen. only aboUt orie·third

' .

LOVE

7~0-992'1493

tdop. 304-755-8744 e'e- t 2002 16xBO 3 bed 2 f " "''"''~'"

controls than that. it' Is, good news and
justifies an upgrade.)
A nine·lead is always top of nothing

• Graph .

RICK PRICE

WimJuws/Rcntut.lelil.l,!:!
Bmu.IL-IJ &amp; Insured

3br. on lincoln Ave. Pt, bed 2 bath gas, I 1997
Pleasant $525.00 a mon 14x70 2 bed. 2 bath gas,
nings.

Advertise
in this

SidiJl g/Rcplat.:cment

~•:;:PP;:t~..,..-...,.:-~ bath, I 19f19 16x80 2

pardon!

trump on today's deal? West leads thE;,
diamond nine..
SOuth's sequence, an artificial two·club
opening lollowed by a two-no-trump
rebid," showed 23 or 24 points. Although
he had only 22 high-card points, he
' upgraded because he had two 1Os and
nine controls. {An ace counts as two
· controls and a king as one. A two-notrump opening will usually have seven
controla, and a typical tWO:clubs~lol·
· lowed-by-two-no-trump hand will have
eight controls. If your hand has more

take the first tnck 01 your hand and lead
tho spade king (or 10).
Wesl will win with ~is ace and do some·

PSI CONSTRUCTION

Vinyl

16X80 2 bed 2 bat~. 1
2000 16~~;70 2 bed t

woman

Astro~.

CmmJW"f. it1/ .~ Hfs id!';l/iaf

~========

eternity ·

that the detense can do.

Gutters
Maintenance Plus·

~P!"'ric·es-~Red...,.u•ce•d~
2 •2~0~
06

10 Fume
36 Squander .;
14 Lime cooler 37 Course
:·
pronoun
off.
17 Sociol
ot evenll '
24 High-fiber
mores
41 Brownies )
food
DOWN
19 Klutz's cry 43 Hostile
27 Bogus
(2 wds.)
44 Eur . airline :
t Coupd"butter
22 Alpine
45 Sodoka or 29 RV haven
2 Montez or
refratns
Simon
.
32 -·mullan
Falana
23 Paces
46 Tombstono
sleeve
3 Joaeph
24 Visibly cold
deputy
·
(hyph.)
Campbell
25 Solar
48 Salone• :
3J Goeo to low
apec11lty
plexus
sheet gurui
beam
4 Soe eye·
26 Soaweed
49 - fu
:
34 "Gro11! " ·
to-eye
extract
50 RBI or ERA
35 Ms. Hagen
5 Boot part 28 Reclines 52 Capture :
of fllms
6 Asaoc.
29 Ruuell of 53 -got it! .
36 Show
7 Malde" Bockdrafl" 54 Carson City
diatre11
8 Analyze the 30 Curved
loc.
37 II has rings
content of
molding
38 Poet's
9 Young
3t Beg

thing, perhaps shift to the heart seven,
but you take the trick and continue with
your spade 10 {or king). There is nothing

Quality Seamless

$15,000, Can 446-4743
0 245 5045
·

t Horr9r-flick 41 Slalom run
aueel
· 42 Heovy4" Ftrmlljllitlt
hearted
8 Sitcom allen U Uaed a
11 Kind
proytr rug
of poodle
47 Sweller
12 AI or Tipper
loaturu
13 Tealldllle
51 Yeaat
ol poetry
55 Oepoeit
t5 Modtl
56. M•ohy
Carol ground
16 Fall bock
57 Soy it' a so
18 Lake near 58 Miacellanr
Reno
59 DJ't
20 Preference
plaHera
21 Put!
60· Throng
23 Quaker
6t Barrack•

ably Singleton. That gives you eight top
tricks: two hearts, lour diamonds and

~CI\'l' .

ln ~idl.'

3NT

Easl
Pass
All p;,.

AnlwM IO P,..Vlout Puutt

40 Now• article

{unless you play what are called coded
leads, when a jack, 10 or nine shows
zero or two higher cards). So you know
thai East has the diamond queen , Prob-

spm:e i-.. lir"t ("!Jm t fiN
S t l\ra~t:

Pau

2+

39 Too

It 1$ normally correct to play toward an
hOnOr combination, but not always. How
would you try lo land nine tricks in no-

Mon-Fri .

Jn,idl·

~'~~"

Usually toward,
but sometimes from

K:IJII am - 4:311 pm

Oc·t. 25. 20U8

Wut Nor1b

Opening lead: • 9

boats anJ

Ctr. h11rgruuntb

• J 10
. Soulb ·
• K 10

(740) 992-5344

M rig~

• Q

.. Q 9 8 5

1{\' '~

WINTER STORAGE

Eul
• . 986 532
•QJ t03

• AQ

740-416-1164

· i!l ig mlK'Ill~. li gh r
c.huu.gc:-.. ~llla i 1L'II£itil'

etmllmil

Aucuoneer:
BiiiV R. Goble Jr.

L"l lrl lpu"tL·r "' lwd

tt -()ol 1~

• J 7 f
•• 8 5

AUCTIONS/ANTIQUES

(5 Poim~l
New &amp; U-.cd Tires,
W.:: huy u '~.·d lir~·~.

oi l

North

IllSELL

1!1 4/1 mo. pd

Pomun~,OH

~.:ontpktc .~~ rvicc

'

HourS
AM· 8:00PM

IlBERT

-;;;.;;;;;;""'""'="'-•

Satea

NEA Crossword Puzzle

BRIDGE

s

~~~BR~.~H!"'ou·s·e-"!34~8~L.,..ln·

Tht Daily Sentinel • Pag• 85

.PROFE SSI ONAL.BAR·

ager needed fqr local
apartment commulllly located in Gallipolis, Ohio.
CsffTODAY!
Now Hiring Experienced,
Ideal candrdate will have
WOO
r.~,111 Jf,JC! ured
"'tervlew
wet11sta l1 . cooks, dish·
prevrous
experience
rn
TOMORROW!!
H.._u51119
washers &amp; delivery driv·
property management at
Work NEXT WEEK!!!
ers apply 1n person
a Rural Developrnenl
Harry's
F'amous
Hot
property,
excellent
com·
1·888-IMC·PAYU
Rontals
Dog,s ~ew Haven
munication and organizaExt. 2311
16x80 Two Bedroom Motional skills ancl be cteApply Online :
Salta
bile, 2 full Baths, Out·
http:ll!obs.lnloclslon.cotn
pendable. Health insurbullding, Porch, Excellent -::::::-::::-----:--~ ance &amp; 40t k available.
Salesperson
Wanted:
Condition. Fairview Ad. $250 Sign-on Bonus! Sak1ry dependent upon
Experience in building
Gracious Llvlrtg I and 2 304-895-3129
experrence Submit re·
materials
preterrod
Bedroom Apts. at Village
s.ume &amp; salar y requileVo'ed TOP FIVE Best
Manor
and
Riverside .,.._ _ _ _ _ __
Plef!&lt;;e
apply
withrn
ments to: GallipOlis C.M ..
store. Thomas Do It CenApts. in Middlepor1 . ·from Federal Funds just re· Places to Worlf fn Ohio! Gorsuch Mgt., P.O Box
Come See Why !
$327
ter. 176 McCormick {'trj.,
10
592 . leased for Land Owners.
190, lancaster OH
No closing cost and
Gallipolis, Oti.
43130·019o'
or
err.all
to
H0-992-5064 .
Equal ZERO DOWNI WUI do
No Sates'
Housing Oppor1unfty
kdasbury @embarqmail.com
No Collections!
Serv•ce t Bus
land
improvements.
9000
EOE
Nice
Clean
Ground Bankruptcy &amp; Bad Credit
D1rectory
Full anct Part-lime
Floor. 2br, WID hookup , OK. 2, 3, 4 anp 5 bed·. Medical
AeferencesiDeposiVNo
rooms
available.
P~si tions
Day and Evening
Pets 304-675-5162
740-446-3384
Need
Ohio
Licensed -=~C;i;on"ci;;re;i;l;i;e==
Shills
Massage
Therapist ~
Now accepting
Professional Work
Send resumes 10 P.O. All types Masonry, brick.
2 Bedroom trailer Teensapplk:alions at:
Environment'
Box
489 Proctorville, OH block. stone. concrete.
run
Ad.
446-4655.
Valley View Apartments
Medical. Denial,
45669
Free
!?stimate,
800 State Route 325 ,
304-593-6421
EAP,
401K!
14X70 newly remodeled
Thurman, Ohio 45685
On·site Doctor'
mobile home 3BR $450
74().245-9170 .
Weekly Pay and
Accepting ·
applications
1·2 Bedroom Apar1ments + utilities. Ref/security
Bonus Incentives!
for lull &amp; part time EMT,
with appliances luinished deposit. excellent toea·
and
Parame(tics.
We
On site laundry facility.
\ton. 446·83aO between
SEE WHAT WE CAN
have a benefits package
Call for details or pick up 6-9PM
OFFER YOU AT
available. $15.00/hr Ap'applk:ation at rental
http:ll)obt.lnfoctston.com.
p!icalions can be Ob·
NO MATTER
office
Mobile home for rent.
W#AT YOUR
tained
from
the
Melson
Possibility of rent81
7 40-446·4234
or
OR CALL
County EMS 911 EmerSTYLE ..
740-208-7861
assistance.
1·888-IMC-PAYU
gency Drive, Point PleasEqual HouSing
\ Ekl. 1901 .
ani, WV 25550 or onhfl e
0ppor1unity
2 br.. 2· bath in Syracuse,
at
rnaso1 1Countyoes.~om.
TDO.'II9·526-04C6
all electric, $400 a mo. ::"""':':'"":~":"'~~~
"This lnstl1utlon Is an
plus dep .. &amp; utilil1es; 2 br. C N A's I DIETARY follow the EMS link.
Equal OpportunitY
1
baltl,
14)(70, HELPER. Interviews Are
Pro'o'ider and Employer"
(740)992-7680
Currently
Being . Con- ~~~-~--~
dueled
Fqr
Full-Time, Middleton
Estates · &amp;
... T#E "
3 Br. Mobile Home for Experiem:ed CNA Posi- ResCare Home Care is
NEWSPAPER
applicat1ons
rent Middlepcrt.all elec- tion s &amp; 1 E)(perienced accepting
#AS
Helper. AppH- lor Direct Care. Staff. Intric,c/a,no inside pets, Dietary
SOA-,1ET#ING
may
$450 month ,plus dep. can ts That Enjoy The tere.sted persons
FOR YOU!!
Healthcare
Industry
&amp;
contact
Rhonda
Harnson
740·416-1354or992606S
- - - - - - - Working ·with The Elct- at 740-446-4814 ex t. 26
~' '
Tara
Townhouse •2005
Monday Ihrough Fr1 day
~4x70
Mobile
erly
May
Apply.
CompeliApartments
2BA. 1.5
.
bath, back patio, pool, Home, 2Bedroom, 2batn , live Wages. Paid Vaca- 9a-5 P. or e-rmu1 a resume
playgmund, (trash. sew· vinyl siding, shingle roo! , lion,. Paid Meals Difleren· to
age,
. water
pd.) therniapayne
window, tial Pay Discounts, No rhanison@ rescare.corn
$425/rent,
$425/sec 20ft .Porch 740-664·4356
Dues, Come &amp; Experidep. Call740·367·0547
or 740-797:4356 lo· ence
Wor ~ing 'In
A
cated
at
Darwin. Pleasant. Homelike AI·
Commercial
$26,000
mosphere. Call For Your
~;;;;;;;;;;;i;;io;i;;;i;i;=;;;;;;,....,,..._____ Confidential
Interview
2 Qay service station
For Rent
.Today. You'll Be Glad
Jackson
Pike · Lease Mobile homes &amp; lots , You
Did!!!304,273-5893
required. Call" 446-3644 (no pets) in Ashton wv Or Stop In ~ See Us @
lormoreinlo.
304·576-2942.
111 3
Washington
St., ~~~z:r:;::e:;:::~:::=::c:;:::::::C:~~~
Ravenswood, WV. Ret· ll
Hou... For R1111t
"Sc
·
erences
Required.
IN
THE COMMON count will be set lor
enic locatiOil, conven- E.O.E.
•
ient to town and affordS2J81mo~ '* txd , 2 buth .
~--,...-..,..-- PLEAS COURT, PRO· hearing before said
Bank Rt."rn1, (5% d own, 15 able, 2 &amp; 3 bedrooms Youth
Case
M
BATE DIVISION MEIGS Court on the 4th day of
··available
call
anager
December, 2008, at
yciar S. K~ APRI fur listings
needer:t lor workforce de- COUNTY, OHIO
92~·5;;:63
800-(J2tl -4'J46 c&gt;. R02_7
~17;;:4;;0 !~;;9 :;;
;;;9;,,.,.,., velopment program in IN THE MATTER OF which time said ilc·

2br, House, $300 mon1h,
plus Utltllies. Deposit &amp;
References
2BA garage Apartment. 304-6754874
downtown, $425 mth rem 2b h
r. ouse . garage , •.
,.., 11 Brand new 3bed 2bath
+ utMnies, NO PETS.' basemen1, rrver 1ron1ag~
ha"
PI
4'46..()415
·
Ne
H
wv 00
+ · " acre 1n
·
tn
w
aven
Pleasant. OWNER FIFree
Rent
Special!!! 304·934·7462:
NANCE
AVAILABLE.
2&amp;38A j:~nd up, Central
2br. house in . Mason (740) 446·3570
· Air, WID hookup, tenant $325 _00
a
mon.
+ ~~~~-.--~pays electric. EHO Elm $ 325 _00 dep. . no pets ; 996
Mobile
Home
View
Apts. 304 _882 _3652 .
.
(304)882-3017
te~t:SO 2854 Georges
,,
.
V Ita
G
2BR houS(t lor rent on Creek Ad. MUST BE
s¥nng a Y reen Garfield. Deposit $450 MOVED, new heal pump
Apartments 1BR lor rent rent
$450.
256-6408, 3BR, 2 bath stove/relr

dep.

BAR

www.inydailysentlnel.com

to NEEDING \ ENERGETIC.

(~d

-1BR . Ap1, WID hookups,
·• ;satellite TV incl. .w/rent,
~lose to hospital. Call
...40-339·0362
ll Bedroom 2 Bath.
'Green

5800 dep. 740-446-7029

Brand new ctuplek with 2
BR, 1.5 baths, attached
gar. froot I back porches,
Land for your flowers I
garden, fully equipped
kitcMn, wheelchair ac·
oosslble.
Midway
between Jackson and Gallipolis on Highway 35.
Aent $600. Call lor application to 740·236- IS72
or e-mail to sou thohiotiving@gmail.com

Cover GQODTIMES

Resume

Shifts

74{)-446-2568. - -.....- - - - -

Equal Housing 0ppor1u- New 2BR, 2 bath. fridge ,
nity. This institution is an stove, dishwasher 1ncl
Equal Oppor1unity PrO- WID hookup. $600 mo -+-

•

Forward
and

com . Equal Opportunlty TENDmS
WAITRE·
Employer/Program
SE.S.
AND
A

oon Eatalea. 52 West- tion can 245-003 t

vidor and Employe(.

Ple.:-~se

Lener

Tuesday, November 4, 2008
ALLEYOOP

Rtstaunints

No Collections!

wood Dr., !rom $365 to

$560.

Tuesday, November 4, 2008

www.mydailysentinel.com

CANCER tJune 2hluty 22) .:._ If you've
heard something that counters Information from another, don't hesllate to with·
hold making a decision until both stories
can be "Checkecl out Something i8 wrong.
lEO (July 23-Aug. 22)- The batt way to
maintain harmooy on the horn&amp; frOn\ it to
avoid all issu~s where differenees IB)(ist.
U one must be addressed for aome rea·

son ." maka cor1aklthat you are a better
listener than talker. •
VIRGO (Aug. 23·Sepl 22) - BeinQ a
'perfectionist might make you difficun to
please, so take care that you don't dis ~
courage anyone who ts simpty trying to ·
help. You'll only make things tougher on
yourself - and you'll be terribly unpqpular.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) - Of course,
yOu should atways b8 protective of your
po"essions, but It might be smart to be
especially careful at this lime. Don't
needle881y invite extravagance, care·
lessness or mishaps with a Ia• anltude.

SOUP TO NUTZ
'

S HT E CK.

tlllllll
ME.LAR

.....,......,..._,.-,.,,..-l
5

.

EUSEMB
a,

-1 I I' I e
.
L.....t,...,...t.....J.-,_-'---'
.

r

•'

'

''Have-vou
. ever notii:ed ,;. .·
my sister asked. •·ao)1hing ;·.
worth doingalways ••··• a ·
---'!"
.
Complete ~~~·· cnoc••· .q•
bv fillir\Q In rhe missing Ward~

.,.a

you develop fram ~ep No. 3 below."

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS I 1/3108
Vendor - Plant- Brawl - Wallop · APPROVAL
"I've always figured." mused I he gem, ''duit you can't ll&lt;'
comfonable without your own APPROVAL ··

ARLO &amp; JANIS

�Page B4 • The Daily Sentinel

. '-' "'-•••1

...

~
.:.,t
TOWfthou...

HouiU For Ron!

...

Ch~rch par"onage. 3BR,
...,... 111116 Chevy eon- ~!l"'i~;;;;;~~
• Yon, · OliCIIIIenl 3Bfl. tOOO sq H. Hard- 2 bath, tun basement, 2

garage.
Includes
oorldltlon, easy on gas wood floors, WID. No pet car
.-o· wll:raller "76"K16, S650Jent 740·591 -5174 WID, ·new fridge and
range. Sits on nearly 2
J-3500t axles, 2 wheel or441 -0IIO

~-

w/~

lor 5 ::-~~~~""!"'".,. acres. $700 plus sec.
acreo tn Meigs County, -utHul Ap1e. at Jac:k- dep. For info or inspec~740)992.0174

Holp Wa~ . Genoral HelpWantod - General
S25Q Sign on Bonus!
No e11perlence requiredt
No Credit Card Sales!

A,2211mWAII/

Townhoulll

=;;;;:;
~

Clip this AD and take h
wtth you when you visit
our community to get
this special discount.
Move-In In Nov and get

$1110.110 off your ~BR
Apt. in Dec. Currently
renting 1 &amp; 2 BR units
Spacious Uoor plans,
ranch &amp; 1ownhome style
' IMng, playground &amp;
basketball court, on-siltl
laundry facility, 24 hr

emergency mainte·
nance, quiet country lo·
cellon close to major
medical
facilities,
. phannacles, grocery
store ... just minutes
away from other major
shopping In the area.

Honoyouc.klo Httto
Apartmen1s

266 Colonial Drive N113
Bidwell, Ohio 45614
740·446-3344
Office Hours M, W, F

9AM- 5PM

SchOol

area.

~- Call740-441·1124

&lt;! BA Apamnent &amp; 2 BR
"House on 5th St. Pt
Pleasant
304-812-4350
'aSk for Don
2BR APT.
441 ..o194

CIA.

(740)

3 rooms and bath upstairs. Completaly fur·
nished wlth · W/0. No

pets. Ret. Req. 441·0245
Apartment available noW
Riverbend
Apls.
New
Haven WV. Now accept·
ing
applicat+ons
for
HUD·subsic:fized.
one
Bedroom Apts. Utilities
Included. Based on 30%
of adjusted income. Call
304·882·312"1 ,
ayailabte
lor senior and · Disabled

'e

Small 2br House, $400
month, . No Pets, No
Smoking 304-773-9192

people.

CONVENIENTLY
LO·
CATEO · &amp;
AFFORDABLE! Townhouse apartments,
ilndlor
small
houses . for rent Call
740·441·1111 for appli·
cation &amp; Information.

IS

wmonte rosso@ rossprov.

Full and Part ·l11ne

Auxiliary Aids and Sel"'.'· SECURITY/DOOR MAN,
rces are available upon MUST
HAVE
GREAT
request
PERSONALITY.
AND

Pos•lions
Day and Evening
Professtonal Work

Management I
Supervisory

Environmcnl 1
Medical, Dental,
E"AP, 401K'
On-site Doctor
Weekly Pay and
Bonus Incentives!

E'ro~

P.T. Commumty Man-

DRIVE
TO ·
MAKE
GREAT
MONEY.APPLY
AT 122 B HUNTINGTON
AD (RT2,) NEXT TO
THE LOCKS AND DAM.
IN GALLIPOliS FERRY
WV 304 5(6·2220 ASK
FOR JOHN G. GOOD
PAY. AND FUN WORK.

~f!!JJ

.,'b==~

ACROSS

Phillip
Alder
YOUNG'S

CARPENTER
SERVICE
· Room Addlttonl &amp;

RemoMllng
• New Garages
·Electrical &amp; Plumbing
· Roollng &amp; OuHe11
• Vjnyl Siding ll Painting
• Pallo and Porch Decks

WY 036725

V.C. YOUNG Ill

'S375
month.
•o .,6·1599
7....,.._
Twin Rt'o'ers Tower is accepting applk:aUons for
waiting list for HUO sr.b-

coin ,
Mldctleport,
304 •675 •3753
740 _416 _9725

West Virginia. Duties in"'~,_;;i;;;.==·
elude group presents~
2004 Doublewlde in new tions,
developing
recondition. 4 bedroom, 2 ·sources,
facilitating
bath, all appliances in- meetings and workshops
eluded, $37,000 located assessments, data 8ntry,
at 176 Zuspan Lane Ma· file . management and
son Oity 304-675·2117
progressl\le case man·
agement.
Must enjoy

OH
or

441-0583, 256·6718

:;;.;.:;;;::,:;:.:;~,:.;..;.,...,..Clean · 3SA, LR, kitchen,
t mile from city. No Pets.
$475
+
deposit.
~4;;;46:,.·;::3292;;;;._...,._ _ _
sidized, 1-BA apartment -:
3 bd. house for rent lfl
for the elderly/disabled.
cal 675 _6679
Middleport
$650
mo. ptus on
dep.river,
includes
Beech St., Middleport, 2 water. sewer: trash. alec··
br. lumished apartment, tric &amp; 2 rooms direct TV,
utilities paid, no pets, call {740)992-5620 for
&amp;
rei.,
(740)S92·0 l65
New Haven hJmi~ t
Bd. Apt. has WID, No
pets,dep.Ref.,992.0165

Hills Seif
Storage
29670 Bashan Road.
Racine, Ohio
I
4577t
' 740·949·2217

.SJ-f)!1lr ·.

: t9 ,6·x3o'
'·
' ...
·,.:
'
'

\.

Y92·6215
f''lrneroy On n
2S '{c,l•s loc 11 Ex per ~nc~
,..-------,

L &amp; L Tire Barn
-1-1087 Wippk Kd .

7:DQ

~

IJlct:han il· "111l .

rcpatr.

w. · . .(·n i ~· ..· and
'' illiL'I"II.e

.• K 4 3 2
• 7 62

•New Homes

MONTY

• Garages

We•t

• Complete
Remodeling

• 7 6 4
.Q8 7 "6

740·912·1811
Stop &amp; Compare

"AK 2
t A J 10 5
•A !CO

Dealer: South
Vulnerable: East-West

,.

Soutla

2NT

E-mail: captblll65@yahoo.com ·
.www.auctlonzlp,com
#5548

S;~t.M : 00al!1·12

'\(• lippredute ) IO/Ir
bu,\·i,e.'l.\"

Hardwoad CablnMry And FurnHure

BARNEY

·........,.,titnbo.-er•okeobltl.....,..eom

WHO'RE YOU VOTIN'
FER PREZ'1)ENT I
SNUFFY?

9:00 ll.lll - \I :00 a.m.
Rl.'ka!&gt;c: ,\l lri125.1(~1 9
A li.·l· llf :i-.~0 .IMl will be
dJ&lt;tq_:cll for Carl )" :rniv;rl.
l:rtt' arrin1l. earl y rcmo\"BI.
l~ t c rl'JIIO\"al. nr anylime
w.:n·~~
;,
'' an l ~.o'd lo
fair ~m und'
ulht: r thau
~ laird
datl.'d . Bu ilding

NOBODY

!!

l FIGGJ:R ENNYONE WHO WANTS
THAT ..&gt;08 IS TOO CRAZV TO
HAVE IT!!

i4.00/lf

OJ"-'11 Span: ~J.OOi lf
.(

~-

' ., .

FcnLl': $1.00/lf

H&amp;H
Gutt~ring
Seamless Gutters
Rootin g, Siding, Gutters
Insured &amp; Bonded

740-653-9657

working w"h
" 1he youth
population!
Tra,et required.

Posi tion requires

a BNBS and a! .le&lt;ist 1
years eKp6rience in identltylng. - developing and
securing resources for
diverse population. Ek·
cellent luii·Ume opportu~ily
with
benefits.

SETTLEMENT OF AC·
COUNTS, PROBATE
COURT
MEIGS
COUNTY, OHIO
Accounts and vouch~
ers of the following
named fiduciary has
been flied In the Pro·
bate Court1 Meigs
County, Ohio for ap·
proval and settlement.
ESTATE NO. 33188·
Third and llnal account
of Shirley A. Paynter
guardian of the estate
ot Kyle Lee Hoover a
minor.
·
.
Unless exceptions are
flied thereto, said 8C·

count will be consld·
ered and continued
trom day to day until II·
nally disposed of.
Any person Interested
may file written excep-tlon to said account or
to matters pertaining to
the execution of the
trust, not less than live
days prior to the date
selfor hearing.
J S Powell
Judge
Comi)10n Pleas Court,
Probate Division
Meigs County. Ohio
( 111 4

Racine, Ohio 740·247·2019
Owners:
Jon Van Meter &amp;

F'L.t::.IEN, \0 \1-\.IS- /&gt;-

Cell: 74().416--5047
email:

~TUI&gt;'l'

~E".W ""'~ ~"'sii\OKE.~ Sf-\oVLI&gt; I&gt;Ri!-IK;' ~"'M'&lt;&amp;. r ~1-\out..t&gt; ~~E. up""'~
6L~S

51&gt;.'1'5 ...

ot R£.1&gt; Wl~E:..t)JE.R'!'

~1&lt;\0KIN,G! '!'UK '!'UK!

1&gt;1&gt;.'&lt; &gt;Oll-. ii-\EI li:.

PauiRowe
'

r
~-~~---­
New 3 Bedroom homes
from $214.36 per month,
includes many upgrades,
delivery
&amp;
set-up.
740 _38 5- 2434

TEAM

I'IAN"-G.ERS.\

II

for

$64
per

month ·

.....

740-388-0000
740-388-8513
740-245-9215 · Evenings
weekends
Ph.
&amp;
74o-Jsa-aot 7

Oman &amp; Delivery

*Insured
* Ex1x:rienced

References AvailAble!
Call Gary Stanley ®
740-591 -8044
Ple:lse leave messa e

.........

Comptete TrH C..

141-992-51112

7~t .t3f17

. J&amp;L
Construction

CORNER STONE
CONSTRUCTION

Windows
·Roofing
·Decks
·Garages
• Pole Buildings
• Room Addition~

Seeking
driv~r
w/CDUHazmat qualifica·
lions lor lull time em~oy·
ment @ propane busi·
ness, send resumes to:
Daily Sentinel: PO Bok
729·23, Pomeroy, Oh

fftt~

C.OW and BOY

Owner:
Keesee II

James

.

742-2332

&lt;''

ISOLATION LEADS TO

AN EARLY GilAVE. LONELY
PEOPLE ARE AT HIGHER
' 11151&lt; OF CANCE~. HEAIIT
DISEASE. YOU NA!If. IT.

• FtM Eattrnet.

Roofing, Siding,
Soffit, Decks,
Doors. Windows,
Electric, Plumbing,
. Drywall,
Remodeling, Room
Additions

Jobs

.GARAELD

1 ~-~~~ti Wffi\IQ

Local Contractor

A~,

740.367.0544
FreeEotlmat..

1'\~\-\T

740.367-G536

For Remodeling and New House Building

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

Call:

MilE W. MDCII, OWNER ·
Holp Wantod · Genoraf
An Eli:cellent way to eam
money. The New AVon.
ca 11
Marilyn

304·882·2645

Public Is cordially Invited!

· Service Manager &amp; Serv-

Light refreshments
will be served.

Technician positions
av~ilable , Heallh care &amp;
Retirement plans avail·
able. Please send
sume
ice

LLC@CAAEO.COM
fa• to 740-446-9104

/·

47239 Riebel Road. Long Bouom : OH

740-985-4141

..

Cdl : 740-4 16-1834

•' I

Ot{;t ~allipoU• Jlaflp·~ribune
~be Joint ~lcnMnt
1\egister
.
The paily Sentinel
'

Calllbrtly ~~ cr)"plcglllms •a craatacflrom qoot111ion~D)' l&lt;r11ous p&amp;opla paE1 &lt;r1d prasen1 '
.
f;&amp;Ch l•ner ~~ thtCI!t1&amp;r !!taMs t::r anOiheJ
.
..

ol the..lime. Much better is to play on

Todiy'S Clv9: 0 BqUIIS Y

by Luis Campos

spades, where you can eventually estab·
Iish a trick . .However, because dummY
has only ooe entry, yoli cannot aHoid to
play a spade toward your hand. Instead,

"RHPXANPXR WXHWIX BCII P. X CD ·.
NUXCINRA. VXII, ALCA NR ALX
VCO N FDHV N CP CD CPXJNBCD . "
•

VH'HUJHV

VNIRHD

PREVIOUS SOLUTION- '$ute ~·sa big job : but I donl know anyone wh~
can do~ better than 1can."· John F. Kennedy
·

l5+ ~ars exptriem:_e Free Estl'mates

qbir'lltrllldltl!':

W.Snuday, Nov. 5, 2008
By Bemtce Bede 0.01
Thart1 is nothing wrong wfth pOrsuln"g
larger goals In the year ahead, but make
sure that they are based on ·realistic
pramlses, Onoe that primary require--'
ment iJ I'Jlel. go a!l out tor what you hope
to aCcomplish.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24·Nov, 22) - lrideciatven&amp;ss' can cauee a great deal of
inner cOnflict and, consequently, a lacll of
Interaction. with others. FocUs on one
tople only, and act on lt.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23·0tc . , ~1) ...,...
Although you're a gutsy person and wiH
do most anything. lear of making a mistake coUld immobilize you . .Return tp
character, and gal bact&lt;o In the aCtion.
CAPRICORN (Dec .. 22-Jan . 10) - Be
sure that the designated acli't~lty Isn't so
~!»~pensive that it .becomes .a financial
burden to some of the participants.
Check wi1h eve·ryone first befOre oomrTtll·
ting people to take part
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) - Avoid
being goaded into a risky interaction with
othe~. such as a competitive situation
where the odds are stacked against you.
There's nothing to gain, and everything
to lose.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) - L.og;c
must be the only governing factor when
an important de(;lsion needs to be made,
If you allow emotion to overrule sound
reasoning , you might gMa11y r&amp;gM:t mal&lt;·
in9 a judgment ,.all .
ARIES (March 21-Aprll i9) - Be oareful
io keep your irwotvement with frle.nds
Purely on a social basis. II you want to
have a pleasant time, leave lUI commer·
cial, political or religious affairs out of the
lnleraclton.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) -

'

GRIZZWELLS
I ~ 'ti:Al '*-~ '+IWI~-tu
A~.
1=1~\-\T

'

Advertise
in this space for
$64 p~r month
'

,,

f

t

If you're
smart, you'll steer clear of making
arrangemttnls with someone who has a
reputation as a dominating pe1ti011 . You
can be just as stubborn as the next guy.
and you won't take being bossed around.
GEMINI (May 21 ·June 20) - ,Problems
will definitely arise if you dem&amp;nd more ·
from others than you are pref)ared to ·
give back In return. Let this advice serve
as a warning so that you can a...,.d trou·
t)le.

Gotommont &amp; Federal

Room (Downstairs)

:

Work
* Reasonable Rate&amp;

llM.124PIIII Iii..

• Replacein~nt

45769

• Prompt and Quality

Joh§W'sTree
_Ice

• Vinyl Siding

PVH Volunteer
of the Year,
Northwestern District
Volunteer of the Year &amp;
West Virginia State
Volunteer of. the. Year
Thursday,
November 6, 2008
2pmto4pm
Buxton Conference

IF" TJ.IE PHONE RIN65, IT'LL BE F"OR ME ...
I TOLD GENERAL PER5J.IIN6 I'D BE i-IERE .

.121111.

740-794-0460

Jean Roush

Stanley Tree·
Trimming
&amp; Removal

18811 HYSIUS

740..245·92 1 ~

Special Reception
for

.YO\J
60TTA

space

Ollicc
740-416-lll39 Cell
Free Estimated
Pomeroy, Ohio

bath. Pnced delivered
blocked. leveled and
chored.
Day

CELEBRITY CIPHER

two clubs.
You could hope lor a 3-3 club break,
when you would get a third dub trick. But
that would happen. only aboUt orie·third

' .

LOVE

7~0-992'1493

tdop. 304-755-8744 e'e- t 2002 16xBO 3 bed 2 f " "''"''~'"

controls than that. it' Is, good news and
justifies an upgrade.)
A nine·lead is always top of nothing

• Graph .

RICK PRICE

WimJuws/Rcntut.lelil.l,!:!
Bmu.IL-IJ &amp; Insured

3br. on lincoln Ave. Pt, bed 2 bath gas, I 1997
Pleasant $525.00 a mon 14x70 2 bed. 2 bath gas,
nings.

Advertise
in this

SidiJl g/Rcplat.:cment

~•:;:PP;:t~..,..-...,.:-~ bath, I 19f19 16x80 2

pardon!

trump on today's deal? West leads thE;,
diamond nine..
SOuth's sequence, an artificial two·club
opening lollowed by a two-no-trump
rebid," showed 23 or 24 points. Although
he had only 22 high-card points, he
' upgraded because he had two 1Os and
nine controls. {An ace counts as two
· controls and a king as one. A two-notrump opening will usually have seven
controla, and a typical tWO:clubs~lol·
· lowed-by-two-no-trump hand will have
eight controls. If your hand has more

take the first tnck 01 your hand and lead
tho spade king (or 10).
Wesl will win with ~is ace and do some·

PSI CONSTRUCTION

Vinyl

16X80 2 bed 2 bat~. 1
2000 16~~;70 2 bed t

woman

Astro~.

CmmJW"f. it1/ .~ Hfs id!';l/iaf

~========

eternity ·

that the detense can do.

Gutters
Maintenance Plus·

~P!"'ric·es-~Red...,.u•ce•d~
2 •2~0~
06

10 Fume
36 Squander .;
14 Lime cooler 37 Course
:·
pronoun
off.
17 Sociol
ot evenll '
24 High-fiber
mores
41 Brownies )
food
DOWN
19 Klutz's cry 43 Hostile
27 Bogus
(2 wds.)
44 Eur . airline :
t Coupd"butter
22 Alpine
45 Sodoka or 29 RV haven
2 Montez or
refratns
Simon
.
32 -·mullan
Falana
23 Paces
46 Tombstono
sleeve
3 Joaeph
24 Visibly cold
deputy
·
(hyph.)
Campbell
25 Solar
48 Salone• :
3J Goeo to low
apec11lty
plexus
sheet gurui
beam
4 Soe eye·
26 Soaweed
49 - fu
:
34 "Gro11! " ·
to-eye
extract
50 RBI or ERA
35 Ms. Hagen
5 Boot part 28 Reclines 52 Capture :
of fllms
6 Asaoc.
29 Ruuell of 53 -got it! .
36 Show
7 Malde" Bockdrafl" 54 Carson City
diatre11
8 Analyze the 30 Curved
loc.
37 II has rings
content of
molding
38 Poet's
9 Young
3t Beg

thing, perhaps shift to the heart seven,
but you take the trick and continue with
your spade 10 {or king). There is nothing

Quality Seamless

$15,000, Can 446-4743
0 245 5045
·

t Horr9r-flick 41 Slalom run
aueel
· 42 Heovy4" Ftrmlljllitlt
hearted
8 Sitcom allen U Uaed a
11 Kind
proytr rug
of poodle
47 Sweller
12 AI or Tipper
loaturu
13 Tealldllle
51 Yeaat
ol poetry
55 Oepoeit
t5 Modtl
56. M•ohy
Carol ground
16 Fall bock
57 Soy it' a so
18 Lake near 58 Miacellanr
Reno
59 DJ't
20 Preference
plaHera
21 Put!
60· Throng
23 Quaker
6t Barrack•

ably Singleton. That gives you eight top
tricks: two hearts, lour diamonds and

~CI\'l' .

ln ~idl.'

3NT

Easl
Pass
All p;,.

AnlwM IO P,..Vlout Puutt

40 Now• article

{unless you play what are called coded
leads, when a jack, 10 or nine shows
zero or two higher cards). So you know
thai East has the diamond queen , Prob-

spm:e i-.. lir"t ("!Jm t fiN
S t l\ra~t:

Pau

2+

39 Too

It 1$ normally correct to play toward an
hOnOr combination, but not always. How
would you try lo land nine tricks in no-

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Opening lead: • 9

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Tht Daily Sentinel • Pag• 85

.PROFE SSI ONAL.BAR·

ager needed fqr local
apartment commulllly located in Gallipolis, Ohio.
CsffTODAY!
Now Hiring Experienced,
Ideal candrdate will have
WOO
r.~,111 Jf,JC! ured
"'tervlew
wet11sta l1 . cooks, dish·
prevrous
experience
rn
TOMORROW!!
H.._u51119
washers &amp; delivery driv·
property management at
Work NEXT WEEK!!!
ers apply 1n person
a Rural Developrnenl
Harry's
F'amous
Hot
property,
excellent
com·
1·888-IMC·PAYU
Rontals
Dog,s ~ew Haven
munication and organizaExt. 2311
16x80 Two Bedroom Motional skills ancl be cteApply Online :
Salta
bile, 2 full Baths, Out·
http:ll!obs.lnloclslon.cotn
pendable. Health insurbullding, Porch, Excellent -::::::-::::-----:--~ ance &amp; 40t k available.
Salesperson
Wanted:
Condition. Fairview Ad. $250 Sign-on Bonus! Sak1ry dependent upon
Experience in building
Gracious Llvlrtg I and 2 304-895-3129
experrence Submit re·
materials
preterrod
Bedroom Apts. at Village
s.ume &amp; salar y requileVo'ed TOP FIVE Best
Manor
and
Riverside .,.._ _ _ _ _ __
Plef!&lt;;e
apply
withrn
ments to: GallipOlis C.M ..
store. Thomas Do It CenApts. in Middlepor1 . ·from Federal Funds just re· Places to Worlf fn Ohio! Gorsuch Mgt., P.O Box
Come See Why !
$327
ter. 176 McCormick {'trj.,
10
592 . leased for Land Owners.
190, lancaster OH
No closing cost and
Gallipolis, Oti.
43130·019o'
or
err.all
to
H0-992-5064 .
Equal ZERO DOWNI WUI do
No Sates'
Housing Oppor1unfty
kdasbury @embarqmail.com
No Collections!
Serv•ce t Bus
land
improvements.
9000
EOE
Nice
Clean
Ground Bankruptcy &amp; Bad Credit
D1rectory
Full anct Part-lime
Floor. 2br, WID hookup , OK. 2, 3, 4 anp 5 bed·. Medical
AeferencesiDeposiVNo
rooms
available.
P~si tions
Day and Evening
Pets 304-675-5162
740-446-3384
Need
Ohio
Licensed -=~C;i;on"ci;;re;i;l;i;e==
Shills
Massage
Therapist ~
Now accepting
Professional Work
Send resumes 10 P.O. All types Masonry, brick.
2 Bedroom trailer Teensapplk:alions at:
Environment'
Box
489 Proctorville, OH block. stone. concrete.
run
Ad.
446-4655.
Valley View Apartments
Medical. Denial,
45669
Free
!?stimate,
800 State Route 325 ,
304-593-6421
EAP,
401K!
14X70 newly remodeled
Thurman, Ohio 45685
On·site Doctor'
mobile home 3BR $450
74().245-9170 .
Weekly Pay and
Accepting ·
applications
1·2 Bedroom Apar1ments + utilities. Ref/security
Bonus Incentives!
for lull &amp; part time EMT,
with appliances luinished deposit. excellent toea·
and
Parame(tics.
We
On site laundry facility.
\ton. 446·83aO between
SEE WHAT WE CAN
have a benefits package
Call for details or pick up 6-9PM
OFFER YOU AT
available. $15.00/hr Ap'applk:ation at rental
http:ll)obt.lnfoctston.com.
p!icalions can be Ob·
NO MATTER
office
Mobile home for rent.
W#AT YOUR
tained
from
the
Melson
Possibility of rent81
7 40-446·4234
or
OR CALL
County EMS 911 EmerSTYLE ..
740-208-7861
assistance.
1·888-IMC-PAYU
gency Drive, Point PleasEqual HouSing
\ Ekl. 1901 .
ani, WV 25550 or onhfl e
0ppor1unity
2 br.. 2· bath in Syracuse,
at
rnaso1 1Countyoes.~om.
TDO.'II9·526-04C6
all electric, $400 a mo. ::"""':':'"":~":"'~~~
"This lnstl1utlon Is an
plus dep .. &amp; utilil1es; 2 br. C N A's I DIETARY follow the EMS link.
Equal OpportunitY
1
baltl,
14)(70, HELPER. Interviews Are
Pro'o'ider and Employer"
(740)992-7680
Currently
Being . Con- ~~~-~--~
dueled
Fqr
Full-Time, Middleton
Estates · &amp;
... T#E "
3 Br. Mobile Home for Experiem:ed CNA Posi- ResCare Home Care is
NEWSPAPER
applicat1ons
rent Middlepcrt.all elec- tion s &amp; 1 E)(perienced accepting
#AS
Helper. AppH- lor Direct Care. Staff. Intric,c/a,no inside pets, Dietary
SOA-,1ET#ING
may
$450 month ,plus dep. can ts That Enjoy The tere.sted persons
FOR YOU!!
Healthcare
Industry
&amp;
contact
Rhonda
Harnson
740·416-1354or992606S
- - - - - - - Working ·with The Elct- at 740-446-4814 ex t. 26
~' '
Tara
Townhouse •2005
Monday Ihrough Fr1 day
~4x70
Mobile
erly
May
Apply.
CompeliApartments
2BA. 1.5
.
bath, back patio, pool, Home, 2Bedroom, 2batn , live Wages. Paid Vaca- 9a-5 P. or e-rmu1 a resume
playgmund, (trash. sew· vinyl siding, shingle roo! , lion,. Paid Meals Difleren· to
age,
. water
pd.) therniapayne
window, tial Pay Discounts, No rhanison@ rescare.corn
$425/rent,
$425/sec 20ft .Porch 740-664·4356
Dues, Come &amp; Experidep. Call740·367·0547
or 740-797:4356 lo· ence
Wor ~ing 'In
A
cated
at
Darwin. Pleasant. Homelike AI·
Commercial
$26,000
mosphere. Call For Your
~;;;;;;;;;;;i;;io;i;;;i;i;=;;;;;;,....,,..._____ Confidential
Interview
2 Qay service station
For Rent
.Today. You'll Be Glad
Jackson
Pike · Lease Mobile homes &amp; lots , You
Did!!!304,273-5893
required. Call" 446-3644 (no pets) in Ashton wv Or Stop In ~ See Us @
lormoreinlo.
304·576-2942.
111 3
Washington
St., ~~~z:r:;::e:;:::~:::=::c:;:::::::C:~~~
Ravenswood, WV. Ret· ll
Hou... For R1111t
"Sc
·
erences
Required.
IN
THE COMMON count will be set lor
enic locatiOil, conven- E.O.E.
•
ient to town and affordS2J81mo~ '* txd , 2 buth .
~--,...-..,..-- PLEAS COURT, PRO· hearing before said
Bank Rt."rn1, (5% d own, 15 able, 2 &amp; 3 bedrooms Youth
Case
M
BATE DIVISION MEIGS Court on the 4th day of
··available
call
anager
December, 2008, at
yciar S. K~ APRI fur listings
needer:t lor workforce de- COUNTY, OHIO
92~·5;;:63
800-(J2tl -4'J46 c&gt;. R02_7
~17;;:4;;0 !~;;9 :;;
;;;9;,,.,.,., velopment program in IN THE MATTER OF which time said ilc·

2br, House, $300 mon1h,
plus Utltllies. Deposit &amp;
References
2BA garage Apartment. 304-6754874
downtown, $425 mth rem 2b h
r. ouse . garage , •.
,.., 11 Brand new 3bed 2bath
+ utMnies, NO PETS.' basemen1, rrver 1ron1ag~
ha"
PI
4'46..()415
·
Ne
H
wv 00
+ · " acre 1n
·
tn
w
aven
Pleasant. OWNER FIFree
Rent
Special!!! 304·934·7462:
NANCE
AVAILABLE.
2&amp;38A j:~nd up, Central
2br. house in . Mason (740) 446·3570
· Air, WID hookup, tenant $325 _00
a
mon.
+ ~~~~-.--~pays electric. EHO Elm $ 325 _00 dep. . no pets ; 996
Mobile
Home
View
Apts. 304 _882 _3652 .
.
(304)882-3017
te~t:SO 2854 Georges
,,
.
V Ita
G
2BR houS(t lor rent on Creek Ad. MUST BE
s¥nng a Y reen Garfield. Deposit $450 MOVED, new heal pump
Apartments 1BR lor rent rent
$450.
256-6408, 3BR, 2 bath stove/relr

dep.

BAR

www.inydailysentlnel.com

to NEEDING \ ENERGETIC.

(~d

-1BR . Ap1, WID hookups,
·• ;satellite TV incl. .w/rent,
~lose to hospital. Call
...40-339·0362
ll Bedroom 2 Bath.
'Green

5800 dep. 740-446-7029

Brand new ctuplek with 2
BR, 1.5 baths, attached
gar. froot I back porches,
Land for your flowers I
garden, fully equipped
kitcMn, wheelchair ac·
oosslble.
Midway
between Jackson and Gallipolis on Highway 35.
Aent $600. Call lor application to 740·236- IS72
or e-mail to sou thohiotiving@gmail.com

Cover GQODTIMES

Resume

Shifts

74{)-446-2568. - -.....- - - - -

Equal Housing 0ppor1u- New 2BR, 2 bath. fridge ,
nity. This institution is an stove, dishwasher 1ncl
Equal Oppor1unity PrO- WID hookup. $600 mo -+-

•

Forward
and

com . Equal Opportunlty TENDmS
WAITRE·
Employer/Program
SE.S.
AND
A

oon Eatalea. 52 West- tion can 245-003 t

vidor and Employe(.

Ple.:-~se

Lener

Tuesday, November 4, 2008
ALLEYOOP

Rtstaunints

No Collections!

wood Dr., !rom $365 to

$560.

Tuesday, November 4, 2008

www.mydailysentinel.com

CANCER tJune 2hluty 22) .:._ If you've
heard something that counters Information from another, don't hesllate to with·
hold making a decision until both stories
can be "Checkecl out Something i8 wrong.
lEO (July 23-Aug. 22)- The batt way to
maintain harmooy on the horn&amp; frOn\ it to
avoid all issu~s where differenees IB)(ist.
U one must be addressed for aome rea·

son ." maka cor1aklthat you are a better
listener than talker. •
VIRGO (Aug. 23·Sepl 22) - BeinQ a
'perfectionist might make you difficun to
please, so take care that you don't dis ~
courage anyone who ts simpty trying to ·
help. You'll only make things tougher on
yourself - and you'll be terribly unpqpular.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) - Of course,
yOu should atways b8 protective of your
po"essions, but It might be smart to be
especially careful at this lime. Don't
needle881y invite extravagance, care·
lessness or mishaps with a Ia• anltude.

SOUP TO NUTZ
'

S HT E CK.

tlllllll
ME.LAR

.....,......,..._,.-,.,,..-l
5

.

EUSEMB
a,

-1 I I' I e
.
L.....t,...,...t.....J.-,_-'---'
.

r

•'

'

''Have-vou
. ever notii:ed ,;. .·
my sister asked. •·ao)1hing ;·.
worth doingalways ••··• a ·
---'!"
.
Complete ~~~·· cnoc••· .q•
bv fillir\Q In rhe missing Ward~

.,.a

you develop fram ~ep No. 3 below."

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS I 1/3108
Vendor - Plant- Brawl - Wallop · APPROVAL
"I've always figured." mused I he gem, ''duit you can't ll&lt;'
comfonable without your own APPROVAL ··

ARLO &amp; JANIS

�-·
hp 86 • The Daily 5entinel

Tuesday, Novembjer 4 2008

www.mydailysentinel.com

With Big Ben hurt,
·Leftwich takes
over at QB, Bt

Scenes from
the polls, As

•
~

Printed on 100%
Recycled Newsprint ~4f

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio ·
\\ 'FDNi ·.SilAY. :'1:0\ 'E:\1 BER 5 , :wnli

:;o CENTS • \"ol. 51{, No . H:1

.

. w\\w.;nydailp;enlind.cum

'.

tvnch

SPORTS
· ~Rested Bu~

BY BRIAN

J. REED

races

BREEDOMVDAILVSENTINELCOM

prep for stretch run.
SeePageBl .

POMEROY - Michael
Bartrum and Thomas R.
Anderson were elected
Meigs County Commissioner
in their respective races in
Tuesday's general election. In
the only other contested race
on
the
local
ballot,
Republican Diane Lynch was
elected Clerl&lt;: of Courts over
Democrat Brenda Phalin.
Bartrum, an independent,
. Republican
defeated
Commissioner Jim Sheets,
by a two-thirds · margin,
receiving 6,621 votes to
Sheets' 3,355.
Republican
Anderson
won a three-way race

Thomas R. Andenion

Michael Bartrum

against A. Thomas Lowery,
a
Democrat,
and
Independent Candidate Bill
Quickel. Anderson received
4,104 votes , Lowery, 3,936,

and Quickel , I ,613.
Every Democratic candidate on the ballot, except
U.S. Rep. Charlie Wilson,
D-Bridgeport,lost yesterday

'

Dennis Spisak, 429.
State
Rep.
Jimmy
Stewart, R-Aibany, won
Meigs County in his bid for
the Ohio Senate. receiving
6.726 votes to Democrat
Rick Shrivers ' 2.883 votes.
Green Party Candidate ·
Timothy Kettler received
320 votes.
Athens County Treasurer
Jill Thompson received
5.803 votes in Meigs
County in her race for the
92nd House District against
Debbie Phillips. Athens City
Diane Lynch
Councilwoman.
At
press time . the house race
in Meigs County. Wilso n was undecided distri~;t-wide.
carried 4,833 votes here .
Unopposed
local
Republican Richard Stobbs Republican
candidates
received 4 ,209 votes, and
Green Party Candidate
Please see Meigs, AS

OBITUARIES

.

'

INSIDE·

'
'

PLEAS AN~
VALLEY

1.

--------~--~------2520

2.___________________

• Plenty of pressing
.matters await next
:.president.
Page ~
··• Around the world,.
.Obama victory sparks
. · cheers. See Page A2
• ·Don't be afraid
, to ~ply onHne..·
SeePageA3
·• Church $POOSOIS
Christmas toy QiVe-awey.
'See Page A3·· . ' .
~ Ohio wting: big 6nes
·.early; no big pi'Qblerns.
··See Page AS
: • Local Briefs.
' See Page 'AS

see

HOSPITAL~
Valley
WV •
llrivo. • Point Pleasant,

20i·h&lt;d,lurllity

. 304-675-434Q
.
The Family ofProfesnmaals

3.·----------------~--

4. ____________________
.5 •.________________.,..----

WEAn.IER

.WfJE BREAKER'~
Total Poin~ in tbe Mo~day ~ite ·
446-2404

Football Game! .- ·

1-888-446-2684

.

216 Upper River Rd. Gallipolis, OhiO
112 mile south of the Sllytr Bridge

.•...,

HOLZER CLINic·

License CC 1000n.ooo 8nd 001
license Cl7~ and 001

•

~

¥

.

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't
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'·'lj

•
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'
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.... . -~·~. AI".~
.. ·-u,

1

..,.

~..

·~·,

·~

1' ''

' •

.

'

•

appear in each pmldpatlntl ~Ia ad. .~·: .~ '
Indicate your pick of wllllll!n and• write it besldt
, . "iiie .
correspondlntl number.
'
'
Entries mpst be dropped olr at the:
GalUpolis Dally 'l)ibune or mailed to:
·
FootbaU Smackdown '
c/"" GaWwlis Dally Tribune
: 8lS'3rd Avenue
Gali!Jiolli, OH 45631
..
Entrjes must be postmarked by Thursday to q""lfy .•
for that week's contest~-Tbe prize will be awarded '
weekly on the b18ls ot.most ~loners select~ ~Jy
and in case of lies, winner will be determined by blind
draw. You must be 16 years of age or older to enter.
Only one entry per person per week.

•

....
UitCIIah
-H~~.
•

.. 1 •

,LifT CHAIIII
•

$land and lit with taae in

•

Cuitom
Whella
&amp;E.._.

I \

'

~~--

......

I .......\.

I;

"~~

JNDEX

.-; .

·····"-''Jl'll
4
'
. ...,,
Each 1\Jesday lllrliu~ Dec:S, a.niimbered game_Yiq .
,.

Shop

Getting out the vote in Meigs
BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENTOMV~ILVSENTINEL.COM

SYRACUSE
"It's
been steady all day," was a
common quote from pol~.t..
workers in both ~yraeus~,
and Racine.
. · · h !' 1
By 3 p.m. yesteirlay,' 388 ·
ballots had been ckt at the
Syracuse Community Center
from the two precincts which
set up shop at the center,
noticeably up from the
turnout for the March primary. In addition to a large ·
tumout, poll workers said
they were seeing more young
and first-time voters. like
Jordan Pickens of Syracuse.

Local~

'

~· ,

a Pricle Uft Chlllr - a fine tumishlng
~will accent your home while .
enhancing your life.

.
'
' •·Single .I!Mich hMd control lor IUY opertlllon
·.~; ,;,Biyt'-1\ ooior 11\d flbrlc cholcla

·

• lntnlgrllld IDIII'glncy balllry backup

''ACII , .. tiCOIIIIII, IIJmCI YOII DIIIIYI'

s - · 740-446-0007 •

•

2!!!!1~.

12 PAGES

RAClNE
Voters
. passed a renewal levy in the
Southern Local School
~endars
District as well as decided
'
other local levies, statewide
B2-4 issues and races in yesterffillSsifieds
f.\
day's general election.
Comics
The Southern Local
'
''
·School District's five-year,
:Editorials
A4 four-mill renewal levy
',
passed soundly by a vote
Obituaries
'
of
1,287 for to 808 against
•
the
levy for current operatB Section
~rts
in~ expenses. The levy
'
bnngs '
approximately
/1.6
~eather
232,000
into
the district
'
••
annually.,
.
4'/- 0b1a Valley Publloblna C...
Local levies decided:
' '
Pomeroy Village, renewal
one-mil,! levy for fire protection, 434 for, 159
'
, against;
Columbia
4I 7I
I

Bs

:.::t!·11,
\

BY BETH SERGENT

:Annie's Mailbox
'' .I

.

~~
, ,ttli'IEOICAL IEQUIPMKNT

"I voted for the person I
felt WOUld do the best job,"
Pickens' said about who he
voted for in the presidential race.
t!ckens, who is a senior at
S~!J.lelll · High School,
1umtill8 inJufyand said he
is ")lonored" to be voting in
his :first election especially
in a swing state like Ohio,
making him feel that · his
voted counted even more. ·
Also happening at the
Syracuse
Commumty
Center was the annual election day dinrier which
served up soups, sandwiches and desserts, carrying on
an election day tradition .

Statewide iSSueS decided

BSERGENTOMVDAILYS!'NTINEL.COM

•

2 SI!CI10NS -

.

• ~: • P.tlen!M, qull1111d 1111100111 llfltyalem
•

'

I

Belh Sergentlphoto

By 5 p.m. in Racine, the
two precincts voting at the
Racine
First
Baptist
Church's
Christian
Outreach Center were
reporting 500 ballots cast
out of nearly 1,000 eligible
voters registered in the two
precincts. Poll workers said
voting was non-stop until 1
p.m. yesterday and they
were seeing more "first time
voters of all ages."
Poll workers closed up
shop at 7 :30 p.m . though
their day did not end there
with many delivering the
ballot boxes to the board of
elections into . the late
evening hours.
'

Southern levy passes.

)

.

,.,-.'

asnrst

Jordan Pickens (pictured), 111. Syracuse, casts his first ballot ever at the Syracuse
Community Center. Pickens is a senior at Southern High School and one of many first time
vo.t ers in the county.

,. Dttlllle on Pia• ~·

.:if•·,

FuiSetvlce

.

We're '8-very~here You Are!
':

Sulpnlon&amp;
Bodylllll

Pr!!sldeitt-el~ Barack Obeme smllas during his accep-

tanCe speech at Grant
Park
.
. In Chicago Tuesday night.

Bv DAviD EsPO
AP SPECIAL CORRESPONDENT

WASHINGTON - Barack Obama swept to victory
as the nation's first black president Thesday night in
an electoral ·college landslide that overcame racial
bai:riers as old as America itself. "Change l!as come,"
he told a jubilant hometown Chicago crowd'estill)ilted
at nearly a quarter-million people.
The son: of a black father from Kenya and a· white
mother from Kansas, the Democratic senator' from
Illinois sealed his historic triumph by defe\iting
Republican Sen. John McCain in a string of wins in
hard-fought battleground states - Ohio, Florida,
'owa and more. He captured Virginia, tori, the first
candidate of his pllrty in 44 years to do so.
On a night for Democrats to savor, they not only
elected Obama the nation's 44th president but padded
· their majorities in the House and Senate, and i11
January will control both the White House and
Congress for the fttst time since 1994.
A survey of voters leaving polling places showed
the economy was by far the top Election Day issue.
Six in 10 voters said so, and none of the other top
issues - energy, Iraq, terrorism and health care was picked by more than one in lO.

•
PI•••••Obema.A6

~:~~~~~;:

Scott Powell,
State Issue One, to proTownship , additional 1.5- vide for earlier filing deadmill levy for road mainte- lines for statewide ballot
nance, 294 against, 258 for issues, 5 ,565 for, 3 ,436
the tax levy; Lebanon
Township, one-mill replace· . against; State Issue Two, to
men! levy for fire protec- authorize state to issue
tion, 246 'for, 130 against bonds to coniinue the
the levy ; Scipio Township, Clean Ohio Program,
two-mill replacement levy 5,907 for , 3,552 against:
for fire protection, 3'71 for, State Issue Three , to
143 against the levy; Sutton amend the Constitution to
Township one-mill replace· protect pri vale property
ment levy for ftre · protec- rights in ground water,
tion, 1,022 for, 392 against lakes, other, 6,871 for,
the levy.
2,548 against; State ls~ue
Statewide issues/races Five, referendum on legisdecided:
lation making changes to
Justice of the Supreme check · cashing lending,
Court, Evelyn L. •stratton, feels. interest rates, etc .,
5,067 votes, Peter M. 5,892 for. 3,866 against;
Sikora, 2,314 votes. Justice State Issue Six , 10 amend
of Court Appeals, fourth the Constitution by initia·
district, Peter B . Abele, , tive petition for a casino in
6,397 votes, Judge of the Southwest Ohio. 7,074
Court of Common Pleas, against, 3,045 for.

McCain carries Meigs,
turnout 69 percent ·
BY BRIAN

REED

POMEROY
Many
Meigs County voters and
po II workers dealt .with Ii nes
at the polls Tuesday, but
voter turnout was nearly II
percent below the statewide
projection for the general
election.
According to unofficial
results from the Meigs
County Board of Elections,
15.329 ballots were cast 69 percent. 2,Q53 of those
ballols were cast during the
30-day early voting period.
The ballot total also
includes 228 provisional
~

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J.

BREEDDMVDAILYSENTINEL.COM

ballots. cast by voters who
have moved from one
precinct to another since the
voter registration deadline.
The Ohio Secretary of
State projected an SO-percent turnout statewide.
Absentee, or early votinf,
ballots were included in tHe
precinct counts conducled
last night, but the provisional ballots will not · be
included umil the official
coum of ballots , which the
board will conduct at 8:30
a.m. on Nov. 17.
The
Republican
Presidential candidate, John
Pl. .se see Votlnc. AI

•

•

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