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                  <text>.Pqe B6 •. The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

Wednesday, November 19•. 2008

Ward not worrying about possible Bengals revenge
· -PITISBURGH (AP) If the Cincinnati Bengals
are seeking retribution for
liis hit that broke linebacker
Keith Rivers' jaw last
!llonth, Hines Ward said
t!tey know where to find
him Thursday night.
·Revenge factor or not, the
Pittsburgh Steelers wide
r!lcei ver expects it will be
the Bengals ..,- as usual ~
tbat end up getting the
worst of the AFC North
matchup physically.
"I always keep my head
on a swivel," .Ward said
Tuesday. "It's football ....
Their heads should be on a
swivel."
· · Some Bengals players
hinted at payback after
· Ward 's block ended Rivers'
season during Pittspurgh's
38-10 victory on Oct. 1.9.
.. Rivers, who can't oppose
Ward again until next seaspn, said, " You reap what
you sow. What goes around
comes around."
The Bengals ramped
qown such talk Tuesday, no
doubi trying to prevent any
distractions during a short
work week before a rivalry
game.
· "It's all part of the game .
Injuries happen," linebacker Brandon Johtlson
said. "The only thing I have
ttow is just the 'passion fqr
. the rivalry. Getting a win is
IllY incentive . I'll see him .

If he's standing between me Lewis issued no such apoland a W, that's my incen- ogy after ending Steelers
rookie
running
back
tive ."
Ward developed the repu - Rashard Mendenhall's seatation of being an uncom- son by causing a severe
monly physical blocker for shoulder injury. Ward said.
Ward was blocking on a
a receiver early in his 11season career and has kept pass reception by tight end
it, and players around the Matt Spaeth when he levleague - not just those in eled Rivers , who· was comCincinnati - dislike him. ing from a different angle
. bisliking him is one in pursuit of the play.
NFL vice president Ray
thing , Ward said, but calling him dirty is unfair.
Anderson said during a
"To label me as dirty or a visit to Pittsburgh last
cheap shot, if you're worry- month that the rules regarding about a little 200- ing hits like Ward's might
pounder, a 32-year-old be reviewed .
wide receiver, I take that as
"I continue seeing those
a compliment," Ward said. blocks, they 've been going
Following the Steelers' on the entire age of foot11 -10 victory Sunday over ball," Ward said. "There's
San Diego, Ward said some nothing cheap about it. ... If
Chargers players told him I really was trying to butt
they stayed away from his Rivers , I would have gone
territory to avoid the risk of low on him,and tried to take
IDJury.
.
, · out his knee."
"I'm not going to change · To Ward, his biggest
because of the threat some- worry witl-1 the Bengals (!body is going to get me 8-1) is they will be playing
back," Ward said. "Every the Steelers (7-3) with little
game, there's somebody time for preparation after
trying to get me. I'll apolo- only three days off, not
gize for the guy being out whether they're targeting
the whole year, Rivers, but him .
"They don't have anythere 's nothing I can do
about it . I'm not going to thing to lose . They'll go for
apologize for the way I play it on fourth-and-3 , fourththis game. Nobody's going and-2. They 'll do the tricK
to apologize to me if I g~t plays," Ward said. "They'll
knocked out going over the blitz the house."
Ward is coming off his
middle."
Ravens linebacker Ray two best games of the sea-

son, making II catches for
124 yards against San
Diego and eight for 112
yards against Indianapolis.
Still. he remains confused
about several of his three
holding calls against the
Chargers.
. On one play, Ward said,
the referee complimented
him for a good block, while
another official . said he
made the officials look bad
by acting as if he were
holding before releasing
the opposing player.
The holding calls, among
115 yards in Pittsburgh
penalties,. were part of tile
reason the Steelers were
held without a touchdown
despite · outgaining San
Diego 410-213 .

Home for the Holidays
edition inside
today's Sentinel
.

Pittsburgh Stealers wide receiver Hines Ward smiles alter
making a catch during the second quarter of an NFL foot·
ball game against th.e Washington Redskins on Monday,
Nov. 3 In Landover, Md.

the Marcelo Lajterman
Memorial Scholarship. The
·placekicker and punter from
Lyndhurst, NJ ., was 19 when
he died in the crash along
with 74 others. ·
Lajter-man 's family recent-

1y presented a $1,000 check
to the foundation . The fund
wjl( become endowed when a
minimum of $15,000 is
received , Until then, the foundation will support a yearly
$1,000 merit scholarship.

Youkilis (.312, .29, 115)
was third with 20 I points
and Mauer (.328, 9, 85) was
fromPageBl
next with 188 points.
White Sox star Carlos
after earning the Rookie of Quentin, who was leading
the Year award, joining Cal the AL with 36 home runs
Ripken Jr. and Ryan when he broke his right
Howard.
wrist in an act of frustration,
Morneau got seven first- was fifth with 160 points.
place votes and had 257 Rodriguez, who went 62points , and Youkilis and for-69 in save chances and
Twins catcher Joe Mauer recently filed for free
each got a pair of first~place agency, drew 143 points.
votes. Rodriguez drew the
Texas
slugger
Josh
other first· place nod and Hamilton, who made a
came in sixth.
remarkable recovery from
Morneau , the 2006 AL drug addiction to resume his
MVP winner, hit .300 with career, was seventh and fol2.3 home runs and 129 RBis lowed by last year's winner,
in helping the Twins reach a · Yankees
star
Alex
one game playoff for the Rodriguez. ·
AL Central, which they lost
Tampa Bay fust baseman
to Chicago.
Carlos Pena came in ninth,

the top vote-getter from the
AL champions. The Rays
beat Boston in Game 7 of
theALCS .
Morneau earned $75,000
for. his MVf finish and
Mauer, Youk11is and Pena
got $25 ,000 each.
The AL MVP was the last
. of . the major BBWAA
awards presented this year.
Albert Pujols won the NL
MVP award Monday and
last week Cliff Lee and Tim
Lincecum won Cy Youngs,
Joe Maddon and Lou
Piniella were picked as
Managers of the Year and
Evan
Longoria
and
Geovanny Soto were the iop
rookies.

.MVP

James
from PageBl
quickness, at his size, is
pretty unheard of," said
Nets rookie forward Ryan
Anderson, who got a chance
to face James . "The things
he can do is pretty amazing.
He is so athletic , and he's 69. He is an incredibly talented gu('
Tra1ling most of the first
half, Cleveland got within
three points at the half and
then blew things open in the
third quarter, outscoring
New Jersey 28-13.
Williams tied the game
with a 3-pointer off an assist
by . James. West put
Cleveland ·ahead with a 3pqinter from Williams and
Williams nailed a 3-pointer

off another James assist.
West, who scored 12 of his
16 points in the quarter,
then capped the 12-0 spurt,
hining another 3-pointer off
a Williams' assist.
.Cleveland led 77-65 at ihe
end of the third quarter and
Daniel Gibson iced the
game, converting a fourpoint play to open the final
quarter.
Notes: James (23 years,
323 days) replaced Kobe
Bryant as the youngest
player to score 11,000
points when he hit a jump
shot late in the first quarter.
Bryant of the Los Angeles
Lakers was 25 years, 99
days when he got 11,000 ....
Cavs coach Mike Brown
seemed to pull a hamstring
retrieving a loose ball in the
game · ... Cleveland outrebounded New Jersey 50-39
and blocked eight shots.
The good-natured Wells is
a happy-go-lucky kid who
everyone on the team seems
to like . Smith said off the
field Wells is a "goofball"
- joking with upper- and
underclassmen alike.
At the same time, his
teammates know that the
·impending decision on a pro
career - keep in mind, he's
one of l_l kids - is weighmg on li1m.
"It will come down to
what he wants in his heart ,"
said . cornerback Malcolm
Jenkins, who could have
gone in the first round of the
draft last year but electod to
return for his senior season.
"He could easily go to the
NFL next year. He's played
well enough in college to do

Beanie
fromPageBl

opponent, too.
"When I'm out there, I
feel as if I bring a presence
to the field and a sense of
energy to the team," he said.
Wells, who missed three
games earlier in the season
with a foot injury, piled up
143 yards on 24 carries in
last we~k 's 30:20 win at
illinois. Perhaps the high·
light-reel play of the season
for the Buckeyes took place
when Wells vaulted Illinois
safety Donsay Hardeman it appeared he was a good 4
feet off the ground as the
mystified defender disap- it."
peared und~r him, grabbing
Especially in the biggest
games.
at air - on a 25-yard run .

•

Prinled on

.)II

C 1-: :-..: I'S • \' ol. ;;_fl. :'\ o . •J-t

SPORTS
· • Lewis not running on
empty. See Page 81

I Ill RS ll \\ . :'\ 0\

I · :\I B 1-: R

:w, 2008

tOO %

""l

Recycled Newspri.Dt ~'

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

AP Photo

.

·~

'"'" .m\ll.litys&lt;•nti nd .w m

Pomeroy receives grant for pond work
· Bv CHARLENE HOEFLICH

HOEFUCHOMYDAILYSENTINELC.OM
POMEROY - ·Meigs
County has received another Nature Works Grant from
the Ohio Department of
Natural Resources (ODNR)
for improvements to the
Mulberry Avenue pond near
· Beech Grove Cemetery.
The
Wednesday
announcement of projects
. receiving grants in 58 Ohio
counties i1i the amount of
$1.7 million for improve-

ment to outdoor recreation
included 'one for Meigs
County. It is in the amount
of $7,319 for Pomeroy 's
Mulberry Avenue pond
rehabilitation and improvements to that site.
The use specitication for
the new grant money is
"rehabilitation of the pond
by removing tree debris,
rehabilitating existing and
constructing new accessible
walking paths on two foot
bridges , and construction of
an accessible wooden deck .

Previous Nature Works
Jim Smith who was
grants for ·work at that site · named chairman of the
total $7,500. Pomeroy Pond Restoration Fund by
Mayor John Mosser said Mayor Musser earlier this
this gives the village · year has been persistent in
$15,000 in grants and with making contacts with age nthe 25 percent required cies asking for money so the
match, a total of $20,000 on work can more forward. He
the project.
frequently fishes at the
He estimates that the pond, knows the interest of
entire project of planned othersjn fishing there. and
improvements to the site has ~een Cl)lling for
will cost $40,000, but said improvements for several
after announcement of the years now
additional grant money that
Over th~ years Smith has
this "gives us a good stan." written several letters to

Governor Ted Strickland
and the Ohio Depanment
· of Natural · .Resources
appealing for grant money,
and more recently has written . to the National ,
Audobon Society and The
David and Lucile Packard
Foundation asking cons id~
eration for grants.
'
Smith is now in the
process of soliciting dona~
tions from businesses iti
Meigs

c

.

..

ounty. Earlier thl~

·~

Please see Grant. AS
·,

Bench dedication set at Jibrary

Marshall scholarship honors 1970 crash victim
HUNTINGTON, W.Va .
(AP) - A Marshall football
player killed in the 1970
plane crash is being bonored
b:t the university.
·
The Marshall University
Foundation has established

River .City
Players plan
'A Look Back,' A2

Bv BETH SERGENT

BSERGENTIIMYDAILYSENTINELCOM

.

'Community
Giveaway' :
set for
Saturday

POMEROY - A love of
reading often begins in
childhood when parents take
Bv BETH SERGENT
the time to recite a bedtime
BSERGENTIIMYDAILYSENTINEL.
GoM
story and this Sunday this
love of reading willl)e celePOMEROY - The annu.Page AS
brated with the dedication of
al
Community Giveaway at
a
brass
bench
in
memory
of
• Jan Durst, 70
the
Mulberry Community
Ted and Nancy Reed .
Center is set for 9:30 a.m.
The ceremony/open house
this Saturday.
is planned for 1-3 p.m .,
The giveaway has become.
Sunday at the Pomeroy
an annual tradition original·
Library. Refreshments will
ly started by churches in the
be served.
Upper Sandusky area whicn
Pat Holter ·and Doug
colleCts
donations of every:
Little of the Meigs County
thing from food to the
Library Board will speak .
kitchen sink and then delivrHw~ter, ser&gt;~ed with ,)vir. , -~~f1~t~:;~~
.
ers
them via a semi-truck io
uurmg his tenure on ·1;the people of Meigs County.
the
and she described ·
who may be in need. ·
him as being a very active
and involved member.
Dee Radar of God's NET.
Holter said Mr. Reed was on
which is . located at th.e
Mulberry
Community
the board from 1971 until
the time of his death and
Center. said the truck is
after the more recent passapproximately due at 9:30
ing of his late wife Nancy,
a.m. but it may be a littl~;,
friends made donations in
later, it all depends on the
lieu Of flowers in her name
drive down from Upper
to be left to the library.
Sandusky. Like before. those
Holter said the hoard had
who help unload the truck
been talking about a bench
will be first in line to pick
for the children and the
items the truck delivers.
• Updating tables.
money left to the library
So just what will be on
See Page A2
seemed like a good fit. Since
the
truck~
Courtney
the money was d9nated. in
Frederick, who has Men
• Tellabration coming
Nancy's memory; she was
helping to organize the
to Mipdleport Saturday.
the inspiration behind the
giveaway
in . Upper
See Page A2
statue which sits on the brass
Sandusky. said furniture,
bench. The statue features a
food, clothing. heavy
• DAR members learn
mother
reading
to
a
child
coats, toys and other mis-:
about Native Americans. who is sitting on her lap. The
cellaneous items will be
See Page A3
bench sits on the front porch
delivered.
·
:
of·the Pomeroy Library.
· ~ Holly Berry Festival
Frederick said it isn't jusi
The
bench's
dedication
churches
of every denomi~
1-eturns to Marshall.
plaque reads "In memory
nation involved in collecP
See Page AS
of Ted and Nancy Reed,
ing items but the gener&lt;J
Beth SergenVphoto
education is a life long
public in the Uppe.S:
Natalie Harris, 5; Pomer9y, takes a seat on the new, brass bench outside the Pomeroy Sandusky area. FredericK
journey."
The public is . invited to · Library fe11turing a mother reading to a child. An open house/dedication ceremony for the
•
Please see Giveaway, AS:
bench, dedicated to the late Ted and .Nancy .Reed, will be held on Sunday.
the ded1cation.
.
WEATHER
•

0BTIUARIES
welcomes Boanl Certified Orthopedic: SurJeon
Dr. Bruce Haupt, formerly of Mountain Pride Orthopedic:&amp;
iJI. Charle&amp;ton, West Virgillia. Dr. Haupt apeclaUzes iJI.
. all upeeh of Orthopedic: Suqery, iJI.cJudlal bone
fnctarel and total joint replal:ement. He II
a«omplishecl in Sports Medicine, Computer Navlptecl
Total Joint Replacement S111p1y uul LJmb
Recoastnu:d...-e SUJ'Iery iJI.dudfnJ tlte Dizarov Bone
Len&amp;theah•J Tedmiqae. He II n:ow atcepdq all
OrthopecJic patients at Holzer Clinic iJI. Galllpolls
and Holzer Clink South Charleston.
'

Accem
740. . .5401 .

Now

New Patients

INSIDE

.

Annual kickoffheld.f or 2009 United Fund drive:.
.

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH

HOEFLICHOMYDAiLYSENTINEL.COM
POMEROY - A goal of
$9,000 for the 2009 United
Fund drive was annunced at
the annual meeting of the
United Fund for Meigs
Detalla on Page AS
County held recently at the
Meigs County Historical
Society's annex.
Sue Maison, vice ·president, stressed that I 00 percent of all donations are disa Sl!CTioNS- ta PAoFS
tributed to the funded agenAnnie's Mailbox
cies in Meigs County. She
introduced the board memCalendars
bers, George Hawley. Lesa
Quickel,
Luzon McQuaid,
Submitted photos Sue Maison accepts an AEP Connects grant for the United
Classifieds
Julie Houston, Tom Reed, ·Jlrri Snodgrass of Peoples Bank, Middleport, presents a Fund of Meigs County. The grant from American Electric
Jim Snodgrass, and Chloris check for $1,000 for the United Fund for Meigs County to Power was given in honor of AEP retiree Chloris Gaul~
Comics
Gaul-McQuaid.
McQuaid's significant volunteer service.
Sue MaiS&lt;?n· vice president.
Editorials
The funded agency representatives were introduced County Historical Society. · Gaui-McQuaid's significant hours donat;d by AEP schools and nonprofit orga-.
Obituaries
and each gave brief remarlcs
employees and retirees and nizations meet the chal ~
At the meeting , Peoples volunteer service.
regarding
their
agency
or
.The AEP Connects pro- the1r families were made · lenges of fulfilling important
Places to go
Bank representative Jim
organization. They include Snodgrass
from
the gram recognizes the com- last year across AEP's II·- • human needs." Morris said.
B Section the
Sports
Meigs
County Middleport Branch. pre- mitment of AEP employees state service territory.
Maison thanked GaulCooperative
Parish,
God's
and
retiree,
co
their
comn1u"Although
no
monelary
McQuaid
for serving as the
sented Maison with a corpo·
Weather
Net, Meigs County Cancer rate check of $1000 to kick- nities and supports causes grant can compare 10 the organization's secretary fori
Initiative,
Inc., Meigs County off the campaign.
. that are important to them, value of the time our the last four years and fo~
C ooo8 Ohio Volley Publl$hlna Co.
Council on Aging-RSVP
Also presented into the according to Michael G . .employees and retirees give her volunteer service to th&lt;
Director, Holzer Hospice, United Fund was an AEP Morris. chairman , president to worthwhile causes, the group and AEP for its mon~
grant
from and chief executive officer. $150 grants made by this etary .contributiol• to th\'
Serenity House, Meigs Connects
Humane Society, Riverbend American Electric Power in More t~an 780 grants repte- _program in the na_mes of United Fu':ld and their su~
-:
• Arts Council 'and the Meigs ihonor of AEP retiree Chloris senting 130,000 volunteer .;-AEP volunteers w1ll help pon m Me1gs County.

INDEX

.

...

~

�..

•

BYTHEBEND
Birth
For a good Cause
announced

The Daily Sentinel

'.:

Thursday, November 20, 2008

www.mydailysentinel.com

Page A2 ·The Daily Sentinel

.

Updating ables·
"Aesop's (Qh So
Slightly) Updated .
Fables~ the first
production of the
Ariel Jr. Theatre
!Qr-the 2008·09
~ason, will be
staged this week· .
end at the Ariel· ·
Dater f&gt;Eirlorming
Arts Centre in
Gallipolis. The
. show; directed by
Christina Cogar
and Lori 'Sanders,
will be seen at 7
p.m. Friday and ·.
Saturday, and 3
p.m. Sunday.
· Tickets are avail·. '·
able now at the I
· Ariel-Dater .bOx . ,
office and 90 min·
utes prior to the .
performances. For
· information, call ·
' (7:&lt;lO) 446-2187.
Submitted photo

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
MIDDLEPORT
Tellabration 2008 . an
evening of storytelling, is
coming to .the Riverbend
Arts Council theater in the
Middleport
Masonic
Temple
building
in
Middleport 7 p.m. Saturday.
The event is a part of an
international event that
happens around the world
.on this day. Eight storytellers from Ohio and West
Virginia will bring their
stories to southeastern
Ohio .
This year's professional

'
RIO GRANDE
- The
Symphonic Band at the
University
of
Rio
Grande /Rio
Grande . JACKSON - The CLA
Community College will 9th Annual Christmas
hold its fall concert today at Ba zaar will be held
8 p.m. in the Johl) W. Berry Saturday from 9 a.m. to 4
Fine and Performing Arts p.m . in the CLA Gym, 1595
Center on the Rio Grande Chillicothe Pike, Jackson .
campus.
There will be holiday decThe concert, to last orations and gifts for sale.
around an hour, will include Visitors will .. be able to
seven pieces of music that watch th"e . OSU/Michigan
will cover several different game on site. A turkey bowl
Celtic
mus1c , will be held for grades 3-7
genres.
marches ,
contemporary from 10 to II a.m. Food
pieces and Christmas music will be available .
will all be included during
For more infotmarion,
the performance.
call (740) 286-5690.
The Symphonic Band
concert is one of several
concerts being held on the
.Rio Grande campus during
. .
November and December.
Over the coming weeks, ihe
POINT
PLEASANT,
Rio Grande Masterworks W.Va. - Power · in the
Chorale, Grande Chorale. · Blood Ministry, along with
Jazz Ensemble and Rock . New Hope Bible Baptist
Ensemble will also be per- · Church and Vinton Baptist
forming for area residents in Church Choir. are inviting
free concerts .
the public to the live drama
· For more information .
"Walk
Through·the Bible contact Garv Stewart at
Word ."
The
Living
(800) 282-7201.
This drama will be staged
Saturday, Nov. 22 at 7 p.m.
at the new , Point Pleasant
Junior/Senior, High School
. Auditorium.
Bring the whole family
SYRACUSE
The for an enjoyable evening. ·
annual Christmas flower
There wi II be a short
show of the Meigs County. interm1s sron
halfway
Garden .Clubs Association through the performance.
will be held this weekend at · Admission is free.
the Carleton School .
For more information,
The show will be open to · call (304) 675-4054.
the public from I to 5 p.m .
on Saturday, and noon to 4
p.m . on Sunday. There is no
charge to .attend.
CENTENARY - AholiExhibitors are to have
their entries displayed by day bazaar has ,'been sched12 :30
p.m.
Saturday. uled . for Saturday from 9
Judging by an accredited a.m. until 4 p.m. at
Centenary
United
judge will begin at I p.m.
Theme of the show is "A Methodist Church.
Caroling We Will Go," . Baked goods, candies .
with each artistic design and pies will be available,
class carrying the name of a along with vegetable, potaChristmas carol. In addi- to, chili and bean soups to
tion to artistic arrange- eat or to go.
ments, there will be table
settings, Christmas plants,
horticulture .
displays,
wreaths, and creative gift
wrappings, with many featuring. a wide variety of
WILLOW WOOD - A
accessories, like bells and Longaberger open house
baubles, ribbon and glitter has been set for Saturday
as well as figurines.
from 2 to 4 p.m. at Symmes
Valley High Schooi in the
ag room.
All proceeds will benefit
GALLIPOLIS - Dick student Irvin White, who is
Burdette , who first placed battling leukemia.
For information, comact
the story of' The Waterloo
Wonders in · book form Dora at (740) 643-2060 or
nearly 50 years ago, will · Miss Robem at (740) 643be
at
the
Bossard 2371.
Memorial
Library, . 7
Spruce St., for a booK
signing event on Saturday
from II a.m. to I p.m.
Burdette, who authored
SNOWSHOE,
W.Va.
The Fabulous Waterloo
Wonders. has written a (AP) - A big blast of winmeans . Snowshoe
revised and expanded ter
Mountain
Resort will open
account of the story of the
most unforgettable team in its slopes early.
The resort announced
the history of Ohio high
Tuesday it will ·open six
school basketball.
"For many years, we trails and two lifts for the
have been asked by patrons season on Friday. That's
to ·assist them in finding five days earlier than
more information about planned:
More than 2 feet of snow
this fabulous team and
their place in sports histo- has fallen on the Pocahontas
ry," Library
Dir.ector County
resort
smce
Debbie Saunders said . Saturday.
"The story of the Waterloo
The resort wi II otTer disWonders is indeed time- counted lift tickets that will
less . I would like to invite · be good . through next
the community to visit the Tuesday.

Flower show
this weekend

Holiday bazaar

The River City Player•

through Dec. 31 from 5:30
He added that there also residents," he added.
to 9:30 p.m. each day.
are several LED lights this
While· admission i~ free,
According to Main Street year, which were used to Humphreys
emphasized
Director Charles Humphreys, decorate the fort. Humphreys that all donations c.ollected
this year's show will be the described the lights as being at the light show go directly .
biggest one yet.
·
brighter and more energy- back into the community
"It is not .only a better .efficient. He also said he through various community
show, but a bigger and hoped residents would make services and the Main Street
brighter show," he said. · the light show part of their organization.
"(The light show) is· an Christmas rituals. .
"Donations make the show
exciting thing for kids and
"We are trying to make better ;md help the communithis a tradition for (area) ty at the same time," he said.
people of all ages."

story tellers will be:
•
Larry Staats from
Sandyville , W.Va.. who
combines storytelling with
music using several different instruments.
• Bizzie Vunderink of
Ashland , Ohio , who tells
stories coming from what
she describes as the "original small town ."
."• Mike Neeley of Little
Hocking, a storyteller and
writer, who was born into a
storytelling family in the
· hill country of Indiana .
• Suzi Whaples of
Dunbar, W.Va .. a storyteller
from the Stories at River's
Edge programming last

summer, and was so well
received.
.
• Cathy Jo Smith of Grove
City, very popular at the
Irish festivals.
• Keith Maynard of
Evans, W.Va. , a poet,
author and storyteller with
a specialization in railroads
who will share tales from
the rails:
• And Donna Wilson of
Middleport , with ·stories
from Meigs County.
Melanie
Prall
of
Columbus will emcee the
program and add her own
tales as she goes. The storie s will reach back into
Appala chian
lifestyle;

Longaberger
open house

Book signing

Ski resort
opens early ·

Tellabration coming to Middleport Saturday
HOEFUCHOMYDAILYSENTINE LC OM

'

· library on Nov. 22 .to hear
the story of this unforgettable team from southeast·
ern Ohio ."

Biblical drama
set Saturday

.Christmas Fantasy Light Show debuts Friday
rmNT
PLEASANT,
W.Va. - The holiday season will get off to a glowing
start this weekend with the
Christmas Fantasy Light
Show at Point ·Pleasant's
Krode I Park.
Christmas light displays
will come to life Friday following Point Pleasant's
Holiday Parade. The light
show is slated '· to run ·

tales coming out of the
foothills of Ohio, those
dealing with riding the
rails, and some which been
passed down from family
·
to family .
The objective is to make
audiences laugh, reflect on
their own experiences; and
renew personal mep1ories.
They are appropriate for
youngsters and adults alike.
Door prizes will be
awarded
during
the
evening .• Admission at the
door is $5 for the event
sponsored by the RiVerbend
Arts CounciL
Wilson arranges the local
1'ellabration program.

'At Holzer Clinic, You Can Always Count on ...

HOLZER
CLINIC
•

Local Caring:·

•

www.holzerclinic
.. com
.
.
••

Lillian Zen Ellis

DAR members learn .,~
·about Native Americans~

•

photo
These students from Robin Schoonover's SkillsUSA class designed ·greeting cards for patients of Holzer Hospice at
Halloween and will be doing the same for Thanksgiving and Christmas. The SkillsUSA class is in the Buckeye Hills
Career Center Patient Care Technician Program. Sharon Shull, AN, BSN, Holzer Hospice Director, commended the students for their thoughtfulness to brighten the day of patients with life-limiting illnesses in Athens, Gallia, Jackson and
Meigs counties.
· ··
·
·
'
.
·

Submitted

CHESTER ._:_ Deborra Love talked on Native Americans a!
a recent meeting of Return .Jonathan Meigs Chapter, Daughte!11
of the American Revolution held at the Chester Courthouse. ;
She displayed stone ax heads found on the family land i(t
.Michigan and spoke of her childhood and mentioned sto~
ries told to her by her father about the Indians .
·
She said that trough the years she developed a close rela'
tionship with different tribes by going to pow wows and said
she had been accepted in the Laconta tribe. He comments
included information on Indians of Southeastem Ohio. To
those attending she served fried bread with berry sauce . :
Peggy Moore gave the national defense report on wome~
who have played apan in the national defense of this countrv
over the years. She reported that today there are 107 female
general officers in active duty and as of 9/11 more than
·193,000 women have been deployed in support of U.S. oper,
ations . She also spoke about Silver Star recipients, the latest
being SPC Monica Brown serving as a medic in Afghanistan;
A workshop was announced for I0 a.m . Nov. 29 at th~
Chester Courthouse for future members. Also planned was
the IOOth anniversary of the Chapter, to be observed at the
March 14 meeting ·at the Pomeroy Library.
·

Alfred.UMW enjoys Thallksgiving observance·
ALFRED
· A Weber selected Sharon "Thanksgiving by Janice
Thanksgiving potluck dinner Millard of Nicholasville, Weber, "Autumn Song" by
was served as a feature of the Ky., for the prayer calendar Sarah
Caldwell;
"A
Alfred United Methodist birthday card. She is a dea- Thanksgiving Prayer" and
Women's meeting held coness. Helen Wolf will quotes from Gamer Griffin
.recently at the church. Mary · have the December card.
by Thelma Henderson ,
Jo Barringer. president, had
Reported ill or having "Who to Thank" by Mary Jo
prayer before the meal.
accidents were Warren Barringer, and "Happy
It was reported that 98 VanMeter, Janelle Sargent, . Thanksgiving," "The Road
friendship contacts had been and Dora Mae Calaway. of Life" and Thanksgiving
made by the group . Janice Program reaoings were tidbits by Osie Mae Follrod.

Next meeting will be Dec.
9 with a potluck dinner.
Secret sister exchange of
gifts will take place and there
will be drawings for new
secret sisters, programs and
refreshments for next year.
The program closed with
the president reading a
prayer "Thank You God for
Everything ,"
·

Community Calendar
. Public meetings
Monday, l'io .. 24
RACINE - Southern
Local School Board, regular
meeting, 8 p.m., high school
media room.
·
'fuesday, Nov. 25
POMEROY Local
Emergency. · . ·Planning
Committee, 11:30 a.m.,
Senior Center. FY-09 exercise to be discussed. Lunch
available.

Church events
Thursday, Nov. 20
POMEROY - Laurel
Cliff
Free
Methodist
Church, revival services, 7

p.m. through Nov.· 23. honor at her home on
Leland "Bud'' Allman, Saturday, Nov. 29.2 to 4 p.m.
speaker. Special singing.
Monday, Nov. 24
'CHESHIRE - Revival at
Old Bethel Free Will
· Baptist Church, Ohio 7 and
Story's Run Road, 7 p.m.
·T hursday, Nov. 20
nightly through , Nov. 28,
CHESTER - Shade River
evangelist Norman Taylor.
LOdge 453, special meeting,
7 p.m. for the purpose of
conferring the Master Mason
Degree on one candidate.
Refreshments after.
Thursday, Nov. 27
POMEROY Meigs
TUPPERS PLAINS - Ina
Cancer
County
American
Weaver will celebrate her
80th birthday on · Nov. 27. Society Advisory Board, regCards may be sent to her at 18 ular meeting, noon, basement
Cheyenne Street. Chillicothe, conference room Pomeroy
Ohio 4560 I. The family is Library, lunch provided, new
hosting an open house in her members welcome.

POMEROY - Meigs
Soil
and
Water
Conservation District Board
of Supervisors, regular
meeting, 11 :30 a.m., district
office, 33101 Hiland Road.

Clubs and
organizations

,,

ANNIE'S MAILBOX ·

It's healthy to broaden your horizons
ability. She walks up ·and
I am a volunteer DSP
down steps like an elderly instructor. The program is
person, asks to be let off at designed specifically for
Dear Annie: I am a fresh- the door to wherever we drivers over 50 to help them
man in college and have been drive, and has me do thihgs understand the effects of
with my boyfriend, a senic;&gt;r for her at home so she can . aging on dri~ing. and . it
in high school, for two years. avoid walking up and down shows how to adjust driving
Before I graduated, we ·were stairs. She can no longer strategies to allow for these
inseparable. Now that I'm statid long enough to cook changes.
But AARP also offers a
two hours away, it's taking a meals of any comple~ity.
says
she
is
not
free
90-minute forum, "We
She
huge toll on me.
·
depressed,
and
a
counselor
Need
to Talk," for families
I started out liking my colwe
saw
for
an
extended
peri·
concerned
about the safety
lege , but now that it's kicked
in that he's not here, I've od of time agreed. The coun- . of their older relatives and ·
begun to hate it. We agreed selor told me nothing will friends. It includes crafting
. that next year when he gradu- make my wife· lose weight candid, effectual discussions
ates we' II attend the same until she is ready, and that it about driving safety, warncollege. We've even selected is counterproductive for me ing signs, strategies for alterthe school we want. Our fam- to mention it J.am frustrated native transportation and
ilies and friends, however, and ·resent what my wife has what to do if .a parent or
thir\k that's a bad idea. They done to herself. I'm sure" friend has dementia or a
say we'll end up resenting she'd feel the same way high-risk driver refuses to
about me if I were to stop driving .. The Hartford
each other down the road.
Financial Services Group,
Please tell me; Annie, is become, say, an alcoholic.
I work hard to remain fit Inc. and the MIT AgeLab
this a bad idea?. We are
'
a
nd
feel cheated that my developed this information
young, but we do love _each
wife
has
let herself go. What to help families initiate proother. And the last thmg · I
ductive and caring conversawant is to have him resent can I do? - In Distress
Dear In Distress: Not tions with older adults about
me. - Missing Him ·
Dear Missing: Whether or much. The counselor could . driving safety. - Mark D.
not you're in school together, be mistaken about depres- ' Berg, Gettysburg, Pa.
Dear Mark Berg: Thank
the problem is the same . · sion, and some people use
weight
as
a
way
to
control
you
for the excellent inferBein~ at college can be eyethose
around
them.
However,
mation.
Readers should be
opemng for one's social tife,
and frankly, we think it's gaining so much in such a aware . that this program is
healthy to widen your opt!ons short period of time could not available in all states. To
at that 'age. Your boyfnend indicate a medical problem. find out, check the AARP
may look around. and decide Suggest your wife get a com- office in your area.
he's not l"l!&amp;dy to commit to plete checkup because she is · . Annie's Mailbox is writwoman. How would you .at risk for developing . dia- ten by Kathy Mitchell and·
(eel if he wanted to date oth!- . betes. Tell her you love her Marcy Sugar, longtime edi·
ers? If you are fair to hiffi and want heF to stay well. tors of the Ann Landers
(and yourself) and allow each Encourage her to jGin you for column. Please e-mail your
other the freedom to see other' a s~ort walk after dinner. questions to anniesmail- •
people, he won't resent you, Help her prepare nutritious box@comcast.net, or write
~though you might not like meals because they're goOd to: Annie's Mailbox; P.O.
for both of you. Make this Box 118190, Chicago, IL ·
the choices he makes.
; Dear Annie: My beauti· about her health, not her size: 60611. To fuul out more
Dear Annie: "No Name about Annie's Mailbox,
ful wife, who is considerably youuger than me , has As It Will Cause Arg•tments" and rend features by other
·allowed herself to gain worried alx)ut her in-laws' Creators Syndicate writers
more than I00 pounds over driving. You recommended · and cartoonists, visit the
the last two years and is the AARP Driver Safety Creators Syndicate Web
page at www.creators.com.
· now in a Stljte of semi-dis- Program (DSP).
BY KATHY MITCHELL
AND MARCY SUGAR

..

.

•

Holzer starts Santa project
GALLIPOLIS - The Holzer Hospice has initiated a special project geared to please what they call "difficult to buy
for people" which they claim works for all ages.
. It is a letter from Santa. For a donation of $5 to Holzer
Hospice, Santa's elves will prepare a special letter to arrive
directly from the North Pole by Dee : 25.
To ensure delivery on time those interested should contact HolZer Hospice at 740-446-5074 or toll free I "800500-4850 by Thursday. Dec . 18.

Proiid to be apart of your life.
Subscribe today • 992-2155

Birthdays

one

Medical Excellence.

740-446-5381

POMEROY
Kara
Doherty and Caleb Ellis of '
Canton announce the birth
of a daughter, Lillian Zen
Ellis. Aug . 31, at Mercy
Hospital in Canton . She
weigh~d 6 pounds. 6 ounce .
Maternal grandparents are
Peter and Kathy Doherty of
Canton and paternal grandparents are Charles and
Laura Ellis of Pomeroy.

.' •

Bazaar planned

River City Players plan 'A Look Back'
. RUTLAND - The River City
Players plan to "light up" the stage
again Friday and Saturday for
their annual Broadway d·inner. theater titled "A Look Back ."
The cast will be performing songs
from all RCP's past shows including, "Oklahoma," "Music Man,"
"Wizard of Oz," "Annie Get Your
Gun," "Bye Bye Birdie," "Fiddler
on the Roof." "Suessical," "Seven
Brides for Seven Brothers" and
songs from the group's past revues.
· Tickets are now on sale from lO
a.m. until noon and 3 to 6 p.m.,
Monday . through Saturday at the
RCP's building in Middleport
located next to Locker 219.
All seats are reserved. Tickets
will be sold until noon Friday.
For more information, call (740)
992-6759 or (740) 416-7860. Also
go to www.rcplayers .net for more
information. The ·dinner theater
production will be held at Meigs
Elementary School.

Thursday, November 20, 2008

Entertainment Briefs
Symphonic
Band concert

PageA3

•

•
HI

•
am1

Coming Soon To
(iallla, Meigs &amp; Mason
Counties

We need your
Inspirational Stories!
Summit Your Stories To
.
Matt Rodgers
mrodgers@mydailytribune.com
or mail to
·
'1
Gallipolis Daily Tribune
·Att: Matt Rodgers
P.O. Box 469
Gallipolis, OH 45631

And l'our Story
~ight Be Included
In This
faith Based
~agazine ·

�..

•

BYTHEBEND
Birth
For a good Cause
announced

The Daily Sentinel

'.:

Thursday, November 20, 2008

www.mydailysentinel.com

Page A2 ·The Daily Sentinel

.

Updating ables·
"Aesop's (Qh So
Slightly) Updated .
Fables~ the first
production of the
Ariel Jr. Theatre
!Qr-the 2008·09
~ason, will be
staged this week· .
end at the Ariel· ·
Dater f&gt;Eirlorming
Arts Centre in
Gallipolis. The
. show; directed by
Christina Cogar
and Lori 'Sanders,
will be seen at 7
p.m. Friday and ·.
Saturday, and 3
p.m. Sunday.
· Tickets are avail·. '·
able now at the I
· Ariel-Dater .bOx . ,
office and 90 min·
utes prior to the .
performances. For
· information, call ·
' (7:&lt;lO) 446-2187.
Submitted photo

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
MIDDLEPORT
Tellabration 2008 . an
evening of storytelling, is
coming to .the Riverbend
Arts Council theater in the
Middleport
Masonic
Temple
building
in
Middleport 7 p.m. Saturday.
The event is a part of an
international event that
happens around the world
.on this day. Eight storytellers from Ohio and West
Virginia will bring their
stories to southeastern
Ohio .
This year's professional

'
RIO GRANDE
- The
Symphonic Band at the
University
of
Rio
Grande /Rio
Grande . JACKSON - The CLA
Community College will 9th Annual Christmas
hold its fall concert today at Ba zaar will be held
8 p.m. in the Johl) W. Berry Saturday from 9 a.m. to 4
Fine and Performing Arts p.m . in the CLA Gym, 1595
Center on the Rio Grande Chillicothe Pike, Jackson .
campus.
There will be holiday decThe concert, to last orations and gifts for sale.
around an hour, will include Visitors will .. be able to
seven pieces of music that watch th"e . OSU/Michigan
will cover several different game on site. A turkey bowl
Celtic
mus1c , will be held for grades 3-7
genres.
marches ,
contemporary from 10 to II a.m. Food
pieces and Christmas music will be available .
will all be included during
For more infotmarion,
the performance.
call (740) 286-5690.
The Symphonic Band
concert is one of several
concerts being held on the
.Rio Grande campus during
. .
November and December.
Over the coming weeks, ihe
POINT
PLEASANT,
Rio Grande Masterworks W.Va. - Power · in the
Chorale, Grande Chorale. · Blood Ministry, along with
Jazz Ensemble and Rock . New Hope Bible Baptist
Ensemble will also be per- · Church and Vinton Baptist
forming for area residents in Church Choir. are inviting
free concerts .
the public to the live drama
· For more information .
"Walk
Through·the Bible contact Garv Stewart at
Word ."
The
Living
(800) 282-7201.
This drama will be staged
Saturday, Nov. 22 at 7 p.m.
at the new , Point Pleasant
Junior/Senior, High School
. Auditorium.
Bring the whole family
SYRACUSE
The for an enjoyable evening. ·
annual Christmas flower
There wi II be a short
show of the Meigs County. interm1s sron
halfway
Garden .Clubs Association through the performance.
will be held this weekend at · Admission is free.
the Carleton School .
For more information,
The show will be open to · call (304) 675-4054.
the public from I to 5 p.m .
on Saturday, and noon to 4
p.m . on Sunday. There is no
charge to .attend.
CENTENARY - AholiExhibitors are to have
their entries displayed by day bazaar has ,'been sched12 :30
p.m.
Saturday. uled . for Saturday from 9
Judging by an accredited a.m. until 4 p.m. at
Centenary
United
judge will begin at I p.m.
Theme of the show is "A Methodist Church.
Caroling We Will Go," . Baked goods, candies .
with each artistic design and pies will be available,
class carrying the name of a along with vegetable, potaChristmas carol. In addi- to, chili and bean soups to
tion to artistic arrange- eat or to go.
ments, there will be table
settings, Christmas plants,
horticulture .
displays,
wreaths, and creative gift
wrappings, with many featuring. a wide variety of
WILLOW WOOD - A
accessories, like bells and Longaberger open house
baubles, ribbon and glitter has been set for Saturday
as well as figurines.
from 2 to 4 p.m. at Symmes
Valley High Schooi in the
ag room.
All proceeds will benefit
GALLIPOLIS - Dick student Irvin White, who is
Burdette , who first placed battling leukemia.
For information, comact
the story of' The Waterloo
Wonders in · book form Dora at (740) 643-2060 or
nearly 50 years ago, will · Miss Robem at (740) 643be
at
the
Bossard 2371.
Memorial
Library, . 7
Spruce St., for a booK
signing event on Saturday
from II a.m. to I p.m.
Burdette, who authored
SNOWSHOE,
W.Va.
The Fabulous Waterloo
Wonders. has written a (AP) - A big blast of winmeans . Snowshoe
revised and expanded ter
Mountain
Resort will open
account of the story of the
most unforgettable team in its slopes early.
The resort announced
the history of Ohio high
Tuesday it will ·open six
school basketball.
"For many years, we trails and two lifts for the
have been asked by patrons season on Friday. That's
to ·assist them in finding five days earlier than
more information about planned:
More than 2 feet of snow
this fabulous team and
their place in sports histo- has fallen on the Pocahontas
ry," Library
Dir.ector County
resort
smce
Debbie Saunders said . Saturday.
"The story of the Waterloo
The resort wi II otTer disWonders is indeed time- counted lift tickets that will
less . I would like to invite · be good . through next
the community to visit the Tuesday.

Flower show
this weekend

Holiday bazaar

The River City Player•

through Dec. 31 from 5:30
He added that there also residents," he added.
to 9:30 p.m. each day.
are several LED lights this
While· admission i~ free,
According to Main Street year, which were used to Humphreys
emphasized
Director Charles Humphreys, decorate the fort. Humphreys that all donations c.ollected
this year's show will be the described the lights as being at the light show go directly .
biggest one yet.
·
brighter and more energy- back into the community
"It is not .only a better .efficient. He also said he through various community
show, but a bigger and hoped residents would make services and the Main Street
brighter show," he said. · the light show part of their organization.
"(The light show) is· an Christmas rituals. .
"Donations make the show
exciting thing for kids and
"We are trying to make better ;md help the communithis a tradition for (area) ty at the same time," he said.
people of all ages."

story tellers will be:
•
Larry Staats from
Sandyville , W.Va.. who
combines storytelling with
music using several different instruments.
• Bizzie Vunderink of
Ashland , Ohio , who tells
stories coming from what
she describes as the "original small town ."
."• Mike Neeley of Little
Hocking, a storyteller and
writer, who was born into a
storytelling family in the
· hill country of Indiana .
• Suzi Whaples of
Dunbar, W.Va .. a storyteller
from the Stories at River's
Edge programming last

summer, and was so well
received.
.
• Cathy Jo Smith of Grove
City, very popular at the
Irish festivals.
• Keith Maynard of
Evans, W.Va. , a poet,
author and storyteller with
a specialization in railroads
who will share tales from
the rails:
• And Donna Wilson of
Middleport , with ·stories
from Meigs County.
Melanie
Prall
of
Columbus will emcee the
program and add her own
tales as she goes. The storie s will reach back into
Appala chian
lifestyle;

Longaberger
open house

Book signing

Ski resort
opens early ·

Tellabration coming to Middleport Saturday
HOEFUCHOMYDAILYSENTINE LC OM

'

· library on Nov. 22 .to hear
the story of this unforgettable team from southeast·
ern Ohio ."

Biblical drama
set Saturday

.Christmas Fantasy Light Show debuts Friday
rmNT
PLEASANT,
W.Va. - The holiday season will get off to a glowing
start this weekend with the
Christmas Fantasy Light
Show at Point ·Pleasant's
Krode I Park.
Christmas light displays
will come to life Friday following Point Pleasant's
Holiday Parade. The light
show is slated '· to run ·

tales coming out of the
foothills of Ohio, those
dealing with riding the
rails, and some which been
passed down from family
·
to family .
The objective is to make
audiences laugh, reflect on
their own experiences; and
renew personal mep1ories.
They are appropriate for
youngsters and adults alike.
Door prizes will be
awarded
during
the
evening .• Admission at the
door is $5 for the event
sponsored by the RiVerbend
Arts CounciL
Wilson arranges the local
1'ellabration program.

'At Holzer Clinic, You Can Always Count on ...

HOLZER
CLINIC
•

Local Caring:·

•

www.holzerclinic
.. com
.
.
••

Lillian Zen Ellis

DAR members learn .,~
·about Native Americans~

•

photo
These students from Robin Schoonover's SkillsUSA class designed ·greeting cards for patients of Holzer Hospice at
Halloween and will be doing the same for Thanksgiving and Christmas. The SkillsUSA class is in the Buckeye Hills
Career Center Patient Care Technician Program. Sharon Shull, AN, BSN, Holzer Hospice Director, commended the students for their thoughtfulness to brighten the day of patients with life-limiting illnesses in Athens, Gallia, Jackson and
Meigs counties.
· ··
·
·
'
.
·

Submitted

CHESTER ._:_ Deborra Love talked on Native Americans a!
a recent meeting of Return .Jonathan Meigs Chapter, Daughte!11
of the American Revolution held at the Chester Courthouse. ;
She displayed stone ax heads found on the family land i(t
.Michigan and spoke of her childhood and mentioned sto~
ries told to her by her father about the Indians .
·
She said that trough the years she developed a close rela'
tionship with different tribes by going to pow wows and said
she had been accepted in the Laconta tribe. He comments
included information on Indians of Southeastem Ohio. To
those attending she served fried bread with berry sauce . :
Peggy Moore gave the national defense report on wome~
who have played apan in the national defense of this countrv
over the years. She reported that today there are 107 female
general officers in active duty and as of 9/11 more than
·193,000 women have been deployed in support of U.S. oper,
ations . She also spoke about Silver Star recipients, the latest
being SPC Monica Brown serving as a medic in Afghanistan;
A workshop was announced for I0 a.m . Nov. 29 at th~
Chester Courthouse for future members. Also planned was
the IOOth anniversary of the Chapter, to be observed at the
March 14 meeting ·at the Pomeroy Library.
·

Alfred.UMW enjoys Thallksgiving observance·
ALFRED
· A Weber selected Sharon "Thanksgiving by Janice
Thanksgiving potluck dinner Millard of Nicholasville, Weber, "Autumn Song" by
was served as a feature of the Ky., for the prayer calendar Sarah
Caldwell;
"A
Alfred United Methodist birthday card. She is a dea- Thanksgiving Prayer" and
Women's meeting held coness. Helen Wolf will quotes from Gamer Griffin
.recently at the church. Mary · have the December card.
by Thelma Henderson ,
Jo Barringer. president, had
Reported ill or having "Who to Thank" by Mary Jo
prayer before the meal.
accidents were Warren Barringer, and "Happy
It was reported that 98 VanMeter, Janelle Sargent, . Thanksgiving," "The Road
friendship contacts had been and Dora Mae Calaway. of Life" and Thanksgiving
made by the group . Janice Program reaoings were tidbits by Osie Mae Follrod.

Next meeting will be Dec.
9 with a potluck dinner.
Secret sister exchange of
gifts will take place and there
will be drawings for new
secret sisters, programs and
refreshments for next year.
The program closed with
the president reading a
prayer "Thank You God for
Everything ,"
·

Community Calendar
. Public meetings
Monday, l'io .. 24
RACINE - Southern
Local School Board, regular
meeting, 8 p.m., high school
media room.
·
'fuesday, Nov. 25
POMEROY Local
Emergency. · . ·Planning
Committee, 11:30 a.m.,
Senior Center. FY-09 exercise to be discussed. Lunch
available.

Church events
Thursday, Nov. 20
POMEROY - Laurel
Cliff
Free
Methodist
Church, revival services, 7

p.m. through Nov.· 23. honor at her home on
Leland "Bud'' Allman, Saturday, Nov. 29.2 to 4 p.m.
speaker. Special singing.
Monday, Nov. 24
'CHESHIRE - Revival at
Old Bethel Free Will
· Baptist Church, Ohio 7 and
Story's Run Road, 7 p.m.
·T hursday, Nov. 20
nightly through , Nov. 28,
CHESTER - Shade River
evangelist Norman Taylor.
LOdge 453, special meeting,
7 p.m. for the purpose of
conferring the Master Mason
Degree on one candidate.
Refreshments after.
Thursday, Nov. 27
POMEROY Meigs
TUPPERS PLAINS - Ina
Cancer
County
American
Weaver will celebrate her
80th birthday on · Nov. 27. Society Advisory Board, regCards may be sent to her at 18 ular meeting, noon, basement
Cheyenne Street. Chillicothe, conference room Pomeroy
Ohio 4560 I. The family is Library, lunch provided, new
hosting an open house in her members welcome.

POMEROY - Meigs
Soil
and
Water
Conservation District Board
of Supervisors, regular
meeting, 11 :30 a.m., district
office, 33101 Hiland Road.

Clubs and
organizations

,,

ANNIE'S MAILBOX ·

It's healthy to broaden your horizons
ability. She walks up ·and
I am a volunteer DSP
down steps like an elderly instructor. The program is
person, asks to be let off at designed specifically for
Dear Annie: I am a fresh- the door to wherever we drivers over 50 to help them
man in college and have been drive, and has me do thihgs understand the effects of
with my boyfriend, a senic;&gt;r for her at home so she can . aging on dri~ing. and . it
in high school, for two years. avoid walking up and down shows how to adjust driving
Before I graduated, we ·were stairs. She can no longer strategies to allow for these
inseparable. Now that I'm statid long enough to cook changes.
But AARP also offers a
two hours away, it's taking a meals of any comple~ity.
says
she
is
not
free
90-minute forum, "We
She
huge toll on me.
·
depressed,
and
a
counselor
Need
to Talk," for families
I started out liking my colwe
saw
for
an
extended
peri·
concerned
about the safety
lege , but now that it's kicked
in that he's not here, I've od of time agreed. The coun- . of their older relatives and ·
begun to hate it. We agreed selor told me nothing will friends. It includes crafting
. that next year when he gradu- make my wife· lose weight candid, effectual discussions
ates we' II attend the same until she is ready, and that it about driving safety, warncollege. We've even selected is counterproductive for me ing signs, strategies for alterthe school we want. Our fam- to mention it J.am frustrated native transportation and
ilies and friends, however, and ·resent what my wife has what to do if .a parent or
thir\k that's a bad idea. They done to herself. I'm sure" friend has dementia or a
say we'll end up resenting she'd feel the same way high-risk driver refuses to
about me if I were to stop driving .. The Hartford
each other down the road.
Financial Services Group,
Please tell me; Annie, is become, say, an alcoholic.
I work hard to remain fit Inc. and the MIT AgeLab
this a bad idea?. We are
'
a
nd
feel cheated that my developed this information
young, but we do love _each
wife
has
let herself go. What to help families initiate proother. And the last thmg · I
ductive and caring conversawant is to have him resent can I do? - In Distress
Dear In Distress: Not tions with older adults about
me. - Missing Him ·
Dear Missing: Whether or much. The counselor could . driving safety. - Mark D.
not you're in school together, be mistaken about depres- ' Berg, Gettysburg, Pa.
Dear Mark Berg: Thank
the problem is the same . · sion, and some people use
weight
as
a
way
to
control
you
for the excellent inferBein~ at college can be eyethose
around
them.
However,
mation.
Readers should be
opemng for one's social tife,
and frankly, we think it's gaining so much in such a aware . that this program is
healthy to widen your opt!ons short period of time could not available in all states. To
at that 'age. Your boyfnend indicate a medical problem. find out, check the AARP
may look around. and decide Suggest your wife get a com- office in your area.
he's not l"l!&amp;dy to commit to plete checkup because she is · . Annie's Mailbox is writwoman. How would you .at risk for developing . dia- ten by Kathy Mitchell and·
(eel if he wanted to date oth!- . betes. Tell her you love her Marcy Sugar, longtime edi·
ers? If you are fair to hiffi and want heF to stay well. tors of the Ann Landers
(and yourself) and allow each Encourage her to jGin you for column. Please e-mail your
other the freedom to see other' a s~ort walk after dinner. questions to anniesmail- •
people, he won't resent you, Help her prepare nutritious box@comcast.net, or write
~though you might not like meals because they're goOd to: Annie's Mailbox; P.O.
for both of you. Make this Box 118190, Chicago, IL ·
the choices he makes.
; Dear Annie: My beauti· about her health, not her size: 60611. To fuul out more
Dear Annie: "No Name about Annie's Mailbox,
ful wife, who is considerably youuger than me , has As It Will Cause Arg•tments" and rend features by other
·allowed herself to gain worried alx)ut her in-laws' Creators Syndicate writers
more than I00 pounds over driving. You recommended · and cartoonists, visit the
the last two years and is the AARP Driver Safety Creators Syndicate Web
page at www.creators.com.
· now in a Stljte of semi-dis- Program (DSP).
BY KATHY MITCHELL
AND MARCY SUGAR

..

.

•

Holzer starts Santa project
GALLIPOLIS - The Holzer Hospice has initiated a special project geared to please what they call "difficult to buy
for people" which they claim works for all ages.
. It is a letter from Santa. For a donation of $5 to Holzer
Hospice, Santa's elves will prepare a special letter to arrive
directly from the North Pole by Dee : 25.
To ensure delivery on time those interested should contact HolZer Hospice at 740-446-5074 or toll free I "800500-4850 by Thursday. Dec . 18.

Proiid to be apart of your life.
Subscribe today • 992-2155

Birthdays

one

Medical Excellence.

740-446-5381

POMEROY
Kara
Doherty and Caleb Ellis of '
Canton announce the birth
of a daughter, Lillian Zen
Ellis. Aug . 31, at Mercy
Hospital in Canton . She
weigh~d 6 pounds. 6 ounce .
Maternal grandparents are
Peter and Kathy Doherty of
Canton and paternal grandparents are Charles and
Laura Ellis of Pomeroy.

.' •

Bazaar planned

River City Players plan 'A Look Back'
. RUTLAND - The River City
Players plan to "light up" the stage
again Friday and Saturday for
their annual Broadway d·inner. theater titled "A Look Back ."
The cast will be performing songs
from all RCP's past shows including, "Oklahoma," "Music Man,"
"Wizard of Oz," "Annie Get Your
Gun," "Bye Bye Birdie," "Fiddler
on the Roof." "Suessical," "Seven
Brides for Seven Brothers" and
songs from the group's past revues.
· Tickets are now on sale from lO
a.m. until noon and 3 to 6 p.m.,
Monday . through Saturday at the
RCP's building in Middleport
located next to Locker 219.
All seats are reserved. Tickets
will be sold until noon Friday.
For more information, call (740)
992-6759 or (740) 416-7860. Also
go to www.rcplayers .net for more
information. The ·dinner theater
production will be held at Meigs
Elementary School.

Thursday, November 20, 2008

Entertainment Briefs
Symphonic
Band concert

PageA3

•

•
HI

•
am1

Coming Soon To
(iallla, Meigs &amp; Mason
Counties

We need your
Inspirational Stories!
Summit Your Stories To
.
Matt Rodgers
mrodgers@mydailytribune.com
or mail to
·
'1
Gallipolis Daily Tribune
·Att: Matt Rodgers
P.O. Box 469
Gallipolis, OH 45631

And l'our Story
~ight Be Included
In This
faith Based
~agazine ·

�"

~The Daily Sentinel

-~ The Daily Sentinel

PagcA4

OPINION

AP Interview: US military can meet Obmna demands
Bv ANNE GEARAN AND
LOLITA C. BALDOR

-

·TODAY IN HISTORY

Must Obama (discipline' Democf6itst)!i,~i'- : · ·-

,_

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

www.mydailysentinel.com

Thursday, Novcmbe1· 20, 2008

for defense secretary - the
"It's my belief that -you McKiernan. i\' lor tor
top civilian leader at the negotiate from a position of Taliban kilders , he said it is
111 Court Sti'Mt • Pomeroy, Ohio
Pentagon.
strength &lt;Uld right now the up to i\ fghan ofticials to
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITERS
(740) 992·2156 • FAX (740) 992-2157
The current defense secre- Taliban is doing pretty dctermin~ "how important
~.mydallysentlnel.com
WASHINGTON - The tary, Robert Gates, is often well." said Mullen . "I think that is tu lry to reconcile those
top U.S. military officer mentioned as an option for that's important as we dis- who havu: on record. seemed
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
sa1d Tuesday the Pentagon Obama. If• Gates stayed it cuss how we negotiate,_and to he fairl y irreconcilable."
is developing plans to get would -provide the continuity with whom we negotiate , · Under the security agreetroops
quicldy out of Iraq and stability Obama has said thut we do so from a posi- mcnt now' before the Iraqi
Dan Goodrich
Parli~me nt. _U.S. troops
and into Afghanistan to bat- he wants in his national tion of strength."
Publisher
Mullen would ·not dis- must be out of the dtie~ by
tle a more confident and ·security operations, but neiiher man has discussed the close how many combat June 2009, and_leave . Iraq
successful
Taliban.
Charlene Hoeflich
brigades-and additional sup- by the end of 2011.
.
Adm. · Mike Mullen, possibility publicly. ·
General Manager-News Editor
Pentagon
ofticials,
includpon
forces
he
will
be
able
to
Giving
the
Iraqis
control
of
chairman of the Joint Chiefs
of
Staff,
told
The ing Mullen, have -consistent- get to Afghanistan by next Baghdad will also be doable ,
Associated Press in·an inter- _ly rejected timelines for spring , when the military but chall~ nging. he said. _
has
view that the military can pulling troops out .of Iraq, expects to face another · Whil e violence
· Congress shcdl make no law respecting an
plunged in the capital city.
the
·changes saying that any withdrawal- offensive by militants.
make
must
be
based
on
security
While
Mulle.n
a,cknowl!here
are still frequent, Ora Barack
President-elect
establishment of religion, or prohibiting the
Obama wants in both wars. conditions in Iraq. At the edged that troops in the ' matic attacks, more often
free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of "I've been listening to the same time, military leaders northern city of Mosul are targeted' at Iraqi citizens.
speech, or of the press; or the right of the peo- campaign, and f - ·under- have said they need 15,000 still in a tough fight, he said He also has to address
Mullen said. "And he to 20,000 more troops in commanders are confident ' logistical challenges _ in
.. pie peaceably to assemble, and to petition the stand,"
has certainly reinforced that Afghanistan - including . that the.y will be able to tum remo ving forces frprn Iraq.
Government for a redress of grievances.
si nee -the election, so from a four more combat brigades. the city over to the Iraqis by Noting the h1,1ge amount of
Obama, who has -called next June .
. _ equipment and infrastrucplanning standpoint, we are
Af~hanistan
an
"urgent
cri,
McKiernan,
speaking
in ture unde r the IJ .S. !lag in
looking
at
tqat
as
well."
·
- The First Amendment to the u.s. Constitutionsis,'
said
in
a
speech
Oci.
22
Washington
on
Tuesday
Iraq. Mullen said planners
Mullen, once a critic 'of
Obama 's plan to pull com- that "it's time to heed the evening, said he does not are looking at what would
bat forces from Iraq in 16 call" from U.S. Gen. David have enough U.S., coalition move and when.
months, said the Pentagon Mckiernan, the commander or Afghan forces in -southern
Mu lle n indicale.d that
in Afghanistan "to provide for some infrastructure. along
. Today is Thursday, Nov. 20, the 325th day of 2008. There has already identified .and of NATO forces
practiced travel routes out Afghanistan, for more U.S . -adequate security for the peo- with residual forces responare 41 days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History: On Nov. 20, 1947, Britain's of Iraq along exit routes troops. Obarna said'he would . pie." He said that is where he sihle for ~· ounterterrorism
operations . and ongoing
future - queen, Princess Elizabeth, married Philip through Turkey and Jordan. send at least two or three would put more troops.
He also endorsed -!!ffons trainin g of Iraqi forces.
The governments in those - additional combat· brigades.
Mount~tten. Duke of Edinburgh, at Westminster Abbey.
rem~in
beyond
· _On th1s date: In 1789, New Jersey became the first state two bordering countries are One combat brigade typical- to reconcile with militants, could
U.S.
allies,
and
Mullen
.said
ly
has
3,500-4,000
sold1ers.
but
said
such
talks
must
be
Obama
's
16-month'timeline.
to ratify the Bill Of Rights.
Obama also has called for led by the Afghans. And he
"In tlw last several months.
_ In 1908, Anglo-American journalist and broadcaster they support the withdrawalmore
training
of
Afghan
drew
a
distinction
between
·
he
said , military officials
·
planning
eftoit.
A-listair Cooke was born in Salford, England.
Mullen,
who
is
halfway
as
well
.as
attempting
to
convince
local
have
looi--ed at "the totality
security
forces
In 1910, revolution broke out in Mexico, led by
through a two-year term, more nonmilitary assistance. Taliban fighters to put down of what we have there and
Francisco I. Madero. .
Mullen said he is working their weapons and suppon what wmrld it take to move it
In 1925, Robert F. Kennedy was born in Brookline, Mass. said he expects to stay on
to
get as many troops into the Afghan - government, out. Gcncmlly the answer is
next
year
as
the
new
adminIn 1929, the radio program "The Rise of the Goldbergs"
istration
takes
office,
as quickly as versus trying to work with two to three years."
Afghanistan
debuted on the NBC Blue Network.
There
are currently
- In 1945, 22 out of 24 indicted Nazi officials went on trial adding, "We all serve at the possible and noted he's not · top Talib_an leaders such as
pleasure
of
the
president.
Taliban
leadMullah
Omar.
151,000
IJ.S.
troop~ in Iraq,
surprised
that
(one in absentia) before an international war crimes triI'
11
serve
as
long
as
he
said
this
week
that
they
"The
idea
of
reconciliation
and
32
;000
in
Afghcmistan,
ers
bunal in Nuremberg, Germany.
would not entertain settle- at the local level, of local iricludiug 14 ,500 with the
, In 196.7, the Census Clock at the Commerce Department wants me to."
Obama has said he wants ment talks With the Afghan . fighters, of local influencers , NATO -leu coalition. and
.t1cked past 200,000,000.
. In 1975, after nearly four decades of absolute rule, to assemble a national secu- government _as long as for- potentially is a very, very 17,500 who are fighting
metric
in insurg e11ts and traini.ng
Spain's General Francisco Franco died, two weeks before rity teain quickly. He has eign forces remained in the powerful
not- yet named a candidate · country. ·
Afghanistan,"
said Afghan fnrc ~s.
h1s 83rd birthday.
: In 1992, fire seriously damaged Windsor Castle, the
favorite weekend home of Britain's Queen. Elizabeth ll.
Five years ago: Michael Jackson was booked on suspi~AHL£R.
-=:s
-Cion of child molestation in Santa Barbara, Calif. (Jackson
was later acquitted at trial.) Record producer Phil Spector
was charged with -murder in the shooting death of an
actress, Lana Clarkson, at his home in Alhambra, Calif., in
February 2003. (Spector is being retried after his first trial
ended in a deadlocked jury.)
One year ago: A judge iii St. George, Utah, sentenced
polygamous-sect leader Warren Jeffs to five years to life in
prison for his role in the arranged marriage of an .underage
girl to her 'older cousin. Scientists in Japan and.the U.S.
reported creating the equivalent of embryonic stem cells
from ordinary skin cells. Ian Smith, the last white prime
minister of Rhodesia (now Zimbabwe), died near Cape
Town, South Africa, at age 88. ·
_.
·
·
Today's Birthdays: Sen. Robert Byrd, D-W.Va., is 91.
Actress-comedian Kaye Ballard is .83. Actress Estelle
.Parsons is 81. TV personality Richard Dawson is 76.
Comedian DiCk Smothers is 70. Singer Norman
Greenbaum is 66. Vice President-elect Joe Biden is 66.
Broadcast journalist Judy Woodruff is 62. Actor Samuel E..
Wright is 62. Singer Joe Walsh is 61. Actress Bo Derek i~
52. Reggae musician Jim Brown (UB40) is 51. Actress
Sean Young is 49. Pianist Jim Brickman is 47. Actress
Ming-Na is 45. Rapper Mike D (The Beastie Boys) is 43.
One of the Republican
only half-joking when he 71 percent think they 'rc
Rapper Sen Dog (Cypress Hill)' is 43. Actress Sabrina
right's
most
·
successful
says the Gang of 500 final- too low.
Lloyd is 38. Actress Marisa Ryan is 34. Country singe[
inventions
has
been
liberal
ly found something they
~ R4 percl'!nt favor s'tricter
'Dierks Bentley is 33. Actor Joshua Gomez is 33. ACountry
media
bias.
Even
as
the
cared
about:
their
own
pollution . limits and tax
'singer Josh Turner is 31. Actor Cody Linley is 19.
shrinking 40 l(k)s.
credits for ultelilative-ener· Thought for Today: "People, when they first come to "mainstream" press has
So should Obama heed gy development.
America, whether as travelers or settlers, become aware of trended rightward, the liberal
bias
trope
has
had
two
big
Gene
them
now? Not if he wants
• Expandi11g public works
.a new and agreeable feeling: that the whole country is their
Lyons
· to be a successful president. projects, pmbably the single
· ~yster." ~ Alistair Cooke, British-born American journal- advantages in keeping the
party
faithful,
well,
faithful.
Ar~uing over meaningless
most useful thing Obama
.ist and broadcaster (1908-2004).
phrases like "center-right" could do to stimulate the
First, it allowed devotees to
reject any and all informaversus "center-left" would economy, is favored by 82
_
tion at odds with G.OP Iraq as the world's biggest be a foolish. Because while perc~nt.
LETTERS TO THE
i\cc&lt;lruing
to
an
ABC
•
dogma. Second, it preserved Boy Scout jamboree until - much of the electorate may
EDITOR
the sense of victimization chaos in Baghdad became be.· uneasy about · what News/Washington Post poll
last
June,
essential
to the right-wing impossible 10 ignore.
they've been taught liberals conducteu
_ Letters to the editor are welcome. They should be less
Americans
favored
"provid, So was -it shocking after thmk about symbohc socoal
than 300 words. All letters are subject to editing, must be worldview.
In
reality,
the
Washington
Barack Obama's election 10 _ 1ssu~~ hke abonro~, guns ing healrh ,·are coverage for
signed, and include address and telephone number. No
political
media
has
been
find
pundits on television and_ .~ay marrtage, strong all Americans, even if it
.uruigned letters will be publi.1hed. Letters should be itr
agree
w1th means raisong· taxes" by
functionally
pro.
warning
America maJOrlltes
good taste, addressing issues, nor personalities. Letters of Republican . for years. The remains athatconservative
Democratic approaches on more than 2 to I . A
thanks to organizations and individuals will not be acceptQui1iniriac University surso-called
"Gang_
of
500"
country,
and
that
he
must
more concrete matters.
ed for publication.
long ago abandoned jour- "discipline" the "ardent
Never
mmd
that ve) foun~l that 61 percent
nalistic ethics for those of activists" who elected him Democrats have won the agreeing thJt it 's "the gov-ihe entertainment industry.. by engaging "interests that popular vo!e in fou~ out of ernment'~ responsibility to
They're celebrities, an!l as usually
ally
with the last f1ve pres1dent1al make sure Ihat evt;ryone . in
such, would-be insiders and _Republicans?" That was the electrons; . A
recent the United States has ade(USPS
213·980)
- 4uatc 'health care." Just 35
from-runners.
Another
way
estimable
Ron
Brownstein's
CNN/Opm10n
Resear~h
Reader Services Ohio Valley Publishing
of putting it would ·be that advice on MSNBC.
Corp. showe&lt;.~ that fully "59 renxlll disagreed.
Co.
On. loreign policy and
no matter who you vote for,
:Newsweek editor Jon percent of those questwned
Correction Polley
Published every ahemoon, Monday
you get the same talking Meacham cautioned that, think that Democratic con- natio1wl ~ ecurity issues,
Our main concern in all ·stories is to through Friday, 111 Court Street,
·
heads on television. ·
despite Obama's w1n, trol of b_oth _the executive !here's similar suprmt fnr
be accurate. If you know of an error Pome~ Ohio. Second-class postage
.
"we're
still a center-right . and legislative branches Democratic ideas.
Liberal
media?
During
In a story, oalllhe newsroom at (7401 paJd at Pomeroy.
the Clinton administration, nation." On CNN the net- w11l be good for the coon• According to survey by
992-2156.
•
Member: The Associated Press and
this cohort flogged the work conservati~es view try." Only 38 percent di~~ Foreign Affairs magazine,
!he Ohio Newspaper A4sooiation.
Postntelter: Send address co..ac·
make-believe "Whitewater" with horror correspondent agree. The rejection of Bu~h vot~rs asked to rank strateOur main number Ia
lions to The Daily Sen1ir'fll, 111 Court
scandal for years. Th~y John King ailowed that "the and Bushism could hardly gies for making the nation (740) 992·2t56.
Street, Pomeroy. Ohio 45769.
went hyster~cal over B1ll electorate voted for Barack be clearer.
safer chose improving
Department extenelone are:
Ho.lland
compiled
Clinton's
sexual
sins
.
.
Obarna,
but
still
perceives
Joshua
intelligence (63 percent)
Subecrlptlon Rates
flogged
false
derogatory
him
to
be
a
liberal."
.
add1110nal
data
m
a
Nov.
10
and
less dependence on forBy Cllrrler or motor route
News
One month·
· •t 0.27
stories about AI Gore during
Having made "inroads in posting at AlterNet.org. On eign energy (55 percent).
One yeer
•tt5.84
Edllor: Ch•rlene Hoef1icl1. Ext 12
the 2000 election (invented-- communities that not too issue after bread-and-bu~er For all the Beltway chatter
Dlolly
50' .
fleporter: Brian Reed, Ext 14
the Internet : ".Love ~tory," long
af.O
voted issue, he f~?und, "a signifi- . about confroming Iran,
Senior
CHizen
ratee
ilePor\ar: Belh Se'll'lnl, Exl. 13
then
bur~ed
their
ow.n
Republican
,
'
King cant maJOrity of the elec- on Iy 17 percellt favored
etc
,),
One month
'10.27
recount shqwing that had all allowed, "the last thing you !orate fully supports the "attacking countries 'that
qne yeer
't03.90
the
Florida votes been want to do if you want to center-left agenda advanced develop weapons of mass
&amp;m&gt;boo'
"""""
rerm
in
--.co
Advertising
drocl to h llally - No sub·
keep them four years from· by the liberal wing of destruction." counted,
he'd have won.
oDIM! Harris, Ext 15 scription by mall permitted in areas
The nation's premier now is to alienate them today's Democratic Party."
In short , if Obama ignore&gt;
o - - : Brenda Davis, Ex116 whef'e home carrier service is IY8il·
newspapers,
specifically
•with
a
liberal
agenda.:·
•
62
percent
in
a
Wall
the
gasbags and leads.
C~rc.: Judy Clark, Ext 10
able.
The New York Times and
Did Obama get largely Street Journal . poll favor Americans will follow.
Mell Subscription
Washington Post, got suck- favorable press coverage repealing Bush's tax cuts
(Arkansas
Democrat. Genllt'lll Man~~ger
ln..- ahlge County
the
campaign?
He
for
·
the
wealthiest
ered
into
running
singleduring
Ga ~e tti' columnist Gene
Cherleno Hoollidl, Ext. 12_
13 Weeks
'32.26
source, front-page propa- did. Largely, · J think, Americans.
Lyons
is a National
'64.20
26 Weeks
ganda
about
Saddarn because he was so clearly . • Americans support an Ma RazitrP A11 ·&lt;1rd winner
52 Weeks
'127.11
E·nuoll:
Hussein's
nonexistent
winning . Undying Clinton increased minimum wage mrd · ciJ-author &lt;~/ "The
nowsO mydallysentinel.corn
Outekle Meigs County
weapons
of
mass
destruchatred also played a part by a 4-to- 1 ratio.
_
Hwiting of the Presidem "
153.55
13 WeekS
tion. The "embedded" d~ring the primaries. My
• According to' a Gallup (Sr. Martin ~- Press. 2000 1.
1107.t0
26Weeks
mainstream
media
treated
fnend
Bob
Somerby
of
the
Poll.
5 percent think cpr- YtJu , can l'~ mail Lro11 ... ur
www.mydallyuulfo!lf.oom
52 WHI&lt;s
'214.21
the subsequent invasion of Daily Howler Web site is porate taxes are too high: eu.C!eP~ e lvons2® yohm , ,('Oil t.)
~----~--------------------~.
•
'·'
-

Thursday, November 20, 200 g

The Da~ly Sentinel

-=

-:

•

•

'

Deaths

-·

Jan Durst

BY MARTIN CRUTSINGER
AP ECONOMICS WRITER

racon11

a period of detlation during
the 1990s and it took a
decade for that coumry to
overcome those problems.
"I am worried that the situation in the United States
could turn into a deflationary peri,od in this country if
trends continue." said Sung
Won Sohn, chief economist
at the Martin Smith School
of Business at California '
State University. "With economic conditio~ s getting
worse and not beuer, the
risk of deflation is there ."
Other .analysts, however,
said they still saw deflation
as a remote threat , i'n large
pan because they believed
the Federal Reserve would
use every means at its dis~
· posal to combat an actuat
period of deflation.
The Fed cut interest rate s
twice in half-point moves in
October, driving the federal
funds rate to I percem , a low
seen only once before in the
last half-century. Economists
expect the Fed will cut rates
again at its last meeting this
year on Dec. 16. ·
The Bush administration
has
also been working to
AP photo
combat
the current financial
In this Oct. 27 file photo, a customer pumps gas for $1.99
crisis,
pushing
out nearly
a gallon at the Dixie Deli gas station in Fairfield. $160 billion to banks
Consumer prices plunged by the largest amount in the the $700 billion bailout from
fund
past 61 yea~s in October as gasoline · pump prices Congress passed on Oct. 3. ·
dropped by a record amount.
Nee!
Kashkari.
the
Treasury official who is
The big retreat in con- tions for economic activity running the rescue effort.
said Wednesday that h·e
sumer prices represented a this year and next.
remarkable turnaround from
Minutes released of · its believed all the government
just a few months ago when Oct.
28-29
meetings efforts were having a signifa r ~tentless surge in energy showed I hat the Fed icant impact.
prices raised concerns that approved a new economic
"We believe the combined
int1ation could get out of forecast projecting that the actions .. have stabilized the
control.
economy, as measured by financial system and preSince that time, the econ- the gross domestic producl, veilled a tinancial collapse ,"
omy has beeri jolted by the will be flat or show growth he said in remarks to -a
most serious financial crisis of just 0.:} _percent for this. Washington business group.
in seven decades. The U.S. year. - GDP will either
Kashkari told the group
troubles have quickly decline by a slight 0.2 per- that Treasury was processing
spread overseas. depressing · cent or expand by 1.1 per- "hundreds and hundreds" of
growth around the world cent next year. Those fore- . applications from banks for
and cutting into demand for casts were both lower than money from the rescue fund
oil and other products, ·a the Fed's forecasts deliv- and that "potentially thoudevelopment that has result- ered to Congress in July.
sands" of banks may apply
ed in sharp declines in the
While falling prices espe- for a ponion of the money. ·
price of crude oil and other cially for such key products
For October, energy prices
commodities.
as gasoline.. can provide a fell by a record 8.6 percent.
"Consumer price inflation break for consumers, ana- led by a 14.2 percent drop in
has suddenly screeched.into lysis said the worry is if gasoline prices,also a record. ·
reverse as the recent abrupt _ price declines become so Since prices at the [' limp
slowdown in world eco- entrenched that consumers have continued to fall this
nomic growth has led to · stop buying things, awaiting month, analysts are looking
sharp declines in energy further price drops. That is for a big decline in ~nergy
costs while very weak one of the problems facing costs in November as well. :
The nationwide average
domestic demand is putting housing as buyers in some
downward pressure on retail markets stay on the · fence, _ for regular gasoline now
prices," said Brian Bethune, expecting home prices to stands at $2.07 , down 33
chief U.S. financial econo- drop further.
cents since the start of the
mist at IHS Global Insighi.
The U.S. has not suffered month, according to the
Separately, the Federal through a prolonged bout of Energy
InformatioR
Reserve
revealed deflation. since the Great Agency, and well below
Wednesday that ii has Depression of the 1930s. record-highs above $4 per
sharply lowered its- projec- But Japan was gripped with gallon this summer.

WASHINGTON
Jan Durst, 70, Middleport, died Wednesday, Nov. 19,
Consumer
prices plunged
2008, m the Ove~brook Cenrer, Middlepon. He was the son
by
the
largest
amount in the
of the late Harry and Carman Durst.
In keepm~ with his wis~es there are no calling hours or past 61 years in October as
funeral semce. Cremahon serv1ces are under the direction gasoline_ pump _prices
dropped by a record
of the Cremeens Funeral Home, Racine .
amount.
The Labor Department
said Wednesday · that consumer prices fell by I percent last month, the biggest
one-month decline on
records that go back to
in
February '1947. The drop
PORTSMOUTH (AP) - Authorities say a southern Ohio was twice as large as the 0.5
teen dted after he took an arrow to the chest while a friend percent decrease that analysts had been expecting and
was showing off a bow he had recently purchased.
Ponsmouth Poli~e Detective · Lynn Brewer says the boy marked the third straight
Wllh the bow was mexpenenced, and when he pulled it back month that prices had either
Tues?ay morning he either hit the quick release or it mal- fallen or been unchanged.
The worry is that the
funcnoned, and the arrow struck 17-year-old Stonn Bratchett.
The high school senior was taken to Southern Ohio recession, whkh many ana. lysts believe will worsen in_
Medical Center in Portsmouth , where he died.
·
Police aren't identifying the other boy, also 17. But they cpming months, will funher
say his uncle was present and warned him not to pull back depress prices, hurting such
industries as housing, autos
the bow with an arrow in it.
and retailing, and contribute
to a downward spiral that
will feed on itself.
A
separate
report
MARIETTA (AP) - A man who shot a southeast Ohio W~dnQsday showed that the
sheriff's deputy in the face during a standoff has been sen- woes in housing, where the
tenced to 38 years in prison.
economic troubles began two
Thiny-three-year-old Jason Berecz apologized to Sgt. 'years ago, have yet to ease.
Scott Parks in a. Marietta courtroom on Tuesday. The Builders slashed construcWashington .. County sheriff's deputy showed no reaction tion of new pomes and apartbut said later that he felt "Closure." ·
ments to a seasonally adjustIn hi-s statement, Berecz also called the April 7 shooting ed annual rate of 791 ,000
the biggest mistake of his life and blamed drug and alcohol uniis in October, the slowest
abuse. A jury last month convicted him of attempted mur- building pace on records that
der and other counts.
.
· go back near! y 50 years.
Common Pleas Judge Ed Lane gave Berecz less than the
With the economy sliding
maximum 50 years he could have received. A defense attor- into a recession and mortney had asked for 20 years.
gage foreclosures continuDeputy Parks has returned to work but says he still has ing to rise to record levels,
vision problems.
there was little prospect of a
rebound any time soon.
Analysts noted that the
National Association of
Page AI
Home Builders reported this
week that builder confimonth he prepared and approved by Ohio voters in dence plunged to a record
began distributing firers November 1993. It llutho- low in November, retlecting
.around asking for donatwns rized the State of Ohio: " ...to the gloom that pervades the
to be sent to the Village of issue bonds, which will be housing sector.
Pomeroy for the Pond retired from general state
The big drop in inflation
Restoration Fund.
revenues, to finance · capital reflected not only a huge
_ Contacts have also been improvements for state and fall in gasoline and other
made with Keith Wood, local parks and recreation ·energy costs, but wide wildlife officer with the areas and to preserve Ohio's spread declines in other
Department of Natural natural areas and habitats ..." areas. Core consumer
Resources, about restockAdditional · legislation prices , which exclude food
ing the pond with fish once authorized the creation of and energy, fell by 0.1 perthe pond has been cjr¢dged the NatureWorks Grant · cent last month, the first
and other work completed ·Pingram. The role of the drop in core prices in more
at the site.
_
Ohio Department of Natural than .a quaner-century.
NatureWorks projects are Resources ensures a balance
There were price declines
funded through the Ohio between wise use and pro- for clothing, new and used
Parks and Natural Resources tection of natural resources cars, and airline fares.
Bond Issue, which was for the benefit of all.
Analysts predicted further
declines in the months
ahead as retailers struggle to
attract consumers who are
Page At
being battered by rising
unemployment and the
said . .that -the .public knows might wonder how .o{ why weak economy.
"
- about the giveaway which the Upper Sandusky commuhas been going on for nine nity continues to remember
years and donations -occur Meigs Counl)r? Frederick
year round. A loc~l compa- says it's true that she's
ny even donated ·d1esel fuel, noticed a difference in donaabout $700 worth, to make tio_ns this year but she added
HUNTINGTON, W.Va. ers about woodworking or
the round trip, a person anytime it looks like there - The fourth annual Holly pottery from master crafters
Frederick said ls not associ- won't be enough to give at Berrr. Festival returns to who will demonstrate both
ated with a church but is a the annual giveaway, "God Huntington
and
the techniques during the
"Christian." A member of always pulls us through and Marshall University campus course of the day.
in grand tradition Saturday
Organizers say shoppers
Frederick's church donates we have-enough."
"This is nothing that will with what organizers say will be treated to an expanded
the use of his truck.
s·o with the national econ- -end anytime soon," Frederick will be a bigger and better variety of.gift ideas presented
omy in such a crisis, some said. "It is amazing."
by a wide variety of tri-state
event than in recent years.
The festival, sponsored by artisans and crafts persons.ln
tile Marshall University addition, for the first time
Library AssoCiates, takes ever, th~ event will include a
place from 9 acm. to 3 p.m. used book and record sale.
in Marshall's Memorial Winters said four boxes of
Student Center. More ven- long-play (LP) record albums
Friday
night ...Partly dors, artists and crafters will will he for sale.
Thursday ... Mostly
cloudy.
Cold
with lows be participating and more · Special guests at this
cloudy with a slig4t chance
.
around
20.
of snow showers. A slight
~eneral and holiday-themed
year's event include Daile
Saturday...Mostly sunny. 1tems will be for sale.
chance of rain showers in
La vender, a reporter and
the afternoon. Highs in the Highs in the mid 30s.
you' re looking . columnist with The HeraldSaturday nlght ...Mostly for"Whether
upper 30s. West winds 5 to
hand-crafted
/·ewelry or Dispatch, and
former
10 mph. Chance of precipi- clear.. Lows around 20. ·
paintings, art, quits, aprons, Herald-Dispatch editorial
Sunday.. .Mostly sunny. kitcben towel sets, scarves, page· editor Jim Casto, both
tation 20 percent.
Thursday night ...Cloudy Highs in the upper 40s.
prints or books, chances are of whom will be signing
Sunday mght ...Partly excellent you'll find what books they have written.
with a 40 percent chance of
in
the you're ' looking for at the . From 9 a.m. to noon,
snow showers. Col!} with cloudy
lows in the mid 20s. evening ...Then becoming Holly Berry Festival,'' said Lavender will sign copies of
Northwest winds 10 to 15 mostly cloudy. A 30 percent B!J,rbara Winters, dean of Dave Trippirr : A Duy
chance of ·rain showers. Marshall Libraries.
m{l_h.
.
Tripper's Quide to the
- J!riday ...Mostly cloudy Lows in the mid 30s.
She says visitors to_ this Appalachian Galaxy of
Monday...Mostly cloudy year's festival also will be Ohio , Kent11cky and West
with a 20 percent chance of
with
a 40 percerit chance of able to pick up a few point- Virginia, while from 10 a.m.
snow showers. Highs in the
rain
showers
. Highs in the
lower 30s. Northwest winds
mid 40s.
IOto 15 mph.

Regional Briefs
Teen killed

archery accident

Man sentenced in deputy's shooting

· Grantrrom

.Giveaway rrom

9

.Holly Berry Festival returns to Marshall

·Local Weather

Local Stocks·
'
Ohio Valley
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Deily etoclc reporte arsthe 4
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Couple awarded $54,000
in lawsuit against AEP
. LOGAN (AP) - A central Ohio couple who don't
·use electric power has been
awarded $54,000 in a lawsuit accusing · American
Electric Power of inappropriately seeking par:t of
their property to build a
power line .
A Hocking County jury
on
Wednesday
said
Melanie and Charles Ogle
are owed the money for the
land. The couple says it is
worth $75,000. AEP tirst
offered $3,600.
The Ogles , who use solar
'· panels to power their log

home , plan to appeal a
judge's ruling last year that
says AEP has the right to
purchase the land .
The couple 's lawyer ,
Ray Michalski, says he
will ask that AEP be
delayed in taking the land
pending the appeal.
The
Columbus-based
company says it needs the
land to string a power line to
a telecommunications tower
so workers can communicate by radio . Spokesman
Jeff Rennie says the company is evaluating the
Wednesday decision .

to noon, Casto will sign his
_local history books, including Marshall University, a ·
photo history of the school.
Books
about
Wesl
Virginia and the Civil War
and related items will be on .
display for sale as well.
Winters said 10 percent of
all sales will be donated to the .
Library Associates endowment fund, which suppons
the ongomg development ol
the Marshall University
Libraries book collections.

Admission is free, an~
free parking is available op
the Marsh'all parking lot
across 5th Avenue from the
student center. Food win be
available for purchase, and
proceeds from the sale of
food will go to Marshall's
Student Nurses Association
and the Libraries.

For more information ,
comact Winters at (304)
696-23/8 (wmtersb@marsha/l.edu) or Dr. Lynne
Welch at (304) 523-8327 . ·

Gyne~ology

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~The Daily Sentinel

-~ The Daily Sentinel

PagcA4

OPINION

AP Interview: US military can meet Obmna demands
Bv ANNE GEARAN AND
LOLITA C. BALDOR

-

·TODAY IN HISTORY

Must Obama (discipline' Democf6itst)!i,~i'- : · ·-

,_

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

www.mydailysentinel.com

Thursday, Novcmbe1· 20, 2008

for defense secretary - the
"It's my belief that -you McKiernan. i\' lor tor
top civilian leader at the negotiate from a position of Taliban kilders , he said it is
111 Court Sti'Mt • Pomeroy, Ohio
Pentagon.
strength &lt;Uld right now the up to i\ fghan ofticials to
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITERS
(740) 992·2156 • FAX (740) 992-2157
The current defense secre- Taliban is doing pretty dctermin~ "how important
~.mydallysentlnel.com
WASHINGTON - The tary, Robert Gates, is often well." said Mullen . "I think that is tu lry to reconcile those
top U.S. military officer mentioned as an option for that's important as we dis- who havu: on record. seemed
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
sa1d Tuesday the Pentagon Obama. If• Gates stayed it cuss how we negotiate,_and to he fairl y irreconcilable."
is developing plans to get would -provide the continuity with whom we negotiate , · Under the security agreetroops
quicldy out of Iraq and stability Obama has said thut we do so from a posi- mcnt now' before the Iraqi
Dan Goodrich
Parli~me nt. _U.S. troops
and into Afghanistan to bat- he wants in his national tion of strength."
Publisher
Mullen would ·not dis- must be out of the dtie~ by
tle a more confident and ·security operations, but neiiher man has discussed the close how many combat June 2009, and_leave . Iraq
successful
Taliban.
Charlene Hoeflich
brigades-and additional sup- by the end of 2011.
.
Adm. · Mike Mullen, possibility publicly. ·
General Manager-News Editor
Pentagon
ofticials,
includpon
forces
he
will
be
able
to
Giving
the
Iraqis
control
of
chairman of the Joint Chiefs
of
Staff,
told
The ing Mullen, have -consistent- get to Afghanistan by next Baghdad will also be doable ,
Associated Press in·an inter- _ly rejected timelines for spring , when the military but chall~ nging. he said. _
has
view that the military can pulling troops out .of Iraq, expects to face another · Whil e violence
· Congress shcdl make no law respecting an
plunged in the capital city.
the
·changes saying that any withdrawal- offensive by militants.
make
must
be
based
on
security
While
Mulle.n
a,cknowl!here
are still frequent, Ora Barack
President-elect
establishment of religion, or prohibiting the
Obama wants in both wars. conditions in Iraq. At the edged that troops in the ' matic attacks, more often
free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of "I've been listening to the same time, military leaders northern city of Mosul are targeted' at Iraqi citizens.
speech, or of the press; or the right of the peo- campaign, and f - ·under- have said they need 15,000 still in a tough fight, he said He also has to address
Mullen said. "And he to 20,000 more troops in commanders are confident ' logistical challenges _ in
.. pie peaceably to assemble, and to petition the stand,"
has certainly reinforced that Afghanistan - including . that the.y will be able to tum remo ving forces frprn Iraq.
Government for a redress of grievances.
si nee -the election, so from a four more combat brigades. the city over to the Iraqis by Noting the h1,1ge amount of
Obama, who has -called next June .
. _ equipment and infrastrucplanning standpoint, we are
Af~hanistan
an
"urgent
cri,
McKiernan,
speaking
in ture unde r the IJ .S. !lag in
looking
at
tqat
as
well."
·
- The First Amendment to the u.s. Constitutionsis,'
said
in
a
speech
Oci.
22
Washington
on
Tuesday
Iraq. Mullen said planners
Mullen, once a critic 'of
Obama 's plan to pull com- that "it's time to heed the evening, said he does not are looking at what would
bat forces from Iraq in 16 call" from U.S. Gen. David have enough U.S., coalition move and when.
months, said the Pentagon Mckiernan, the commander or Afghan forces in -southern
Mu lle n indicale.d that
in Afghanistan "to provide for some infrastructure. along
. Today is Thursday, Nov. 20, the 325th day of 2008. There has already identified .and of NATO forces
practiced travel routes out Afghanistan, for more U.S . -adequate security for the peo- with residual forces responare 41 days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History: On Nov. 20, 1947, Britain's of Iraq along exit routes troops. Obarna said'he would . pie." He said that is where he sihle for ~· ounterterrorism
operations . and ongoing
future - queen, Princess Elizabeth, married Philip through Turkey and Jordan. send at least two or three would put more troops.
He also endorsed -!!ffons trainin g of Iraqi forces.
The governments in those - additional combat· brigades.
Mount~tten. Duke of Edinburgh, at Westminster Abbey.
rem~in
beyond
· _On th1s date: In 1789, New Jersey became the first state two bordering countries are One combat brigade typical- to reconcile with militants, could
U.S.
allies,
and
Mullen
.said
ly
has
3,500-4,000
sold1ers.
but
said
such
talks
must
be
Obama
's
16-month'timeline.
to ratify the Bill Of Rights.
Obama also has called for led by the Afghans. And he
"In tlw last several months.
_ In 1908, Anglo-American journalist and broadcaster they support the withdrawalmore
training
of
Afghan
drew
a
distinction
between
·
he
said , military officials
·
planning
eftoit.
A-listair Cooke was born in Salford, England.
Mullen,
who
is
halfway
as
well
.as
attempting
to
convince
local
have
looi--ed at "the totality
security
forces
In 1910, revolution broke out in Mexico, led by
through a two-year term, more nonmilitary assistance. Taliban fighters to put down of what we have there and
Francisco I. Madero. .
Mullen said he is working their weapons and suppon what wmrld it take to move it
In 1925, Robert F. Kennedy was born in Brookline, Mass. said he expects to stay on
to
get as many troops into the Afghan - government, out. Gcncmlly the answer is
next
year
as
the
new
adminIn 1929, the radio program "The Rise of the Goldbergs"
istration
takes
office,
as quickly as versus trying to work with two to three years."
Afghanistan
debuted on the NBC Blue Network.
There
are currently
- In 1945, 22 out of 24 indicted Nazi officials went on trial adding, "We all serve at the possible and noted he's not · top Talib_an leaders such as
pleasure
of
the
president.
Taliban
leadMullah
Omar.
151,000
IJ.S.
troop~ in Iraq,
surprised
that
(one in absentia) before an international war crimes triI'
11
serve
as
long
as
he
said
this
week
that
they
"The
idea
of
reconciliation
and
32
;000
in
Afghcmistan,
ers
bunal in Nuremberg, Germany.
would not entertain settle- at the local level, of local iricludiug 14 ,500 with the
, In 196.7, the Census Clock at the Commerce Department wants me to."
Obama has said he wants ment talks With the Afghan . fighters, of local influencers , NATO -leu coalition. and
.t1cked past 200,000,000.
. In 1975, after nearly four decades of absolute rule, to assemble a national secu- government _as long as for- potentially is a very, very 17,500 who are fighting
metric
in insurg e11ts and traini.ng
Spain's General Francisco Franco died, two weeks before rity teain quickly. He has eign forces remained in the powerful
not- yet named a candidate · country. ·
Afghanistan,"
said Afghan fnrc ~s.
h1s 83rd birthday.
: In 1992, fire seriously damaged Windsor Castle, the
favorite weekend home of Britain's Queen. Elizabeth ll.
Five years ago: Michael Jackson was booked on suspi~AHL£R.
-=:s
-Cion of child molestation in Santa Barbara, Calif. (Jackson
was later acquitted at trial.) Record producer Phil Spector
was charged with -murder in the shooting death of an
actress, Lana Clarkson, at his home in Alhambra, Calif., in
February 2003. (Spector is being retried after his first trial
ended in a deadlocked jury.)
One year ago: A judge iii St. George, Utah, sentenced
polygamous-sect leader Warren Jeffs to five years to life in
prison for his role in the arranged marriage of an .underage
girl to her 'older cousin. Scientists in Japan and.the U.S.
reported creating the equivalent of embryonic stem cells
from ordinary skin cells. Ian Smith, the last white prime
minister of Rhodesia (now Zimbabwe), died near Cape
Town, South Africa, at age 88. ·
_.
·
·
Today's Birthdays: Sen. Robert Byrd, D-W.Va., is 91.
Actress-comedian Kaye Ballard is .83. Actress Estelle
.Parsons is 81. TV personality Richard Dawson is 76.
Comedian DiCk Smothers is 70. Singer Norman
Greenbaum is 66. Vice President-elect Joe Biden is 66.
Broadcast journalist Judy Woodruff is 62. Actor Samuel E..
Wright is 62. Singer Joe Walsh is 61. Actress Bo Derek i~
52. Reggae musician Jim Brown (UB40) is 51. Actress
Sean Young is 49. Pianist Jim Brickman is 47. Actress
Ming-Na is 45. Rapper Mike D (The Beastie Boys) is 43.
One of the Republican
only half-joking when he 71 percent think they 'rc
Rapper Sen Dog (Cypress Hill)' is 43. Actress Sabrina
right's
most
·
successful
says the Gang of 500 final- too low.
Lloyd is 38. Actress Marisa Ryan is 34. Country singe[
inventions
has
been
liberal
ly found something they
~ R4 percl'!nt favor s'tricter
'Dierks Bentley is 33. Actor Joshua Gomez is 33. ACountry
media
bias.
Even
as
the
cared
about:
their
own
pollution . limits and tax
'singer Josh Turner is 31. Actor Cody Linley is 19.
shrinking 40 l(k)s.
credits for ultelilative-ener· Thought for Today: "People, when they first come to "mainstream" press has
So should Obama heed gy development.
America, whether as travelers or settlers, become aware of trended rightward, the liberal
bias
trope
has
had
two
big
Gene
them
now? Not if he wants
• Expandi11g public works
.a new and agreeable feeling: that the whole country is their
Lyons
· to be a successful president. projects, pmbably the single
· ~yster." ~ Alistair Cooke, British-born American journal- advantages in keeping the
party
faithful,
well,
faithful.
Ar~uing over meaningless
most useful thing Obama
.ist and broadcaster (1908-2004).
phrases like "center-right" could do to stimulate the
First, it allowed devotees to
reject any and all informaversus "center-left" would economy, is favored by 82
_
tion at odds with G.OP Iraq as the world's biggest be a foolish. Because while perc~nt.
LETTERS TO THE
i\cc&lt;lruing
to
an
ABC
•
dogma. Second, it preserved Boy Scout jamboree until - much of the electorate may
EDITOR
the sense of victimization chaos in Baghdad became be.· uneasy about · what News/Washington Post poll
last
June,
essential
to the right-wing impossible 10 ignore.
they've been taught liberals conducteu
_ Letters to the editor are welcome. They should be less
Americans
favored
"provid, So was -it shocking after thmk about symbohc socoal
than 300 words. All letters are subject to editing, must be worldview.
In
reality,
the
Washington
Barack Obama's election 10 _ 1ssu~~ hke abonro~, guns ing healrh ,·are coverage for
signed, and include address and telephone number. No
political
media
has
been
find
pundits on television and_ .~ay marrtage, strong all Americans, even if it
.uruigned letters will be publi.1hed. Letters should be itr
agree
w1th means raisong· taxes" by
functionally
pro.
warning
America maJOrlltes
good taste, addressing issues, nor personalities. Letters of Republican . for years. The remains athatconservative
Democratic approaches on more than 2 to I . A
thanks to organizations and individuals will not be acceptQui1iniriac University surso-called
"Gang_
of
500"
country,
and
that
he
must
more concrete matters.
ed for publication.
long ago abandoned jour- "discipline" the "ardent
Never
mmd
that ve) foun~l that 61 percent
nalistic ethics for those of activists" who elected him Democrats have won the agreeing thJt it 's "the gov-ihe entertainment industry.. by engaging "interests that popular vo!e in fou~ out of ernment'~ responsibility to
They're celebrities, an!l as usually
ally
with the last f1ve pres1dent1al make sure Ihat evt;ryone . in
such, would-be insiders and _Republicans?" That was the electrons; . A
recent the United States has ade(USPS
213·980)
- 4uatc 'health care." Just 35
from-runners.
Another
way
estimable
Ron
Brownstein's
CNN/Opm10n
Resear~h
Reader Services Ohio Valley Publishing
of putting it would ·be that advice on MSNBC.
Corp. showe&lt;.~ that fully "59 renxlll disagreed.
Co.
On. loreign policy and
no matter who you vote for,
:Newsweek editor Jon percent of those questwned
Correction Polley
Published every ahemoon, Monday
you get the same talking Meacham cautioned that, think that Democratic con- natio1wl ~ ecurity issues,
Our main concern in all ·stories is to through Friday, 111 Court Street,
·
heads on television. ·
despite Obama's w1n, trol of b_oth _the executive !here's similar suprmt fnr
be accurate. If you know of an error Pome~ Ohio. Second-class postage
.
"we're
still a center-right . and legislative branches Democratic ideas.
Liberal
media?
During
In a story, oalllhe newsroom at (7401 paJd at Pomeroy.
the Clinton administration, nation." On CNN the net- w11l be good for the coon• According to survey by
992-2156.
•
Member: The Associated Press and
this cohort flogged the work conservati~es view try." Only 38 percent di~~ Foreign Affairs magazine,
!he Ohio Newspaper A4sooiation.
Postntelter: Send address co..ac·
make-believe "Whitewater" with horror correspondent agree. The rejection of Bu~h vot~rs asked to rank strateOur main number Ia
lions to The Daily Sen1ir'fll, 111 Court
scandal for years. Th~y John King ailowed that "the and Bushism could hardly gies for making the nation (740) 992·2t56.
Street, Pomeroy. Ohio 45769.
went hyster~cal over B1ll electorate voted for Barack be clearer.
safer chose improving
Department extenelone are:
Ho.lland
compiled
Clinton's
sexual
sins
.
.
Obarna,
but
still
perceives
Joshua
intelligence (63 percent)
Subecrlptlon Rates
flogged
false
derogatory
him
to
be
a
liberal."
.
add1110nal
data
m
a
Nov.
10
and
less dependence on forBy Cllrrler or motor route
News
One month·
· •t 0.27
stories about AI Gore during
Having made "inroads in posting at AlterNet.org. On eign energy (55 percent).
One yeer
•tt5.84
Edllor: Ch•rlene Hoef1icl1. Ext 12
the 2000 election (invented-- communities that not too issue after bread-and-bu~er For all the Beltway chatter
Dlolly
50' .
fleporter: Brian Reed, Ext 14
the Internet : ".Love ~tory," long
af.O
voted issue, he f~?und, "a signifi- . about confroming Iran,
Senior
CHizen
ratee
ilePor\ar: Belh Se'll'lnl, Exl. 13
then
bur~ed
their
ow.n
Republican
,
'
King cant maJOrity of the elec- on Iy 17 percellt favored
etc
,),
One month
'10.27
recount shqwing that had all allowed, "the last thing you !orate fully supports the "attacking countries 'that
qne yeer
't03.90
the
Florida votes been want to do if you want to center-left agenda advanced develop weapons of mass
&amp;m&gt;boo'
"""""
rerm
in
--.co
Advertising
drocl to h llally - No sub·
keep them four years from· by the liberal wing of destruction." counted,
he'd have won.
oDIM! Harris, Ext 15 scription by mall permitted in areas
The nation's premier now is to alienate them today's Democratic Party."
In short , if Obama ignore&gt;
o - - : Brenda Davis, Ex116 whef'e home carrier service is IY8il·
newspapers,
specifically
•with
a
liberal
agenda.:·
•
62
percent
in
a
Wall
the
gasbags and leads.
C~rc.: Judy Clark, Ext 10
able.
The New York Times and
Did Obama get largely Street Journal . poll favor Americans will follow.
Mell Subscription
Washington Post, got suck- favorable press coverage repealing Bush's tax cuts
(Arkansas
Democrat. Genllt'lll Man~~ger
ln..- ahlge County
the
campaign?
He
for
·
the
wealthiest
ered
into
running
singleduring
Ga ~e tti' columnist Gene
Cherleno Hoollidl, Ext. 12_
13 Weeks
'32.26
source, front-page propa- did. Largely, · J think, Americans.
Lyons
is a National
'64.20
26 Weeks
ganda
about
Saddarn because he was so clearly . • Americans support an Ma RazitrP A11 ·&lt;1rd winner
52 Weeks
'127.11
E·nuoll:
Hussein's
nonexistent
winning . Undying Clinton increased minimum wage mrd · ciJ-author &lt;~/ "The
nowsO mydallysentinel.corn
Outekle Meigs County
weapons
of
mass
destruchatred also played a part by a 4-to- 1 ratio.
_
Hwiting of the Presidem "
153.55
13 WeekS
tion. The "embedded" d~ring the primaries. My
• According to' a Gallup (Sr. Martin ~- Press. 2000 1.
1107.t0
26Weeks
mainstream
media
treated
fnend
Bob
Somerby
of
the
Poll.
5 percent think cpr- YtJu , can l'~ mail Lro11 ... ur
www.mydallyuulfo!lf.oom
52 WHI&lt;s
'214.21
the subsequent invasion of Daily Howler Web site is porate taxes are too high: eu.C!eP~ e lvons2® yohm , ,('Oil t.)
~----~--------------------~.
•
'·'
-

Thursday, November 20, 200 g

The Da~ly Sentinel

-=

-:

•

•

'

Deaths

-·

Jan Durst

BY MARTIN CRUTSINGER
AP ECONOMICS WRITER

racon11

a period of detlation during
the 1990s and it took a
decade for that coumry to
overcome those problems.
"I am worried that the situation in the United States
could turn into a deflationary peri,od in this country if
trends continue." said Sung
Won Sohn, chief economist
at the Martin Smith School
of Business at California '
State University. "With economic conditio~ s getting
worse and not beuer, the
risk of deflation is there ."
Other .analysts, however,
said they still saw deflation
as a remote threat , i'n large
pan because they believed
the Federal Reserve would
use every means at its dis~
· posal to combat an actuat
period of deflation.
The Fed cut interest rate s
twice in half-point moves in
October, driving the federal
funds rate to I percem , a low
seen only once before in the
last half-century. Economists
expect the Fed will cut rates
again at its last meeting this
year on Dec. 16. ·
The Bush administration
has
also been working to
AP photo
combat
the current financial
In this Oct. 27 file photo, a customer pumps gas for $1.99
crisis,
pushing
out nearly
a gallon at the Dixie Deli gas station in Fairfield. $160 billion to banks
Consumer prices plunged by the largest amount in the the $700 billion bailout from
fund
past 61 yea~s in October as gasoline · pump prices Congress passed on Oct. 3. ·
dropped by a record amount.
Nee!
Kashkari.
the
Treasury official who is
The big retreat in con- tions for economic activity running the rescue effort.
said Wednesday that h·e
sumer prices represented a this year and next.
remarkable turnaround from
Minutes released of · its believed all the government
just a few months ago when Oct.
28-29
meetings efforts were having a signifa r ~tentless surge in energy showed I hat the Fed icant impact.
prices raised concerns that approved a new economic
"We believe the combined
int1ation could get out of forecast projecting that the actions .. have stabilized the
control.
economy, as measured by financial system and preSince that time, the econ- the gross domestic producl, veilled a tinancial collapse ,"
omy has beeri jolted by the will be flat or show growth he said in remarks to -a
most serious financial crisis of just 0.:} _percent for this. Washington business group.
in seven decades. The U.S. year. - GDP will either
Kashkari told the group
troubles have quickly decline by a slight 0.2 per- that Treasury was processing
spread overseas. depressing · cent or expand by 1.1 per- "hundreds and hundreds" of
growth around the world cent next year. Those fore- . applications from banks for
and cutting into demand for casts were both lower than money from the rescue fund
oil and other products, ·a the Fed's forecasts deliv- and that "potentially thoudevelopment that has result- ered to Congress in July.
sands" of banks may apply
ed in sharp declines in the
While falling prices espe- for a ponion of the money. ·
price of crude oil and other cially for such key products
For October, energy prices
commodities.
as gasoline.. can provide a fell by a record 8.6 percent.
"Consumer price inflation break for consumers, ana- led by a 14.2 percent drop in
has suddenly screeched.into lysis said the worry is if gasoline prices,also a record. ·
reverse as the recent abrupt _ price declines become so Since prices at the [' limp
slowdown in world eco- entrenched that consumers have continued to fall this
nomic growth has led to · stop buying things, awaiting month, analysts are looking
sharp declines in energy further price drops. That is for a big decline in ~nergy
costs while very weak one of the problems facing costs in November as well. :
The nationwide average
domestic demand is putting housing as buyers in some
downward pressure on retail markets stay on the · fence, _ for regular gasoline now
prices," said Brian Bethune, expecting home prices to stands at $2.07 , down 33
chief U.S. financial econo- drop further.
cents since the start of the
mist at IHS Global Insighi.
The U.S. has not suffered month, according to the
Separately, the Federal through a prolonged bout of Energy
InformatioR
Reserve
revealed deflation. since the Great Agency, and well below
Wednesday that ii has Depression of the 1930s. record-highs above $4 per
sharply lowered its- projec- But Japan was gripped with gallon this summer.

WASHINGTON
Jan Durst, 70, Middleport, died Wednesday, Nov. 19,
Consumer
prices plunged
2008, m the Ove~brook Cenrer, Middlepon. He was the son
by
the
largest
amount in the
of the late Harry and Carman Durst.
In keepm~ with his wis~es there are no calling hours or past 61 years in October as
funeral semce. Cremahon serv1ces are under the direction gasoline_ pump _prices
dropped by a record
of the Cremeens Funeral Home, Racine .
amount.
The Labor Department
said Wednesday · that consumer prices fell by I percent last month, the biggest
one-month decline on
records that go back to
in
February '1947. The drop
PORTSMOUTH (AP) - Authorities say a southern Ohio was twice as large as the 0.5
teen dted after he took an arrow to the chest while a friend percent decrease that analysts had been expecting and
was showing off a bow he had recently purchased.
Ponsmouth Poli~e Detective · Lynn Brewer says the boy marked the third straight
Wllh the bow was mexpenenced, and when he pulled it back month that prices had either
Tues?ay morning he either hit the quick release or it mal- fallen or been unchanged.
The worry is that the
funcnoned, and the arrow struck 17-year-old Stonn Bratchett.
The high school senior was taken to Southern Ohio recession, whkh many ana. lysts believe will worsen in_
Medical Center in Portsmouth , where he died.
·
Police aren't identifying the other boy, also 17. But they cpming months, will funher
say his uncle was present and warned him not to pull back depress prices, hurting such
industries as housing, autos
the bow with an arrow in it.
and retailing, and contribute
to a downward spiral that
will feed on itself.
A
separate
report
MARIETTA (AP) - A man who shot a southeast Ohio W~dnQsday showed that the
sheriff's deputy in the face during a standoff has been sen- woes in housing, where the
tenced to 38 years in prison.
economic troubles began two
Thiny-three-year-old Jason Berecz apologized to Sgt. 'years ago, have yet to ease.
Scott Parks in a. Marietta courtroom on Tuesday. The Builders slashed construcWashington .. County sheriff's deputy showed no reaction tion of new pomes and apartbut said later that he felt "Closure." ·
ments to a seasonally adjustIn hi-s statement, Berecz also called the April 7 shooting ed annual rate of 791 ,000
the biggest mistake of his life and blamed drug and alcohol uniis in October, the slowest
abuse. A jury last month convicted him of attempted mur- building pace on records that
der and other counts.
.
· go back near! y 50 years.
Common Pleas Judge Ed Lane gave Berecz less than the
With the economy sliding
maximum 50 years he could have received. A defense attor- into a recession and mortney had asked for 20 years.
gage foreclosures continuDeputy Parks has returned to work but says he still has ing to rise to record levels,
vision problems.
there was little prospect of a
rebound any time soon.
Analysts noted that the
National Association of
Page AI
Home Builders reported this
week that builder confimonth he prepared and approved by Ohio voters in dence plunged to a record
began distributing firers November 1993. It llutho- low in November, retlecting
.around asking for donatwns rized the State of Ohio: " ...to the gloom that pervades the
to be sent to the Village of issue bonds, which will be housing sector.
Pomeroy for the Pond retired from general state
The big drop in inflation
Restoration Fund.
revenues, to finance · capital reflected not only a huge
_ Contacts have also been improvements for state and fall in gasoline and other
made with Keith Wood, local parks and recreation ·energy costs, but wide wildlife officer with the areas and to preserve Ohio's spread declines in other
Department of Natural natural areas and habitats ..." areas. Core consumer
Resources, about restockAdditional · legislation prices , which exclude food
ing the pond with fish once authorized the creation of and energy, fell by 0.1 perthe pond has been cjr¢dged the NatureWorks Grant · cent last month, the first
and other work completed ·Pingram. The role of the drop in core prices in more
at the site.
_
Ohio Department of Natural than .a quaner-century.
NatureWorks projects are Resources ensures a balance
There were price declines
funded through the Ohio between wise use and pro- for clothing, new and used
Parks and Natural Resources tection of natural resources cars, and airline fares.
Bond Issue, which was for the benefit of all.
Analysts predicted further
declines in the months
ahead as retailers struggle to
attract consumers who are
Page At
being battered by rising
unemployment and the
said . .that -the .public knows might wonder how .o{ why weak economy.
"
- about the giveaway which the Upper Sandusky commuhas been going on for nine nity continues to remember
years and donations -occur Meigs Counl)r? Frederick
year round. A loc~l compa- says it's true that she's
ny even donated ·d1esel fuel, noticed a difference in donaabout $700 worth, to make tio_ns this year but she added
HUNTINGTON, W.Va. ers about woodworking or
the round trip, a person anytime it looks like there - The fourth annual Holly pottery from master crafters
Frederick said ls not associ- won't be enough to give at Berrr. Festival returns to who will demonstrate both
ated with a church but is a the annual giveaway, "God Huntington
and
the techniques during the
"Christian." A member of always pulls us through and Marshall University campus course of the day.
in grand tradition Saturday
Organizers say shoppers
Frederick's church donates we have-enough."
"This is nothing that will with what organizers say will be treated to an expanded
the use of his truck.
s·o with the national econ- -end anytime soon," Frederick will be a bigger and better variety of.gift ideas presented
omy in such a crisis, some said. "It is amazing."
by a wide variety of tri-state
event than in recent years.
The festival, sponsored by artisans and crafts persons.ln
tile Marshall University addition, for the first time
Library AssoCiates, takes ever, th~ event will include a
place from 9 acm. to 3 p.m. used book and record sale.
in Marshall's Memorial Winters said four boxes of
Student Center. More ven- long-play (LP) record albums
Friday
night ...Partly dors, artists and crafters will will he for sale.
Thursday ... Mostly
cloudy.
Cold
with lows be participating and more · Special guests at this
cloudy with a slig4t chance
.
around
20.
of snow showers. A slight
~eneral and holiday-themed
year's event include Daile
Saturday...Mostly sunny. 1tems will be for sale.
chance of rain showers in
La vender, a reporter and
the afternoon. Highs in the Highs in the mid 30s.
you' re looking . columnist with The HeraldSaturday nlght ...Mostly for"Whether
upper 30s. West winds 5 to
hand-crafted
/·ewelry or Dispatch, and
former
10 mph. Chance of precipi- clear.. Lows around 20. ·
paintings, art, quits, aprons, Herald-Dispatch editorial
Sunday.. .Mostly sunny. kitcben towel sets, scarves, page· editor Jim Casto, both
tation 20 percent.
Thursday night ...Cloudy Highs in the upper 40s.
prints or books, chances are of whom will be signing
Sunday mght ...Partly excellent you'll find what books they have written.
with a 40 percent chance of
in
the you're ' looking for at the . From 9 a.m. to noon,
snow showers. Col!} with cloudy
lows in the mid 20s. evening ...Then becoming Holly Berry Festival,'' said Lavender will sign copies of
Northwest winds 10 to 15 mostly cloudy. A 30 percent B!J,rbara Winters, dean of Dave Trippirr : A Duy
chance of ·rain showers. Marshall Libraries.
m{l_h.
.
Tripper's Quide to the
- J!riday ...Mostly cloudy Lows in the mid 30s.
She says visitors to_ this Appalachian Galaxy of
Monday...Mostly cloudy year's festival also will be Ohio , Kent11cky and West
with a 20 percent chance of
with
a 40 percerit chance of able to pick up a few point- Virginia, while from 10 a.m.
snow showers. Highs in the
rain
showers
. Highs in the
lower 30s. Northwest winds
mid 40s.
IOto 15 mph.

Regional Briefs
Teen killed

archery accident

Man sentenced in deputy's shooting

· Grantrrom

.Giveaway rrom

9

.Holly Berry Festival returns to Marshall

·Local Weather

Local Stocks·
'
Ohio Valley
Bane Corp. (NAsAEP (NYSE) - 29.37
DAQ) -19
Akzo (NASDAQ] - 30.45
BBT (NYSE) - 23.57
Aehlond Inc. (NYSE) - t4.32
Peoplee (NASDAQ) - t4.52
- Big Lola (NYSE) - t3.81
Pepalco (NYSE) - 52.10
Bob Evana (NASDAQ) - •14.6t
Premier (NASDAQ) - 8.68
llolgWemer (NYSE) --' t6.tt
Century AluiJIInum (NASDAQ)· , RockWell (NYSE) - 25.t8 ·
Rocky Boola (NASDAQ) - 3.18
- 6.t2
Royal Dutch Shell - 47.09
Chlmplon (NASDAQ) - 2.60
S..Ors Holding (NASDAQ) c;:honnlng Shopo (NASDAQ) 28.50
.63
Wai-Marl (NYSEI - 51
City Holding (NASDAQ) - 34.97
Wendy'a (NYSE) - 3.26
Cotllno (NYSE) - 29.32
WeeBinco (NY$E) - 2o.&amp;3
DuPont (NYSE) - 24.26
Worthington (NYSE)- tt.23
US Bank (NYSE) - 23.62
Deily etoclc reporte arsthe 4
Gannett (NYSE) - &amp;.8t
Glnerlll Electric (NVSE) - t4.45 p.m. ET cto1lng quotH of trsnaactlona for Nov. t9, 2008, proHarley-Davidson (NYSE) vided by Edw,onl Jonee finant3.4t
cial
aclvleor11 lnac Millo In
JP MOrQan (NYSE) - 28.47
Gllllpolll II (740),44t-1441 and
Kroger (NYSE) - 26.60
Lntey Mil'""' In Point Pleoaant
Llmlhicl Brandl (NYSE) - 7.56
Nor10ik Soad...., (NYSE) - 45.33 cot (304) 874-0174. Member SIPC.

Couple awarded $54,000
in lawsuit against AEP
. LOGAN (AP) - A central Ohio couple who don't
·use electric power has been
awarded $54,000 in a lawsuit accusing · American
Electric Power of inappropriately seeking par:t of
their property to build a
power line .
A Hocking County jury
on
Wednesday
said
Melanie and Charles Ogle
are owed the money for the
land. The couple says it is
worth $75,000. AEP tirst
offered $3,600.
The Ogles , who use solar
'· panels to power their log

home , plan to appeal a
judge's ruling last year that
says AEP has the right to
purchase the land .
The couple 's lawyer ,
Ray Michalski, says he
will ask that AEP be
delayed in taking the land
pending the appeal.
The
Columbus-based
company says it needs the
land to string a power line to
a telecommunications tower
so workers can communicate by radio . Spokesman
Jeff Rennie says the company is evaluating the
Wednesday decision .

to noon, Casto will sign his
_local history books, including Marshall University, a ·
photo history of the school.
Books
about
Wesl
Virginia and the Civil War
and related items will be on .
display for sale as well.
Winters said 10 percent of
all sales will be donated to the .
Library Associates endowment fund, which suppons
the ongomg development ol
the Marshall University
Libraries book collections.

Admission is free, an~
free parking is available op
the Marsh'all parking lot
across 5th Avenue from the
student center. Food win be
available for purchase, and
proceeds from the sale of
food will go to Marshall's
Student Nurses Association
and the Libraries.

For more information ,
comact Winters at (304)
696-23/8 (wmtersb@marsha/l.edu) or Dr. Lynne
Welch at (304) 523-8327 . ·

Gyne~ology

Services :

Available In Meigs County
-

• Well-woman exams
i Birth Control fnduding
·•lmplanon (J'irst &amp; OniJ
3-ycar implantable
birth control
• Gardasil Vaccine
•SID detection &amp; treatment
• Minimally-inlasin
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• Pregnancy Care
u-.._._."...:,U.~ • Essure (Searles.~ Permanent
.Jane D. Broc-cker, MD Birth Control Sterilization)
113 Ea&lt;ot Memorial Drive
Pomeroy, OH • 992-9158

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Athens, OH • 594-8819

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HIALTH SWSTlM '
www.riverroseobgyn.cq.m

-.

�•

I

I

I

PageA6

The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, November 20, 2008

•

Teen lives 4 months with
no heart~ leaves hospital ·
Children's Hospital crafted
substitute heart chambers
using a fabric and connected
MIAMI
D'Zhana these to the two pumps.
Although m1iticial hearts ..
.Simmons says she felt like a
"fake person'' for 118 days have been approved for
when she had no heart beat- adults none has been federing .in her chest. .
.ally approved for use in chil"But I know that I really dren. In general, there are
was here," the 14-year-old fewer options for pedmtr~c
said, "and l did live without patients. That's because 11 s
a lleart.H
rarer for them to have these
As she was being released life-threateni ng conditions,
Wednesday from a Miami so companies don 't invest as
hospital. the s hy teen mtich into technology that
seemed in awe of what she's could help them , said Dr.
endured. Since July, she's Marco Ricci. director of
had two heart transplants pediairic cardia~ surgery at
and survived with artificial the University of Miami.
heart pumps - .but no heart
He said this case demon- for four months between -strates that doctors now
the transplants.
have one more option.
Last spring D'Zhana and
" In the past, this situation
her parents learned she had co uld have tieen lethal,"
an enlarged hemt that was too Ricci said.
weak to sufficiently pump
And it nearly was. During
blood. They traveled from the almost four months
their home in Clinton, S.C. to between her two transHoltz Children's Hospital in plants. D'Zhana wasn't able
AP pboto Miami for a heart transplant.
to breathe on her own half
Dan Sivia shows X·rays of his foot and ankle at his home in Waukegan, Ill ., Friday. Sivia had ankle replacement surgery
Bur her new heart didn 't · the time . She also had kidthat left his foot and ankle completely deformed, and the foot unable.to move because of cru~hed ankle bones.
work properly and could ney and liver failure . and
have ruptured so surgeons gastrointestinal bleeding.
removed it two days Iuter.
Taking a short stroll And they did something when she felt up for it ·unusual, . especially for a required the help of four
: Bv LAURAN NEERGAARD after years of suffering, made the ankle and its cush- is evaluating whether to young
patient: They replaced people, a( least one of
AP MEDICAL WAITER
while surgeons perform ioning cartilage wear out.
allow it here.
the heart with a pair of artifi- whom would steer the phobetween 2,000 and 2 ,500
Fusion - eliminating the
So which is better, fusion cial pumping devices that tocopier-s ized machine that
WASHINGTON - What ankle replacements.
pain-causing friction by per- .or replacement?
kept blood flowing through was the external part of the
was left of Dan Sivia's
While Medicare pays for manently connecting ankle
It all depends on age and her body until she could have pumping devices,
ankle simply didn ' t work. ankle replacements, which bones so they won't move activity. Even if these new
When D'Zhana was stable
He limped through his 30s Haddad says can reach - is usual! y an easy opera- ankles last more than a a second transplant.
Dr. Peter Wearden, a car- enough for another operaby sheer force of will, one $50,000 including a three- to tion, with about 5 percent decade as Haddad expects,
diothoracic surgeon at tion , doctors did the second
foot almost completely five-day hospital stay, many who fail to heal. The disad- someone who jogs or mounChildren's Hospital of transplant on Oct. 29.
immobile from repeated other insurers don't. And a vantage is a stiff ankle that tain climbs will wear theirs
"I truly believe it's a mirbroken bones and surgeries. review
in September's limits the. foot's range of out faster than someone who Pittsburgh who works with
the
kind
of
pumps
used
in
.
acle,'.'
said her mother,
· Then a doctor offered his Journal of the American motion and eventually caus- · is sedentary. Also, different
this case, said what the TwoUa Anderson.
.
· jast hope: An ankle replace- Academy of Orthopedic es a domino effect, wearing patients have different risks
D'Zhana
Miami
medical
team
mansaid
now
she's.
ment. ·
·
Surgeons 'cautions that so out smaller joints in the foot of wound infections.
aged to do " is.a big deal."
grateful
for
small
things:
; A what? Sivia knew about' far, there is little research to to cause more pain until
"If you're someone that
"Fm · (more than) 100 She ' ll sec 1M Jive siblings
!lip, knee, even shoulder tell how long newer versions they, too, are fused.
does not mind having addi- days, there was no heart in soon , and ·she can spend
will last - and that few hosteplacements. But ankles?
Hence the quest for artifi- tional surgeries on your
: ·His confusion is under- pitals have much practice in cia] ankles that would allow ankle in the future as a this ~tirl's body? That is pret- time outdoors.
ty amazing," Wearden said.
"I'm glad I can walk with.standable: The first ankle implanting them.
a fully flexible foot and nor- trade-off to get better funcThe . pumps. ventricular out the machine," she said,
But· for Sivia, the surgery mal gait.
replacements of the .J9?0s
tion , then a replacement is a assist devices, are typically her turquoise princess top
y;ere abandoned when they restored an ability to walk
That's not an easy task. better option," Haddad tells
used with a hemt still in place covering most of the scars
couldn't. withstand the · that the 39-year-old thought The ankle joint is SIT! .Jier patients. "If you want to
to help the chambers circulate
pounding of daily life. A he'd forever lost. His leg was than the hip and knee and take care of it once, you blood . With D'Zhana's heart on her chest. After thanking
the surgeons for helping her,
second generation in the crooked from a series of must absorb more force
have to opt for a fusion."
removed, doctors at floltz . D' Zhana began weeping. ·
~90s lasted longer but never
breaks that began in child- than its · ~ister joints,• Dr.
became really popular.
hood and included a crushing Keith Wapner of . the ·
n•Now the n~tion is anklefr~t~.a~28.Ad~CaM . Univ~rSi!,Y of Penns,ylvania
embarking on a new genera- of pain later, he sought out told'
recent
lion of artificial ankles Haddad. Then he spent 17 Academy of Orthopedic
~e~igned to work more like
months on crutches,. with Surgeons meeting .
the joint you're born with, a· external pins holding bones
The Food and Drug
move ~pecialists hope final- . in place , as Haddad rebuilt Administration began clearJy will offer less pain and his leg. The last surgery, the ing so-called third-generamore function to thousands ankle implant, came in July.
ti,on ankle implants in 2005,
who hobble - although it's
"When I got to rake mx versions
that
Wapner
too soon to be sure.
own lawn - I've done il expects to last longer. Each
: "These third-generation three times just because I model is slightly different
prostheses really mimic a can," the Waukegan, -Ill .. but consists of two attached
natural ankle, which is real- man said with a laugh. "I'm parts. Surgeons drill a tunly what makes them differ- riding my bike, I'm doing nel into the lower leg bone
~nt," says ankle specialist
all the things everybody and slide in the stem of the
Dr. SteVen L. Haddad of the else is doing.''
artificial joint. A bottom'
Jllinois Bone and Joint
Haddad says ankle suffer- piece connects to the top of
Institute and an orthopedic ers tend . to move like a the foot. Thin plastic
surgery
professor . at sidewinder .snake, one foot hooked to one side funcNorthwestern University.
gingerly turned out to the tions as cartilage. Bone then
· If the newer implants pan side while the other foot grows into . the implant,
out, it's a market ripe for does the heavy pushing to holding it in place.
growth. More than 200,000 walk. They might have stanIn Europe, doctors also .
people seek care for ankle dard arthritis. But usually. can use a similar but threepain annually, with few · fractures from years earher piece artificial ankle, wh.ere
options for the severely -sometimes broken ankles, the plastic cushion is freedamaged. More than 8,000 but often broken legs that floating. Amid questions
a year get their ankle bones . left th~ entire lower lin,1b out about whether that approach
fused, a last-ditch treatment of alignment - Simply is better or worse, the FDA

BY

The Daily Sentinel

has things to do, Page B2
reinstates Pacman, Page 82
State beats Central Mich., Page 82
seUs out; Page 86

lodl~iguez

RASHA MADKOUR

Thursday, November 20, 2008:

ASSOCIATED PRESS WAITER

Iverson pushes Pistons past Cavs
.'07 loss to Jets
makes Steelers
wary of Bengals
Bv ALAN ROBINSON
ASSOCIATED PRESS·

·
PITTSBURGH - Tile
Bengals 'are comin~ off the
NFL's first tie in SiX years·,
the Steelers are only a few
days removed from the
league's first 11-10 game
since, we!. I, never.
With little time for either
team to recuperate or pre· h
th'
·
pare, mig I some mg cun-·
ous happen again when
North
rivals
AFC
Cincinnati (1-8-1 l and
Pittsburgh
(7-3)
play
Thursday night? Like, perhaps, the Bengals actually'
making a game of it?
The NFL brags anything
can happen on any given
Sunday, but this is only
Thursday, so maybe that's
too much to expect.
.
Maybe not.
"I've learned to expect the
unex,pected," Steelers coach
Mike Tomlin said.
Pittsburgh losing to a
Bengals team that didn't
win until midseason would
be more than surprising,
given the Steelers' fourgame winnin~ streak in the
series and their 38-10 win in
Cincinnati last month .
Still , recent history presents a reason for the
Steelers to be wary. A year
ago this week, they had a 7•
~ record before they playep
r.nother one-win team, the
Jets, yet lost 19-16 in overtime.
·
With the Steelers up by a
single game over Baltimore .
(6:4) in the division,
attempting to coast against a
team that recently beat
Jacksonville and surprised
the Eagles by tying them
13-all Sunday might be

new era

a.

'American

Gallipolis Garden Center

risky. ~

Saturday, November 22nd

Insurers make pitch for health coverage mandate
BY KEVIN

fREKING

ASSOCIATED PRESS WAITER

WASHINGTON - The
health insurance industry
said Wednesday it will support a national health care
overhaul that requires them
to accept .&lt;~II customers,
. regardless of pre-existing
medical conditions - but in
return it wants lawmakers to
mandate that everyone buy
coverage.
Lawmakers have signaled their intent to craft
health care legis lation
early next year, and the
insurance industry's support would make passage
easier. That legislation is
~xpected to closely track
the proposals of.Presidente.lect
Barack Obama.
However, Obama separated himself from hi s
Democr~tic challengers by
opposing an individual
mandate for adults to buy
health insurance .
More lawmakers may
agree to a mandate if it
means the insurance industry will back those efforts.
J'hey' ll remember it was the
industry's opposition _15
years ago that helped scuttle
rormer Pi"esident Clinton's
. health plan.
. The board of directors for
America's Hialth Insurance

Plans agreed to the trade-off because government subsiMonday night. The board dies will make it easier for
endorsed the proposal after millions of people to buy
a series of hearings in vari- coverage from them. But
ous states.
the insurers say experience
"We hope this will be a in the states shows the coYcontribution . to help mem. erage -guarantee often
bers of Congress fashion makes it harder for people
their proposal," said Karen to find coverage. That's
Ignagni, president and chief because insurers raised
exe'c utive officer of the premiums to meet the
trade group. "We're going expe.nse of covering a.ll
to provide all the techmcal . · applicants With chrome
background that we have health conditions.
assembled, all the experi"They ended up making
en~e we've assembled at the
the problem much worse ,"
state level, and we're going Ignagni sai d of the state
to work very hard with efforts. "The data is clear
members of Congress on -about the need to have
both sides of the aisle. We everyone part of · the syswant to make sure ihat tern."
whatever reforms
are
Analysts
say
advanced, no one falls Massachusetts is an examthrough the cracks."
. ple where the coverage
Obama 's health plan guarantee has worked well,
calls for a health insurance but it's also a state that
exchange , a sort of govern- requires . everyone to buy
ment-run shopping center health coverage or suffer a
where customers cou ld go tax penalty.
to select from private plans · Some key Democratic
or a plan administered by lawmakers have already
the federal government. expressed support for an
Any insurer that wants to individual mandate . The
-t hat concept was a centerpiece
participate ' in
exchange must accept all of Sen . · Hillary Rodham ·
c ustomers regardless of Clinton's health care plan.lt
pre-existing health condi- was also part of the bluelions, such as diabetes or print offered last week by
heart disease.
' Sen. Max Baucus, chairman
Insurers will want to par- of th e · Senate Finance
ticipate in the . exchange • Committee .

8am-7pm ·
Light Refreshments will be served.
INCLUDES:
AUCiuistaa ~~

lteas, MtCal's Ceedles,
Gift lte.s.

SipiplriltL
We're PIC •ltiJ

- ..• ., WrRIJ.

Cl!rlsCati 'l'reet

• Scatet PIM '
•FraaetFw
•WIIitePIM

AUBURN HILLS , Mich. playing tough defense
(AP) - The Detroit Pistons against stars, as they did
·are starting to show their against LeBron James and
potential with Allen Iverson, Kobe
Bryant,
they'll
beating two of the NBA's improve their chances, in the
best teams in less than a playoffs.
.
week .
· James was 8-of-21 and
Iverson scored 23 points, missed all four of hi s 3-point
and Rasheed Wallace had 10 attempts, but made enough
of his 21 points during a free throws to finish with 25
fourth -quarter surge that points to fall just five .below
gave Detroit a 96-89 victory his league-leading average.
over
Cleveland
on
"That happens in this
. Wednesday ·night that ended league," he said. "You have
the Cavaliers' eight-game good . games and bad
. winning streak.
games."
Detroit handed ihe Los
Bryant missed 18 of 30
Angeles Lakers their . only' shots last week against the
defeat, beating them by dou- Pistons.
ble digits Friday night on the
The Cavs are a half-game
road.
.
ahead of the Pistons in the
" It's early, but it's excit- Central Division .
·
De troll· 1ost 1ts
· fiirst two
ing," Iverson sa1'd .
Wallace wouldn't go that games
after
acqumng
f
·
1
f
D
ar.
verson rom
enver on
"It:s not like we set out Nov. 3, buthas won four of
·and said, 'Oh, these are the .its last five.
·
NBA's hottest teams.' We're
"It's way too early to
just trying to make ourselves know anything about them,"
better," said Wallace, who · James said. ·
'
It looked as if the Cavs
had a season-high 15
rebounds . "We really don't were going to beat Detroit
care about what the other the first time they saw them
teams are doing at that with Iverson, going on a 21 moment.
6 run to take the lead in the
"We just want to make first quarter and. taking 13point leads in both the sec•
ourselves better for June."
If the Piston s can keep ond and third.

But Wallace gave the
Pistons the lead for good .
midway through the fourth
with a pair of ].pointers in a
36-second span and made
another long jumper to give
them a 95-82 lead with 2 1/2
minutes left.
"Sheed hit those long 3s
and AI did a great job of getting to the hole ," James said.
"They really turned it up in
tJ'le second half, and it
caught us off guard."
His coach agreed.
"They played a great second half and we didn't
respond," Ca vs coach Mike
Brown said. " It was like a
bunch of their players got
together at halftime and said
'Let's bear down and take
this game away from the
Cavaliers,' and that 's just
what they did. They brought
us to a complete standstill.
"That's the first time I've
seen us that discombobulated all year."
Detroit's
Richard
Hamilton scored 15 points,
reserve Rodney Stuckey and
Taysl1aun Prince each added
nine points. Cleveland's Mo
AP phot~
Williams scored 25 points, Cleveland Cavaliers' Anderson Varejao, of Brazil, drives to
Zydrunas llgauskas had 13 · the basket past Detroit Pistons' Amir Johnson, left, in the
points and Delonte West first half of an NBA basketball game Wednesday iri Auburn ·
added I I.
Hills, Mich.

Browns' Lewis not
running on empty
BY TOM WITHERS

carries, a 3.6-yard-per-carry
average, below his 4.3
career mark - that has
BEREA - Cleveland run- some wondering if the 29ning back Jamal Lewis is year-old.has lost a step. He
quickly approaching two hasn't been breaking off
round milestones: 30 years long runs the wny he did . a
of age and to ,000 career year ago, when he scored on
yards~
TD runs of 66 and 31 yards.
He won't hit the big 3-0 His longest scoring run this
until Aug. 26, when.the self- season is four yards.
However, Browns coach
described "gym junkie" will
be preparing for his lOth Romeo Crennel said that's
season as a pro . Barring an not all Lewis' fault .
"We haven't blocked as
injury, Lewis, who once
gained 295 yards in a game, efficiently as we need to, to
will become the NFL's 24th help him," he said. "Last
10,000-yard man sorrietime year we were able to get him
in the next few weeks.
into the second level and he
The Browns wouldn ' t can have a break out run. He
mind if he got there sooner really hasn't had those this
year to get him over that
- like Sunday.
With
running
backs century mark."
Jerome Harri§on (hamstring)
Although
he
hasn ' t
and Jason Wright (neck) . seemed as productive or as
nursing injuries , Lewis quick, Lewis is ahead of last
could be busier than usual season's pace. It was at this
when the Browns (4-6) host exact point a year ago. when
the Houston Texans (3-7). he took oft'.
And that's more than tine
In Week II against
With Lewis , who is still Houston, Lewis busted out
looking for.his first 100-yard for 134 yards on 29 attempts
game this season after rush- in Cleveland's 27-17 win. It
ing for I ,304 yards in 2007 · was the first of four .100Whether on the pra.ctice yard-plus games in his final
field or in the stadium ·when six games when he racked
. ·
.
AP Photo
the game Jig hts are shmmg,
up 697 yards.
·
Lewis
craves
being
Lewis feels he's on the In this Nov. 6 photo, Cleveland Browns running back Jamal Lewis runs against the Denver
Cl eve Ian d' s wor khorse.
verge of breaking loose . Broncos 1'n an NFL football game in Cleveland. Lewis is quickly approaching two round
·
milestones , 30 years of age and 10,000 career yards.
·
"I want every rep (repetilion)," he said. "I want every ag,?f"ihink I'm ru~ning as being very. consistent right changed .
still settling into his new
rep. I want it. I want it. well as 1 need to and as well now. But eventually those
Injuries have been a factor, role·. Quinn's presence
limiting offensive coordina- changes the game plan as
Things happen. I've got to as 1 train in the offseason to breaks will come."
As a whole, Cleveland's tor
Rob
Chudzinski's does the opponent.
be there to answer the bell, · ·run," he said. "You're not
going to get 100 yards every offense hasn't been what it options. Also, the Browns
Beyond · that.
Lewis
and I'll be there."
There hasn't been a time game. You're not going get was last season, when the recently switched quarter- injured a hamstring during
when he wasn't.
those big yards every game. Browns scored 402 points backs,. turning the unit over the preseason. Crennel has
. Lewis .enters this week's Som.etimes it 's all about and produced four · Pro to Brady Quinn. who has
Pleese see Lew1~. B:Z
game with 658 yards on ·185 being consisten). I think I'.m Bowlers. But things pave made just two starts an d ·iS
ASSOCIATED

~RESS

. "lt's!IA' rivalry game and
·it's a division. game, so it
means to a lot to us in a ·tight
· division," left tackle Max
Starks said. "Baltimore is
not too far behind. You look
at last year when we took
(the Jets) for granted, and
you saw what happened in
that game."
The Steelers own the
advantage of playing .at
home for the fourth time in
five games, yet they lost
there to the Giants (21-14)
and Colts (24-20) and went
to the final minute before
beating San Diego 11-10
Sunday on three field goals
by Jeff Reed and a safety.
Despite having a 300yard
passer
(Ben
Roethlisberger) , a 100-yard
rusher (Willie Parker) and a
100-yard receiver (Hines
Ward), the offense kept getting ·pushed back. by penalties - 115 yards in all and never reached the end
zone. Overall, the Steelers
have gone nearly seven
quarters without a touchdown.
·
· · That's -reason enough for
worry, even if the Bengals'
league-worst offense looks
unequipped to do much . COLUMBUS (AP) against a Steelers defense What's brewing today with
that is No . I against the the 2008 Ohio State
rush, pass and overall and is Buckeyes ..'.
allowing the second-fewest
BUCKE:YES BUZZ: A
·
Jot
is being made of freshPleese see Wery, B:Z
man Terrelle Pryor st.arting
at . quarterback
against
(12:08
p.m.
kickMichigan
CoNrACfUS
offSaturday.OhioStadium).
But what if he doesn't?
1-740-446-2342 ext. 33
This is the final ho'me
Fax - 1-740-446-3008
game for seniors. One of the
E-mail - sportsOmydaMyaenttnel.com
most Joyal of seniors has
SPOrt&amp; SteU
been QB Todd Boeckman,
who
waited patiently for his
Eric Randolph, Sports Writer .
ch&lt;.nce
to play and then led
(740) 446·2342. eKt. 33
erandolphCmydallyaentinel.com
the Buckeyes to an outright'
Bryan Watters, Sports Writer Big Ten title and the national championship game a.
(740)446-2342, ext 33
bwalter&amp;C myda!lytrlbune.com
year ago. As Pryor began to
deo,:elop
early this season,
~rry Crum, Sports Writer
coach Jim Tressel tossed
(740)446-2342 , ext 33
ltrurJ?Omydaltyreglster.com "
Boeckman aside a~ has

Could Ohio state QB Boeckman get a token start? •

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Artificial Tbemed Trees
.
• Over 50 Decorated Artificial
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Freshfrom the Greenhouse... · Arriving this weekend"'
Beautiful Poinsettias Fmi!Cat

Bl·I

'

barely put him in since.
So, what about it, coach:
Would you start Boeckman?
''I'm· not sure that that's in
the cards here, but I haven't
really talked about that," he
said this week.
Bbeckman ~s teammates
are sure talking about it.
Here's a sampling of what
they had to say:
LB Marcus Freeman:
"Just talking to Todd and
seeing him, it's got to be
tough. He's a competitor.
Any true competitor wants
to be on that football field. ...
A lot of timrs if you see a
guy ge\ his spot taken , he' ll
be like , .' 1 ain't helpin '
nobody out. It's about me.'
And Todd isn't that guy."
, CB Malcolm Jenkins: "It
would be nice to see Todd go
out· on his senior day and get

a snap. But that's not up to
us. 'It would be a nice gesture."
LB James Laurinaitis: "He
' has hand led the whole situation the whole season with
unbelievable class, and I
think he'll handle this week
the same way. You don't
expect anything Jess from
him. He's a guy (who) truly
loves this university, loves
this t~am and has tried to
take every opportumty to
help Terrelle with anything
he's needed."
TE Rory Nicol: "I do feel
for Todd. Todd's one of my
best friends on the team . A
year ago h~ was an All-B1g
Ten quarterback and he's
struggled and he's had some
adversity .... I think that's
one of the toughest snuations you ca~ be put in as a

.player regardless of your
position. He· never backed
away from it . He never
asked that he not be a captain. He gets up and speaks·
in front of the team every
Thursday."
QUOTE OF THE DAY:
P AJ. Trapasso, on whether
it 's been· hard to watch
Michigan go 3-8th" &gt;eason:
·'] •think any true Buckeye
fan would tell you when
we're not playing Michigan,
we're rooting for them. A lot
of people will turn their
heads about that. but you
want it to mean more than·
just Michigan playing their
last game of the season·. It
makes it that much better of
·a game when there's something on the line, when
there's BCS bids, Big Ten

titles. That's what you really
want at the end of the season.''

PRO PROSPECTS: Fans
tend to forgenhat those guys
playing in Ohio State uni.;
forms are doing it for fun;
for scholarships, for the
coaches and for the universi~
ty, but they're also doing it
with hopes .of making a
.
career of footbalL
Two of the dozen or so
players who could have
gone pro last January but
elected to stay at Ohio State
say it's hard to not think
about playing in the NFL
next season.
"When you sit back and
look at the scheme of things ;
obviously we all look

PlfiSe see Buckeyes, B:Z

I

�•

I

I

I

PageA6

The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, November 20, 2008

•

Teen lives 4 months with
no heart~ leaves hospital ·
Children's Hospital crafted
substitute heart chambers
using a fabric and connected
MIAMI
D'Zhana these to the two pumps.
Although m1iticial hearts ..
.Simmons says she felt like a
"fake person'' for 118 days have been approved for
when she had no heart beat- adults none has been federing .in her chest. .
.ally approved for use in chil"But I know that I really dren. In general, there are
was here," the 14-year-old fewer options for pedmtr~c
said, "and l did live without patients. That's because 11 s
a lleart.H
rarer for them to have these
As she was being released life-threateni ng conditions,
Wednesday from a Miami so companies don 't invest as
hospital. the s hy teen mtich into technology that
seemed in awe of what she's could help them , said Dr.
endured. Since July, she's Marco Ricci. director of
had two heart transplants pediairic cardia~ surgery at
and survived with artificial the University of Miami.
heart pumps - .but no heart
He said this case demon- for four months between -strates that doctors now
the transplants.
have one more option.
Last spring D'Zhana and
" In the past, this situation
her parents learned she had co uld have tieen lethal,"
an enlarged hemt that was too Ricci said.
weak to sufficiently pump
And it nearly was. During
blood. They traveled from the almost four months
their home in Clinton, S.C. to between her two transHoltz Children's Hospital in plants. D'Zhana wasn't able
AP pboto Miami for a heart transplant.
to breathe on her own half
Dan Sivia shows X·rays of his foot and ankle at his home in Waukegan, Ill ., Friday. Sivia had ankle replacement surgery
Bur her new heart didn 't · the time . She also had kidthat left his foot and ankle completely deformed, and the foot unable.to move because of cru~hed ankle bones.
work properly and could ney and liver failure . and
have ruptured so surgeons gastrointestinal bleeding.
removed it two days Iuter.
Taking a short stroll And they did something when she felt up for it ·unusual, . especially for a required the help of four
: Bv LAURAN NEERGAARD after years of suffering, made the ankle and its cush- is evaluating whether to young
patient: They replaced people, a( least one of
AP MEDICAL WAITER
while surgeons perform ioning cartilage wear out.
allow it here.
the heart with a pair of artifi- whom would steer the phobetween 2,000 and 2 ,500
Fusion - eliminating the
So which is better, fusion cial pumping devices that tocopier-s ized machine that
WASHINGTON - What ankle replacements.
pain-causing friction by per- .or replacement?
kept blood flowing through was the external part of the
was left of Dan Sivia's
While Medicare pays for manently connecting ankle
It all depends on age and her body until she could have pumping devices,
ankle simply didn ' t work. ankle replacements, which bones so they won't move activity. Even if these new
When D'Zhana was stable
He limped through his 30s Haddad says can reach - is usual! y an easy opera- ankles last more than a a second transplant.
Dr. Peter Wearden, a car- enough for another operaby sheer force of will, one $50,000 including a three- to tion, with about 5 percent decade as Haddad expects,
diothoracic surgeon at tion , doctors did the second
foot almost completely five-day hospital stay, many who fail to heal. The disad- someone who jogs or mounChildren's Hospital of transplant on Oct. 29.
immobile from repeated other insurers don't. And a vantage is a stiff ankle that tain climbs will wear theirs
"I truly believe it's a mirbroken bones and surgeries. review
in September's limits the. foot's range of out faster than someone who Pittsburgh who works with
the
kind
of
pumps
used
in
.
acle,'.'
said her mother,
· Then a doctor offered his Journal of the American motion and eventually caus- · is sedentary. Also, different
this case, said what the TwoUa Anderson.
.
· jast hope: An ankle replace- Academy of Orthopedic es a domino effect, wearing patients have different risks
D'Zhana
Miami
medical
team
mansaid
now
she's.
ment. ·
·
Surgeons 'cautions that so out smaller joints in the foot of wound infections.
aged to do " is.a big deal."
grateful
for
small
things:
; A what? Sivia knew about' far, there is little research to to cause more pain until
"If you're someone that
"Fm · (more than) 100 She ' ll sec 1M Jive siblings
!lip, knee, even shoulder tell how long newer versions they, too, are fused.
does not mind having addi- days, there was no heart in soon , and ·she can spend
will last - and that few hosteplacements. But ankles?
Hence the quest for artifi- tional surgeries on your
: ·His confusion is under- pitals have much practice in cia] ankles that would allow ankle in the future as a this ~tirl's body? That is pret- time outdoors.
ty amazing," Wearden said.
"I'm glad I can walk with.standable: The first ankle implanting them.
a fully flexible foot and nor- trade-off to get better funcThe . pumps. ventricular out the machine," she said,
But· for Sivia, the surgery mal gait.
replacements of the .J9?0s
tion , then a replacement is a assist devices, are typically her turquoise princess top
y;ere abandoned when they restored an ability to walk
That's not an easy task. better option," Haddad tells
used with a hemt still in place covering most of the scars
couldn't. withstand the · that the 39-year-old thought The ankle joint is SIT! .Jier patients. "If you want to
to help the chambers circulate
pounding of daily life. A he'd forever lost. His leg was than the hip and knee and take care of it once, you blood . With D'Zhana's heart on her chest. After thanking
the surgeons for helping her,
second generation in the crooked from a series of must absorb more force
have to opt for a fusion."
removed, doctors at floltz . D' Zhana began weeping. ·
~90s lasted longer but never
breaks that began in child- than its · ~ister joints,• Dr.
became really popular.
hood and included a crushing Keith Wapner of . the ·
n•Now the n~tion is anklefr~t~.a~28.Ad~CaM . Univ~rSi!,Y of Penns,ylvania
embarking on a new genera- of pain later, he sought out told'
recent
lion of artificial ankles Haddad. Then he spent 17 Academy of Orthopedic
~e~igned to work more like
months on crutches,. with Surgeons meeting .
the joint you're born with, a· external pins holding bones
The Food and Drug
move ~pecialists hope final- . in place , as Haddad rebuilt Administration began clearJy will offer less pain and his leg. The last surgery, the ing so-called third-generamore function to thousands ankle implant, came in July.
ti,on ankle implants in 2005,
who hobble - although it's
"When I got to rake mx versions
that
Wapner
too soon to be sure.
own lawn - I've done il expects to last longer. Each
: "These third-generation three times just because I model is slightly different
prostheses really mimic a can," the Waukegan, -Ill .. but consists of two attached
natural ankle, which is real- man said with a laugh. "I'm parts. Surgeons drill a tunly what makes them differ- riding my bike, I'm doing nel into the lower leg bone
~nt," says ankle specialist
all the things everybody and slide in the stem of the
Dr. SteVen L. Haddad of the else is doing.''
artificial joint. A bottom'
Jllinois Bone and Joint
Haddad says ankle suffer- piece connects to the top of
Institute and an orthopedic ers tend . to move like a the foot. Thin plastic
surgery
professor . at sidewinder .snake, one foot hooked to one side funcNorthwestern University.
gingerly turned out to the tions as cartilage. Bone then
· If the newer implants pan side while the other foot grows into . the implant,
out, it's a market ripe for does the heavy pushing to holding it in place.
growth. More than 200,000 walk. They might have stanIn Europe, doctors also .
people seek care for ankle dard arthritis. But usually. can use a similar but threepain annually, with few · fractures from years earher piece artificial ankle, wh.ere
options for the severely -sometimes broken ankles, the plastic cushion is freedamaged. More than 8,000 but often broken legs that floating. Amid questions
a year get their ankle bones . left th~ entire lower lin,1b out about whether that approach
fused, a last-ditch treatment of alignment - Simply is better or worse, the FDA

BY

The Daily Sentinel

has things to do, Page B2
reinstates Pacman, Page 82
State beats Central Mich., Page 82
seUs out; Page 86

lodl~iguez

RASHA MADKOUR

Thursday, November 20, 2008:

ASSOCIATED PRESS WAITER

Iverson pushes Pistons past Cavs
.'07 loss to Jets
makes Steelers
wary of Bengals
Bv ALAN ROBINSON
ASSOCIATED PRESS·

·
PITTSBURGH - Tile
Bengals 'are comin~ off the
NFL's first tie in SiX years·,
the Steelers are only a few
days removed from the
league's first 11-10 game
since, we!. I, never.
With little time for either
team to recuperate or pre· h
th'
·
pare, mig I some mg cun-·
ous happen again when
North
rivals
AFC
Cincinnati (1-8-1 l and
Pittsburgh
(7-3)
play
Thursday night? Like, perhaps, the Bengals actually'
making a game of it?
The NFL brags anything
can happen on any given
Sunday, but this is only
Thursday, so maybe that's
too much to expect.
.
Maybe not.
"I've learned to expect the
unex,pected," Steelers coach
Mike Tomlin said.
Pittsburgh losing to a
Bengals team that didn't
win until midseason would
be more than surprising,
given the Steelers' fourgame winnin~ streak in the
series and their 38-10 win in
Cincinnati last month .
Still , recent history presents a reason for the
Steelers to be wary. A year
ago this week, they had a 7•
~ record before they playep
r.nother one-win team, the
Jets, yet lost 19-16 in overtime.
·
With the Steelers up by a
single game over Baltimore .
(6:4) in the division,
attempting to coast against a
team that recently beat
Jacksonville and surprised
the Eagles by tying them
13-all Sunday might be

new era

a.

'American

Gallipolis Garden Center

risky. ~

Saturday, November 22nd

Insurers make pitch for health coverage mandate
BY KEVIN

fREKING

ASSOCIATED PRESS WAITER

WASHINGTON - The
health insurance industry
said Wednesday it will support a national health care
overhaul that requires them
to accept .&lt;~II customers,
. regardless of pre-existing
medical conditions - but in
return it wants lawmakers to
mandate that everyone buy
coverage.
Lawmakers have signaled their intent to craft
health care legis lation
early next year, and the
insurance industry's support would make passage
easier. That legislation is
~xpected to closely track
the proposals of.Presidente.lect
Barack Obama.
However, Obama separated himself from hi s
Democr~tic challengers by
opposing an individual
mandate for adults to buy
health insurance .
More lawmakers may
agree to a mandate if it
means the insurance industry will back those efforts.
J'hey' ll remember it was the
industry's opposition _15
years ago that helped scuttle
rormer Pi"esident Clinton's
. health plan.
. The board of directors for
America's Hialth Insurance

Plans agreed to the trade-off because government subsiMonday night. The board dies will make it easier for
endorsed the proposal after millions of people to buy
a series of hearings in vari- coverage from them. But
ous states.
the insurers say experience
"We hope this will be a in the states shows the coYcontribution . to help mem. erage -guarantee often
bers of Congress fashion makes it harder for people
their proposal," said Karen to find coverage. That's
Ignagni, president and chief because insurers raised
exe'c utive officer of the premiums to meet the
trade group. "We're going expe.nse of covering a.ll
to provide all the techmcal . · applicants With chrome
background that we have health conditions.
assembled, all the experi"They ended up making
en~e we've assembled at the
the problem much worse ,"
state level, and we're going Ignagni sai d of the state
to work very hard with efforts. "The data is clear
members of Congress on -about the need to have
both sides of the aisle. We everyone part of · the syswant to make sure ihat tern."
whatever reforms
are
Analysts
say
advanced, no one falls Massachusetts is an examthrough the cracks."
. ple where the coverage
Obama 's health plan guarantee has worked well,
calls for a health insurance but it's also a state that
exchange , a sort of govern- requires . everyone to buy
ment-run shopping center health coverage or suffer a
where customers cou ld go tax penalty.
to select from private plans · Some key Democratic
or a plan administered by lawmakers have already
the federal government. expressed support for an
Any insurer that wants to individual mandate . The
-t hat concept was a centerpiece
participate ' in
exchange must accept all of Sen . · Hillary Rodham ·
c ustomers regardless of Clinton's health care plan.lt
pre-existing health condi- was also part of the bluelions, such as diabetes or print offered last week by
heart disease.
' Sen. Max Baucus, chairman
Insurers will want to par- of th e · Senate Finance
ticipate in the . exchange • Committee .

8am-7pm ·
Light Refreshments will be served.
INCLUDES:
AUCiuistaa ~~

lteas, MtCal's Ceedles,
Gift lte.s.

SipiplriltL
We're PIC •ltiJ

- ..• ., WrRIJ.

Cl!rlsCati 'l'reet

• Scatet PIM '
•FraaetFw
•WIIitePIM

AUBURN HILLS , Mich. playing tough defense
(AP) - The Detroit Pistons against stars, as they did
·are starting to show their against LeBron James and
potential with Allen Iverson, Kobe
Bryant,
they'll
beating two of the NBA's improve their chances, in the
best teams in less than a playoffs.
.
week .
· James was 8-of-21 and
Iverson scored 23 points, missed all four of hi s 3-point
and Rasheed Wallace had 10 attempts, but made enough
of his 21 points during a free throws to finish with 25
fourth -quarter surge that points to fall just five .below
gave Detroit a 96-89 victory his league-leading average.
over
Cleveland
on
"That happens in this
. Wednesday ·night that ended league," he said. "You have
the Cavaliers' eight-game good . games and bad
. winning streak.
games."
Detroit handed ihe Los
Bryant missed 18 of 30
Angeles Lakers their . only' shots last week against the
defeat, beating them by dou- Pistons.
ble digits Friday night on the
The Cavs are a half-game
road.
.
ahead of the Pistons in the
" It's early, but it's excit- Central Division .
·
De troll· 1ost 1ts
· fiirst two
ing," Iverson sa1'd .
Wallace wouldn't go that games
after
acqumng
f
·
1
f
D
ar.
verson rom
enver on
"It:s not like we set out Nov. 3, buthas won four of
·and said, 'Oh, these are the .its last five.
·
NBA's hottest teams.' We're
"It's way too early to
just trying to make ourselves know anything about them,"
better," said Wallace, who · James said. ·
'
It looked as if the Cavs
had a season-high 15
rebounds . "We really don't were going to beat Detroit
care about what the other the first time they saw them
teams are doing at that with Iverson, going on a 21 moment.
6 run to take the lead in the
"We just want to make first quarter and. taking 13point leads in both the sec•
ourselves better for June."
If the Piston s can keep ond and third.

But Wallace gave the
Pistons the lead for good .
midway through the fourth
with a pair of ].pointers in a
36-second span and made
another long jumper to give
them a 95-82 lead with 2 1/2
minutes left.
"Sheed hit those long 3s
and AI did a great job of getting to the hole ," James said.
"They really turned it up in
tJ'le second half, and it
caught us off guard."
His coach agreed.
"They played a great second half and we didn't
respond," Ca vs coach Mike
Brown said. " It was like a
bunch of their players got
together at halftime and said
'Let's bear down and take
this game away from the
Cavaliers,' and that 's just
what they did. They brought
us to a complete standstill.
"That's the first time I've
seen us that discombobulated all year."
Detroit's
Richard
Hamilton scored 15 points,
reserve Rodney Stuckey and
Taysl1aun Prince each added
nine points. Cleveland's Mo
AP phot~
Williams scored 25 points, Cleveland Cavaliers' Anderson Varejao, of Brazil, drives to
Zydrunas llgauskas had 13 · the basket past Detroit Pistons' Amir Johnson, left, in the
points and Delonte West first half of an NBA basketball game Wednesday iri Auburn ·
added I I.
Hills, Mich.

Browns' Lewis not
running on empty
BY TOM WITHERS

carries, a 3.6-yard-per-carry
average, below his 4.3
career mark - that has
BEREA - Cleveland run- some wondering if the 29ning back Jamal Lewis is year-old.has lost a step. He
quickly approaching two hasn't been breaking off
round milestones: 30 years long runs the wny he did . a
of age and to ,000 career year ago, when he scored on
yards~
TD runs of 66 and 31 yards.
He won't hit the big 3-0 His longest scoring run this
until Aug. 26, when.the self- season is four yards.
However, Browns coach
described "gym junkie" will
be preparing for his lOth Romeo Crennel said that's
season as a pro . Barring an not all Lewis' fault .
"We haven't blocked as
injury, Lewis, who once
gained 295 yards in a game, efficiently as we need to, to
will become the NFL's 24th help him," he said. "Last
10,000-yard man sorrietime year we were able to get him
in the next few weeks.
into the second level and he
The Browns wouldn ' t can have a break out run. He
mind if he got there sooner really hasn't had those this
year to get him over that
- like Sunday.
With
running
backs century mark."
Jerome Harri§on (hamstring)
Although
he
hasn ' t
and Jason Wright (neck) . seemed as productive or as
nursing injuries , Lewis quick, Lewis is ahead of last
could be busier than usual season's pace. It was at this
when the Browns (4-6) host exact point a year ago. when
the Houston Texans (3-7). he took oft'.
And that's more than tine
In Week II against
With Lewis , who is still Houston, Lewis busted out
looking for.his first 100-yard for 134 yards on 29 attempts
game this season after rush- in Cleveland's 27-17 win. It
ing for I ,304 yards in 2007 · was the first of four .100Whether on the pra.ctice yard-plus games in his final
field or in the stadium ·when six games when he racked
. ·
.
AP Photo
the game Jig hts are shmmg,
up 697 yards.
·
Lewis
craves
being
Lewis feels he's on the In this Nov. 6 photo, Cleveland Browns running back Jamal Lewis runs against the Denver
Cl eve Ian d' s wor khorse.
verge of breaking loose . Broncos 1'n an NFL football game in Cleveland. Lewis is quickly approaching two round
·
milestones , 30 years of age and 10,000 career yards.
·
"I want every rep (repetilion)," he said. "I want every ag,?f"ihink I'm ru~ning as being very. consistent right changed .
still settling into his new
rep. I want it. I want it. well as 1 need to and as well now. But eventually those
Injuries have been a factor, role·. Quinn's presence
limiting offensive coordina- changes the game plan as
Things happen. I've got to as 1 train in the offseason to breaks will come."
As a whole, Cleveland's tor
Rob
Chudzinski's does the opponent.
be there to answer the bell, · ·run," he said. "You're not
going to get 100 yards every offense hasn't been what it options. Also, the Browns
Beyond · that.
Lewis
and I'll be there."
There hasn't been a time game. You're not going get was last season, when the recently switched quarter- injured a hamstring during
when he wasn't.
those big yards every game. Browns scored 402 points backs,. turning the unit over the preseason. Crennel has
. Lewis .enters this week's Som.etimes it 's all about and produced four · Pro to Brady Quinn. who has
Pleese see Lew1~. B:Z
game with 658 yards on ·185 being consisten). I think I'.m Bowlers. But things pave made just two starts an d ·iS
ASSOCIATED

~RESS

. "lt's!IA' rivalry game and
·it's a division. game, so it
means to a lot to us in a ·tight
· division," left tackle Max
Starks said. "Baltimore is
not too far behind. You look
at last year when we took
(the Jets) for granted, and
you saw what happened in
that game."
The Steelers own the
advantage of playing .at
home for the fourth time in
five games, yet they lost
there to the Giants (21-14)
and Colts (24-20) and went
to the final minute before
beating San Diego 11-10
Sunday on three field goals
by Jeff Reed and a safety.
Despite having a 300yard
passer
(Ben
Roethlisberger) , a 100-yard
rusher (Willie Parker) and a
100-yard receiver (Hines
Ward), the offense kept getting ·pushed back. by penalties - 115 yards in all and never reached the end
zone. Overall, the Steelers
have gone nearly seven
quarters without a touchdown.
·
· · That's -reason enough for
worry, even if the Bengals'
league-worst offense looks
unequipped to do much . COLUMBUS (AP) against a Steelers defense What's brewing today with
that is No . I against the the 2008 Ohio State
rush, pass and overall and is Buckeyes ..'.
allowing the second-fewest
BUCKE:YES BUZZ: A
·
Jot
is being made of freshPleese see Wery, B:Z
man Terrelle Pryor st.arting
at . quarterback
against
(12:08
p.m.
kickMichigan
CoNrACfUS
offSaturday.OhioStadium).
But what if he doesn't?
1-740-446-2342 ext. 33
This is the final ho'me
Fax - 1-740-446-3008
game for seniors. One of the
E-mail - sportsOmydaMyaenttnel.com
most Joyal of seniors has
SPOrt&amp; SteU
been QB Todd Boeckman,
who
waited patiently for his
Eric Randolph, Sports Writer .
ch&lt;.nce
to play and then led
(740) 446·2342. eKt. 33
erandolphCmydallyaentinel.com
the Buckeyes to an outright'
Bryan Watters, Sports Writer Big Ten title and the national championship game a.
(740)446-2342, ext 33
bwalter&amp;C myda!lytrlbune.com
year ago. As Pryor began to
deo,:elop
early this season,
~rry Crum, Sports Writer
coach Jim Tressel tossed
(740)446-2342 , ext 33
ltrurJ?Omydaltyreglster.com "
Boeckman aside a~ has

Could Ohio state QB Boeckman get a token start? •

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Freshfrom the Greenhouse... · Arriving this weekend"'
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Bl·I

'

barely put him in since.
So, what about it, coach:
Would you start Boeckman?
''I'm· not sure that that's in
the cards here, but I haven't
really talked about that," he
said this week.
Bbeckman ~s teammates
are sure talking about it.
Here's a sampling of what
they had to say:
LB Marcus Freeman:
"Just talking to Todd and
seeing him, it's got to be
tough. He's a competitor.
Any true competitor wants
to be on that football field. ...
A lot of timrs if you see a
guy ge\ his spot taken , he' ll
be like , .' 1 ain't helpin '
nobody out. It's about me.'
And Todd isn't that guy."
, CB Malcolm Jenkins: "It
would be nice to see Todd go
out· on his senior day and get

a snap. But that's not up to
us. 'It would be a nice gesture."
LB James Laurinaitis: "He
' has hand led the whole situation the whole season with
unbelievable class, and I
think he'll handle this week
the same way. You don't
expect anything Jess from
him. He's a guy (who) truly
loves this university, loves
this t~am and has tried to
take every opportumty to
help Terrelle with anything
he's needed."
TE Rory Nicol: "I do feel
for Todd. Todd's one of my
best friends on the team . A
year ago h~ was an All-B1g
Ten quarterback and he's
struggled and he's had some
adversity .... I think that's
one of the toughest snuations you ca~ be put in as a

.player regardless of your
position. He· never backed
away from it . He never
asked that he not be a captain. He gets up and speaks·
in front of the team every
Thursday."
QUOTE OF THE DAY:
P AJ. Trapasso, on whether
it 's been· hard to watch
Michigan go 3-8th" &gt;eason:
·'] •think any true Buckeye
fan would tell you when
we're not playing Michigan,
we're rooting for them. A lot
of people will turn their
heads about that. but you
want it to mean more than·
just Michigan playing their
last game of the season·. It
makes it that much better of
·a game when there's something on the line, when
there's BCS bids, Big Ten

titles. That's what you really
want at the end of the season.''

PRO PROSPECTS: Fans
tend to forgenhat those guys
playing in Ohio State uni.;
forms are doing it for fun;
for scholarships, for the
coaches and for the universi~
ty, but they're also doing it
with hopes .of making a
.
career of footbalL
Two of the dozen or so
players who could have
gone pro last January but
elected to stay at Ohio State
say it's hard to not think
about playing in the NFL
next season.
"When you sit back and
look at the scheme of things ;
obviously we all look

PlfiSe see Buckeyes, B:Z

I

�•
.P age 82 • The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, November 20,

www .mydailysentinel.com

2008

Thursday, November 20, 2008

www.mydallysentlnel.com

m;rtbune- Sentinel- l\e filter

Rodriguez has long list of things to do·
BY LARRY LAGE
ASSOCIATED PRESS

. ANN ARBOR, M1ch
coach
Rich
Rodriguez reached mto the
nuddle drawer of his desk and
pulled out 10 large index
-cards filled wtth notes
: · One outlined problems to
fiX, another was changes to
make and one mcluded items
(0 address with the athlettc
:director.
: The 45-year-old Rodnguez
;started
orgamzmg
his
thoughts thts way two
decades ago at tmy Salem
College and conttnued to do
so at Glenv1lle State, Tulane,
Clemson and West V1rgmia
"Thts year, there are more
notes and cards than I'd hke,"
Rodnguez said in a recent
(lllerv JeW
With
The
~ssociated Press. "I've gone
lhrough years with one card.
Now, I've got 10 cards here.
That tells you what kind of
.
year we've had .
"It's been as tough as any
season I've had in coaching "
: Mtchtgan 's year will merct{ully end soon, but not until
playmg Saturday on the road
against ri\al Oh10 State.
The Wolvennes (3-8, 2-5)
have already broken a school
.record for losses, had thetr
~ichtgan

first losmg season smce the Rodnguez dunng a recent
pre-Bo Schembechler era and lunch as they swapped huntwill be relegated to watchmg mg stones.
bowl games for the first tune
"( loved 11 when we h1red
smce 1974
h1m &lt;~nd I love 11 more now
It has been an mtscrable attcr spcndmg time Wllh htm
season for the once-proud and gettmg to know h1m pretprogram. whtch hit rock hot- ty well." Leach said "There
tom last month when 11 lost to h&lt;lve bee11 ,, ton of players
Tuiedo. Against the lOth- who have been through this
ranked Buckeyes. who are progrdm and they all have the
favored to win by a nvalry- 11ght to an optmon .tbout h1m.
high 20 'I/2 pomts. RoJriguez but personally. I'm proud he's
and the Wolvennes &lt;an etther our codch.
salvage some pride or add a · "It's pamful for a lot of peagloomy final chapter.
pie to see M1chigan lose like
"I'm d1sappomted m the th1s. but the wms and losses
season we've had, but I'm not go on hi s tecord and so you
deterred or diScouraged about can multJple the pam he feels.
the direCtion we're headed ," Nobody has taken more of a
Rodngue z satd. "We · had bnmt fm thiS year than coach,
more thmgs to get shored up but thts wasn"t gomg to be an
than I ongmally expected, but easy JOb f01 anybody."
none of them are daunttng
Lloyd
Carr,
who
''I'm still as exc1ted about announced h1s retirement a
the future as I was three year ago, left behmd an expemonths ago."
ncnced detense and an NFLRick Leach, M1Ch1gan's depleted offense.
quarterback from three
Rodnguez has tned to
decades ago. " also fired up mstall h1s renown spread. but
about how he beheves the he didn't have much to work
new-look program will wtth at quarterback. receiver
evolve under Rodriguez
or on the offenstve !me and
Leach started watchmg the unn has outscored only
Rodnguez's
h1gh-tempo Purdue m the Btg Ten.
workouts last sprmg and has
Oh1n State coach Jun
been a regulur VISitor thts fall. Tressel. whose staff vtsited
standmg on the sideline dur- Rodriguez m West V1rgmm a
mg practtces ,md stttmg wllh lew years agn to learn about

hts scheme. has no doubt the
Wolvennes wtll eventually
find a gtoove on offense .
·'Everyone in the country
that's been around coachmg
would agree that Rtch
Rodnguez has been one of
the most creattve and really
one of the founders of the
spread-style attack," Tressel
satd "You know that he's
building one building block
on top of the next "
Mtchtgan "s defense has
been dtsappomtmg, gtvmg up
2R points a game to rdnk lOth
m the conference, and woes
on spectal teams have led to
some of the setbacks that
have stunned a school, program and fan base
Rodriguez has kept h1s
composure for the most part
m pub he, where his every
word ts dtssected, but he has
lost 11 at times pnvately
He ranted and raved at his
players. without lashing out
at mdiVIduals, m pantcular
after losses at Notre Dame
and Penn State.
Rodnguez, though , is not
about to htde from a chal ·
Ienge or cnt1cs.
Instead , he'll JUSt keep
ptckthg away at the to·do hsts
on hiS mdex cards to restore
,Mich1gan to a national power.

NFL reinstates 'Pacman' Jones
BY STEPHEN HAWKINS
ASSOCIATED PRESS

ARLINGTON. Texas
The NFL ts giVIng Adam
"Pacman" Jones ,another
chance.
: Dallas Cowboys owner
~erry Jones said Wednesday
!he suspended cornerback
has been reinstated by
!eague commissioner Roger
Goodell, but he must miss
two more games - this
Sunday and the following
game on Thanksgivmg
He'll be back Dec. 7 at
Pittsburgh.
"He much apprecmtes the
Cowboys and Jerry Jones for
standmg behmd htm and
encouragmg htm. and he's
:grateful to the commtssioner," satd Womck Robinson ,
Adam Jones ' Nashvillebased attorney
Jerry Jones would not
·reveal any condillons the
:commtssioner may have
tmposed and the league
,office satd 11 would not have
any immediate comment.
However, Robinson, said,
"He knows what he has to
:do It's vety clear."

"He's a long way. a long
way from having clear sailmg." Jerry Jones satd
Adam Jones was suspended from the entire 2007 season because of multiple mctdents while With the
Tennessee Titans. Over the
offseason, he was traded to
Dallas and then gtven another chance by Goodell. The
Cowboys gave htm a security team to help keep htm m
hne, but on Oct 7, Jones got
mto an alcohol-related scuffle with one of the bodyguards during a private party
at a Dallas hotel
Jones spent part of hts
ttme away undergomg alcohol rehabihtatton.
"He . has demonstrated
something very important to
all of us," Jerry Jones said
It also wtll be up to
Pacman to police himself.
The Cowboys wtll no longer
be providing bodyguards.
"It all starts wtth htm and
his
decision-m&lt;1king,"
Robmson said "He's comfortable makmg decisions
for himself."
Robmson said the alcohol
therapy was "something he

needed to do "
"The real tssue was more
than allegations of an mcident dt a Dallas hotel."
Robinson smd. "There were
personal issues ·that, unttl
addressed , there was a hkelihood of another mcident
occurnng"
Jerry Jones satd Adam
Jones can have "limited partlctpatmn" thts week, but
would not be part of fullsquad practices or conditionmg. He can return to practtce
Monday.
Goodell suspended Adam
Jones indefimtely on Oct.
14, saying he'd put a limeframe on it after the comerback missed at least four
games. Thts decision means
it wtll be a stx-game suspension. Jones also missed the
entire 2007 season. By the
time he returns, he wtll have
been suspended from 22 of a
posstble 28 games. '
A few hours before the
announcement, teammates
sa1d they would welcome
htm back
,
Tank Johnson, who has the
locker next to Jones and also
has been through an NFL

suspens1on for off-fteld troubles, said he's spoken frequently wtth Adam Jones.
"He's just chompmg at the
b1t to get back and come
back and be successful."
Johnson satd. "He knows
we're all with him and we're
never gomg to tum our back
on him and as soon as he
gets back It Will be business
as usual I can't watt to have
21 next to me in the locker."
Added quarterback Tony
Romo: "When he was here
he worked very hard and he
helped us. He's a good football player and I don't see
why you wouldn't welcome
a guy back that works hard
on the practice field ."
Jones sUI! leads the club
with II passes defensed;
nobody else had more than
live. Hts 27 tackles are second-best among defenstve
backs. He also forced a tumble and recovered one.
Jones was Dallas' main
punter returner, averagmg 5
yards per return on 16
attempts He had a long of
only 18 yatds after Ieadmg
the league m punt returns in
2006.

Ball St. beats Central Michigan, 31-24
MOUNT PLEASANT,
Mtch. (AP) - Nate DaviS
threw four touchdowp passes, and No 14 Ball State
survtved a scare from
Central
Mtchigan
on
Wednesday night in a 31-24
vtctory that gave the
Cardmals a school-record
for wms in a season
The vtctory also clmched
a share of the West DIVIsiOn
ot
the
Mtd-Amencan
Conference for Ball State
( 11-0 , 7-0), wh1ch has never
played m the league tttle
game The Cardmals can
wm the dtVJSJon outnght
w1th a win over Western
M1chtgan on Nov 25.
Da\ 1s ,h1t Bnggs Orsbon
111 the corne1 of the end
ione from II yards nut with

7.29 left to gtve Ball State
a 31-24 lead. Central
Mtchtgan had a chance to
lte tt m the closmg mmutes,
but Dan LeFevour was
mtercepted by Sean Baker
at the Ball State 15 wtth 35
seconds left
Ball State"s
M1Quale
Lewts rushed lor 177 yards
on 28 carnes, hiS mnth I00yard game thts season. In
the Cardinals ' go-ahead
dnvc. Lewt s earned six
t1mes for 63 yards.
Central Mtchtgan (8-3, 61) can st1ll reach the conference champ1onsh1p game 11
Ball State
stumbles,
Western Mich1gan tlefeats
Eastern Mich1gan and a
number of other tiebreakers
come through

LeFevour fmtshed 30-of44 for 345 yards and two
touchdowns ,' but hts only
mterception came on the
Chtppewas' final offensive
play. After a 29-yard pass to
Joe Bockhetm advanced the
ball to the Ball State 36,
Baket tntercepted a pass
mtended for Kito Poblah to
seal the wm
LeFevour also led Central
Michtgan m rushtng wtth
75 yards on 24 carnes.
Anton1o Bmwn caught
e1ght passes for 61 yards
for the Chippewas, and
Poblah caught ftv e passes
for II 0 yards and a touchdown . Hts 38-yard scoring
receptwn m the ftrst mmute
of th e fourth quarter gave
Centr.JI Michtgan a 24-17

Lewis

sional teams.
"When I'm m the game.
tt's 100 percent that 'O K.
we're gomg to see the run'
When another back comes
m the game, it 's 'OK , they
m1ght throw 1t or they
might run ' You"ve got to
look at 11 like that "
The Browns are Il-l in
games when Lewts has 20
or more cames. It's a statistic they proudly d1splay m
thetr weekly med1a .release.
Cleveland ts 3-0 this season
when Lew ts gets hi s 20
touches. But he knows better than anyone that 11 only
takes one rush to make an
average game spectacular
On Monday night in
Buffalo , Hamson foung· a
seam on the left stde and
went 72 yards for a TD the etghth longest scoring
run m Browns htstory
"It was blocked up perfectly," Lewts satd . "The

alley was there. That 's an
oppo1tututy The hole ts
there and when you've got
the opportumty you take 11.
It's not how many nmes
you ca1 ry the ball."
Lewts
may
be
Cleveland's only backfteld
opllon on Sunday. That
could mean more carnes
and perhaps more yards for
a player whose not getting
any younger.
But to Lewis, age ts nothmg more than another
meanmgless stallsttc . He's
not sure how much longer
he can play, but he knows
when he' ll quit
"When I get up and say I
don't f~ e l like doing it ,
that 's when It 's ttme to
move on," he s3id
Lew1s was remmded that
30 IS about when NFL running backs begm tathng off
"I thought 11 was 29
before I came mto the sea-

from Page 81
kept h1m out of at least one
practtce dunng the week so
he 's close to I00 percent by
ktckoff.
"Thmk about last year.
we were putting up how
many yards of 'offense?"
Lewi s satd. "Everythmg
complements Itse lf The
runnmg game is JUst not
the runmng game. The runnmg game complements
the passmg game, the passing game complements the
runmng game. Thmgs happen . Other teams look at
film. They know what
Chud 1s gomg to do. They
know
what
Kellen
Wmslow ts going to do
They scout, they fmd that
weakness. They're profes-

~------------~~

CLASSIFIED

Meigs County, OH

Gallia
County,
OH
Webs1tes
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Monday thru Friday
8:00 a.m. to 5:00 .p.m.

AP Photo

Dally Jn ..Column: 9:00a.m.
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Business Days Prior To

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Sunday Display: 1 :DO
Thursday for Sundays· P••P•"

In this Oct. 25 photo, Michigan head football coach R1ch
Rodnguez looks on from the sidelines dunng an NCAA coll!lge football game aga1nst M1ch1gan State 1n Ann Arbor,
Mlch Rodnguez sa1d h1s debut season at M1ch1gan has
been tougher than any year he's had

Wary
from Page 81
pomts.
Even w1th playmakmg
recet vers
T.J.
Houshmandzadeh and Chad
Johnson. er, O~ho Cmco
around to stretch defenses.
it mtght be too much to ask
mexpenenced quarterback
Ryan Fttzpatnck to get
much gomg.
Subbing for the inJUred
Carson Palmer, Fitzpatrick
was sacked e1ght limes by
Phtladelphta, seven times
last month by Ptttsburgh
and has the fewest passing
yards ( 1,050) of any quarterback who has attempted
more than 200 passes.
Worse still, Cmcmnatt's
offensive lme is an injurynddled mess, wtth left tackle Levi Jones (back) and left
guard Andrew Whllworth
(ankle) out. Rookie tackle
Anthony Colhns 1s expected
to make hts first NFL start
alongside
guard
Nate
Livmgs, a practice squad
play.;r most of the last 2 1/2
years.
Ptttsburgh pass rushers
James Hamson (12 sacks)
and LaMarr Woodley (9
1/2) probably can't wait to
get at Fitzpatrick. short
week or not, given the
team's league high-tying 36
sacks.
, For those scpnng at
home, the Steelers ' smglegame record for sacks ts 10
reached four ttmes, once
agamst Cmcmnatt 's Davtd
Klingler.
"That's thetr game, they
try to make sUre you 're
uncomfortable back there,"
Fttzpatrick sat d. "And wtth
thetr rush, and how hard
they come sometimes. tt 's
uncomfortable "
Roethlisberger
also
expects the Bengals to

lead.
Davi s answered wtth TD
passes to Robmson and
Orsbon.
After Ball State struck
f1rst on Johnson's touchdown catch wllh 1.56 left 111
the f1rst quarter, Central
M1chtgan answered with a
24-yard touchdown pass
from
LeFevour
to
Bockhetm and a 31-yard
fteld by Andrew Agmla on
consecutive possesstons m
the second quarter
A 21-yard field goal by
Ball State's Ian McGarvey
wtth 59 seconds left m the
second quarter tied it at 10.
from Page81
The halft1me deadlock was
the ftrst time all season that
Ball State had not led at toward the future a little bit.
the break.
l would be lymg to say I
never dtd," LB Marcus
Freeman said. "We always
son Now tt's 30? Next year
11 w11l be 31 ,"he satd wtth a thmk about what's going to
laugh. "The numbers are happen next year. Where a111
the numbers I'm 30 years I going to be? Where am I
old. I've played moe sea- gomg to go in the draft? ..
sons I mtssed one season But that's something you
wl!h an mJury, so that's can't control. All you can
etght seasons. I'm fresh. I control ts playmg as hard as
work out hard in the offsea- you can and you let the rest
son. That's what I pride of it play out "
myself on."
Fellow · LB
James
Lewis, thou11h, tsn't tak- Laurinattts said he's certain
ing any satisfaction at he made the nght dectsion
echpsing the 10,000-yard in staying at Ohio State . He
barrier. While others may could never trade the expef111d it notable, LeWIS lSD 't riences he's had, the friends
impressed .
he 's made and relationshtps
"It just means tt's a lot'of he's cultivated.
numbers already under my
He believes he's worked
belt ," he satd. "That's it.
on some things that wtll
Are they gomg to gtve me
something after I get there? make him a better NFL
If they're going to give me player.
"My sophomore year
something, let me know.
maybe
there was one game,
It's some numbers under
like
,
gosh,
I JUSt didn 't feel
the bell. Hopefully we can
gnnd out about 2,000 like I played that well My
junior year, if I could watch
more .''

Buckeyes

.

throw everythmg at htm m
an attempt to force mistakes
like the e1ght mtercept10n_s
he had dunn g a recent
three-game slletch
"We have to be prepared
for
anythuJg."
Roethlt sberger
satd.
"They're going to bnng all
kinds of blitzes . who knows
what."
The problem ts - and
they have many. gtven thetr
record - the Bengals have
only II sacks. the second
fewest m the leaj,lUC.
One extracumcular 1ssue
is whether the Bengals wtll
target Ward for h1s crackback block that broke rookIe linebacker Kellh Rtvers'
jaw and ended hts season.
Ward's block was legal
and he was not penabzed or
fined, but Ben gals coach
Marvin Lewis promises the
NFL compettllon committee wtll address whether to
outlaw such blocks.
"Unfortunately our player
was lllJured and you know
there will be some revi stons, I'm sure, to the rules,
after the season," Lewis
satd ••(t\ an unfortunate
mctdent and it occurred and
it's done ."
Unfortunately or not. the
Ben gals' season senes wtth
the Steelers 1sn 't over yet.
Plltsburgh has won tour m a
row, f1~e of six and 13 of 17
agamst Cincmnat1, yet
Tomhn dtdn ., ~o hghtly on
hts players dm mg the short
work week
Tomlin mad, them pracllcc outdoors. wtth no sidehac heat~rs, m anttcipatton
of a gametime temperature
around 30. a wmd chtll m
the 20s and possible snow
nurnes.
"I guess he 's trymg to
teach us a lesson ," Parker
sat d.
One Tomhn undoubtedly
hopes hts players learned
when they met the Jets last
season.
over the season, maybe
there was one game I'm
like , I JUSt might skip thts
one," he satd. "But I think
this one, I'm conststent
each and every game. And
recognition of plays and
bemg more patient and
stuff. But ultimately I can't
speak for what they (pro
scouts) are gomg to thmk "
SMALL TALK · Tres sel
was asked tf WR/KR Ray
Small might duck hts head
out of the coach's doghouse
long enough to see action
against the Wolverines
Tressel sa1d 011ly that Small
nught be avmlable to play.

STAT OF THE DAY:
ESPN .com suggests that
Ohio State should be rooting for Tennessee to lose to
Vanderbilt or Kentucky m
its final two games.
Why ?
Should
the
Volunteers lose at least one
more game, they would jow
Michtgan wJth etght losses .
T.hat would leave Ohio
State as the only current
Football Bowl Subdtvtsmn
team to never have lost
etght games m a season.

'

Fax To (304) 675-5234

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200

A1nouncemr ~ ts

MomOI)f I

Thank You

I would like to thank all
wl'lo support&amp;d Tickled
Pmk In the Amencan
Cancer Socie1y Making
Slrides Walk A spoctal
thanks to Baskel Oellghts, Karat Patch, Wrseman
Realty
PhiiHps
Sporn Plant &amp; Summer
Image &amp; staff

Reel

Thank You
to GKN
Smter Metals, Ph iN1ps
Sporn Plant and all
lnends and fam11y tor
lhe1r generous donations
to the Mzuzu Academy
end orphan feed1ng cen·
ter tn Malawi Afnca

Nata.
only

ado

We

witt
lho law.

KIT &amp; CARLYLE
Wont To Buy

Grave Blankets Wreaths Lead singer for estab$10 &amp; up, Biankets !!shed
southem/classlc
loot &amp; Found
$5-$25
Sues Green- rock band Senous lnq
house, 47310 Mornmg only
740·446·1974
Found- Beagle pup at Star
Rd ,
Racme, aves after 6PM
Krodel • Park
call 10 740-949·2115
lden1fy 304-512-7007
Reward lost 3 mon old
male bnndle BoKer, little
glr1 heartbroken , also 3
month old female Fawn
Boxer Last seen on last
road on Camp CQnley
$100 reward for return of
both dogs or JUSt one of
them
please
call
304·593-2641

At!

Wanlod

Noticu

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NOTICE OHIO VALLEY
PUBLISHING CO rec·
ommends that you do
bUSiness with people you
know, and NOT to send
money through the mat!
unt•l you have lnvestigatth ft
'"9 60 enng

c

res

Absolute Top Dollar sliver/gold
coms
any
1OK/1 41&lt;11 BK gold tewelry denial gold
pre
1935
us
currency,
proof!mmt
sets
d1a
mends MTS Com Shop
151 2nd Avenue, Galh

a

have been
placed In ads at
the Ga\tlpolls
Dally Tribune
must be picked
within 30 days.
Any plctul'88
,that are not
picked wilt be
discarded.
The Tribune
Office haa many
unclaimed
l
let
p urea Ih aI wIl
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l)ecembe( 31, 08.

Hyou think you
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Into the office

polls 446·2842

Child I

Eidolly Core

Yard Salo

Connie's
Chlldcare in
Tuppers Plains now has
openings, county &amp; private
pay
accepted
20yrs
experience, call
for
an
appo•ntment
740 667 6329
MeiiSsa"s Day Care has
opemngs
for
Children
ages 1 and up. !he day·
care 1s localed on Ba1~y
Run
Road.
Pomeroy.
mgh1s
and
weekend
hOurs
ava1lable
call
!740)992·0070
Rooms available at Oars!
Adult Group Home we
provide 24hr
superv1sian. personal care as·
s1stants, meals laundry,
housekeeping &amp; a warn
envuonment for 1hose
who need a little or 8 lot

Carpenter/Harnsonv•lle
Tools ladder bldg
matenals table s WICker,mdoor
pond storage bldgs ,John
Deere
garden
tractor more Sat Nov 22
9 to 5
38072 Carpenter
Hill
Ad
740 947 0501(before
sale)

;;;;;....,~~~~~~

!!!

Compe11/ RVo &amp;
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&lt;Ill 2008 by NEA, Inc.

Au,oa ..............................

Automo11vo .................... .............................. 304
Building Matarlela ....................................... 306
Bualne••··· ~············ · """"""'""'"""''''""'"'"'""""' 308
Catorlng ....................................,................310
Chlld/Eidtrly Ctue.... ................................ 312
Computere ................ ............................... 314
Contractora .............................................31&amp;
Domeallci/Janllorlol ................................. 318
Elactrlcot ... ........... . ..................... 320
Flnanclol.. ............ ...............................322
HeoHh .................................. ......... . 326
HH~'"'m'procoove'monlng·.:, ~~~·... ••· ·· ......... · ... 328

Claoalc/An11queo .............................,:........ 2015
Commerc::lalllndualrlal .............................. 2020
Parte &amp; Acc.uorlea .................................. 2025
Sporta utility .............................................2030
Trucko................... .....................................2035
Utility Trallero ....................................... ... . 2040
V11no ............................................................2045
Wont to Jluy .......... ..................................2050
Reel Eotote Sileo ..... .......... .. ............. 3000
Cemetery Pl01o .........................., ......... ...... 3005
Commercial .• ~...........................................3010
Condominium• ..........................................301 5
For SOle by Owner .....................................3020
Houaea for Slle ....... .. .............................. .. 3025
Land (Ac,....J11) ..........................................3030
Lola ...........................................:................3035
Wont to buy ................................................3040
Real Eolllla Rllnlfllo ...................................3500
ApartmentafTawnhou..• ··················-····· 3~5
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Monulactured Houtlng .............................4000
lOti .................. ....... .................................4005
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Rontota ..................................................... .. 4015
Sllta ..................................... .....................4020
Suppllea ..................................................... 4025
Wont to Buy .............., ................................ 4030
Retort Property ......................................... 5000
Retort Property lor oole ........................... 5025
Rasor! Property lor rant ........................... 5050
Employment...............................................6000
Accountlng1Financlal ............................. ... 6002
Adrnlnlatratlye1Profllaalonal .....................6004
Cashlor/Cierk .............................................6006
Chlld/Eld•rly Care .................................... 8008
Clericol ........................ ...............................60t0
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Education ..................................................6018
EleCirtcol Plumblng ...................................6018
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Food SlrYICM ...........................................6024
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•• ~

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2010

Muelcal ....................................................... 8040
Pori·Time-Temporarlea .............................6042
Reataurenta ............................................... 8044Slleo ...........................................................6048
TIIChnlcol- ...................................... 6050
T•X11IHIFK1ory .........................................6052

www comics com

~~~~;;;;;;;-;;;:;:;;;;;;;;-;~~~~~;;
Htating &amp; Cooling

CLASSIFIED INDEX

Applllnca Service .................... .. -.... ..• 302

Veh1rles

Fair Steers, A 1 Sired
shoe steers, broke to
lead, only a few weeks
rema tnlng before weigh
Auctions
In Pnced for all budgets ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~""-;;;;;;;;;;
Call
740·256·1621
or Cross
Creek
AUCtiOn,
740 963 0022
Buftalo, Saturday 6 pm
Peta
Fruit
cakes
smoked
Ham
sliced.
Trailer
Benjl type dog 10-12 loaded of merchandise
months old 682·7672

Jack Russell pups ready
at Christmas $.250 Reg
379 243g

Olhtr Sorvi..,
Pet
CrematiOns
740·446·3745

livestock
~~~;;;;;;~~~
~

0 alI Reg1stered

Prof.uional s.,..·
TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY SSI
No Fee Unless We Wlnl
1-1188-51!2·3345 •

Hay, fetd, Sttd, Grain
="'---"""="""=•
Hay and Gram 4x5 round
bates
mtKed
hay
$12-$20,740 441 5502

flufty
Toy
740 367 0889

Beautiful
Poodles

Toy Poodle for sale 3 fe·
males
$350
740-256·1101
or

ServiCe

chaal

~~~-,.,..--

38R 2 Bath S299 month

~44;::6:;;·3:;:3:;;84~-~-~
Avo1d1ng foreclosure 14
payments left make one
move 1n 446-3093
3Br 2 5 BA 1721sq ft
Wl\h Full Bsmt 2 car
2FP on o Sac
1n
Spnng
Valley
Est
move 1n ready Ap·
po1ntment
Only
740·266-5260
2-3 bedrooms 1
hardwood
floors
proved sept1c new
deck
golclf1sh
fenced 1n yard 1
Rocksprrngs
Pomeroy ,
740 992 2355

at

03

bath
aproof

pond
acre
Rd
Oh10,

?J $76 590

or

3br
2ba
Central
Air/Heat newly remocl·
eled
bathrooms
new
at Carm1· hardwood &amp; tile floors
Trailers $155 000 304 675 4680

740-446·3825
RV
Serv1ce
Tratlers
740-446

for Salt

3 Bed, 2 Bath! Only
515 500
lor
hst1ngs
800-620-4946 ex R019

=;;;;;;;;;; HO:'' 5·

help, Gas fired heat1ng boiler 5
yr old w1th all controls
!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!io!!"':'!!!!!!!!! must see Co"'es
with
and look through
Heating
• &amp;Cool'eng
eve."""
complete
7 ....ng
the them.
740-992-2974
I..O.....;-.iiiiiiiiii.-..1 Lowes New &amp;unopaniKI "'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
boxes Odesa fireplace """
mantel plus vent free gas
Horne lmJIIOVt'menfl
Penonals
lOg heaternouvered ventIIHment
free ftreboK!Large white
Weterprooftng
Lady would like to meet 55 1!2" high by 6l"
Unconditional lifetime
Gentleman
between long Cost over $1 200 &amp;
guarantee Local refer
65-70
years
old will sell to 1st offer of
encestum1shed Estab645-5440
$500. Call740-742-2628
lished 1975 Catl24 Hrs
740-4 4G·0870 Rogers
Basemen! Waterproofing

Recreational Vehlclea ..•..•••..........•.•.........• 1000
ATV ........................................................ 1005
Blcyclu...................................................... 1010
Booii/Acceoaorlu .................................... 1015
ComperiRVo &amp; Tntlltro ............................. 1020
Motorcyclu ............................................... 1025
Otllor ........................................................ 1030
Want to buy ............................................... 1035
Automotlve ................................................ 2ood
Aula RtniiiiiLHH ..................................... 2005

Recrea11onal

1000

we
can
(740 )992-5023

legale.......................................................... 100
Announcementa ......................................... 200
Blrthday/Annlvoru'V ................................. 205
Happy Ado.......... •....................................210
Loot &amp; Found ........................ ................. 215
Memory!T11onk You ., ......................... ...... 220
Notices....... .......... ................................. 225
Poroonola ............................................ ...... 230
Wonted ...................... .............................. 235
5ervleto..................... ...... ....... .. ............... 300

, lnaurana....... .......................... . ••..••••.•...•. 332
Lawn Slrvtce ............................ . • ...... .... 334
Muolc/Dionce/llroma ................................. 336
Other Slrvlceo ...................... ............... ........ 336
Plumblng/Eioctrlcal ............................. ....... 340
prof...lonal Services ...............................342
Repelre .... ................................................. 344
Roofing .......................................................346
Security ...................... ..... ... .................... 348
lllniiAccounllng ....... • .......... ................. 350
TroveW:nltr10lnment ...............................352
Flnonclol ..................................... .................400
' Flnonclol Slrvlcta ................. . ...................405
lnaurence """''""··························· ••.•••••.•••.• 410
Money to Lend ....................................... ......415
Education ..... ....... ......................................500
Bullntll &amp; Trodl! SChool ...........:............ 505
Jnatructlon &amp; Tntlnlng ............... ............ 510
J.ouona ............. ......................................515
Peroonol • .• .........................
. ............. 520
Anlmolo.. .. . .............. ...........................800
Animal Suppll•o ......................................... 605
Harooo..... ................................................ 610
Llvealoek ....................................... .........615
Pete .............................................................620
Wont to buy........ .••. •..................................625
Agriculture .........................,........................700
Form Equipment ......................................705
O.rdon a Produce......................................710
Hay, food,-· Gnoln ............................... 715
Huntl1111 Lind .......................................... 720
W.nttobuy .... .........................................725
~~- ............. • .. .........................900
Antiques. .. ................. ••.•..•• .... ......... .......1105
Applltnct ............................. •·•· .......... 910
Aucllono • . ............. ............................ 915
Botgllln J1110tmttnt.....................................920
Coflecllbleo ......................................... • ... 825
Computoro ................................. • .............. 930
Equlpmen1/Supplleo............ ···•• •••••• , ........836
FIH Mtrktto ........................ ·• ••·· · ...... • 840
Fuel 011 coot/Wobd!Goo ..... ......... .. ........ tw5
furniture ..... . ........................ ·········· ... 950
Hobby/Hunt• Sport ..................................955
Kld'a Corner ................................................960
Ml•ooUonoouo ..............................................965
W•nt to boy ................... ,...........................870
Yord Boll ..................................................... 875

HouMJ

CarmiChael

3825

-;;;;;;;;;;;;..;A;;uto~•;..;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
02 Honda Accord V6
loaded
92,000
Call 740·245·5526

miles

~~--~~~~

~

2006
Ctievrolet
HHA J 2Sk
·L •
miles gafrom Georg1a, all new rage
&gt;ept,
loaded
Buck mas
" 1er Km1a 1o1S
•
•
304 862 2356
of new 1tems Start~ng to
sell h1gh quality Kmves
Sports Ulilily
such as Case, Buck &amp; ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;~;;;;;;;;
Mossy Oak
V1sa, Mas- 02 Edd1e Bauer Ford Elt
ter
Card
&amp;
Debit plorer 102K miles 4WD.
304-550·1616
Stephen loaded seats up to 7
Ready N1639
greal shape great pnce,
;;;,;;;;;;,;,;;;;;;;,!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!'! great winter or aU season
fvot/ Oil/ Coal/ travel
vehiCle
WoOd GOJ
740 441 7233

1

Extraordinary Pr-"1
s pectacu 1ar v1ew ot t he
Ohio River
Pnvate dnve off Uncotrr
Hill,
Pomeroy
OhiO
woods on three sides
(4+)acres to a htstoncal
home
Ctrca 1900., 5
bedrooms. 2 l~rep laces 2
lull baths, 2 staircases
beauttful anginal wood
work many PICh.lre Win·
dows mostly new Win·
dows large kitchen and
breakfast room beaut1
fully landscaped w1th 1n
ground pool S11 on the
wrap around porch and
enJOY
ttle
spectacular
v1ew of the Oh1o Rwer 2
car detached garage and
2 out bulld1ngs Would
make a wonderful famtly
home or bed &amp; breakfast
Pnvate and P1cturesque
SPECTACULAR VIEW
SeriOus
1nqurres
only
please call 740·992-3678
Land (Acroaa•)

740·645·19ti0
l!===ii=;;;:~ ...,....,.,_~--- 345 Acres located 011,
Rei
ps Seasoned F.rewoOd CAA 2003 Chevy Trailblazer. 496 Paxton Ad GallipoGolden
pu
HEA"
ed
m/$200. f/$250. Chihua·
,..
accept
SWD
loaded.
clean lis ts adequate tor a mohua pup m/$200, Cocker 645·5946 or 441·0941
105k
$8 900
OBO bile home Has all hook·
Septic pumping Gallla pups
mi$200.
M1n1 !""-~--~-- 304·675·5253
or ups 740-441-5129
Co OH and Mason Co SChnauzer • (parti)
m/1 Seasoned
Ftrewood ~304-;;;;;,5;9;;;,;3·!!
59;;;49;.,!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! ,~..,..~~=-WV Ron Evans Jack- $400,
BoKer
pups, Hardwood 446-9204
=
Exceptional
200
acre
son. OH 800-537-9528
black/While ml$600 , All ,....-.-~-~-- "';;;;;;o~T;n.;;;ocb""-=-----= cattle farm m Gallla Co
AKC reg , 740.696-1085
Wood for Sale Wlll ~
OH
60+
acres
03 F250 4 door 4WD well-dramed
bOttomland
II
HI
h
D
Us
35
8
~ home 6 wk
\'er
g way
o tesel 1oaded $19,500 along Raccoon Creek ~
Fr.. 10 ...-.304 • 12 5350
old pups Dad IS Pyron· ,:;;;:;;;;~;,;,;;·.,.;;,.!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! or trade for older dresel 60+ acres pasture, bateeslmother IS small dOg
Miscellaneous
~37;,;9;;;2:;,7,!i15;,.!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! ance wooded Stock waAfteJ Spm 245-9890
ter pond 2 spnngs well
Giveaway 2 ktUens part Jet Aeration Motors re •=W~ant~To~&amp;~uy~;;;;; Farm has earned 40-45
MonoyToltnd
Persian Call441-0833
paired , new &amp; rebutlt 1n Wan t to buY Junk Cars. cows w/calves Modem
stock Call Ron Evans, call 740 .388 _0884
bnck ranch Style house
I
NOTICE Borrow Smart Pekingese pups for sae 1-800-537-9528
wl hmshed
walk-out
:;,$2;:50:=.7::40-:=256~
·1~664===
• __.....,..;..._~-- basemen\ 937·596·6774 ·
Contact the Otuo DIVI· :
. . , . . - - - - . - - WANTED 69 Camaros .
sion of F1nanc1al lnst1tu
Big new Gas F1replace
Re~l Estate
tlons OftiC8 of Consumer
prOJects or restored ears 3500
nEWer used
kJgs Still
any cond1t1on
l1nders
Rentals
Affairs BEFORE you ref!
wrapped, glass on three ree paid
Call Doug : ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ;
nance your home Of obsides to be bUilt 1n walt 614 203 _1272
call
or ~
1a1n a !pan BEWARE ol "':::'Fann==Eq;i;o~il"::m:=te::~:t~ Nalural
gas
$300 00 61 4-444-2!109 office
Apor1mentt/
requesls for any ~rge ::
OBO 740.388-8743
::.:;:;::::::,;;;:::.::,::;;::;...~~
advance paymen\S
INTEGRITY,
Townhoo111
01 EBY,
JOOO
RL'11 Est1te
fees or msurance Call KIEFE~ BUILT,
EJ\.IVE Rem1ngton Model 870
1
d
2 bed
t
,
Sales
the Office of C""sumer VALLE'
HORS
·
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
an
room
ap
s1
16
""''
STOCK
TRAILERS "Wu-,gma ster"
Gal
furnished
and
unfur
Affiars
toll
tree
at
Small
Forand
$325
HJ 66 •278 •0003 to team LOAD
MAX
EQUIP
mshed and houses 1n
74
7
MENT
TRAILERS.
0-533·38 0
Pomemy ano M•ddlepon
Common:ial
If the mortgage broker or CARG O EXPRESS
•
secun1y deposit required
lender IS propi!rty h·
o. For sale used sta 1
rHft call Commerc1aVreta•l
&amp;pace
no pets 740·992·22t8
Ho"ESTEAOER
censed (Th1s IS a publiC CA~GO/CONCESSION
lor mfo 1·60&amp;329-1344
for rent
H'1gh traffic
serv1ce
announcement
. ·,-,~-...,.--~ count good VISibility - 1 and 2 BR apatrtments
from the Ohio Valley TRAILERS
B+W Mollohan
carpet
Fall ma1n road location heat for •ent near downtown
Pubtlsh1ng Company)
GOOSENECK FLATBED
8 water mcluded ih rem
$3999 VIEW OUR EN- Special 20 oz Cammer·
Potnt Pleasant All ut11iJ
TIRE TRAILER INVEN· c!al Carpet $6 95/yard Respond to box ClA 16 ties
paid
No
pets .
~~~~~~~~
Several
Colors 200 Main St·eet PI PI Please
call
TORV AT
WV 25550
WWWCARMICHAEL•
740 446 7444 Ouahly at
304·36(Hl163
TRAILERS COM
Low Pncesl
1BFI Ap1 WID hookups
740-446-3825
Established beauty shop satellite TV 1ncl w/rent
""'""'""'"""""'""'""'~ ----..,..-:--:~ NEW AND USED STEEL
locatiOn for rent
Clean close to hosp 1tal Can
;;; lulinNt &amp; Trod.
Have you priced 8 John Steel Beams, P1pe Rebar recently
remodeled 7-40-339-036 2
School
Deere lately? You 11 be for
Coocrete
Angle Heal &amp; water. InCluded 1n 2 bedroom, hvmg room
surpnsedl Check out our Channel , Flat Bar Steel rent
Respond 10 Box kitchen, batn Apartment
used
•nventory
Grating
for
Ora1ns.
OnveCLA
17
200 Ma1n St Pt Have Central All fur
81
•
www
CA~EQ
com
Carways
&amp;
Walkways
l&amp;L
~P
..
I.
WVo;,;,,;2;;;5550;;;;;,""""""""""
n4shed
WITh
couCh
GoHt,ollo
michael
Equlpfnent Scrap Metals Open Mon =
cha1rs
washer
dryer
iuel
Wed
&amp;
Frl
For Solely Owner stove mterowave beds
(Careers C1ose To Home) 740-446 24 12
8am·4 30pm
Closed
d1rt1ng table and chau--s
Call Today! 740 446·43117
K10ta Tractor LK3054, Thurs
Sal
&amp;
Sun House on SA 588 lor S400 depos1t $450 a
1-800·214-!l452
4WD,
D1esel
w/End 740·446·7300
more
1ntonnation
and month
Cal1
~llipgl!tcareercollege tdu
Loader 30hp , HO hrs - - - - - - - • piCtures go to orvb com 304-862·2523
Leave'
Aoofedt!ed Member Accredil
Garage
kept Story Book Ooll House 1 d number Is browmng Message and Number 1f
1ng Council tor 1~
~ w Schools 12748
304-882·2356
$35 304-882-2438
740.446 7204
no1 a\ Home

Are

=

!""_____..._

c......,eo-

�•
.P age 82 • The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, November 20,

www .mydailysentinel.com

2008

Thursday, November 20, 2008

www.mydallysentlnel.com

m;rtbune- Sentinel- l\e filter

Rodriguez has long list of things to do·
BY LARRY LAGE
ASSOCIATED PRESS

. ANN ARBOR, M1ch
coach
Rich
Rodriguez reached mto the
nuddle drawer of his desk and
pulled out 10 large index
-cards filled wtth notes
: · One outlined problems to
fiX, another was changes to
make and one mcluded items
(0 address with the athlettc
:director.
: The 45-year-old Rodnguez
;started
orgamzmg
his
thoughts thts way two
decades ago at tmy Salem
College and conttnued to do
so at Glenv1lle State, Tulane,
Clemson and West V1rgmia
"Thts year, there are more
notes and cards than I'd hke,"
Rodnguez said in a recent
(lllerv JeW
With
The
~ssociated Press. "I've gone
lhrough years with one card.
Now, I've got 10 cards here.
That tells you what kind of
.
year we've had .
"It's been as tough as any
season I've had in coaching "
: Mtchtgan 's year will merct{ully end soon, but not until
playmg Saturday on the road
against ri\al Oh10 State.
The Wolvennes (3-8, 2-5)
have already broken a school
.record for losses, had thetr
~ichtgan

first losmg season smce the Rodnguez dunng a recent
pre-Bo Schembechler era and lunch as they swapped huntwill be relegated to watchmg mg stones.
bowl games for the first tune
"( loved 11 when we h1red
smce 1974
h1m &lt;~nd I love 11 more now
It has been an mtscrable attcr spcndmg time Wllh htm
season for the once-proud and gettmg to know h1m pretprogram. whtch hit rock hot- ty well." Leach said "There
tom last month when 11 lost to h&lt;lve bee11 ,, ton of players
Tuiedo. Against the lOth- who have been through this
ranked Buckeyes. who are progrdm and they all have the
favored to win by a nvalry- 11ght to an optmon .tbout h1m.
high 20 'I/2 pomts. RoJriguez but personally. I'm proud he's
and the Wolvennes &lt;an etther our codch.
salvage some pride or add a · "It's pamful for a lot of peagloomy final chapter.
pie to see M1chigan lose like
"I'm d1sappomted m the th1s. but the wms and losses
season we've had, but I'm not go on hi s tecord and so you
deterred or diScouraged about can multJple the pam he feels.
the direCtion we're headed ," Nobody has taken more of a
Rodngue z satd. "We · had bnmt fm thiS year than coach,
more thmgs to get shored up but thts wasn"t gomg to be an
than I ongmally expected, but easy JOb f01 anybody."
none of them are daunttng
Lloyd
Carr,
who
''I'm still as exc1ted about announced h1s retirement a
the future as I was three year ago, left behmd an expemonths ago."
ncnced detense and an NFLRick Leach, M1Ch1gan's depleted offense.
quarterback from three
Rodnguez has tned to
decades ago. " also fired up mstall h1s renown spread. but
about how he beheves the he didn't have much to work
new-look program will wtth at quarterback. receiver
evolve under Rodriguez
or on the offenstve !me and
Leach started watchmg the unn has outscored only
Rodnguez's
h1gh-tempo Purdue m the Btg Ten.
workouts last sprmg and has
Oh1n State coach Jun
been a regulur VISitor thts fall. Tressel. whose staff vtsited
standmg on the sideline dur- Rodriguez m West V1rgmm a
mg practtces ,md stttmg wllh lew years agn to learn about

hts scheme. has no doubt the
Wolvennes wtll eventually
find a gtoove on offense .
·'Everyone in the country
that's been around coachmg
would agree that Rtch
Rodnguez has been one of
the most creattve and really
one of the founders of the
spread-style attack," Tressel
satd "You know that he's
building one building block
on top of the next "
Mtchtgan "s defense has
been dtsappomtmg, gtvmg up
2R points a game to rdnk lOth
m the conference, and woes
on spectal teams have led to
some of the setbacks that
have stunned a school, program and fan base
Rodriguez has kept h1s
composure for the most part
m pub he, where his every
word ts dtssected, but he has
lost 11 at times pnvately
He ranted and raved at his
players. without lashing out
at mdiVIduals, m pantcular
after losses at Notre Dame
and Penn State.
Rodnguez, though , is not
about to htde from a chal ·
Ienge or cnt1cs.
Instead , he'll JUSt keep
ptckthg away at the to·do hsts
on hiS mdex cards to restore
,Mich1gan to a national power.

NFL reinstates 'Pacman' Jones
BY STEPHEN HAWKINS
ASSOCIATED PRESS

ARLINGTON. Texas
The NFL ts giVIng Adam
"Pacman" Jones ,another
chance.
: Dallas Cowboys owner
~erry Jones said Wednesday
!he suspended cornerback
has been reinstated by
!eague commissioner Roger
Goodell, but he must miss
two more games - this
Sunday and the following
game on Thanksgivmg
He'll be back Dec. 7 at
Pittsburgh.
"He much apprecmtes the
Cowboys and Jerry Jones for
standmg behmd htm and
encouragmg htm. and he's
:grateful to the commtssioner," satd Womck Robinson ,
Adam Jones ' Nashvillebased attorney
Jerry Jones would not
·reveal any condillons the
:commtssioner may have
tmposed and the league
,office satd 11 would not have
any immediate comment.
However, Robinson, said,
"He knows what he has to
:do It's vety clear."

"He's a long way. a long
way from having clear sailmg." Jerry Jones satd
Adam Jones was suspended from the entire 2007 season because of multiple mctdents while With the
Tennessee Titans. Over the
offseason, he was traded to
Dallas and then gtven another chance by Goodell. The
Cowboys gave htm a security team to help keep htm m
hne, but on Oct 7, Jones got
mto an alcohol-related scuffle with one of the bodyguards during a private party
at a Dallas hotel
Jones spent part of hts
ttme away undergomg alcohol rehabihtatton.
"He . has demonstrated
something very important to
all of us," Jerry Jones said
It also wtll be up to
Pacman to police himself.
The Cowboys wtll no longer
be providing bodyguards.
"It all starts wtth htm and
his
decision-m&lt;1king,"
Robmson said "He's comfortable makmg decisions
for himself."
Robmson said the alcohol
therapy was "something he

needed to do "
"The real tssue was more
than allegations of an mcident dt a Dallas hotel."
Robinson smd. "There were
personal issues ·that, unttl
addressed , there was a hkelihood of another mcident
occurnng"
Jerry Jones satd Adam
Jones can have "limited partlctpatmn" thts week, but
would not be part of fullsquad practices or conditionmg. He can return to practtce
Monday.
Goodell suspended Adam
Jones indefimtely on Oct.
14, saying he'd put a limeframe on it after the comerback missed at least four
games. Thts decision means
it wtll be a stx-game suspension. Jones also missed the
entire 2007 season. By the
time he returns, he wtll have
been suspended from 22 of a
posstble 28 games. '
A few hours before the
announcement, teammates
sa1d they would welcome
htm back
,
Tank Johnson, who has the
locker next to Jones and also
has been through an NFL

suspens1on for off-fteld troubles, said he's spoken frequently wtth Adam Jones.
"He's just chompmg at the
b1t to get back and come
back and be successful."
Johnson satd. "He knows
we're all with him and we're
never gomg to tum our back
on him and as soon as he
gets back It Will be business
as usual I can't watt to have
21 next to me in the locker."
Added quarterback Tony
Romo: "When he was here
he worked very hard and he
helped us. He's a good football player and I don't see
why you wouldn't welcome
a guy back that works hard
on the practice field ."
Jones sUI! leads the club
with II passes defensed;
nobody else had more than
live. Hts 27 tackles are second-best among defenstve
backs. He also forced a tumble and recovered one.
Jones was Dallas' main
punter returner, averagmg 5
yards per return on 16
attempts He had a long of
only 18 yatds after Ieadmg
the league m punt returns in
2006.

Ball St. beats Central Michigan, 31-24
MOUNT PLEASANT,
Mtch. (AP) - Nate DaviS
threw four touchdowp passes, and No 14 Ball State
survtved a scare from
Central
Mtchigan
on
Wednesday night in a 31-24
vtctory that gave the
Cardmals a school-record
for wms in a season
The vtctory also clmched
a share of the West DIVIsiOn
ot
the
Mtd-Amencan
Conference for Ball State
( 11-0 , 7-0), wh1ch has never
played m the league tttle
game The Cardmals can
wm the dtVJSJon outnght
w1th a win over Western
M1chtgan on Nov 25.
Da\ 1s ,h1t Bnggs Orsbon
111 the corne1 of the end
ione from II yards nut with

7.29 left to gtve Ball State
a 31-24 lead. Central
Mtchtgan had a chance to
lte tt m the closmg mmutes,
but Dan LeFevour was
mtercepted by Sean Baker
at the Ball State 15 wtth 35
seconds left
Ball State"s
M1Quale
Lewts rushed lor 177 yards
on 28 carnes, hiS mnth I00yard game thts season. In
the Cardinals ' go-ahead
dnvc. Lewt s earned six
t1mes for 63 yards.
Central Mtchtgan (8-3, 61) can st1ll reach the conference champ1onsh1p game 11
Ball State
stumbles,
Western Mich1gan tlefeats
Eastern Mich1gan and a
number of other tiebreakers
come through

LeFevour fmtshed 30-of44 for 345 yards and two
touchdowns ,' but hts only
mterception came on the
Chtppewas' final offensive
play. After a 29-yard pass to
Joe Bockhetm advanced the
ball to the Ball State 36,
Baket tntercepted a pass
mtended for Kito Poblah to
seal the wm
LeFevour also led Central
Michtgan m rushtng wtth
75 yards on 24 carnes.
Anton1o Bmwn caught
e1ght passes for 61 yards
for the Chippewas, and
Poblah caught ftv e passes
for II 0 yards and a touchdown . Hts 38-yard scoring
receptwn m the ftrst mmute
of th e fourth quarter gave
Centr.JI Michtgan a 24-17

Lewis

sional teams.
"When I'm m the game.
tt's 100 percent that 'O K.
we're gomg to see the run'
When another back comes
m the game, it 's 'OK , they
m1ght throw 1t or they
might run ' You"ve got to
look at 11 like that "
The Browns are Il-l in
games when Lewts has 20
or more cames. It's a statistic they proudly d1splay m
thetr weekly med1a .release.
Cleveland ts 3-0 this season
when Lew ts gets hi s 20
touches. But he knows better than anyone that 11 only
takes one rush to make an
average game spectacular
On Monday night in
Buffalo , Hamson foung· a
seam on the left stde and
went 72 yards for a TD the etghth longest scoring
run m Browns htstory
"It was blocked up perfectly," Lewts satd . "The

alley was there. That 's an
oppo1tututy The hole ts
there and when you've got
the opportumty you take 11.
It's not how many nmes
you ca1 ry the ball."
Lewts
may
be
Cleveland's only backfteld
opllon on Sunday. That
could mean more carnes
and perhaps more yards for
a player whose not getting
any younger.
But to Lewis, age ts nothmg more than another
meanmgless stallsttc . He's
not sure how much longer
he can play, but he knows
when he' ll quit
"When I get up and say I
don't f~ e l like doing it ,
that 's when It 's ttme to
move on," he s3id
Lew1s was remmded that
30 IS about when NFL running backs begm tathng off
"I thought 11 was 29
before I came mto the sea-

from Page 81
kept h1m out of at least one
practtce dunng the week so
he 's close to I00 percent by
ktckoff.
"Thmk about last year.
we were putting up how
many yards of 'offense?"
Lewi s satd. "Everythmg
complements Itse lf The
runnmg game is JUst not
the runmng game. The runnmg game complements
the passmg game, the passing game complements the
runmng game. Thmgs happen . Other teams look at
film. They know what
Chud 1s gomg to do. They
know
what
Kellen
Wmslow ts going to do
They scout, they fmd that
weakness. They're profes-

~------------~~

CLASSIFIED

Meigs County, OH

Gallia
County,
OH
Webs1tes
In
One
Week
With
Us
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E-mail
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ca~f;~::v (740) 446-2342 (740) 992-2156 (304) 675-1333 '

...

• ..,..._ _ _ _ __;__ ___:O::;r..;F.;a;.xTo

446·3008

Or Fax To

992·2157

Or

Oead'~ir~
Wprd Ads

YOUR CLASSIFIED LINE AD NOTICED

pjsplay Ads

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

AP Photo

Dally Jn ..Column: 9:00a.m.
Monday-Friday for Insertion
In Next Day'5 Paper

All Display~ 12 Noon 2
Business Days Prior To

Sunday In-Column: V:OO a.m.
Frldo,y For Sundays Pa.,.r

Sunday Display: 1 :DO
Thursday for Sundays· P••P•"

In this Oct. 25 photo, Michigan head football coach R1ch
Rodnguez looks on from the sidelines dunng an NCAA coll!lge football game aga1nst M1ch1gan State 1n Ann Arbor,
Mlch Rodnguez sa1d h1s debut season at M1ch1gan has
been tougher than any year he's had

Wary
from Page 81
pomts.
Even w1th playmakmg
recet vers
T.J.
Houshmandzadeh and Chad
Johnson. er, O~ho Cmco
around to stretch defenses.
it mtght be too much to ask
mexpenenced quarterback
Ryan Fttzpatnck to get
much gomg.
Subbing for the inJUred
Carson Palmer, Fitzpatrick
was sacked e1ght limes by
Phtladelphta, seven times
last month by Ptttsburgh
and has the fewest passing
yards ( 1,050) of any quarterback who has attempted
more than 200 passes.
Worse still, Cmcmnatt's
offensive lme is an injurynddled mess, wtth left tackle Levi Jones (back) and left
guard Andrew Whllworth
(ankle) out. Rookie tackle
Anthony Colhns 1s expected
to make hts first NFL start
alongside
guard
Nate
Livmgs, a practice squad
play.;r most of the last 2 1/2
years.
Ptttsburgh pass rushers
James Hamson (12 sacks)
and LaMarr Woodley (9
1/2) probably can't wait to
get at Fitzpatrick. short
week or not, given the
team's league high-tying 36
sacks.
, For those scpnng at
home, the Steelers ' smglegame record for sacks ts 10
reached four ttmes, once
agamst Cmcmnatt 's Davtd
Klingler.
"That's thetr game, they
try to make sUre you 're
uncomfortable back there,"
Fttzpatrick sat d. "And wtth
thetr rush, and how hard
they come sometimes. tt 's
uncomfortable "
Roethlisberger
also
expects the Bengals to

lead.
Davi s answered wtth TD
passes to Robmson and
Orsbon.
After Ball State struck
f1rst on Johnson's touchdown catch wllh 1.56 left 111
the f1rst quarter, Central
M1chtgan answered with a
24-yard touchdown pass
from
LeFevour
to
Bockhetm and a 31-yard
fteld by Andrew Agmla on
consecutive possesstons m
the second quarter
A 21-yard field goal by
Ball State's Ian McGarvey
wtth 59 seconds left m the
second quarter tied it at 10.
from Page81
The halft1me deadlock was
the ftrst time all season that
Ball State had not led at toward the future a little bit.
the break.
l would be lymg to say I
never dtd," LB Marcus
Freeman said. "We always
son Now tt's 30? Next year
11 w11l be 31 ,"he satd wtth a thmk about what's going to
laugh. "The numbers are happen next year. Where a111
the numbers I'm 30 years I going to be? Where am I
old. I've played moe sea- gomg to go in the draft? ..
sons I mtssed one season But that's something you
wl!h an mJury, so that's can't control. All you can
etght seasons. I'm fresh. I control ts playmg as hard as
work out hard in the offsea- you can and you let the rest
son. That's what I pride of it play out "
myself on."
Fellow · LB
James
Lewis, thou11h, tsn't tak- Laurinattts said he's certain
ing any satisfaction at he made the nght dectsion
echpsing the 10,000-yard in staying at Ohio State . He
barrier. While others may could never trade the expef111d it notable, LeWIS lSD 't riences he's had, the friends
impressed .
he 's made and relationshtps
"It just means tt's a lot'of he's cultivated.
numbers already under my
He believes he's worked
belt ," he satd. "That's it.
on some things that wtll
Are they gomg to gtve me
something after I get there? make him a better NFL
If they're going to give me player.
"My sophomore year
something, let me know.
maybe
there was one game,
It's some numbers under
like
,
gosh,
I JUSt didn 't feel
the bell. Hopefully we can
gnnd out about 2,000 like I played that well My
junior year, if I could watch
more .''

Buckeyes

.

throw everythmg at htm m
an attempt to force mistakes
like the e1ght mtercept10n_s
he had dunn g a recent
three-game slletch
"We have to be prepared
for
anythuJg."
Roethlt sberger
satd.
"They're going to bnng all
kinds of blitzes . who knows
what."
The problem ts - and
they have many. gtven thetr
record - the Bengals have
only II sacks. the second
fewest m the leaj,lUC.
One extracumcular 1ssue
is whether the Bengals wtll
target Ward for h1s crackback block that broke rookIe linebacker Kellh Rtvers'
jaw and ended hts season.
Ward's block was legal
and he was not penabzed or
fined, but Ben gals coach
Marvin Lewis promises the
NFL compettllon committee wtll address whether to
outlaw such blocks.
"Unfortunately our player
was lllJured and you know
there will be some revi stons, I'm sure, to the rules,
after the season," Lewis
satd ••(t\ an unfortunate
mctdent and it occurred and
it's done ."
Unfortunately or not. the
Ben gals' season senes wtth
the Steelers 1sn 't over yet.
Plltsburgh has won tour m a
row, f1~e of six and 13 of 17
agamst Cincmnat1, yet
Tomhn dtdn ., ~o hghtly on
hts players dm mg the short
work week
Tomlin mad, them pracllcc outdoors. wtth no sidehac heat~rs, m anttcipatton
of a gametime temperature
around 30. a wmd chtll m
the 20s and possible snow
nurnes.
"I guess he 's trymg to
teach us a lesson ," Parker
sat d.
One Tomhn undoubtedly
hopes hts players learned
when they met the Jets last
season.
over the season, maybe
there was one game I'm
like , I JUSt might skip thts
one," he satd. "But I think
this one, I'm conststent
each and every game. And
recognition of plays and
bemg more patient and
stuff. But ultimately I can't
speak for what they (pro
scouts) are gomg to thmk "
SMALL TALK · Tres sel
was asked tf WR/KR Ray
Small might duck hts head
out of the coach's doghouse
long enough to see action
against the Wolverines
Tressel sa1d 011ly that Small
nught be avmlable to play.

STAT OF THE DAY:
ESPN .com suggests that
Ohio State should be rooting for Tennessee to lose to
Vanderbilt or Kentucky m
its final two games.
Why ?
Should
the
Volunteers lose at least one
more game, they would jow
Michtgan wJth etght losses .
T.hat would leave Ohio
State as the only current
Football Bowl Subdtvtsmn
team to never have lost
etght games m a season.

'

Fax To (304) 675-5234

Publication

Now you can have borders and graphics
"-'
added to your classified ads
_t, ~
Jm
Borders$3.00/perad
t!!
Graphics 50¢ for small
S1.00 for Iorge

POUCtES Ohio Valley Publllhing reaervn the right to edit, rejec:t or cancel any ad at 1ny time Errors muat be reported on the first day ot
Trlbune-s.ntln.t·Regleter wiiiiM reiA(lnllble for no mort than the cot! of the apace ~upled by the error and onl~ the flret lnaenlon We
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any loll or e~&lt;penee that reaulte from the publication or omlealon ot en advertlnment Contctlon will be made In the flrat available odttlon Boll number ada
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All real Mille ldvertl..mente are eubjeelto the Federal Fair Hou .. ng Act of 1H8 • Thla newapaptr
accepta only hllp wanted Ida meeting EOE tllnderdl We wur not knowingly accept 11n~ advertising In violation of the law Will not be retpontlblt for any
errortln 1n a&lt;lllken over thl phone.

OhloVolloy
Publishing reoeoveo
lhe righllo edit,
rejoct or cancelony
ad at any time.
Errors Mus!
Repclfled on the

200

A1nouncemr ~ ts

MomOI)f I

Thank You

I would like to thank all
wl'lo support&amp;d Tickled
Pmk In the Amencan
Cancer Socie1y Making
Slrides Walk A spoctal
thanks to Baskel Oellghts, Karat Patch, Wrseman
Realty
PhiiHps
Sporn Plant &amp; Summer
Image &amp; staff

Reel

Thank You
to GKN
Smter Metals, Ph iN1ps
Sporn Plant and all
lnends and fam11y tor
lhe1r generous donations
to the Mzuzu Academy
end orphan feed1ng cen·
ter tn Malawi Afnca

Nata.
only

ado

We

witt
lho law.

KIT &amp; CARLYLE
Wont To Buy

Grave Blankets Wreaths Lead singer for estab$10 &amp; up, Biankets !!shed
southem/classlc
loot &amp; Found
$5-$25
Sues Green- rock band Senous lnq
house, 47310 Mornmg only
740·446·1974
Found- Beagle pup at Star
Rd ,
Racme, aves after 6PM
Krodel • Park
call 10 740-949·2115
lden1fy 304-512-7007
Reward lost 3 mon old
male bnndle BoKer, little
glr1 heartbroken , also 3
month old female Fawn
Boxer Last seen on last
road on Camp CQnley
$100 reward for return of
both dogs or JUSt one of
them
please
call
304·593-2641

At!

Wanlod

Noticu

;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;=;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
NOTICE OHIO VALLEY
PUBLISHING CO rec·
ommends that you do
bUSiness with people you
know, and NOT to send
money through the mat!
unt•l you have lnvestigatth ft
'"9 60 enng

c

res

Absolute Top Dollar sliver/gold
coms
any
1OK/1 41&lt;11 BK gold tewelry denial gold
pre
1935
us
currency,
proof!mmt
sets
d1a
mends MTS Com Shop
151 2nd Avenue, Galh

a

have been
placed In ads at
the Ga\tlpolls
Dally Tribune
must be picked
within 30 days.
Any plctul'88
,that are not
picked wilt be
discarded.
The Tribune
Office haa many
unclaimed
l
let
p urea Ih aI wIl
be dlacardad on

l)ecembe( 31, 08.

Hyou think you
may have
forgotten

to pick

up a picture you
hive

Pllcad In

the paper, please
feel free tO come
Into the office

polls 446·2842

Child I

Eidolly Core

Yard Salo

Connie's
Chlldcare in
Tuppers Plains now has
openings, county &amp; private
pay
accepted
20yrs
experience, call
for
an
appo•ntment
740 667 6329
MeiiSsa"s Day Care has
opemngs
for
Children
ages 1 and up. !he day·
care 1s localed on Ba1~y
Run
Road.
Pomeroy.
mgh1s
and
weekend
hOurs
ava1lable
call
!740)992·0070
Rooms available at Oars!
Adult Group Home we
provide 24hr
superv1sian. personal care as·
s1stants, meals laundry,
housekeeping &amp; a warn
envuonment for 1hose
who need a little or 8 lot

Carpenter/Harnsonv•lle
Tools ladder bldg
matenals table s WICker,mdoor
pond storage bldgs ,John
Deere
garden
tractor more Sat Nov 22
9 to 5
38072 Carpenter
Hill
Ad
740 947 0501(before
sale)

;;;;;....,~~~~~~

!!!

Compe11/ RVo &amp;
Trailer•

RV

&lt;Ill 2008 by NEA, Inc.

Au,oa ..............................

Automo11vo .................... .............................. 304
Building Matarlela ....................................... 306
Bualne••··· ~············ · """"""'""'"""''''""'"'"'""""' 308
Catorlng ....................................,................310
Chlld/Eidtrly Ctue.... ................................ 312
Computere ................ ............................... 314
Contractora .............................................31&amp;
Domeallci/Janllorlol ................................. 318
Elactrlcot ... ........... . ..................... 320
Flnanclol.. ............ ...............................322
HeoHh .................................. ......... . 326
HH~'"'m'procoove'monlng·.:, ~~~·... ••· ·· ......... · ... 328

Claoalc/An11queo .............................,:........ 2015
Commerc::lalllndualrlal .............................. 2020
Parte &amp; Acc.uorlea .................................. 2025
Sporta utility .............................................2030
Trucko................... .....................................2035
Utility Trallero ....................................... ... . 2040
V11no ............................................................2045
Wont to Jluy .......... ..................................2050
Reel Eotote Sileo ..... .......... .. ............. 3000
Cemetery Pl01o .........................., ......... ...... 3005
Commercial .• ~...........................................3010
Condominium• ..........................................301 5
For SOle by Owner .....................................3020
Houaea for Slle ....... .. .............................. .. 3025
Land (Ac,....J11) ..........................................3030
Lola ...........................................:................3035
Wont to buy ................................................3040
Real Eolllla Rllnlfllo ...................................3500
ApartmentafTawnhou..• ··················-····· 3~5
Cornmon:lal ................................................351 0
Condoml~:~luma ........................................ t.3515
HDUMI for Rent .................••......•..••••.. 3520
Land (AC,..JII) ..........................................3525
Storage ....................................................3535
Went to Rent ............................................. 3540
Monulactured Houtlng .............................4000
lOti .................. ....... .................................4005
......................................................4010
Rontota ..................................................... .. 4015
Sllta ..................................... .....................4020
Suppllea ..................................................... 4025
Wont to Buy .............., ................................ 4030
Retort Property ......................................... 5000
Retort Property lor oole ........................... 5025
Rasor! Property lor rant ........................... 5050
Employment...............................................6000
Accountlng1Financlal ............................. ... 6002
Adrnlnlatratlye1Profllaalonal .....................6004
Cashlor/Cierk .............................................6006
Chlld/Eld•rly Care .................................... 8008
Clericol ........................ ...............................60t0
Conotructlon ...........................................6012
Drlvwo' Dolhrory ..................................... 6014
Education ..................................................6018
EleCirtcol Plumblng ...................................6018
Employment Agenclea ............!.................eo20
En-lnmtnt ............................................6022
Food SlrYICM ...........................................6024
Government &amp; F-ol Jbba ................... 6026
Help onttd- 011Mn11 .., ............................... 6028
Law Entor-1 ...................................... 6030
Molntononctlllomeotlc ............................. 6032
Monagomon118upervloory ........................ 6034
Mtchanlc•..................................................6036
-lcal ....................................................... 6036

•• ~

-·"' lr

a

H . . . . . . . . . . . . . . : : ;. . . . . . . . .

2010

Muelcal ....................................................... 8040
Pori·Time-Temporarlea .............................6042
Reataurenta ............................................... 8044Slleo ...........................................................6048
TIIChnlcol- ...................................... 6050
T•X11IHIFK1ory .........................................6052

www comics com

~~~~;;;;;;;-;;;:;:;;;;;;;;-;~~~~~;;
Htating &amp; Cooling

CLASSIFIED INDEX

Applllnca Service .................... .. -.... ..• 302

Veh1rles

Fair Steers, A 1 Sired
shoe steers, broke to
lead, only a few weeks
rema tnlng before weigh
Auctions
In Pnced for all budgets ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~""-;;;;;;;;;;
Call
740·256·1621
or Cross
Creek
AUCtiOn,
740 963 0022
Buftalo, Saturday 6 pm
Peta
Fruit
cakes
smoked
Ham
sliced.
Trailer
Benjl type dog 10-12 loaded of merchandise
months old 682·7672

Jack Russell pups ready
at Christmas $.250 Reg
379 243g

Olhtr Sorvi..,
Pet
CrematiOns
740·446·3745

livestock
~~~;;;;;;~~~
~

0 alI Reg1stered

Prof.uional s.,..·
TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY SSI
No Fee Unless We Wlnl
1-1188-51!2·3345 •

Hay, fetd, Sttd, Grain
="'---"""="""=•
Hay and Gram 4x5 round
bates
mtKed
hay
$12-$20,740 441 5502

flufty
Toy
740 367 0889

Beautiful
Poodles

Toy Poodle for sale 3 fe·
males
$350
740-256·1101
or

ServiCe

chaal

~~~-,.,..--

38R 2 Bath S299 month

~44;::6:;;·3:;:3:;;84~-~-~
Avo1d1ng foreclosure 14
payments left make one
move 1n 446-3093
3Br 2 5 BA 1721sq ft
Wl\h Full Bsmt 2 car
2FP on o Sac
1n
Spnng
Valley
Est
move 1n ready Ap·
po1ntment
Only
740·266-5260
2-3 bedrooms 1
hardwood
floors
proved sept1c new
deck
golclf1sh
fenced 1n yard 1
Rocksprrngs
Pomeroy ,
740 992 2355

at

03

bath
aproof

pond
acre
Rd
Oh10,

?J $76 590

or

3br
2ba
Central
Air/Heat newly remocl·
eled
bathrooms
new
at Carm1· hardwood &amp; tile floors
Trailers $155 000 304 675 4680

740-446·3825
RV
Serv1ce
Tratlers
740-446

for Salt

3 Bed, 2 Bath! Only
515 500
lor
hst1ngs
800-620-4946 ex R019

=;;;;;;;;;; HO:'' 5·

help, Gas fired heat1ng boiler 5
yr old w1th all controls
!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!io!!"':'!!!!!!!!! must see Co"'es
with
and look through
Heating
• &amp;Cool'eng
eve."""
complete
7 ....ng
the them.
740-992-2974
I..O.....;-.iiiiiiiiii.-..1 Lowes New &amp;unopaniKI "'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
boxes Odesa fireplace """
mantel plus vent free gas
Horne lmJIIOVt'menfl
Penonals
lOg heaternouvered ventIIHment
free ftreboK!Large white
Weterprooftng
Lady would like to meet 55 1!2" high by 6l"
Unconditional lifetime
Gentleman
between long Cost over $1 200 &amp;
guarantee Local refer
65-70
years
old will sell to 1st offer of
encestum1shed Estab645-5440
$500. Call740-742-2628
lished 1975 Catl24 Hrs
740-4 4G·0870 Rogers
Basemen! Waterproofing

Recreational Vehlclea ..•..•••..........•.•.........• 1000
ATV ........................................................ 1005
Blcyclu...................................................... 1010
Booii/Acceoaorlu .................................... 1015
ComperiRVo &amp; Tntlltro ............................. 1020
Motorcyclu ............................................... 1025
Otllor ........................................................ 1030
Want to buy ............................................... 1035
Automotlve ................................................ 2ood
Aula RtniiiiiLHH ..................................... 2005

Recrea11onal

1000

we
can
(740 )992-5023

legale.......................................................... 100
Announcementa ......................................... 200
Blrthday/Annlvoru'V ................................. 205
Happy Ado.......... •....................................210
Loot &amp; Found ........................ ................. 215
Memory!T11onk You ., ......................... ...... 220
Notices....... .......... ................................. 225
Poroonola ............................................ ...... 230
Wonted ...................... .............................. 235
5ervleto..................... ...... ....... .. ............... 300

, lnaurana....... .......................... . ••..••••.•...•. 332
Lawn Slrvtce ............................ . • ...... .... 334
Muolc/Dionce/llroma ................................. 336
Other Slrvlceo ...................... ............... ........ 336
Plumblng/Eioctrlcal ............................. ....... 340
prof...lonal Services ...............................342
Repelre .... ................................................. 344
Roofing .......................................................346
Security ...................... ..... ... .................... 348
lllniiAccounllng ....... • .......... ................. 350
TroveW:nltr10lnment ...............................352
Flnonclol ..................................... .................400
' Flnonclol Slrvlcta ................. . ...................405
lnaurence """''""··························· ••.•••••.•••.• 410
Money to Lend ....................................... ......415
Education ..... ....... ......................................500
Bullntll &amp; Trodl! SChool ...........:............ 505
Jnatructlon &amp; Tntlnlng ............... ............ 510
J.ouona ............. ......................................515
Peroonol • .• .........................
. ............. 520
Anlmolo.. .. . .............. ...........................800
Animal Suppll•o ......................................... 605
Harooo..... ................................................ 610
Llvealoek ....................................... .........615
Pete .............................................................620
Wont to buy........ .••. •..................................625
Agriculture .........................,........................700
Form Equipment ......................................705
O.rdon a Produce......................................710
Hay, food,-· Gnoln ............................... 715
Huntl1111 Lind .......................................... 720
W.nttobuy .... .........................................725
~~- ............. • .. .........................900
Antiques. .. ................. ••.•..•• .... ......... .......1105
Applltnct ............................. •·•· .......... 910
Aucllono • . ............. ............................ 915
Botgllln J1110tmttnt.....................................920
Coflecllbleo ......................................... • ... 825
Computoro ................................. • .............. 930
Equlpmen1/Supplleo............ ···•• •••••• , ........836
FIH Mtrktto ........................ ·• ••·· · ...... • 840
Fuel 011 coot/Wobd!Goo ..... ......... .. ........ tw5
furniture ..... . ........................ ·········· ... 950
Hobby/Hunt• Sport ..................................955
Kld'a Corner ................................................960
Ml•ooUonoouo ..............................................965
W•nt to boy ................... ,...........................870
Yord Boll ..................................................... 875

HouMJ

CarmiChael

3825

-;;;;;;;;;;;;..;A;;uto~•;..;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
02 Honda Accord V6
loaded
92,000
Call 740·245·5526

miles

~~--~~~~

~

2006
Ctievrolet
HHA J 2Sk
·L •
miles gafrom Georg1a, all new rage
&gt;ept,
loaded
Buck mas
" 1er Km1a 1o1S
•
•
304 862 2356
of new 1tems Start~ng to
sell h1gh quality Kmves
Sports Ulilily
such as Case, Buck &amp; ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;~;;;;;;;;
Mossy Oak
V1sa, Mas- 02 Edd1e Bauer Ford Elt
ter
Card
&amp;
Debit plorer 102K miles 4WD.
304-550·1616
Stephen loaded seats up to 7
Ready N1639
greal shape great pnce,
;;;,;;;;;;,;,;;;;;;;,!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!'! great winter or aU season
fvot/ Oil/ Coal/ travel
vehiCle
WoOd GOJ
740 441 7233

1

Extraordinary Pr-"1
s pectacu 1ar v1ew ot t he
Ohio River
Pnvate dnve off Uncotrr
Hill,
Pomeroy
OhiO
woods on three sides
(4+)acres to a htstoncal
home
Ctrca 1900., 5
bedrooms. 2 l~rep laces 2
lull baths, 2 staircases
beauttful anginal wood
work many PICh.lre Win·
dows mostly new Win·
dows large kitchen and
breakfast room beaut1
fully landscaped w1th 1n
ground pool S11 on the
wrap around porch and
enJOY
ttle
spectacular
v1ew of the Oh1o Rwer 2
car detached garage and
2 out bulld1ngs Would
make a wonderful famtly
home or bed &amp; breakfast
Pnvate and P1cturesque
SPECTACULAR VIEW
SeriOus
1nqurres
only
please call 740·992-3678
Land (Acroaa•)

740·645·19ti0
l!===ii=;;;:~ ...,....,.,_~--- 345 Acres located 011,
Rei
ps Seasoned F.rewoOd CAA 2003 Chevy Trailblazer. 496 Paxton Ad GallipoGolden
pu
HEA"
ed
m/$200. f/$250. Chihua·
,..
accept
SWD
loaded.
clean lis ts adequate tor a mohua pup m/$200, Cocker 645·5946 or 441·0941
105k
$8 900
OBO bile home Has all hook·
Septic pumping Gallla pups
mi$200.
M1n1 !""-~--~-- 304·675·5253
or ups 740-441-5129
Co OH and Mason Co SChnauzer • (parti)
m/1 Seasoned
Ftrewood ~304-;;;;;,5;9;;;,;3·!!
59;;;49;.,!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! ,~..,..~~=-WV Ron Evans Jack- $400,
BoKer
pups, Hardwood 446-9204
=
Exceptional
200
acre
son. OH 800-537-9528
black/While ml$600 , All ,....-.-~-~-- "';;;;;;o~T;n.;;;ocb""-=-----= cattle farm m Gallla Co
AKC reg , 740.696-1085
Wood for Sale Wlll ~
OH
60+
acres
03 F250 4 door 4WD well-dramed
bOttomland
II
HI
h
D
Us
35
8
~ home 6 wk
\'er
g way
o tesel 1oaded $19,500 along Raccoon Creek ~
Fr.. 10 ...-.304 • 12 5350
old pups Dad IS Pyron· ,:;;;:;;;;~;,;,;;·.,.;;,.!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! or trade for older dresel 60+ acres pasture, bateeslmother IS small dOg
Miscellaneous
~37;,;9;;;2:;,7,!i15;,.!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! ance wooded Stock waAfteJ Spm 245-9890
ter pond 2 spnngs well
Giveaway 2 ktUens part Jet Aeration Motors re •=W~ant~To~&amp;~uy~;;;;; Farm has earned 40-45
MonoyToltnd
Persian Call441-0833
paired , new &amp; rebutlt 1n Wan t to buY Junk Cars. cows w/calves Modem
stock Call Ron Evans, call 740 .388 _0884
bnck ranch Style house
I
NOTICE Borrow Smart Pekingese pups for sae 1-800-537-9528
wl hmshed
walk-out
:;,$2;:50:=.7::40-:=256~
·1~664===
• __.....,..;..._~-- basemen\ 937·596·6774 ·
Contact the Otuo DIVI· :
. . , . . - - - - . - - WANTED 69 Camaros .
sion of F1nanc1al lnst1tu
Big new Gas F1replace
Re~l Estate
tlons OftiC8 of Consumer
prOJects or restored ears 3500
nEWer used
kJgs Still
any cond1t1on
l1nders
Rentals
Affairs BEFORE you ref!
wrapped, glass on three ree paid
Call Doug : ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ;
nance your home Of obsides to be bUilt 1n walt 614 203 _1272
call
or ~
1a1n a !pan BEWARE ol "':::'Fann==Eq;i;o~il"::m:=te::~:t~ Nalural
gas
$300 00 61 4-444-2!109 office
Apor1mentt/
requesls for any ~rge ::
OBO 740.388-8743
::.:;:;::::::,;;;:::.::,::;;::;...~~
advance paymen\S
INTEGRITY,
Townhoo111
01 EBY,
JOOO
RL'11 Est1te
fees or msurance Call KIEFE~ BUILT,
EJ\.IVE Rem1ngton Model 870
1
d
2 bed
t
,
Sales
the Office of C""sumer VALLE'
HORS
·
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
an
room
ap
s1
16
""''
STOCK
TRAILERS "Wu-,gma ster"
Gal
furnished
and
unfur
Affiars
toll
tree
at
Small
Forand
$325
HJ 66 •278 •0003 to team LOAD
MAX
EQUIP
mshed and houses 1n
74
7
MENT
TRAILERS.
0-533·38 0
Pomemy ano M•ddlepon
Common:ial
If the mortgage broker or CARG O EXPRESS
•
secun1y deposit required
lender IS propi!rty h·
o. For sale used sta 1
rHft call Commerc1aVreta•l
&amp;pace
no pets 740·992·22t8
Ho"ESTEAOER
censed (Th1s IS a publiC CA~GO/CONCESSION
lor mfo 1·60&amp;329-1344
for rent
H'1gh traffic
serv1ce
announcement
. ·,-,~-...,.--~ count good VISibility - 1 and 2 BR apatrtments
from the Ohio Valley TRAILERS
B+W Mollohan
carpet
Fall ma1n road location heat for •ent near downtown
Pubtlsh1ng Company)
GOOSENECK FLATBED
8 water mcluded ih rem
$3999 VIEW OUR EN- Special 20 oz Cammer·
Potnt Pleasant All ut11iJ
TIRE TRAILER INVEN· c!al Carpet $6 95/yard Respond to box ClA 16 ties
paid
No
pets .
~~~~~~~~
Several
Colors 200 Main St·eet PI PI Please
call
TORV AT
WV 25550
WWWCARMICHAEL•
740 446 7444 Ouahly at
304·36(Hl163
TRAILERS COM
Low Pncesl
1BFI Ap1 WID hookups
740-446-3825
Established beauty shop satellite TV 1ncl w/rent
""'""'""'"""""'""'""'~ ----..,..-:--:~ NEW AND USED STEEL
locatiOn for rent
Clean close to hosp 1tal Can
;;; lulinNt &amp; Trod.
Have you priced 8 John Steel Beams, P1pe Rebar recently
remodeled 7-40-339-036 2
School
Deere lately? You 11 be for
Coocrete
Angle Heal &amp; water. InCluded 1n 2 bedroom, hvmg room
surpnsedl Check out our Channel , Flat Bar Steel rent
Respond 10 Box kitchen, batn Apartment
used
•nventory
Grating
for
Ora1ns.
OnveCLA
17
200 Ma1n St Pt Have Central All fur
81
•
www
CA~EQ
com
Carways
&amp;
Walkways
l&amp;L
~P
..
I.
WVo;,;,,;2;;;5550;;;;;,""""""""""
n4shed
WITh
couCh
GoHt,ollo
michael
Equlpfnent Scrap Metals Open Mon =
cha1rs
washer
dryer
iuel
Wed
&amp;
Frl
For Solely Owner stove mterowave beds
(Careers C1ose To Home) 740-446 24 12
8am·4 30pm
Closed
d1rt1ng table and chau--s
Call Today! 740 446·43117
K10ta Tractor LK3054, Thurs
Sal
&amp;
Sun House on SA 588 lor S400 depos1t $450 a
1-800·214-!l452
4WD,
D1esel
w/End 740·446·7300
more
1ntonnation
and month
Cal1
~llipgl!tcareercollege tdu
Loader 30hp , HO hrs - - - - - - - • piCtures go to orvb com 304-862·2523
Leave'
Aoofedt!ed Member Accredil
Garage
kept Story Book Ooll House 1 d number Is browmng Message and Number 1f
1ng Council tor 1~
~ w Schools 12748
304-882·2356
$35 304-882-2438
740.446 7204
no1 a\ Home

Are

=

!""_____..._

c......,eo-

�'

Thursday, November 20, 2008

www.mydallysentlnel.com ·

P.ge 84 • The Daily Sentinel,

:~i·~·"'*·1Af~ :~r·~~*/[:~~~iApG~•~•~n/~;·::~;;~~;m;~~-~Q;·~~;;~;;;:!a~e~•;;~~:;;1~~u~~~~~;;;!H~~~p~'W~a~mM~-~~~~·~~~l!~~~l!!l!!l:lll!!
' ·, Te••,..
2 br
&amp; rru from

Thursday, November 20, 2008
ALLEYOOP

www.mydailysentinel.com

The Daily Sentinel • Page BS.

1'owrr'ta,..
"·

2 bay service stat~n 1 "AA" Governmem Funds Gallipolis Career College Service Manager &amp; Serv·
Hoi-- Beech Street, Middle· Jackson
Pike.
Lease Available for 1st time is accepting resumes for ice Technician positions
ar. Sortie utllltlel pd or, port, 2 beclroom tur- required. Call 446·3644' home buyers who own a
mathematics a'ailable. Heatth care &amp;

,appilnc:es
.$40(Vmo

7~ 18 • 52 88

avail. nlshed apanment, utili· lor more info.
land or ha'We land or
dep. ties paid, no pets, dehave family l&lt;~nd. Zero
or posit
&amp;
references, Business space tor rent Down Easy rinancing.
(740)992.01 85
423 Second Ave. Call Call to be Pre-Qualified.
740446·4383
740·423-~728

+

.388-8o39

•

~

1nstructor.A minimum

ol Retirement

a master's degree in
mathematics is required.
Please emaN a cover let·
1er and resume to idan·

plans

able. F»tease send
sume
LLCOCAAEQ.COM
fax to 740446·9104

ACROSS

avail·

Phillip
Alder

re·

to
or

(740) lleeutlful Apta. II Jock· Olfile ·building lOcated in ~200~5-.;.t~4~,7~0~~-:o:-.~lle· lc~llgallipoltocareercot·
"wv"""·so~"!H~r."""!App~·re·n.t~iee
ton Eltetn. 52 West- GaJiipolis OH 28 Cedar
lege.edu or tax it to
A
·441.0194
St. Rent $450 mth. + de- Home, 26edroom, 2bath, 740 ,AA.:l-4 124 .
Miner Class MSH • 24
wood Or., from $365 to
"rt\1
Cl
wv M'
F
,----~-.-·
vinyl siding, shingle roof,
Hr. ass
1ne or740
258
6681
74
4
2568
3 rooms and bath up· $560.
o- 46- ·
"
"
thermapayne
window,
man Class Safety Con·~·t
Compte'""•
"----~ •• •Wh 11.•~ ra.
-r 1ur- Equal Houst''" · Opportu·
HIIUMI For Rent
20ff.poroh 741H164·4356
,..........,~
, .'---'
_ , sulallng SeNice
dehed with W/0 . No nity. Thlt Institution 11 an ...........~.;.~,;;;;_.
or 740·797·4356 lo-~obl
Co
TraiAing · Company
;pets. Ref. Aeq. 441'-o245 Equal Oppanunity PrQ- SIIJ9fmo~ 3 bed. 2 b11th . caled
a1
Oar-Nin. =;;;o;;o;;!#~~~~ (304)-372·8346
..,
. bl
vlder a~d Employer.
. B'"k R'po' (l% dowoL ll$••2::;6~
.
0~00:;:
·
--~--=
.
·.,.anment aval 1a e now .Gr.cloua Living l and 2 years. gq APRl fur li~t lng~ ~
$1 89 $28 27/HR
Medical
'Riverbend
Apts.
New
tt(X)-620-..$114(:n;":X IW27
97 ROOman 16K72 2BA,
now ....=;;;;;;~~;;..~~
~ven WV. Now accept· Bedroom Apts. at · Village _':"":""'"""'~-::::~~ 2ba. all appliances . heal hiring. For application Enjoy caring lor ll'le Eld·
.
.
Manor
and
Riverside ~ bedroom at 88 Gar- pump, $.19000. Must be and tree govern.ment job erl"?
Home
Health
mg
app11catrons
lor Apts. in Middleport, from
I A
A
'
HUO·aubsidlzed,
one ~'~"~
to
$592. field. $400 rent $400 de· moved. 740·245-5962
info. ~I
mencan
S· Aides needed in Pt.
01
Bedroom Apts. Utilities ~ _
_
Equal posit. WOFS provided. New 3 Bedroom hOmes soc.
~~bor ·Pleasant and Mason,
1
822
913
599
Included. Based on 30o/o
~7;;;40-;.:64:;;;;;5-.;1;:;64;:6~-,.,..- !rom $214.36 per month, " • - 6'
rs. $7.50
to
·StO.OMlr.
or adjusted income. Gall Housing Oppor:t"nity·
2'br. house \n Mason includes many upgrades, emp. ser.~.
1·866-766·9832'
304..a82·3121,
available
HOUDAV SPECIAL
$325 mOn. + $325 dep. . delivery
&amp;
set·up.
for Senior and Di18bled Pat a full security deposh no pels 304-802·3652.
740·385·2434
POST
OFFICE
NOW
J)eopie.
and nAt vour first months
~:;;;::~~~~~~ HIRING avg. Pay · $20/hr
,.,~ ,
1BR house $375 utilities Prices Reduced 2 2006 or
$571&lt;Jvr,
includes
are NOT included. Relet· 16K80 2 bed 2 bath. 1 Fed.Ben, OT. Place by
Rant Freet
At
ences required. Gallipolis 2000 16 x7 0 2 bed 1 adSource, not affiliated
V~lley
VIeW
Apartments
area 709·1372
bath, 1 1999 16x80 2 wi1h USPS who hires.
CONVENIENTLY
LQOOO.State ~gute 325
2. 3 &amp; 4 Bedroom bed 2 bath gas. I 1997 1.866 .403 •2582
CATEO
&amp;
AFFORD·
Thunnan, O~'io 45685
14K70 2 ,bed 2 b&amp;th QBS,
Home Health Care aides
ASLEI Townhouse apa~·
740-24$.8170
Homes.
Pomeroy,
$500'$550
month,
1
2002
16&gt;80
3
bed
2
Help
Genoral
immediately
needed
ments,
and/or
small
1·2 BedroomApar1ments
bath.
Priced
deliYered
must be certified or have
/'lOUses for rent. Call With appliances furnished 740"992"6909
Leave blocked, leveled and ·an· · Ohio
valley
Home
1' year experience bo·
74()..441-1111 lor appli·
On site laundry tacllll)'.
Messiige
chored.
Day
· · Ph. Health, Inc. hirlng Home nuses available conlact
cation &amp; information
Call fDt' details or pick up 3 bedroom house lo· 740-388·0000
&amp; Health
Aides.
STNA,
Kay
or
Shetley.
applicatiOn at rental
cated at 1678 Lincoln 740·388·6513
&amp; Eve- CNA, CHHA., PCA may Hl86·366-1t00
• ELLM VIEW APT$
otflca ·
Heights, Pomero~.
$400 nlngs &amp; weakends Ph . apply at 1480 Jackson
'
;2&amp;3BA and up, Central
l'ossibility of renfat
a month, S400 deposit. 740-388-8017
&amp; Pike, Gallipolis. Ohio or
.,t.Jr, W/0 hookup, tenant
assistance.
{740)742·1903
740-794·0460
phone 740·441·1393 for
:PaYs elec1ric. EHO Elm
Equal Housing
Three · Bd house in Mid·
more info. Competitive
-VIew
Apts.
ctteport
Ohio
$380
wages, mileage
reim·
Opportunil)'
:1304)882-30 t 7
TOOt 419-526-0466
Month.
no
pets.$200
bursement and benefits
"TI1ts Institution Is an
dep.• 74()..591·0195
inclUding
haallh
lnsur·
Green
·Spnng
valley
Equal Opportunity
..
Very nice 2 br. in SyraAdministratiwi/
ance &amp; much more.
·Apartmants 1BR tor rent
cuse, 2 &amp; 3 be: In
Profes,ionGI
Provider and Employar"
month.
$375
Pomeroy,
call
740-446-, 599
Needed for yard work
{740)992·3702
The Board of Park Com· raking leaves, fairly big
·Twin Alvers Tower · is ac·
· 3br, 2ba, BradQerry Rd. missioners ot the 00 job. Call 367·0689
:cepttng applications for
Middleport, OH, Reier· Mcintyre Park District is ___.__ _ _ __
.waiting list tor HUO sub- . , . . . - - - - . - - - - - ences
Required,
No accepting letters of inter· An ExceiJent way to eam
:Sidlzed, 1-BR apartment Spacious 3BR apt. k&gt;· Pets,
$450 est and resumes from money. The New AVon.
lor the elderiy/disabled, cated In GaHipol~. $650 304-675-3834
persons interested in the Call
Marilyn
ca11675-56?g
th
· tudee
at
ot
Park
Admlnls·
304·882
-2645
position
mon
•nc
w er, BeautHul 3BA in coun1ry,
trator. The Parit: AOOlinis·
~:::-"':":~~~~~ trash, sawage. No pe~
·
:Now
LEASING Jordan 740·591-5t74
new appl, new carpet, trator is responsible lor Domino's now hiring .safe
or
-landing 2BR &amp; 38A 441 -attO
fresh painted, CIA, wash· administration,
planning, . dflvers at all l~attons,
~vailable No Pets. Ten- :-----:~':""-- room w/ WID hookup. management and opera· mus~ be 1Byrs. old. Apply
'8r1l Responsible for Aent Tara
Townhouse Water
pd.
$550/mo.
tlons ol the countywide in person
:&amp; Electric 304·674-Q023 Apartments · 2BR. 1.5 614·595·77731645-5953
Park District. Applicaf!tS - - - - - - - -or 304-61o-On6
bath, back patio, pool, Furnished 3 br. in New
should posses a mini-· I-Ifti"~~
playground, (trash, sew- Haven call after 4:30 mum o'l a Bachelors De...,... ~,_. ._.,... ..
3 bt, $400, 2 br. $325, 1 age.
·water
pd.) ~304::;:;.·77~3-;;;9;::50~7;.._ __
$425/sec ~
gree, eKperlence in combr. $295 plus utilities 8 $425/rent,
dep. Call 74
Nicr J br. huu se. no peti, munily leadership, com7. 0547
deposit, 740·247-4292
1
ref. req. 304-67~ -2050 be- munications, public rela·
Gel Paid What You're
rure 5pm.3()4..675· 15ijiJ ;;f. tions, fund raising, grant
Worth! .
ter·5pm.
writing,
administrative,
Help Wanted
Ht~IP Wanted
AenVSale Jbr, w/lg. Ga·. management ancl linan· .
Our blat performars
rage,
$500/deposlt, clal skiils . Pl~ase submit make up to $12.25 after
or inlori"natior_~ to: 00 Mcln·
WANTED: Pan-time positions available to 304-755-8744
six months I
lyre Park District. Gallia
304-675·6113
assist individuals with mental retardation in
County · Cour111ouse, -18
. You choose the type ol
Meigs County:
Sm. 2 br. $375 ·00 a Locust
Street.
Room
calls you want to !Ska·
mon.
+
$500.00
dep.
no
1262,
Gallipolis,
Ohio
I) 35 hrs: 6 a-l lp SIS
Recruit volunteers for
smoking,
~o
pets 45631
2) 25.5 hrs: Fri. 7:30p. 8 a Sat; Sat8p · 8 a 304-nl-9192 after 4pm. ;;;;;;;;,;,.,..,..,..,..,..., non-profit organizations
Or
Sun:
Child/Elderly Core
.woo
Mill1111acture0
· Raise funds and renew
Mus1 have high school diploma or GED,
Hou~mq
memberships for the
Reliable
childcare
NRA!
valid driver's license, three years good
needed 1n my home
No
eKperience
required!
·. (Gallipolis) mostly evedriving e.perience and adequate automobile
Rentals
No
Credit
Ca"rd
Sales!
ning·hours. 446·2908
insurance . $8.40/hr, after ·!raining. Send
No Collections!
. 2 &amp; 3 bedroom. Call
resume to:
Drive,. &amp; Delivery
740-'46-1279
Full and Par1.'time
Positions!
~F-ed~e-ra~l~Fu-n~ds-i~us~l-re"-· Taking applicatiofls lor
All Major Holidays OFF
leased lor Land owners. independent contractors.
WITH PAY!
No closing cos! and Wate rloo area eam up to
OH 45640
.Weekly Pay + Bonus
ZERO DOWN! Will do $1,200 a month deliver·
Incentives!
Deadline for applicants: 11 /2 5108 .
land
improvements. lng The Daily Tribune.
Medical, Oenta,l, EAP,
Bankruptcy
&amp;
Bad
Credl
Must
be
reliable
and
1
Pre-employment drug testing . Equal
401K!
OK. 2, 3, 4 and 5 bed· have dependable trans·
Opponunity Employer ,
portatlon. Must be avail·
rooms
available.
Cell N0'6' to start Nrnable Monday tQrough Fri·
740-446·3364
tng your potential!
day mornings and early
For Rent
1-188-IMC.PAYU
afternoons
and
Saturday
HelpWanred
ttelp Wanted
MobiJe homes &amp; lots , evenings. If interested
Ext 24~7
{no pets) In Ashton WV contact David at The
. ApPI¥ online:
http:/llobt.tofoc:-ltlon.com
304-57&amp;2942.
Gallipolis Daily Tribune,
Nice 2BR 2 beth mobile 740·446·2342
~-:--:-~-~-:-'::""
hoine ·for rent. $450 per ;,;;;,;,;~;;,;,;;..,.,..,.,., Local EnYironmental Co.
month + deposit c811
Education
seeking certified asbes·
LICENSED I'IIACTICAL NURSE
740-646-8460
los abatement workers.
,;;;;:;;:;:::;::::;::::..,_ _ _ Gallipolis Career College 74D-441·8227
AND/OR MEDICAL ASS?STAf(f
Scenic location, conven·
resumes lor
Pleasant Valley Hospital is currently ient to town and afford· isan accepting
accounting instructor.
accepting applications for a full time able, 2. &amp; 3 betlrooms A minimum of a ·Bache·
call lor's degree in account·
licensed Practical Nurse anci/Of Medical avaHable
!!!7,;;4!;;!0)!.99;;2;;;
:5!!63!!9;,.,..,...,
ing is required. Please
Asst. LPN's must have current West
ScH.s
email a (lover letter and

11 CUba

posit.

POSTAL JOBS

r . .

7

.,

2

992 5064

;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;!!!

WamM.

o.3s

9:00a.m. - II :00 a.m.

H1lls Self
Storage

RelellSe: Apn! 2.5. 2009 '
A fee of . $20.00 will be

29670 Bashan Road
Racine, Ohi&lt;Y ·

WINTER STORAGE
Meigs Co. Fairgrounds

Oct. 25. 2008

charged for early arrival.
late a.rri.val. early remoyul,
late remO\'al, or anyttme
OJCCC~S
~~
wanted 10
f8irgroumb other . than
stated doted
Bu•lding
space is first come lir.&gt;t
11erve ,
Inside Stor.tge $4 .00/lf
Opefl Spo"' Sl.UO/If
Inside Fence: $ l .00/lf

'

44087 Wipple Rd.
Pomeroy,OH
· (5 Points)
New &amp; Used Tires,
We buy used tires,
computer wheel
. alignments. light
mechanic work.
complete se rvice oil
changes. small engine
repair.

Virginia license. Previous medical office
experience or hospital related experience
preferred.
.
'
·
Send resumes to:
PleaSIInt Valley Hospital

cto Human ltesourcH
2520

;;;;;;=='""~=;;;;;;;= resume to jdanicki@Qalli·
Brand riew 3bed 2bath pollscaretrcollage.adu
on • -half acre . In Pt. faxitto740·446·4124
Pteaaant.
OWNER
Fl·
NANCE
AVAILABLE.
{740) 446-3570

valley Drive

· Pl!lnt PI-nt. WV 15550
Or fax: 304·675·075 or apply o.n-llne at

A.fennca~
6715,17
Ohio Revleed ~Odl

The · Melga County
Board of Revlllon hlltl
comp?eled Ita wor?c of

equalization. The ?ax
.returna for ?ax year
2008 hav. _ , revlald

NOnCE: Ia hereby
given IIIII on lllltufC?Iy,
November 22, 2008 It
10:00 •.m., • public
Nltt wlll be held II 211
W
Second
51.,
Porneray, Ohio. The
F.,_llan?cand lav·
lnge Company Ia HI~

Aucuoneer:
BiiiV R. Goble Jr.
740·416·1164

lng for_CMIIIn hanCI ot
comp?eled end are Clf"Jtlti? ?he 101openlor pubHc lnopeo- lOW7ng J:!l..,.,..,:
lion In the oftlce of the 111N " - Cherok•
the

YIIUatlonl

County Audhor, 14FJ711111U10551
8acond Floor, Court- The Farmers llan7l lrKI
hou11, S.Cand Sbwl, Savtnge - Comp1ny,
:Pot...oy. Ohio.
p_.,y, Ohio, ....
Metga

~nla tlgllt)SIIIIe -

the rlg7lt ?o bid
voiUIIIona, 11 _.,_ a1 thle Nltt, •ncJ ro
lllhld for ?ax- 2008 withdraw the IIbOv•
muat be . . - I n eccor· COII-I p~or 7o - -

FLYIN6.

8:00am · 4:.10 pm
Sat. ~:00 am· 12

We appreciate your
'

.Hardwood Cabinetry And Furniture

740.446.9200
2459 St. Rt. 160 ·Gallipolis
EE

• Room Addition• 6

Remod•llng
• New G1ragn .
• Eflctrlcal &amp; Plumbing

THE BORN LOSER
Racine, Ohio 740·247-2019
Owners:

Cell: 740-416·5047

Jon Van Meter &amp;
Paul Rowe.

jrshadfrm@aol.com

-

wltll

Section Further, The , _ ,

&amp;715.1t of the O?llo Re- lank ond ilt?ntra
"YIHd Codll. Theile comp1ny I'WIIiriiM die
:comp;alnla IIIUII be right ?o re)ect.ny or oR
nlld In , . County Au- bkla IUbmltled.
dhor'a Ofl7ce on or • The obove delcrrr.,d

fore the 3181 dlty of colleterol will be eold
· March, 2009. All corn' ••• 1........,. Ia", wltll
plalnla fl?ed w?dl the no expreaoOd or lmcounry Auditor will be p??ed watattrtlven,

7INrd by the Board of For fut1hor lnlornlltlon,
Rlvlt?on In t h e - or ?or In toppalntmant

Section ra ?nlptiCI colloterot,
&amp;715.18ofthe0hlo.Re- prior to llle at. c~viHd ~.
r.ct Cync?le or Ken 11

)lrov?dld by

Miry T. Byer·Hln
1112-21:11.
...... County Aud7tlllr (11) 1t, 20, 21
(1t) II, 1t, 20, 21, 23,

a&amp;,21,:zi,'D,21

For more information or to
reserve a seat please call

(304) 675·4340,
Ext. 1100
Puppies
6 wks
Free
949-3088

tl\'( &amp;.:&gt;\ I' I&lt;:.I ffi t:&gt;'

Tl-\t&gt;.T'5 H:\Z.ii.I~L£~
Wl-\0

email:

!~

1-\E:?

'"t D0\'-1'1 KNOW Wl-\0 1-\E:. 1~, ~

i

WI IF l E.\jER m~t&gt;
-l'

OUT, l't&gt; U fl..(. TO

;f\t&gt;J-IK f\1~

1

~

T+IE REST OF US
WILL JU!.T
~ROUND!

28 Years Experience

David Lewis
740·992-6971
I ·~·

f

itl'
•'

Quality Seamless
Gutters

Stanley TreeTrimming
&amp; Removal

Maintenance l'lus
Com merd&lt;~l

&amp; Rt .•idr!rl //11

Vinyl
Siding/Replw.;:en ·~nt
WindowsiRentnt:lc ling
Bonded &amp; lnsm\•J

740-992-1493 Olllce
740-476-p3.19 Cel l

1-J&gt;rompl and Quality
Wmk

*Rl'asonablc Rates
* lmmed
+E'&lt;perienccd

References Available!
Call Gary Stanley'@
740-59) -8044
l~ lease leaVe messa e

COW and BOY

Johnson's Tree

Service

Corilplete Tree Care
ll&gt;tlurld · F1" liii!M1n
7.o-441·1311

l~OVA.TION

LIES
WHERE YOU LEAST
EXP£CT IT.

J

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

, Roofing
·Decks
·Garages

• Pole Buildings

• Room Addnlons

LIKE,010 YOU KNOW THE

SHOES WEllE DESIGNED .
WITH THE HELP Of A
WAFFLE M/IJI.Efl?
•1- - flOW NIK£

"fl.!AN~ AG&lt;AIN

FOR PINNeR, l-IZ

Free Esllmataa

For Remodeling and New

Hou~C

Building

MARCUM CONSTRUCTION
• Room Additions • Omnges • Vinyl

Call:

and Wood Siding • Roofing • Pole
Barns • Palio 's, Porches und Decks

MilE W. MARCUM, OWNER
472J9 Rid'le l Ruat.J.

Lon~ Bnll\ltn ,UH

740-985-4141
lll· IXJ4 .

25+ years rxperiem:e 1-'rt'l: f:srimt~les

Advertise·
in thi.s space for
$64 per month

--::-:...._.J

~=~~~:~z::
.

L

740-367·0536

742-2332

L

IS AMULTI·
BILLION
DOLLAR
CORI'OIIATION.

740-367·0544

James KHsee II

YOU'IIE SHOVING
YOUR SHOE IN A
TOASTER.

TIIEAD OF THE FIRST NIK£

Local C011tractor

• Owner :

West

2 NT

Pas11

Pa~11

North
2•
3 NT

Ea•l
Pass

All pass

From the land
of sheep and bridge

~
G.RIZZWELLS

V" ~fil.~Y. ~l'ODY... T PID\4'T I.IEA\i
~R

\-\tAD ClfF t

~ajesty

33 Roofer's

gunk

Then came the error. East should not
have gone back lo spades. If Wesr had
wanted East to return to spades, West
would llave led a high diamond. When
he led llis lowest, ha was saying that 11e
wanted to win tricks In that suit, no! in
spades. East should have ·ted the die·
mond.queen at trick live.
Details
are
available
at
www.nzbridge.org.nz.

·AstroGraph
"bur '7llrlhdaor:

Friday, NoV. 21, 2008
By Bemlca Bltde Oaal
If you let the powers·lhat·be know that
you 're not afraid to take on more responsibilities, the year ahead will be one ol
e~eception81 growth . You may be given
more work, but you'll also be well dom·
pansated.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) - Should
· you realize !rom personal 8Kperience
that a friend is mismanaging an lmpor·
tant personal relallonshlp, find an oppor·
lu;l,lty
. ·hare the wisdom of what you've
Ia' r
on)t letl1im or her suffer.
S· rf RillS (Nov. 23-0ec. 21) . Although your Initial yield might not meet
eJ~pectatlons. your probabilities for sue·
cess down lhe line are extremely good.
Don't despair - that trir'kllng flow will
become a gusher.
CAPAICOAN' (Oec. 22-Jan. 19) - With
your nalural·leadershlp qualilif3s, you
should be able lo show others how lo do·
things in a manner that Is agreeable to
'atl. Selthe example o! What it takes.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) - You1 ·
good deeds are admirable because you
assist others in a manner where they
believe they are accomplishing things on
the ir own . It's a formula for attracling
popularily.
PISCES {Feb. 20-March 20) - Even it
you hav&amp; doubts. proceed with !he new
ideas suggested by two lriends wllo
have your best Interest at heart . Their
design will prove to be extremely successful.
AAIES (March 21-Aprll 19) - Persons
with whom you could be imolved may
Come out of two camps. One will shiue
your visions and hopes, while the other
may possess the know·how and wherewithal to make things happen
TAURUS (April 20·May 20)- There will
be no doubt that you are in cha rge when you issue directives , you'll mean
business. Yet because of the nice way
you present lhe edicts, there will be no
sting In thern, liither.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20)- You might
not be perals1ent about accomplishing
personal matters, but when it comes lo
anything of Importance, you will be
exlreme.ly tenacious and conscientious .

I Sci-fi
Doctor
2 Boathouee
implement
3 Twice 01
4 Had tc apol·
ogize
(2 wds.)
5 ~icci or
Foch

I DID ca~¥-&gt;IDER li,. ..
aooP "ffi\Nq I FOUHD 1\-1\!r BUI&amp;\To

AT "M. ~A'7\

7~~D

,...__......--

34 Accumulate
36 Wrttlling ·

meas.
IS Grind, as

39 Apply caulk

·

44 Slir up

furnishings 45
(2 wds.)

19 Fast-talks
20 Chipmunk

anack

~tan

Autl
heroine

46 II not
47 Blouse part

49 Kitchen

22 Stadium

7 Call-cab

24 Durable

cousins

holds
43 Peeves

6 -lee
cakes

, noite

pest

.

51 Tumbler's -·
pad

wood

52 Festive
25 Split to join
night
26 Turns white· 53 Van27 Fully.
Waals Ioree

qualified

certain

10 Adventure

29 SaultMario

tala

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos

Cei&amp;tlnly O!Yier cryp:ograms arecrenteO lrom qu-:rre!IOns by lam~s ~le 11ast a."td pr9SIInt

·

~~h

lener lntne c~er &gt;lards lo1 ar.olher

Today's clue: N equalS lJLRHJRV

OHTU

CJILVHUTRFHE
VFUARLTM
BHVF

PUC

EJUEIJ.

UTJ. "

•

XULT

UP
WJ
VFJ

HR

BHVF

VJt

FLCMJRV

HR

SLJN

PREVIOUS SOLUTION - "The superior man ... does noi set his mind slher.

for anythtng Of against anything : what is righl he will follow ." . Confucius

~~:i:t~~, S~1\~·1A-!]; t~s~~

WOIQ
GAM I

ldltod by CLAT I. POLLAN

R~arrcng•
0 lour
sCPombled

letters of thl!l
word• be-

low

Ia

form

four simple words.

QOAUPE

W.A T R Y 0

"If you c&lt;Jntinue lo sweep
your problems under ihe
rug," lectured gramps, ''you ·.

I

f--rj"''I"Tj-,j"'-rl-;lr-·-i 0
. ....1.1.-.1..--l
1..___..-.L.-J.

may wind up in the·-··."
Complete the o/ttl(kle qootecl
by filling In mo tnll$tng wordi

you develop from :step No. 3 below.•

•

.:\ PRINT NUMBERED iEnERS
I# IN .JHESE SQUARE$

I

I

I

UNSCRAMBLE LETTERS TO
GEr ANSWER

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS 11119108
Poncho - Yield - Thyme - Fickle - THEY KEEP
"!believe," gramps mustd, "that the things people discani
Jells more about them lhan Ihe things THEY KEEP

ARLO &amp; JANIS

·'
'

In catrylng them out
CANCER (June 21..July 22)- Make It a
point tO let those people In valued rela-

- - - ' - - - - - - - - - . , . . , tiOnships know how much they mean to
you and how deeply you care. AI this
"
time, any loving words you speak would
greatly solidity those bonds.
LEO (July 23·Aug. 22) - Although you
might ha\le to work a bit harder than
usual In order lo gratify your ambitious .
objectives. the rewards yov receive will
be proportionate to the efforts you
e)lpend
VIRGO (Aug, 23·Sept. 22) - Little th ings
we do for others have a way of becoming
very endearing, especially to those we
~~ - It'll be those lhOughtful tokens of
el'lpre&amp;lion that will go a long way toward
loving memories.
UBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) - Even If ll'a
Inconvenient, helping people wroo need
your assistance could prove to be to your
ultimate benefit. The dividends you
r•ce lve will far &amp;lCceed your aftorl.

~\.\. , U:iUA\.\.:1,

14 Cough
syrup
teeth
t7 Home

pooeh
9 Felt

40 Fencor·s·
blade

"VFJ

jaCk.

DOWN

8 Sarge's

35 Hill
37 W-2 info
38 Rhaa

New Zealand Blidge, edited by Richard
Solomon, ls a bimonthly magazine :~ a
small-page format. I enjoy the magazine,
errors notwithstanding. II gives readers a
. chance to see· bridge ptayed by normal
people, not superstars who never seem
to make mistakes. And -one can learn
important basics of the game - as in
tl1is deal based on one in the magazine.
Decide what good plays and errors were
made.
Against three no-trump, West led the
spade 10: two, five,. jadl . Declarer
cashed the c)ub ace a~d conliooed with'
his second club. West woh with his king
and shifted to the diamond t11ree. ~ast
wOn with his ace and returned the spade
seven, wheraupon declarer claimed
lhree spades, three hearts and four
Clubs.
The auction was natural an(l normal. The.
opening lead was also teKtbook. And
East's play at trick one was correct, playing his lowest card b~ause he 11~d no
help tor spades.
When Wast wop the second club. he
reatlzed . that tl1e defense had lo cash
four diamond tricks. He .had to hope .
partner had !!C&amp;·fourlh (declarer having
4-4·3·2 distribution), ace-queen-third or
ace·queen-doubteton. So West correctly
switcl1ed to the diamond three, not the

•

RICK PRICE
Ni!w Homes. R10om Addit.ions, Remodeling,
Metal &amp; Shh1~Ie Roo[,, Siding, Decks,
BallhnMlm !!_~~~ Licensed &amp; Insured

Cell· 740 -~

4 Lab/aorder Collie

r M'i win: !&lt;:.1&gt;.1'11 OFF" Will-\ "'I

PSI CONSTRUCTION

December 13, 2008

PVH Auxiliary

GONNA NEED MORE'N'THAT!!
MAW'S COMIN' FER SUPPER

'TIL I.YI.A
HOOKED
HIM AN'
.REELED
HIM IN !!

www.tt.n........e~kcall!r)otey.com

Windows

Sponsored by

·

F~A~ OF

·VInyl Siding
• Raplacomant

$42/person
Chartered Coach

EV~~YrOJ&gt;Y 1 I&gt;~IV~
TO Ttf~ AI~PO~T
SEfM~ TO LOS~
Ttffl~

#5548

• PaHo 1M Porch Oeck8

South
It

dollar
25 Ecol. police
28 Oeelores
frankly
30 Triumphant
cry
· 31 Big black
do ·
32-

Opening lead: olo 10

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

. J&amp;L
Construction

Wheeling Festival
of Lights
&amp; ShoppinQ'
at St. Clairsville Mall

Dealer: South
Vulnerable : Both

AUCTIONS/ANTIQUES

H&amp;H
Guttering

NOT?CE TO TAXPAY· PUIIUC NOTICE

t 87542
• A 5

t/!4/1 mo. pd

• Roofing $ Outttrt
• Vlnrl Siding I Painting

23 Tijuana

• AKJ
• J I0 8

Mon-Fri. ·

CAll US TODAY
FOR RfVUCfD
WlffffR RATtS
DfC. · FfTI'

.. 8 7 5 J

South

Stop &amp; Compare

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

:ERS

.. K 2

RV's

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER
SERVICE

item

21 Tjiuana
"Mra."
22 "Little
Caestl'" role

•+AQ

t K J 10 3

(740) 992-5344

businfSS

• 7 6 5
' '9742

6 5 3

l40·992·1m

Hours
7:00AM· 8:00PM

Pomemy. Ohi(J

AA/EOE

•

swer exams

48 Palace
dwellers
giant
50 Impended
Far Eoot
54 Brick bal&lt;ors
Kitct..n tool 55 Rogue ·
Bllhhouot 56 Grey rock
Pay for
57 Organic
Conning
compound

13
15
16
18
19

• 9 6

• Complete.
Remodeling

- .111'xa0' "\).

11 20 oo
2

•QJ I094

West
• Q 10. 4

·

neighbor
12 Inourance

• AKQ

• Garages

. Free Estinwtrd

www.pulllf.~

·

or

• a3

• New Homes

.$tlih'ilo.. ~ .

We service and
winterize boats and

Buckeye Community ·Services
P.O.Box604
Jackson,

®

North

BISSELl
COKSTIUCTIDN

45771
740-949·2217

.

L &amp; L Tire Barn

I OBERT

:Anawar to Previous Puzzle

41 Ripen
42 Gullarlol
-Paul
43 Retiree's
kitty
46 Long-an-

1 John
Lennon
tuna
6 Hozy

CIA.

APT.

lnd

NEA Crossword Puzzle

BRIDGE

SOUP TO NUTZ
~

COMe l&gt;le'i

Ma~e

liS sa&lt;/ lHf PLeoc;e: OF .

AL~18HCe t~~ Da'i?

?'~

�'

Thursday, November 20, 2008

www.mydallysentlnel.com ·

P.ge 84 • The Daily Sentinel,

:~i·~·"'*·1Af~ :~r·~~*/[:~~~iApG~•~•~n/~;·::~;;~~;m;~~-~Q;·~~;;~;;;:!a~e~•;;~~:;;1~~u~~~~~;;;!H~~~p~'W~a~mM~-~~~~·~~~l!~~~l!!l!!l:lll!!
' ·, Te••,..
2 br
&amp; rru from

Thursday, November 20, 2008
ALLEYOOP

www.mydailysentinel.com

The Daily Sentinel • Page BS.

1'owrr'ta,..
"·

2 bay service stat~n 1 "AA" Governmem Funds Gallipolis Career College Service Manager &amp; Serv·
Hoi-- Beech Street, Middle· Jackson
Pike.
Lease Available for 1st time is accepting resumes for ice Technician positions
ar. Sortie utllltlel pd or, port, 2 beclroom tur- required. Call 446·3644' home buyers who own a
mathematics a'ailable. Heatth care &amp;

,appilnc:es
.$40(Vmo

7~ 18 • 52 88

avail. nlshed apanment, utili· lor more info.
land or ha'We land or
dep. ties paid, no pets, dehave family l&lt;~nd. Zero
or posit
&amp;
references, Business space tor rent Down Easy rinancing.
(740)992.01 85
423 Second Ave. Call Call to be Pre-Qualified.
740446·4383
740·423-~728

+

.388-8o39

•

~

1nstructor.A minimum

ol Retirement

a master's degree in
mathematics is required.
Please emaN a cover let·
1er and resume to idan·

plans

able. F»tease send
sume
LLCOCAAEQ.COM
fax to 740446·9104

ACROSS

avail·

Phillip
Alder

re·

to
or

(740) lleeutlful Apta. II Jock· Olfile ·building lOcated in ~200~5-.;.t~4~,7~0~~-:o:-.~lle· lc~llgallipoltocareercot·
"wv"""·so~"!H~r."""!App~·re·n.t~iee
ton Eltetn. 52 West- GaJiipolis OH 28 Cedar
lege.edu or tax it to
A
·441.0194
St. Rent $450 mth. + de- Home, 26edroom, 2bath, 740 ,AA.:l-4 124 .
Miner Class MSH • 24
wood Or., from $365 to
"rt\1
Cl
wv M'
F
,----~-.-·
vinyl siding, shingle roof,
Hr. ass
1ne or740
258
6681
74
4
2568
3 rooms and bath up· $560.
o- 46- ·
"
"
thermapayne
window,
man Class Safety Con·~·t
Compte'""•
"----~ •• •Wh 11.•~ ra.
-r 1ur- Equal Houst''" · Opportu·
HIIUMI For Rent
20ff.poroh 741H164·4356
,..........,~
, .'---'
_ , sulallng SeNice
dehed with W/0 . No nity. Thlt Institution 11 an ...........~.;.~,;;;;_.
or 740·797·4356 lo-~obl
Co
TraiAing · Company
;pets. Ref. Aeq. 441'-o245 Equal Oppanunity PrQ- SIIJ9fmo~ 3 bed. 2 b11th . caled
a1
Oar-Nin. =;;;o;;o;;!#~~~~ (304)-372·8346
..,
. bl
vlder a~d Employer.
. B'"k R'po' (l% dowoL ll$••2::;6~
.
0~00:;:
·
--~--=
.
·.,.anment aval 1a e now .Gr.cloua Living l and 2 years. gq APRl fur li~t lng~ ~
$1 89 $28 27/HR
Medical
'Riverbend
Apts.
New
tt(X)-620-..$114(:n;":X IW27
97 ROOman 16K72 2BA,
now ....=;;;;;;~~;;..~~
~ven WV. Now accept· Bedroom Apts. at · Village _':"":""'"""'~-::::~~ 2ba. all appliances . heal hiring. For application Enjoy caring lor ll'le Eld·
.
.
Manor
and
Riverside ~ bedroom at 88 Gar- pump, $.19000. Must be and tree govern.ment job erl"?
Home
Health
mg
app11catrons
lor Apts. in Middleport, from
I A
A
'
HUO·aubsidlzed,
one ~'~"~
to
$592. field. $400 rent $400 de· moved. 740·245-5962
info. ~I
mencan
S· Aides needed in Pt.
01
Bedroom Apts. Utilities ~ _
_
Equal posit. WOFS provided. New 3 Bedroom hOmes soc.
~~bor ·Pleasant and Mason,
1
822
913
599
Included. Based on 30o/o
~7;;;40-;.:64:;;;;;5-.;1;:;64;:6~-,.,..- !rom $214.36 per month, " • - 6'
rs. $7.50
to
·StO.OMlr.
or adjusted income. Gall Housing Oppor:t"nity·
2'br. house \n Mason includes many upgrades, emp. ser.~.
1·866-766·9832'
304..a82·3121,
available
HOUDAV SPECIAL
$325 mOn. + $325 dep. . delivery
&amp;
set·up.
for Senior and Di18bled Pat a full security deposh no pels 304-802·3652.
740·385·2434
POST
OFFICE
NOW
J)eopie.
and nAt vour first months
~:;;;::~~~~~~ HIRING avg. Pay · $20/hr
,.,~ ,
1BR house $375 utilities Prices Reduced 2 2006 or
$571&lt;Jvr,
includes
are NOT included. Relet· 16K80 2 bed 2 bath. 1 Fed.Ben, OT. Place by
Rant Freet
At
ences required. Gallipolis 2000 16 x7 0 2 bed 1 adSource, not affiliated
V~lley
VIeW
Apartments
area 709·1372
bath, 1 1999 16x80 2 wi1h USPS who hires.
CONVENIENTLY
LQOOO.State ~gute 325
2. 3 &amp; 4 Bedroom bed 2 bath gas. I 1997 1.866 .403 •2582
CATEO
&amp;
AFFORD·
Thunnan, O~'io 45685
14K70 2 ,bed 2 b&amp;th QBS,
Home Health Care aides
ASLEI Townhouse apa~·
740-24$.8170
Homes.
Pomeroy,
$500'$550
month,
1
2002
16&gt;80
3
bed
2
Help
Genoral
immediately
needed
ments,
and/or
small
1·2 BedroomApar1ments
bath.
Priced
deliYered
must be certified or have
/'lOUses for rent. Call With appliances furnished 740"992"6909
Leave blocked, leveled and ·an· · Ohio
valley
Home
1' year experience bo·
74()..441-1111 lor appli·
On site laundry tacllll)'.
Messiige
chored.
Day
· · Ph. Health, Inc. hirlng Home nuses available conlact
cation &amp; information
Call fDt' details or pick up 3 bedroom house lo· 740-388·0000
&amp; Health
Aides.
STNA,
Kay
or
Shetley.
applicatiOn at rental
cated at 1678 Lincoln 740·388·6513
&amp; Eve- CNA, CHHA., PCA may Hl86·366-1t00
• ELLM VIEW APT$
otflca ·
Heights, Pomero~.
$400 nlngs &amp; weakends Ph . apply at 1480 Jackson
'
;2&amp;3BA and up, Central
l'ossibility of renfat
a month, S400 deposit. 740-388-8017
&amp; Pike, Gallipolis. Ohio or
.,t.Jr, W/0 hookup, tenant
assistance.
{740)742·1903
740-794·0460
phone 740·441·1393 for
:PaYs elec1ric. EHO Elm
Equal Housing
Three · Bd house in Mid·
more info. Competitive
-VIew
Apts.
ctteport
Ohio
$380
wages, mileage
reim·
Opportunil)'
:1304)882-30 t 7
TOOt 419-526-0466
Month.
no
pets.$200
bursement and benefits
"TI1ts Institution Is an
dep.• 74()..591·0195
inclUding
haallh
lnsur·
Green
·Spnng
valley
Equal Opportunity
..
Very nice 2 br. in SyraAdministratiwi/
ance &amp; much more.
·Apartmants 1BR tor rent
cuse, 2 &amp; 3 be: In
Profes,ionGI
Provider and Employar"
month.
$375
Pomeroy,
call
740-446-, 599
Needed for yard work
{740)992·3702
The Board of Park Com· raking leaves, fairly big
·Twin Alvers Tower · is ac·
· 3br, 2ba, BradQerry Rd. missioners ot the 00 job. Call 367·0689
:cepttng applications for
Middleport, OH, Reier· Mcintyre Park District is ___.__ _ _ __
.waiting list tor HUO sub- . , . . . - - - - . - - - - - ences
Required,
No accepting letters of inter· An ExceiJent way to eam
:Sidlzed, 1-BR apartment Spacious 3BR apt. k&gt;· Pets,
$450 est and resumes from money. The New AVon.
lor the elderiy/disabled, cated In GaHipol~. $650 304-675-3834
persons interested in the Call
Marilyn
ca11675-56?g
th
· tudee
at
ot
Park
Admlnls·
304·882
-2645
position
mon
•nc
w er, BeautHul 3BA in coun1ry,
trator. The Parit: AOOlinis·
~:::-"':":~~~~~ trash, sawage. No pe~
·
:Now
LEASING Jordan 740·591-5t74
new appl, new carpet, trator is responsible lor Domino's now hiring .safe
or
-landing 2BR &amp; 38A 441 -attO
fresh painted, CIA, wash· administration,
planning, . dflvers at all l~attons,
~vailable No Pets. Ten- :-----:~':""-- room w/ WID hookup. management and opera· mus~ be 1Byrs. old. Apply
'8r1l Responsible for Aent Tara
Townhouse Water
pd.
$550/mo.
tlons ol the countywide in person
:&amp; Electric 304·674-Q023 Apartments · 2BR. 1.5 614·595·77731645-5953
Park District. Applicaf!tS - - - - - - - -or 304-61o-On6
bath, back patio, pool, Furnished 3 br. in New
should posses a mini-· I-Ifti"~~
playground, (trash, sew- Haven call after 4:30 mum o'l a Bachelors De...,... ~,_. ._.,... ..
3 bt, $400, 2 br. $325, 1 age.
·water
pd.) ~304::;:;.·77~3-;;;9;::50~7;.._ __
$425/sec ~
gree, eKperlence in combr. $295 plus utilities 8 $425/rent,
dep. Call 74
Nicr J br. huu se. no peti, munily leadership, com7. 0547
deposit, 740·247-4292
1
ref. req. 304-67~ -2050 be- munications, public rela·
Gel Paid What You're
rure 5pm.3()4..675· 15ijiJ ;;f. tions, fund raising, grant
Worth! .
ter·5pm.
writing,
administrative,
Help Wanted
Ht~IP Wanted
AenVSale Jbr, w/lg. Ga·. management ancl linan· .
Our blat performars
rage,
$500/deposlt, clal skiils . Pl~ase submit make up to $12.25 after
or inlori"natior_~ to: 00 Mcln·
WANTED: Pan-time positions available to 304-755-8744
six months I
lyre Park District. Gallia
304-675·6113
assist individuals with mental retardation in
County · Cour111ouse, -18
. You choose the type ol
Meigs County:
Sm. 2 br. $375 ·00 a Locust
Street.
Room
calls you want to !Ska·
mon.
+
$500.00
dep.
no
1262,
Gallipolis,
Ohio
I) 35 hrs: 6 a-l lp SIS
Recruit volunteers for
smoking,
~o
pets 45631
2) 25.5 hrs: Fri. 7:30p. 8 a Sat; Sat8p · 8 a 304-nl-9192 after 4pm. ;;;;;;;;,;,.,..,..,..,..,..., non-profit organizations
Or
Sun:
Child/Elderly Core
.woo
Mill1111acture0
· Raise funds and renew
Mus1 have high school diploma or GED,
Hou~mq
memberships for the
Reliable
childcare
NRA!
valid driver's license, three years good
needed 1n my home
No
eKperience
required!
·. (Gallipolis) mostly evedriving e.perience and adequate automobile
Rentals
No
Credit
Ca"rd
Sales!
ning·hours. 446·2908
insurance . $8.40/hr, after ·!raining. Send
No Collections!
. 2 &amp; 3 bedroom. Call
resume to:
Drive,. &amp; Delivery
740-'46-1279
Full and Par1.'time
Positions!
~F-ed~e-ra~l~Fu-n~ds-i~us~l-re"-· Taking applicatiofls lor
All Major Holidays OFF
leased lor Land owners. independent contractors.
WITH PAY!
No closing cos! and Wate rloo area eam up to
OH 45640
.Weekly Pay + Bonus
ZERO DOWN! Will do $1,200 a month deliver·
Incentives!
Deadline for applicants: 11 /2 5108 .
land
improvements. lng The Daily Tribune.
Medical, Oenta,l, EAP,
Bankruptcy
&amp;
Bad
Credl
Must
be
reliable
and
1
Pre-employment drug testing . Equal
401K!
OK. 2, 3, 4 and 5 bed· have dependable trans·
Opponunity Employer ,
portatlon. Must be avail·
rooms
available.
Cell N0'6' to start Nrnable Monday tQrough Fri·
740-446·3364
tng your potential!
day mornings and early
For Rent
1-188-IMC.PAYU
afternoons
and
Saturday
HelpWanred
ttelp Wanted
MobiJe homes &amp; lots , evenings. If interested
Ext 24~7
{no pets) In Ashton WV contact David at The
. ApPI¥ online:
http:/llobt.tofoc:-ltlon.com
304-57&amp;2942.
Gallipolis Daily Tribune,
Nice 2BR 2 beth mobile 740·446·2342
~-:--:-~-~-:-'::""
hoine ·for rent. $450 per ;,;;;,;,;~;;,;,;;..,.,..,.,., Local EnYironmental Co.
month + deposit c811
Education
seeking certified asbes·
LICENSED I'IIACTICAL NURSE
740-646-8460
los abatement workers.
,;;;;:;;:;:::;::::;::::..,_ _ _ Gallipolis Career College 74D-441·8227
AND/OR MEDICAL ASS?STAf(f
Scenic location, conven·
resumes lor
Pleasant Valley Hospital is currently ient to town and afford· isan accepting
accounting instructor.
accepting applications for a full time able, 2. &amp; 3 betlrooms A minimum of a ·Bache·
call lor's degree in account·
licensed Practical Nurse anci/Of Medical avaHable
!!!7,;;4!;;!0)!.99;;2;;;
:5!!63!!9;,.,..,...,
ing is required. Please
Asst. LPN's must have current West
ScH.s
email a (lover letter and

11 CUba

posit.

POSTAL JOBS

r . .

7

.,

2

992 5064

;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;!!!

WamM.

o.3s

9:00a.m. - II :00 a.m.

H1lls Self
Storage

RelellSe: Apn! 2.5. 2009 '
A fee of . $20.00 will be

29670 Bashan Road
Racine, Ohi&lt;Y ·

WINTER STORAGE
Meigs Co. Fairgrounds

Oct. 25. 2008

charged for early arrival.
late a.rri.val. early remoyul,
late remO\'al, or anyttme
OJCCC~S
~~
wanted 10
f8irgroumb other . than
stated doted
Bu•lding
space is first come lir.&gt;t
11erve ,
Inside Stor.tge $4 .00/lf
Opefl Spo"' Sl.UO/If
Inside Fence: $ l .00/lf

'

44087 Wipple Rd.
Pomeroy,OH
· (5 Points)
New &amp; Used Tires,
We buy used tires,
computer wheel
. alignments. light
mechanic work.
complete se rvice oil
changes. small engine
repair.

Virginia license. Previous medical office
experience or hospital related experience
preferred.
.
'
·
Send resumes to:
PleaSIInt Valley Hospital

cto Human ltesourcH
2520

;;;;;;=='""~=;;;;;;;= resume to jdanicki@Qalli·
Brand riew 3bed 2bath pollscaretrcollage.adu
on • -half acre . In Pt. faxitto740·446·4124
Pteaaant.
OWNER
Fl·
NANCE
AVAILABLE.
{740) 446-3570

valley Drive

· Pl!lnt PI-nt. WV 15550
Or fax: 304·675·075 or apply o.n-llne at

A.fennca~
6715,17
Ohio Revleed ~Odl

The · Melga County
Board of Revlllon hlltl
comp?eled Ita wor?c of

equalization. The ?ax
.returna for ?ax year
2008 hav. _ , revlald

NOnCE: Ia hereby
given IIIII on lllltufC?Iy,
November 22, 2008 It
10:00 •.m., • public
Nltt wlll be held II 211
W
Second
51.,
Porneray, Ohio. The
F.,_llan?cand lav·
lnge Company Ia HI~

Aucuoneer:
BiiiV R. Goble Jr.
740·416·1164

lng for_CMIIIn hanCI ot
comp?eled end are Clf"Jtlti? ?he 101openlor pubHc lnopeo- lOW7ng J:!l..,.,..,:
lion In the oftlce of the 111N " - Cherok•
the

YIIUatlonl

County Audhor, 14FJ711111U10551
8acond Floor, Court- The Farmers llan7l lrKI
hou11, S.Cand Sbwl, Savtnge - Comp1ny,
:Pot...oy. Ohio.
p_.,y, Ohio, ....
Metga

~nla tlgllt)SIIIIe -

the rlg7lt ?o bid
voiUIIIona, 11 _.,_ a1 thle Nltt, •ncJ ro
lllhld for ?ax- 2008 withdraw the IIbOv•
muat be . . - I n eccor· COII-I p~or 7o - -

FLYIN6.

8:00am · 4:.10 pm
Sat. ~:00 am· 12

We appreciate your
'

.Hardwood Cabinetry And Furniture

740.446.9200
2459 St. Rt. 160 ·Gallipolis
EE

• Room Addition• 6

Remod•llng
• New G1ragn .
• Eflctrlcal &amp; Plumbing

THE BORN LOSER
Racine, Ohio 740·247-2019
Owners:

Cell: 740-416·5047

Jon Van Meter &amp;
Paul Rowe.

jrshadfrm@aol.com

-

wltll

Section Further, The , _ ,

&amp;715.1t of the O?llo Re- lank ond ilt?ntra
"YIHd Codll. Theile comp1ny I'WIIiriiM die
:comp;alnla IIIUII be right ?o re)ect.ny or oR
nlld In , . County Au- bkla IUbmltled.
dhor'a Ofl7ce on or • The obove delcrrr.,d

fore the 3181 dlty of colleterol will be eold
· March, 2009. All corn' ••• 1........,. Ia", wltll
plalnla fl?ed w?dl the no expreaoOd or lmcounry Auditor will be p??ed watattrtlven,

7INrd by the Board of For fut1hor lnlornlltlon,
Rlvlt?on In t h e - or ?or In toppalntmant

Section ra ?nlptiCI colloterot,
&amp;715.18ofthe0hlo.Re- prior to llle at. c~viHd ~.
r.ct Cync?le or Ken 11

)lrov?dld by

Miry T. Byer·Hln
1112-21:11.
...... County Aud7tlllr (11) 1t, 20, 21
(1t) II, 1t, 20, 21, 23,

a&amp;,21,:zi,'D,21

For more information or to
reserve a seat please call

(304) 675·4340,
Ext. 1100
Puppies
6 wks
Free
949-3088

tl\'( &amp;.:&gt;\ I' I&lt;:.I ffi t:&gt;'

Tl-\t&gt;.T'5 H:\Z.ii.I~L£~
Wl-\0

email:

!~

1-\E:?

'"t D0\'-1'1 KNOW Wl-\0 1-\E:. 1~, ~

i

WI IF l E.\jER m~t&gt;
-l'

OUT, l't&gt; U fl..(. TO

;f\t&gt;J-IK f\1~

1

~

T+IE REST OF US
WILL JU!.T
~ROUND!

28 Years Experience

David Lewis
740·992-6971
I ·~·

f

itl'
•'

Quality Seamless
Gutters

Stanley TreeTrimming
&amp; Removal

Maintenance l'lus
Com merd&lt;~l

&amp; Rt .•idr!rl //11

Vinyl
Siding/Replw.;:en ·~nt
WindowsiRentnt:lc ling
Bonded &amp; lnsm\•J

740-992-1493 Olllce
740-476-p3.19 Cel l

1-J&gt;rompl and Quality
Wmk

*Rl'asonablc Rates
* lmmed
+E'&lt;perienccd

References Available!
Call Gary Stanley'@
740-59) -8044
l~ lease leaVe messa e

COW and BOY

Johnson's Tree

Service

Corilplete Tree Care
ll&gt;tlurld · F1" liii!M1n
7.o-441·1311

l~OVA.TION

LIES
WHERE YOU LEAST
EXP£CT IT.

J

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

, Roofing
·Decks
·Garages

• Pole Buildings

• Room Addnlons

LIKE,010 YOU KNOW THE

SHOES WEllE DESIGNED .
WITH THE HELP Of A
WAFFLE M/IJI.Efl?
•1- - flOW NIK£

"fl.!AN~ AG&lt;AIN

FOR PINNeR, l-IZ

Free Esllmataa

For Remodeling and New

Hou~C

Building

MARCUM CONSTRUCTION
• Room Additions • Omnges • Vinyl

Call:

and Wood Siding • Roofing • Pole
Barns • Palio 's, Porches und Decks

MilE W. MARCUM, OWNER
472J9 Rid'le l Ruat.J.

Lon~ Bnll\ltn ,UH

740-985-4141
lll· IXJ4 .

25+ years rxperiem:e 1-'rt'l: f:srimt~les

Advertise·
in thi.s space for
$64 per month

--::-:...._.J

~=~~~:~z::
.

L

740-367·0536

742-2332

L

IS AMULTI·
BILLION
DOLLAR
CORI'OIIATION.

740-367·0544

James KHsee II

YOU'IIE SHOVING
YOUR SHOE IN A
TOASTER.

TIIEAD OF THE FIRST NIK£

Local C011tractor

• Owner :

West

2 NT

Pas11

Pa~11

North
2•
3 NT

Ea•l
Pass

All pass

From the land
of sheep and bridge

~
G.RIZZWELLS

V" ~fil.~Y. ~l'ODY... T PID\4'T I.IEA\i
~R

\-\tAD ClfF t

~ajesty

33 Roofer's

gunk

Then came the error. East should not
have gone back lo spades. If Wesr had
wanted East to return to spades, West
would llave led a high diamond. When
he led llis lowest, ha was saying that 11e
wanted to win tricks In that suit, no! in
spades. East should have ·ted the die·
mond.queen at trick live.
Details
are
available
at
www.nzbridge.org.nz.

·AstroGraph
"bur '7llrlhdaor:

Friday, NoV. 21, 2008
By Bemlca Bltde Oaal
If you let the powers·lhat·be know that
you 're not afraid to take on more responsibilities, the year ahead will be one ol
e~eception81 growth . You may be given
more work, but you'll also be well dom·
pansated.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) - Should
· you realize !rom personal 8Kperience
that a friend is mismanaging an lmpor·
tant personal relallonshlp, find an oppor·
lu;l,lty
. ·hare the wisdom of what you've
Ia' r
on)t letl1im or her suffer.
S· rf RillS (Nov. 23-0ec. 21) . Although your Initial yield might not meet
eJ~pectatlons. your probabilities for sue·
cess down lhe line are extremely good.
Don't despair - that trir'kllng flow will
become a gusher.
CAPAICOAN' (Oec. 22-Jan. 19) - With
your nalural·leadershlp qualilif3s, you
should be able lo show others how lo do·
things in a manner that Is agreeable to
'atl. Selthe example o! What it takes.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) - You1 ·
good deeds are admirable because you
assist others in a manner where they
believe they are accomplishing things on
the ir own . It's a formula for attracling
popularily.
PISCES {Feb. 20-March 20) - Even it
you hav&amp; doubts. proceed with !he new
ideas suggested by two lriends wllo
have your best Interest at heart . Their
design will prove to be extremely successful.
AAIES (March 21-Aprll 19) - Persons
with whom you could be imolved may
Come out of two camps. One will shiue
your visions and hopes, while the other
may possess the know·how and wherewithal to make things happen
TAURUS (April 20·May 20)- There will
be no doubt that you are in cha rge when you issue directives , you'll mean
business. Yet because of the nice way
you present lhe edicts, there will be no
sting In thern, liither.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20)- You might
not be perals1ent about accomplishing
personal matters, but when it comes lo
anything of Importance, you will be
exlreme.ly tenacious and conscientious .

I Sci-fi
Doctor
2 Boathouee
implement
3 Twice 01
4 Had tc apol·
ogize
(2 wds.)
5 ~icci or
Foch

I DID ca~¥-&gt;IDER li,. ..
aooP "ffi\Nq I FOUHD 1\-1\!r BUI&amp;\To

AT "M. ~A'7\

7~~D

,...__......--

34 Accumulate
36 Wrttlling ·

meas.
IS Grind, as

39 Apply caulk

·

44 Slir up

furnishings 45
(2 wds.)

19 Fast-talks
20 Chipmunk

anack

~tan

Autl
heroine

46 II not
47 Blouse part

49 Kitchen

22 Stadium

7 Call-cab

24 Durable

cousins

holds
43 Peeves

6 -lee
cakes

, noite

pest

.

51 Tumbler's -·
pad

wood

52 Festive
25 Split to join
night
26 Turns white· 53 Van27 Fully.
Waals Ioree

qualified

certain

10 Adventure

29 SaultMario

tala

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos

Cei&amp;tlnly O!Yier cryp:ograms arecrenteO lrom qu-:rre!IOns by lam~s ~le 11ast a."td pr9SIInt

·

~~h

lener lntne c~er &gt;lards lo1 ar.olher

Today's clue: N equalS lJLRHJRV

OHTU

CJILVHUTRFHE
VFUARLTM
BHVF

PUC

EJUEIJ.

UTJ. "

•

XULT

UP
WJ
VFJ

HR

BHVF

VJt

FLCMJRV

HR

SLJN

PREVIOUS SOLUTION - "The superior man ... does noi set his mind slher.

for anythtng Of against anything : what is righl he will follow ." . Confucius

~~:i:t~~, S~1\~·1A-!]; t~s~~

WOIQ
GAM I

ldltod by CLAT I. POLLAN

R~arrcng•
0 lour
sCPombled

letters of thl!l
word• be-

low

Ia

form

four simple words.

QOAUPE

W.A T R Y 0

"If you c&lt;Jntinue lo sweep
your problems under ihe
rug," lectured gramps, ''you ·.

I

f--rj"''I"Tj-,j"'-rl-;lr-·-i 0
. ....1.1.-.1..--l
1..___..-.L.-J.

may wind up in the·-··."
Complete the o/ttl(kle qootecl
by filling In mo tnll$tng wordi

you develop from :step No. 3 below.•

•

.:\ PRINT NUMBERED iEnERS
I# IN .JHESE SQUARE$

I

I

I

UNSCRAMBLE LETTERS TO
GEr ANSWER

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS 11119108
Poncho - Yield - Thyme - Fickle - THEY KEEP
"!believe," gramps mustd, "that the things people discani
Jells more about them lhan Ihe things THEY KEEP

ARLO &amp; JANIS

·'
'

In catrylng them out
CANCER (June 21..July 22)- Make It a
point tO let those people In valued rela-

- - - ' - - - - - - - - - . , . . , tiOnships know how much they mean to
you and how deeply you care. AI this
"
time, any loving words you speak would
greatly solidity those bonds.
LEO (July 23·Aug. 22) - Although you
might ha\le to work a bit harder than
usual In order lo gratify your ambitious .
objectives. the rewards yov receive will
be proportionate to the efforts you
e)lpend
VIRGO (Aug, 23·Sept. 22) - Little th ings
we do for others have a way of becoming
very endearing, especially to those we
~~ - It'll be those lhOughtful tokens of
el'lpre&amp;lion that will go a long way toward
loving memories.
UBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) - Even If ll'a
Inconvenient, helping people wroo need
your assistance could prove to be to your
ultimate benefit. The dividends you
r•ce lve will far &amp;lCceed your aftorl.

~\.\. , U:iUA\.\.:1,

14 Cough
syrup
teeth
t7 Home

pooeh
9 Felt

40 Fencor·s·
blade

"VFJ

jaCk.

DOWN

8 Sarge's

35 Hill
37 W-2 info
38 Rhaa

New Zealand Blidge, edited by Richard
Solomon, ls a bimonthly magazine :~ a
small-page format. I enjoy the magazine,
errors notwithstanding. II gives readers a
. chance to see· bridge ptayed by normal
people, not superstars who never seem
to make mistakes. And -one can learn
important basics of the game - as in
tl1is deal based on one in the magazine.
Decide what good plays and errors were
made.
Against three no-trump, West led the
spade 10: two, five,. jadl . Declarer
cashed the c)ub ace a~d conliooed with'
his second club. West woh with his king
and shifted to the diamond t11ree. ~ast
wOn with his ace and returned the spade
seven, wheraupon declarer claimed
lhree spades, three hearts and four
Clubs.
The auction was natural an(l normal. The.
opening lead was also teKtbook. And
East's play at trick one was correct, playing his lowest card b~ause he 11~d no
help tor spades.
When Wast wop the second club. he
reatlzed . that tl1e defense had lo cash
four diamond tricks. He .had to hope .
partner had !!C&amp;·fourlh (declarer having
4-4·3·2 distribution), ace-queen-third or
ace·queen-doubteton. So West correctly
switcl1ed to the diamond three, not the

•

RICK PRICE
Ni!w Homes. R10om Addit.ions, Remodeling,
Metal &amp; Shh1~Ie Roo[,, Siding, Decks,
BallhnMlm !!_~~~ Licensed &amp; Insured

Cell· 740 -~

4 Lab/aorder Collie

r M'i win: !&lt;:.1&gt;.1'11 OFF" Will-\ "'I

PSI CONSTRUCTION

December 13, 2008

PVH Auxiliary

GONNA NEED MORE'N'THAT!!
MAW'S COMIN' FER SUPPER

'TIL I.YI.A
HOOKED
HIM AN'
.REELED
HIM IN !!

www.tt.n........e~kcall!r)otey.com

Windows

Sponsored by

·

F~A~ OF

·VInyl Siding
• Raplacomant

$42/person
Chartered Coach

EV~~YrOJ&gt;Y 1 I&gt;~IV~
TO Ttf~ AI~PO~T
SEfM~ TO LOS~
Ttffl~

#5548

• PaHo 1M Porch Oeck8

South
It

dollar
25 Ecol. police
28 Oeelores
frankly
30 Triumphant
cry
· 31 Big black
do ·
32-

Opening lead: olo 10

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

. J&amp;L
Construction

Wheeling Festival
of Lights
&amp; ShoppinQ'
at St. Clairsville Mall

Dealer: South
Vulnerable : Both

AUCTIONS/ANTIQUES

H&amp;H
Guttering

NOT?CE TO TAXPAY· PUIIUC NOTICE

t 87542
• A 5

t/!4/1 mo. pd

• Roofing $ Outttrt
• Vlnrl Siding I Painting

23 Tijuana

• AKJ
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Mon-Fri. ·

CAll US TODAY
FOR RfVUCfD
WlffffR RATtS
DfC. · FfTI'

.. 8 7 5 J

South

Stop &amp; Compare

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

:ERS

.. K 2

RV's

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER
SERVICE

item

21 Tjiuana
"Mra."
22 "Little
Caestl'" role

•+AQ

t K J 10 3

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businfSS

• 7 6 5
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6 5 3

l40·992·1m

Hours
7:00AM· 8:00PM

Pomemy. Ohi(J

AA/EOE

•

swer exams

48 Palace
dwellers
giant
50 Impended
Far Eoot
54 Brick bal&lt;ors
Kitct..n tool 55 Rogue ·
Bllhhouot 56 Grey rock
Pay for
57 Organic
Conning
compound

13
15
16
18
19

• 9 6

• Complete.
Remodeling

- .111'xa0' "\).

11 20 oo
2

•QJ I094

West
• Q 10. 4

·

neighbor
12 Inourance

• AKQ

• Garages

. Free Estinwtrd

www.pulllf.~

·

or

• a3

• New Homes

.$tlih'ilo.. ~ .

We service and
winterize boats and

Buckeye Community ·Services
P.O.Box604
Jackson,

®

North

BISSELl
COKSTIUCTIDN

45771
740-949·2217

.

L &amp; L Tire Barn

I OBERT

:Anawar to Previous Puzzle

41 Ripen
42 Gullarlol
-Paul
43 Retiree's
kitty
46 Long-an-

1 John
Lennon
tuna
6 Hozy

CIA.

APT.

lnd

NEA Crossword Puzzle

BRIDGE

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~

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AL~18HCe t~~ Da'i?

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�-·
-.

(

'

;: Page B6 • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

•

Thursday, November 20, 2008

BCSsells out, and you'll eventually pay or it'
•
•

Bv TIM

DAHLBERG

ASSOCIATED PRESS

: Unless you're one of the
dwindling millions who slill
get your television from rabbit ears, it •probably dido ' r
register.
-_ And if you are one of
those dwindling millions, il
doesn't matter. The people
who run big time sports
don 'I care about you anyway.
That became more than
apparent this week when the
ijowl Championship .Series
sold out to the highesr bidder and, in the process , sold
out more than 15 million
American households who
will now have to find anoth~r way to watch college
football's biggest games.
: They did it for the money,
a staggering half a billion
dollar's worth over four
years. They did it because

when the worldwide leader
in sports comes calling, they
know better than to not listen.
They did it because they
can.
No one pttered a peep. T:Jo
one said much of anything,
upless you count some sour
grapes from the Fox network that couldn't match
the economic muscle of
ESPN.
It's just business as usual,
and the business in' this case
is college football, which

long ago gave up the pre- have an insatiable appetite the rest of us, who look at reach deeper and deeper into
tense of being anything for games on television.
the monthly television bill their wallets.
other than a big money facll's a nice business model as a basic necessity much
Paying a few buckS . a
tory for the schools that play !hat the free television net- like they view their eleclric month now isn't such a brg
it.
works can'! match, and it bill.
deal. especially since it's
Can't afford cable or generates so much money
"I think we all treat our buried deep inside the cable
satellite TV? Too bad, but that it allows ESPN to out- cable bill now as part of the bill. But how aboui in a few
you're not the demographic bid them for almost any woodwork." said Neal years when it's $10 or 20 a
advertisers want watching event it wants .
Pilsmf, a former CBS execu- month and when boxing and
anyway.
Bur it ·also means that tive who now works as a MMA aren·'r the only sports
The demographic they do you're essentially paying consultant . in the television being offered on pay-perwart! are the. members . of now for sports you used to industry. "It doesn't make view?
··
some 98 million American get for just the price -of any difference to me or 9R
Don't think that 's not
households who pay for the warching some commer- million other consumers , going to happen._
television they .watch, cials. The trend is toward who have ESPN that the
The Walt Drsney Co.,
rhough most of rhem have pay television and it acceler- games -- while be in channel which owns both ESPN and
no idea that they fork out an ated in the past week as 36 rather than channel 2, 4. ABC. could easi ly have kept
extra $3 or so every month ESPN added both the or 7. I'm sure most kids both the BCS and the British
for the right to have ESPN biggest college football today don'! even understand Open on free television. But
piped into their living games in the United States the difference between a it chose to put it on ESPN
rooms.
and one of golf's majors - television station and a and cut out millions of
The television giant com- the British Open :- to its cable channel." .
Americans because · having
mands by far the biggest ·ever-expanding lineup.
That's probably true, but two more valuable proper:
subscr'iber fee from cable
That's bad news for peo- what they should understand ties wiH enable It to charge
and satellite companies , pie who 'either can't afford is that the growing trend even more than the three
mainly because it offers the ·or don't want to pay for toward paying to warch bucks it now gels every
most sports programming cable or satellite. But it will sports on televi sion will month from your cable bill
for a nation that seems to hardly be noticed by most-of . eventually cause them to in the future.

Sodexo Dining
Services
located on Tbe Universitv of
Rlo Grande's campus in Evan ·
and Elizabeth Davlll University
Center invites you to our
Sunday hmnch.buffet. We
bave.many Items to choose from
. Including: made to order
omelets, pastries, salad bar, ·
breakfast and lunch, dessert,
Ice cream bar, soup, pizza,
and much more.

o..o ....... ""· MtCitltiAN p.,..a...
AT 10AII
KEGS&amp;EGGS
Bucki!YIE Bl.ooovMARVa
...A ....

COMe: CI!LI!8U.T2 ANCTH!Jt
V.cTOWt" owR lliE WOLVM~NI!:!J

Bucten~.

s-··~8-.•~
.BEAN BOULaYARO COflllu
C-.OK OUT OUR Plta8H UKIIJ) -...,...

lt'T IJ'8, H!LP WITH YoU.. HOLIDAY Pu.NNtNG

Gon S..oKI!TI

c........

PAlm' TRAVS &amp;
CCifalcrr W MII!Air4Mt NM tfcii..IMt llll..c'IM*t . '

:~DoN·r FcltoeT r .. DaJ. 0.",

Our bruuch hours are
11 a.m. to I p.m.

AND NOW WE HAW IPtNACH Df~

..eu_..,!!I!C!I Yous
F ..... H MOZZ:Afii.U.. A
SMOK•o SALMON
•
PRG&amp;CIUT'TO
PIN WH• •L. Tl'tAY.
7 LAv•lll SALAO .

Bring your family and join us.

$7.95 for adults and we otTer
disc:ounted rates for cbildren.

4.99

Lunch Buffet

11:00 AM - 3:30

Mon. - Sat
/'hank You
io Our .lfanv
( ·u.~·to JIIU!r.~­

/0 }'cars in

Colbpolis

.

._.

_______ ...... .,
'

J,(

There "IS'' S'w:h r1 T'Tzing As
A Free /,unch!
Enter Here For A

· $30 Gift Certificate
To One Of These Grf(at Restaurants
Name:--------------------------~--Phone # _____________________________

h(IJ'kl
t!IPIJN
for Inside Dining

Ex.cu!:le uur mes!l while we complete our remodel.

NOW .SENVI/1/G.,....
Pizza Rnd Stromboli
Award Winning Wings!

ly Sh::ak ur Chicken Sandwiches
ASK ABOUT OUR PEPPERONI ROILS/
Coming Soon ...
Uf#tntR tht&lt; Hu n ltof,dtt\.\ I I· 'I' rS da tlt4!
t't~nJ..t"£ I 4r t .. ,..,
.

Great HtJmettu:&amp;de Dinnerj. Deli Trays
&amp;. Cutered Panies
H ours: M onday·Friday 1()..7,

Saturduy 11-6. CI05ed Sunday

0

Mall to: Free Lunch
P.~.

Gallipolis Dully TribuOe
Box 469, Gallipolis, OH 45631

....... """'

!f.~

.

~

......

.• ·.

Thi.,· Weeks

~

'

•,$

~· ~
'

',i·
I

....

-.:•

~Vinner! !.1

BRANDON

ROACH
( '(J JV GI? .. \ /')' .'
i~ntcr

.......

..

1 o H 111 l
FREE LUNCH.'

f'

�-·
-.

(

'

;: Page B6 • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

•

Thursday, November 20, 2008

BCSsells out, and you'll eventually pay or it'
•
•

Bv TIM

DAHLBERG

ASSOCIATED PRESS

: Unless you're one of the
dwindling millions who slill
get your television from rabbit ears, it •probably dido ' r
register.
-_ And if you are one of
those dwindling millions, il
doesn't matter. The people
who run big time sports
don 'I care about you anyway.
That became more than
apparent this week when the
ijowl Championship .Series
sold out to the highesr bidder and, in the process , sold
out more than 15 million
American households who
will now have to find anoth~r way to watch college
football's biggest games.
: They did it for the money,
a staggering half a billion
dollar's worth over four
years. They did it because

when the worldwide leader
in sports comes calling, they
know better than to not listen.
They did it because they
can.
No one pttered a peep. T:Jo
one said much of anything,
upless you count some sour
grapes from the Fox network that couldn't match
the economic muscle of
ESPN.
It's just business as usual,
and the business in' this case
is college football, which

long ago gave up the pre- have an insatiable appetite the rest of us, who look at reach deeper and deeper into
tense of being anything for games on television.
the monthly television bill their wallets.
other than a big money facll's a nice business model as a basic necessity much
Paying a few buckS . a
tory for the schools that play !hat the free television net- like they view their eleclric month now isn't such a brg
it.
works can'! match, and it bill.
deal. especially since it's
Can't afford cable or generates so much money
"I think we all treat our buried deep inside the cable
satellite TV? Too bad, but that it allows ESPN to out- cable bill now as part of the bill. But how aboui in a few
you're not the demographic bid them for almost any woodwork." said Neal years when it's $10 or 20 a
advertisers want watching event it wants .
Pilsmf, a former CBS execu- month and when boxing and
anyway.
Bur it ·also means that tive who now works as a MMA aren·'r the only sports
The demographic they do you're essentially paying consultant . in the television being offered on pay-perwart! are the. members . of now for sports you used to industry. "It doesn't make view?
··
some 98 million American get for just the price -of any difference to me or 9R
Don't think that 's not
households who pay for the warching some commer- million other consumers , going to happen._
television they .watch, cials. The trend is toward who have ESPN that the
The Walt Drsney Co.,
rhough most of rhem have pay television and it acceler- games -- while be in channel which owns both ESPN and
no idea that they fork out an ated in the past week as 36 rather than channel 2, 4. ABC. could easi ly have kept
extra $3 or so every month ESPN added both the or 7. I'm sure most kids both the BCS and the British
for the right to have ESPN biggest college football today don'! even understand Open on free television. But
piped into their living games in the United States the difference between a it chose to put it on ESPN
rooms.
and one of golf's majors - television station and a and cut out millions of
The television giant com- the British Open :- to its cable channel." .
Americans because · having
mands by far the biggest ·ever-expanding lineup.
That's probably true, but two more valuable proper:
subscr'iber fee from cable
That's bad news for peo- what they should understand ties wiH enable It to charge
and satellite companies , pie who 'either can't afford is that the growing trend even more than the three
mainly because it offers the ·or don't want to pay for toward paying to warch bucks it now gels every
most sports programming cable or satellite. But it will sports on televi sion will month from your cable bill
for a nation that seems to hardly be noticed by most-of . eventually cause them to in the future.

Sodexo Dining
Services
located on Tbe Universitv of
Rlo Grande's campus in Evan ·
and Elizabeth Davlll University
Center invites you to our
Sunday hmnch.buffet. We
bave.many Items to choose from
. Including: made to order
omelets, pastries, salad bar, ·
breakfast and lunch, dessert,
Ice cream bar, soup, pizza,
and much more.

o..o ....... ""· MtCitltiAN p.,..a...
AT 10AII
KEGS&amp;EGGS
Bucki!YIE Bl.ooovMARVa
...A ....

COMe: CI!LI!8U.T2 ANCTH!Jt
V.cTOWt" owR lliE WOLVM~NI!:!J

Bucten~.

s-··~8-.•~
.BEAN BOULaYARO COflllu
C-.OK OUT OUR Plta8H UKIIJ) -...,...

lt'T IJ'8, H!LP WITH YoU.. HOLIDAY Pu.NNtNG

Gon S..oKI!TI

c........

PAlm' TRAVS &amp;
CCifalcrr W MII!Air4Mt NM tfcii..IMt llll..c'IM*t . '

:~DoN·r FcltoeT r .. DaJ. 0.",

Our bruuch hours are
11 a.m. to I p.m.

AND NOW WE HAW IPtNACH Df~

..eu_..,!!I!C!I Yous
F ..... H MOZZ:Afii.U.. A
SMOK•o SALMON
•
PRG&amp;CIUT'TO
PIN WH• •L. Tl'tAY.
7 LAv•lll SALAO .

Bring your family and join us.

$7.95 for adults and we otTer
disc:ounted rates for cbildren.

4.99

Lunch Buffet

11:00 AM - 3:30

Mon. - Sat
/'hank You
io Our .lfanv
( ·u.~·to JIIU!r.~­

/0 }'cars in

Colbpolis

.

._.

_______ ...... .,
'

J,(

There "IS'' S'w:h r1 T'Tzing As
A Free /,unch!
Enter Here For A

· $30 Gift Certificate
To One Of These Grf(at Restaurants
Name:--------------------------~--Phone # _____________________________

h(IJ'kl
t!IPIJN
for Inside Dining

Ex.cu!:le uur mes!l while we complete our remodel.

NOW .SENVI/1/G.,....
Pizza Rnd Stromboli
Award Winning Wings!

ly Sh::ak ur Chicken Sandwiches
ASK ABOUT OUR PEPPERONI ROILS/
Coming Soon ...
Uf#tntR tht&lt; Hu n ltof,dtt\.\ I I· 'I' rS da tlt4!
t't~nJ..t"£ I 4r t .. ,..,
.

Great HtJmettu:&amp;de Dinnerj. Deli Trays
&amp;. Cutered Panies
H ours: M onday·Friday 1()..7,

Saturduy 11-6. CI05ed Sunday

0

Mall to: Free Lunch
P.~.

Gallipolis Dully TribuOe
Box 469, Gallipolis, OH 45631

....... """'

!f.~

.

~

......

.• ·.

Thi.,· Weeks

~

'

•,$

~· ~
'

',i·
I

....

-.:•

~Vinner! !.1

BRANDON

ROACH
( '(J JV GI? .. \ /')' .'
i~ntcr

.......

..

1 o H 111 l
FREE LUNCH.'

f'

�Home for the Ho.lidays~ :s-Y~ :~':" :-\~

Page 2 •

.

.

~~Y.! November 20,2008

Home for the Holidays

.Thursday, November 20, 2008

.

.rt«»v.~21 ~~

'

.

.,.

:.. · ·~·~,~~." .·

··~

¥ • •

w. .

~~C:O~~ti-~:%\s,;~,
~~ff~e
·
.;{ , and Pedemlklg~~rts ~ter, UmveJS•ty Qf · ·..
·-~

Houn: Monday-Saturday 7-8;

Rio Gr~de/Bio Gr~de CortWlunity_. .

,_, ~tlege,..:S p.m. . :·. "

·

· ~ ·· .

·

· l\ •

··NOtj. 21·- · Phil Otrtand JhePOzers, Ariel-Dater ·

.. ' Perfon:nirig-Att._ ctnter~· 8 p·.m.

{

~-,

.
·l··,

.1~ ~ .. · . as Gifts

to. Grv~ to_·-y:'ouP 6}Pf!te · ~o-ve
'

1. A Diamond "0" Pendant
2. WOodW/clc CandlesChristmas Fragrances• Snowflake; Carainel,
&amp;. Sp/Ceid £88nog
' 3; journey D/aplonds _
4. Seiko Musical ClOcks ·
Jacqueline Kennetfy
~~~n / r/
..

.

6. OJocolate Pearls
7. Golden Rings
8. VIva Beads
9. Pulsar Watt:hes
10. Anniversary Rings
11. 24kt Mistletoe $19.95 &amp;.
12. Past, Present, Future

JewelrY .
,

{ { ( : . Lfiyawoy• Welcome

.. · .

Wov~:29 ~ .Craft.IJ&amp;%f¥'f, ~._..Dater · · ·: · .:._;, r

..::~ ,;Perf()rrrurtO Arts ~QtftJ.; 1, toe p.m. ., · .· ,
·, btc. 3 - · Grande~~···;John,W. ~epy~Fin~; ·
. ,y. . . and Perforr:ni~ £8nt~r.
ive.rslty .of ·... :
. Rio Grande/Rio Grilite CommunitY•· · ':

. Wlli·Mai1 Plaza, Gelllpolla, Ohio
(740) 448-3283 .
Houre: Mon • 88_
1..9;30 • 8:011 Open Sunday
. Call for Exttnc!ed Ho!ldiV Hourtl

. - College~ ·8
·
·
~, · '
....._ • 3- Ja
toy, dolt and
French ·
~· · Art Colo y, Tuesday.throt)gh Fri~y, 10 a.m.
, to 6 p.m.;·Sunday, :1 to 5 p._
m. ~ ·' · • .
~Dec.. f.-8

.

.

Janet Bolin, OGCA judge, demonstrates the fantasy flow design to fit
into "The First Noel" class for members of the Wildwood Garden. Club.
She use dried banksia, painted dried materials, snake plant and driftwood in a flowing design.

£ws. 'Dacon or .sausage, ~ f.Pototnu,

We will Cllter for your P~ Pertles...:::li
Altio '~~kin~ Orden for Holldey Pies, Cakes, CookJa,
Whlltever you want!

·~

.
Saturday;,7 p.'m,'.; sU,nday, .a, p.m.' ~· -·· ·~
, :NC)V,.23 ·~ ~sterwQif&lt;$ Phor~te, John
:eerry'F;ne and Perfdffllir,g Arts ~Center,. · .::
. UniverSity of Rfo Gr_ahde!Rib:Grande- ~. ~~ ·

A Fuii ~Service Res;taulrant
"Tasty Treatt and Home-Cooked Eats?' ,
• c:Holiday 'Breakfast Speci4l• ~ - .)lnuaty
'Toast or 'Discuit all for $4.99
Calllo Reserve our Banquet tt.',om ror

"'

~If

r;t ·Performiog .Arts Oent~,_ Frittay·~ri'd .

· POMEROY, Ohio - It'~ that time of year when
everything's coming up Christmas.
Nov. 22-23 will be the kickoff of seasonal events
- the annual holiday flower show of the Meigs
County Garden Clubs Association · at Carleton .
School in Syracuse. "A Caroling We Will Go" is
the theme with each exhibit'class title being the
name of a Christmas carol.
As always there will be plenty of Christmasy
things to see like lots of bells, baubles, ribbon and
glitter enhancing traditional and creative flower
arrangements, inc}oor and outdoor wreathes, gift
wrappings and table.settings, Christmas plants and
greenery.
.
Offering something for everyone the show · is
bound to boOst the holiday spirit of exhibitors and
visitors alike. Hours to visit the display are'from I
to 5 p.m on Saturday, and noon to 4 p.m. on
Sunday. There is n~ charge.
While many of the exhibitors are garden club
members, tlwre are classes in both the artistic.and
horticulture categories for junior exhibitors and
the general public. Exhibits must be in place
before I p.m. when the judging begins to select the
best from the rest. There will be ribbons ·awarded
for best of show, ·reserve best of show, and creativity in the artistic classes, and sweepstakes .
awards for horticulture exhibits.
Mervbers of Meigs County's five. gardt:n
ciJlbS , Wildwood Garden Club, th~ Rutland
Friendly Gardeners , the Shade Valley Council
of Floral Arts, the Chester Garden Club, and the
Winding Trail Garden Club, are hQsting the
flower show.

1.~

.!: "

• Page 3

(.;bJjshnas Massage

-

Treat yourself and a friend to a Massage
Buy two-30 minute sessions and get one Paraffin Facial Free
two Full-Body MasSage Sessions and get one Body Wnao
--~

- . Holi~Y. Home To

_
r;·.Frencfi Art ·~

. . ,..Colopy, tt~~ &amp;to 1Qp,m~; aatOrday,. 1-tO
. 4 p.M~ ·
..
·
'. •
Dii. s;7 - French :SOO Flea Market, Gama·
_County Fairgrounds, 9 a.m. until 5 p.m~ .
·Dec. 8- GaUipOfis.Christmae Parade/Tree. .
D htir,lg, downtown Gallipolis, 4 p.m. · :
.Dec. I ~ Ohio Valley Symphony,' Ariel-Dater
·Performing Arts Centre, 8 p.m.
.
...
Dec. ·e - . Breakf~st With Santa, Holi9ay 1·ri~, . &gt;
,.. &amp;30 to 11 :30 a.m.
·
·· .
DeC. 7 - Free concert by the Concords with
·Forgiven ~. ana ather artists, Ariel-Dater ·
·performing Arts Centre, 3 p.m.
Dec. 20.21 - •Jingle Bell FoiHes," Ariel-Dater
Performing Arts Centre, Saturday, 7 p.m.;
Sunday, 3 p.m.
·

/KQ!t&lt;lq!/ .9lt)uflv

./

/

:. //.. /(,/,_9-6 '; ,.Jiaulqy / -4; .9hu""~ 9- 7/

Gift Certificates Available

.

�Home for the Ho.lidays~ :s-Y~ :~':" :-\~

Page 2 •

.

.

~~Y.! November 20,2008

Home for the Holidays

.Thursday, November 20, 2008

.

.rt«»v.~21 ~~

'

.

.,.

:.. · ·~·~,~~." .·

··~

¥ • •

w. .

~~C:O~~ti-~:%\s,;~,
~~ff~e
·
.;{ , and Pedemlklg~~rts ~ter, UmveJS•ty Qf · ·..
·-~

Houn: Monday-Saturday 7-8;

Rio Gr~de/Bio Gr~de CortWlunity_. .

,_, ~tlege,..:S p.m. . :·. "

·

· ~ ·· .

·

· l\ •

··NOtj. 21·- · Phil Otrtand JhePOzers, Ariel-Dater ·

.. ' Perfon:nirig-Att._ ctnter~· 8 p·.m.

{

~-,

.
·l··,

.1~ ~ .. · . as Gifts

to. Grv~ to_·-y:'ouP 6}Pf!te · ~o-ve
'

1. A Diamond "0" Pendant
2. WOodW/clc CandlesChristmas Fragrances• Snowflake; Carainel,
&amp;. Sp/Ceid £88nog
' 3; journey D/aplonds _
4. Seiko Musical ClOcks ·
Jacqueline Kennetfy
~~~n / r/
..

.

6. OJocolate Pearls
7. Golden Rings
8. VIva Beads
9. Pulsar Watt:hes
10. Anniversary Rings
11. 24kt Mistletoe $19.95 &amp;.
12. Past, Present, Future

JewelrY .
,

{ { ( : . Lfiyawoy• Welcome

.. · .

Wov~:29 ~ .Craft.IJ&amp;%f¥'f, ~._..Dater · · ·: · .:._;, r

..::~ ,;Perf()rrrurtO Arts ~QtftJ.; 1, toe p.m. ., · .· ,
·, btc. 3 - · Grande~~···;John,W. ~epy~Fin~; ·
. ,y. . . and Perforr:ni~ £8nt~r.
ive.rslty .of ·... :
. Rio Grande/Rio Grilite CommunitY•· · ':

. Wlli·Mai1 Plaza, Gelllpolla, Ohio
(740) 448-3283 .
Houre: Mon • 88_
1..9;30 • 8:011 Open Sunday
. Call for Exttnc!ed Ho!ldiV Hourtl

. - College~ ·8
·
·
~, · '
....._ • 3- Ja
toy, dolt and
French ·
~· · Art Colo y, Tuesday.throt)gh Fri~y, 10 a.m.
, to 6 p.m.;·Sunday, :1 to 5 p._
m. ~ ·' · • .
~Dec.. f.-8

.

.

Janet Bolin, OGCA judge, demonstrates the fantasy flow design to fit
into "The First Noel" class for members of the Wildwood Garden. Club.
She use dried banksia, painted dried materials, snake plant and driftwood in a flowing design.

£ws. 'Dacon or .sausage, ~ f.Pototnu,

We will Cllter for your P~ Pertles...:::li
Altio '~~kin~ Orden for Holldey Pies, Cakes, CookJa,
Whlltever you want!

·~

.
Saturday;,7 p.'m,'.; sU,nday, .a, p.m.' ~· -·· ·~
, :NC)V,.23 ·~ ~sterwQif&lt;$ Phor~te, John
:eerry'F;ne and Perfdffllir,g Arts ~Center,. · .::
. UniverSity of Rfo Gr_ahde!Rib:Grande- ~. ~~ ·

A Fuii ~Service Res;taulrant
"Tasty Treatt and Home-Cooked Eats?' ,
• c:Holiday 'Breakfast Speci4l• ~ - .)lnuaty
'Toast or 'Discuit all for $4.99
Calllo Reserve our Banquet tt.',om ror

"'

~If

r;t ·Performiog .Arts Oent~,_ Frittay·~ri'd .

· POMEROY, Ohio - It'~ that time of year when
everything's coming up Christmas.
Nov. 22-23 will be the kickoff of seasonal events
- the annual holiday flower show of the Meigs
County Garden Clubs Association · at Carleton .
School in Syracuse. "A Caroling We Will Go" is
the theme with each exhibit'class title being the
name of a Christmas carol.
As always there will be plenty of Christmasy
things to see like lots of bells, baubles, ribbon and
glitter enhancing traditional and creative flower
arrangements, inc}oor and outdoor wreathes, gift
wrappings and table.settings, Christmas plants and
greenery.
.
Offering something for everyone the show · is
bound to boOst the holiday spirit of exhibitors and
visitors alike. Hours to visit the display are'from I
to 5 p.m on Saturday, and noon to 4 p.m. on
Sunday. There is n~ charge.
While many of the exhibitors are garden club
members, tlwre are classes in both the artistic.and
horticulture categories for junior exhibitors and
the general public. Exhibits must be in place
before I p.m. when the judging begins to select the
best from the rest. There will be ribbons ·awarded
for best of show, ·reserve best of show, and creativity in the artistic classes, and sweepstakes .
awards for horticulture exhibits.
Mervbers of Meigs County's five. gardt:n
ciJlbS , Wildwood Garden Club, th~ Rutland
Friendly Gardeners , the Shade Valley Council
of Floral Arts, the Chester Garden Club, and the
Winding Trail Garden Club, are hQsting the
flower show.

1.~

.!: "

• Page 3

(.;bJjshnas Massage

-

Treat yourself and a friend to a Massage
Buy two-30 minute sessions and get one Paraffin Facial Free
two Full-Body MasSage Sessions and get one Body Wnao
--~

- . Holi~Y. Home To

_
r;·.Frencfi Art ·~

. . ,..Colopy, tt~~ &amp;to 1Qp,m~; aatOrday,. 1-tO
. 4 p.M~ ·
..
·
'. •
Dii. s;7 - French :SOO Flea Market, Gama·
_County Fairgrounds, 9 a.m. until 5 p.m~ .
·Dec. 8- GaUipOfis.Christmae Parade/Tree. .
D htir,lg, downtown Gallipolis, 4 p.m. · :
.Dec. I ~ Ohio Valley Symphony,' Ariel-Dater
·Performing Arts Centre, 8 p.m.
.
...
Dec. ·e - . Breakf~st With Santa, Holi9ay 1·ri~, . &gt;
,.. &amp;30 to 11 :30 a.m.
·
·· .
DeC. 7 - Free concert by the Concords with
·Forgiven ~. ana ather artists, Ariel-Dater ·
·performing Arts Centre, 3 p.m.
Dec. 20.21 - •Jingle Bell FoiHes," Ariel-Dater
Performing Arts Centre, Saturday, 7 p.m.;
Sunday, 3 p.m.
·

/KQ!t&lt;lq!/ .9lt)uflv

./

/

:. //.. /(,/,_9-6 '; ,.Jiaulqy / -4; .9hu""~ 9- 7/

Gift Certificates Available

.

�.. ... .. . .

Home for the Holidays

Page 4 •

'

Thursday, November 20,2008

"

Holiday parades.plani)ed ·
out Mason COll:Jity
· POINT PLEASANT,
W.Va~ Mason County
loves a parade.
And local residents love
them, too, with no fewer
than four separate parades,
scheduled this holiday·
season.
The first parade will be
in Point Pleasant, where
residents will gather at 6
p.m. Friday, Nov. 21 for
the annual holiday parade
down Main Street. This
parade is unique to the others in the city because it
takes pi~ in the evening,
a contrast . to most others,
which typically take place
in the late morning or early
afternoon .
Another unique thing
about Point Pleasant's holiday parade is that it kicks .
the Christmas season into
gear in mid-November,
and the whole reas.on the
parade takes place so early
is because it ·kicks off the
Christmas Fantasy Light
Show at Krodel Park.
Local officials estimate
that as many as I ,000 peo- .
pie annually line the street
for the holiday parade, ·

._

....

.

'

Thursday, November 20,'2008

.... Ho~e: forthe Holidays

Association begins

•

Santa Claus typi. cally can be seen
perched atop a .
fire truck at the
conclusion of any
· of the numerous
local hOliday\
· parades. Here,
Santa waves to
the crowd'gathered ill N&amp;W
Haven du~ng a
· recent C!lristmas
parade.

'

which. provides a great
opportunity to unite the
commtmity
in
the
Christmas spirit.
The Bend Area will celebrate the holidays as well,
with parades scheduled in
Mason and New Haven
Saturday, Dec. 6. Mason's
parade will begin at noon ,

with. New Haven's'set to
follow at 1 p.m. The annu.al Christmas bazaar at the'
New Haven fire station
also will take place that
day.
In Henderson, residents
can watch the annqa1
parade Saturday, Dec. 20.
Lineup is slated for 4:30

the fo~er .,B\uns·
Trucking,, with the evenJ
'set to qfficially kick off ar
5 ·p.m: That's when: 1-H
floats ; fire ctrUcksl'· and
other enJries -w11J 'wind
their way through, the_
municipality before ending at the starting p(&gt;int.
The parade will be .fol-

p.m. ·at

0

'

lowed '.by the animal .toy
giveaway at the communi-. ·
ty center, wht:re local kids ·
~an recdve gifts and visit
with Santa . Clau~,. That . ..
same weekend, from 1-4
p.m. Sunday, Dec~. 21'; res~ •
idents will gatller, 'for the ·
annual holiday dinner at
.the community center.

.

Santa makes his way to

Middl~ during the viliage's' annual Christmas parade.
~

'

'

• Page 5

for~ holiday season

·~:·~·DDI.,.EP.ORT_, Ohio , The. ~idtllep9rt Community
· :,A ssociati6n··begari plans for
. J:1hdstmas holiday events
al)d finalized . plans for its
fall Bear/Basket Game during its· reg~lar monthly
meeting, ·
Plans f6r oecorating downtown Miadleport for the holiday season will begin at . a
meeting at '8:30 a.m. on Nov.
. 21 at the bank. Decorating
work will begin o.n Nov. 24.
Three holiday events are
planned:
the .
annual
Christmas parade, to be held
Dec. 6, a holiday church tour
on Dec. 11 , and Frantic Santa
shopping spree, Dec. 19. ·
Parade lineup will be at 4
p.m., at Rej~icing Life
Church. The parade will
begin . at 4:30, and travel
through downtown on North

Second Avenue to South
Third. Activities that day will
also include horse-drawn carriage rides, carolers and a live
nativity.
Tickets for · the Dec. II
church tour will be $10.
Debbie Gerlach is the chairman for the event , to be held
from 6-9 p.m. That tour will .
also feature a live nativity
and Christmas caroling .
Carriage rides, free refresh. ments, caroling and another
live nativity are ' planned for
the annual Frantic Santa
shopping spree . .
The
Association
is
encouraging
downtown
business owners to break
"Rusty the Snowman" out
in new holiday costumes. A
trophy will be awarded to
the best-dressed snowman
again this year.

-aid Pharmacy

lASON
FURNITURE CO.

·-··STilET.

314-1JH512.

HGWe fulw·~n CExceUent Sefectlon of
.. (flrfstmas GiftS,.

w·

.Wahama Hlgh School
' • Earrings, Bracelets,
Key Chains, and
Necklaces

Marshall &amp; WVU
Sunglasses and Watches

Precious

••

HS
11111111. •• Crlllll CHcl

OHIO VALLEY
CHECK CASHING
&amp;LOAN

2fl Upper River Rd.
Wipolll, Otllo
. •,. . . soutll of

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

I

0

&gt;

'

0

f

,

I'''

'

'
I'

• Entertainment Centers
• living Room Suites • Dinette Sets
. ~ ComputerDesks • Glider Rockers
Springwall Bedding
·
• Appliances • Curios • Bean Bags ,
• La-Z-Boy Recliners

Inspirational
'Scripture Stones
Crosses and Votive
Holders

Moments .
Figurine
:(Musical Girl with G lass St·

................ '

$7.99

Availahlc fo r Purchase whe n you spe nd
$35 o n Merchandise in the sto re .
(While Quantities last)

· Select group of
merchandise
50% OH!

Free Delivr ry in the Entire Bend Area!

Delivery Availabl~ thru

· 309 srh srreet, New Haven

· .-Oer:~rnl;l~c ;24th!: ... . , ,

'

PHONE: 882·2005

0&lt;

�.. ... .. . .

Home for the Holidays

Page 4 •

'

Thursday, November 20,2008

"

Holiday parades.plani)ed ·
out Mason COll:Jity
· POINT PLEASANT,
W.Va~ Mason County
loves a parade.
And local residents love
them, too, with no fewer
than four separate parades,
scheduled this holiday·
season.
The first parade will be
in Point Pleasant, where
residents will gather at 6
p.m. Friday, Nov. 21 for
the annual holiday parade
down Main Street. This
parade is unique to the others in the city because it
takes pi~ in the evening,
a contrast . to most others,
which typically take place
in the late morning or early
afternoon .
Another unique thing
about Point Pleasant's holiday parade is that it kicks .
the Christmas season into
gear in mid-November,
and the whole reas.on the
parade takes place so early
is because it ·kicks off the
Christmas Fantasy Light
Show at Krodel Park.
Local officials estimate
that as many as I ,000 peo- .
pie annually line the street
for the holiday parade, ·

._

....

.

'

Thursday, November 20,'2008

.... Ho~e: forthe Holidays

Association begins

•

Santa Claus typi. cally can be seen
perched atop a .
fire truck at the
conclusion of any
· of the numerous
local hOliday\
· parades. Here,
Santa waves to
the crowd'gathered ill N&amp;W
Haven du~ng a
· recent C!lristmas
parade.

'

which. provides a great
opportunity to unite the
commtmity
in
the
Christmas spirit.
The Bend Area will celebrate the holidays as well,
with parades scheduled in
Mason and New Haven
Saturday, Dec. 6. Mason's
parade will begin at noon ,

with. New Haven's'set to
follow at 1 p.m. The annu.al Christmas bazaar at the'
New Haven fire station
also will take place that
day.
In Henderson, residents
can watch the annqa1
parade Saturday, Dec. 20.
Lineup is slated for 4:30

the fo~er .,B\uns·
Trucking,, with the evenJ
'set to qfficially kick off ar
5 ·p.m: That's when: 1-H
floats ; fire ctrUcksl'· and
other enJries -w11J 'wind
their way through, the_
municipality before ending at the starting p(&gt;int.
The parade will be .fol-

p.m. ·at

0

'

lowed '.by the animal .toy
giveaway at the communi-. ·
ty center, wht:re local kids ·
~an recdve gifts and visit
with Santa . Clau~,. That . ..
same weekend, from 1-4
p.m. Sunday, Dec~. 21'; res~ •
idents will gatller, 'for the ·
annual holiday dinner at
.the community center.

.

Santa makes his way to

Middl~ during the viliage's' annual Christmas parade.
~

'

'

• Page 5

for~ holiday season

·~:·~·DDI.,.EP.ORT_, Ohio , The. ~idtllep9rt Community
· :,A ssociati6n··begari plans for
. J:1hdstmas holiday events
al)d finalized . plans for its
fall Bear/Basket Game during its· reg~lar monthly
meeting, ·
Plans f6r oecorating downtown Miadleport for the holiday season will begin at . a
meeting at '8:30 a.m. on Nov.
. 21 at the bank. Decorating
work will begin o.n Nov. 24.
Three holiday events are
planned:
the .
annual
Christmas parade, to be held
Dec. 6, a holiday church tour
on Dec. 11 , and Frantic Santa
shopping spree, Dec. 19. ·
Parade lineup will be at 4
p.m., at Rej~icing Life
Church. The parade will
begin . at 4:30, and travel
through downtown on North

Second Avenue to South
Third. Activities that day will
also include horse-drawn carriage rides, carolers and a live
nativity.
Tickets for · the Dec. II
church tour will be $10.
Debbie Gerlach is the chairman for the event , to be held
from 6-9 p.m. That tour will .
also feature a live nativity
and Christmas caroling .
Carriage rides, free refresh. ments, caroling and another
live nativity are ' planned for
the annual Frantic Santa
shopping spree . .
The
Association
is
encouraging
downtown
business owners to break
"Rusty the Snowman" out
in new holiday costumes. A
trophy will be awarded to
the best-dressed snowman
again this year.

-aid Pharmacy

lASON
FURNITURE CO.

·-··STilET.

314-1JH512.

HGWe fulw·~n CExceUent Sefectlon of
.. (flrfstmas GiftS,.

w·

.Wahama Hlgh School
' • Earrings, Bracelets,
Key Chains, and
Necklaces

Marshall &amp; WVU
Sunglasses and Watches

Precious

••

HS
11111111. •• Crlllll CHcl

OHIO VALLEY
CHECK CASHING
&amp;LOAN

2fl Upper River Rd.
Wipolll, Otllo
. •,. . . soutll of

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

I

0

&gt;

'

0

f

,

I'''

'

'
I'

• Entertainment Centers
• living Room Suites • Dinette Sets
. ~ ComputerDesks • Glider Rockers
Springwall Bedding
·
• Appliances • Curios • Bean Bags ,
• La-Z-Boy Recliners

Inspirational
'Scripture Stones
Crosses and Votive
Holders

Moments .
Figurine
:(Musical Girl with G lass St·

................ '

$7.99

Availahlc fo r Purchase whe n you spe nd
$35 o n Merchandise in the sto re .
(While Quantities last)

· Select group of
merchandise
50% OH!

Free Delivr ry in the Entire Bend Area!

Delivery Availabl~ thru

· 309 srh srreet, New Haven

· .-Oer:~rnl;l~c ;24th!: ... . , ,

'

PHONE: 882·2005

0&lt;

�..

,,

•

.Home for the Holidays

Page 6 •

Tbursday, November 20,2008 .

r

. Home for the Holidays

Thursday, November 20, 2008

• Page 7

Christmas Fantasy Light ~ho~ starts this weekend
POINT · PLEASANT, W.Va. Twinkling lights and dancing displays
will light up the area in the midst of
this year's hustle and bustle of the
Christmas season.
At Krodel Park in Point Pleasant,
W.Va., the area's largest light show
continues to grow and attract thou- .
sands of people to the region each
year.
Sponsored by the Main Street Point.
Pleasant organization and the City of
Point Pleasant; the annual Christmas
Fantasy Light Show has grown in size
each year since it first opened more
than five years ago. Situated. around
Krodel Lake, · the displays bring a
smile to just about anyone's face: here
residents have a chance to see dan~ing
gingerbread men, bugle boys, snowmen and a giant reindeer fishing in the . ·
lake. Mason County's most famous
monster might even make an unscheduled visited, so guests should always
, be watching for those bright red eyes.
Volunteers usually begin working at
least a month in advance to repair displays and check lights - more than 2
million in all on the nearly 200 lighted and animated displays - for the
show. Nearly 40.000 people visited
the show last year, and those returning
surely will not be disappointed with
the addition of several new displays.
The Christmas Fantasy Light Show
takes place ~ov. 21-Dec. 31 and is
open 5:30-9:30 p.m . daily. Admission
. is free, but donations are accepted as
part of ongoing fundraising for the
hosting organizations.

POINT. PLEASANT,' located on the comer· of prepiHe enough f~ '.to . of tl\e-..4\0ner, and ca.rrYW.Va. - At least ·two · Eighth and Main streets, · ~rve 'ffie crowcf()r,pe&lt;&gt;ple .: out will-not be available.
local churches are orga- · has been hosting the din~ .. that generally attends .~he 'l ·. ·IIi the Bend Area, memnizing
Thanksgiving ner since 1995, and the dinner - last -y~3):~ : hiori., bers :.:of First Baptist
feasts that will impress annual event, along with than .·270 people'·enjoyed . Church in Mason, W.Va.,
even the hungriest souls.
other special events the the food and fellowship.
are h~ping to help make
For
l09king for a church helps sponsor
Lambert said tliis year's Thanksgiying an enjoyin all the throughout the year, is just feast will include turkey, able day for as many peoc..ance to
.·
trim- a way for the members to dressing, mashed pota- pte as they can by hosting
f61Ji!e·, the spread God's love.
toes, yams, green beans, 'their first community
"We keep (h~sting the . co'rir, ·:g:aked 'beans, rolls Thariksgiving dinner on
annual
community
Thanksgiving dinner host- dinner) to make sure and a variety of desserts. Thaitksgiving Day.
ed at the Point Pleasant ev~ry~:me
has
a In addition to the food,
According to Heather
Pre~b~teriau Ch~JI:c.h is the Th~sgiving dinner and there will be door prizes Lloyd, a member of the
pla1ce · · •· · ·· .• •. · •, . . , someone to visit with dur- given awaylhroughout the church and one of the
.;..·,··.'-i!! . dinriet, ing their dinner," she said.. evening and treat bags for organizers, the event is
llldl.IIN aitd open to
"We don't push religioli. the children. · ·t
. planned as a way for the
For more · information congregation to share its
is scheduled 4..: ' on them, but we do let
Tuesdlay, Nov. 25, them ··know that it was · about the dinner, or if you 'bles~ings wi~h other peopromises to feed both (}od's h:imds tha(prepared at:e a shut-in and would ple in the community.
the ·soul and empty stom- that food."
, ~·
Uke to have a ~eal deliv"ThanJ.(sgiving is a time
·. acbs, according to Donna . ·;She sai~ t\1~ ~er tradi~ t?red Qn th~ day Of the din- !o ~fl~t upon the bless,. ·l .ambert, one of the ~~ap~ .l S' set:vaf·by con.. .ner, call. 304-675-2170 ~r mgs ~e. t'ha~e and sh~e
__cltw-ch's members.
· .,...,.&amp;f¢&amp;1lt.i9(·· memQers who · ~04-675-48S3. Oms wlll ~~~ ~ptnt wtth our famtly
-' f~be said the churc_~;: . ·rri~,~~~)~~-tl\ ~~ime to notbe~accepted qp t)le day aOJt : frieqds," she said.
Above: Community involvement helps the annual Christmas
Failti!S}t Ught Sh.9w grow at Krodel Park, and local civic
chlbs and other organizations support the event with dona. tions and decorations. Pictured are lights and wrapped
bol(es that were featured last year as part of a display pUt
up by mem~rs of Girl Scout Troop 4511 .
·
Above left: Familiar favorttes, such as these bugle boys, as
well as so_me new surprises will greet guests at the annual
light show at Krodel Park. The show officially opens Nov. 21,
but volunteers and City workers have been preparing the displays for the past fiVe weeks in preparation fqr opening clay.

~

--

.

,..,.

..

"However,
the
Thanksgiving holiday can
also be an opportunity for
us to share our blessings
with others.
· "Come join us for a time
of food and fellowship as
we remember together the
wonderful gifts of God,"
Lloyd added.
The
Community
Thanksgiving Dinner wifl
be hosted by First Baptist
Church of Mason at .the
New Haven Community
Center. Meals will be
served on a first come,
first serve basis beginning
•
at 1:30 p.m. Thursday,
Nov. 27.
For more information or
to volunteer for that event,
contact Lloyd at 304-8823897 . or planner@firstbaptistmason.org.

'

GIFTS.FOR THE
ENTIRE FAMILY!

..

, 200,6 Mtmorial
Keepsake Ornament Sale
.
.

.'

Left: Candy canes light up the campground at Krodel Park
during last year's Christmas Fantasy Ught Show. The annu·
al drive-thru show runs Nov. 21-Dec. 31 and is open daily
from 5:30-9:30 p.m. ·

..

Ingels Electronics -·Radio Shack
• GPS • AT&amp;T Wireless
• Scanners • Digital Cameras • DVD Players

• Ipods • Latest RC Toys
992-2825

INGELS
MIDDLEPORT

PICTURE GALLERY
992-2635

'I

I

Js avUiable from any Hol;r..er Hospice

KIPLING ·SHOE CO . .
Route 2 Bypass _
Point Pleasant, WV

(304) 675-7870
•

To honor our loved ones, pitst and.present,
this beautiful orRAment.is gift bo)(ed and

Check out our
selection of
.hunting ,..
•
300 lnd Ave. G.llipolis

740-441-9010
Mon-Fri 10:00- 6:00;
10:00- 5

Reprcsentativl~.

Ornaments are $12 each and .
all proceeds benefit Holzer Hospice.
Pletlse call (740) 446 5074 or
1 800-500 4850 for detds.

Thank you for helping us c:are
lor our cormnanlty.

�..

,,

•

.Home for the Holidays

Page 6 •

Tbursday, November 20,2008 .

r

. Home for the Holidays

Thursday, November 20, 2008

• Page 7

Christmas Fantasy Light ~ho~ starts this weekend
POINT · PLEASANT, W.Va. Twinkling lights and dancing displays
will light up the area in the midst of
this year's hustle and bustle of the
Christmas season.
At Krodel Park in Point Pleasant,
W.Va., the area's largest light show
continues to grow and attract thou- .
sands of people to the region each
year.
Sponsored by the Main Street Point.
Pleasant organization and the City of
Point Pleasant; the annual Christmas
Fantasy Light Show has grown in size
each year since it first opened more
than five years ago. Situated. around
Krodel Lake, · the displays bring a
smile to just about anyone's face: here
residents have a chance to see dan~ing
gingerbread men, bugle boys, snowmen and a giant reindeer fishing in the . ·
lake. Mason County's most famous
monster might even make an unscheduled visited, so guests should always
, be watching for those bright red eyes.
Volunteers usually begin working at
least a month in advance to repair displays and check lights - more than 2
million in all on the nearly 200 lighted and animated displays - for the
show. Nearly 40.000 people visited
the show last year, and those returning
surely will not be disappointed with
the addition of several new displays.
The Christmas Fantasy Light Show
takes place ~ov. 21-Dec. 31 and is
open 5:30-9:30 p.m . daily. Admission
. is free, but donations are accepted as
part of ongoing fundraising for the
hosting organizations.

POINT. PLEASANT,' located on the comer· of prepiHe enough f~ '.to . of tl\e-..4\0ner, and ca.rrYW.Va. - At least ·two · Eighth and Main streets, · ~rve 'ffie crowcf()r,pe&lt;&gt;ple .: out will-not be available.
local churches are orga- · has been hosting the din~ .. that generally attends .~he 'l ·. ·IIi the Bend Area, memnizing
Thanksgiving ner since 1995, and the dinner - last -y~3):~ : hiori., bers :.:of First Baptist
feasts that will impress annual event, along with than .·270 people'·enjoyed . Church in Mason, W.Va.,
even the hungriest souls.
other special events the the food and fellowship.
are h~ping to help make
For
l09king for a church helps sponsor
Lambert said tliis year's Thanksgiying an enjoyin all the throughout the year, is just feast will include turkey, able day for as many peoc..ance to
.·
trim- a way for the members to dressing, mashed pota- pte as they can by hosting
f61Ji!e·, the spread God's love.
toes, yams, green beans, 'their first community
"We keep (h~sting the . co'rir, ·:g:aked 'beans, rolls Thariksgiving dinner on
annual
community
Thanksgiving dinner host- dinner) to make sure and a variety of desserts. Thaitksgiving Day.
ed at the Point Pleasant ev~ry~:me
has
a In addition to the food,
According to Heather
Pre~b~teriau Ch~JI:c.h is the Th~sgiving dinner and there will be door prizes Lloyd, a member of the
pla1ce · · •· · ·· .• •. · •, . . , someone to visit with dur- given awaylhroughout the church and one of the
.;..·,··.'-i!! . dinriet, ing their dinner," she said.. evening and treat bags for organizers, the event is
llldl.IIN aitd open to
"We don't push religioli. the children. · ·t
. planned as a way for the
For more · information congregation to share its
is scheduled 4..: ' on them, but we do let
Tuesdlay, Nov. 25, them ··know that it was · about the dinner, or if you 'bles~ings wi~h other peopromises to feed both (}od's h:imds tha(prepared at:e a shut-in and would ple in the community.
the ·soul and empty stom- that food."
, ~·
Uke to have a ~eal deliv"ThanJ.(sgiving is a time
·. acbs, according to Donna . ·;She sai~ t\1~ ~er tradi~ t?red Qn th~ day Of the din- !o ~fl~t upon the bless,. ·l .ambert, one of the ~~ap~ .l S' set:vaf·by con.. .ner, call. 304-675-2170 ~r mgs ~e. t'ha~e and sh~e
__cltw-ch's members.
· .,...,.&amp;f¢&amp;1lt.i9(·· memQers who · ~04-675-48S3. Oms wlll ~~~ ~ptnt wtth our famtly
-' f~be said the churc_~;: . ·rri~,~~~)~~-tl\ ~~ime to notbe~accepted qp t)le day aOJt : frieqds," she said.
Above: Community involvement helps the annual Christmas
Failti!S}t Ught Sh.9w grow at Krodel Park, and local civic
chlbs and other organizations support the event with dona. tions and decorations. Pictured are lights and wrapped
bol(es that were featured last year as part of a display pUt
up by mem~rs of Girl Scout Troop 4511 .
·
Above left: Familiar favorttes, such as these bugle boys, as
well as so_me new surprises will greet guests at the annual
light show at Krodel Park. The show officially opens Nov. 21,
but volunteers and City workers have been preparing the displays for the past fiVe weeks in preparation fqr opening clay.

~

--

.

,..,.

..

"However,
the
Thanksgiving holiday can
also be an opportunity for
us to share our blessings
with others.
· "Come join us for a time
of food and fellowship as
we remember together the
wonderful gifts of God,"
Lloyd added.
The
Community
Thanksgiving Dinner wifl
be hosted by First Baptist
Church of Mason at .the
New Haven Community
Center. Meals will be
served on a first come,
first serve basis beginning
•
at 1:30 p.m. Thursday,
Nov. 27.
For more information or
to volunteer for that event,
contact Lloyd at 304-8823897 . or planner@firstbaptistmason.org.

'

GIFTS.FOR THE
ENTIRE FAMILY!

..

, 200,6 Mtmorial
Keepsake Ornament Sale
.
.

.'

Left: Candy canes light up the campground at Krodel Park
during last year's Christmas Fantasy Ught Show. The annu·
al drive-thru show runs Nov. 21-Dec. 31 and is open daily
from 5:30-9:30 p.m. ·

..

Ingels Electronics -·Radio Shack
• GPS • AT&amp;T Wireless
• Scanners • Digital Cameras • DVD Players

• Ipods • Latest RC Toys
992-2825

INGELS
MIDDLEPORT

PICTURE GALLERY
992-2635

'I

I

Js avUiable from any Hol;r..er Hospice

KIPLING ·SHOE CO . .
Route 2 Bypass _
Point Pleasant, WV

(304) 675-7870
•

To honor our loved ones, pitst and.present,
this beautiful orRAment.is gift bo)(ed and

Check out our
selection of
.hunting ,..
•
300 lnd Ave. G.llipolis

740-441-9010
Mon-Fri 10:00- 6:00;
10:00- 5

Reprcsentativl~.

Ornaments are $12 each and .
all proceeds benefit Holzer Hospice.
Pletlse call (740) 446 5074 or
1 800-500 4850 for detds.

Thank you for helping us c:are
lor our cormnanlty.

�.

.

'

.

.

.Ho~e .for the

· Thursday, No'fember 20,2908

Page 8 •

Home for ·t he ·Holidays

'Thursday, November 20,2008

·. Schools plan ·~multitude
of holiday activities
~ POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. -

The Southern
High School
Band performs
at many local
parades, includ. ing Christmas
parades in
Meigs County.

.'

Plays, choral
shows, musical selections and dinners - an
abundance of holiday festivities is available
this season in the Mason County . School
Sy:;tem .
Hannan Junior Senior High School in Ashton,
W.Va., will host a community dinner Dec. 2
beginning at 5:30 p.m. At 7 p.m., the school's
band will present a holiday concert with the
guitar and dance classes presenting a program
as well.
·
·
Students at Roosevelt Elementary in Point
Pleasant, W.Va., will perform iil two programs
beginning at 6 p.m. Dec. 11 in the Lillian and
Paul Wedge Auditorium at ~oint Pleasant Junior
bank ·listening to the Senior High School. Students in kindergarten
Christmas lists of good little through third grade will present their take on the
boys and girls while bank "~ing of Rock and Roll" with a holiday rendition
employees take a free pic- of "Elfis," while students is · grades fourth
ture of the moment to give through sixth will explain why "I Need a Little
Christmas Vacation."
to the children.
Ori Dec: 12, students at Ashton Elementary
Also during Santa's visit,
there wiii be. a reception · School will present their Christmas program at 1
with cake and punch in one p.m., while Santa Claus will visit the school at 1
of the bank's conference p.m. Dec. 19 to hand out treats ..
rooms for those wishing to
Students at New Haven Elementary School will
stop in and wish bank present a concert at 7 p.m. Dec. 16, and members
employee Marilyn Wolfe . a of the Beale Elementary School choir in
Gallipolis .Ferry, W.Va., will perform 6:30-830
happy retirement.
After the parade, several p.m. Dec. 11 at the school.
local downtown businesses · At 6 p.m~ Dec. 16, the Leon Elementary
will have special holiday Musical Christmas program will be presented.
Members of the Wahama Junior Senior High
open houses and extended
· shopping hours.
School choirs aqd bands will perform in concert ·
Prior to the parade the at 1 p.m. Dec. J4·in f!t~ gym along with the New
COmmunity Band will be Haven Elementary School band and choir. The
performing holiday tunes on performance is a fundraiser to benefit Bend
Front Street.
Area CARE.

tor Po01erov

POMEROY, Ohio
Christmas officially arrives
in downtown Pomeroy
when the , village's annual
Christmas parade makes its
way down Main Street on
Sunday, Nov. 30.
The parade begins at 2
· · p.m. Lineup for the parade
is at I p.m. at the football
field on East Main Street in
_Pomeroy. The parade will
feature a wide variety of
entrees., including walking
unit~.
floats, marching
bands, pets, etc.
Parade organizer Toney
Dingess said there is no preregistration required and
those wishing to participate
can show up the day of the
parade. For those wishing to
preregister their entry, call

992-7141, which is the Meigs
High School Bandroom, or
992-2056, which is Clark's
Jewelry Store.
In order to avoid a traffic
jam, those dropping off participants in the parade are
asked to not pull their vehicle into the lineup area
unless that vehicle is going
to be in the parade.
This year's parade theme
is once again "Christmas
Along the River." The
parade is one of the largest
in the county and has had up
to 60 entrants.
The parade will of course
feature an appearance by
Santa Claus .who will arrive
at Peoples Bank in Pomeroy
immediately following the
parade. Santa will be at the

Holidays

•_Page 9

,..

·Touring
prodUction
of
Dickens·
"'}~~ · · ,. · ~·~ · .. :. · . -. ·:c · ~
1 unu,er _~p.y 1or
, ·• . ·
. . ··
. ).r:~~s
classic comes to area Dec. 9 .faJnllyGlpi~tnlas event

GALLIPOLIS, Ohio - · three decades ago, the . an American holiday traJ'()I:NT
· WVi
· The Ariel-Dater Hall is . national touring -pl:'oduc- · dition for 28 years, enter- · F....Uty Re~~~~rk."t:ged;er~ ·;f.~~o~
pleased to present . the tion of ' "A Christmas taining thousands of famimmdt)' ag~ooies ~. indivi&lt;Jpals, will pre,sent.. 'the
national tour of Nebraska Carol" has delighted audi~ lies across the country. So u ........ r .......... F·-:.....l•
.
•
"A
A
·
u
·
·
il.......,.... ~1· CUiwy Christmas.
Theatre . Caravan s · . · en~s across menca . .., y . JOm Ebenezer Scrooge on ~~. ~: Yt81:~ event · is .· 8clleduted . lQ. ·a.m.-·l p.m. ·
Christmas .
Carol,'' artfully · combining ele- his unforgettable magical
S..Uy, Dec. 13 at th.e fOrmer c~ Elementary

i~:s~J~~~i:O a~itf·~~·- ~~:fa~:e~)o~=~~e:~~i~ ~ur:;.i' :~~ h~e~~f~;edr &amp;!~ gy~~iutn; located,'at 1200 ,Main
held at The University of stage version that not only Christmas in a stage show
~~· "!!.:.Va. .
.
.

St. .in'·

. · ·Rio Grande/Rio G
.· rand.e delights children, but also ·that has become one ofthe · ~i"'~ , or "J'I' .even.t · ~ PJ.C~ Wtth S~. . '"'
Chii5tnlas crafts, face pamtu:ag and refreshments,
Community College John transports audiences of all m_ost treasured family
R ·
· · ,_, Ty S
·u •8 s F
W. Berry· Fine and ages on. a magical J·ourney ··gifts of the season.
· ~nmtives -~~~~
, OJPCfVl e. !11.te , ~
.~n~ A~Y tn M8sQo· County _wilt donate
Performing Arts ·Center, right alongside Ebenezer . "A Christmas Carolis the their ~tas; film aiJd time to take 'PictUres of every
dufeth~- the bsize and scope Scwr~thge. · "th·
th. d · first of three professional · ;dlifd with Santa. , .· ·
. ,,
·
- .· ..
1
00
1s e a orate pr uc: · 1 a
e warm an p~uctions presented by . "' ~n~llcldjtion, picture ~~swill be P.d&gt;vided -for
o
· tion.
· comfort of -a. cup. of. tlie. Ariel this year. Others . tho Children ~o., de&lt;;o'rate l)rtd. ~t th~ p*~,Ure wttl\ ·
This presentation is the C.hrjstmas cheer, · "A include: "In The Mood," a
S~ in. Community ·organiurion Y,oh.tnteers lwill
very same company and . ·Christmas · Carol" · is 1_940s m1,1sical review; and
be painting faces . and -othe~ comniu'nity agencies:
production presented by pa~ked . with laughter, ' international
pianist wil1 ~~ent ctaft' tables where children can make
CAPA .to central .Ohio pageantry and gorgeops Richard Glazier's "The itetns tO~ give their parents a\ _gifts or tQ decorate
audiences in Columbu.s. costume&amp;. Every memo- . Music ofJudy Garland and .t~~ Ch~is~mas ~r~s at _home. The FamUy
Ticke~ are · only $22 for rable detail of Dickens "'A Friends." ·
~ ·
Itesource Network will proVIde .refreshments, and
adults, $20 for . seniors, · Christmas ".Caror• springs
More information .can be
M' .;west Virginia 2008 Kayla Lyniuu:.will be preand $15 students, less to life, from spine-chilling obtained by -v1S1tmg
sent to visit with all.
,.
. . . ... ·
than half. of the cost to see gho~ ·. to heartfC?lt rendi- www.arieltheatre.org. .
. :'. . ~!SPn Coqnty Ff\mily Christptas is about,the
this production• else- -tions· of traditional British · A Christmas O~rol tick'ty pulling tOgether co·provide a good boll~
wher.e . Gr()up discounts carols. Crotchety Scrooge, ets are sold through the · day~nee 'for l~al ~~1\ and~ familie:;,'' ,...
are. available.
.
lovable Tiny Tim, and-all .. N-iel-Dater · Hall Box
said (ftg F9Wler, &lt;iWcto,t tbe ~y Resoun:e ,.
"A Christmas Carol" is •he fascinatiqg characters Office. Tickets may be NdM!fk. •-over the past few y~. we.~ave created
sponsored by 101.~ BOB that audiences ~ve ~come purchased9nline,by call- 'it~bere~J'!erep~nts:'C~bri.n8,tbeirchildren
FM, su_.ny 93.1, WBYG to love make Char~s" ing 740-446-ARTS, or by. 8Pden.JOY~i~vent. Theev~has~wneacbyear
99 S·, and Pepsi.
,
.Dickens• enchanti~g story visiting our box office at ' and we ex~tblt •o be the case again this year.
Ever since legendary a treasured holiday event. / 428
Second
Ave., . · ~ are··extl"Cntely happy to ' bay~ Miss rWest
Th~ Nebraska Tht?atre Gallipolis. Tickets will be Vi.rdlia Kay Ia Lynam atten&lt;liog,'' ~added.
.
theatrical pioneer Charles
Jones adapted the Dickens Carl:!vati's national touring sol4 in the theatre. lobby
; ~venfi$}ree and 9/Jen 1tj tHe public. For roore
classic · for Nebraska production
of , "A the night of the show if inftwmation, -call Fowler at j()4.;593-iJ012.
: '
Theatre Caravan nearly Christmas Carol'~ has been seating is·· a~ajlable. ·
· "'
•
.. .. .,

11

:ot

�.

.

'

.

.

.Ho~e .for the

· Thursday, No'fember 20,2908

Page 8 •

Home for ·t he ·Holidays

'Thursday, November 20,2008

·. Schools plan ·~multitude
of holiday activities
~ POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. -

The Southern
High School
Band performs
at many local
parades, includ. ing Christmas
parades in
Meigs County.

.'

Plays, choral
shows, musical selections and dinners - an
abundance of holiday festivities is available
this season in the Mason County . School
Sy:;tem .
Hannan Junior Senior High School in Ashton,
W.Va., will host a community dinner Dec. 2
beginning at 5:30 p.m. At 7 p.m., the school's
band will present a holiday concert with the
guitar and dance classes presenting a program
as well.
·
·
Students at Roosevelt Elementary in Point
Pleasant, W.Va., will perform iil two programs
beginning at 6 p.m. Dec. 11 in the Lillian and
Paul Wedge Auditorium at ~oint Pleasant Junior
bank ·listening to the Senior High School. Students in kindergarten
Christmas lists of good little through third grade will present their take on the
boys and girls while bank "~ing of Rock and Roll" with a holiday rendition
employees take a free pic- of "Elfis," while students is · grades fourth
ture of the moment to give through sixth will explain why "I Need a Little
Christmas Vacation."
to the children.
Ori Dec: 12, students at Ashton Elementary
Also during Santa's visit,
there wiii be. a reception · School will present their Christmas program at 1
with cake and punch in one p.m., while Santa Claus will visit the school at 1
of the bank's conference p.m. Dec. 19 to hand out treats ..
rooms for those wishing to
Students at New Haven Elementary School will
stop in and wish bank present a concert at 7 p.m. Dec. 16, and members
employee Marilyn Wolfe . a of the Beale Elementary School choir in
Gallipolis .Ferry, W.Va., will perform 6:30-830
happy retirement.
After the parade, several p.m. Dec. 11 at the school.
local downtown businesses · At 6 p.m~ Dec. 16, the Leon Elementary
will have special holiday Musical Christmas program will be presented.
Members of the Wahama Junior Senior High
open houses and extended
· shopping hours.
School choirs aqd bands will perform in concert ·
Prior to the parade the at 1 p.m. Dec. J4·in f!t~ gym along with the New
COmmunity Band will be Haven Elementary School band and choir. The
performing holiday tunes on performance is a fundraiser to benefit Bend
Front Street.
Area CARE.

tor Po01erov

POMEROY, Ohio
Christmas officially arrives
in downtown Pomeroy
when the , village's annual
Christmas parade makes its
way down Main Street on
Sunday, Nov. 30.
The parade begins at 2
· · p.m. Lineup for the parade
is at I p.m. at the football
field on East Main Street in
_Pomeroy. The parade will
feature a wide variety of
entrees., including walking
unit~.
floats, marching
bands, pets, etc.
Parade organizer Toney
Dingess said there is no preregistration required and
those wishing to participate
can show up the day of the
parade. For those wishing to
preregister their entry, call

992-7141, which is the Meigs
High School Bandroom, or
992-2056, which is Clark's
Jewelry Store.
In order to avoid a traffic
jam, those dropping off participants in the parade are
asked to not pull their vehicle into the lineup area
unless that vehicle is going
to be in the parade.
This year's parade theme
is once again "Christmas
Along the River." The
parade is one of the largest
in the county and has had up
to 60 entrants.
The parade will of course
feature an appearance by
Santa Claus .who will arrive
at Peoples Bank in Pomeroy
immediately following the
parade. Santa will be at the

Holidays

•_Page 9

,..

·Touring
prodUction
of
Dickens·
"'}~~ · · ,. · ~·~ · .. :. · . -. ·:c · ~
1 unu,er _~p.y 1or
, ·• . ·
. . ··
. ).r:~~s
classic comes to area Dec. 9 .faJnllyGlpi~tnlas event

GALLIPOLIS, Ohio - · three decades ago, the . an American holiday traJ'()I:NT
· WVi
· The Ariel-Dater Hall is . national touring -pl:'oduc- · dition for 28 years, enter- · F....Uty Re~~~~rk."t:ged;er~ ·;f.~~o~
pleased to present . the tion of ' "A Christmas taining thousands of famimmdt)' ag~ooies ~. indivi&lt;Jpals, will pre,sent.. 'the
national tour of Nebraska Carol" has delighted audi~ lies across the country. So u ........ r .......... F·-:.....l•
.
•
"A
A
·
u
·
·
il.......,.... ~1· CUiwy Christmas.
Theatre . Caravan s · . · en~s across menca . .., y . JOm Ebenezer Scrooge on ~~. ~: Yt81:~ event · is .· 8clleduted . lQ. ·a.m.-·l p.m. ·
Christmas .
Carol,'' artfully · combining ele- his unforgettable magical
S..Uy, Dec. 13 at th.e fOrmer c~ Elementary

i~:s~J~~~i:O a~itf·~~·- ~~:fa~:e~)o~=~~e:~~i~ ~ur:;.i' :~~ h~e~~f~;edr &amp;!~ gy~~iutn; located,'at 1200 ,Main
held at The University of stage version that not only Christmas in a stage show
~~· "!!.:.Va. .
.
.

St. .in'·

. · ·Rio Grande/Rio G
.· rand.e delights children, but also ·that has become one ofthe · ~i"'~ , or "J'I' .even.t · ~ PJ.C~ Wtth S~. . '"'
Chii5tnlas crafts, face pamtu:ag and refreshments,
Community College John transports audiences of all m_ost treasured family
R ·
· · ,_, Ty S
·u •8 s F
W. Berry· Fine and ages on. a magical J·ourney ··gifts of the season.
· ~nmtives -~~~~
, OJPCfVl e. !11.te , ~
.~n~ A~Y tn M8sQo· County _wilt donate
Performing Arts ·Center, right alongside Ebenezer . "A Christmas Carolis the their ~tas; film aiJd time to take 'PictUres of every
dufeth~- the bsize and scope Scwr~thge. · "th·
th. d · first of three professional · ;dlifd with Santa. , .· ·
. ,,
·
- .· ..
1
00
1s e a orate pr uc: · 1 a
e warm an p~uctions presented by . "' ~n~llcldjtion, picture ~~swill be P.d&gt;vided -for
o
· tion.
· comfort of -a. cup. of. tlie. Ariel this year. Others . tho Children ~o., de&lt;;o'rate l)rtd. ~t th~ p*~,Ure wttl\ ·
This presentation is the C.hrjstmas cheer, · "A include: "In The Mood," a
S~ in. Community ·organiurion Y,oh.tnteers lwill
very same company and . ·Christmas · Carol" · is 1_940s m1,1sical review; and
be painting faces . and -othe~ comniu'nity agencies:
production presented by pa~ked . with laughter, ' international
pianist wil1 ~~ent ctaft' tables where children can make
CAPA .to central .Ohio pageantry and gorgeops Richard Glazier's "The itetns tO~ give their parents a\ _gifts or tQ decorate
audiences in Columbu.s. costume&amp;. Every memo- . Music ofJudy Garland and .t~~ Ch~is~mas ~r~s at _home. The FamUy
Ticke~ are · only $22 for rable detail of Dickens "'A Friends." ·
~ ·
Itesource Network will proVIde .refreshments, and
adults, $20 for . seniors, · Christmas ".Caror• springs
More information .can be
M' .;west Virginia 2008 Kayla Lyniuu:.will be preand $15 students, less to life, from spine-chilling obtained by -v1S1tmg
sent to visit with all.
,.
. . . ... ·
than half. of the cost to see gho~ ·. to heartfC?lt rendi- www.arieltheatre.org. .
. :'. . ~!SPn Coqnty Ff\mily Christptas is about,the
this production• else- -tions· of traditional British · A Christmas O~rol tick'ty pulling tOgether co·provide a good boll~
wher.e . Gr()up discounts carols. Crotchety Scrooge, ets are sold through the · day~nee 'for l~al ~~1\ and~ familie:;,'' ,...
are. available.
.
lovable Tiny Tim, and-all .. N-iel-Dater · Hall Box
said (ftg F9Wler, &lt;iWcto,t tbe ~y Resoun:e ,.
"A Christmas Carol" is •he fascinatiqg characters Office. Tickets may be NdM!fk. •-over the past few y~. we.~ave created
sponsored by 101.~ BOB that audiences ~ve ~come purchased9nline,by call- 'it~bere~J'!erep~nts:'C~bri.n8,tbeirchildren
FM, su_.ny 93.1, WBYG to love make Char~s" ing 740-446-ARTS, or by. 8Pden.JOY~i~vent. Theev~has~wneacbyear
99 S·, and Pepsi.
,
.Dickens• enchanti~g story visiting our box office at ' and we ex~tblt •o be the case again this year.
Ever since legendary a treasured holiday event. / 428
Second
Ave., . · ~ are··extl"Cntely happy to ' bay~ Miss rWest
Th~ Nebraska Tht?atre Gallipolis. Tickets will be Vi.rdlia Kay Ia Lynam atten&lt;liog,'' ~added.
.
theatrical pioneer Charles
Jones adapted the Dickens Carl:!vati's national touring sol4 in the theatre. lobby
; ~venfi$}ree and 9/Jen 1tj tHe public. For roore
classic · for Nebraska production
of , "A the night of the show if inftwmation, -call Fowler at j()4.;593-iJ012.
: '
Theatre Caravan nearly Christmas Carol'~ has been seating is·· a~ajlable. ·
· "'
•
.. .. .,

11

:ot

�--------Pag~

Home for the . ~olidays

10 •

· .• Thursday, NQ'Vember.20, 2008
' .

Thursday, November 20, 2008

Millions.of
lights twinkle
at annual·farm
museum event ·
POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. Take a drive through a winter wonderland.
....,
And eveti though it will be dark,
the twinkling lights will help guide
your way.
Officials at the West Virginia State
Farm Museum have been busy the ·
past few months, working furiously
to hang more than I million lights on
buildings, fences, trees, bushes, tractors and other equipment in preparation for the annual Hol~day Light ·
Festival, which begins its 11-day run
at 6 p.m. Friday, Dec. 12.
The hundreds of strands of lights
totally transform the grounds:
where nearly 10,000 people attend.ed last year'~ show. Museum officials say the . great turnout -is
because everyone's on the lookout
for one simple thing: the Christmas
- spirit, and guests imnually enjoy
seeing the lights.
Of course, decorating the more .
than 30 buildings at the. farm museum is no easy task, and lo.cal volunte.ers annually help the museum staff
hang lights and garland.
·
Work typically starts the first full
week of October, when museum
staff members begin hanging more
than I million lights - an estimate
at best,. offic;:ials say, · jokingly
encouragmg anyone eager enough to
come out and count them all.
·
The Holiday Light Festival will
be open 6-9 p.m. daily Dec. 12-22.
In addition. to the Hghts, there will.
- be cookies and hot chocolate available each night, and Santa Claus
will be in attendance and will be
available for pictures . Admission to
the drive-thru show is free, . but
donations will be accepted, and all
proceeds will be used to fund the
farm museum.

For more information. call the

•• •fdntuilisJIW
.
. hi. fJ(J4~1$:.5Y!J'l'.
. I r. ,•• I
'

-·

•

•

..

I

•

."

Above: Lloyd Akers, ,director of the West Virginia
State Farm Museum, adjusts some of the lights
that will be displayed during the facility's annual
Holiday Lig~ Festival. More than 1 million lights
cover the buildings, fences, equipment, trees
and bushes spread across .the grounds.
Left: You can see what they mean when they .
say everything is covered in lights .- this old
wagon iS a perfect example, and twinkling ligl}.ts
literally are everywhere at theJarm museum.
The light show will be open 6-9 p.m. daily Dec.
12-22..

' ;

\., ~

.

. ..

•

Home·for the Holidays

• Page 11

.Support the _troops with
timely holiday day mailing ·

COLUMBUS, Ohio ·- Holiday the mailing dates listed below.
· gifts from home -are a big morale Mail addresseQ to military post
boost for military service members offices overseas i'S subject to cerstationed around the world. To help tain conditions 'or · restrictions
the families and friends of military regarding content, _preparation and
persomiel, the Postal Service is handling. APO/FPO addresses
offering a discount on its largest generally require customs forms. ·
To see a table of active APO and
Priority Mail Flat-Rate .box. .
Mail sent to overseas military FPO addresses and mailing restricaddresses ·is charged only domes- tions by individual APO/FPO ZIP
tic mail prices. The domestic mail Codes, go to pe.usps.com and
priCe for the largest -Flat-Rate click "Postal Bulletins'~' in the left
Priority ·Mail box is $12.95, but column. Select the current. issue
for packages to . APO/FPO aild look for . the heading
addresses overseas the price is "Overseas Military Mail."
reduced to' only $10.95. Flat-Rate
Express Mail Military Service
boxes are free at any Post Office, is available to selected military
or can be ordered ·online a_t post · offices. Check with your
usps.com. Postage, labels and cus- local Post Office to determine if
toms forms can be printed online' this service is available to your
any time using Gli&lt;;k-N-Ship. at APO/FPO of address. 2/ PAL:
· www.usps.com/clicknship. .
PAL i~ a service that provides air
"Flat-Rate Priority _Mail boxes transportation . for parcels on a
offer the best bargain in holiday space-available basis. It is availsbipping," says Paul Vogel, man- able for Parcel Post items not
aging director, Global Business exceeding 30 poundS in weight or
·and senior vice president. "The 60 inches in length · and girth
contents can· be any . weight for . combined. The applicable PAL
· one low rate. If it fits, it ships."
fee must be paid in addition to the
The Postal Service continues to regular surface rate of postage for
show Its support by offering free each addressed piece sent by PAL
Military Care Kits, designed service. 3/ SAM:
.
SAM parcels are paid . at the
specifically for military families
sending packages oversea~. The Parcel Post postage rate with
mailing kits can be ordered by maximum weight and size limits
phone by calling (800) 610-8734 of 15 pounds and 60 inches in
and asking for the Care Kit ·
length and girth combined. SAM
Each kit includes two Priority parcels are first transported
Mail boxes, six Priority Mail domestically by surface and then
Flat-Rate boxes, eight Ptjority to overseas destinations by air on
Mail labels, one roll of Priority a space-available basis.
· Mail tape and eight customs
An independent federal agency,
forms with envelopes.
. the U.S. Postal Service is the only
"The best support for the troops delivery service that visits every
this holiday season .is a gift that's address in the nation - 146 mil, on time, so mail before the dead- lion homes and.businesses. It has
line," Vogel advises.
37,000 retail locations and relies
To ensure delivery of holiday on the sale of postage, products
cards and packages by Dec. 25 to and services to pay for operating
military . APOIFPO addresses .expenses, not tax dollars.
overseas, the Postal Service recThe Postal Service has am1Ual
ommends that mail· for service revenues of$75 billion and delivmeJ'riliets,be eotet'e&lt;! no later than ers ooai-i~:~~~~~ :Wor~:S: M~;: ;· ; ;

. P0INT PLEASANT; W.Va. -

Visitors who would like.to
see bow othet local residents decorate thew homes for ·the ~ :
holiq~ys can •
a peek during the upcoming annual holiday
·
··
. ·_
home tour. .
The DowJ!toy.rn Merchants in ];&gt;oint ·Pleasant, W.Va., will be
hosting the Christmas Home Tours Dec. - 1~. The tour will be
6-9·p.m. and will.take place Inside the Hliy "limits. and along
W.Va. 2. · ·
·
. ··
..
. . ,
. : Homes f~ on this year's .tour inclp!Je John and Leota
Sang's in Point P,leasant, Robert and Jeanie Brooks in Poplar
Heights and many others.
·.
· ··
· .
·
Tickets will be available for the tour, and those interested . •'
al~
receive maps of the hoipes' 1ocations. .
·
Carolin H ·s, one of the organizers, said the hosting
.•gt;OUp is not'lcying _to seread the tour OUt this year, but seVePll
. restdents Ylere interested in showing th~ir. holiday decoratiQns. , ..
'
'fb,r;"
r inf(mnatiOn, call . 304-675~9~26 or 304-675. 1988. : ... '
z .
.. .
.
.

can

...._

~·

wo.re

.'

c••, If, lr1't.1 .... , , •

·: ==~:lc;:.~IANCI!S
• WASHI!Ita/DitYERS
• RI!FRIGI!RATORS
• STOVES: JIAII8U tTAJmMe'110 &amp; UP

Wa CAMf

A-

Ill' BMil e.-ti'OI1'1tliTO'II.

• AIR CONDITIONERS
• FuRNITURE

• llcCoY DISHES &amp; COOKie JARS
• 30·120 DAY WARRANnes
• SERVICE WoRK
•WHOLESALE

&amp;

PARTS

BEAUTIFUL CHINESE TABLES &amp; CHAIRS
BOOTHES FOR REST AURA~ TS
IDEA. FOr&lt; ~EI'I OR REMODEL

UPft . . .,.

OFF

MuurBtUIED Plica
• 875-7888

�--------Pag~

Home for the . ~olidays

10 •

· .• Thursday, NQ'Vember.20, 2008
' .

Thursday, November 20, 2008

Millions.of
lights twinkle
at annual·farm
museum event ·
POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. Take a drive through a winter wonderland.
....,
And eveti though it will be dark,
the twinkling lights will help guide
your way.
Officials at the West Virginia State
Farm Museum have been busy the ·
past few months, working furiously
to hang more than I million lights on
buildings, fences, trees, bushes, tractors and other equipment in preparation for the annual Hol~day Light ·
Festival, which begins its 11-day run
at 6 p.m. Friday, Dec. 12.
The hundreds of strands of lights
totally transform the grounds:
where nearly 10,000 people attend.ed last year'~ show. Museum officials say the . great turnout -is
because everyone's on the lookout
for one simple thing: the Christmas
- spirit, and guests imnually enjoy
seeing the lights.
Of course, decorating the more .
than 30 buildings at the. farm museum is no easy task, and lo.cal volunte.ers annually help the museum staff
hang lights and garland.
·
Work typically starts the first full
week of October, when museum
staff members begin hanging more
than I million lights - an estimate
at best,. offic;:ials say, · jokingly
encouragmg anyone eager enough to
come out and count them all.
·
The Holiday Light Festival will
be open 6-9 p.m. daily Dec. 12-22.
In addition. to the Hghts, there will.
- be cookies and hot chocolate available each night, and Santa Claus
will be in attendance and will be
available for pictures . Admission to
the drive-thru show is free, . but
donations will be accepted, and all
proceeds will be used to fund the
farm museum.

For more information. call the

•• •fdntuilisJIW
.
. hi. fJ(J4~1$:.5Y!J'l'.
. I r. ,•• I
'

-·

•

•

..

I

•

."

Above: Lloyd Akers, ,director of the West Virginia
State Farm Museum, adjusts some of the lights
that will be displayed during the facility's annual
Holiday Lig~ Festival. More than 1 million lights
cover the buildings, fences, equipment, trees
and bushes spread across .the grounds.
Left: You can see what they mean when they .
say everything is covered in lights .- this old
wagon iS a perfect example, and twinkling ligl}.ts
literally are everywhere at theJarm museum.
The light show will be open 6-9 p.m. daily Dec.
12-22..

' ;

\., ~

.

. ..

•

Home·for the Holidays

• Page 11

.Support the _troops with
timely holiday day mailing ·

COLUMBUS, Ohio ·- Holiday the mailing dates listed below.
· gifts from home -are a big morale Mail addresseQ to military post
boost for military service members offices overseas i'S subject to cerstationed around the world. To help tain conditions 'or · restrictions
the families and friends of military regarding content, _preparation and
persomiel, the Postal Service is handling. APO/FPO addresses
offering a discount on its largest generally require customs forms. ·
To see a table of active APO and
Priority Mail Flat-Rate .box. .
Mail sent to overseas military FPO addresses and mailing restricaddresses ·is charged only domes- tions by individual APO/FPO ZIP
tic mail prices. The domestic mail Codes, go to pe.usps.com and
priCe for the largest -Flat-Rate click "Postal Bulletins'~' in the left
Priority ·Mail box is $12.95, but column. Select the current. issue
for packages to . APO/FPO aild look for . the heading
addresses overseas the price is "Overseas Military Mail."
reduced to' only $10.95. Flat-Rate
Express Mail Military Service
boxes are free at any Post Office, is available to selected military
or can be ordered ·online a_t post · offices. Check with your
usps.com. Postage, labels and cus- local Post Office to determine if
toms forms can be printed online' this service is available to your
any time using Gli&lt;;k-N-Ship. at APO/FPO of address. 2/ PAL:
· www.usps.com/clicknship. .
PAL i~ a service that provides air
"Flat-Rate Priority _Mail boxes transportation . for parcels on a
offer the best bargain in holiday space-available basis. It is availsbipping," says Paul Vogel, man- able for Parcel Post items not
aging director, Global Business exceeding 30 poundS in weight or
·and senior vice president. "The 60 inches in length · and girth
contents can· be any . weight for . combined. The applicable PAL
· one low rate. If it fits, it ships."
fee must be paid in addition to the
The Postal Service continues to regular surface rate of postage for
show Its support by offering free each addressed piece sent by PAL
Military Care Kits, designed service. 3/ SAM:
.
SAM parcels are paid . at the
specifically for military families
sending packages oversea~. The Parcel Post postage rate with
mailing kits can be ordered by maximum weight and size limits
phone by calling (800) 610-8734 of 15 pounds and 60 inches in
and asking for the Care Kit ·
length and girth combined. SAM
Each kit includes two Priority parcels are first transported
Mail boxes, six Priority Mail domestically by surface and then
Flat-Rate boxes, eight Ptjority to overseas destinations by air on
Mail labels, one roll of Priority a space-available basis.
· Mail tape and eight customs
An independent federal agency,
forms with envelopes.
. the U.S. Postal Service is the only
"The best support for the troops delivery service that visits every
this holiday season .is a gift that's address in the nation - 146 mil, on time, so mail before the dead- lion homes and.businesses. It has
line," Vogel advises.
37,000 retail locations and relies
To ensure delivery of holiday on the sale of postage, products
cards and packages by Dec. 25 to and services to pay for operating
military . APOIFPO addresses .expenses, not tax dollars.
overseas, the Postal Service recThe Postal Service has am1Ual
ommends that mail· for service revenues of$75 billion and delivmeJ'riliets,be eotet'e&lt;! no later than ers ooai-i~:~~~~~ :Wor~:S: M~;: ;· ; ;

. P0INT PLEASANT; W.Va. -

Visitors who would like.to
see bow othet local residents decorate thew homes for ·the ~ :
holiq~ys can •
a peek during the upcoming annual holiday
·
··
. ·_
home tour. .
The DowJ!toy.rn Merchants in ];&gt;oint ·Pleasant, W.Va., will be
hosting the Christmas Home Tours Dec. - 1~. The tour will be
6-9·p.m. and will.take place Inside the Hliy "limits. and along
W.Va. 2. · ·
·
. ··
..
. . ,
. : Homes f~ on this year's .tour inclp!Je John and Leota
Sang's in Point P,leasant, Robert and Jeanie Brooks in Poplar
Heights and many others.
·.
· ··
· .
·
Tickets will be available for the tour, and those interested . •'
al~
receive maps of the hoipes' 1ocations. .
·
Carolin H ·s, one of the organizers, said the hosting
.•gt;OUp is not'lcying _to seread the tour OUt this year, but seVePll
. restdents Ylere interested in showing th~ir. holiday decoratiQns. , ..
'
'fb,r;"
r inf(mnatiOn, call . 304-675~9~26 or 304-675. 1988. : ... '
z .
.. .
.
.

can

...._

~·

wo.re

.'

c••, If, lr1't.1 .... , , •

·: ==~:lc;:.~IANCI!S
• WASHI!Ita/DitYERS
• RI!FRIGI!RATORS
• STOVES: JIAII8U tTAJmMe'110 &amp; UP

Wa CAMf

A-

Ill' BMil e.-ti'OI1'1tliTO'II.

• AIR CONDITIONERS
• FuRNITURE

• llcCoY DISHES &amp; COOKie JARS
• 30·120 DAY WARRANnes
• SERVICE WoRK
•WHOLESALE

&amp;

PARTS

BEAUTIFUL CHINESE TABLES &amp; CHAIRS
BOOTHES FOR REST AURA~ TS
IDEA. FOr&lt; ~EI'I OR REMODEL

UPft . . .,.

OFF

MuurBtUIED Plica
• 875-7888

�•

Huddle captain shares
experience with FCA, As

Lending .
assistance, .A2

•

at
Middleport • PomerQy, Ohio

~

•

Prinledon 100%
Re&lt;ycltd Newsprinl ~. .

SPORTS
• Pryor, Buckeyes
prepped for rivalry.
See Page at

crash
STAFF REPORT
NEWS@MYOAILYSENTINEL.COM

MIDDLEPORT
A
three-vehicle accident on
Ohio 7 near lhe intersection
with Ohio 124 took the life
of a local man and injured
another driver.
The Gallia-Meigs Post of
the State Highway Patrol
said William N. Lehew, 2~,
Pomeroy, was pronounced
dead at the scene of the accident, which occurred around
6:55 p.m. Wednesday.
Troopers said Lehew was
southbound on 7 when he
reportedly drove off the
right side of the road to pass
a sports utility vehicle ahead
of him driven by Kelly M.
Barnett, 25, Rutland.
Lehew passed the Barnett

OBITUARIES
Page A3
• Helen L. Culmer, 79
• W~liam 'Nate' Lehew, 23
• Sarah E. Neigler, 74
• Joanne Tatterson, 82
'

'

INSIDE .

•

Page 12 •

~

'

.. ·~··

'

.

'Nov~ber 20, 2008

• [j

.,

'.

of'A" honors

.. -

members. See Page A2
·• .Familiar face takes
over accounting
business. See Page A2
• Two arrested for
stealing copper at
.bridge. See Page A3
· • 'Volley for the Cure'
·aidsACS. See Page AS
·• Ohio.family farm
illuminates Christmas.
See Page AS
• Are you blessed?
See Page A6
• A Hunger For More.
See Page A6
• Upwards Ministry ·
beginning. See Page A6

WEATHER

111

Street ·

Pomeroy, Ohio

Association ·
BY BRIAN

J.

holida church ·tour Shank is

REED .

BREEDCMYOAILYSENTINEL.COM

MIDDLEPORT - Tickets
for a holiday tour of
Middleport's churches will
go on sale Dec. I.
The
Middleport
Community Association is
the ·sponsor of the community's Christmas chl!rch_to_ur,
from6~9 p.nf: 6fi Dk1'1.
· The. association has been
pleasantly surprised With
the response from churches
in town, Chairman Debbie
Gerlach
said.
From
Bradbury to the "lower ·
end," the tour will take visitors to churches large and.
small, old and newer.
Volunteers are hard at
work decking the churches
out for the Christmas sea- ·
son. Churches participating
are the Ash Street Church
.''
on Ash Street, First Baptist
Church at South Sixth
''
Avenue and Palmer Street,
Hope Baptist Church on
Grant
Street, Victory
Baptist Church on North
Second Avenue downtown,
Bradbury Church of Christ
on
Bradbury
Road,
Middleport Church of.
Christ on Main Street, the
First Presbyteri;m Church
on South Fourth Avenue,
Middleport Church of the
Nazar;:ne on General
Hartinger
Parkway,
Rejoicing Life · Church on
North Second Avenue, Mt.
Moriah Baptist Church on
South Fourth Avenue, and
Heath United Methodist
Church on South · Third
.
Brion J. Roed/pholo
Avenue.
Betty VanMatre places a handmade angel in one of the multi-colored windows at the
Tickets for the tour are Bradbury Church of Christ. The church is one of 11 participating in a holiday church tour,
sponsored by Middleport Community Association, on Dec. 11 .
Pl..se see Tour, A3

Record spending on winter heating assistance

-INDEX
· a SECI10NS-

16 PAGES

Comics

87

Editorials
Faith • Values
Movies
NASCAR
Obituaries

A4

Sports

weather

In ten and one-half work-'
ing days, the agency has
processed 507 Emergency
MIDDLEPORT - Since Home Heating Emergency
Nov. 3, the Gallia-Meigs Assistance
Program
Community Action Agency (HEAP) applications, 552
has spent $230,016 on heat- regular HEAP apphcat1ons
ing assistance funds which and 694 Percentage of
is basically a new record, Income Payment Plan upphaccording
to
Sandra cations total in Galli a and
lv!eigs . Counties.
On
Edwards ofGMCAA.
Bv BETH SERGENT

BSERGENTOMYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

A2
Annie's Mailbox
BB
Bp.ckeye Edition
A2
Calendars
Bs-6
Classifieds

As-7
A3
83
A3

BSl!ction
A2

© ooo8 Ohio Vlliey Publillhlng Co.

' ' 1

---

Detello on Page A2

.www.mydaUysentlnel.com

· 4·"'4', ..

vehicle. but lost control of
the car he drove before reentering the roadway. His
car came back on toe highway out of control, causing
the car to travel left of center,
where it struck head-on with
a northbound livestock truck
driven by Jack W. Vaughn ,
61, Parkersburg, W.Va. . .
Troopers said the crash
forced Lehew's car back
into the southbound lane,
where it was struck in the
rear by Barnett's vehicle.
Lehew was ejected from his
· vehicle, and was later
to Anderson
released
McDaniel Funeral Home
for arrangements.
Barnett was not injured,
Pholo courtesy of Brenl RoH
but.. Vaughn was treated at Heavy damage is seen to one of the vehicles involved in a crash Wednesday night on Ohio
Please see Crash. A3
7 near Middleport that took the life of a Pomeroy man.

,

Wednesday alone, nearly
$66,000 wet~! out of the
office to pay fuel 011 btljs of
clients that quahfted for one
of the vanous programs.
Whether it's a sign of the
economy, the cost of heatmg, the cost of hvmg versus
stagnant wages, the lack of
Jobs, a cold snap pr all of the
above, several factnrs seem

to be converging·into a busy
da~ s at the GMCAA's three
offtces,
accordmg
to
Edwards. To say that the
office has been inundated
with applications would be
an understatement.
Another important reason
why more people are
Pleese see Heat1n1r A3

Additional flu vaccines arrive at health d~partment
BY BETH SERGENT
BSEAGENTOMYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY - Today an·
additional 200 influenza vaccines arrive at the Meigs
County Health Department
after public interest picked
up again this week following
the firsl documented case of
"the flu" diagnosed at Holzer
Meigs Clinic last week.

•

Allhough health depart- mately 50 chi ldren ha ve
ment officials have not had already received vaccinaany additi.onal report s of tions through the health
official influenza case&gt; \11 department since vaccinathe county, the public see.ms tion clinics began back in
to have heard the warnmg October. Sim said this num·
and purchased the last of the ber was up from last year.
For those wishing to
department's rough ly 50
doses this week . MCHP receive a vaccination at the
Assistant
Admini strator health depmtment, walk-ins
Courtney Sim said about are welcome during regular
850 adults and appro~t - business hours , and the
ib

department is open until 6
p.m . on one Tuesday a
month. The .vaccine is free
to those with Medicaid or
Medicare Part B who present t~eir cards , or $15 a
dose . The MCI;ID ordered
the first batch of vaccines
from a private ·company to
assure &lt;lVailability but this
Pleese see Vacdnu. A3

newDJFS
Director
Bv BRIAN

J.

REED

BAEEDCIMYD"ILYSENTINEL.COM

fOMEROY

Chris
=~~~~oai has
the ·Department of~lind
Family Services.
• r• , .
Meeting Thursda~. Meigs
Co11nty . Corrurussioners
approved
Shank's promotion to the
director's
position. He
has
been
with
the
agency for
over 15 years
and
now
serves
as
Social Services Supervisor,
Shank
will
replace
Barbara Chapman, who has
been serving as acting director since Michael Swishe(s
retirement early this year.
Chapman will return to her
previous position of program administrator. Her
appointment as acting director was effective through the
new year, and Shank will
assume _the job on Jan. 4 .
Please see Shank, A:S

be,: ·

County to
seek $15K
for lending
education
BY BRIAN

J.

REED

BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY - Meigs
County
Commissioners
held a second public hear- ·
ing on an application for
$15,000 in New Horizons
Fair Housing funding during ·their meeting Thursday.
The application includes a
$12,000 match from the
county's
Community
Development Block Grant
fomlllla allocation for fair
housing activities. The funds,
if awarded. would primarily
be used to purchas.e billboards in Middleport and
Pomeroy relating to predatory lending. The total budget
for those billboards is $9.700.
Funds are also set aside
for printed educational
materials, personnel and
administration.
In other business , commissioners opened a bid from
Please see Education. A3

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