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                  <text>IN DEPTH

iunbap ltm~ ·ientind

PageD6
Sunday, Derember 7, 2008

Southem students
make a difference, A2

Mandates driving sprge to rivers for hydropower
BY TERRY KINNEY
AND JtM SUHR
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITERS

sufficient.
Harnessing
the
Mississippi River 's flow
for electrical generation
isn't new : A 134-megawatt
hydroelectric plant by St.
Louis-based AmerenUE,
.for instance, has been run. ning since '1913 at
Keokuk, Iowa.
· Develope'rs see even
more potential, however.
Mass ac h use t t s- based
Free Flow Power Corp. is
studyi ng the prospects of
planting thousands of
small electric turbines in
the river bed at 55 si te s
.from St. Louis to the Gulf
of . Mexico.
figuring
together they could generate enough power to supply 1.5 million homes.
The private startup says
·the cumulative .output of
1,600 megawatts would be

HAMILTON - Many
decades ago, cost-conscious Henry Ford turned
to hydroelectric plants to
power his car factories like
the one by the Great
Miami River, near this
Cincinnati suburb . That
assembly plant is long
gone, but the power plant
and the. tec.hnology behind
it isn't.
Far from it. The push to
get electricity from moving water is only picking
up steam.
There is mounting politi. cal pressure to ge l more
energy from alternative
sources and developers are
pushing ambitious projects
to exp loit
America's
biggest rivers for power.
"Some of these applications have been around for
decades,
but
there 's
renewed interest now,"
said
Jeff
Hawk ,
spokesman . for the U.S.
Army COI]lS of Engineers'
Pittsburgh district. "We've
seen a spurt of applications; we're busier now
than ever." ·
A new . generation of
low -impact hydroelectric ·
plants is expected to light
up the Ohio River Valley.
Along the Mi ssissi ppi
River, a city and a small .,
startup firm have separate '
hopes of harnessi ng that
artery's energy potential
either through a few big
turbines or thousands of
tiny, submerged ones.
Water is already the
leading renewable energy
source used by utilities· to
ge nera.te electric power.
The recent credit crisis
has not been a concern for
most.
"One thing that is certain
is that this will pass," said
Dan Irvin, behind one of
the ventures planned for
the Mississippi R!ver. "If
you were financtng any
energy project at the
. moment, you'd have your
hands full. But.we're looking out far enough, and we
carry conservative enough
assumptions, that we feel
very comfortable."
American
Municipal
Power-Ohio is a nonprofit
wholesale power supplier
for 123 municipal systems
in
Ohio, ' Kentucky ,
Pennsylvania, Virginia,
West
Virgini~
and
Michigan. It already owns
a hydro plant on the Ohio
River and is involved iri
developing five more .
In Hamilton , Ohio ;
where the Ford plant once
stood, the city Qought the
hydro power plant in 1963 ,
acquired a second one on
the Ohio River a few years
later and may soon build
another just upriver from
Cincinnati.
Hydro gives the 30,000
customers of the .cityowned utility the lowest
electricity rate in Ohio ,
and officials think that
Hamilton can become virtually all-.hydro.
The price tag :, $450 million over 40 years.
"The cost is in construction . Once the project's
built, that's it ," said Linda
Church Ciocci , executive
director of the National
Hydropower Association,
a Washington-based trade
group. "There 's no fuel
cost · associated , with
hydropower."
Hamilton 's 30,000 residential customers pay 9.7
cents per kilowatt-hour, a
couple cents more than the
average in . Washington
state, where 70 percent of
its electricity comes from
. hydropower.
There are 20 navigation
and flood control dams on
the Ohio River along its
981 miles from Pittsburgh
to Cairo, Ill. Hydro plants
at six of the dams already
.are producing electricity,
with a generating capacity .
of more
than
300
megawatts; four more that
have been licensed would
double that perhap~ be on
linein2013 .
The . principle behind
hydro is simple. Moving
·water spins the blades of a
turbine, which turns a generator shaft. A fall of less
than 30 feet, the height of
mos.t Ohio River dams, is

the equivalent. of three
small coal-fired power
plants or one or two
nuclear ones.
Toe plan. with a possible
$3 billion price tag, uses
hydrokinetics - electrical
generation from river currents or ocean waves. The
river's flow would spiri
submerged turbines about
two feet in diameter and
perhaps made of carbon
fiber or some other lightweight source durable
enough to withstand being
hit by debris swept downriver while not interfering
with barge traffic .
~'It's elegant, it's simple," says Irvin, Free
Flow's chief executive and
. a former
investment
banker. His company
screened some 80,000 river
sites across the country.

Preliminary ·permits that
Free Flow Power already
has from the Federal
Energy
Regulatory
Commission give the startup first right to seek operating licenses for projects
at those-. locations while
giving it three years to do
environmental and technical studies.
Sternberg,
a
Janet
Missouri Department of
Conservation policy coordinator, · urged FERC
months ago to not move
too hastily on ·such projects until . more about
hydrokinetics is known.
"People
saw
the
Mississippi as an .opportunity ....;, here 's ·a big river
with a lot of free-flowing
":'ater," Sternberg told The
A4&gt;sociated Press. "Is this a
good place .to install this

type of energy?"
Irvin calls such debate
healthy.
"We have no objection to
the careful scrutiny and
scientific question," Irvin
said. Stressing that Free
Flow's turbines would turn
only with the speed of the
river, "we're pretty comfortable that what we're
proposing is going to be
completely benign to
fish."
Up the river in Quincy,
Ill., which hugs the .
Mississippi's eastern bank,
· Mayor John Spring thinks
installing hydroelectric
turbines on three locks and ·
.dams could produce 55
megawatts of power enough to supply the city's
16,000 homes.
Quincy's plan - already
siglieil off on by the City

Council and with preliminary permits from ·FERC
- could cost about $200
million .
By the end of this fiscal
year, which . ends next
May, Quincy - a city with
an operations budget of
$30 million - will have
put $1.4 million into the
effort.
~·we'd like to make this
part of our state the poster
child for hydroelectricity
in our country," Spring
said. "Normally, you'd
never see an entity this
size take on such a gigantic project. But I think it's
the future , and it's the.
right thing to do:"
(Associated Press Writer
Jim Suhr reported from St.
Louis).

Pleasant
Valley

Hospital

•
•

~

Prinl&lt;donlOO'ii&gt;
Recycled NeWipriut ~·

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio ·
:; u &lt; I '\ I S • \ o I. :;H. ~ o . 1oh

.,, H l :\ I l \' . I )j l I ' I HI I{ H. :.!ooH

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d.11l, ... t · ••l~ru· I , 111 ••

Dec. 20-21
last days
to deergun hunt

SPORTS ~ Oklahoma,

. Il l\

Florida

headed to .BCS tit!$
game. See Page 81

STAFF REPORT
NEWSCMYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

OBITUARIES
Page AS

' DorottP,t Walters, 79

' Brian J . Reedlphotoe

Santa Claus arrived in Middleport aboard Jeff Darst's vintage firetruck . He later took Chr[stmas requests and posed
with children for free photos at Peoples Bank.
.

lNsmE

First·
snowfall
adds
to
.
. . . ..
:.:
.
.

.ve ·

BY BRIAN

i. :(~:~~·.&lt;
~

J. REED ·,.

BREEDOMYDAILYSEiHINEL.COM

Case Knives make
great stocking

• Club prepares lor
::silent basket auction to

stu~rst

www. ThomaeOoH.com

Holzer Hospice.
:See Page A3 .
,. Democrats pick up . ·
::a House seat In central
1
. 0hio. See ... A2
:. Land t~sfers.
·benef~

MONTHS
NO INTEREST

See Page AS

WEATHER

Nov. 28 •Dec. 29 2008

Corbm &amp;Snyier furniture
"!From Our :1lome 'To fYours•
9515 Second Avenue • .Oalllpolle, OH
-.corb1Nincl8nyder.com

HOURI: IIDn

Tlil4at N •PH

•800 eN UIZ
Delalle on Pege AS

'

INDEX
a SI!CI10NS

-

la PAGES

t\nnie's Mailbox Aa
·ta\endars
A3
Classifieds
B3-4
.
.
e.olnics ··
Bs
,Editorials
Obituaries
Any High

B Section

Sports

Deftnidon TV

A4
As
.. As

Weather

~aooaOhloV~I'IMM•naeo.

·.

•

•

.,
. • ' f\

...

MIDDLEPORT
A,
fresh blanket of snow only
added to the festive atmosphere
in
Middleport
Saturday, as Santa ~ved
on a vintage ftrenuck m the
annual Christmas parade.
Entries we~ fewer but
spirts were high for the .
parade and other ddwritown
events, which kick off the
holiday shopping season.
A steady snowfall began
earlier i!J tlli: day, and by the
time walking units, · the
Meigs
High · School
Marching Band, floats and
fireln!cks stepped off from
Rejoicing Life Church, side .
streets and sidewalks .were
covered. It was a cold day,
but hot cocoa and snacks ·
were sen-ed at ·the "T," part
of
the . · Middleport
CommuJ;Jity Association's ·
holiday 'Program of events.
A~r the parade, Santa ·
visited children at Peoples
)3ank, and pOsed for f~ . ·'
photos. Ther,e were also
horse-Qrawn carriage rides,
and a live nativity.
·
. The next holiday event in
Middleport · .will
be
'fhursday, :when !he·associatiGn hosts tts hohday church
tour. Tickets are
.c arriage · · rides, free
refreshments, caroling and
another ' live nativity are .
planned for the )annu~l
Frtintic · Santa ShQpping
spree on Dec. 19. The annual event will also include
sales by panidpating downtown merchants. ··

·'Keep Your
Fork~ raises
money,
•
recogmzes
•
wmners
BY BETH SERGENT
SSEAGENTOMY~I~~ENTINEL.COM

Above: The Meigs High School
Marching Band played holiday
tunes along the Middleport
Christmas parade route.
Left: Heavy coats, mittens,

scarves and earmuffs were lhe
order of ttie day Saturday, due to ·
wintry temperatures and the season's first snowfall. These youngsters were awaiting candy from
par~tde· floats.

Rutlan4 Holiday Lighting Co~test scheduled
STAFI' REPQin' ·,.,
NEWS8MVDAILYBENTINEL.coM

··
RUTLAND
Tb~
Rutland Friendly Gardeners
recently announced its
annual
Rutland
area
Holiday Lighting &lt;;:ontest
which will be judged during
the
wee.k prior- .to
Christmas.
•
No preregistration i~ neeessary as oilt-of.:town
judges' and representatives
of the Rutland Friendly
Gardeners will travel the
,.

,_

COLUMBUS - Ohio's
popular deer-gun season
will conclude with hunting
Dec. 20 and 21.
The extra days we~
added beginning in 2006 in
response to comments
received from hunters for
. more weekend time to hunt.
"These two additional
weekend days give deer
hunters another chance at
filling their deer ta1l while
helping us in meetmg our
deer management goals,"
•said David M. Graham,
chief of the Division of
Wildlife.
So far this season, hunters
have taken 51 ,620 deer during the first six weeks of the
statewide archery season.
The special youth season,
held Nov. 22-23, resulted in
young . hunters bagging
9,852 deer. Hunters checked
33,034 deer during the
opening day of the
statewide deer-gun season,
Dec. I.
Another 568 deer were
taken during the early muzzteloader deer season he*
. in October on the Shawne ,
Salt Fork and Wolf Cre
state wildlife areas.
,·
A total of three deer may
be harvested in eastern and
southeastern Ohio's Zone
C. Hunters may take only
one antle~d deer, regll!dless of zone, huntmg
method or season. A deer
permit is required in addition to.a valid Ohio hunting
license.

roads Within the contest • Pri~s will be awarded for
vicinity, considering all Overall Decorating and
lighted homes. DUrin,g that Porch/Doorway Decorating
week of judgiQg, lights in both Religious and Non· .should be operatinS~from at Religious
categories.
least 6 to 9 p.m. , · . · Residents are advised that
The jud~ing route will areas decorated with both
include Ohio 124 from the Religious
and · Nonold 'Hilltop · gas station, Religious elements will not
$Oil!g west to the to:wn lim" be considered for either cat·· ~is near Lasher Road; and uJt e$ory. For example, a home
New Lima Road as far as Pisplaying a Nativity ~cene
the · Joe Bolin residence, should not 1also dis(-.ay a
with all ' streets within · Santa Claus, Grinch , or
Rutland Village . to be other secular figures.
included.
Consideration will be

.. f

given to good use of design·
elements, such as color
harmony, scale.and proportion, use of space, BJ!pro·
priate display in good
working order, and originality to create the best
visual effect.
Winning residents will be
contacted by members of
the
Rutland
Friendly
Gardeners for the awardiQg
of prizes, and winners will
be announced in The Daily
PIHH -

Contest. AS

POMEROY - The Keep
Your Fork 5K Run/Walk
recently raised . around
$4,500 for college scholarships and recognized winners of the race.
The annual race which
just completed its seventh
.vear, raises money for graduates of Meigs High School
who participated in track
and field or cross-coun!')'.
In addition to scholarship
funds·, the race also raises
the· memory of the late
Brandi Thomas, a member
of the Meigs High School
Cross Country Track and
Field Team who died in
·2002 as a result of injuries
sustained in an automobile
accident.
Thomas' mother Cheryl
said this year's race had 213
runners, down only slightly
from 2007's 217 participants ..
This year out of the 213
participants, Michael Owen
had the best time at 16:31.
The male overall winners
were Michael Owen, first
place, Kody Wolfe, second
place, Aaron Martindale ,
third place. The female
overall winners were, Devan
Soulsby, first place, Jennifer
Bartrum, second place,
Morgan Lentes, thirdflace .
Female winners o various age groups were:
Shawnella Patterson, six13; Kimi Swisher, 14-17;

Pleut ... Winnen.M

•

�PageA2 ·

LOCAL • .STATE
·Democrats pick Southern students make a difference
up a House seat
in central Ohio
'Ihe Daily Sentinel

.

.

BY STEPHEN MAJORS
PRES~ WAITER

COLUMBUS
• Democrat Mary Jo ·Kilroy
· came from behind Sunday
• to snatch a central Ohio seat
from House Republicans
after· elections officials tallied provisional ballots.
Kilroy 's victory by a little
more than 2,000 votes over
• Republican Steve Stivers
: p~t the 15th Congressi&lt;.mal
. Dtstnct
seat
mto
· Democratic hands after the
retirement of Republican
Deborah Pryce.
Franklin County officials
· released unofficial results
. Sunday that showed Kilroy
· • with a margin of victory of
2,311 votes out of roughly
300,000 cast. enough to
avoid an automatic recount.
Provisional ballots are
issued at polls to people
who . believe they were
. wrongly denied the right to
vote. Kilroy was down by
594 voles when officials
began counting about 9,600
provisional ballots in her
district, which encompasses
Columbus, the state's capital and largest city.
"I am very proud to serve
our community as the next
congresswoman from central Ohio," Kilroy, a fonner,
Franklin County commissioner. said in a statement.
"In Washington , I will work
together
with . both
Democrats, Republicans ·
and presidenHiect Obama
to tackle the. real problems
that our community faces."
Stivers conceded. the race
to Kilroy shortly after the
results were released .,
"While I am extremely
proud of the race I ran, ultimately it was not enough,"
Stivers said. "I have called
Commissioner Kilroy to
fOngratulate her for her
hard-fought vtctory, and I
in
wish
her
well
. Washington."
With Kilroy's victory,
Democrats will hold 256
seats in the House, compared with 177 Republicans.
.Two House races in Virginia
and Louisiana are still up in
the air.
Kilroy narrowly lost election to the congressional
seai in 2006, when she came
within fewer than 2,000
votes of unseating Pryce.
That race required a
recount.
The counting of 24,000
provisional ballots this year
m Franklin County went
forward after the Ohio
Supreme Court ruled Friday
that l ,000 of the ballots in
dispute must be thrown out
because of voter error.
In a 4-2 decision , the
court struck down a directive by Ohio Secretary of
State Jennifer Brunner say. ing the votes should be
counted. ·
Justices said Brunner
improperly instructed county officials to apply conflict- ·
ing standards to election
law by ruling that the votes

Ohio Univ.
provost hired
as Otterbein's
president
WESTERVILLE (AP) Ott~F.rbein College has hired
a top Ohio University official to be its new president.
Otterbein
announced
Kathy Krendl 's appointment
on Friday. She'll be the suburban Columbus school's
first woman pro&lt;sident when
she takes over in July.
Krendl has served as Ohio
University's provost since
2004 and as executive vice
president since last year,
when her role was expanded
to oversee academic affairs .
She and Ohio University
President
Roderick
McDavis have weathered
criticism from some faculty
members and students in
recent years over breakdown·s in computer security,
cuts in athletic programs
and negative publicity over
alleged plagiarism in the
engineering school.

should be counted", ·even
though the envelopes failed
to comply with ll:gal guidelines set out before Election
Day, Nov. 4.
The disputed ballots contained errors on the outer
envelope, such as no signature or name. Others had the
signature or name written in
the incorrect space.
The provisional ballots
also settled two state House
races, both of which were
won by Democrats .

·

1

, S~tbm lltlld pooto

1

•

During "Red Ribbon Week" one of the planned activities was, "I Can, You Can, We Can, Make a Di~rence Day" y.o~ere
students from the elementary and high school brought in canned food or dog food for the Friends!!&lt;.NeiQh~ors Community
Food Center located at th~ Racine Municipal Building and the Melge; County Humane Society, respectively; Pic.tured deliv- ·
ering caoned !bod to the Friends &amp; Neighbors Community Food.Center are, Sean Riffle, Grant to ·fted\II*! ,AICQflol Abuse
community organizer, students Nathan Roush, Jeremiah Warden, Courtney Thom~.''Dalton :Patte~oh! ·Tan.nerRous~, .
Dan1elle Icenhower, and Knsten Humphrey.
. :·, .
•' '
.'.,,
,

Be ·willing to stand up to disapproval
with my last boyfriend six
months ago, and I'm not
'ure I am. ready fur another
Dear Annie: I am not a serious rela tionship so
: small woman. I weigh soon. However. things
: close to 200 pounds, and at seem to be going well and I
·.5 feet 4 inches. I am solid- don't want to keep my
: .ly built. My family is full mother out of the loop in
: of stocky individuals. so 1 my dating life. Should I
. don't know why I'm afraid ' state upfront that he's a
·:to tell my parents about a large man Ol' just not bring
::guy I am dating while away it up unl ess ;he asks? :-at university.
Not Afraid of a Little Fat
" Roger'' . is extremely . Dear Not Afraid: If
· smart, funny, physically you're in mllcge, yo u're an
: strong, personable, works in adult and your dating choic: social work and is getting a es are your own . That
· Ph .D. in ed ucation. He's means if you choose some: handsome and treats me like one your parents are preju,a princess. I think I could diced agamst , you have to
. fall in love with him.
be willing to stand up to
. The problem is, he 's their disapproval until they
. upward of 300 pounds, and get to know him . For now,
: at 6 feet 4 inches, is a mas- tell your parenls you are
sive human being. He's the dating a greal guy . If . the
·same size as my boss, a man relationship becomes seri·my family refers to as ous, you can e-mail them a
' "Jabba the Hun."
photo of the two of you and
1 don't want my family to then let the chips fall where
;·judge my signifiqmt other they may.
·.' based on something as . Dear Annie: My cousin
~ superficial as weight, but I is getting married for the
know my grandmother will third time in 10 years. Her
say something nasty about fiance has never been mar"his body. I think he 's a thing ried . They want a tradition"of beauty.
al (and large) reception.
Roger and I are not dat- . They are not in a P"sition to
--ing exclusively. I broke up pay for the recepllon or dinBY KATHY MITCHELL
AND MARCY SuGAR

ner, and therefort' all
expe nses would fall on her
parents - again.
I think anything after the
second marriage should be a
quiet, intimate affair. This
seems like the height of
tackiness and arrogance.
particularly on someone
else's dime. Her parents
have a large group of
friends who gave generously to the last two weddings.
. I would hate to think they
would feel obligated to buy
anothcqjift.
I am very happy for my
cousin, but let's get real.
Her track record isn 't great.
Is there anything I could say
or politely hint that would
avoid hurt feelings. yet save
embarrassment? ·- Cousin
of Miss Tacky
Dear Cousin: No. Don't
forget, this i~ the groom's
first wedding. The onli
objection should be who is
paying for it. After two previous weddings, your
cousin should be footing her
own bill , even if that means
a much more modest wedding. However, if her parents want to pay for it , that's
their deci sion, and those
who wish to send a gift ·again - rna)' do so.

.

·l ill• I• lei
}

i

'

"

.,

Street·
food stores

740-112-2111
Prices available starting Nov. 28th. Meat aod Produc.e price1

good thru Dec. 13th.

County
Chamber
of
Commerce,
businessminded luncheon , noon ,.
Pomeroy Library, speaker
Fred
Deal
from
Monday, Dec:. 8
CHESTER
. Past Governor's Office of
. Councilors Club, 6 p.m. at Appalachia. performance
· the Masonic hall for a by . Eastern High School
• catered dinner, $3 gift . Bell Choir, lunch catered
by Bob Evans of Mason,
exchange.
W.Va ., RSVP 992-5005.
MIDDLEPORT
Thursday, Dec. 11
Middleport Lodge 363, speCHESTER
Shade
cial meeting at Temple , 7
. p.m. for work in fellowcraft River Lodge ·453 will hold
open installation of its new
: degrees .
officers,
7:30
p.m.
Thesday, Dec. 9
Refreshments .
HARRISONVILLE
RACINE - Sunshine
. Harrisonville OE.S 255,
Circle,
7 p.m .. Bethany. potluck dinner, 6 p.m.
Dorcas
Church,
brinl' col.
. meeting 7:30 p.m. Wear
: chapter dresses and t.ake lectibles, gifts for semors .
· canned goods for food
: drive .
m~etings
The
. SYRACUSE
: Wildwood Garden Club will
Monday, Dec. 8
: meet at 6:30 p.m . at the
POMEROY - Meigs
· Syracuse
Community County Trustees and Clerks
: Center. Shirley Hamm will Association, 6 p.m. at. the
: present a program on Meigs Senior Citizens
: weather legends.
Center.
POMEROY - Meigs
POMEROY - Veterans

Clubs and
organizations

Public

Boneless

·Seedless

.Chuck Roast

Dear Annie: "Gloria in
the Southeast" was upset by
large women wearing shorts.
Who is Gloria to judge who
looks good in shorts and
who is allowed to wear
.them? Why should I care
what other people think?
I'm 66 and thin , but still
don't look very good in
shorts. However, I wear
them in the hot weather
because they are comfortable. If people are walking
behind me and judging my
rear o;:nd, it doesn 't bother
me. Gloria should get over
herself and find another
hobby. - Helen in Oregon
Dear Helen: If you don't
care; we certainly don't ,
either,
.
Annie's Mailbox is written by Kathy Mitchell and
Marcy Sugar, longtime edi·
tors of the Ann Landers
cQlumn. Please e-mai/yQur
questions to anniesmailbox@comcast.net, or write
to: Annie's Mailbox, P.O.
Box 1181·90, Chicago, IL
60611. To find ·out ·more
about Annie's Mailbox,
and read features by other
Creators Syndicate writers
and ca.rtooni.~ts, visit the
Creators ·Syndicate Web ·
page at www.creators.com.

7

2.
•

t.99

Assorted Varieties

Assorted Vari~ · ·

TGIF

Bugles ..
Snickl

Appetizers

7.6-11 'oz box ·

ZJS&amp;

,.,

&gt;

Fresh Express

Sozbag

Garden

Silad Mix
. 24oz bag

1.77

Smithfield or Sugardale

· Spiral Sliced Ham

Ham &amp; sweet potato prices good

ttvu Oec. 24, 2008.

•

-- - -

.. - ......... ...

~

-

·- --··

•

- ···---·-

•

•

----

-

Service Commission, 9
· a.m., 117 Memorial Dr.
TheSday, Dec. 9
POMEROY - Meigs
County Board of Elections,
. 8:30a.m.
POMEROY - Salisbury
Township Tru stees 6:30
p.m. · at the home of
Manning Roush.
POMEROY - Meigs
Soil
and
Water
Conservation · District
Board of Supervisors:
11:30 a.m., 33101 Hiland
Rd.

Lowell Beaver will observe
hi&gt; 80th birthday on
Sunday, Dec, 14. Cards may
be sent to him at 457 Beech
St. , Middleport, Ohio
45760. A celebnition will be
held at . the Middleport
Church of Christ fellowship
·hall from 2 to 4 p.m. on
Dec. 14.

_....., ___

....,.

lb

.

•
The first real snow of the season brings out the kid in many
of us. Many children attending Middleport's Christmas
parade Saturday afternoon were as inlerested in the snow
as they were the candy thrown along the route.
.4-far~ogi"g

Tlut Restaurant
is \'our Business.
Protccti01g It Is Our5!

tr"'

(!'(I ~&gt;Am .a' inw \lfY:IIi! ·.':lrC&gt;.(;r~ \Jowl t&gt;
' ~·i&gt;I'U tuol&lt;re:u !!1fC411001 .
Wt! 1:1'~ mt(:&lt;l[lt1(~\~ i~;~lO'J'Wll' SW\'1~ '()~

vr,u
~.1

Church events

~~uti':' JY(Iljo)tfl(J

,.,.111 r:.r

Dlt w.~.

c~.Y-'8 ~41'«1

ca.tli&lt;IQE' 'oi'oMrl1

L111 Ctiu ~Lfo.~o

:l!' ,1 o~+::'!'i rtc.{11.

~"Q••cco ~Po~ t&lt;:.g~!tu

II!Jf'»iltl"\ !!"'$ W51 ~~ ·;&lt;» &lt;::#C~IM

Friday, Dec. 12
TUPPERS PLAINS
Community
Christmas
Con~ert, with Eastern High
School Handbell Choir and
church choirs. 7 p.m .•
Bethel Worship Center.
Thursday, Dec:.ll
follow.
TUPPERS PLAINS - .Refreshments
Millard Swartz of 42315 Information · at 667-6793,
Alfred Road, Coolville, www.bethelwc .org.
Ohio 45723, will observe.
his 90th birthday on Dec.
II. His birthday will be celebrated from 2 to 4 p.m. on
Dec·. 13 at the Bethel
Worship Center.
Sunday. llec. 14
MIDDLEPORT

'Ai'YO.~();..(&gt;~

~~,Y\:1~~¥1.

Reed &amp; Haur
Insurance Agency

Birthdays

220 t:asl Main Sl.
l'omcro)·. Oil
992-3600

(~ ·

....... ""'••I
......

~.,·····

I

Club$prepares for silent basket
! auction to benefit Holzer Hospice
.GALLIPOLIS - The
· Gallipoli s Junior Women's
i Club announces a silent
: basket auction to be held at
· Holzer Medical Center on
: Tuesday, Dec. 16 from 10
: a.m. to 4:30 p.m. The auc: tion wi II take place in the
: Hospital's French 500
' Room.
Hospital departments and
: local businesses . donated
· baskets to be auctioned
: throughout the day. The
: Club will donate all pro. ceeds of the event to Holzer
: Hospice, which serves
• Athens, Gallta. Jackson,
. Meigs and surrounding
: counties.
. According to . Karrie
· Davison, who chairs the Jr.
: Women's Club committee
: for this parti cular event,
: minimum bid s will be
established for the entries.
· "We are so thankful for the
, generous donations from
' the · entire community,"
Davison commented. "Our
· Club is enthusiastic about
: the event and the opportuni. ty to raise money for a wonderful program such as
: Holzer Hospice ."
: Sharon
Shull,
RN ,
of
Holzer
Director
. Hospice, commented. by
· saying, ...The donatt&lt;?"s
. from the Basket Auctton ,
. will allow Holzer Hospice
' to continue serving our
· patients at a time that is
: important to them and their
. family. Our staff IS very
· appreciati~e of the commu. nity 's support , of the
Hospice program.
For more information
·. about donutiorts or the·
. Auction. call Daviso11 at
: (740) 446-5901 or e-mail
· kswain@holzer.org .

2008

Brian J. Reed/photo

.'

Navel Oranges

Monday, December 8,

First snow

ANNIE'S MAILBOX

Community Calendar

II.I·· a
.

PageA3

BY THE BEND

The Daily Sentinel

Monday, Deeember 8, 20()8

'

ASSOCIATED

'

we remember those who have passed away
and are especially dear to us.
On Wednesday, December 24, we will publish a special page devoted to those who are gone but
not forgoHen. They will be similat to the sample below:
If you wish, select one of the following FREE verses b&lt;low to
accompany your tribute.
I . We hold you m our thoughts and mcmo'rics fore ver.

July 10, 1961-May 5, 1980

May God's angels

guide you and
protect you
throughout time.
Always in Our h.ea.rb,
John and Mona AndNws and

2. May God cradle you In His anns, now and forever.
.3, Forever missed, never forgouen . May Gud hold you mthe palm uf
His hand.
4. Thank you for the wonderful days we shared togetht•r. My prayers
will be with vou until we meet again.
5. The days we. shared were swcet.llong to see you again iil God's
heavenly glory.

6. Your courage and bravery still iusptre us all. and the memory of your
smile fills us with joy and laughter.
7. Though out of sight. you'l lforever bt- in my heart and mmd. .
8. The days may come and go. but the times we ~hared wilt always remain .
9. May God's angels guide yo uand protect you throughout.time
10. You were a light in our life that bums fOrt'\'C'f in our hearts .
II. ·May GOO's graces shine: O\'er you for all time.
12. You are in our thoughts and prayers from morning to n1ght imd from
year to year.

family

',

A basket to be off!!red In the
silent auction for Holzer Hospice.

TO REMEMBER YOUR LOVED ONE IN THIS SPECIAL WAY,
SEND $8.50 PER LISTING • $15 IF PICTI;RE INCLUDED
Fill out the form below and drop off to or mail:
The Daily Sentinel
With Fondest Memories
· lll Court St.; Pomeroy, OH 45769
DEADLINE: THURSDAY, Derember 18 BY 5:00 P~l
Pick up photos 11ithin 30 days of in memory rmming.

r---PJ;;-p;ii:h:7trib:;"ein~;;;i:iM:~P·;e:nW:t;~;-o;~:;;;i;h~---,
I

Cll• tJ Ill JIIII'MIIICtUIIIIilld
Dllllp . . lilllr full prktl.
. Help bep JOUI' fUINCihtl F-.Upe
will PrtitJIIII:a....-..

.

·:Name of ,heased - - - - - - - - - - - : - - _ ; ,_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

(ftlll611"

I Relationship Io me - - - - - - - - - ' - - - - 1

Number of selected verse - - -

IDatc ofbinh - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Dn&lt;c of passing------

~Print yournMle here - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 1

.

!Address - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - P h o n e n u m b e r - - - - - -

lcity - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - S m t e - - - - Zip - - 1
Make Check Payable to THE DAILY SENTINEL
I

---

-----------

'

�PageA2 ·

LOCAL • .STATE
·Democrats pick Southern students make a difference
up a House seat
in central Ohio
'Ihe Daily Sentinel

.

.

BY STEPHEN MAJORS
PRES~ WAITER

COLUMBUS
• Democrat Mary Jo ·Kilroy
· came from behind Sunday
• to snatch a central Ohio seat
from House Republicans
after· elections officials tallied provisional ballots.
Kilroy 's victory by a little
more than 2,000 votes over
• Republican Steve Stivers
: p~t the 15th Congressi&lt;.mal
. Dtstnct
seat
mto
· Democratic hands after the
retirement of Republican
Deborah Pryce.
Franklin County officials
· released unofficial results
. Sunday that showed Kilroy
· • with a margin of victory of
2,311 votes out of roughly
300,000 cast. enough to
avoid an automatic recount.
Provisional ballots are
issued at polls to people
who . believe they were
. wrongly denied the right to
vote. Kilroy was down by
594 voles when officials
began counting about 9,600
provisional ballots in her
district, which encompasses
Columbus, the state's capital and largest city.
"I am very proud to serve
our community as the next
congresswoman from central Ohio," Kilroy, a fonner,
Franklin County commissioner. said in a statement.
"In Washington , I will work
together
with . both
Democrats, Republicans ·
and presidenHiect Obama
to tackle the. real problems
that our community faces."
Stivers conceded. the race
to Kilroy shortly after the
results were released .,
"While I am extremely
proud of the race I ran, ultimately it was not enough,"
Stivers said. "I have called
Commissioner Kilroy to
fOngratulate her for her
hard-fought vtctory, and I
in
wish
her
well
. Washington."
With Kilroy's victory,
Democrats will hold 256
seats in the House, compared with 177 Republicans.
.Two House races in Virginia
and Louisiana are still up in
the air.
Kilroy narrowly lost election to the congressional
seai in 2006, when she came
within fewer than 2,000
votes of unseating Pryce.
That race required a
recount.
The counting of 24,000
provisional ballots this year
m Franklin County went
forward after the Ohio
Supreme Court ruled Friday
that l ,000 of the ballots in
dispute must be thrown out
because of voter error.
In a 4-2 decision , the
court struck down a directive by Ohio Secretary of
State Jennifer Brunner say. ing the votes should be
counted. ·
Justices said Brunner
improperly instructed county officials to apply conflict- ·
ing standards to election
law by ruling that the votes

Ohio Univ.
provost hired
as Otterbein's
president
WESTERVILLE (AP) Ott~F.rbein College has hired
a top Ohio University official to be its new president.
Otterbein
announced
Kathy Krendl 's appointment
on Friday. She'll be the suburban Columbus school's
first woman pro&lt;sident when
she takes over in July.
Krendl has served as Ohio
University's provost since
2004 and as executive vice
president since last year,
when her role was expanded
to oversee academic affairs .
She and Ohio University
President
Roderick
McDavis have weathered
criticism from some faculty
members and students in
recent years over breakdown·s in computer security,
cuts in athletic programs
and negative publicity over
alleged plagiarism in the
engineering school.

should be counted", ·even
though the envelopes failed
to comply with ll:gal guidelines set out before Election
Day, Nov. 4.
The disputed ballots contained errors on the outer
envelope, such as no signature or name. Others had the
signature or name written in
the incorrect space.
The provisional ballots
also settled two state House
races, both of which were
won by Democrats .

·

1

, S~tbm lltlld pooto

1

•

During "Red Ribbon Week" one of the planned activities was, "I Can, You Can, We Can, Make a Di~rence Day" y.o~ere
students from the elementary and high school brought in canned food or dog food for the Friends!!&lt;.NeiQh~ors Community
Food Center located at th~ Racine Municipal Building and the Melge; County Humane Society, respectively; Pic.tured deliv- ·
ering caoned !bod to the Friends &amp; Neighbors Community Food.Center are, Sean Riffle, Grant to ·fted\II*! ,AICQflol Abuse
community organizer, students Nathan Roush, Jeremiah Warden, Courtney Thom~.''Dalton :Patte~oh! ·Tan.nerRous~, .
Dan1elle Icenhower, and Knsten Humphrey.
. :·, .
•' '
.'.,,
,

Be ·willing to stand up to disapproval
with my last boyfriend six
months ago, and I'm not
'ure I am. ready fur another
Dear Annie: I am not a serious rela tionship so
: small woman. I weigh soon. However. things
: close to 200 pounds, and at seem to be going well and I
·.5 feet 4 inches. I am solid- don't want to keep my
: .ly built. My family is full mother out of the loop in
: of stocky individuals. so 1 my dating life. Should I
. don't know why I'm afraid ' state upfront that he's a
·:to tell my parents about a large man Ol' just not bring
::guy I am dating while away it up unl ess ;he asks? :-at university.
Not Afraid of a Little Fat
" Roger'' . is extremely . Dear Not Afraid: If
· smart, funny, physically you're in mllcge, yo u're an
: strong, personable, works in adult and your dating choic: social work and is getting a es are your own . That
· Ph .D. in ed ucation. He's means if you choose some: handsome and treats me like one your parents are preju,a princess. I think I could diced agamst , you have to
. fall in love with him.
be willing to stand up to
. The problem is, he 's their disapproval until they
. upward of 300 pounds, and get to know him . For now,
: at 6 feet 4 inches, is a mas- tell your parenls you are
sive human being. He's the dating a greal guy . If . the
·same size as my boss, a man relationship becomes seri·my family refers to as ous, you can e-mail them a
' "Jabba the Hun."
photo of the two of you and
1 don't want my family to then let the chips fall where
;·judge my signifiqmt other they may.
·.' based on something as . Dear Annie: My cousin
~ superficial as weight, but I is getting married for the
know my grandmother will third time in 10 years. Her
say something nasty about fiance has never been mar"his body. I think he 's a thing ried . They want a tradition"of beauty.
al (and large) reception.
Roger and I are not dat- . They are not in a P"sition to
--ing exclusively. I broke up pay for the recepllon or dinBY KATHY MITCHELL
AND MARCY SuGAR

ner, and therefort' all
expe nses would fall on her
parents - again.
I think anything after the
second marriage should be a
quiet, intimate affair. This
seems like the height of
tackiness and arrogance.
particularly on someone
else's dime. Her parents
have a large group of
friends who gave generously to the last two weddings.
. I would hate to think they
would feel obligated to buy
anothcqjift.
I am very happy for my
cousin, but let's get real.
Her track record isn 't great.
Is there anything I could say
or politely hint that would
avoid hurt feelings. yet save
embarrassment? ·- Cousin
of Miss Tacky
Dear Cousin: No. Don't
forget, this i~ the groom's
first wedding. The onli
objection should be who is
paying for it. After two previous weddings, your
cousin should be footing her
own bill , even if that means
a much more modest wedding. However, if her parents want to pay for it , that's
their deci sion, and those
who wish to send a gift ·again - rna)' do so.

.

·l ill• I• lei
}

i

'

"

.,

Street·
food stores

740-112-2111
Prices available starting Nov. 28th. Meat aod Produc.e price1

good thru Dec. 13th.

County
Chamber
of
Commerce,
businessminded luncheon , noon ,.
Pomeroy Library, speaker
Fred
Deal
from
Monday, Dec:. 8
CHESTER
. Past Governor's Office of
. Councilors Club, 6 p.m. at Appalachia. performance
· the Masonic hall for a by . Eastern High School
• catered dinner, $3 gift . Bell Choir, lunch catered
by Bob Evans of Mason,
exchange.
W.Va ., RSVP 992-5005.
MIDDLEPORT
Thursday, Dec. 11
Middleport Lodge 363, speCHESTER
Shade
cial meeting at Temple , 7
. p.m. for work in fellowcraft River Lodge ·453 will hold
open installation of its new
: degrees .
officers,
7:30
p.m.
Thesday, Dec. 9
Refreshments .
HARRISONVILLE
RACINE - Sunshine
. Harrisonville OE.S 255,
Circle,
7 p.m .. Bethany. potluck dinner, 6 p.m.
Dorcas
Church,
brinl' col.
. meeting 7:30 p.m. Wear
: chapter dresses and t.ake lectibles, gifts for semors .
· canned goods for food
: drive .
m~etings
The
. SYRACUSE
: Wildwood Garden Club will
Monday, Dec. 8
: meet at 6:30 p.m . at the
POMEROY - Meigs
· Syracuse
Community County Trustees and Clerks
: Center. Shirley Hamm will Association, 6 p.m. at. the
: present a program on Meigs Senior Citizens
: weather legends.
Center.
POMEROY - Meigs
POMEROY - Veterans

Clubs and
organizations

Public

Boneless

·Seedless

.Chuck Roast

Dear Annie: "Gloria in
the Southeast" was upset by
large women wearing shorts.
Who is Gloria to judge who
looks good in shorts and
who is allowed to wear
.them? Why should I care
what other people think?
I'm 66 and thin , but still
don't look very good in
shorts. However, I wear
them in the hot weather
because they are comfortable. If people are walking
behind me and judging my
rear o;:nd, it doesn 't bother
me. Gloria should get over
herself and find another
hobby. - Helen in Oregon
Dear Helen: If you don't
care; we certainly don't ,
either,
.
Annie's Mailbox is written by Kathy Mitchell and
Marcy Sugar, longtime edi·
tors of the Ann Landers
cQlumn. Please e-mai/yQur
questions to anniesmailbox@comcast.net, or write
to: Annie's Mailbox, P.O.
Box 1181·90, Chicago, IL
60611. To find ·out ·more
about Annie's Mailbox,
and read features by other
Creators Syndicate writers
and ca.rtooni.~ts, visit the
Creators ·Syndicate Web ·
page at www.creators.com.

7

2.
•

t.99

Assorted Varieties

Assorted Vari~ · ·

TGIF

Bugles ..
Snickl

Appetizers

7.6-11 'oz box ·

ZJS&amp;

,.,

&gt;

Fresh Express

Sozbag

Garden

Silad Mix
. 24oz bag

1.77

Smithfield or Sugardale

· Spiral Sliced Ham

Ham &amp; sweet potato prices good

ttvu Oec. 24, 2008.

•

-- - -

.. - ......... ...

~

-

·- --··

•

- ···---·-

•

•

----

-

Service Commission, 9
· a.m., 117 Memorial Dr.
TheSday, Dec. 9
POMEROY - Meigs
County Board of Elections,
. 8:30a.m.
POMEROY - Salisbury
Township Tru stees 6:30
p.m. · at the home of
Manning Roush.
POMEROY - Meigs
Soil
and
Water
Conservation · District
Board of Supervisors:
11:30 a.m., 33101 Hiland
Rd.

Lowell Beaver will observe
hi&gt; 80th birthday on
Sunday, Dec, 14. Cards may
be sent to him at 457 Beech
St. , Middleport, Ohio
45760. A celebnition will be
held at . the Middleport
Church of Christ fellowship
·hall from 2 to 4 p.m. on
Dec. 14.

_....., ___

....,.

lb

.

•
The first real snow of the season brings out the kid in many
of us. Many children attending Middleport's Christmas
parade Saturday afternoon were as inlerested in the snow
as they were the candy thrown along the route.
.4-far~ogi"g

Tlut Restaurant
is \'our Business.
Protccti01g It Is Our5!

tr"'

(!'(I ~&gt;Am .a' inw \lfY:IIi! ·.':lrC&gt;.(;r~ \Jowl t&gt;
' ~·i&gt;I'U tuol&lt;re:u !!1fC411001 .
Wt! 1:1'~ mt(:&lt;l[lt1(~\~ i~;~lO'J'Wll' SW\'1~ '()~

vr,u
~.1

Church events

~~uti':' JY(Iljo)tfl(J

,.,.111 r:.r

Dlt w.~.

c~.Y-'8 ~41'«1

ca.tli&lt;IQE' 'oi'oMrl1

L111 Ctiu ~Lfo.~o

:l!' ,1 o~+::'!'i rtc.{11.

~"Q••cco ~Po~ t&lt;:.g~!tu

II!Jf'»iltl"\ !!"'$ W51 ~~ ·;&lt;» &lt;::#C~IM

Friday, Dec. 12
TUPPERS PLAINS
Community
Christmas
Con~ert, with Eastern High
School Handbell Choir and
church choirs. 7 p.m .•
Bethel Worship Center.
Thursday, Dec:.ll
follow.
TUPPERS PLAINS - .Refreshments
Millard Swartz of 42315 Information · at 667-6793,
Alfred Road, Coolville, www.bethelwc .org.
Ohio 45723, will observe.
his 90th birthday on Dec.
II. His birthday will be celebrated from 2 to 4 p.m. on
Dec·. 13 at the Bethel
Worship Center.
Sunday. llec. 14
MIDDLEPORT

'Ai'YO.~();..(&gt;~

~~,Y\:1~~¥1.

Reed &amp; Haur
Insurance Agency

Birthdays

220 t:asl Main Sl.
l'omcro)·. Oil
992-3600

(~ ·

....... ""'••I
......

~.,·····

I

Club$prepares for silent basket
! auction to benefit Holzer Hospice
.GALLIPOLIS - The
· Gallipoli s Junior Women's
i Club announces a silent
: basket auction to be held at
· Holzer Medical Center on
: Tuesday, Dec. 16 from 10
: a.m. to 4:30 p.m. The auc: tion wi II take place in the
: Hospital's French 500
' Room.
Hospital departments and
: local businesses . donated
· baskets to be auctioned
: throughout the day. The
: Club will donate all pro. ceeds of the event to Holzer
: Hospice, which serves
• Athens, Gallta. Jackson,
. Meigs and surrounding
: counties.
. According to . Karrie
· Davison, who chairs the Jr.
: Women's Club committee
: for this parti cular event,
: minimum bid s will be
established for the entries.
· "We are so thankful for the
, generous donations from
' the · entire community,"
Davison commented. "Our
· Club is enthusiastic about
: the event and the opportuni. ty to raise money for a wonderful program such as
: Holzer Hospice ."
: Sharon
Shull,
RN ,
of
Holzer
Director
. Hospice, commented. by
· saying, ...The donatt&lt;?"s
. from the Basket Auctton ,
. will allow Holzer Hospice
' to continue serving our
· patients at a time that is
: important to them and their
. family. Our staff IS very
· appreciati~e of the commu. nity 's support , of the
Hospice program.
For more information
·. about donutiorts or the·
. Auction. call Daviso11 at
: (740) 446-5901 or e-mail
· kswain@holzer.org .

2008

Brian J. Reed/photo

.'

Navel Oranges

Monday, December 8,

First snow

ANNIE'S MAILBOX

Community Calendar

II.I·· a
.

PageA3

BY THE BEND

The Daily Sentinel

Monday, Deeember 8, 20()8

'

ASSOCIATED

'

we remember those who have passed away
and are especially dear to us.
On Wednesday, December 24, we will publish a special page devoted to those who are gone but
not forgoHen. They will be similat to the sample below:
If you wish, select one of the following FREE verses b&lt;low to
accompany your tribute.
I . We hold you m our thoughts and mcmo'rics fore ver.

July 10, 1961-May 5, 1980

May God's angels

guide you and
protect you
throughout time.
Always in Our h.ea.rb,
John and Mona AndNws and

2. May God cradle you In His anns, now and forever.
.3, Forever missed, never forgouen . May Gud hold you mthe palm uf
His hand.
4. Thank you for the wonderful days we shared togetht•r. My prayers
will be with vou until we meet again.
5. The days we. shared were swcet.llong to see you again iil God's
heavenly glory.

6. Your courage and bravery still iusptre us all. and the memory of your
smile fills us with joy and laughter.
7. Though out of sight. you'l lforever bt- in my heart and mmd. .
8. The days may come and go. but the times we ~hared wilt always remain .
9. May God's angels guide yo uand protect you throughout.time
10. You were a light in our life that bums fOrt'\'C'f in our hearts .
II. ·May GOO's graces shine: O\'er you for all time.
12. You are in our thoughts and prayers from morning to n1ght imd from
year to year.

family

',

A basket to be off!!red In the
silent auction for Holzer Hospice.

TO REMEMBER YOUR LOVED ONE IN THIS SPECIAL WAY,
SEND $8.50 PER LISTING • $15 IF PICTI;RE INCLUDED
Fill out the form below and drop off to or mail:
The Daily Sentinel
With Fondest Memories
· lll Court St.; Pomeroy, OH 45769
DEADLINE: THURSDAY, Derember 18 BY 5:00 P~l
Pick up photos 11ithin 30 days of in memory rmming.

r---PJ;;-p;ii:h:7trib:;"ein~;;;i:iM:~P·;e:nW:t;~;-o;~:;;;i;h~---,
I

Cll• tJ Ill JIIII'MIIICtUIIIIilld
Dllllp . . lilllr full prktl.
. Help bep JOUI' fUINCihtl F-.Upe
will PrtitJIIII:a....-..

.

·:Name of ,heased - - - - - - - - - - - : - - _ ; ,_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

(ftlll611"

I Relationship Io me - - - - - - - - - ' - - - - 1

Number of selected verse - - -

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�Page.A4

OPINION

The _Daily Sentinel

Monday, December 8, 2008

Just
answer
the
Hil
question,
Mr.
President-elect
.The Daily Sentinel

Monday, December 8, 2008

'

111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

(740) 992·2156 ·FAX (740) 992·2157
www.mydally..ntlnel.com

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
. Dan Goodrich
Publisher
Charlene Hoeflich
· General Manager-News Editor
-

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

TODAY IN HISTORY
Today is Monday, Dec. 8, the 343rd day of 2008. There
are 23 days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History: On Dec. 8, 1941, the
United States entered World War II as Congress declared
war against Japan, a day after the attack on Pearl Harbor.
On this date: In 1776, during the Revolutionary WIJI,
George Washington's retreating army crossed the Delaware
River from New Jersey into Pennsylvania.
· In 1854, Pope Pius IX proclaimed the Catholic dogma of
the Immac_ulate Conception, which holds that Mary, the
mother of Jesus, was free of original sin from the rrioment
of her own conception.
In 1863, President Abraham Lincoln announced his plan
for the Reconstruction of the South.
In 1886, the American Federation of Labor was founded
in Columbus, Ohio.
In 1949, the Chinese Nationalist government moved
from the Chinese mainland to Formosa as the Communists
pressed their attacks.
In 1978, former Israeli Prime Minister Golda Meir died
in Jerusalem at age 80.
.
..
In 1980, rock star John Lennon was shot to death outside
his New York City apartment building by an apparently
deranged fan.
In 1982, a man demanding an end to nuclear weapons
held the Washington Monument hostage, ihreatening to
blow it up with explosives he claimed were inside a van.
After a 10-hour standoff, Norman D. Mayer was shot dead
by police; it turned out there were no explosives.
In 1987, President Ronald Reagan and Soviet leader
Mikhail S. Gorbachev signed a treaty at the White House calling for destruction of intermediate-range nuclear missiles.
In 1993, President Bill Clinton signed into U.S.law theNorth American Free Trade Agreement, which went into
effect at the start of 1994.
One year ago: The Justice Department and CIA
announced a joint inquiry into the spy agency's destruction
of videotapes of interrogations of two suspected terrorists.
Talk show host Oprah .Winfrey publicly endorsed Barack
Obama (or president during appearances in Des Moines
and Cedar Rapids, Iowa. Skiers, fire-eaters and an ice
sculptor joined in worldwide demonstrations to draw attention to global warming. Florida quarterback Tim Tebow
became the first sophomore to win the Heisman Trophy. ·
Today's Birthdays: Actor-director Maximilian Schell is
78. Actor David Carradine is 72. Actor James MacArthur is
71. hutist James Galway is 69. Singer Jerry Butler is 69.
Actor John Rubinstein is 62·. Reggae singer Toots Hibbert
(Toots and the Maytals) is 60. Actress Kim Basinger is 55.
Rock musician Phil Collen (Def Leppard) is 51. Actress Teri
Hatchet is 44. Rapper Bushwick Bill (The Geto Boys) is 42.
Singer Sinead O'Connor is 42. Rock musician Ryan Newell
(Sister Hazel) is 36. Actor Dominic Monaghan is 32. Actor
Ian Somerhalder is 30. Actress AnnaSophia Robb is 15.
Thought for Today: "So long as governments set the
example of killing their enemies, private individuals will
occastonally kill theirs." - Elbert Hubbard, American
author (1856-1915).

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EDITOR
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than 300 words. All letters are subject to editing, must be
signed, and include address and telephone number. No
unsigned letters will be published. Letters should be in
good taste, addressing issues, not persoMlities. Letters of
thanks to organizations and individuals will not be accepted for publication.

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Mall SUbecrlptlon
lnelde Melga County
13 Weeks

'32.26

26 Weeks

'64.20

52 Weeks

'127.11

Outside Melga County
13 Weeks
26 Weeks
52 Weeks

'53.55
'107.10
'214.21

ticularly the Baker question. president's role will be in
Interesting thing hapKlein asked :
your Administration?"
pened this week. Somebody
·~What sort of journalist
• Is he kidding?
m the mainstream media
Let's just say these aren't
expects the president-elect
(MSM) actually asked
to
tell
the
'inside
·story
'
of
·
exactly
queries born of zapPresident-elect
Barack ·
how he selected Hillary ping neurons, let alone a
Obama a good question. It
Diana
Clinton? (Those sorts of detectable pulse.
concerned how Obama
stories," he continued, "if
Elsewhere in the MSM,
West
could square his campaign
told
at
all,
are
wrenched
CNN's
Campbell Brown of
attacks on Hillary Clinton's
from aides on background "No Bias, No Bull" reacted
foreign policy with his
· - and reported only after to
the
Obama-Baker
selecting her as secretary of
•
.
consulting
multiple
exchange
with
. far more
.
d
state. Let's just say Obama
cont~nue
·
And
.
there
s
sources.)
And
what's
the
lively
sarcasm
and
fervor.
didn !t much like this new nothmg wrong wtth that . . . ·
. .
" B
experience.
I'm not faulting that: :·
. potnl of ratstng the nasty,
"I mean, really,
rown ,
But besides making histoMilbank placed this thmgs Obama and Chn~on said , "how silly of that
ry as a bout of insubordina- exchange in the context of satd a~ut each?othe~ dunng reporter to dare ask you, Mr.
tion against the praetorian the
return
on
the the pnmanes. Dtd the President-Elect, how it is
guardlike duties of . the Clintonistas, who, at last . repo~er expe~l Ob_ama to 'that you completely mocked
Obamedia, the question count. will hold nine key say, Well, I sttll beheve h~r Hillary Clinton's foreign
was .also newsworthy positions in the Obama resume ts overblown, that s policy experience just a few
enough to kick off·a column White House . "Obama," why I appomted her ... o~. months ago, and yet today,
by Dana Milbank in the ·Milbank wrote, "who cam- and by_ .the way, she sttll you think there is no one
Washington Post. Milbank paigned against the Clinton thinks •.t s du-:nb to talk to more qualified than she to .
set it up this way :
way of doing things is now the_lran!~ns wtthout precon- lead rour -foreign policy
"Peter Baker of the New engaged in the veritable dtttot:ts..
.
team.' Brown went on to
York Times pointe~ out to restoration of the Clinton
Thts ts. nothmg less than nail
Obama 's
"fun"
Obama that he once held a administration."
bre~thtakmg. ~ecause, ~s response as "an attempt to
different view of his nomiBut something deeper and Klem has effectively ad!"tt- delegitimize" the questton.
nee to be secretary of state. more serious than personnel ted: there Js no plaustble,
"But it is a legitimate ques'You belittled her travels decisions is on display here. logtcal or even grace-s~vmg tion,'' she continued, adding:
around the world, equating What is , revealed · is answer to the . why-Htllary "Annoying questions are
it to having teas with for- Obama 's tactical denigra- question, Klein sees no rea- about more than just the
eign
leaders,'
Baker tion of a basic legitimate son at all to ask 11. Thts press 'having fun.' Annoying
recalled . 'And your new and even screanrlngly obvi- hyper-prote~tive rationale questions are about the press
White House counsel said ous question as so much O(Jens a wmdow onto a doing its job and the people's
that her resume was grossly "fun" that he the serious mmdset that has long baf- right to know."
exaggerated when it came new president: may' disre- fie~ . me: Repo~ers like
Could this mark the
to foreign policy. I'm won- gard and deride as frivolous. Klem s~m(JIY do~ I want to decline of Obamediadering whether ,you can talk
The roll-the-tape, clip-file put pohtibans hke ~burna ·. mania? Don't hold your
about the evolution of your fact is, however candidate (or, for that matter, Chnton) breath.
Paradoxically,
views of your credentials Obama belittled' candidate on the spot. Their litmus test though, even as the conservsince the spring.'''
Clinton 's foreign policy appell;fS to be: If it doesn't ative punditry glows with a
Baker would ultimately judgment and experience promtse a good Ob;!ma strange
rapture
over
buff the edges of the result- throughout the primary sea- answer, it's ~ot a goQd President-elect Obama's
ing give-and-take with so_n._Any reporter with the . Obama question .. Indeed,_ emerging Cabinet, there is
Obama in his article - this mtmmal moxie to ask the accordmg to Klem, there at least a limited revolt in
was, after all, the New president-elect why he were much "better" ques- progress among the MSM.
Obama Times but would now decide to make tions reporters could have
Of course, we still don't
Milbank,
thankfully, Clinton the face of American asked at that same Obama- have an answer to that one
retained the verbatim foreign policy is · simply Hillary press conference, a good question.
sharpness: ·
few of which he thoughtful(Diana West is a co/urn(barely) doing his job.
''"Well, l mean, I think -'
But even this journalistic ly provided, including:
nist for The Washington
Obama began. 'This is fun ABC is debatable in today's
• "Are you still going to Times. She is the author oj
for the press to try to stir up Obamedia. Time maga- call it the Global War on "The Death of the Grown·
up: How America's Arrested
whatever quotes were gen- zine's Joe Klein, while trav- Terror?
erated during the course of eling abroad ("I'm in
• "What are you going to Development Is Bringing
the campaign.'
Europe on. my way to do about Robert · Gates's Down
Western
"'They're your quotes, Afghanistan"), was moved staff of Bush administration Civilization," and has a
to blog against t~e "inanity" holdovers?"
.
blog at dianawest.net. She
sir,' Bake,r pointed out.
'"No; I understand. And of the Obama-Htllary press
• "Could you gtve us a can be contacted via
you're having fun,' Obama conference questions, par- better sense of what the vice diaMwest@verizon.net.)

Donors, lobbyists .help ·_ Obama get ready
Bv RrrA BEAMISH

·was her lobbying focus.
of the Washington-based ing door." Policy experts roufor
American tinely use their expertise to ·
• The former Agriculture · Center
Department official leading Progress. The center is a think influence the government.
Faced with hiring a new Obama 's agricultural policy tank headed by John Podesta,
Gary Andres, a lobbyist
administration, President- review, Bart Chilton, lobbied former chief of staff to Bill who was a White House
elect Barack Obaina · is until last year as vice presi- Clinton and now co-chairman aide in the first Bush adminlearnin$ how hard it is to dent of the National Farmers ofObama's transition.
istration, said it is unrealiskeep hts promise to avoid Union. It spends hundreds of
Also
prominent
on tic to cut out lobbyists when
aides who have been entan- thousands of dollarS each Obama's new team are his recruiting policy expe!"ls for
gled with the capital's lob- year to press for farm sub- big-money fundraisers. At a new administration.
hying scene.
sidy programs, fighting the least 18 of Obama's major
"A lot of the people
An Associated Press North American Free Trade financial backers are help- you're ~oing to draw upon,
review of more than 400 Agreement and · reducing ing him create his adminis- if they re not in governmembers of Obama's transi- taxes on farms and ranches. tration . They collected at ment, are involved in lobbytion team identified at least . • A lawyer working on least $50,000' each from ing," he said.
34. who have registered iii Indian issues for Obama, friends and associates to
Despite Obama's etforts to
recent years to lobby gov- Keith Harper, has worked as help l?ay for the most insulate his new administraemment officials on behalf a lawyer for Native expenstve presidential cam- tion from what might be taintAmerican tribes, and wrote paign in history.
ed advice, lobbyists' involveof clients or employers some as recently as this sum- in a 2006 article that the
A few raised 'at least ment in the new government
mer. The AP's review repre- Interior Department's han- $500,000 each. They include warrants close scrutiny, said
sents the most comprehen- dling of lndtan trust matters two former officials from the Sheila Krumholz, executive
sive examination to date of has been a "national dis- Federal Communications director of the Center for
people. workin~ ~m O~ama's grace." Obama initially Cqmmission: Donald Gips, &amp;esponsive Politics, a nonmcmrung adrrurustratJOn. ·
assigned Harper to be his a one-time aide to V1ce partisan institute that studies
During the campaign, lead adviser on the ~epart­ President AI Gore who is co- the influence business.
Obama promised ·to keep ment, but now Harper is chajrman of Obama's teams
"They are taking a risk by
lobbyists at arm's length, advising the·campaign more reviewing government agen: · taking the.se people on
and he has taken steps narrowly on Indian gaming. cies;
and
Julius boar&lt;!," Krumholz said. "If
aimed at keeping out the Harper was registered to Genachowski, who was an they're viewed as being in
taint of the influence busi- lobby on sovereignty issues executive at Barry Diller's the pocket of industry, that
ness. He imposed first-ever for a tribe as recently as this IAC/InterActiveCorp, when is not going to be beneficial
rules that prohibit anyone year but did not personally the Internet giant owned to this administration that is
on his transition team from lobby, transition aides and a Ticketmaster and Home trying so hard to claim a
working in policy areas on tribe official said.
Shopping
Network. new mantle."
• An Obama transition Genachowski is working on
which they had lobbied in
A fooner State Department
the past year. - an arbitrary adviser for health and technology and government official, Tom Donilon, is helptime period - and a with- human services, Bill Corr, reform policy for the new ing Obama on foreign policy.
drawal system was set up lobbied to prevent children administration.
Donilon worked as a regiStered
for anyone who might run from smoking as executive
A
former
Justice lobbyist at Fannie Mae liom
director of the Campaign Department · official advis- . 1999 until2005, when the curafoul of the rule .
''By moving lobbyists out for Tobacco-Free Kids. The ing Obama on the depart- rent mortgage crisis was quietof the particular matters group has spent $675,000 ment, Thomas Perrelli, ly brewing. Donilon was part
they lobbied, our policy dis- this year trying to influence raised at least $500,000 for of the team reporting more
lances them from the inter- policymakers. Corr has told Obama. Perrelli is manlig- than $40 million in lobb ·
ests of their' clients," transi- Obama he will not offer ing partner of a Washington activity during that period.ymg
law firm, Jenner &amp; Block
tion spokesman Tommy advice on tobacco issues.
Another Obama adviser,
Vietor said.
• A tr&amp;nsition advisory LLP. He lobbied pro bono Michael Strautmanis, worked
Yet, as Obama is finding . board
member,
Mark -in 2002 on behalf of victims for trial lawyers as recently as
out; it is impractical to plan . Gitenstein, was registered of the 1998 Africa embassy 2005 on issues related to
and fill up a new govern- until August to lobby on bombings. His firm's law medical malpractice and
men! without connections to behalf of the U.S. Chamber.of clients have included the health care liability, and in
Commerce, AT&amp;T Inc . and mortgage company Fannie 2004 on asbestos issues.
lobbyists.
Among the,AP's findings: financial firms such as Ernst Mae, General Motors and Strautmanis is a former aide
• An Obarna adviser on ~ Young LLP and Merrill the husband of Terri to Obama in the Senate. He
immigration issues, Maria . Lynch &amp; Co. Inc. Gitenstein Schiavo, the brain-damaged heads public liaison and .
Echaveste, lobbied for the is workin~ on transition man- woman at the center of a intergovernmental affairs at
United Farm Workers this agement tssues, not specific bitter right-to-die battle.
Obama's transition office.
year to protect immigrant policies, but has agreed not to
Perrelli. a copyright
In addition to the 12agricultural workers as the deal with topics on which he expert , has represented month restriction, Obama
Bush administration sought lobbied.
Hollywood studios and the bars lobbyists from making
to ease hiring of seasonal
Overall, the people Obama mustc industry cracking donations to cover transifarm · labor and Congress is relying on to build his down on Internet piracy tion costs and will restrict
debated an immigration administration have repre- a lingering problem facing access to his administration
overhaul. Echaveste, who sented unions; energy, envi- the department.
for transition team members
worked in the White House ronmental groups, insurance,
This is how Washington who later take up lobbying.
and Labor Department and drug companies; Wal- works: People work for the . Podesta has called the selfunder
President
Bill Mart;
the
National government or seek to influ- imposed
limits
"the
for
the ence it, and often pass from strictest, most far-reaching
Clinton, assured Obama she Association
will not wei~h in on the · Advancement of Colored one role to the other through ethics rules of any transition
farmworker vtsa issue that People; and the lobbying arm what is known as "the revolv- team in history." ·
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

•

•

Fewer bu"iness travelers flying out of Cincinnati

' Don»thy Rife Wallen
Dorothy Rife Walters, 79 , Jackson. died Friday, De~. 5.
2008, in Holzer Medical Center.
Services will be 2 p.m. Wednesday in the Mayhew
Funeral Home, Jackson. Burial will be in Fairmount
Cemetery, Jackson. Friends may call at the ·funeral home
from 2 to 4 and 6 to 8 p.m. Tuesday.
'

Local Briefs
Clarification

CINCINNATI (AP) High
air
fares
at
Cincinnati / Northern
Kentucky
International
Airport aie increasingly driving business travelers to
cheaper flights out of nearby atrports, contributing to
worries that the airport is·
losing status and clout.
As recently as 2005, the
Hebron, Ky., airport Delta Air Lines ' second
biggest . hub - han~led
about 22 million pass~n '
gers. Officials said they'll

be lucky if 10 million peopie move through the airport this year, largely
because of Delta's service
cuts.
Eyen before Delta bought
Northwest Airlines in
October, the Atlanta-based
airline had begun downsizing it s Cincinnati hub,
which had direct flights to
nearly 100 cities. The airline reduced U.S. flights in
favor of more lucrative
int~ mational flights after it
emerged from Chapter 11

expensive
Cine innati 's
bankruptcy last year.
The · reduced number of fares .
"Unless you 're suffering
destinations and fl ights has
caused frustration among from delu sion . you rea lize
area executives, and many that the Cincinnati ai rport
are no longer ~illing to pay is now real_ly in Dayton;·
fares that have been ranked aviation ex pert Darryl
the nation's highest.
. Jenkins said.
Airport offi c1ab and the
Executives at threefourths of more than 30 Cincinnati USA Regional
Cincinnati-area companies . Chamber have commissaid they are using atrpons sioned a survey to deter- .
in Indianapolis , Lexington · mine whether the airport's
and Loui sville , Ky., · and high costs are making it difDayton and ColUmbus , ficult to attract and keep
because
of job§ in the Cincinnati area.
Ohio ,

MII?D.LErORT - The ~iddleport Community
Assoctallon·s hohday church tour ts Thursday evening. The
date was incorrectly reported in a headline in the Sunday
Times-Sentinel.'

Dinner tickets
•

~IDDLEPORT

- Middleport Church of Christ adult
ch01r and drama team will present "A Christmas· Prayer,"
for their annual dinner theater, at 6 p.m. on. Friday and
Saturday.
·
·
·
The program will take . place in the Church of Christ
Family Life Center. Tickets are $5 and are available at the
church and at Farmers Bank and Sav(ngs Co., Pomeroy.
Child care will be available for children 5 and younger.
Proceeds from the event will go toward the church's
monthly community dinners. Information is available by
calling 992-2914.
·

Bethel Church to host concert
.

Submitted pholbs

Female ovE)rall winners in their respective age categories in
the Keep Your Fork 5K Run/Walk are (from left) Shawnella
Patterson, Kimi Swisher, Renee Bailey, Mindy Durst,
Brenda Scott, Cindy Rawson, Norma Wilcox.
·

TUPPERS PLAINS ~ Bethel Worship Center will host Overall winn!lrs in both the male and female categories in
· a Community Christmas Concert featuring the Eastern · the Keep Your Fork 5K Run/Walk are back row (from left),
High School handbell choir and the Bethel adult and chil- Michael' Owen, Kody Wolfe, Aaron Martindale; front row
dren 's choirs Friday, 7 p.m. Friday, Dec. 12 at the church. (from left) Je.~nifer Bartrum, Devat1 Soulsby, Morgan Lentes.
Refreshments will be served afterwards and the f?Ublic is
invited to the free concert.
·,.
· For more information, contact the chlu"Ch at 740-667rrom Page At
6793, or visit .www.bethelwc.org.
Renee
Bailey, . 18-22; Ridenour, 31 :05, Dhronda
Mindy
Durst,
23-29; Hoover, 33:07, Heather
Ronde] Spires, 30-39; Hawley, 34:44:
40-49,
P.eter
Male,
MIDDLEPORT - Again this year the River City Players Brenda Scott, 40-49; Cindy
22:40,
Charles
Martindale,
50-59;
Norma
Rawson,
will sponsor a trip to )\lew York City. .
Angell, 27:49, Jimmer
The trip is planned for Jun 8-11 with accommodations at Wilcox, 60 and over. ·
Soulsby,
29:25_, Chuck
Male
winners
of
various
,
the Fairfield Inn in New Jersey. The cost is $689 for single
29:30,
David . C . .
Kennedy,
were:
Jonathon
age
groups
occupancy; $450 for doubt\!; $390 for lrlple, and $360 for
Kennedy,
.33:30;
fet:nale,
Hayman,
six-13;
Matt
·
quad ()()cupancy.
'· This includes three nights lodging with a continental K,nowllon, 14-17; Kyle Brenda Scott, 27:48, Mary
breakfast at the hotel, motorcoach transportation between Goode, 18-22; Marc Barr, Ann Baker, 31 :56, Terri Male overall winners in their respective age categories in
23-29; Mike Bartrum, 30- Soulsby, 34:41, Lorri
Middl~port and the New York City area, and pickups on the
39; Peter Martindale, 40-4'!_; Lightle, 35:18, Rhonda the Keep Your Fork 5K Run/Walk are (from left) Johnathon
street in front of the hotel by the New Jersey Transit Bus.
Hayman, Matt .Knowlton, Kyle Goode, Peter Martindale,
A deposit of $100 per person is due by Dec. 15 so that the · Tony Mollica, 50-59; K~p ·Cullums, 45:14.
Tony
Mollinca, Ken Holley.
Male, . 50-59, Tony
"
hotel rooms can be secured. Those interested are asked to Holley, 60 and over.
call Cathy Erwin, 992-6759 or contact per . at · A complete listing,of par- Mollica, 24:27, Jeff Steele,
47 : 13.
Joan
Male, 60 and over, Ken Collins,
, tipants .and times is as fol- 24 l~7, Pat Soulsby, 2~ : 15,
cathy.erwin@yahoo.com.
24:12, Frank Anderson. 54:42. Naomi
lows: Male, age six-13, ·Jerry · Well, 27:51, . Fred Holley,
Jonathon Hayman, 21 :37, Baloy, 29:00; female , Woodqerd. 32:08, Ray King, 58:04.
Overall winners received
Conner Wolfe, 23:31, Cindy Rawson, . 31 :43 , · Shasteen, n:33, . Gale
Tristen Wolfe, 27:07, Cody Connie Halley, 40:29, Barb Shri.mplin, 34:48, Thomas plaques. first place winners
Bartrum , 27:51, :· B'ailey Crow, 45:52, Francie Smith, 40: IS; female , received medals, second·
· i.
Caruthers, 28:42; ·female, Shrin'tplin, 50:45, Debbie Norma WilCox, 43:43 , fifth places rcc'eived rib·
Monday...Partly · sunny lower 40~. - Southwest winds six-13 ,'
Shawnella Kennedy,53:18.
Sharon Knight, 44: II , Ann bons .
with a slight chance of snow 15 to 20 mph. Chance of Patterson, 27:24,. Keisey
showers
in
the rain near 100 perc~nt.
Hudson, 31:12, Kaitlin
31:56,
Haley
morning ...Then
mostly '' Wedne,day ... CloQdy Baker,
'
cloudy in the afternoon. with -showers likelh. Highs ~ennedy, 34:02. Maggie
Highs in the uppe r 30hs: in the mid 40s. C ance of Smith, 34:11.
South winds 5 to l 0 mp . rain 7Q·percent. .
iMale,
14-17.
Matt
Wed-nesday ·
night Knowlton, 19:59, Cody
Chance of snow 20 percent.
Monday nlght.. ~Mostly ·through
,Thursday_ HallJimg, 20:00, Ketth
cl~dy. Aeiker, III, 20:1'3, Steven ·
cloudy. Not as cool with nlght._..Mostl~
lows in the ,mid 30s. !-oW&amp; w,the IDJd 20~. ~ghs Mahr724:3l, Gary Hopkins,
Southeast winds .· 5 to 10 · 10 the IDJ(l ~Os. ,
25:06;female, 14-17, Kimi
mph. · Gusts up to 20 .mph
Frld19' and. Fr4~&amp;)\ Swisher, 25: 17, Jessica
after midnight.
·
!'ight~.r,artly cloudy.I:Jtgh~ , 'Holliday, 27:12. Olivia •
Tuesday...Cioudy · · wiih m:the 1Dld•3Qs. Lows 1n the, .Be~•n,
30:28,
Micki
showers likely. Much warmer IDJd 20s. · · .. , .
· •:Bili'lles 31·46 · ·Olivia
with highs in the mid 50s.
~aturday ••.Partly 'suJ:I;nr· "Q.eek;:34:09. · .' _
South winds 10 to 15 mph Htghsintlielower40s . . · ... ~lile, I8-22,KyleGoode,
with gusts up to 30 mph.· Saturday night and 21:12, Andrew O'Bryant,
Chance of fain 70 percent.
Sunda~ .. .Mostly. cloudy. 21:25, Adam Knowlton,
Tuesday nlght ••.Showers. L&lt;;~ws . m the. upper 20s. 24:25, John Dunn, 27:43,
Breezy with lows in the Htghs ·Jn the ffild 40s.. .
Nathan Jeffers , 28:05;
female, 18-22. Renee
Bailey" 27:49, Ashley
Savage, 36:01, Casey
·
Smith, 37:39, Jaynee Davis,
· POMEROY · - Meigs of Middleport.
,
48:57, Pamela Rupe, 51 :04~
County Recorder Kay Hill
Retha M. Day to Jeffrey A.
Male 23-29, Marc Barr,
reported the followmg Day, deed. Bedford/Oran~e . 29:51, Adam Thomas,
transfers in real .estate:
.
Jessica ~- WillillfliS, 31:,52, Bertholt S~hroeder,
· Debra L. Chevalier to Jessica R . .Jaol)y, to J. 48:44; female, Mm~y
Kirjc D. Chevalier, deed, Tucker Williams deed Purst,
25: 13, ~ateJa
Chester.
Sutton/Village of Syracuse.' Bezjak, 25:59, Lauren
, William H. Cleland, Jane
Michael R. Duhl to Diana Anderson. 26:05 , Shannon
W. Cleland, to Wayne D. Duhl, deed; Lebanon.
Souls~y. 28:36, Knsten
Gryphon Thomas
Thomas Cleland, Margaret
Di:alena C. Bell, deceased, Detlwtller, 33:17 ·
.
"Merry Christmas ~
Ann Clela.nd, deed, Suttoq. to Brian Joseph Bell, certifiMale,
30-39,
Mtke
' '
Bartrum, 25:08, Nate Baloy,
Kenneth Clyde Kerps, cate of transfer, Sutton.
Nana &amp;. Papal
Peggy .Wandling to Paul 25:14,l~eath Hud_son, 31:19,
deceased, to Deloris Lynn
Kerns, affidavit.
,
Grady, ICathe,rine , Grady., Craig Ltghtle,35: 1·8• Shawn
Kenneth Clyde Kerns, deed, Scipio.
·
Haw!?, .36.43,_ ~emale,
Actual Size 1x3
deceased, to Deloris Lynn
Donald· Johnson, Shirley Ronde Sptres, 26.10, Pen~y
Kerns, affidavit.
A. Johnson, to Consumers Newland, 26:40\ lamte
* Rune Wedneeday, December 24th
Deloris Kerns to Ohio Gas Cooperative, right of
DepartmeiJt· .
of way, Lc;tart:· . ..· &lt; ·
" De..t~dllne ' for etrt;ry Deoember 19th 5:00
TQ\nsportatio'n, easeml)nt,
Middleport', 'Pentecostal •
Lebanon.
.
Church, River ·\l'.t Valtey ·
'
Wanda R. Wyeth, Donald Apostolic Worship, to
"from PageAl
Mail or drop off at :
H. Wyeth, to Herbert L. Freedom Center Ministries,
Wellman, deed, Sutton.
deed, Village of MiddlepOrt. SentineL Rutland area merThe Daily Sentinel
Charles jl. Zehnder, John
Joyce E. Frye to 'Cynthia ' chants · have again donated
111 Court Street, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
E. Berend Charitable Trust, Grabb, Cath¢ne Grabb, the prize award mon~y.
to Countrytyme ALC, Ltd., deed,-Rutl1111d.
The contest is coordinated
to Anthony Land Co., Ltd.,
John · Charles Bond; annually by the Rutland
deed, Salem. .
' ... ' deceased, . ·to os,rva Jeag . Friendly Gardeners ' to
Child's Name: ___..;.____________
!ames H. Starcher, Gloria Bond, affidavit, .cipio.
• encourage residents to beau- .
Starcher, to ,Jatnes H.
Charles
. · •: ~ad for~. tify the community and lift Starcher, James H. Starcher,_ deceased, Ida B'; 'Rildfotd, tile spirits of those t11!Veli,ng ·
tFrom:--~~--~---~--------------• .
Jr., deed, Olive.
. . · deee~ •. Helepe : Radford in the vicinity, reflecting the
James H. Starcher, CHona Sayre, ~. deceased, Helene Spirit of the holiday sea:;on.
YourName:-~---~~--..;._----------J . . Starcher, to James H., E\izabeth Sayre, Charles W. The club has also provided
Starcher James H. Starcher, . Radfof4, Jr., deceased, affi- fruit baskets , annually al)d
Jr., tleed: Olive.
extinguishing l!fe sunshiite gifts throughout tlie
• davit
·Paula J. Fisher, Gene R. 1 estate.
·· '
• . year to .shut-ins to brighten
Lawrence to Columbus
ClydeR.Morristol\Jppcrs their days, and sponsor''a
Southern 'power\ right of Plains..chesterWaterDistrictt "!,.awn of tile Month" award '
Phone:~· ------------------------~--way, Lebanon.
'right of. way, &lt;?~tester.
sign Spring through Fall to
Ads must be pre-paid
Walter Taylor, Frances
!ack C. Gmther, Flo~ne encourage community beauTaylor to Christopher Aker1 Gtntlier, to TP-CWD, nght. . tification and pride in our ·
Rebec~a Aker, deed, Village of way, Chester.
'environment.

.Winners

Players plan trip to New York City

·Local Weather

~ay

Merry Christmas
to &amp;1meone. ~pecial with a
&amp;nUnel Christmas An8el

"*

'

.

Land trans£ers

:per f'ictur~
·' Prepaid

*

·:contest

·•
•

'

Deaths

The Daily Sentinel • Page A5

www.mydailysentinel.com

.. '

.

a-t

•
•

�Page.A4

OPINION

The _Daily Sentinel

Monday, December 8, 2008

Just
answer
the
Hil
question,
Mr.
President-elect
.The Daily Sentinel

Monday, December 8, 2008

'

111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

(740) 992·2156 ·FAX (740) 992·2157
www.mydally..ntlnel.com

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
. Dan Goodrich
Publisher
Charlene Hoeflich
· General Manager-News Editor
-

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

TODAY IN HISTORY
Today is Monday, Dec. 8, the 343rd day of 2008. There
are 23 days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History: On Dec. 8, 1941, the
United States entered World War II as Congress declared
war against Japan, a day after the attack on Pearl Harbor.
On this date: In 1776, during the Revolutionary WIJI,
George Washington's retreating army crossed the Delaware
River from New Jersey into Pennsylvania.
· In 1854, Pope Pius IX proclaimed the Catholic dogma of
the Immac_ulate Conception, which holds that Mary, the
mother of Jesus, was free of original sin from the rrioment
of her own conception.
In 1863, President Abraham Lincoln announced his plan
for the Reconstruction of the South.
In 1886, the American Federation of Labor was founded
in Columbus, Ohio.
In 1949, the Chinese Nationalist government moved
from the Chinese mainland to Formosa as the Communists
pressed their attacks.
In 1978, former Israeli Prime Minister Golda Meir died
in Jerusalem at age 80.
.
..
In 1980, rock star John Lennon was shot to death outside
his New York City apartment building by an apparently
deranged fan.
In 1982, a man demanding an end to nuclear weapons
held the Washington Monument hostage, ihreatening to
blow it up with explosives he claimed were inside a van.
After a 10-hour standoff, Norman D. Mayer was shot dead
by police; it turned out there were no explosives.
In 1987, President Ronald Reagan and Soviet leader
Mikhail S. Gorbachev signed a treaty at the White House calling for destruction of intermediate-range nuclear missiles.
In 1993, President Bill Clinton signed into U.S.law theNorth American Free Trade Agreement, which went into
effect at the start of 1994.
One year ago: The Justice Department and CIA
announced a joint inquiry into the spy agency's destruction
of videotapes of interrogations of two suspected terrorists.
Talk show host Oprah .Winfrey publicly endorsed Barack
Obama (or president during appearances in Des Moines
and Cedar Rapids, Iowa. Skiers, fire-eaters and an ice
sculptor joined in worldwide demonstrations to draw attention to global warming. Florida quarterback Tim Tebow
became the first sophomore to win the Heisman Trophy. ·
Today's Birthdays: Actor-director Maximilian Schell is
78. Actor David Carradine is 72. Actor James MacArthur is
71. hutist James Galway is 69. Singer Jerry Butler is 69.
Actor John Rubinstein is 62·. Reggae singer Toots Hibbert
(Toots and the Maytals) is 60. Actress Kim Basinger is 55.
Rock musician Phil Collen (Def Leppard) is 51. Actress Teri
Hatchet is 44. Rapper Bushwick Bill (The Geto Boys) is 42.
Singer Sinead O'Connor is 42. Rock musician Ryan Newell
(Sister Hazel) is 36. Actor Dominic Monaghan is 32. Actor
Ian Somerhalder is 30. Actress AnnaSophia Robb is 15.
Thought for Today: "So long as governments set the
example of killing their enemies, private individuals will
occastonally kill theirs." - Elbert Hubbard, American
author (1856-1915).

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EDITOR
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than 300 words. All letters are subject to editing, must be
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unsigned letters will be published. Letters should be in
good taste, addressing issues, not persoMlities. Letters of
thanks to organizations and individuals will not be accepted for publication.

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Mall SUbecrlptlon
lnelde Melga County
13 Weeks

'32.26

26 Weeks

'64.20

52 Weeks

'127.11

Outside Melga County
13 Weeks
26 Weeks
52 Weeks

'53.55
'107.10
'214.21

ticularly the Baker question. president's role will be in
Interesting thing hapKlein asked :
your Administration?"
pened this week. Somebody
·~What sort of journalist
• Is he kidding?
m the mainstream media
Let's just say these aren't
expects the president-elect
(MSM) actually asked
to
tell
the
'inside
·story
'
of
·
exactly
queries born of zapPresident-elect
Barack ·
how he selected Hillary ping neurons, let alone a
Obama a good question. It
Diana
Clinton? (Those sorts of detectable pulse.
concerned how Obama
stories," he continued, "if
Elsewhere in the MSM,
West
could square his campaign
told
at
all,
are
wrenched
CNN's
Campbell Brown of
attacks on Hillary Clinton's
from aides on background "No Bias, No Bull" reacted
foreign policy with his
· - and reported only after to
the
Obama-Baker
selecting her as secretary of
•
.
consulting
multiple
exchange
with
. far more
.
d
state. Let's just say Obama
cont~nue
·
And
.
there
s
sources.)
And
what's
the
lively
sarcasm
and
fervor.
didn !t much like this new nothmg wrong wtth that . . . ·
. .
" B
experience.
I'm not faulting that: :·
. potnl of ratstng the nasty,
"I mean, really,
rown ,
But besides making histoMilbank placed this thmgs Obama and Chn~on said , "how silly of that
ry as a bout of insubordina- exchange in the context of satd a~ut each?othe~ dunng reporter to dare ask you, Mr.
tion against the praetorian the
return
on
the the pnmanes. Dtd the President-Elect, how it is
guardlike duties of . the Clintonistas, who, at last . repo~er expe~l Ob_ama to 'that you completely mocked
Obamedia, the question count. will hold nine key say, Well, I sttll beheve h~r Hillary Clinton's foreign
was .also newsworthy positions in the Obama resume ts overblown, that s policy experience just a few
enough to kick off·a column White House . "Obama," why I appomted her ... o~. months ago, and yet today,
by Dana Milbank in the ·Milbank wrote, "who cam- and by_ .the way, she sttll you think there is no one
Washington Post. Milbank paigned against the Clinton thinks •.t s du-:nb to talk to more qualified than she to .
set it up this way :
way of doing things is now the_lran!~ns wtthout precon- lead rour -foreign policy
"Peter Baker of the New engaged in the veritable dtttot:ts..
.
team.' Brown went on to
York Times pointe~ out to restoration of the Clinton
Thts ts. nothmg less than nail
Obama 's
"fun"
Obama that he once held a administration."
bre~thtakmg. ~ecause, ~s response as "an attempt to
different view of his nomiBut something deeper and Klem has effectively ad!"tt- delegitimize" the questton.
nee to be secretary of state. more serious than personnel ted: there Js no plaustble,
"But it is a legitimate ques'You belittled her travels decisions is on display here. logtcal or even grace-s~vmg tion,'' she continued, adding:
around the world, equating What is , revealed · is answer to the . why-Htllary "Annoying questions are
it to having teas with for- Obama 's tactical denigra- question, Klein sees no rea- about more than just the
eign
leaders,'
Baker tion of a basic legitimate son at all to ask 11. Thts press 'having fun.' Annoying
recalled . 'And your new and even screanrlngly obvi- hyper-prote~tive rationale questions are about the press
White House counsel said ous question as so much O(Jens a wmdow onto a doing its job and the people's
that her resume was grossly "fun" that he the serious mmdset that has long baf- right to know."
exaggerated when it came new president: may' disre- fie~ . me: Repo~ers like
Could this mark the
to foreign policy. I'm won- gard and deride as frivolous. Klem s~m(JIY do~ I want to decline of Obamediadering whether ,you can talk
The roll-the-tape, clip-file put pohtibans hke ~burna ·. mania? Don't hold your
about the evolution of your fact is, however candidate (or, for that matter, Chnton) breath.
Paradoxically,
views of your credentials Obama belittled' candidate on the spot. Their litmus test though, even as the conservsince the spring.'''
Clinton 's foreign policy appell;fS to be: If it doesn't ative punditry glows with a
Baker would ultimately judgment and experience promtse a good Ob;!ma strange
rapture
over
buff the edges of the result- throughout the primary sea- answer, it's ~ot a goQd President-elect Obama's
ing give-and-take with so_n._Any reporter with the . Obama question .. Indeed,_ emerging Cabinet, there is
Obama in his article - this mtmmal moxie to ask the accordmg to Klem, there at least a limited revolt in
was, after all, the New president-elect why he were much "better" ques- progress among the MSM.
Obama Times but would now decide to make tions reporters could have
Of course, we still don't
Milbank,
thankfully, Clinton the face of American asked at that same Obama- have an answer to that one
retained the verbatim foreign policy is · simply Hillary press conference, a good question.
sharpness: ·
few of which he thoughtful(Diana West is a co/urn(barely) doing his job.
''"Well, l mean, I think -'
But even this journalistic ly provided, including:
nist for The Washington
Obama began. 'This is fun ABC is debatable in today's
• "Are you still going to Times. She is the author oj
for the press to try to stir up Obamedia. Time maga- call it the Global War on "The Death of the Grown·
up: How America's Arrested
whatever quotes were gen- zine's Joe Klein, while trav- Terror?
erated during the course of eling abroad ("I'm in
• "What are you going to Development Is Bringing
the campaign.'
Europe on. my way to do about Robert · Gates's Down
Western
"'They're your quotes, Afghanistan"), was moved staff of Bush administration Civilization," and has a
to blog against t~e "inanity" holdovers?"
.
blog at dianawest.net. She
sir,' Bake,r pointed out.
'"No; I understand. And of the Obama-Htllary press
• "Could you gtve us a can be contacted via
you're having fun,' Obama conference questions, par- better sense of what the vice diaMwest@verizon.net.)

Donors, lobbyists .help ·_ Obama get ready
Bv RrrA BEAMISH

·was her lobbying focus.
of the Washington-based ing door." Policy experts roufor
American tinely use their expertise to ·
• The former Agriculture · Center
Department official leading Progress. The center is a think influence the government.
Faced with hiring a new Obama 's agricultural policy tank headed by John Podesta,
Gary Andres, a lobbyist
administration, President- review, Bart Chilton, lobbied former chief of staff to Bill who was a White House
elect Barack Obaina · is until last year as vice presi- Clinton and now co-chairman aide in the first Bush adminlearnin$ how hard it is to dent of the National Farmers ofObama's transition.
istration, said it is unrealiskeep hts promise to avoid Union. It spends hundreds of
Also
prominent
on tic to cut out lobbyists when
aides who have been entan- thousands of dollarS each Obama's new team are his recruiting policy expe!"ls for
gled with the capital's lob- year to press for farm sub- big-money fundraisers. At a new administration.
hying scene.
sidy programs, fighting the least 18 of Obama's major
"A lot of the people
An Associated Press North American Free Trade financial backers are help- you're ~oing to draw upon,
review of more than 400 Agreement and · reducing ing him create his adminis- if they re not in governmembers of Obama's transi- taxes on farms and ranches. tration . They collected at ment, are involved in lobbytion team identified at least . • A lawyer working on least $50,000' each from ing," he said.
34. who have registered iii Indian issues for Obama, friends and associates to
Despite Obama's etforts to
recent years to lobby gov- Keith Harper, has worked as help l?ay for the most insulate his new administraemment officials on behalf a lawyer for Native expenstve presidential cam- tion from what might be taintAmerican tribes, and wrote paign in history.
ed advice, lobbyists' involveof clients or employers some as recently as this sum- in a 2006 article that the
A few raised 'at least ment in the new government
mer. The AP's review repre- Interior Department's han- $500,000 each. They include warrants close scrutiny, said
sents the most comprehen- dling of lndtan trust matters two former officials from the Sheila Krumholz, executive
sive examination to date of has been a "national dis- Federal Communications director of the Center for
people. workin~ ~m O~ama's grace." Obama initially Cqmmission: Donald Gips, &amp;esponsive Politics, a nonmcmrung adrrurustratJOn. ·
assigned Harper to be his a one-time aide to V1ce partisan institute that studies
During the campaign, lead adviser on the ~epart­ President AI Gore who is co- the influence business.
Obama promised ·to keep ment, but now Harper is chajrman of Obama's teams
"They are taking a risk by
lobbyists at arm's length, advising the·campaign more reviewing government agen: · taking the.se people on
and he has taken steps narrowly on Indian gaming. cies;
and
Julius boar&lt;!," Krumholz said. "If
aimed at keeping out the Harper was registered to Genachowski, who was an they're viewed as being in
taint of the influence busi- lobby on sovereignty issues executive at Barry Diller's the pocket of industry, that
ness. He imposed first-ever for a tribe as recently as this IAC/InterActiveCorp, when is not going to be beneficial
rules that prohibit anyone year but did not personally the Internet giant owned to this administration that is
on his transition team from lobby, transition aides and a Ticketmaster and Home trying so hard to claim a
working in policy areas on tribe official said.
Shopping
Network. new mantle."
• An Obama transition Genachowski is working on
which they had lobbied in
A fooner State Department
the past year. - an arbitrary adviser for health and technology and government official, Tom Donilon, is helptime period - and a with- human services, Bill Corr, reform policy for the new ing Obama on foreign policy.
drawal system was set up lobbied to prevent children administration.
Donilon worked as a regiStered
for anyone who might run from smoking as executive
A
former
Justice lobbyist at Fannie Mae liom
director of the Campaign Department · official advis- . 1999 until2005, when the curafoul of the rule .
''By moving lobbyists out for Tobacco-Free Kids. The ing Obama on the depart- rent mortgage crisis was quietof the particular matters group has spent $675,000 ment, Thomas Perrelli, ly brewing. Donilon was part
they lobbied, our policy dis- this year trying to influence raised at least $500,000 for of the team reporting more
lances them from the inter- policymakers. Corr has told Obama. Perrelli is manlig- than $40 million in lobb ·
ests of their' clients," transi- Obama he will not offer ing partner of a Washington activity during that period.ymg
law firm, Jenner &amp; Block
tion spokesman Tommy advice on tobacco issues.
Another Obama adviser,
Vietor said.
• A tr&amp;nsition advisory LLP. He lobbied pro bono Michael Strautmanis, worked
Yet, as Obama is finding . board
member,
Mark -in 2002 on behalf of victims for trial lawyers as recently as
out; it is impractical to plan . Gitenstein, was registered of the 1998 Africa embassy 2005 on issues related to
and fill up a new govern- until August to lobby on bombings. His firm's law medical malpractice and
men! without connections to behalf of the U.S. Chamber.of clients have included the health care liability, and in
Commerce, AT&amp;T Inc . and mortgage company Fannie 2004 on asbestos issues.
lobbyists.
Among the,AP's findings: financial firms such as Ernst Mae, General Motors and Strautmanis is a former aide
• An Obarna adviser on ~ Young LLP and Merrill the husband of Terri to Obama in the Senate. He
immigration issues, Maria . Lynch &amp; Co. Inc. Gitenstein Schiavo, the brain-damaged heads public liaison and .
Echaveste, lobbied for the is workin~ on transition man- woman at the center of a intergovernmental affairs at
United Farm Workers this agement tssues, not specific bitter right-to-die battle.
Obama's transition office.
year to protect immigrant policies, but has agreed not to
Perrelli. a copyright
In addition to the 12agricultural workers as the deal with topics on which he expert , has represented month restriction, Obama
Bush administration sought lobbied.
Hollywood studios and the bars lobbyists from making
to ease hiring of seasonal
Overall, the people Obama mustc industry cracking donations to cover transifarm · labor and Congress is relying on to build his down on Internet piracy tion costs and will restrict
debated an immigration administration have repre- a lingering problem facing access to his administration
overhaul. Echaveste, who sented unions; energy, envi- the department.
for transition team members
worked in the White House ronmental groups, insurance,
This is how Washington who later take up lobbying.
and Labor Department and drug companies; Wal- works: People work for the . Podesta has called the selfunder
President
Bill Mart;
the
National government or seek to influ- imposed
limits
"the
for
the ence it, and often pass from strictest, most far-reaching
Clinton, assured Obama she Association
will not wei~h in on the · Advancement of Colored one role to the other through ethics rules of any transition
farmworker vtsa issue that People; and the lobbying arm what is known as "the revolv- team in history." ·
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

•

•

Fewer bu"iness travelers flying out of Cincinnati

' Don»thy Rife Wallen
Dorothy Rife Walters, 79 , Jackson. died Friday, De~. 5.
2008, in Holzer Medical Center.
Services will be 2 p.m. Wednesday in the Mayhew
Funeral Home, Jackson. Burial will be in Fairmount
Cemetery, Jackson. Friends may call at the ·funeral home
from 2 to 4 and 6 to 8 p.m. Tuesday.
'

Local Briefs
Clarification

CINCINNATI (AP) High
air
fares
at
Cincinnati / Northern
Kentucky
International
Airport aie increasingly driving business travelers to
cheaper flights out of nearby atrports, contributing to
worries that the airport is·
losing status and clout.
As recently as 2005, the
Hebron, Ky., airport Delta Air Lines ' second
biggest . hub - han~led
about 22 million pass~n '
gers. Officials said they'll

be lucky if 10 million peopie move through the airport this year, largely
because of Delta's service
cuts.
Eyen before Delta bought
Northwest Airlines in
October, the Atlanta-based
airline had begun downsizing it s Cincinnati hub,
which had direct flights to
nearly 100 cities. The airline reduced U.S. flights in
favor of more lucrative
int~ mational flights after it
emerged from Chapter 11

expensive
Cine innati 's
bankruptcy last year.
The · reduced number of fares .
"Unless you 're suffering
destinations and fl ights has
caused frustration among from delu sion . you rea lize
area executives, and many that the Cincinnati ai rport
are no longer ~illing to pay is now real_ly in Dayton;·
fares that have been ranked aviation ex pert Darryl
the nation's highest.
. Jenkins said.
Airport offi c1ab and the
Executives at threefourths of more than 30 Cincinnati USA Regional
Cincinnati-area companies . Chamber have commissaid they are using atrpons sioned a survey to deter- .
in Indianapolis , Lexington · mine whether the airport's
and Loui sville , Ky., · and high costs are making it difDayton and ColUmbus , ficult to attract and keep
because
of job§ in the Cincinnati area.
Ohio ,

MII?D.LErORT - The ~iddleport Community
Assoctallon·s hohday church tour ts Thursday evening. The
date was incorrectly reported in a headline in the Sunday
Times-Sentinel.'

Dinner tickets
•

~IDDLEPORT

- Middleport Church of Christ adult
ch01r and drama team will present "A Christmas· Prayer,"
for their annual dinner theater, at 6 p.m. on. Friday and
Saturday.
·
·
·
The program will take . place in the Church of Christ
Family Life Center. Tickets are $5 and are available at the
church and at Farmers Bank and Sav(ngs Co., Pomeroy.
Child care will be available for children 5 and younger.
Proceeds from the event will go toward the church's
monthly community dinners. Information is available by
calling 992-2914.
·

Bethel Church to host concert
.

Submitted pholbs

Female ovE)rall winners in their respective age categories in
the Keep Your Fork 5K Run/Walk are (from left) Shawnella
Patterson, Kimi Swisher, Renee Bailey, Mindy Durst,
Brenda Scott, Cindy Rawson, Norma Wilcox.
·

TUPPERS PLAINS ~ Bethel Worship Center will host Overall winn!lrs in both the male and female categories in
· a Community Christmas Concert featuring the Eastern · the Keep Your Fork 5K Run/Walk are back row (from left),
High School handbell choir and the Bethel adult and chil- Michael' Owen, Kody Wolfe, Aaron Martindale; front row
dren 's choirs Friday, 7 p.m. Friday, Dec. 12 at the church. (from left) Je.~nifer Bartrum, Devat1 Soulsby, Morgan Lentes.
Refreshments will be served afterwards and the f?Ublic is
invited to the free concert.
·,.
· For more information, contact the chlu"Ch at 740-667rrom Page At
6793, or visit .www.bethelwc.org.
Renee
Bailey, . 18-22; Ridenour, 31 :05, Dhronda
Mindy
Durst,
23-29; Hoover, 33:07, Heather
Ronde] Spires, 30-39; Hawley, 34:44:
40-49,
P.eter
Male,
MIDDLEPORT - Again this year the River City Players Brenda Scott, 40-49; Cindy
22:40,
Charles
Martindale,
50-59;
Norma
Rawson,
will sponsor a trip to )\lew York City. .
Angell, 27:49, Jimmer
The trip is planned for Jun 8-11 with accommodations at Wilcox, 60 and over. ·
Soulsby,
29:25_, Chuck
Male
winners
of
various
,
the Fairfield Inn in New Jersey. The cost is $689 for single
29:30,
David . C . .
Kennedy,
were:
Jonathon
age
groups
occupancy; $450 for doubt\!; $390 for lrlple, and $360 for
Kennedy,
.33:30;
fet:nale,
Hayman,
six-13;
Matt
·
quad ()()cupancy.
'· This includes three nights lodging with a continental K,nowllon, 14-17; Kyle Brenda Scott, 27:48, Mary
breakfast at the hotel, motorcoach transportation between Goode, 18-22; Marc Barr, Ann Baker, 31 :56, Terri Male overall winners in their respective age categories in
23-29; Mike Bartrum, 30- Soulsby, 34:41, Lorri
Middl~port and the New York City area, and pickups on the
39; Peter Martindale, 40-4'!_; Lightle, 35:18, Rhonda the Keep Your Fork 5K Run/Walk are (from left) Johnathon
street in front of the hotel by the New Jersey Transit Bus.
Hayman, Matt .Knowlton, Kyle Goode, Peter Martindale,
A deposit of $100 per person is due by Dec. 15 so that the · Tony Mollica, 50-59; K~p ·Cullums, 45:14.
Tony
Mollinca, Ken Holley.
Male, . 50-59, Tony
"
hotel rooms can be secured. Those interested are asked to Holley, 60 and over.
call Cathy Erwin, 992-6759 or contact per . at · A complete listing,of par- Mollica, 24:27, Jeff Steele,
47 : 13.
Joan
Male, 60 and over, Ken Collins,
, tipants .and times is as fol- 24 l~7, Pat Soulsby, 2~ : 15,
cathy.erwin@yahoo.com.
24:12, Frank Anderson. 54:42. Naomi
lows: Male, age six-13, ·Jerry · Well, 27:51, . Fred Holley,
Jonathon Hayman, 21 :37, Baloy, 29:00; female , Woodqerd. 32:08, Ray King, 58:04.
Overall winners received
Conner Wolfe, 23:31, Cindy Rawson, . 31 :43 , · Shasteen, n:33, . Gale
Tristen Wolfe, 27:07, Cody Connie Halley, 40:29, Barb Shri.mplin, 34:48, Thomas plaques. first place winners
Bartrum , 27:51, :· B'ailey Crow, 45:52, Francie Smith, 40: IS; female , received medals, second·
· i.
Caruthers, 28:42; ·female, Shrin'tplin, 50:45, Debbie Norma WilCox, 43:43 , fifth places rcc'eived rib·
Monday...Partly · sunny lower 40~. - Southwest winds six-13 ,'
Shawnella Kennedy,53:18.
Sharon Knight, 44: II , Ann bons .
with a slight chance of snow 15 to 20 mph. Chance of Patterson, 27:24,. Keisey
showers
in
the rain near 100 perc~nt.
Hudson, 31:12, Kaitlin
31:56,
Haley
morning ...Then
mostly '' Wedne,day ... CloQdy Baker,
'
cloudy in the afternoon. with -showers likelh. Highs ~ennedy, 34:02. Maggie
Highs in the uppe r 30hs: in the mid 40s. C ance of Smith, 34:11.
South winds 5 to l 0 mp . rain 7Q·percent. .
iMale,
14-17.
Matt
Wed-nesday ·
night Knowlton, 19:59, Cody
Chance of snow 20 percent.
Monday nlght.. ~Mostly ·through
,Thursday_ HallJimg, 20:00, Ketth
cl~dy. Aeiker, III, 20:1'3, Steven ·
cloudy. Not as cool with nlght._..Mostl~
lows in the ,mid 30s. !-oW&amp; w,the IDJd 20~. ~ghs Mahr724:3l, Gary Hopkins,
Southeast winds .· 5 to 10 · 10 the IDJ(l ~Os. ,
25:06;female, 14-17, Kimi
mph. · Gusts up to 20 .mph
Frld19' and. Fr4~&amp;)\ Swisher, 25: 17, Jessica
after midnight.
·
!'ight~.r,artly cloudy.I:Jtgh~ , 'Holliday, 27:12. Olivia •
Tuesday...Cioudy · · wiih m:the 1Dld•3Qs. Lows 1n the, .Be~•n,
30:28,
Micki
showers likely. Much warmer IDJd 20s. · · .. , .
· •:Bili'lles 31·46 · ·Olivia
with highs in the mid 50s.
~aturday ••.Partly 'suJ:I;nr· "Q.eek;:34:09. · .' _
South winds 10 to 15 mph Htghsintlielower40s . . · ... ~lile, I8-22,KyleGoode,
with gusts up to 30 mph.· Saturday night and 21:12, Andrew O'Bryant,
Chance of fain 70 percent.
Sunda~ .. .Mostly. cloudy. 21:25, Adam Knowlton,
Tuesday nlght ••.Showers. L&lt;;~ws . m the. upper 20s. 24:25, John Dunn, 27:43,
Breezy with lows in the Htghs ·Jn the ffild 40s.. .
Nathan Jeffers , 28:05;
female, 18-22. Renee
Bailey" 27:49, Ashley
Savage, 36:01, Casey
·
Smith, 37:39, Jaynee Davis,
· POMEROY · - Meigs of Middleport.
,
48:57, Pamela Rupe, 51 :04~
County Recorder Kay Hill
Retha M. Day to Jeffrey A.
Male 23-29, Marc Barr,
reported the followmg Day, deed. Bedford/Oran~e . 29:51, Adam Thomas,
transfers in real .estate:
.
Jessica ~- WillillfliS, 31:,52, Bertholt S~hroeder,
· Debra L. Chevalier to Jessica R . .Jaol)y, to J. 48:44; female, Mm~y
Kirjc D. Chevalier, deed, Tucker Williams deed Purst,
25: 13, ~ateJa
Chester.
Sutton/Village of Syracuse.' Bezjak, 25:59, Lauren
, William H. Cleland, Jane
Michael R. Duhl to Diana Anderson. 26:05 , Shannon
W. Cleland, to Wayne D. Duhl, deed; Lebanon.
Souls~y. 28:36, Knsten
Gryphon Thomas
Thomas Cleland, Margaret
Di:alena C. Bell, deceased, Detlwtller, 33:17 ·
.
"Merry Christmas ~
Ann Clela.nd, deed, Suttoq. to Brian Joseph Bell, certifiMale,
30-39,
Mtke
' '
Bartrum, 25:08, Nate Baloy,
Kenneth Clyde Kerps, cate of transfer, Sutton.
Nana &amp;. Papal
Peggy .Wandling to Paul 25:14,l~eath Hud_son, 31:19,
deceased, to Deloris Lynn
Kerns, affidavit.
,
Grady, ICathe,rine , Grady., Craig Ltghtle,35: 1·8• Shawn
Kenneth Clyde Kerns, deed, Scipio.
·
Haw!?, .36.43,_ ~emale,
Actual Size 1x3
deceased, to Deloris Lynn
Donald· Johnson, Shirley Ronde Sptres, 26.10, Pen~y
Kerns, affidavit.
A. Johnson, to Consumers Newland, 26:40\ lamte
* Rune Wedneeday, December 24th
Deloris Kerns to Ohio Gas Cooperative, right of
DepartmeiJt· .
of way, Lc;tart:· . ..· &lt; ·
" De..t~dllne ' for etrt;ry Deoember 19th 5:00
TQ\nsportatio'n, easeml)nt,
Middleport', 'Pentecostal •
Lebanon.
.
Church, River ·\l'.t Valtey ·
'
Wanda R. Wyeth, Donald Apostolic Worship, to
"from PageAl
Mail or drop off at :
H. Wyeth, to Herbert L. Freedom Center Ministries,
Wellman, deed, Sutton.
deed, Village of MiddlepOrt. SentineL Rutland area merThe Daily Sentinel
Charles jl. Zehnder, John
Joyce E. Frye to 'Cynthia ' chants · have again donated
111 Court Street, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
E. Berend Charitable Trust, Grabb, Cath¢ne Grabb, the prize award mon~y.
to Countrytyme ALC, Ltd., deed,-Rutl1111d.
The contest is coordinated
to Anthony Land Co., Ltd.,
John · Charles Bond; annually by the Rutland
deed, Salem. .
' ... ' deceased, . ·to os,rva Jeag . Friendly Gardeners ' to
Child's Name: ___..;.____________
!ames H. Starcher, Gloria Bond, affidavit, .cipio.
• encourage residents to beau- .
Starcher, to ,Jatnes H.
Charles
. · •: ~ad for~. tify the community and lift Starcher, James H. Starcher,_ deceased, Ida B'; 'Rildfotd, tile spirits of those t11!Veli,ng ·
tFrom:--~~--~---~--------------• .
Jr., deed, Olive.
. . · deee~ •. Helepe : Radford in the vicinity, reflecting the
James H. Starcher, CHona Sayre, ~. deceased, Helene Spirit of the holiday sea:;on.
YourName:-~---~~--..;._----------J . . Starcher, to James H., E\izabeth Sayre, Charles W. The club has also provided
Starcher James H. Starcher, . Radfof4, Jr., deceased, affi- fruit baskets , annually al)d
Jr., tleed: Olive.
extinguishing l!fe sunshiite gifts throughout tlie
• davit
·Paula J. Fisher, Gene R. 1 estate.
·· '
• . year to .shut-ins to brighten
Lawrence to Columbus
ClydeR.Morristol\Jppcrs their days, and sponsor''a
Southern 'power\ right of Plains..chesterWaterDistrictt "!,.awn of tile Month" award '
Phone:~· ------------------------~--way, Lebanon.
'right of. way, &lt;?~tester.
sign Spring through Fall to
Ads must be pre-paid
Walter Taylor, Frances
!ack C. Gmther, Flo~ne encourage community beauTaylor to Christopher Aker1 Gtntlier, to TP-CWD, nght. . tification and pride in our ·
Rebec~a Aker, deed, Village of way, Chester.
'environment.

.Winners

Players plan trip to New York City

·Local Weather

~ay

Merry Christmas
to &amp;1meone. ~pecial with a
&amp;nUnel Christmas An8el

"*

'

.

Land trans£ers

:per f'ictur~
·' Prepaid

*

·:contest

·•
•

'

Deaths

The Daily Sentinel • Page A5

www.mydailysentinel.com

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�ACROSS THE NATION

The Daily Sentinel

PageA6
Monday, December 8, 2008

..

Inside

The Daily Sentinel

SCeelers top~. Page Bl

Remembering Pearl Harbor

Titans clindi AFC South, Page B2

BY HERBERT A. SAMPLE
ASSOCIATED

~RESS

WRITER

PEARL
HARBOR ,
Hawaii - With smoke still
billowing from the torpedoed ruins of the U.S. fleet
at Pearl Harbor. Thoma$.
Griffin's B-25 group took
off from its Oregon base to ·
search fpr Japanese ships or
submarines along the West
Coast.
They didn't find any, but
four months later the group
flew from the aircraft earner USS Hornet and attacked
Tokyo. The raid inflicted little damage but boosted U.S.
morale and el)lbarrassetl the
Japanese, who launched the
ill-fated attack on Midway Woody Derby, 90, (farright) with his hand
his heart,
·Island six weeks later, travels to Hawaii every year for the Pearl Harbor
Griffin recalled.
"We took them by sur- Commemoration In Pearl Harbor, Hawaii. DerbY ~as Waist
AP pholc!l
prise," said Griffin , a· deep in water 67 years ago after his ship the USS Nevada In this Dec. 7, 1941 file photo, a small boat rescues a USS West Virginia crew member
retired Army Air Corps was struck. He worked to save his own life and fellow from the water after the Japanese bombing of Pearl Harbor, Hawaii.
·
major and a keynote speak- crew members.
er at a ceremoNy Sunday
commemorating the 67th
anniversary
of
the
Japanese raid that marked
America's entry into World
War II. He was joined by
more t1han 2,000 World
War II veterans and other
observers .
Uslially, the commemoration focuses on the attack
on the USS Arizona, Pearl
Harbor and several other
installations on Oahu. But
Sunday's
remembrance
centered more on the
months following the raid
and on an American
response that helped defeat
the Japanese and render the
U.S. a military superpower.
At 7:55 ·a.m., the moment
on a Sunday morning in
1941 when (lund~erls. of
· Japanese planes began
raining bombs and torpedoes onto Oabu's U.S. mil ~
itary ships and planes,
onlookers across from the
sun~en USS Arizona went
silent .
"It · was an impossible
beginning," Adm. Robert
Willard, commander of the
U.S . Pacific Fleet, said in
his address . "·Yet, ·look at
us today." He noted that
Pearl . Harbor
Naval
.•.
'"
Shipyard recently celebrated I00 years of service and
still maintains the farreaching U.S. Pacific
Fleet.
Underscoring how far
Americans and Japanese
have come since Dec. 7,
: 111'1. . . . . . . . . ...
1941,
·President-elect
Barack Obama in Chicago
on Sunday introduced
retired Gen. Eric Shinseki, a
Japanese American born in
Cese Knives make
Hawaii a year after the
great stocking
attack, as his nominee to
stutters
I
head the Veterans' Affairs
Department.
: www.ThomasOolt.coSunday's commemoration
featured a performance by
the U.S. Pacific Fleet Band,
• morning colors , a Hawaiian
blessing, a rifle salute by the
U.S . Marine Corps and a
recognition of those who
survived the attack.
After the· moment of
silence observing the beginning of the attack, the
destroyer OSS Chung-Hoon
rendered honors to the
Arizona, which still lies in
the harbor with its dead.
Nearly 2,400 Americans
were killed and almost
I ;180
injured
when
Japanese fighters bombed
and sank 12 naval vessels
·•!From Our ~o"'" 'To !;Your1'"'
and heavily damaged nine
others.
958 Second Avenue • Gallipolis, OH
The Arizona , which saok
--.oorbln-nnyder.oom
in less than nine minutes
f1lt.llliiN •PH7~ 4461171•1~412
after an armor-piercing
bomb breached its deck and
exploded in the ship's
ammunition magazine , lost
I ,177 sailors and Marines.
About 340 of its crew members survived.
Other major installations
on Oahu , such as Wheeler
Field and Kaneohe Naval
Air Station , also were
attacked .
This year's ceremony
came weeks after construction began on a new visitor's center for the USS
Arizona Memorial. The ,
existing center, built 28 ·
years ago on reclaimed
land, is sinking. Officials
have said it will be unusable
in a few years.
The event was held a half"'"" ,.,_
mile away at Kilo Pier of
Naval Station Pearl Harbor,
the etanned site f~r next
year s commemoratiOn , as
well . The new visitor 's center is scheduled to open
Dec. 7, 2010.

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(7:==.2 . ~ .

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24 MO THS

NO INTEREST
Nov. 28 •Dec. 29
Cor6in &amp; Snytftr furniture
.

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Monday, December 8, 2008

locAL ScliEDULE
• POMEAaf - • -

t1 .......... ..,;.

_Olio.,_, ........ _

- - - * ' v - 'hi&lt;Mlg .....

a,tondl¥0

nthwl

Glrtlll-11
llieunder at Melgo, 6 p.m.
River Valley at Eutern, 6 p.m.
Souttiem at South Gallla, 6 p.m.

1 • "'r=br •

"D

··Gatlla Academy
· aov•-n
.
at ChesapealcB, 6 p.m:
~ Gallla at Southern, 6 p.m.

South Pomt at River Valley, 8 p.m.

~!lilston at OVCS, 7 p.m.
.·
Ol~llllk-tt

Glhilllcothe at Galjia Academy, 6 p.m.
Pnlnt Pleasant at R!ivtnswood, 7:30

p.m.

~at WBhama,

1:30 p.m.

Buffalo at Hannan, 7:30 p.m.
Wnodlng
'
Gallla Academy at Logan, 5 p.m.

Wtdllftdl¥ &gt;

-- 1Q

01~•-blltl

&lt;?race Christian at Hannan, 7:30 p.m.
· Tburtcta¥ Q

utw 11

aov•-n

ParkersbtJrg Catholic at OVCS, 8 p.m.
~.
Qlrlelltkltblll

Rio .Grande holds off Mt. Vernon Nazarene in semifinals, 1-0
RedStorm advances to second-ever championship final
BY MARK WILUAMS
S~ECIAL TO THE

SENTINEL

FRESNO, Calif. - The
second-seeded Uniwersity of
Rio Grande RedStorm
earned its second ever trip to
the
NAIA
National
Championship final ·after a
1-0 win over No. 14 seed
and
fellow
American
Mideast Conference foe
Mount Vernon Nazarene on
Friday evening in the second
semifinal at the 50th Annual
NAIA
Men's
Soccer
National
Championship
final site, hosted by Fresno
Pacific (Calif.) University.
Rio Grande will take on
Bethel (Tenn.) tomorrow

iO&amp;tem at Fe0eral Hooking, 6 p.m.

Gatorsto

[!)Inion St. Joa at Hannan, 7:30p.m.

· Mllgs at Wahama, 7:30 p.m.
~orkeraburg Catholic at OVCS, 6 p.m.
. ,River Valley at South Point, 8 p.m.
~rtord al

SOutharn,

e p.m.

(Dec. 6) at 6 p.m. PST in the
Championship
final.
Saturday's Championship
final will be the fiTS! ever for
Bethel and second for Rio
Grande.
Both MVNU and Rio
Grande are familiar with
each other as both belong to
the American Mideast
Conference. The . teams
played to a 0-0 draw in the
first meeting while Mt,.
Vernon won the second
match-up 1-0 in the AMC
Semifinals.
·
The Rio Grande defense
was the storyline shutting
down the MVNU offense.
The Cougars tallied only
two shots on . goal and six

·overall shots. That defensive
stand. allowed the URG
offense to contain the ball on
their end and rip off 25 shots
overall and eight on goal.
Rio Grande junior midfielder Jon Brooks directed a
kick from 30 yards out and
hit the back of the net in the
12th minute. It appeared that
goaltender Alex Stout was
blinded by a few players and
could . not see the shot
attempt. That goal allowed
was the first for Stout and
the MVNU defense in four
games.
The Red Storm defense
stayed solid throughout tunring away any MVNU offensive burst. Senior goaltender

Nate Walzer earned the win
posting one save.
Mt . Vernon Nazarene
wraps up its year with an 184-2 overall record . The
Cougars made the most of
first
ever
their
Championship appearance
making the school's first
ever Semifinal in any sport.
Notes: Rio Grande now
holds a '9-2 scoring advantage in the postseason and
has blanked two straight
opponents .... The goal in
the lith minute by Rio
Grande was the first allowed
for MVNU in the 2008
Championships and first
since the confer ,nee championship (Nov. 15) ... With
this Semifinal appearance ,
Mount Vernon Nazarene

BCS title

BY EDDIE PEL,LS
A~

NATIONAL WRITER

Buckeyes
draw Texas in
Fiesta Bowl

Florida was an up-andcoming . power
and
Oklaboma was a declining
one when Bob Stoops made
his move. He left his post as
Gators defensive coordinaCOLUMBUS (AP)
tor to take his flTSt headFor the fifth time in the last coaching job with the
·
seven years, Ohio State is Sooners. ·
beaded back to the Arizona
Ten years later,·both pro.desert .
grams are ., on top . On
The Buckeyes (10-2) Sunday, they earned their
accepted a spot Sunday in invitalions to play for the
·
the Fiesta BCS national championship
Bowl · on on Jan. 8 in Miami.
Jan.
5,
As expected, the final
where they BCS
had
standings
will take Oklahoma at No . I and
on what Florida at No . 2 - the
figures to reverse order of their rankNOTEBOOK be
an ings in the Associated Press
poll - setting up the fiTS!
======angry
bunch of meeting between these stoTexas Longhorns (11-1). ried programs.
'{'e~ .is ~ged .that an · · ''Nine weeks ago ·our
Oklahoma team that it beat team got together and said
by 1Ol'Oints is playing in let's make eve!)' game
the nauonal championship co)lnt," Gators coach Urban
game ahead of them.
Meyer said, speaking of
The Longhorns will have Florida's rebound from its
a e!int to make.
only ·loss, in September to
'They wam to be at their Mississippi.
~:test and they would love
Tim Tebow and the ·
people to tum on the TV 8et Gators did just that. So did
11itd say, 'Hey, t!rls is one of . Oklahoma, which bounced
ibe best teams m the coun- back from a loss in October
qy,"' Ohio State CQach Jim to Texas. · ·
:fressel said · of the
Two teams with one .loss·
~nghorns' motivation.
each doesn't normally make
-~ Yet Tressel said be Cloubt- for a debate-free lead-up to
ed if Texas coach Mack the title game, but even
Jirown would use the slight President-elect
Barack
tb motivate his team.
Obama - outspokenly in
."He's going t~ coach. his favor of a playoff for colkids to do the nght things lege football - might have
for the right reasons and to agree that both these
become as good as they can teams belong.
be," Tressel said. "I don't
Florida ·(l2-l) has averAPphoto
think (he will use) gim- a~ed 49 points a game in the
micks or 'Win one for the rune games since its only In this Nov. 8 file photo, Oklahoma head coach Bob Stoops is shown against Texas A&amp;M
Gipper' or any of that stuff. lost. Oklaboma (12-1) during the first quarter of an NCAA football game in College Station, Texas. Stoops is done
They don't need that.
with the pqlilicking that has turned the national championship race into a campaign. His
They're good enough withSooners will take on Floridda in the ElcS national tith:l game:
·
.....~ ... ICS.B2
out 1t.'' ·
: The game will pit teams
who ·.split mammoth, regular-season ·showdowns in
2005 and 2006. No . 4 Ohio
State lost 25-22 in 2005 at
. home to quarterback Vmce
Young and No. 2 Texas,
MIAMI
. (AP)
end of , last season.
which would go· on to win
Cincinnati's
first
bowl
Cincinnati beat Virginia
the national championship.
The ,next year the Buckeyes opponent was Vrrginia Tech, Tech in the 1947 Sun Bowl,
won in Austin, 24-7, in the more than six decades .ago. 18-6.
Since losing to the Hokies
s.econd game for Longhorns So maybe it's fitting that the
Bearcats'
first
trip
to
the
a
little over two years ago,
Standout quarterback Colt
McCoy,' now among a hand- Bowl Championship Series Cincinnati has been on a
·. rt,J of Heisman · Trophy will pit them agamst the tear, winning 28 of its past
Hokies once agaiQ.
35 games. Over that span,
{i!vorites.
The
·orange
Bowl
slotted
seven teams - Boise
only
:- There is speculation that
texas could still have a shot Big East champion arid No. State, · Oklahoma, . BYV.
Ill a piece of the national 12 Cincinnati ( 11-2) against Florida,
Southern
championship if it were to Atlantic Coast Conference California, Hawaii and Ohio
W,in convincingly over Ohio champ and 21st-ranked State - haVe won more
State while Oklaboma - a Virginia Tech (9-4) on games than the Bearcats,
~am that the Longhorns Sunday night, · meaning who were expected to
lieat 45-35 on a neuttal field those clubs will play i.n the become a basketball power
fn October - takes on 75th edition of South when they joined the Big
fllorida for the Bow I · Florida's showcase game on East.
:Now, there's a budding
Jim . 1.
. .
:; JIIHM ... Flxta. 12
in
power
The teams last met in football
.
2006, when Vll'ginia Tech Cincinnati, and there's never
.• t"
beel! a bigger stage than the
prevailed 29-13.
·
"This is truly a great Orange Bowl for the
toNTACfUS
story," Cincinnati coach Bearcats to show how far
:0· 1-140-446·2342 ext. 33
Brian Ke11y said, only a few the program - which didn't
hours removed from the make a sing!~ bowl appear•
· ,.. - H40 H8 3Q08.
•
flight back from the an~;:e between 19 51 and
kllll- oporiaOmydaii)'Hntinot.oom Bearcats' season-ending win 1997- has come.
!J ta 111ft
in Hawaii - Which ended
For the Hokies, BCS trips
'
APpholo
after. 3 ·aJll. in the Eastern •are becoming a regular
lry111 Wol...... Sports Wrltor
Cincinnati head football coach Brain Kelly, left, talks with
time zone Sunday morning. OC!:urrence.
t'4Cl 4-IW342 . .... 33
t&gt;,¥a~tera0my&lt;jallytrlbune.oom
Virginia
Tech
has
been
to
Vrrginia Tech went to the Fox· announcer Tl'lom B.rennaman, right, during the BCS
I
the Oran~e Bowl twice Sugar Bowl in 1995 and selection show at the University of Cincinnati, Sunday In
I.
Lltrry Crum, Sports Wrbr
'
before, Josmg to Nebraska
Cincinnati. Cincinnati was selected to pla~JACC champi!Jn
. (74C) olol&amp;-2342, .,.., 33
in 1996. lind Kansas at. the
ICNmO mydaliyrOgiltor.oom
Virginia Tech in the Orange Bowl. f

Bearcats to face ·virginia
Tech in Orange Bowl

'.

...
"'

.

lll•••• ... ara••2

;·

.

,.

made the school's first ever
Semifinal trip in any sport in
school history ... Of the
Semifinalists, Rio Grande is
the only program to boast a
National Championship title
with one back in 2003. ...
Rio Grande is appearing in
its third ever Semifinal
while
Mount
Vernon
Nazarene is playing in its
first . Semifinal. . .. Rio
Grande is 1-0 all-time in
Championship finals. defeating Fresno Pacific (Calif.) 10 during the 2003 title game
in Olathe, Kan .... MVNU
set two school single-season
records this year, fewest
goals allowed (16 in 24
games) and best winning
percentage (.792).

Defenders
fall to··
CalvaryChristian
.
STAFF REPORT

SPORTSOMYOAILYSENTINEL.COM.

GALLIPOLIS - Lategame heroics got the Ohio
Valley Christian boys basketball team to the finals
of its own tournament, but
't
h
e
Defenders
had
no
heroics in ·
the championship
game on
Saturday
during a
53-31 set- .
to
back
Calvary
Christian .
T h e
Defenders
(1-1) never
led in the
c o n t e s t•

and trailed
23-12 after
eight minutes
of
p I a y ,
·
before ralIrwin
lying with
a 7-5 second quarter run to
pull ~ithin 28-19 at the .
mterm1sston.
CCS, however. managed
to put things away after a
14-3 surge in the third quarter, allowing the guests to
take a commanding 42-22
advantage headed into the
finale . Calvary Christian
also outscored the hosts n9 in the finale .to secure the
22-point decision.
OVCS was led by Kyle
Scott with 10 points, followed by Henry Patrick
with eight and Daniellrwin
with seven markers. Paul
Miller and Peter Carman
rounded out the scoring
with four and two points,
respectively.
The Defenders were just
3-of-12 al the free throw
line for 25 percent, while
Calvary Christian fared bet•
ter - going 5-of-11 at the
charity .stripe for 45 percent.
The victors had eight
players score in the contest,
led by J .R. Nida with 17
points . Caleb Wilkinson
added 10 markers and Cody
Totten chipped in six.
OVCS will return to
action today when it hosts
Grace Christian. The bOys
will tip-off appro11.imately
30 minutes after the conclusion of the girls contest that
starts at 6 p.m .
CALVARY
CCS

ovcs

53, OVCS 31

23 S

14

II -

53

12 7

3

9 -

31

CALVARY CHRISTIAN: J.R. Nidi 7 0.0
17. A.J. Cole 2 0.0 5, Cody Totten 3 0.0
e. Jeremy 5el&lt;ton 1 o.a 2. A.J . - 1
3·3 S, Jeremy Boll 2 0.0 4, Cor,
Lomben 1 CHJ t , Cotlb Wll~noon 4 2-0
10. TOTAI.S: 21 5-11 53. Throo-paint
gaell' 4 (Nidrl3, Cole).
OHIO VALLEY CHRISTIAN (H): Paul
Mlltr 2 tl-4 4, K~ Scott 4 H 10,
Donlt l Irwin 2 2-4 7, Henry Pa~lck 3 Chi!
8, Peter Carman 1 o-o 2. TOTA-LS: 12 312 31 . Three-point goalo: 4 (Patriot&lt; 2.

Scott. Irwin).

�ACROSS THE NATION

The Daily Sentinel

PageA6
Monday, December 8, 2008

..

Inside

The Daily Sentinel

SCeelers top~. Page Bl

Remembering Pearl Harbor

Titans clindi AFC South, Page B2

BY HERBERT A. SAMPLE
ASSOCIATED

~RESS

WRITER

PEARL
HARBOR ,
Hawaii - With smoke still
billowing from the torpedoed ruins of the U.S. fleet
at Pearl Harbor. Thoma$.
Griffin's B-25 group took
off from its Oregon base to ·
search fpr Japanese ships or
submarines along the West
Coast.
They didn't find any, but
four months later the group
flew from the aircraft earner USS Hornet and attacked
Tokyo. The raid inflicted little damage but boosted U.S.
morale and el)lbarrassetl the
Japanese, who launched the
ill-fated attack on Midway Woody Derby, 90, (farright) with his hand
his heart,
·Island six weeks later, travels to Hawaii every year for the Pearl Harbor
Griffin recalled.
"We took them by sur- Commemoration In Pearl Harbor, Hawaii. DerbY ~as Waist
AP pholc!l
prise," said Griffin , a· deep in water 67 years ago after his ship the USS Nevada In this Dec. 7, 1941 file photo, a small boat rescues a USS West Virginia crew member
retired Army Air Corps was struck. He worked to save his own life and fellow from the water after the Japanese bombing of Pearl Harbor, Hawaii.
·
major and a keynote speak- crew members.
er at a ceremoNy Sunday
commemorating the 67th
anniversary
of
the
Japanese raid that marked
America's entry into World
War II. He was joined by
more t1han 2,000 World
War II veterans and other
observers .
Uslially, the commemoration focuses on the attack
on the USS Arizona, Pearl
Harbor and several other
installations on Oahu. But
Sunday's
remembrance
centered more on the
months following the raid
and on an American
response that helped defeat
the Japanese and render the
U.S. a military superpower.
At 7:55 ·a.m., the moment
on a Sunday morning in
1941 when (lund~erls. of
· Japanese planes began
raining bombs and torpedoes onto Oabu's U.S. mil ~
itary ships and planes,
onlookers across from the
sun~en USS Arizona went
silent .
"It · was an impossible
beginning," Adm. Robert
Willard, commander of the
U.S . Pacific Fleet, said in
his address . "·Yet, ·look at
us today." He noted that
Pearl . Harbor
Naval
.•.
'"
Shipyard recently celebrated I00 years of service and
still maintains the farreaching U.S. Pacific
Fleet.
Underscoring how far
Americans and Japanese
have come since Dec. 7,
: 111'1. . . . . . . . . ...
1941,
·President-elect
Barack Obama in Chicago
on Sunday introduced
retired Gen. Eric Shinseki, a
Japanese American born in
Cese Knives make
Hawaii a year after the
great stocking
attack, as his nominee to
stutters
I
head the Veterans' Affairs
Department.
: www.ThomasOolt.coSunday's commemoration
featured a performance by
the U.S. Pacific Fleet Band,
• morning colors , a Hawaiian
blessing, a rifle salute by the
U.S . Marine Corps and a
recognition of those who
survived the attack.
After the· moment of
silence observing the beginning of the attack, the
destroyer OSS Chung-Hoon
rendered honors to the
Arizona, which still lies in
the harbor with its dead.
Nearly 2,400 Americans
were killed and almost
I ;180
injured
when
Japanese fighters bombed
and sank 12 naval vessels
·•!From Our ~o"'" 'To !;Your1'"'
and heavily damaged nine
others.
958 Second Avenue • Gallipolis, OH
The Arizona , which saok
--.oorbln-nnyder.oom
in less than nine minutes
f1lt.llliiN •PH7~ 4461171•1~412
after an armor-piercing
bomb breached its deck and
exploded in the ship's
ammunition magazine , lost
I ,177 sailors and Marines.
About 340 of its crew members survived.
Other major installations
on Oahu , such as Wheeler
Field and Kaneohe Naval
Air Station , also were
attacked .
This year's ceremony
came weeks after construction began on a new visitor's center for the USS
Arizona Memorial. The ,
existing center, built 28 ·
years ago on reclaimed
land, is sinking. Officials
have said it will be unusable
in a few years.
The event was held a half"'"" ,.,_
mile away at Kilo Pier of
Naval Station Pearl Harbor,
the etanned site f~r next
year s commemoratiOn , as
well . The new visitor 's center is scheduled to open
Dec. 7, 2010.

r.--·--·--.
•lo .·
'

I

........

. . . . . . . . . . .k
I
1

I

I

(7:==.2 . ~ .

='~I

1.-----------------·.1 '" "' ·'"

24 MO THS

NO INTEREST
Nov. 28 •Dec. 29
Cor6in &amp; Snytftr furniture
.

.. ,.....

'

I

.J

---

•

'• '

..

Monday, December 8, 2008

locAL ScliEDULE
• POMEAaf - • -

t1 .......... ..,;.

_Olio.,_, ........ _

- - - * ' v - 'hi&lt;Mlg .....

a,tondl¥0

nthwl

Glrtlll-11
llieunder at Melgo, 6 p.m.
River Valley at Eutern, 6 p.m.
Souttiem at South Gallla, 6 p.m.

1 • "'r=br •

"D

··Gatlla Academy
· aov•-n
.
at ChesapealcB, 6 p.m:
~ Gallla at Southern, 6 p.m.

South Pomt at River Valley, 8 p.m.

~!lilston at OVCS, 7 p.m.
.·
Ol~llllk-tt

Glhilllcothe at Galjia Academy, 6 p.m.
Pnlnt Pleasant at R!ivtnswood, 7:30

p.m.

~at WBhama,

1:30 p.m.

Buffalo at Hannan, 7:30 p.m.
Wnodlng
'
Gallla Academy at Logan, 5 p.m.

Wtdllftdl¥ &gt;

-- 1Q

01~•-blltl

&lt;?race Christian at Hannan, 7:30 p.m.
· Tburtcta¥ Q

utw 11

aov•-n

ParkersbtJrg Catholic at OVCS, 8 p.m.
~.
Qlrlelltkltblll

Rio .Grande holds off Mt. Vernon Nazarene in semifinals, 1-0
RedStorm advances to second-ever championship final
BY MARK WILUAMS
S~ECIAL TO THE

SENTINEL

FRESNO, Calif. - The
second-seeded Uniwersity of
Rio Grande RedStorm
earned its second ever trip to
the
NAIA
National
Championship final ·after a
1-0 win over No. 14 seed
and
fellow
American
Mideast Conference foe
Mount Vernon Nazarene on
Friday evening in the second
semifinal at the 50th Annual
NAIA
Men's
Soccer
National
Championship
final site, hosted by Fresno
Pacific (Calif.) University.
Rio Grande will take on
Bethel (Tenn.) tomorrow

iO&amp;tem at Fe0eral Hooking, 6 p.m.

Gatorsto

[!)Inion St. Joa at Hannan, 7:30p.m.

· Mllgs at Wahama, 7:30 p.m.
~orkeraburg Catholic at OVCS, 6 p.m.
. ,River Valley at South Point, 8 p.m.
~rtord al

SOutharn,

e p.m.

(Dec. 6) at 6 p.m. PST in the
Championship
final.
Saturday's Championship
final will be the fiTS! ever for
Bethel and second for Rio
Grande.
Both MVNU and Rio
Grande are familiar with
each other as both belong to
the American Mideast
Conference. The . teams
played to a 0-0 draw in the
first meeting while Mt,.
Vernon won the second
match-up 1-0 in the AMC
Semifinals.
·
The Rio Grande defense
was the storyline shutting
down the MVNU offense.
The Cougars tallied only
two shots on . goal and six

·overall shots. That defensive
stand. allowed the URG
offense to contain the ball on
their end and rip off 25 shots
overall and eight on goal.
Rio Grande junior midfielder Jon Brooks directed a
kick from 30 yards out and
hit the back of the net in the
12th minute. It appeared that
goaltender Alex Stout was
blinded by a few players and
could . not see the shot
attempt. That goal allowed
was the first for Stout and
the MVNU defense in four
games.
The Red Storm defense
stayed solid throughout tunring away any MVNU offensive burst. Senior goaltender

Nate Walzer earned the win
posting one save.
Mt . Vernon Nazarene
wraps up its year with an 184-2 overall record . The
Cougars made the most of
first
ever
their
Championship appearance
making the school's first
ever Semifinal in any sport.
Notes: Rio Grande now
holds a '9-2 scoring advantage in the postseason and
has blanked two straight
opponents .... The goal in
the lith minute by Rio
Grande was the first allowed
for MVNU in the 2008
Championships and first
since the confer ,nee championship (Nov. 15) ... With
this Semifinal appearance ,
Mount Vernon Nazarene

BCS title

BY EDDIE PEL,LS
A~

NATIONAL WRITER

Buckeyes
draw Texas in
Fiesta Bowl

Florida was an up-andcoming . power
and
Oklaboma was a declining
one when Bob Stoops made
his move. He left his post as
Gators defensive coordinaCOLUMBUS (AP)
tor to take his flTSt headFor the fifth time in the last coaching job with the
·
seven years, Ohio State is Sooners. ·
beaded back to the Arizona
Ten years later,·both pro.desert .
grams are ., on top . On
The Buckeyes (10-2) Sunday, they earned their
accepted a spot Sunday in invitalions to play for the
·
the Fiesta BCS national championship
Bowl · on on Jan. 8 in Miami.
Jan.
5,
As expected, the final
where they BCS
had
standings
will take Oklahoma at No . I and
on what Florida at No . 2 - the
figures to reverse order of their rankNOTEBOOK be
an ings in the Associated Press
poll - setting up the fiTS!
======angry
bunch of meeting between these stoTexas Longhorns (11-1). ried programs.
'{'e~ .is ~ged .that an · · ''Nine weeks ago ·our
Oklahoma team that it beat team got together and said
by 1Ol'Oints is playing in let's make eve!)' game
the nauonal championship co)lnt," Gators coach Urban
game ahead of them.
Meyer said, speaking of
The Longhorns will have Florida's rebound from its
a e!int to make.
only ·loss, in September to
'They wam to be at their Mississippi.
~:test and they would love
Tim Tebow and the ·
people to tum on the TV 8et Gators did just that. So did
11itd say, 'Hey, t!rls is one of . Oklahoma, which bounced
ibe best teams m the coun- back from a loss in October
qy,"' Ohio State CQach Jim to Texas. · ·
:fressel said · of the
Two teams with one .loss·
~nghorns' motivation.
each doesn't normally make
-~ Yet Tressel said be Cloubt- for a debate-free lead-up to
ed if Texas coach Mack the title game, but even
Jirown would use the slight President-elect
Barack
tb motivate his team.
Obama - outspokenly in
."He's going t~ coach. his favor of a playoff for colkids to do the nght things lege football - might have
for the right reasons and to agree that both these
become as good as they can teams belong.
be," Tressel said. "I don't
Florida ·(l2-l) has averAPphoto
think (he will use) gim- a~ed 49 points a game in the
micks or 'Win one for the rune games since its only In this Nov. 8 file photo, Oklahoma head coach Bob Stoops is shown against Texas A&amp;M
Gipper' or any of that stuff. lost. Oklaboma (12-1) during the first quarter of an NCAA football game in College Station, Texas. Stoops is done
They don't need that.
with the pqlilicking that has turned the national championship race into a campaign. His
They're good enough withSooners will take on Floridda in the ElcS national tith:l game:
·
.....~ ... ICS.B2
out 1t.'' ·
: The game will pit teams
who ·.split mammoth, regular-season ·showdowns in
2005 and 2006. No . 4 Ohio
State lost 25-22 in 2005 at
. home to quarterback Vmce
Young and No. 2 Texas,
MIAMI
. (AP)
end of , last season.
which would go· on to win
Cincinnati's
first
bowl
Cincinnati beat Virginia
the national championship.
The ,next year the Buckeyes opponent was Vrrginia Tech, Tech in the 1947 Sun Bowl,
won in Austin, 24-7, in the more than six decades .ago. 18-6.
Since losing to the Hokies
s.econd game for Longhorns So maybe it's fitting that the
Bearcats'
first
trip
to
the
a
little over two years ago,
Standout quarterback Colt
McCoy,' now among a hand- Bowl Championship Series Cincinnati has been on a
·. rt,J of Heisman · Trophy will pit them agamst the tear, winning 28 of its past
Hokies once agaiQ.
35 games. Over that span,
{i!vorites.
The
·orange
Bowl
slotted
seven teams - Boise
only
:- There is speculation that
texas could still have a shot Big East champion arid No. State, · Oklahoma, . BYV.
Ill a piece of the national 12 Cincinnati ( 11-2) against Florida,
Southern
championship if it were to Atlantic Coast Conference California, Hawaii and Ohio
W,in convincingly over Ohio champ and 21st-ranked State - haVe won more
State while Oklaboma - a Virginia Tech (9-4) on games than the Bearcats,
~am that the Longhorns Sunday night, · meaning who were expected to
lieat 45-35 on a neuttal field those clubs will play i.n the become a basketball power
fn October - takes on 75th edition of South when they joined the Big
fllorida for the Bow I · Florida's showcase game on East.
:Now, there's a budding
Jim . 1.
. .
:; JIIHM ... Flxta. 12
in
power
The teams last met in football
.
2006, when Vll'ginia Tech Cincinnati, and there's never
.• t"
beel! a bigger stage than the
prevailed 29-13.
·
"This is truly a great Orange Bowl for the
toNTACfUS
story," Cincinnati coach Bearcats to show how far
:0· 1-140-446·2342 ext. 33
Brian Ke11y said, only a few the program - which didn't
hours removed from the make a sing!~ bowl appear•
· ,.. - H40 H8 3Q08.
•
flight back from the an~;:e between 19 51 and
kllll- oporiaOmydaii)'Hntinot.oom Bearcats' season-ending win 1997- has come.
!J ta 111ft
in Hawaii - Which ended
For the Hokies, BCS trips
'
APpholo
after. 3 ·aJll. in the Eastern •are becoming a regular
lry111 Wol...... Sports Wrltor
Cincinnati head football coach Brain Kelly, left, talks with
time zone Sunday morning. OC!:urrence.
t'4Cl 4-IW342 . .... 33
t&gt;,¥a~tera0my&lt;jallytrlbune.oom
Virginia
Tech
has
been
to
Vrrginia Tech went to the Fox· announcer Tl'lom B.rennaman, right, during the BCS
I
the Oran~e Bowl twice Sugar Bowl in 1995 and selection show at the University of Cincinnati, Sunday In
I.
Lltrry Crum, Sports Wrbr
'
before, Josmg to Nebraska
Cincinnati. Cincinnati was selected to pla~JACC champi!Jn
. (74C) olol&amp;-2342, .,.., 33
in 1996. lind Kansas at. the
ICNmO mydaliyrOgiltor.oom
Virginia Tech in the Orange Bowl. f

Bearcats to face ·virginia
Tech in Orange Bowl

'.

...
"'

.

lll•••• ... ara••2

;·

.

,.

made the school's first ever
Semifinal trip in any sport in
school history ... Of the
Semifinalists, Rio Grande is
the only program to boast a
National Championship title
with one back in 2003. ...
Rio Grande is appearing in
its third ever Semifinal
while
Mount
Vernon
Nazarene is playing in its
first . Semifinal. . .. Rio
Grande is 1-0 all-time in
Championship finals. defeating Fresno Pacific (Calif.) 10 during the 2003 title game
in Olathe, Kan .... MVNU
set two school single-season
records this year, fewest
goals allowed (16 in 24
games) and best winning
percentage (.792).

Defenders
fall to··
CalvaryChristian
.
STAFF REPORT

SPORTSOMYOAILYSENTINEL.COM.

GALLIPOLIS - Lategame heroics got the Ohio
Valley Christian boys basketball team to the finals
of its own tournament, but
't
h
e
Defenders
had
no
heroics in ·
the championship
game on
Saturday
during a
53-31 set- .
to
back
Calvary
Christian .
T h e
Defenders
(1-1) never
led in the
c o n t e s t•

and trailed
23-12 after
eight minutes
of
p I a y ,
·
before ralIrwin
lying with
a 7-5 second quarter run to
pull ~ithin 28-19 at the .
mterm1sston.
CCS, however. managed
to put things away after a
14-3 surge in the third quarter, allowing the guests to
take a commanding 42-22
advantage headed into the
finale . Calvary Christian
also outscored the hosts n9 in the finale .to secure the
22-point decision.
OVCS was led by Kyle
Scott with 10 points, followed by Henry Patrick
with eight and Daniellrwin
with seven markers. Paul
Miller and Peter Carman
rounded out the scoring
with four and two points,
respectively.
The Defenders were just
3-of-12 al the free throw
line for 25 percent, while
Calvary Christian fared bet•
ter - going 5-of-11 at the
charity .stripe for 45 percent.
The victors had eight
players score in the contest,
led by J .R. Nida with 17
points . Caleb Wilkinson
added 10 markers and Cody
Totten chipped in six.
OVCS will return to
action today when it hosts
Grace Christian. The bOys
will tip-off appro11.imately
30 minutes after the conclusion of the girls contest that
starts at 6 p.m .
CALVARY
CCS

ovcs

53, OVCS 31

23 S

14

II -

53

12 7

3

9 -

31

CALVARY CHRISTIAN: J.R. Nidi 7 0.0
17. A.J. Cole 2 0.0 5, Cody Totten 3 0.0
e. Jeremy 5el&lt;ton 1 o.a 2. A.J . - 1
3·3 S, Jeremy Boll 2 0.0 4, Cor,
Lomben 1 CHJ t , Cotlb Wll~noon 4 2-0
10. TOTAI.S: 21 5-11 53. Throo-paint
gaell' 4 (Nidrl3, Cole).
OHIO VALLEY CHRISTIAN (H): Paul
Mlltr 2 tl-4 4, K~ Scott 4 H 10,
Donlt l Irwin 2 2-4 7, Henry Pa~lck 3 Chi!
8, Peter Carman 1 o-o 2. TOTA-LS: 12 312 31 . Three-point goalo: 4 (Patriot&lt; 2.

Scott. Irwin).

�Pqe Ba • 'The Daily Sentinel

Townsend, Steelers top Dallas 20-13
PllTSBURGH (AP) Deshea Townsend scored on
a 26-yard interception return
· with I :40 remaining as the
Pittsburgh Steelers scored
their only two· touchdowns
24 seconds apart to rally
from a 10-point deficit and
deal the Dallas Cowboys a
potentially damaging loss,
winning 20-13 on Sunday.·
Pittsburgh was stopped on
a fourth-and-goal play at the
Dallas I early in the fourth
while falling behind 13-3 .
but came back to tie it at .!3
on Ben Roethlisberger 's 6yard pass to Heath Miller
with
2:04
remaining.
Roethlisberger found Nat'e
Was~ington three times for
_51 yards on a 67-yard drive
after the Cowboys (8-5)
twice stalled on dnves that,
if they had scored, probably
would have sealed it.
The Dallas loss secured
the NFC East for New York
(11 -2), despite the Giants'
20-1.4 loss to Philadelphia
earlier in the day.
. The Steelers ( 10-3) didn't
wrap up an AFC playoff

BCS
fromPageBl

I
l

becllflle the first team since
1919 to score 60-plus in
five straight games.
Other teams had their
chances this season, and
also finished with one loss:
Texas , Southern California,
Alabama, Texas Tech and
Penn State.
Of them, Texas had the
best argument for why it
should've been playing for
the title. The Longhorns finished in a three-way tie in
the nation's toughest division - the Bil! 12 South but were .demed a spot in
the title game because of the
tiebreaker, which looks to
the BCS standings.
Oklahoma won the
tiebreaker. Texas protested.
"They went to .a system
we aJI agreed upon before
the season," StooP.s said. "If
someone didn't like it, they
should have decided to
change it before the season,
and I'd have pl;~yed by .
whatever rules they wanted
to play by."
Instead, Texas finished
third in the BCS and AP
rankings and will play_Ohio
State in. the Fiesta Bowl.
. And who outside of Texas
would argue that this title
game is a dream matchup,
with tons of entettainment
potential?
"Oklahoma's a traditional
power just like Florida is
now," said Steve Spurrier,
the former Gators coach
who brought Stoops on as

· Monday, December 8, 2008

Monday, December 8, aoo8

www .mydallysentinel.com

www.mydallysentinel.com

Titans clinch AFC South title

..
spot. but won their fourth in ently put Dallas in command
NASHVILLE ,·
Tenn .
a row and ended Dallas' 'early in the third quarter.
(
AP)
The
Tennessee
three-game winning streak Romo, coming o'ff succesto assure themselves of the sive 300-yard games, ended Titans aren't about to be
AFC North lead going into 19-of-36 for 210 yards and distracted by a power outage in their locker room or a
next Sunday 's game at three interceptions.
struggling
opponenl.
BalJimore. which played
Roethlisberger was 17-ofNot now. Not as a diviWashington later Sunday 33 for 204 yards in his 48th
night.
·
Sion
champion.
career victory. the most by a
It was another December quarterback in his first five
Kerry Collins threw two
disappointment for Dallas, seasons.
touchdowns, and Chris
which is 17-29 in the month
Johnson
ran for 136 yatds
After Choice's 22-yard
since 1996 .
1
and
a
score
as the Titans
run · to the Stcelers 38 earl'y
On second-and-8 from the in the third . Romo found routed
the
Cleveland
Cowboys 17, light end Jason Martellus Bennett for 13 Browns 28,9 Sunday · to
Witten ran the wrong pass yards and Choice ran for 12 grab the AFC South title for
route, allowing Townsend to before Romo - taking more the 'first time since 2002 in
step in front of the pass for than
'eight seconds to throw what they hope is the first
the fifth turnover forced by
Pittsburgh 's league-leading while scrambling to his left of many goals reached this
defense. Until the closing and right - somehow found season.
"Obviously, we're all
minutes, that defense had Owens in the rear of the end
AP pho)o
be_en outplayed by a deter-. zone. Owens was blanketed pleased and happy we won Tennessee Tilans safely Michael Griffin (33) breaks awa,y
mmed Dallas defense that by Ike Taylor, yet leaped the division," Collins said. from Cleveland Browns wide receiver Braylon Edwards (17)
held Pittsburgh to 70 yards over him for Romo's sev- "We know there's a lot of after Griffin intercepted a pass in the third quarter of an
enth touchdown pass in four things left we want to
rushing and 238 yards.
Dallas rookie Tashard games since returning from accomplish. Today was a NFL football game in Nashville, Tenn., on Sunday.
·
good first step."
Choice ran for 88 yards in a finger injury.
lights in their locker room. quarter. · Coach Romc:;o
Choice.
not
intimidated
by
The Titans tiave won 15 They turned it over three Crennel, whose jol;&gt; status
his first NFL start . the most
against Pittsburgh all sea- the opponent or his sur- of their last 16 games, and times, with LenDale White grows shakier with each
son, and Tony Romo impro- roundings, responded with are the first team to secure a losing his first fumble this loss, defended. h'is team for
vised a I 2-yard scoring pass I 66 total yards, including 78 postseason berth this year. season, and they had a sea- sti ll fighting .
to Terrell Owens to appar- on five receptions.
They maintained at least a son-high 13 penalties for
"The Titans are a very
two-game lead with three to 131 yards .
good football team, and I
play for home-field advanDefensive tackle Albert think they showed why they
his defensive coordinator in put Oklahoma in the con- tage in the AFC playoffs,
Haynesworth
said he didn't are today. We came down
1996.
versatioo almost every year and a subdued celebration
Stoops'
arrival
m since he arrived. He is featured players dumping a even notice the power even here and had sonic
Gainesville came a year go.ing for his first national cooler of water o'ver cbach after dressing in near dark&lt; turnovers and had opportl)ness.
nities to try and get a little
after the Gators got p·ound- title since that 13-2 win
Fisher.
ed 62-24 by Nebraska in the over Florida State to end the Jeff
"I
thought
they
were
trybit done. We weren 'I able to
Thi s is ttie Titans' second ing to get .the mood right," get
Fiesta Bowl with the nation- 2000 season.
enough done,", Crennel
consecutive
playoff
·berth,
· al title on the line·. The boost , The winner will join LSU
he said.
said .
the new defensive coordina- as the-second team with 'two secured with the franchise's
Cleveland
(4,9)
lost
its
The Titans outgain~d
tor provided ·was a perfect BCS championships this best record through ·· 13 third straight and fifth in six Cleveland 390- 1'78, intercomplement to Spurrier's decade and will also stake a games, 12-1. Fisher credit- games, with the Browns cepted Dorsey once aQd
Fun 'N'Gun,andtheGators pretty good claim on being ed his Titans' tO-O start starting a third different sacked ·him another time.
won their first national title. called the best program of with helping them wrest the quarterback in as many White just missed joining
division away from the
Fast forward to 2000: In the 2000s.
games. It was Ken Dorsey's Johnson with a 100-yard
his second
year at
The gam.e could also Indianapolis Colts:
"It's a rewarding feeling. first start since Nov. 27, rushing game for a second
Oklahoma, Stoops led the include a Heisman Trophy
Our goal when we left the 2005, when he was with the straight week when he was
Sooners to their seventh winner.
49ers, and he ·didn't get stopped for a I -yard loss on
national championship and
Tebow is in position to playoff game in San Diego, much help from an injury- fourth-and-2 : He finished
their first since 1985.
become the only player to the day we came .back,' wa$ decimated team whose top with 99 yards on 24 carries.
But when Spurrier left win the award twice, foi- to have· a home playoff receiver, tight end Kellen
took the lead
Florida after the 200 I sea- lowing Archie Griffin in game this year. That was Winslow, was out with a fo,Tennessee
r
good
within
the opening ·
son, most Gators felt it was 1974 and L975. Oklahoma our first goal·,,first and fore:
sprained
ankle.
minute
of
the
second
quarjust a matter of getting · quarterback ~am Bradford most. We'v.e now guaran•
Stoops on the first flight is widely considered his teed that : We'll move onto . Tennessee didn't make teras Collins found Ahmard
back home. Who wouldn't biggest competition. If the next step hopefully," nearly enough mistakes to Hall on fourth-and- ! with:a
help the Browns, who· short pass the fullback took'
·
take the. sun and fun of either wins, it would mark Fisher said.
haven 't scored an offepsive up the left sideline for a 28The
Titans
were
a
bit
like
Florida .over the grit and two Heismans .for · his
dust of Norman, right?
respective program th_is a videoboard that ' didn't touchdown in three straight yard TD·and a 7-61ead.
Collins added a 9-yard
. Stoops declined, though, decade, as well. (Jason work thanks to a blown games and coulan't add to
the
6-0
lead
Phil
Dawson
TD
pass to Justin Gage in
transformer
that
knocked
saying he had everything a White won it in 2003 for the
out all but four emergency gave them after the first the third quarter.
coach could ever ask for at Sooners.)
Oklahoma - nice campus,
Oklah~ma has the topgood boosters , fantastic ranked scoring offense in·
resources and, yes, even the country, scoring an
more tradition than they had NCAA-record. ,7.02 points
at Florid!!.
.
this sei!Son. The Gators ·are ·
"He'd only been there ranked third.
It's the kind o( game that
three years, he was building
it up," Spurrier said. "He , will send defensive coordihad a wo'nderful situation natdrs rulll!ing for cover. On
there. No reason to get out the other hand;Spurrier, the
of there."
.. former. Gators quarterback
'
. The Gators ended up hir- · and 'bull c1;mch,' will proba'
mg Ron · Zook, then three bly love this one.
,
years later, turned to Meyer.
"I guess you naturally
Meyer made the Gators pull for·· yoUr· alma mater,"
forget about Stoops. He's he said. "But I pull for
trying to lead Flonda to its 'Stoopsie' all 'the time .' It'll
second title in t~ree years.
be a little ~ bit of both .
Stoops, meanwhile, has Should be a'good game."

.

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Orange
fromPageBl
beat Texas, but has dropped
each of its last four BCS
games. The Hokies lost to
Nebraska in the 1996
Orange Bowl; Florida State
in the 2000 Sugar Bowl for
the national championship,
Auburn in the 2005 Sugar
Bowl and then to Kansas
last year at Dolphin
Stadium .
"To us, this one is real
spe~:ial,"
Hokies coach
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• Ada Should R11n 7 Days

KIT &amp; CARLYLE
200

·100

Announcements

Flr\(HlC

I

0
0
Grave Blankets,
$tO &amp;· up,
$5-$25, Sue's
house, 47310
Star
Ad.,
740·949-2115

Fiesta
fromPageBl
Championship Series title
in Miami on Jan. 8.
Ohio State also has motivation, having lost in the
last two BCS title games by
lopsided
scores. The
Buckeyes even lost one of
them - a 41 -14 beating to
Florida in the 2007 finale on the same University of
P~oenix
Sta.dium field
where they will meet Texas .
"It'll be nice to get down
there again and hopefully
this time there's better
memories of the place,"
linebacker
James
Laurinaitis said.
The Buckeyes a,Ppeared
In the Fiesta Bowl m 2003,
2004 and 2006, pounding
Notre Dame 34-20 In the
moat recent trip after up•ettlna top-ranked Mlamf 31241 In double·overtlmo to
win the nallonal title In
2003 and rollins over

Kansas St~te 35-28 in the
2004 game. Those three
games ~ere . all played at
Arizona State's Sun Devil
Stadium.
It's the fourth year in a
row Ohio State has gone to
a BCS bowl game. The
Buckeyes are 18-21 in bowl
games, losing their last two
after wiiming four in a row,
Ohio State (10-2) has
been patiently waiting since
beating up on rival
Michigan 42-7 in the regular-season finale. on Nov.
22.
The Buckeyes have been
watching the scheduled
games and conference
championships since then,
continually !'Valuating .Ifow
each outcome will affect
them.
They got a huge break
when Oreaon State lost at
home to Oregon on Nov. 29,
making Southern California
the RoKe Bowl champion .
USC was u lock to make a
BCS bowl gume. and hud
the other OSU beutcn
Oreaon lt would hove won

the Pac-10 because of it's
stunning victory over the
Trojans two weeks after
USC throttled the Buckeyes
in September, 35-3. With
Oregon State )mocked out
of the BCS, that opened the
door for the Buckeyes to get
an at,large bid.
· •
'· The pluses of playing in
the BCS are more money
. forthe Big Ten and for each
of its member schools, a
higher,profile game against
a tougher· team, and much
more exposure:
Even early· on Sunday,
there was discussion 'thai
. the Buckeyes wuld end up
in eit)ler the . Sugar Bowl
against Alabama; the
nation's No. I ·team until it
loilt to.Florlda in Saturday's
Southeastent Conference
title aame, or the Fiesta
aaainal Oklahoma.
"lt'a a quality opponent,"
· cornerback .
Malcolm
Jenklna aald about Texu.
"This Ia colleae football at
Ita beat. Everybody's aolng
to get up for the aame and
be ready to play."

,·Current

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pplld.

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iatt·

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guarantee. Local r'eference.s furnished . Estab·
Ushed 1975. Call 24 H~s.
" 740·446·0870, Rogers

Gatttpoflo CarH~
. Coffotjo
(Careers Close To Home)
Call Today! 740-446-4367
• HI00·214.Q452

Basement Watergootlng.

Othot s.rvtceo i
Pet
'Ctematioos.
740-446-3745
'

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Septic pumping Gallia
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VN. Ron Evans Jack-

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600

Read your

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newspape_r an earn

Pots
Pet&amp;
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~~=~~~~,..

740' 256 ' 1101
' Sandy

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Free to a good. home,
Yellow Lab puP.ples. Call

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~.

1

, ~~~~~!::::.'.'.'.':.'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'~ = g::~':~~=:~-~.::::::::::·.:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~~~

Condomlnluma .......................................... 3015
Home Improvements 330
For Sale by Owner~ .................................... 3020
. lnlurance - ................................................... 332 Houaea tor Sale ...... _.................................. 3025
Lawn 8ervlce ............................................:•. 334 Lend (Acreege) ............., ......................-..... 3030
' Muofc/Doncelllrorne .................................... 336 Lots ............................................................3035
Olhoi Servtoeo .............. ; .............................. 338 Want to buy ................................................ 3040
ptumblng/Efoctrlcat ..................................... 340 Real Estate Rentots ................................... 3500
Pl'otoufonat Servlcea ................................. 342 Apa~menta/Townhouuo ......................... 3505
Repatra ..........-......................,,,,, ................... 344 Commerclal .......... :.....................................:i510
Rooflng ...................,... ............. :....................... 346 Condomlnluma .............................,............ 3515
. Security ............................................. ,.......... 348 Houooa tor Rent .... ,................................... 3520
Tax/Account1ng ...........................;............... 350 Land (Acreage) ......._.. ,................1 .............. 3525
Travel/Entertainment .................................. 352 · Storage ••.. -••.... :......._.. ,,, ... ........................... 3535
Flnanclal ..................... .-.................. ~ .............. 400 Want' to Rent ....................................... ,•••. .'. 3640
Financial Servlcea ....................................... 405 Manufactured Houalng ............................,. 4000
lnaurance '""d"""""""'"""""""""""'"""···-.. :~~ Lota ... -.........................................................4005

· Heating &amp; Coollng ••.•.•.-............................... 328

~

_M att Rodgers
mrodgers@mydailytribune.com
ormailto
·
Ga11ipo1is Daily Tribune
Attn: Matt Rodgers
P.O. Box 469 ' '
Gallipolis, OH 45631

~:~::tl:n~.~ :::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::5oo =:~:~·: :~: : : : : .'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'.':.'.'.'.'.'.'.':.'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'.' :g~~

•
..
•

And lour Story
tttlght Be lnduded

...
•.

:~
...

In This
ralth'Based

•
•
•
:
.•

· Mag~ne
t

:

•

Recntlltlonal Yehlclea ............................... 100b
ATV ........................................................_.... 1005
Blcyclea ...................................................... 1010
Boat111Acceesorlea .................:.................. 1015
CamperiRVa &amp; Trallera ............................. 1020
Motorcyc1ea ............................................... 1025
Other ............................................... ........... 1030
Wanttobuy ............................................... 1035
·Automotlve .......................... , .... ;............... 2000
Auto Rantaflleeao ..................................... 2005
:~r~~~~~ervlce ....................................... ~~~ ~r 08 ~A"ii""'""'""""'""""""""''""··· ......... 2D10
881
't""t"·,············· ............................. 306
n quea ................:....................,•. 20 15
B ultd! ng M I era 1 ........--·····--............. _.,......
Comll\erclalllnduatrlal .............................:2020
Bualneaa .................... ."..-..................... _........ 308 Parts &amp; AcceaaoriH ...............;·..................2025
Caterlng ........................................................310 Spor11 Utllfty .............................................. 2030
Chlld/Eidtwly Care ....................................... 312 Trucka ......................................................... 2035
Computers ................................................... 314 UtllltyTrallera .................................. ~ ......... 2040
ContrlctOI'II ............. I .............. . ... - ................. 316 Vana ............................................................ 2045
DomeaUca/Janltorlal ................................... 318 Want to bu~ ............................................... 2050
Electrical .... ;................................................. 320 Real Eatate Sales ·····-··········· .......... --········· 3000

'

...
Bualness a Trade School ........ -...... _.,, ........ 505
fnotructfon a Training ................................. 51 0
Louono ........................................................515
Peroonat .. ,...... .............................................. 520
Anlmala ........... :..................-...................--.... 600
AnlmaiSuppllea .......................................... &amp;OS
Horua ..................... ,.................................... 610
Uveatock......... ........................................... -.615
Pets ............. .................................................620'
Want to buy ..................................................625
Agrlculture .. -............................ _... ,............... 700
Farm Equipment ...................;......................70S
Garden It Prod~ce ................-...................... 710
Hay, Feed, Seed, Grain ..............................: 715
Hunting a. Land ........................................... 720
Want to buy ....................................-............. 725
Merc:hondloo.... . ......................................... 900
AnUqueo ............................ ,,,.,,,,.............. 905
Appllanco ............... ,.....................................910
Auctlont,.._...................................................915
Bargain Baaement .................... ,..................920
Collectlblea .................................... -.. ........... 925
Computera .....................: .........: ................... 930
Equlpment1Suppllu .................................... 935
Flea Markete ................................................ 940
Fuel Oil Coal/Wood/Gao ........................... ,. 945
Furniture ...............................................-...... 950
Hobbv/Hunt. Sport ....................................955
Kld'a Com8r •.•••.• ,.................... ,.... ................960
Miacellaneoua-......................................:..••..i65
Want to buy ..................................................970
Yard Sale .........~ .................................... .......975

Sales ...........................................................4020
SuppUea ........ , ....... """ ............................... 4025
Want to Buy ............................................... 4030
Roaort Property ......................................... 5000
Reaort Property for aale ........................... 5026
RasortProperty-forrent ...... _...... .............. 5050
Employment...............................................6000
Accountlng/Financlal ................................6002
Admlnletrettve/Profeaalonal ....--............... 6004
Cashler/Cierk ......................-...................... 6006
Chlld/Eid~rly Cara ..................................... 6008
Clerlcel ........... -.........:.................................. 6010
Conatructlon ..............................................6012
Drivers 1 Delivery ..................................... 6014
Educatloo .. : .........., .....................................6016
Electrical Plumblng ........................, ••.... .•••6018
Employment Agencfeo ..............................6020
Entorlolnmont ............................................6022
Food Servlcoo ............................................6024 ·
Government &amp; Federal Joba .................... 8026
Help anted- General ...-.............................-602'8
Law Enforcement ................ ~ .............. , ....--6030
Malntenance1Dorne.tlc ............................. 6032
Management/Supervl80ry .-...................... 8034
Mec:hanlce ........... -...................................... 6036
-tcot ....................................................... 6038
Mualcal ...........................................,_., ...... 6040
Part·Timo-Temporarleo ............................. 6042
Reatauranta ............................................... 8044
S.lea ...........................................................8048
Technical Tradla ........................................ 6050
Taxtuea/Factory .......... ; .............................. 8052

Want To

Fumlturo

Buy

Furnished
Apartment
2nd Ave. upstairs all utili·
· ties paid 1BR no pets
Gallipolis. 446-9523
1 Bd. $295 &amp; 3 Bd. $395
apts for rent ut. plus dep.
In
Racine.
Call
740·247-4292

Like new entertainment Want to buy Junk Cars,
center bought at Tope's cal1740-3a8-0884
original price $2100 ask- :::':~"!:"-=~---~
ing
Call WANTED : 69 Cam~ros ·
750 .
~~-:~--- 740 •709•1241
projects or restored cars
Albino Doberman gets """"""""""""""""""""' - any condition .- finders
along well with every·
fee paid. can · Doug
ihlng M. 2Yrs. indoors
Miscellaneout
614-203-1272
cell
or
--;;;~~~~~-- 614_444_2909 office.
74o_444 _5007 ·
~Jet Aeration Mofors re·
AKC Golden Ret. pup~. 7 paired, new &amp; rebuilt in
Wks old, 1st shots, POP, stock. Call Ron Evans,.
$250·$300. No Sunclay 1_800 _537 _9528 _
;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
calls please. 245·5358

Free
kittens,
lin9f
trained, up-to date shots,
Pekingese Puppies 1st playful, abk{ to deliver;
set
of
shots . $250. 740-4l6-492 7

, ~~~§~§~~~so:n~O~H~.~B00~-53~7-~95~~-l:~~~~~~J~:~~--CLASSIFIED INDEX
Legela ...........................................................100
Announcementa .......................................... 2DO
Birthday/Annlversary ..............................-... 205
Happy.Ada .................................................... 210
Lost &amp; Found ................................: .............. 215
Memory!Than k 'tou ..................................... 220
Nottceo .. ........................................ :.............. 225
Personala ..................................................... 230
Wanted ....:...............................,................... 235
Servfcoo '"'"""""""""'"""""""""" """""" 300

NEA, Inc.

Anani'IIS

TOY POODLES for sale
3 females $250 each can
be
(CKC
reg).

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Wreaths
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GreenMorning
· Racine,

Uncond~ionallifatime

.We need your
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~

2 bay service station
Jackson
Pike.
Lease
2&amp;38A a'nd up. Central required. Cilll 446-3644
Air, WID hookup, tenant ;;:'o"'rm;o,;;re;;,i;;nf;;;o-" """"""""""
pays electric. EHO Elm
Hou&amp;el For Rent
View
Apts. ~~;;;;;~;;,;~~
(304)882-3017
~.. • J "·d ' b h
~~~~........:ol /mo .
uo:: • _
at .
Twin Rivers Tower is ac- Bank Reptl' lj:~ down. 1~
years. R~ APR) ' for listinp
. cepting applications tor l«X)..620 _4\1 46 e.\ lW27
waiting list tor HUD sub- , - - -....;_~­
sidized, 1-BA apanment 2br, House for Rent, infor th'e elderly/disabled, eludes Stove, Refrigeracall675-6679
tor1,
Wa.ter!Trash!Sewer
paid, ~o Pets. $450
month,
plus
deposit.
740-446-6939
2 bedroom
apartment ;,;;::;;;;;;:;;;::;;,_ _"""!"!
Vanco Road $530 Call 3 br. house lor rent 109
441-1124
Liberty St. Pt. Pleasant,
no pets 304-593·0909 or
Brand New 2 bedroom 304-675-4655
1.5 balh duplex $575 on ~:;;~::;;:;.~~~
OH
Calf Off SA 141 , 3BR, 2BA,
35 _
740-208-7934
email appl. ,
southohioliving @ gmail.c
om

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740·44HJ55ij

team has overcome a lot to froni this team. There
get where we are this sea- aren't many guys left who
son."
played with me. I'm sure
It's already_ a special that I can speak for the rest
match up for Sid Gillman , of them. We are as proud
too. ·
·
as a peacock for . thi s
. Gillman was the quarter- team."
back on Cincinnati's team
At first glance; it seems
that beat Virginia Tech in the
matchup
of
that Sun Bowl 61 years Cincinnati's offense· and ·
ago, and said Sunday night Virginia Tech's defense
he was proud of the . could be the one to watch.
Bearcats for getting into a
The Hokies finished the
BCS game .
·
regular season ranked sev;
"When we · played, the enth nationally in total
Sun Bowl was a major . defense, allowing jqst -277
bowl game," Oillmafl said:' yards per· game,. while 'the
"There was orily six of Bearcats aver~ged 375
them at tlie time. I don't yards of qffense ¢urin~ the
want to take anythil;lg away •· regular seasGn.

Websites:
www.mydailytribune.com
www.mydailysentinel.com
www.mydailyregister.com

s

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�Pqe Ba • 'The Daily Sentinel

Townsend, Steelers top Dallas 20-13
PllTSBURGH (AP) Deshea Townsend scored on
a 26-yard interception return
· with I :40 remaining as the
Pittsburgh Steelers scored
their only two· touchdowns
24 seconds apart to rally
from a 10-point deficit and
deal the Dallas Cowboys a
potentially damaging loss,
winning 20-13 on Sunday.·
Pittsburgh was stopped on
a fourth-and-goal play at the
Dallas I early in the fourth
while falling behind 13-3 .
but came back to tie it at .!3
on Ben Roethlisberger 's 6yard pass to Heath Miller
with
2:04
remaining.
Roethlisberger found Nat'e
Was~ington three times for
_51 yards on a 67-yard drive
after the Cowboys (8-5)
twice stalled on dnves that,
if they had scored, probably
would have sealed it.
The Dallas loss secured
the NFC East for New York
(11 -2), despite the Giants'
20-1.4 loss to Philadelphia
earlier in the day.
. The Steelers ( 10-3) didn't
wrap up an AFC playoff

BCS
fromPageBl

I
l

becllflle the first team since
1919 to score 60-plus in
five straight games.
Other teams had their
chances this season, and
also finished with one loss:
Texas , Southern California,
Alabama, Texas Tech and
Penn State.
Of them, Texas had the
best argument for why it
should've been playing for
the title. The Longhorns finished in a three-way tie in
the nation's toughest division - the Bil! 12 South but were .demed a spot in
the title game because of the
tiebreaker, which looks to
the BCS standings.
Oklahoma won the
tiebreaker. Texas protested.
"They went to .a system
we aJI agreed upon before
the season," StooP.s said. "If
someone didn't like it, they
should have decided to
change it before the season,
and I'd have pl;~yed by .
whatever rules they wanted
to play by."
Instead, Texas finished
third in the BCS and AP
rankings and will play_Ohio
State in. the Fiesta Bowl.
. And who outside of Texas
would argue that this title
game is a dream matchup,
with tons of entettainment
potential?
"Oklahoma's a traditional
power just like Florida is
now," said Steve Spurrier,
the former Gators coach
who brought Stoops on as

· Monday, December 8, 2008

Monday, December 8, aoo8

www .mydallysentinel.com

www.mydallysentinel.com

Titans clinch AFC South title

..
spot. but won their fourth in ently put Dallas in command
NASHVILLE ,·
Tenn .
a row and ended Dallas' 'early in the third quarter.
(
AP)
The
Tennessee
three-game winning streak Romo, coming o'ff succesto assure themselves of the sive 300-yard games, ended Titans aren't about to be
AFC North lead going into 19-of-36 for 210 yards and distracted by a power outage in their locker room or a
next Sunday 's game at three interceptions.
struggling
opponenl.
BalJimore. which played
Roethlisberger was 17-ofNot now. Not as a diviWashington later Sunday 33 for 204 yards in his 48th
night.
·
Sion
champion.
career victory. the most by a
It was another December quarterback in his first five
Kerry Collins threw two
disappointment for Dallas, seasons.
touchdowns, and Chris
which is 17-29 in the month
Johnson
ran for 136 yatds
After Choice's 22-yard
since 1996 .
1
and
a
score
as the Titans
run · to the Stcelers 38 earl'y
On second-and-8 from the in the third . Romo found routed
the
Cleveland
Cowboys 17, light end Jason Martellus Bennett for 13 Browns 28,9 Sunday · to
Witten ran the wrong pass yards and Choice ran for 12 grab the AFC South title for
route, allowing Townsend to before Romo - taking more the 'first time since 2002 in
step in front of the pass for than
'eight seconds to throw what they hope is the first
the fifth turnover forced by
Pittsburgh 's league-leading while scrambling to his left of many goals reached this
defense. Until the closing and right - somehow found season.
"Obviously, we're all
minutes, that defense had Owens in the rear of the end
AP pho)o
be_en outplayed by a deter-. zone. Owens was blanketed pleased and happy we won Tennessee Tilans safely Michael Griffin (33) breaks awa,y
mmed Dallas defense that by Ike Taylor, yet leaped the division," Collins said. from Cleveland Browns wide receiver Braylon Edwards (17)
held Pittsburgh to 70 yards over him for Romo's sev- "We know there's a lot of after Griffin intercepted a pass in the third quarter of an
enth touchdown pass in four things left we want to
rushing and 238 yards.
Dallas rookie Tashard games since returning from accomplish. Today was a NFL football game in Nashville, Tenn., on Sunday.
·
good first step."
Choice ran for 88 yards in a finger injury.
lights in their locker room. quarter. · Coach Romc:;o
Choice.
not
intimidated
by
The Titans tiave won 15 They turned it over three Crennel, whose jol;&gt; status
his first NFL start . the most
against Pittsburgh all sea- the opponent or his sur- of their last 16 games, and times, with LenDale White grows shakier with each
son, and Tony Romo impro- roundings, responded with are the first team to secure a losing his first fumble this loss, defended. h'is team for
vised a I 2-yard scoring pass I 66 total yards, including 78 postseason berth this year. season, and they had a sea- sti ll fighting .
to Terrell Owens to appar- on five receptions.
They maintained at least a son-high 13 penalties for
"The Titans are a very
two-game lead with three to 131 yards .
good football team, and I
play for home-field advanDefensive tackle Albert think they showed why they
his defensive coordinator in put Oklahoma in the con- tage in the AFC playoffs,
Haynesworth
said he didn't are today. We came down
1996.
versatioo almost every year and a subdued celebration
Stoops'
arrival
m since he arrived. He is featured players dumping a even notice the power even here and had sonic
Gainesville came a year go.ing for his first national cooler of water o'ver cbach after dressing in near dark&lt; turnovers and had opportl)ness.
nities to try and get a little
after the Gators got p·ound- title since that 13-2 win
Fisher.
ed 62-24 by Nebraska in the over Florida State to end the Jeff
"I
thought
they
were
trybit done. We weren 'I able to
Thi s is ttie Titans' second ing to get .the mood right," get
Fiesta Bowl with the nation- 2000 season.
enough done,", Crennel
consecutive
playoff
·berth,
· al title on the line·. The boost , The winner will join LSU
he said.
said .
the new defensive coordina- as the-second team with 'two secured with the franchise's
Cleveland
(4,9)
lost
its
The Titans outgain~d
tor provided ·was a perfect BCS championships this best record through ·· 13 third straight and fifth in six Cleveland 390- 1'78, intercomplement to Spurrier's decade and will also stake a games, 12-1. Fisher credit- games, with the Browns cepted Dorsey once aQd
Fun 'N'Gun,andtheGators pretty good claim on being ed his Titans' tO-O start starting a third different sacked ·him another time.
won their first national title. called the best program of with helping them wrest the quarterback in as many White just missed joining
division away from the
Fast forward to 2000: In the 2000s.
games. It was Ken Dorsey's Johnson with a 100-yard
his second
year at
The gam.e could also Indianapolis Colts:
"It's a rewarding feeling. first start since Nov. 27, rushing game for a second
Oklahoma, Stoops led the include a Heisman Trophy
Our goal when we left the 2005, when he was with the straight week when he was
Sooners to their seventh winner.
49ers, and he ·didn't get stopped for a I -yard loss on
national championship and
Tebow is in position to playoff game in San Diego, much help from an injury- fourth-and-2 : He finished
their first since 1985.
become the only player to the day we came .back,' wa$ decimated team whose top with 99 yards on 24 carries.
But when Spurrier left win the award twice, foi- to have· a home playoff receiver, tight end Kellen
took the lead
Florida after the 200 I sea- lowing Archie Griffin in game this year. That was Winslow, was out with a fo,Tennessee
r
good
within
the opening ·
son, most Gators felt it was 1974 and L975. Oklahoma our first goal·,,first and fore:
sprained
ankle.
minute
of
the
second
quarjust a matter of getting · quarterback ~am Bradford most. We'v.e now guaran•
Stoops on the first flight is widely considered his teed that : We'll move onto . Tennessee didn't make teras Collins found Ahmard
back home. Who wouldn't biggest competition. If the next step hopefully," nearly enough mistakes to Hall on fourth-and- ! with:a
help the Browns, who· short pass the fullback took'
·
take the. sun and fun of either wins, it would mark Fisher said.
haven 't scored an offepsive up the left sideline for a 28The
Titans
were
a
bit
like
Florida .over the grit and two Heismans .for · his
dust of Norman, right?
respective program th_is a videoboard that ' didn't touchdown in three straight yard TD·and a 7-61ead.
Collins added a 9-yard
. Stoops declined, though, decade, as well. (Jason work thanks to a blown games and coulan't add to
the
6-0
lead
Phil
Dawson
TD
pass to Justin Gage in
transformer
that
knocked
saying he had everything a White won it in 2003 for the
out all but four emergency gave them after the first the third quarter.
coach could ever ask for at Sooners.)
Oklahoma - nice campus,
Oklah~ma has the topgood boosters , fantastic ranked scoring offense in·
resources and, yes, even the country, scoring an
more tradition than they had NCAA-record. ,7.02 points
at Florid!!.
.
this sei!Son. The Gators ·are ·
"He'd only been there ranked third.
It's the kind o( game that
three years, he was building
it up," Spurrier said. "He , will send defensive coordihad a wo'nderful situation natdrs rulll!ing for cover. On
there. No reason to get out the other hand;Spurrier, the
of there."
.. former. Gators quarterback
'
. The Gators ended up hir- · and 'bull c1;mch,' will proba'
mg Ron · Zook, then three bly love this one.
,
years later, turned to Meyer.
"I guess you naturally
Meyer made the Gators pull for·· yoUr· alma mater,"
forget about Stoops. He's he said. "But I pull for
trying to lead Flonda to its 'Stoopsie' all 'the time .' It'll
second title in t~ree years.
be a little ~ bit of both .
Stoops, meanwhile, has Should be a'good game."

.

.•
am1

••

at

mribune - Sentinel- l\e
CLASSIFIED
Galli a
County,
OH

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classified@ mydailytribune.com

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HOW I0 W§lj[E, 611 All
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Should Include These Items

•POLICIES*
. Ohio Valley
Pubtlahlng merves
the rlghtto odlt.
or cancel any
ad at any time.
Errors Must
opo~od on the ftr
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nd the
Trlbun
tlnet- ~eglster wll
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hall not be liable to
ny toao or expen
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ubllcatlon
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ot

Orange
fromPageBl
beat Texas, but has dropped
each of its last four BCS
games. The Hokies lost to
Nebraska in the 1996
Orange Bowl; Florida State
in the 2000 Sugar Bowl for
the national championship,
Auburn in the 2005 Sugar
Bowl and then to Kansas
last year at Dolphin
Stadium .
"To us, this one is real
spe~:ial,"
Hokies coach
Frank Beamer said. "This

_

v

POLICIES: Ohio Valley Publishing rtHrvtlthe right to edit, reject, or e~ncel any ad 11 any ume. E"o" muat be reported en the first day ot
TrlbUne-Senttnet-Regiltter wll be rnponalblillor no 11'101'11 thM tha coat of lha &amp;P£8 occup'-d by the errOf and only Ute flrtt lnurtlan. Wa
1
any 1011 or evpenaa thet rtluHa from tht pt1bllc1Uon or omlaalon of an ad11.-tlaement. Correction will be made In the flrat tvllltble edition. ·Box
are tlwty• confidential. ·Current 1'111 ctrd _..,.Ita. ·All rtll eatata ad\lartl..manta are su~ject to the Fedllltl Fair Houtlng Act of 1H8. • Thlt r
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':;::;.,;:!:I

• Ada Should R11n 7 Days

KIT &amp; CARLYLE
200

·100

Announcements

Flr\(HlC

I

0
0
Grave Blankets,
$tO &amp;· up,
$5-$25, Sue's
house, 47310
Star
Ad.,
740·949-2115

Fiesta
fromPageBl
Championship Series title
in Miami on Jan. 8.
Ohio State also has motivation, having lost in the
last two BCS title games by
lopsided
scores. The
Buckeyes even lost one of
them - a 41 -14 beating to
Florida in the 2007 finale on the same University of
P~oenix
Sta.dium field
where they will meet Texas .
"It'll be nice to get down
there again and hopefully
this time there's better
memories of the place,"
linebacker
James
Laurinaitis said.
The Buckeyes a,Ppeared
In the Fiesta Bowl m 2003,
2004 and 2006, pounding
Notre Dame 34-20 In the
moat recent trip after up•ettlna top-ranked Mlamf 31241 In double·overtlmo to
win the nallonal title In
2003 and rollins over

Kansas St~te 35-28 in the
2004 game. Those three
games ~ere . all played at
Arizona State's Sun Devil
Stadium.
It's the fourth year in a
row Ohio State has gone to
a BCS bowl game. The
Buckeyes are 18-21 in bowl
games, losing their last two
after wiiming four in a row,
Ohio State (10-2) has
been patiently waiting since
beating up on rival
Michigan 42-7 in the regular-season finale. on Nov.
22.
The Buckeyes have been
watching the scheduled
games and conference
championships since then,
continually !'Valuating .Ifow
each outcome will affect
them.
They got a huge break
when Oreaon State lost at
home to Oregon on Nov. 29,
making Southern California
the RoKe Bowl champion .
USC was u lock to make a
BCS bowl gume. and hud
the other OSU beutcn
Oreaon lt would hove won

the Pac-10 because of it's
stunning victory over the
Trojans two weeks after
USC throttled the Buckeyes
in September, 35-3. With
Oregon State )mocked out
of the BCS, that opened the
door for the Buckeyes to get
an at,large bid.
· •
'· The pluses of playing in
the BCS are more money
. forthe Big Ten and for each
of its member schools, a
higher,profile game against
a tougher· team, and much
more exposure:
Even early· on Sunday,
there was discussion 'thai
. the Buckeyes wuld end up
in eit)ler the . Sugar Bowl
against Alabama; the
nation's No. I ·team until it
loilt to.Florlda in Saturday's
Southeastent Conference
title aame, or the Fiesta
aaainal Oklahoma.
"lt'a a quality opponent,"
· cornerback .
Malcolm
Jenklna aald about Texu.
"This Ia colleae football at
Ita beat. Everybody's aolng
to get up for the aame and
be ready to play."

,·Current

II

pplld.

\

iatt·

car

luoln... &amp; Trodo
School

guarantee. Local r'eference.s furnished . Estab·
Ushed 1975. Call 24 H~s.
" 740·446·0870, Rogers

Gatttpoflo CarH~
. Coffotjo
(Careers Close To Home)
Call Today! 740-446-4367
• HI00·214.Q452

Basement Watergootlng.

Othot s.rvtceo i
Pet
'Ctematioos.
740-446-3745
'

''

Cal

l

Profuojonal S.l"'icu

gtlllpoliscareercollege.&amp;du

Aecredlt&amp;d Memt!M Accredit·

lng Counc" tor Independent
Coliegel and Schools 121.-B

r::=====--1

TURNED DOWN ON
No Fee Unless We Win!
1-888-582-3345

Wll I

n

accept an
vertlaement
1

nowlngly

. ,
lolatlon of the law

Septic pumping Gallia
Co. OH and Mason Co.
VN. Ron Evans Jack-

www.comlcs.com
600

Read your

dl

newspape_r an earn

Pots
Pet&amp;
:-==~--~--256·1~

~~=~~~~,..

740' 256 ' 1101
' Sandy

ask

fcir

Free to a good. home,
Yellow Lab puP.ples. Call

,.

~.

1

, ~~~~~!::::.'.'.'.':.'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'~ = g::~':~~=:~-~.::::::::::·.:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~~~

Condomlnluma .......................................... 3015
Home Improvements 330
For Sale by Owner~ .................................... 3020
. lnlurance - ................................................... 332 Houaea tor Sale ...... _.................................. 3025
Lawn 8ervlce ............................................:•. 334 Lend (Acreege) ............., ......................-..... 3030
' Muofc/Doncelllrorne .................................... 336 Lots ............................................................3035
Olhoi Servtoeo .............. ; .............................. 338 Want to buy ................................................ 3040
ptumblng/Efoctrlcat ..................................... 340 Real Estate Rentots ................................... 3500
Pl'otoufonat Servlcea ................................. 342 Apa~menta/Townhouuo ......................... 3505
Repatra ..........-......................,,,,, ................... 344 Commerclal .......... :.....................................:i510
Rooflng ...................,... ............. :....................... 346 Condomlnluma .............................,............ 3515
. Security ............................................. ,.......... 348 Houooa tor Rent .... ,................................... 3520
Tax/Account1ng ...........................;............... 350 Land (Acreage) ......._.. ,................1 .............. 3525
Travel/Entertainment .................................. 352 · Storage ••.. -••.... :......._.. ,,, ... ........................... 3535
Flnanclal ..................... .-.................. ~ .............. 400 Want' to Rent ....................................... ,•••. .'. 3640
Financial Servlcea ....................................... 405 Manufactured Houalng ............................,. 4000
lnaurance '""d"""""""'"""""""""""'"""···-.. :~~ Lota ... -.........................................................4005

· Heating &amp; Coollng ••.•.•.-............................... 328

~

_M att Rodgers
mrodgers@mydailytribune.com
ormailto
·
Ga11ipo1is Daily Tribune
Attn: Matt Rodgers
P.O. Box 469 ' '
Gallipolis, OH 45631

~:~::tl:n~.~ :::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::5oo =:~:~·: :~: : : : : .'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'.':.'.'.'.'.'.'.':.'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'.' :g~~

•
..
•

And lour Story
tttlght Be lnduded

...
•.

:~
...

In This
ralth'Based

•
•
•
:
.•

· Mag~ne
t

:

•

Recntlltlonal Yehlclea ............................... 100b
ATV ........................................................_.... 1005
Blcyclea ...................................................... 1010
Boat111Acceesorlea .................:.................. 1015
CamperiRVa &amp; Trallera ............................. 1020
Motorcyc1ea ............................................... 1025
Other ............................................... ........... 1030
Wanttobuy ............................................... 1035
·Automotlve .......................... , .... ;............... 2000
Auto Rantaflleeao ..................................... 2005
:~r~~~~~ervlce ....................................... ~~~ ~r 08 ~A"ii""'""'""""'""""""""''""··· ......... 2D10
881
't""t"·,············· ............................. 306
n quea ................:....................,•. 20 15
B ultd! ng M I era 1 ........--·····--............. _.,......
Comll\erclalllnduatrlal .............................:2020
Bualneaa .................... ."..-..................... _........ 308 Parts &amp; AcceaaoriH ...............;·..................2025
Caterlng ........................................................310 Spor11 Utllfty .............................................. 2030
Chlld/Eidtwly Care ....................................... 312 Trucka ......................................................... 2035
Computers ................................................... 314 UtllltyTrallera .................................. ~ ......... 2040
ContrlctOI'II ............. I .............. . ... - ................. 316 Vana ............................................................ 2045
DomeaUca/Janltorlal ................................... 318 Want to bu~ ............................................... 2050
Electrical .... ;................................................. 320 Real Eatate Sales ·····-··········· .......... --········· 3000

'

...
Bualness a Trade School ........ -...... _.,, ........ 505
fnotructfon a Training ................................. 51 0
Louono ........................................................515
Peroonat .. ,...... .............................................. 520
Anlmala ........... :..................-...................--.... 600
AnlmaiSuppllea .......................................... &amp;OS
Horua ..................... ,.................................... 610
Uveatock......... ........................................... -.615
Pets ............. .................................................620'
Want to buy ..................................................625
Agrlculture .. -............................ _... ,............... 700
Farm Equipment ...................;......................70S
Garden It Prod~ce ................-...................... 710
Hay, Feed, Seed, Grain ..............................: 715
Hunting a. Land ........................................... 720
Want to buy ....................................-............. 725
Merc:hondloo.... . ......................................... 900
AnUqueo ............................ ,,,.,,,,.............. 905
Appllanco ............... ,.....................................910
Auctlont,.._...................................................915
Bargain Baaement .................... ,..................920
Collectlblea .................................... -.. ........... 925
Computera .....................: .........: ................... 930
Equlpment1Suppllu .................................... 935
Flea Markete ................................................ 940
Fuel Oil Coal/Wood/Gao ........................... ,. 945
Furniture ...............................................-...... 950
Hobbv/Hunt. Sport ....................................955
Kld'a Com8r •.•••.• ,.................... ,.... ................960
Miacellaneoua-......................................:..••..i65
Want to buy ..................................................970
Yard Sale .........~ .................................... .......975

Sales ...........................................................4020
SuppUea ........ , ....... """ ............................... 4025
Want to Buy ............................................... 4030
Roaort Property ......................................... 5000
Reaort Property for aale ........................... 5026
RasortProperty-forrent ...... _...... .............. 5050
Employment...............................................6000
Accountlng/Financlal ................................6002
Admlnletrettve/Profeaalonal ....--............... 6004
Cashler/Cierk ......................-...................... 6006
Chlld/Eid~rly Cara ..................................... 6008
Clerlcel ........... -.........:.................................. 6010
Conatructlon ..............................................6012
Drivers 1 Delivery ..................................... 6014
Educatloo .. : .........., .....................................6016
Electrical Plumblng ........................, ••.... .•••6018
Employment Agencfeo ..............................6020
Entorlolnmont ............................................6022
Food Servlcoo ............................................6024 ·
Government &amp; Federal Joba .................... 8026
Help anted- General ...-.............................-602'8
Law Enforcement ................ ~ .............. , ....--6030
Malntenance1Dorne.tlc ............................. 6032
Management/Supervl80ry .-...................... 8034
Mec:hanlce ........... -...................................... 6036
-tcot ....................................................... 6038
Mualcal ...........................................,_., ...... 6040
Part·Timo-Temporarleo ............................. 6042
Reatauranta ............................................... 8044
S.lea ...........................................................8048
Technical Tradla ........................................ 6050
Taxtuea/Factory .......... ; .............................. 8052

Want To

Fumlturo

Buy

Furnished
Apartment
2nd Ave. upstairs all utili·
· ties paid 1BR no pets
Gallipolis. 446-9523
1 Bd. $295 &amp; 3 Bd. $395
apts for rent ut. plus dep.
In
Racine.
Call
740·247-4292

Like new entertainment Want to buy Junk Cars,
center bought at Tope's cal1740-3a8-0884
original price $2100 ask- :::':~"!:"-=~---~
ing
Call WANTED : 69 Cam~ros ·
750 .
~~-:~--- 740 •709•1241
projects or restored cars
Albino Doberman gets """"""""""""""""""""' - any condition .- finders
along well with every·
fee paid. can · Doug
ihlng M. 2Yrs. indoors
Miscellaneout
614-203-1272
cell
or
--;;;~~~~~-- 614_444_2909 office.
74o_444 _5007 ·
~Jet Aeration Mofors re·
AKC Golden Ret. pup~. 7 paired, new &amp; rebuilt in
Wks old, 1st shots, POP, stock. Call Ron Evans,.
$250·$300. No Sunclay 1_800 _537 _9528 _
;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
calls please. 245·5358

Free
kittens,
lin9f
trained, up-to date shots,
Pekingese Puppies 1st playful, abk{ to deliver;
set
of
shots . $250. 740-4l6-492 7

, ~~~§~§~~~so:n~O~H~.~B00~-53~7-~95~~-l:~~~~~~J~:~~--CLASSIFIED INDEX
Legela ...........................................................100
Announcementa .......................................... 2DO
Birthday/Annlversary ..............................-... 205
Happy.Ada .................................................... 210
Lost &amp; Found ................................: .............. 215
Memory!Than k 'tou ..................................... 220
Nottceo .. ........................................ :.............. 225
Personala ..................................................... 230
Wanted ....:...............................,................... 235
Servfcoo '"'"""""""""'"""""""""" """""" 300

NEA, Inc.

Anani'IIS

TOY POODLES for sale
3 females $250 each can
be
(CKC
reg).

SOciAl SECURITY SSI

·Submit
Your Stories To
.

'

G;J

"

Wreaths
Blankets
GreenMorning
· Racine,

Uncond~ionallifatime

.We need your
-Inspirational $toties!
~

2 bay service station
Jackson
Pike.
Lease
2&amp;38A a'nd up. Central required. Cilll 446-3644
Air, WID hookup, tenant ;;:'o"'rm;o,;;re;;,i;;nf;;;o-" """"""""""
pays electric. EHO Elm
Hou&amp;el For Rent
View
Apts. ~~;;;;;~;;,;~~
(304)882-3017
~.. • J "·d ' b h
~~~~........:ol /mo .
uo:: • _
at .
Twin Rivers Tower is ac- Bank Reptl' lj:~ down. 1~
years. R~ APR) ' for listinp
. cepting applications tor l«X)..620 _4\1 46 e.\ lW27
waiting list tor HUD sub- , - - -....;_~­
sidized, 1-BA apanment 2br, House for Rent, infor th'e elderly/disabled, eludes Stove, Refrigeracall675-6679
tor1,
Wa.ter!Trash!Sewer
paid, ~o Pets. $450
month,
plus
deposit.
740-446-6939
2 bedroom
apartment ;,;;::;;;;;;:;;;::;;,_ _"""!"!
Vanco Road $530 Call 3 br. house lor rent 109
441-1124
Liberty St. Pt. Pleasant,
no pets 304-593·0909 or
Brand New 2 bedroom 304-675-4655
1.5 balh duplex $575 on ~:;;~::;;:;.~~~
OH
Calf Off SA 141 , 3BR, 2BA,
35 _
740-208-7934
email appl. ,
southohioliving @ gmail.c
om

ELLM VIEW APTS

Baeemenl

I'

Commercial

TownhouMo

Waterprooflng

Counties '

'

Ap-onll/

~I

I

Oa·i·l i,a , fl1eigs 6 Mason

.

Now you can have borders and graphics
~
addedtoyourclasslfiedads
.S,~
1m
Borders$3.00/perad
l!
Graphics 50¢ for small
$1 .00 for large

rete&lt;t

ConJing Soon To

'

Publication
Sunday Display: 1:00 ,
Thursday for Sunday•

• All ads must be prepaid'

• Start Your Adil With A Keyword • Include Complete
Oesc:riPllon • lndude A Pric;e • Avoid Abbrevlattonl
• Include Phone Nuinber And Address When Needed

To Help Get ReSponse ...

All
Display : 12 Noon 2
Business Days Prior To

Inaertion

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

YOUR CLASSIFIED LINE AD NOTICED

Djsplay Ads ·

~~~~~~~?.9:;:00 a.m.

740·44HJ55ij

team has overcome a lot to froni this team. There
get where we are this sea- aren't many guys left who
son."
played with me. I'm sure
It's already_ a special that I can speak for the rest
match up for Sid Gillman , of them. We are as proud
too. ·
·
as a peacock for . thi s
. Gillman was the quarter- team."
back on Cincinnati's team
At first glance; it seems
that beat Virginia Tech in the
matchup
of
that Sun Bowl 61 years Cincinnati's offense· and ·
ago, and said Sunday night Virginia Tech's defense
he was proud of the . could be the one to watch.
Bearcats for getting into a
The Hokies finished the
BCS game .
·
regular season ranked sev;
"When we · played, the enth nationally in total
Sun Bowl was a major . defense, allowing jqst -277
bowl game," Oillmafl said:' yards per· game,. while 'the
"There was orily six of Bearcats aver~ged 375
them at tlie time. I don't yards of qffense ¢urin~ the
want to take anythil;lg away •· regular seasGn.

Websites:
www.mydailytribune.com
www.mydailysentinel.com
www.mydailyregister.com

s

::.:::::::=:::::=::::=
=

For - Safe CKC . Reg.
White (f) toy poodle, lmpenal male &amp; female
Shih-Tzu, prtces var;,
serious
inq.
only
304-273-2066.
Free to good home : Swk

NEWANO USED STEEL
P
A
:;:,eel ~~:~te ipe A~~~::
Channel, Rat Bar, Steel
Grating lor Drains, Onve·
ways &amp; Walkways. L&amp;L
Scrap Metals Open Mon,
T
W d
&amp;
F
ue.
e
Cl li.
Bam-4:30pm.
ooed
Thurs.
Sat
&amp; Sun.
740-446- 7300
Want To Buy

old pups (mom Is small)
also 8 mo old (F)bfk Lab.
245-9890after5pm
Puppies for sale- . 1
Shih-poo. CKC Aal Terriers,
Cocker-poo ;;;;;;;;;O....;.;.:.;.;;;..;;;;;;;
304-67s-4243. •
Absolu1e Top Dollar · silliny Yorkles AKC, 2nd
· shots,
wormed, family
raised, will be 2·3 fbs.
M's&amp; F's. 740-388-9686

ver/gold
coins,
any
10K/14KI1,8K gold jewefry, dental gold, pre
1935
US
currency,
PfOOIJmint
sets,
dlamends, MTS Coin Shop.
151 .2nd Avenue, Galli-

For Solo By Owner
House on SA 588 for
more
intormalion
and
pictures go to orvb.com
i.d. number is browning.
~74;;;0;;;-4;;;4!!6·,;;72,;;0~4""":"':'"""

&amp;

Av

TORY AT
www.CAAMICHAEL·
TRAILE AS.COM
740-446-3825
Have you priced a J h
1 1 ly? Y •11 °~ .
0
eere a e ·
ou
surprlsl;tdl Check out our
used
inventory
at
www.CAAEO .com.
Car·
michael
Equipment
740-446-2412

Fuel/

on I Coal/

Wood/ Goa

•="""'=="'-=
Seasoned
Firewood
HardwOOd. 446-9204
Firewood $55/load, · deliv·

~er"'ed"'304""";!'882!!!·2;;;;56;;,;7""""""

=

fumiluro

Matching couch and love
seat $500. 6 months old.
441 -1110

at

740·446-3825

-;;;;;;;~A--u1oo~~
· ;;;;;;;;;;;

aon
westwood Eatat8s.
Dr., from 52S365
to
$560 _
740 •44 6- 2568 _
Equal Housing Opportunity. This institution is an
Equal Opportunity Provider and Employer.

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

Gracloua Living 1 and 2
Bedroom Apts. at Village
::-;;;:-;;;--:-~~~ Manor and Riverside
3 Bed, 2 Bathl Only Apts. in Middleport, !rom
$15,500
for
listings $327
to
$592.
800·6204946 ex A019
740-992-5064.
Equal
Housing Opportunity.
2ba,
3br,
Central
Air/Heat. newly remod· Modern IBR apt. Call
eleQ
bathrOoms,
new c_74;;0:;;
·44~6-();::3:;:9;:.0~~~
hardwood &amp; til&amp; floors, ~
.
Pleasant Valley ApartSandhill
Ad
$155,000 ments is now taking ap;;.30!!4;,;·6;;,75;;,·4,;;88;;,0""'"""""""" pllcations for 2B R. 3BA
""
&amp; 4BR HUD Subsidized
~~La"'!"nd;;;;i;(Aa;;~".,"iiS•oi,l= APartments. ApplicatiOns

Acres located on
496 Paxton Ad. GaiHpolis. Js adequate tor a moT
bile hamS&gt; Has ali hookEBY, '
IN EGRITY, ::;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; ups 740 441 5129
KIEFER BUILT,
=
~~~-~-~~~~
VALLEY
HORSOJLIVE·
Campert / RVs &amp;
STOCK
TRAILERS,
Trailon
LOAD
MAX
EQUIP- '!'"=;;;;;~i.i.=;;;;;;; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ;
MENT
TRAILERS RV
CARGO EXPRES;S
SeNice at Carmichael
Apartments/
HOMESTEADER
Trailers
h
.CARGO/CONCESSION
_ _
Town
ou*
TRAILERS.
B+W 740 446 3825
GOOSENECK FLATBED , . . . , - - - . . , - 1 and 2 bedroom apts.,
$3QQQ. VIEW OUR EN·
Service
Carmi· furnished
and
untur·
TIRE TRAILER INVEN· chael
Trailers nished, and houses In

Pom~roy ~nd Middle~~-

Beautiful 38R housft in
country, new appl. new
carpet. fresh .paint, CIA,
washroom
w/
WID
hookup.
Water
pd.
$550/mo.
614-595-7n3
or 740-645-5953
;;.,;,;;;.;;,;;;,;;;;;;;;.._ _
4 BR house large barn,
county schools 2 AC RT
775 $550 month sec. deposit required &amp; reference. 740-709·9503

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

are
taKen
Monday
through.
Friday,
from
9am- 1pm. Office is Jocated at 1151 Evergreen
Drive, Pain,
Pleasant,
WV. 304·675·5806

til
.

•

Tara
TownhouSe
Apartments _ 2BA, 1.5
.bath. back patio. pool.
playground, (trash, sew·
agtt,
water
pd.)

Hou garage
Cify.
2Bdnn, Inall rown
elec .
$550. no smoking no
petsSec
deplrefernease
required. Cal\446-8571
2 bedroom duplex, Harrisonville area, $425 per
month plus utilities, No
. ed
De .1
1
pes,
pos1 s requtr .
740 _742 _3033
;.;;;.;.;;.;;;;;;;;._ _~
4br. 2b$, 3 car gar. 2.44
acres on Spires Ad.
$89,000.
740'446-4895
leave message.

4000
.

Manu1actured
Housmg

--==R.,on;;ta;;l.,'==
•
Federal Funds just released for Land Owners.
No dosing cost and
ZERO DOWN! Wi ll do
land
improvements .
Bankruptcy &amp; Bad Credit
OK . 2, 3. 4 end 5 bedrooms
available.
740-446-3384
COra Mill Ad 4844 near

~:~· 2~Ami~ese:~ a~~~~

ances. . WfD
hookup ..
large
yard . $385/mo
$300/deposit,
credit
check. 614·878·5532 or
614-946-3307

.
$425/rent.
$425/sec. 2, 3. &amp; 4Br
security
pos•t reqUire ' dep. Call740·367·0547
367-7762
no pelS. 740·992 · 2218
1BA Apt WID hookups,
satellite TV inct. wlrent,
close to hospital. Call

•
~7~40~-339~·~03~6;;.2-~~
2007 Chevy Cobah 5 2BA APT.Ciose to HoisPeed
14.000
miles
160
$7000 080. 256·6877 or ~~~ ~ ~~i~! 1°; ~A
256- 126 1.
;;.;;.;;.·,:;,.;.;;......;..;·~-Apartment available now
RiVerbend
Ap1s.
New
Blazer, Saturn, Tracker, Haven wv. Now accept·
Buick SUV's at great tng · applications
for
prices. Others, starting at HUO-subsidized,
one
St400 Stop or call Cook
Molars 328 Jackson Pike Bedroom Apfs, Utilities
included. Based on 30%
740-446-Q103
of adjusted income. Catt
~-.,.-.,.~-::-- 304·882·3121.
available
Pollee Impounds! Cars tor Senior ancl Disabled
tram
$500! ,
Honda, people.
Chevys, Jeeps, Fords. &amp;
more!
for
listings ~~~~~-~
·~ ~0-4876 e• V4"',
~
~
" '""
CONVENIENTLY
LO·
CATED
&amp;
AFFORD·
--;;;;;;;;;;;V;.tllll~;;;;;;;;:;;; ABLE I Townhouse .apartiii
ments.
and/or
small
2003 Chevy Exp,. Cargo houses tor ·rent. Call
van.
$7000.
Call 740-441-1111 1or appli·
74W·388-Q570
cation &amp; Information .

7

1

(i)

Gar·

1BR house S375 utilities
are NOT tncIuded· AeIer·
ences required. Gallipolis
area 709-1372
Beautiful Apts. at Jack·
se/
. C

HouMt For Sale

34 5

fann EquipfMIIt

Beech
Street, Middleport, 2 6edroom furnished .apartment. utililies paid. no pets, deposit
&amp;
references,
(740)992-0165
::..;;;;;:;:,;;;.;;,;,;;;;_ _~
4
room
apt.
wlstoveffridge,
utilities
pd . upstairs, no pets a1
46 Olive St. $450Jmo ...
dep . 740•446-3945

$400/month
posit + utilities
field. 740·645-1646

tor

re~t.

For-,
ANew Home?
TrY the
Classifieds!!

�Plge B4 • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydallysentlnel.com
GOWWI

EXTRA NICE MOI!ILE
HOMES FOR RENT:
2BR 1 - ; Ill elect
~ .. 208-7~1

I Ill

&amp; federal

Jobt

Good uoed three bedroom
14&lt;70.
On~
$7,996.00. Call Cllllle.
740-~

Monday, December 8, 2008
OOP

Holp w...- . o-ra~

www.mydallysentlnel.com

The Daily S~nlinel • Page 85
NEA Crossword Puzzle

BRIDGE

lnfoC'-Ion hill
relied Its Pay
Rates I

ACROSS

Phillip
Alder

1 Victori.,
expletive
5 Flood
control

Ollatlngdo«&amp;, outdoor 11g111a,

ond,..__ol.
~k~~
~~==~~~~
001~•••
entrance.

CDBG
Formula
Altocatton will be
prov- IO&lt;
lhe
project In the amount

Mt:igs Co. Fairzrounds

Oct. 25, 2008
9:00a.m.-11:00a.m.

..

Release: April2~, 2009
fee of $20.00 will be.
chiiJed fur early arrival,

encou.__. 0 •u
lhll rntMttlng on Dec.

late removal, or n.nyti~
access iii wanted to

A

0 f $20' 000 '
CMizene

_... t

18,

2001

to

~ond

make

euggeltlon1 and , to

provide public Input
on lhe propOHCI
amendmlnt IICtlvlly.
H
rtl I
t wtll
a ~ c pon
need
ouxlllorybrllllld
aldo
(lntei'JIN!or,
or t~ matorlal,
aaoloHve
Ullenlng
device, other) dua to
a dlsablllly, pfaaao
contact Gloria Kloos,
«;lork, priO&lt; to Dec.
18, 2008 II 740-992·
2895 , In order to
eneure that your
needs
will
be
accommodated. The
Melga
County
Courthouoe
Ia
handicap~

acceaolble.
WrtHan
comments
will be accepted until
1 :00 P.M. Dec. 18,
2008 and may be
mellod to the Melgo
County
Commlaalonera,
Courthouoe,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45789
Jim Sheata. Preeldent
Metgo
County
Commleslonera
(121 a ·

late arrival. early remuval,

fairgrounds

oi.h.!r

I

.

North
11 -QI-08
• 10 5
¥AKQ 1087642

Hill s Sell
Storage

-

•New Homes

se"'·
r,.;de S1orage S4.oonr
Open Span: Sl.OOnf
lns;de Fence: $1.00/lf

Hours
7:00AM ·8:00PM

MONTY

• Garases
•Complete
Remodeling

than

slated daled. Building
space is first come first

SlOp &amp; Compare

44087 Wlpple Rd .
Pomeroy,OH

(5 Points)
New &amp; Used Tires,
We buy used tires,
computer wheel
alignmcms, light

mechanic work.
complete service oil
change~.

small engine

repair.

AUCTIONS/ANTIQUES

South

SOMHtiiNG F~OM
,- EVE~Y fOOl&gt; G/lOVP
ON IT, ~Of$

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

.,5548

Frank Vine was a well-respected writer
who.dled In 1987. He contributed prlnlarily to The Kibitzer, a Canadian magazine, and The Bridge World. uNorth of the
Master Solvers' Club~ (Mast8r Point
Press) is a colleciion of his best articles.
The book 1s divided into three sections
stories about ·cornelius Coldboltom,
Vme's views about how the game should
be played, and parod1es.
This deal is easler ·to produce in a fie·
tional set1ing. Look. at the South -hand.
With only the opponents \/Uinerable, you
are In the fourth "chair.The bkiding starts
two no-trump - three clubs - three no·
lrur:np. What would you do?
Coldbbttom was North and Vine South.
After West opened two no-trUmp, North
decided against a.mundane four hearts.
Instead, unable to bring himself to pass ·
(whttn he would have been on lead
against three no-trump), he overcalled

I'IOT MAt::E IT A
...IALANC.~l&gt;"
glJl)(iE'T!

Mon-Fri.
8:00am -4:30 pm
Sat. 8:00 am - 12

..

We appretialt your

business
YOUNG'S

1~-8

. NICE

TRY ,

CARP[NUR

FELLERS !!

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

• New Go-

• Electrical &amp; Ptumblng
Roottng a Outtert

Owners:
Jon Van Meter &amp;

Pe!ll Rowe

'IIG-NA'FE···- • . -

TljE

Deer Processing
Skinned- Cut &amp;
Wrapped
Summer Sausage
made

949-2734
Between Racine
&amp; Syracuse
State

Rt. 124

in this
space
for

$96
per
month

Phone_·---------~--

Quality Seamless
Gutters

·,

·

'.

' ~

r .R!&lt;At&gt;

Main"'nance Plus
Commerda/ &amp; Rtsidtntiul

Vinyl
Siding/Replacement
Windows/Remodeling
Bonded &amp; insured
740-99Z-1493 Office
. 740-416-8339Cell

Free Estimated
Pomeroy, Ohio

EI/ER SPOKEN ..

·

DOWN
1 Wind up

2 Trail mtx

an auction

,

40 Add oxygen

)

21 Wild guess 41 Slrong
24 Week da. ·
po;nt
25 -lake
42 Earth tone
forever!
43 Jazzy Della

•

26 Tract

3 Romance,
to Pedro

·

4 Foree out
27
5 Sticky fru;ts 28
6 Wh ite-- 30
ghosl
31
7 Grlffln of TV
8 .Ytllowstons 32
sight
9 Lead-in to

violet

of open
9 round'
Luxury fur
.1040 agcy&gt;Not clooe
Alphabet
trio
Long, on
Lanai

44 Whacked
weeds

45 Omigooh!
47 Sooner city
48 Water the
plants ·
51 Opposing
vote
53 Custom

33 Thai

neighbor
35 Jekyll 's
alter ego

10 So-so
lfradee

,.,........,,........,,;.......,.....

;

'

••'

CELEBRITY CIPHER
·by Luis CamPPS
Celebn~

Dph&amp;r C"/P!o;!r.l'!ls a:s created !Tom QuotaiiO'lS b) la"TWs PQ&lt;:de pas! and :J&amp;Sil11
Each lett6r n 1111itilll19151ands lcr anomsr

. Today SciU8 : YequalsC

" SB

SBCB

Zll

KV

HAPFABH , KRC
MKAVM FK

FXAH

HXAE

AV

MBVBCZ FAKV,

SKCIJ . " - WKXV

•

•

J AHYKOB C FXB

FXB

Z HXAE

VBS

.,•

IBVVKV

'•'.,

PREVIOUS SOLUTION - "There's a drive in me th at won1 allow me 10 do
certain things that are easy." · Johnny Depp

'::~:t~~y S©~~~-&lt;Zt~Se
ldlttd by CLAY ll POLLAN
ORearrange ltttort of tho
· , lour ICfllmblad .word1 b•

I

'

WOlD

GAM I

low .til fonn leur ~mplo words.

I

t

·'I

VEKORE

I. I I I II I

Even though you may be in an easygoing mood, you will go all out if you see a
way to use your efforts to gain a material
m
advantage over your competition at
0
work.
~
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan . 19)- Some
\
kind of calculated risk may be required to
advance a self-Interest th afs Important
to you:Yoo will instinctively know,whetl1er
the odds warrant what you need lo dO.
'' DON'T FOR6ET
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) Outstanding results can be achie\led,
TO FEED TI-lE
especially if you are tenacious and persis tent aPout going after your objeolhte.
vou develop from ~ep No. 3 below.
Once you decide what you want, don't let
l
I
3
PRINT NuMBERED tEllERs IN
distractions throw you otl course.
·
THE il SQUARES
PISCES (Feb. I!O·March 20) - Friends
and acquaintances aren't likely to res ist
UNSCRAMBlE ABOVE LETTERS
your pleasant personality. Your congeTO GET . ANSWER
niality, cl1arm and enthusiasm will wort&lt;
like a one·two-threa punch.
-c
ARIES (March 21·April19)- A number
o1 expected opponunltlea will be there ·
' with regard to your material Interests.
Revoke woven MAKEUP
However, one chal'l!"'elln particular could
is
be a complete surprise.
TAURU S (April 20-May 20) ~ Things
might not run as smooth_ly as you would
like, but you will, nmrtfieless. deal With,
any Irregularities In an effective manfjer .
and k&amp;ep everything under control.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) -The trends
fDOAY
are running jn your favor conceming your
personal and private interests. Capttalize
on getting your affairs in order and setting your mind at ease:
CANCER ~J~ne 21 ~ly 22) - Some
kind of benefits can be derlvtd throu~h
partnership arrangements or group
lrl\/Oivements. so it behooves you to be a
. joiner. Be friendly to everyone, and watch
thin~s devatop.
L:EO (July 23~Aug. 22) - TAost very
s:fteces that wouldn't ftt together previously could tind itie!r places, DeVelop your
plans, and r1)8ke your ~ wl'len you
see thing&amp; Ci)mlng·together.
''Is
VIRGO (Aug. 23-S.pl. 22) - Past frustrations could be robbed of their power if • , . - - - - - - - - - - , ~--------,,
you treat Ute philoOophieall~ Simply hang
'lt~Tti!DIIY
'1J)[),O.Y
loose and watcl'l things work out to your
i\:S:~ , satisfaction In ways you couldn'1 do on

'Experieneed
References Available!
Call Gary Sranley @
740-591 -8044

-

Seamless Gutters
Roofing, Sld;ng, Gutters
lnsured&amp;Bondsd
74o-653-9657

J&amp;L
Construction
• VInyl Sl~ng
• Replacement
Window•

·Roollng

·Deckl
•Garage•
• Pole Buildings
• Room Addldona

- ' ·-

...

;/

WOW, IrS CHILLV.
•

-

'

lr\AfiTIN. I WP.S
ONLVSA.YING...

•
CORNER STONE
CONSTRUCTION

GARFIELD
'
. .
~

LoceiContriiCtor

740-367-()544
FrMEad.......

740-367-()538

IIIE W.IUCII, MEl

(740) 992-2155

47239 Riebel Road , Long Bollom, OH

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS 12/5108

Rummy-

Tamper -

ARLO &amp;JANIS

;

YEAH. JA.~ FROST
IS J1EALL YNIPPING'
A.T MY NOSE.

Additions

I

·r

Mother to primping teenage dllUg,hter, "I tlliok joy the best
•
MAKEUP."

and BOY

Roofing, Siding,
Soffit, Decks,
Doors, Windows,
Electric, Plumbing,
Drywall,
Remodeling, Fioom

'

I'

8
0

• Reasonable Rates
'Insured

The Daily Sentinel

\

OHHH,NOI

.,

YOO
AGAIN!

NO'I' .

•i

f
I
•

NOT'1'HI6.
&lt;,leAR.. :
NO

WAY!!

your

•

•

own.

LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) - II you
belleve an adfustment can be made to
improve oonditlons in your dealings with
others, don't just tit there walling tor
things to happen . Take mi:JasurBS In your
own nand&amp;, and make life worX.·
SCORPIO (oCt. 24-NO'l. 22) - Those
with whom you'll be Involved wUI want to
be your atty. They'll sense in you thOSe
qualities that Indicate that you're A coop·
eraltve eplrll who Is easy to get along

I

'•

with.

No.'NOLI MiAK i"\$ "' S
TO TZ
'.:SIVE Fo'R C\-IRI~T,\\~'5 • . OUP
NU

740-985-4141

1\\1~ )b\X~

Cell : 740-416-1834
25+ yeiU'S exprritnct Fnt EsliiMits

m.JM~t.\1\6
~~Ui !

Advertise
in this space for
$64 per .month

·~------------------------------

23 Long-active
volcano
24 Sent in the
taxes
271singlan
29 T~k30 B1g metoor
34 Ma'1)1 spud
growert
37 Jungle
crusher ·
38 Fergie's
duchy
39 Pori near
Hong Kong
41 Elmer
of cartoons

D06''

Work

(740) 446-2342

Mall or drop off this coupon along
with a copy of your photo 10 to .
: Ohio Valley Publishing P.O. Box 469, Gallipolis, OH 45631

brlmo

13 Each
36 Scads
19 Compete at 39 Tankard

in small packages, btJt they will be a siz·
able bundle.

'Prompt and Quality

cau: MARCUM CONSTRUCTION
• Room Additions • Garages • Vinyl
and Wood Siding • Roofing • Pole
Barns • Palio's, Porches and Decks

(304) 675-1333

-'lllrlhiii\Y:
Tuesda~Dec - 9,2008

E~SA'f

..

tneasant l\egister

•

By Bemk:e Bede 0.01
You may pen the script yourself, but il will
be Lady Luc~ wlio takes the lOading role
in your life in the year ahead. The nu'mber of good lhings she off9rs mlghl come

SIIE'5AII) TO WRITE A SHORT
ON .TilE MOST lM~RTANT

Stanley TreeTrimming
&amp; Removal

For Remodeling and New Houoc Bulldln1 .

&lt;~r~nint

c~

0 WN E V
1-...........,-.,........,.....,.f

Owner:

utpollis 1JBail!' ~ribtme

spacecraft

Waala force

58 Look at
59 Small
whirlpool

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21 ) -

H&amp;H
Guttering

Address _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

I
I
I
I
'I
I
I

.'

.. .

•

Astro":'
Graph

I

SA'(:$! I
THE .
JLI!&gt;T REA!&gt;
NEWS·
THE SToR'(
PAPER.
TAAT P.s_38 TOO, ANt&gt;
15&gt; 1\E •
t !&gt;I DtfT
OPENitlG!
SEE IT I

7~2·2332

I

"·

MEWSP.APEl

JameaK-11

I

·

• •• • I

. lllllllwll Trll
hrll
111111•11111
1111111111

Subscriber's Name _______

I

-~-

Hrs: M-F 1Oam -6pm
Sat. 1Oam - 5pm
closed Sunday

P•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••

no-trump would have gone doWn five.
But Vine tried his own flight of fancy with
four hearts/
•
After West doubled and there were two
passes, South continued with his plan,
rebidding five clubs, wflich he hoped
would be read as a desperate mow ..But
after West's double, North returned to
five hearts. East doubled, of cOurse, and
now Vine, lost. rilade' an SOS redouble,
askirig his p6rtner' to pick a suit. North,
though, did npt wish to run.
Five hearts redou bled went down two,
minus 60Q. As VIne pointed out, the
board might be flat, their teammates
making five diamonds on a black-suit
squeeze against South.
This was Coldbottom's
reply: 'l"he best lactic for you is to 1-d.SS
at every legal opportUnity.•

-~

740 441 9010

Jaail!' Gtribunt
-'oint ~lta•ant l\.tgi,ttr
The Daily ·sentinel
6unbap tltfmH -&amp;tntintl

1

c..L~~ ~~~ ~TI\€. eoR~&gt;~ L05E.R'::. c.ct--::.~ !"'q
\.r---J.i---.l~l...f E/o\I'T'(,
1f5 C.Ott\PLI::Tt.Li EJ'\P\'( !

.

300 2nd Ave Gallipolis
(across from city park}

~allipolb~

· ~ City/State/Zip ----~----

THE BORN LOSER
P"T~E: OPT\tt\~::,T'::, C.U:•.5::, 15""1
"'\.r-- .JI--..._ 1-l.t&gt;.l..t FULL-.

Citll; 740-416-5047
email:
jrahadfrm@aol.com

KIPLING SHOE CO.

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

_J

Lo..:~~!!'!;!:!fo,....,:;:;:iS:::::::,::;:_;:;!,_

Racine, Ohio 740·247·2019

.....
..

Dijon

55 Hot tubs
56 Ike's ex
57 Van-

tllree, clubs. II VIne had passed, lhree

PatiO and Porch Decke

Senior Discount*

East
.3NT

A potpourri
of good articies

E~NIE, $PIL,;ING

RV 's

Now in Progress!
30% Slorewide
(excludes previous
purchases, layaways
&amp; $5 $10 $15 lables)

36 !

Seine

22 Family mem.

Opening lead: • A

(740) 992-5344

INVENTORY
REDUCTION
SALE Ill

North

2NT

t
.~

48 Moon or

15 Plummet
t6 Rain-dtloy
roUout
17 Fem. 18int
18 Unmannad
20

"

IUCdDIIIr:
BIIIJ R. Gable Jr.
140-416·1164

We service and
winterize boats and

Weat

I

43 Wioh
undone
44 Ploin
46 Everglades
wader

8 TampoBey
planet
pro
SO One,
11 1899goldlo Helmut
· ruah town 52 From the
12 Yachting
lop
14 Dot in the 54 Dog days in

J0 2

Dealer: West
Vulnerable: East-West

VInyl Siding &amp; Palnllng

so, you qualify for a

AK87

KJ1 0 765

• 9 42
• J il65 4

·Room Addition• a
Remodlllng .

Call 1100-893,.1991
OptB

A Q 83

9 16
5 3

·-

FOR RETJIJCED
WINTER RATES
DEC.· FEB

hard working lndMdualo
Install and seovlce Dish
Network satellte
systems.

•
•
.
..

J48-112-1m

CAll US TOIM Y

to

Eaat

AKI
J 9

South
•QJ 832

SERVICE

LOOk to hire dedicated

West

•
•
t
•

~~~~~=~~ L----'~"::"'~'m::::o~

L &amp; L Tire Barn

.

• Q3

29570 Baahan Rood
Racine, Ohio
4Sn1
740-949-2217

•

,.

I
•
I'

j

- ----- -

"'
~

�Plge B4 • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydallysentlnel.com
GOWWI

EXTRA NICE MOI!ILE
HOMES FOR RENT:
2BR 1 - ; Ill elect
~ .. 208-7~1

I Ill

&amp; federal

Jobt

Good uoed three bedroom
14&lt;70.
On~
$7,996.00. Call Cllllle.
740-~

Monday, December 8, 2008
OOP

Holp w...- . o-ra~

www.mydallysentlnel.com

The Daily S~nlinel • Page 85
NEA Crossword Puzzle

BRIDGE

lnfoC'-Ion hill
relied Its Pay
Rates I

ACROSS

Phillip
Alder

1 Victori.,
expletive
5 Flood
control

Ollatlngdo«&amp;, outdoor 11g111a,

ond,..__ol.
~k~~
~~==~~~~
001~•••
entrance.

CDBG
Formula
Altocatton will be
prov- IO&lt;
lhe
project In the amount

Mt:igs Co. Fairzrounds

Oct. 25, 2008
9:00a.m.-11:00a.m.

..

Release: April2~, 2009
fee of $20.00 will be.
chiiJed fur early arrival,

encou.__. 0 •u
lhll rntMttlng on Dec.

late removal, or n.nyti~
access iii wanted to

A

0 f $20' 000 '
CMizene

_... t

18,

2001

to

~ond

make

euggeltlon1 and , to

provide public Input
on lhe propOHCI
amendmlnt IICtlvlly.
H
rtl I
t wtll
a ~ c pon
need
ouxlllorybrllllld
aldo
(lntei'JIN!or,
or t~ matorlal,
aaoloHve
Ullenlng
device, other) dua to
a dlsablllly, pfaaao
contact Gloria Kloos,
«;lork, priO&lt; to Dec.
18, 2008 II 740-992·
2895 , In order to
eneure that your
needs
will
be
accommodated. The
Melga
County
Courthouoe
Ia
handicap~

acceaolble.
WrtHan
comments
will be accepted until
1 :00 P.M. Dec. 18,
2008 and may be
mellod to the Melgo
County
Commlaalonera,
Courthouoe,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45789
Jim Sheata. Preeldent
Metgo
County
Commleslonera
(121 a ·

late arrival. early remuval,

fairgrounds

oi.h.!r

I

.

North
11 -QI-08
• 10 5
¥AKQ 1087642

Hill s Sell
Storage

-

•New Homes

se"'·
r,.;de S1orage S4.oonr
Open Span: Sl.OOnf
lns;de Fence: $1.00/lf

Hours
7:00AM ·8:00PM

MONTY

• Garases
•Complete
Remodeling

than

slated daled. Building
space is first come first

SlOp &amp; Compare

44087 Wlpple Rd .
Pomeroy,OH

(5 Points)
New &amp; Used Tires,
We buy used tires,
computer wheel
alignmcms, light

mechanic work.
complete service oil
change~.

small engine

repair.

AUCTIONS/ANTIQUES

South

SOMHtiiNG F~OM
,- EVE~Y fOOl&gt; G/lOVP
ON IT, ~Of$

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

.,5548

Frank Vine was a well-respected writer
who.dled In 1987. He contributed prlnlarily to The Kibitzer, a Canadian magazine, and The Bridge World. uNorth of the
Master Solvers' Club~ (Mast8r Point
Press) is a colleciion of his best articles.
The book 1s divided into three sections
stories about ·cornelius Coldboltom,
Vme's views about how the game should
be played, and parod1es.
This deal is easler ·to produce in a fie·
tional set1ing. Look. at the South -hand.
With only the opponents \/Uinerable, you
are In the fourth "chair.The bkiding starts
two no-trump - three clubs - three no·
lrur:np. What would you do?
Coldbbttom was North and Vine South.
After West opened two no-trUmp, North
decided against a.mundane four hearts.
Instead, unable to bring himself to pass ·
(whttn he would have been on lead
against three no-trump), he overcalled

I'IOT MAt::E IT A
...IALANC.~l&gt;"
glJl)(iE'T!

Mon-Fri.
8:00am -4:30 pm
Sat. 8:00 am - 12

..

We appretialt your

business
YOUNG'S

1~-8

. NICE

TRY ,

CARP[NUR

FELLERS !!

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

• New Go-

• Electrical &amp; Ptumblng
Roottng a Outtert

Owners:
Jon Van Meter &amp;

Pe!ll Rowe

'IIG-NA'FE···- • . -

TljE

Deer Processing
Skinned- Cut &amp;
Wrapped
Summer Sausage
made

949-2734
Between Racine
&amp; Syracuse
State

Rt. 124

in this
space
for

$96
per
month

Phone_·---------~--

Quality Seamless
Gutters

·,

·

'.

' ~

r .R!&lt;At&gt;

Main"'nance Plus
Commerda/ &amp; Rtsidtntiul

Vinyl
Siding/Replacement
Windows/Remodeling
Bonded &amp; insured
740-99Z-1493 Office
. 740-416-8339Cell

Free Estimated
Pomeroy, Ohio

EI/ER SPOKEN ..

·

DOWN
1 Wind up

2 Trail mtx

an auction

,

40 Add oxygen

)

21 Wild guess 41 Slrong
24 Week da. ·
po;nt
25 -lake
42 Earth tone
forever!
43 Jazzy Della

•

26 Tract

3 Romance,
to Pedro

·

4 Foree out
27
5 Sticky fru;ts 28
6 Wh ite-- 30
ghosl
31
7 Grlffln of TV
8 .Ytllowstons 32
sight
9 Lead-in to

violet

of open
9 round'
Luxury fur
.1040 agcy&gt;Not clooe
Alphabet
trio
Long, on
Lanai

44 Whacked
weeds

45 Omigooh!
47 Sooner city
48 Water the
plants ·
51 Opposing
vote
53 Custom

33 Thai

neighbor
35 Jekyll 's
alter ego

10 So-so
lfradee

,.,........,,........,,;.......,.....

;

'

••'

CELEBRITY CIPHER
·by Luis CamPPS
Celebn~

Dph&amp;r C"/P!o;!r.l'!ls a:s created !Tom QuotaiiO'lS b) la"TWs PQ&lt;:de pas! and :J&amp;Sil11
Each lett6r n 1111itilll19151ands lcr anomsr

. Today SciU8 : YequalsC

" SB

SBCB

Zll

KV

HAPFABH , KRC
MKAVM FK

FXAH

HXAE

AV

MBVBCZ FAKV,

SKCIJ . " - WKXV

•

•

J AHYKOB C FXB

FXB

Z HXAE

VBS

.,•

IBVVKV

'•'.,

PREVIOUS SOLUTION - "There's a drive in me th at won1 allow me 10 do
certain things that are easy." · Johnny Depp

'::~:t~~y S©~~~-&lt;Zt~Se
ldlttd by CLAY ll POLLAN
ORearrange ltttort of tho
· , lour ICfllmblad .word1 b•

I

'

WOlD

GAM I

low .til fonn leur ~mplo words.

I

t

·'I

VEKORE

I. I I I II I

Even though you may be in an easygoing mood, you will go all out if you see a
way to use your efforts to gain a material
m
advantage over your competition at
0
work.
~
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan . 19)- Some
\
kind of calculated risk may be required to
advance a self-Interest th afs Important
to you:Yoo will instinctively know,whetl1er
the odds warrant what you need lo dO.
'' DON'T FOR6ET
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) Outstanding results can be achie\led,
TO FEED TI-lE
especially if you are tenacious and persis tent aPout going after your objeolhte.
vou develop from ~ep No. 3 below.
Once you decide what you want, don't let
l
I
3
PRINT NuMBERED tEllERs IN
distractions throw you otl course.
·
THE il SQUARES
PISCES (Feb. I!O·March 20) - Friends
and acquaintances aren't likely to res ist
UNSCRAMBlE ABOVE LETTERS
your pleasant personality. Your congeTO GET . ANSWER
niality, cl1arm and enthusiasm will wort&lt;
like a one·two-threa punch.
-c
ARIES (March 21·April19)- A number
o1 expected opponunltlea will be there ·
' with regard to your material Interests.
Revoke woven MAKEUP
However, one chal'l!"'elln particular could
is
be a complete surprise.
TAURU S (April 20-May 20) ~ Things
might not run as smooth_ly as you would
like, but you will, nmrtfieless. deal With,
any Irregularities In an effective manfjer .
and k&amp;ep everything under control.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) -The trends
fDOAY
are running jn your favor conceming your
personal and private interests. Capttalize
on getting your affairs in order and setting your mind at ease:
CANCER ~J~ne 21 ~ly 22) - Some
kind of benefits can be derlvtd throu~h
partnership arrangements or group
lrl\/Oivements. so it behooves you to be a
. joiner. Be friendly to everyone, and watch
thin~s devatop.
L:EO (July 23~Aug. 22) - TAost very
s:fteces that wouldn't ftt together previously could tind itie!r places, DeVelop your
plans, and r1)8ke your ~ wl'len you
see thing&amp; Ci)mlng·together.
''Is
VIRGO (Aug. 23-S.pl. 22) - Past frustrations could be robbed of their power if • , . - - - - - - - - - - , ~--------,,
you treat Ute philoOophieall~ Simply hang
'lt~Tti!DIIY
'1J)[),O.Y
loose and watcl'l things work out to your
i\:S:~ , satisfaction In ways you couldn'1 do on

'Experieneed
References Available!
Call Gary Sranley @
740-591 -8044

-

Seamless Gutters
Roofing, Sld;ng, Gutters
lnsured&amp;Bondsd
74o-653-9657

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Construction
• VInyl Sl~ng
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Window•

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GARFIELD
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FrMEad.......

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IIIE W.IUCII, MEl

(740) 992-2155

47239 Riebel Road , Long Bollom, OH

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS 12/5108

Rummy-

Tamper -

ARLO &amp;JANIS

;

YEAH. JA.~ FROST
IS J1EALL YNIPPING'
A.T MY NOSE.

Additions

I

·r

Mother to primping teenage dllUg,hter, "I tlliok joy the best
•
MAKEUP."

and BOY

Roofing, Siding,
Soffit, Decks,
Doors, Windows,
Electric, Plumbing,
Drywall,
Remodeling, Fioom

'

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0

• Reasonable Rates
'Insured

The Daily Sentinel

\

OHHH,NOI

.,

YOO
AGAIN!

NO'I' .

•i

f
I
•

NOT'1'HI6.
&lt;,leAR.. :
NO

WAY!!

your

•

•

own.

LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) - II you
belleve an adfustment can be made to
improve oonditlons in your dealings with
others, don't just tit there walling tor
things to happen . Take mi:JasurBS In your
own nand&amp;, and make life worX.·
SCORPIO (oCt. 24-NO'l. 22) - Those
with whom you'll be Involved wUI want to
be your atty. They'll sense in you thOSe
qualities that Indicate that you're A coop·
eraltve eplrll who Is easy to get along

I

'•

with.

No.'NOLI MiAK i"\$ "' S
TO TZ
'.:SIVE Fo'R C\-IRI~T,\\~'5 • . OUP
NU

740-985-4141

1\\1~ )b\X~

Cell : 740-416-1834
25+ yeiU'S exprritnct Fnt EsliiMits

m.JM~t.\1\6
~~Ui !

Advertise
in this space for
$64 per .month

·~------------------------------

23 Long-active
volcano
24 Sent in the
taxes
271singlan
29 T~k30 B1g metoor
34 Ma'1)1 spud
growert
37 Jungle
crusher ·
38 Fergie's
duchy
39 Pori near
Hong Kong
41 Elmer
of cartoons

D06''

Work

(740) 446-2342

Mall or drop off this coupon along
with a copy of your photo 10 to .
: Ohio Valley Publishing P.O. Box 469, Gallipolis, OH 45631

brlmo

13 Each
36 Scads
19 Compete at 39 Tankard

in small packages, btJt they will be a siz·
able bundle.

'Prompt and Quality

cau: MARCUM CONSTRUCTION
• Room Additions • Garages • Vinyl
and Wood Siding • Roofing • Pole
Barns • Palio's, Porches and Decks

(304) 675-1333

-'lllrlhiii\Y:
Tuesda~Dec - 9,2008

E~SA'f

..

tneasant l\egister

•

By Bemk:e Bede 0.01
You may pen the script yourself, but il will
be Lady Luc~ wlio takes the lOading role
in your life in the year ahead. The nu'mber of good lhings she off9rs mlghl come

SIIE'5AII) TO WRITE A SHORT
ON .TilE MOST lM~RTANT

Stanley TreeTrimming
&amp; Removal

For Remodeling and New Houoc Bulldln1 .

&lt;~r~nint

c~

0 WN E V
1-...........,-.,........,.....,.f

Owner:

utpollis 1JBail!' ~ribtme

spacecraft

Waala force

58 Look at
59 Small
whirlpool

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21 ) -

H&amp;H
Guttering

Address _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

I
I
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I
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Astro":'
Graph

I

SA'(:$! I
THE .
JLI!&gt;T REA!&gt;
NEWS·
THE SToR'(
PAPER.
TAAT P.s_38 TOO, ANt&gt;
15&gt; 1\E •
t !&gt;I DtfT
OPENitlG!
SEE IT I

7~2·2332

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MEWSP.APEl

JameaK-11

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. lllllllwll Trll
hrll
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Subscriber's Name _______

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Hrs: M-F 1Oam -6pm
Sat. 1Oam - 5pm
closed Sunday

P•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••

no-trump would have gone doWn five.
But Vine tried his own flight of fancy with
four hearts/
•
After West doubled and there were two
passes, South continued with his plan,
rebidding five clubs, wflich he hoped
would be read as a desperate mow ..But
after West's double, North returned to
five hearts. East doubled, of cOurse, and
now Vine, lost. rilade' an SOS redouble,
askirig his p6rtner' to pick a suit. North,
though, did npt wish to run.
Five hearts redou bled went down two,
minus 60Q. As VIne pointed out, the
board might be flat, their teammates
making five diamonds on a black-suit
squeeze against South.
This was Coldbottom's
reply: 'l"he best lactic for you is to 1-d.SS
at every legal opportUnity.•

-~

740 441 9010

Jaail!' Gtribunt
-'oint ~lta•ant l\.tgi,ttr
The Daily ·sentinel
6unbap tltfmH -&amp;tntintl

1

c..L~~ ~~~ ~TI\€. eoR~&gt;~ L05E.R'::. c.ct--::.~ !"'q
\.r---J.i---.l~l...f E/o\I'T'(,
1f5 C.Ott\PLI::Tt.Li EJ'\P\'( !

.

300 2nd Ave Gallipolis
(across from city park}

~allipolb~

· ~ City/State/Zip ----~----

THE BORN LOSER
P"T~E: OPT\tt\~::,T'::, C.U:•.5::, 15""1
"'\.r-- .JI--..._ 1-l.t&gt;.l..t FULL-.

Citll; 740-416-5047
email:
jrahadfrm@aol.com

KIPLING SHOE CO.

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

_J

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Racine, Ohio 740·247·2019

.....
..

Dijon

55 Hot tubs
56 Ike's ex
57 Van-

tllree, clubs. II VIne had passed, lhree

PatiO and Porch Decke

Senior Discount*

East
.3NT

A potpourri
of good articies

E~NIE, $PIL,;ING

RV 's

Now in Progress!
30% Slorewide
(excludes previous
purchases, layaways
&amp; $5 $10 $15 lables)

36 !

Seine

22 Family mem.

Opening lead: • A

(740) 992-5344

INVENTORY
REDUCTION
SALE Ill

North

2NT

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48 Moon or

15 Plummet
t6 Rain-dtloy
roUout
17 Fem. 18int
18 Unmannad
20

"

IUCdDIIIr:
BIIIJ R. Gable Jr.
140-416·1164

We service and
winterize boats and

Weat

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43 Wioh
undone
44 Ploin
46 Everglades
wader

8 TampoBey
planet
pro
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11 1899goldlo Helmut
· ruah town 52 From the
12 Yachting
lop
14 Dot in the 54 Dog days in

J0 2

Dealer: West
Vulnerable: East-West

VInyl Siding &amp; Palnllng

so, you qualify for a

AK87

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• 9 42
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Remodlllng .

Call 1100-893,.1991
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FOR RETJIJCED
WINTER RATES
DEC.· FEB

hard working lndMdualo
Install and seovlce Dish
Network satellte
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South
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West

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t
•

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.

• Q3

29570 Baahan Rood
Racine, Ohio
4Sn1
740-949-2217

•

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Page B6 • The Daily Sentinel
©2008 UNIVERSAL MEDIA SYNDICATE. INC. SPECIAL ADVERTISEMENT FEATURE

Monday, December 8, 2008

www.mydailysentinel.com

FOR WORLD RESERVE MONETARY EXCHANGE, INC. 3939 EVERHARD RD., CANTON OH 44709

ADVERTISEMENT

Private release of new gilded Genuine Gold
leaf ·u.s. Gov•t 2 bills begins now

donation,A:J

1

&gt;

•

•

,

Rich. $2 bill$ gilded with precious genuine Gold leaf available for 48 hours only in sealed Vault Paks·
containing 4 Estate Wallets each loaded with its own $2 for just twelve dollars per wallet
. ·
Genuine Gilded Gold Leaf: national release to clog phone lines as people everywhere scramble to beat 48 hour deadline
'
_;;o ('1:'-.;'IS • \ 'ol. ,;H, :'l:o. 11.17

By l&lt;lltheryne Gallow

T\.'ESD.\'1. III·.CL~lBI R &lt;J, :.!ooX

,-

~

Printed on 100%
R&lt;'&lt;y&lt;led Newsprint~·

·Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

.

V/11\lll&lt;SII M#di• Synd.c.!t_
• _

,

HOLZER
CLINIC

Village accepts

•

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''" "

•.

"'"1."""'"'""'1.'·""'

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(UMS) ·Hoards of callers will be jamming the
National Toll Free order
lines to get in on the public .release of genuine $2
bills gilded with genuine
Gold leaf.
These crisp U.S. Gov't
$2 bills gilded with genuine .Gold leaf are being
banded in packs of four
from the private vaults ·
of the World Reserve.
These precious gild·
ed genuine Gold leaf $2
bills are so exquisite you
would never dream of
carrying them in an ordi·.
nary leather wallet.
So, these very special $2 bills are being
released in indivi!iually loaded rich protective
Estate Wallets. They are
so impressive, everyone
will &amp;wear they must have
been taken right off the
President's desk.
Traditional $2 bills
are extremely popular to hand out as gifts
for friends'-and family.
"Demand is expected to
soar for these impressive genuine Gold leaf $2
bills," said Robert Castaldo,
Executive
Director
of the World Reserve
Monetary Exchange. .
T'
And they are a real
steal for just twelve dollars for each Estate
Wallet which are being
offered in Vault Paks of
four for forty-eight dol- .
Jars per Vault Pak.
especially since it 1s Gilded with Genuine Gold Leaf.
"Our private vault
,
reserves will soon be gone. So those who iri ,hopes of finding one, and absolutely no
want to get them in these unbroken Vault chance Qf finding one 'that is brand new and
Paks had better · hurry and call now," ·'gilded with genuine Gold leaf," he said.
Castaldo said.
"The $100, $50, $20, $10 and $5 dolThere are already some collectors who Jar bills have all recently undergone
are trying to snatch up all they can get. ·
major new design changes. And with a
That's because they know that $2 bills highly publicized Federal Court deciare almost impossible to lind in your pock- sion ordering the · immediate redeet change these days. Originally issued sigri of all currency for the blind, it
in 1928, the currently designed $2 bills is very likely the historic (iesign of
have largely been locked away in dark U.S. these· $2 will be discontinued and lost
Federal Reserve vaults, rarely distributed forever," he said.
by banks and almost never ever seen in "That's why we have authorized the
circulation.
release of a limited number of these $2'
"So, when our stockpile is gone you'D be bills gilded with genuine Gold leaf from
forced to sort through money from the bank our private vault reserve to the general

•

SPORTS
.:. Meigs falls ta Lady
Spartans. See Page BI

BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENTOMYOAILVSENJINEL.COM

POMEROY - The new .
Medal of Honor Bridge
connecting Pomeroy with
Mason, W.Va. is scheduled
to open to traffic Thesday,
Dec. 30, just beating the
chiming in of the new year.
Barring any unforeseen
catastrophes, there will be a
brief ribbon cutting at II
a.m ., Dec. 30 and then traf·
fie will finally be permitted
to cross the structure.

Karen
Pawloski,
spokesperson with the
Ohio
Department of
Transportation's District
l!J, said logistics on the
brief ribbon cutting were
still being worked out and
will be announced at a later
date. She added that at
some point early next year
when the weather iS'better,
the actual dedication ceremany will take place with
the unveilinll of the Medal
of Honor Bndge signs.
During the .dedicat:on; it's

I

)

:llitll\lftl/1)11/ -

.

HO\f I!:Jet.$2 b;l~s ~u~~f1
...

)

$2 bills are
~P8f~~~it. '
· "·~'1¥'
controlled by the · ·· . • . :·• } Start cillllnsl at:' ·· ,· ,,,, . ,
Treasury Department's . .
• 7:~0 a.m. TODAY . ;•, · · ·
Bureau of Engraving ~
. . . • ·· .
'
, .Claim iliccordlng to
and Printing, makers of all the nation's ,1
paper currency. The $2 bill makes up less
. ' lAST·f4AME
than 1% of the $670 billion in genuine u.s.
.': ·~;.
•. . ,. l .l a~lf~
currencythatcirculatesworldwide,accord'
· 'CLAIM CODE: u
·'·"-'"·'·'
ing to the U.S. Department of Treasury.
At least for now, people will be able to
get what they want by calling the Nation·
.\
•.
al Toll Free Hotline. But anyone who wants
more than 10 sealed Vault. Paks of 4 bills
in Estate Wallets must submit requests
..
in writing so there will be ilo hoarding by
dealers.
"Rest assured, limits · will be · strictly t
,,
enforced and we guarantee there will be at
least 10 Vault Paks for all individuals who
call now," said Castaldo. •
a
.
t n
·
c t
,

,

tr/

OBITtiARIFS
Page AS ,
· • Wallie Hart, 56

..

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INSIDE
:, r

: • ~ transfers.

SeePageAl
• Tough times

awan new Ohio

:public schools chief.

:See Page Al
:• College romances
tend not to last.

SeePageA3
• Local Briefs.

SeePage AS
SeePage AS
• Court blocks FAA
:auction of airport slots.
·See Page A6
:• ·Dogs can think
'no fair' too.
See Page A6

· Dllelle on "-ge A3

••

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·: ,_ SI!C110NS -

Ill PAGES

Annie's Mailbox
A3
A.,
Calendars
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Bg-4
Classifieds

COmics
Editorials
Obituaries
•
~ports

.

Weather

B
· 5

A4
As

B Section

A3

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@..,.,a Ohio valley l'llbllioiWoa eo.

• LOADED WITH MONEY: For the' next 48 hours, hoards of people will be calling the National Toll Free order hotline to get up to 10 sealed Vault Paks
each conta1ning fou r rich Estate Wallets which are loaded w.lth crisp $2 bills. Each gilded genuine Gold leaf $2 bill has been individually loaded tnto these
Estate Wallets to ensure that they are properly protected. These Estate Wallets each with their gilded genuine Gold leaf $2 bill make perfect gifts to Hand
ou't to friends, family and ~re sure to impress everyone on your Christmas list.
·

··: fi

~_.-;~JJ.:or~,

¥11aa~lh·

··

'

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BY BRIAN J. REED

n· !f!!a

..'..

•

BREEDIIMYDAILYSENT!NEL.COM

POMEROY - A five·
count indictment alleging
theft in office has been
returned against Rutland's
former police chief.
·
Jeffrey Miller was dis·
missed from the post in
February after allegations he
cashed checks from the vii·
lage's discretionary police
funds. Special prosecu1ors
were appointed at that time,
and the indictment against
him was returned on Nov.
17, according to the oflicial
record of the Court of
Common Pleas.
Miller was scheduled to
be arraigned on the charges
on Monday, but no arnlign·
ment entry had been lded as
Of Monday afternoon .
Miller was also dismissed
Chllrtene Hoefllchlphoto
as
an officer with lhe ·
Diane Lawson of Peoples Bank presents a check foi $50 to Sam Seckman, first place winner in the Pomeroy Merchants
Middleport
Police
Association's candy making contest, the first of three holiday contests sponsored b¥ the group.
Department at the time he
was discharged as chief of
police in Rutland , but
Mayor Michael Gerlach
'By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Pomeroy's · Save-a-Lot. Five
said at the time his dis·
HOEFLICHGMYDAILYSENTINELCOM
COOkieS are tO be taken tO the
missal from Middleport's
bank on a paper plate covered
. POMEROY - Sam Seckman with plastic before noon when
Pluse see Miller, AS
of Long Bottom captured first the judging will begin. The name
place in the annual Pomeroy of the baker should be written on
Merchants Association's contest the back of the p~r plate l!"d
1
held at Peoples Bank,
on an accompanymg rectpe
From the more than a dozen along with a telephone number,
.entries, the judges selected
Judging will be done by blmk
Seckman's peppermint p11tties employees at noon and the win·
as the best from the rest. Second . ners will be notified by phone.
place went to Holly Stump ~f Prizes will be $50 first and $25
Racine, for her cream{ peanut for second.
butter fudge. Prizes o $50 for
The final contest, a home·
first and $25 for second were made toy or craft item, will be
provided by Peoples Bank and held at Farmers' Bank on Dec.
Bv BETH SERGENT
presented by Diane Lawson, 20. Items ·can be brou$ht into
BSERGENTIIMYDAILYSENTINEL.COM
employee and contest ch~rman. the bank anytime ~unng the
The candy contest was the week of Dec. 15 for display in
POMEROY - Last night
first of three sponsored by the the lobby. The judging will take
P.omeroy Village Council
Pomeroy
Merchants place after the bank closes on
approved Christmas bonus·
Association each year.
SatUrday and the winners will
o;s for all village employees.
be
notified. Again prizes will be
Saturday's contest will· be for
Full-time employees will
cookies and will be hosted by the awarded, $50 for first, and $25
each receive $115, while
Ohio Valley Bank branch in for second.
part-time employees will
receive $57. These bonuses
total just under $3,000.
There are around 23 full·
time employees and four
Bv BRIAN J. REED
Department ·
of . nellotiate for permission t? Gerlach said. .
.
part-time employees whq
BREEDOMYOAILYSENTINEL.COM
Transportation. ODQT has butid the path there , '
The plans tnclude hght· will receive the bonuses.
set aside $135,000 toward Mallaney sitid.
ing, seating and other
Council approved a bid
MIDDLEPORT
con~truction Qfthe path dur·
Mallaney said determin· amenities,
and
was from contractor Bill Lawson
Preliminary work to deter- ing the 2011 construction ing boundary lines is the designed so it could be of Racine to build wooden
mine ownership of parcels year, but that could be next step. There will be served by three VIllage- decking at the Mulberry
along Middleport's pro- moved back to 2010 if the need to obtain easements owned parking lots: Walnut Pond. The bid was for
posed bicycle and walking necessary clearances are from private land owners.
and North Front, at the "T," $13,200 and the village has
path has been completed, awarded. Mallaney said he
Strategic Environmental · and at the manna area, received · two
Ohio
and more intensive title will work with CSX to was awarded a contract for · where the path ends.
Departmenl of Natural
work will be completed i.1 secure permission to con- the work in November, and · The path is a component Resources
NatureWorks
early 2009.
struct the path along its h11s until April, 2009, to of the downtown revttaliza- Grants for a total of $9, I00
complete it. MaHaney said lion plan Middleport .hopes for the project. However, the
Stev~r
Mallaney
of property.
Strategic Environmental
MaHaney met with offi· h&lt;: expects the first phase to secure more fundmg t? village must spend this
sl!id CSX Railroad owns the cials from ODOT and the wtll be completed well complete. As planned , 11 . money by·the end of the year.
land ·along the Ohio River village last month to discuss before then, depending on will
begin
at
the
The decking would go
land
ownership
aild
how
"clean"
the
boundary
Pomeroy/Middleport
corpo·
current
where the fath is to be built,
the hillside of the pdnd
and he wil be working with how it will affect the pro· line surveys are ..
ration line and travel along be around four-feet wide.
the railroad to secure the posed alignment of the path; . The project is actually the the Ohio River, along the Mayor John Mussenaid he
necessary clearance to which also includes · &gt;-&gt;lilt first phase of a ·larger one. old railroad bed as much as believed the work could be
allow construction.
village streets.
An additional phase may possible, to the marina area. done by the end of the year.
This ftrst phase is being·
"Now that we have a bet· take it past General
The entire path project is He added the village has
completed under a $55,000 ter grasp on ownership, we Hartinger Park and on to estimated to cost around
PIMH He Bonuses. AI
award
from
Ohio will contact the railroad anu Ohio 7, and even beyond , $850,000 to complete.

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Preliminary work completed on Middl~port path project

INDEX

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Pomeroy
approves
Christmas
bonuses

WEATHER

1'WO DOilLAR NOTE

I.

·'•,

Long·Bottom man takes first in candy contest

• For the Record.

~"'~'"'0: "1,.'"''"·

t.l,ll t.ll l'oi \IM~ &lt;W· i\.~~.ioll. ,&gt;.

·-.

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The Toll Free order Hotlines Will open
at ,7:30 this morning. All those who
beld the 4e hour order deadline will
~. sealed Vault Paks 90ntalnlnp f~ . ·
'i· ~lite Vt"altets'each one stuffild 1Witlll· ·
crllp $2 bl!llha1 haa been glld,c:I.WIIh'
genlilne.Gold !eaf for ]!IBt ,f_orty·eiO!i(
. ~ I* Y"¥tt Pak (Sius shipplllll. ,..
~~~'~.".• ~
limit of ;10• Va~~ '.~
... ·.·~

0

"'-·

lii. V'n·r.: .t

·. . with genuine Gold·lit .·

...

.. V't'Jl.loi,.IC.

j

'

Fortner
Rutland
officer
indicted

t;, •._-~'j.,

. ''\.

" Castaldo said.
are sure 'to
tDr1ess everyone bemost young peo~
have never even
one of these his·
ric1illv significant $2
Presi-

also likely governors of both cials from the West Virginia long-tenn adhesion '. Once
states, the families of the late Department of Highways. the weather warms, more
. Gen. James Hartinger and Pawloski said the meeting paint will be applied.
Staff Sgt. Jimmy Stewart . went "well" and officials
Several change orders
wiU be in:vited as well as with WVDOH were satis- and unforeseen catastro· ·
. local veterans'to participate: . fled with ODOT's testing of phes later, the late,st cost
Though the bridge will be the structure and recom- estimate for the bridge is
called Medal of Honor mendations to open it as around $65 million though
Bridge, the Ohio ramp will soon as possible. .
. that figure will likely rise.
be · dedicated to Hartinger
The only real work left to The original cost estimate
and the West Virginia ramp doonthestructureappearsto for the bridge was $45 .8
will be dedicated to Stewart. be applying some temporary million. The original con·
The decision to go with · Jane marking paint. The paint tract to build the bridge was
the Dec. 30 date was made will be temporary because signed April 24, 2003 with
yesterday after officials the temperature needs to be the original completion date
with ODOT met with offi- around 45 degrees for any . being Aug. 31, 2006.

•

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