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                  <text>•

Page 88 • The Daily Sentinel

Monday, November 5,

www .my~ailysentinel.com .

2007

.

Police in Pakistan
clash with lawyers
protesting state of
emergency, A2

Doing it Belichicks way, Patriots the NEL's best Redmen avenge loss;
S~~R{~MC~~~ENIST
advance to title g~me
AP

.

' INDIANAPOLIS - Face
it. nobody else in the NFL is
going to come this close the
rest of the way.
The New England Patriots
did in the defending Super
Bowl champions 24-20. At
their place . O.n their carpet in
front of a hostil e crowd, even
while losing the turnover bat tle. their .composure on a few
occasions and rolling up a
franchise re&lt;ord for penalty
yards.
A perfe(l season is a nearcertamty.
So how aboul if we give
Little Bill an ·'A" on his
report card right now, Sll he
can gel a headstart on 10 the
next level , where Lombardi
and Walsh reside. Belichick
is that good. He is the first
certifiable lege nd of the freeage nt era.
Belie hick doesn '1play well
with the rest of the coaches as
it is, and it's only gr :·1g tu get
worse. It was bau enough
when he kept showing them
up, proving just how much
smarter he was.
Lately. though. he's taken
to beating them up. and even
the one team !he Pats couldn' t overpower lust its stomach when it came to crun ch
time.
"Some victories do mean
more than others;" New
England linebacker Tedy
Bruschi said afterward. ··we
tried to treat it like any other
game. This is one we ' re
going to remember."
Belichick wouldn ' t go
even that far. He answered
just about every question by
calling the Colts "a good
football team.
"What else would they be?
My God.'' he scolded one
reporter, "D id you watc h
them play?"
The final time he was
asked whether thi s win mattered more th an most,
liielichick narrowed those
steely eyes and said almost
by rote. "I don't care about
all that. This was a just a
game against the Colts.
That's all it was. The other

BY MARK WIUIAMS
SPEC IAL TO THE SENTINEL

RIO GRANDE - The
University uf R~o Grande
men's soccer team. ranked
No. 18 in the latest NAI'A Top
25 Poll. took a step 1oward a
seventh consecutive lrip tu
the
NAIA
National
Tournament, with a 3-0
shutout . victory
over
Houghton College in the
NAIA Region IX Semifinal
on Saturday afternoon al
Evan Davis Field.
Rio Grande ( 12-4-1), the
top seed in the region. scored
the only goal itwould need in
the 39th minute off a corner
kick when senior defender
Wayne Maden wen! above
the opposition to knock home
a header and give Rio the
lead, 1-0. Sophomore midfielder Jason Massie, who
AP photo delivered the corner kick .
New England Patriots quarter back Tom Brady (12) talks to head coach Bill Belichick after was credited with the first of
the Patriots beat Indianapolis Colts, 24-20 ifl the NFL football game in Indi anapolis Sunday. three assists on the day.
· Rio took the 1-nil to halfgames don't mean a thing." scarefests.
wholehearted ly into his
time.
Honestly. Bclichick. doesThen
again ,
maybe team-first sermons, cutting or
The Redmen did not waisl
n' t care about his legacy. Yet. Belichick chose · Sunday's trading them, or working
any
time in putting the game
Guys like him rarely ge t outfit because the game was them until they wish he'd
out
of
reach as they scored in
hung up worrying about the being played in a climate- gotten rid of them earlier.
the
opening
minute of the
lung hauL It's huw they get controlled dome. We' ll never
Most
imp011ant ,
the
second
half.
Freshman forso much done in such a sho11 know.
Patriots buy into Belichick's
ward
Darren
Griffiths
scored
time.
Fi~urin g Belichick out is a schemes because they work.
off
·
a
corner
kick
from
Look at the way Belichick lifet1me project. He spent
They found a way to get Massie. Senior defender
usuall y dresses. That dingy, most of his early career in Moss deep in single cover- Brendan McManus, along
gray. hooded sweatshirt h.e Bill (Big Bill) Parcell s' shad- age, coaxed a veteran Colts with Massie. was given an
favors was probably a func- ow. and during his first head- offensive line into two penal- assist on the goal.
tiona!' choice the first time he coaching stint in Cleveland, ties on the pivotal drive of the
Rio played add on with the
put it on, prompted by cold he failed to get the players fourth quarter, then put the final score of the game comweather or the snow in New there to believe in him squeeze on Peyton Manning ing in the 55th mmule when
England.
enough to bring all those bril- when it counted most.
freshman forward Ederson
Now that he's caught so liant X-and-0 schemes to
"They force you into play- Lopes scored off an assist
much flak for the outfit, it's life.
.
ing perfect ... keeping the from Massie to give ihe
become just another way for
Finally, though, he won pressure on peofle, forcing Redmen a 3-0 lead.
him to stubbornl y stick it to over enough guys in New you to · play wei for all 60 · Rio held a 17'2 advantage
the man.
England.
minutes. The last game here, on shots. Houghton (9-4-5)
Su Belichick's choice of " As capriciously as he treats the championship game" did not have a shot on goal in
standard coaching fare for many of his players, he's Colts coach Tony Dungy · the game. Rio produced nine
this one, a dark blue polo . fiercely loyal to a core of said. referring to the AFC shots on goal. Erik Lefebvre
shi11 over khak i slacks, might guys Bruschi , Mike fi nale against the Pats that totaled six saves
for
have bee n more revealing Vrabel, Tom Brady, Matt propelled the Colts to a Super Houghton while Ray Nicaise
than anything he said.
Light and others - who Bowl, "we won it in the last collected the shutout with
Maybe he figured when he police the locker room for minute.
garnenng a save.
watches highlights from the him and spread the gospeL
"They won it in the fourth
By winning the game, Rio
perfect season with hi s
He takes chances on some quarter today."
Grande avenged a September
grandkids a dozen years from guys with rough pasts Some day Belichick will 22 loss to Houghton. The
now, they won't thmk he was Randy Moss being just the look back and appreciate Highlanders edged
the
always dressed like Jason latest - and makes examples that, too.
Redmen 2-1 in that game.
from the "Friday the 13th" of others who don 't buy
Just not now.
Rio is 8-0- 1 since that loss:

Was revenge a factor in the
!iame for Rio Grande or was
1t simply about advancing to
the next round? Rio Grande
head coach Scott Morrissey
provides !he answer. "The
guys lalked about 'it, we
talked about it. we fe lt like
that when we played them
during the regular sea,son we
had about as much adversity
as a team could have, both oti
and off the field with suspensions and a lot of distractions,
they capitalized on it in . the
regular season." he said. "!
fe lt if we turned up the play
that we would be able to get a
result ."
·'I think we made it hard
work for ourselves at times,
particularly in the first half,".
Morri ssey added . "Second
half was better, but still the
performance left a little bit to
be desired from my standpoint, I think the guys can
play much better."
Rio advances to face the
winner of other semifin al
match-up between NAJA No.
4 Ohio Dominican and NAJA
No. 20 Notre Dame College:
on Tuesday night. Morrissey
knows hi s team will put forth
an exceptional pe rformanc~
to get.the win.
"We' ve got to play a lot
better Tuesday night, whoev~
er we play,'' he said. ''Both
Ohio Dominican and Notre
Dame are having outstanding
seasons, whoever it is thai
we' re going to play, it's going
to be a great game. One that I
think we' re going to have tQ
bring a little bit more to the
table Tuesday night thari
what we sh!Jwed today.
:
" I think the guys will be up
for it and hopefully we can
put in the_ performance,':
Mornssey added.
.
Ohio Dominican sustained
it 's only loss of the season to
the Redrhen , September 26, a
1-0 overtime win in which
Lopes na iled the deciding
goal. Rio and NDC played t&lt;i
a 2-2 tie at Rio Grande on
October 10.
·
Kick-off time for the game
will be determined. ,
:

I

•
Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
'""' ·"'~ dail~ " '"'"'"!.' .,,._,

I l 1 LSD\ Y. NOVI·.I\1 HER 6, :!1107

:;o CI•.N I'S • \' ol. :;-, No . - ..J •

Sidewalk project nearing co~npletion

SPORTS
• Steelers hammer
Ravens. See Page 81

8Y Bml SEJioENT
BSERGENT®MYDAILYSENTlNEL.COM

OBITUARIES
Page AS
• Robert H. Crow
• Worthy Love

POMEROY - Two years
after the search for funding
began, the sidewalk repair project in Pomeroy is. nearing
· completion.
Acconding to Mayor . John
Musser, currently workers are
completing sidewalk repair on
Mulbe!T)' Avenue and will
continue that repair upwards to
Anne Street. Once the new
sidewalk reaches Anne Street
the project will be complete
and will have expended all the
funds available for the work.
Village Administrator John
Anderson said depending on
the weather, workers could
finish the projecl by the end of
this week.
Through its Community
Development Block Grant
Community Distress progrdiil,
the. village had $73,100 to
spend specifically on side. walks, a proj~X-1 chosen by the
community through surveys.

The village has until July 2008 ·
to spend the grant money on
various · projects throughout
the village, including the
demolition of condemned
houses, improvements at the
Mulbeny Community Center,
equipment for the fire depaninent, etc., again all projects
chosen by the public.
It took three attempts to
·even get contractors to bid.on
the sidewalk project, delaying
the project somewhat.
The following ' sidewalks
were repaired: Spring Avenue
and Main Street to the comer
of Condor Street, Spring
Avenue from the comer .of
Condor Street to Wolfe Drive,
Main Street at the Dollar
General store, Sycamore
Street, Lincoln Hill, Second
Street and Mulbeny Avenue,
and the Meigs County
Courthouse rear parking lot
entr'Jnce.
DGM, Inc. of Beaver was
.• Cha~ene Hoeflich/ photo
contracted to do the repair Workers of DGM, Inc . of Beaver repair the sidewalk on Mulberry Avenue with funds from a
work.
Community Development Block Grant obtained ·by Pomeroy.

THREE INJURED IN ACCIDENT·

INSIDE
• Devotion to uncle
key tOl\etping hirn.
See Page A3
• Litera,Y members hear
historic novel review.
See Page A3
• RACO planning
holiday activities.
See Page A3
• Teachers take
trip to Amish area.
See Page A3
, • Agent advises
gardeners on soil .testing.
See Page A3
• Perspective: Muddy
primary another
.headache for Republicans.
See Page AS
• Woman pleads
guilty in case of slain
pregnant woman, to
testify. See Page AS
• Meigs honor rolls for
first nine weeks released
See Page A6

S• your local·

Group seeks to
bring live music to
those in need, A6

Republican
bean dinner
setfor Nov. 14
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
HOEFLICH@MYDAILYSENTINEL .COM

~'.

.... '•

Beth Sorgentjphoto

Yesterday afternoon three people were taken to local hospitals for treatment of injuries sustained in this car accident on West Main Street in front of Crow's KFC/Long John Silvers. The accident repo rt wa·s not complete at press
time and is being handled by the Pomeroy Police Department. Also on scene were members of the Pomeroy
Volunteer Fire Department, the Middle!;)ort Pollee Department and emergency personnel from Meigs EMS. Two
patients were transported to Holzer Medical Center and one was transported to O'Bieness Memorial" Hospital.

POMEROY - Kevin De Wine
of Greene County who serves as
the .deputy chairman of the Ohio
Republican party, will be speak "
er at the Meigs. County
Republican Par1y's annual fall
bean dinner to be held at 6 p.m.
Nov. 14 in the Meigs High
School cafeteria .
Dewine was appointed to the
created position in April to
ensure an effective tran sition to
chairman up0n the retirement of
the current chair. Bob Bennett. in
January, 2009.
As deputy chairman, DeWine
has taken an active leadership
role in the day-to-day operations
of the party, fro m candidate
recruitment and party messaging
to political strategy and fundraising . He is currently leading an
extensive audit of the party's
infrastructure, evaluating all
aspects of internal and external
operations.
.
DeWine also serves as the primary s pokesman for the Ohio
Republican Party, working
through local, state and national
media
tv
communicate
. Republican accompli shments
and counter the Democratic
Please see Dinner, A5

WEAmER

dealer for a lull line
of STIHL blowers.

ODNR announces youth hunt·
The youth deer-g un ·season is
open statewide . Hunters may
take one deer of either sex duePOMEROY - Ohio's · youth ing this season, in · accordance
deer-gun hunting season will be with existing bag and deer-zone
held Nov. l 7 and 18, according limits. Plugged shotgun s, mu zto the Ohio Department of zleloaders, handguns and bows
Natural Resources Division of are legal.
All participants rnu st wear
Wildlife.
Young hunters killed 8,315 hunter orange, possess a valid
deer during the 2006 two-day Ohio hunting lice nse and deer
season. More than 40,000 permit, and be accompanied by
young hunters are expected to a non-hunting ad ult in the field.
All other .regularly scheduled
participate in the upco ming
hunt.
More than 8,000 . youn g hunting seasons will continu e
hunters have taken advantage of during the two-day youth sea- .
Ohio' s new apprentice hunting son . However, other hunters,
li cense. This new license allows including deer-archery hunters.
novice hunters, both adulls and are required to wear hunter
youth , to sample the experience orange during. this. perlod.
of hunting under the mentorship
This year, Ohio 's deer-gun
of a licensed adult, prior tQ season runs Nov. 26 through
completing a hunter education Dec . 2, with an additional
weeke nd· Dec. 15 and 16.
course .
The appren tice li cense was Details regarding Ohio's vari developed as part of a nation- ous hunting seasons, includin g
wid~ effort called "Famili es those exclusive ly for young
Afield," designed to remove hunters~ can be fo und in the
barriers that prevent hun ters · 2007-08 · Ohio
Hunting
from passing along the hunt ing Re gulations or by visiting
heritage.
wildohio.com .

Election Day

STAFF REPORT

NEWS®MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

BG 55 Handheld Blower
Optional vacuum
and gutter krt
anachmants available

MS 170 Chain Saw
Lightweight, includes
STIHl Quickstop•
chain braka svstam
Details on Page A6

Fully Assembled and Serviced.

GET GEARED UP ... with affordable

INDEX
2

Dettwiller Lumber
634 East Main Street • Pomeroy

740-992-5500
Open 7 Days a week
stihlusa.com

Ale you ready for aSTIHL"7

SEcnoNs -

12 P AGES

- Calendars

A3

Classifieds

B3-4

Comics

B5

Annie's Mailbox

A3

Editorials

A4

Obituaries

As

Sports

B Section

Weather

A6

© aoo7 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

~·

••

Polls are open
from 6:30a.m.
to 7:30p.m. for
the 2007 general election . There
are races in
every precinct in
the county,
including village
offices, township
trustees and fiscal officers and
school board
members .
Several local tax
levies are also
proposed. Here,
Becky Johnston,
Deputy Director
of the Board of
Elections , goes
over last-minute
instruction s with
Nancy Wilford. a
poll worker in
Lebanon
Township.
Brian J. Reed/ photo

�The Daily $entinel

PageA2

NATION • WORLD

Tuesday, November 6,

Bv ROBIN McDOWELL
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

ISLAMAB'AD, Pakistan
- Police fired tear gas and
clubbed lawyers protesting
Monday against President
Gen . Pervez Musharraf's
emergency rule. The U.S.
and other nations called for
elections to be held on schedule and said · they were
reviewing aid to Pakistan.
In the largest protest in the
eastern city of Lahore,
lawyers dressed in black suits
and ties chanted "Musharraf
Go'" as they defied the government's ban on rallies.
Some fought back with
stones and tree branches.
The crackdown mainly targeted Musharraf's most
potent critics - the judiciary
and lawyers, independent
television stations and opposition activists. Opposition
groups said 3,500 had been
arrested, though the govern. ment reported half that totaL
President Bush urged
Musharraf to hold parliamentary elections as scheduled in
January and relinquish his
army post as soon as possi . ble. ''Our hope is that he will
restore democracy as quickly
as possible," Bush said.
But there did not appear to
be a unified position among
senior government officials
on whether they planned to
hold the election as planned.
The attorney general said the
vote would take place as
scheduled but then conceded
there was a chance of a'delay.
The prime minister also left
open the possibility of a
delay.
The demonstrations so far
have been limited largely to
opposition activists, rights
workers and lawyers angered
by his attacks on the judiciary. There does .not appear to
be a groundswell of popular
resistance and all the protests
have been quickly and sometimes brutally stamped out.
The streets of Pakistan
appeared normal Monday
with people going about
business as usual for the most
part.
Musharraf, who took
power in a 1999 coup and is
also head of Pakistan's army,
suspended 'the constitution
on Saturday ahead of a
Supreme Court ruling on
whether his recent re-election
as president was legaL He
ousted seven independentminded Supreme ·Court
judges, put a stranglehold on
independe nt media · and
gran· ' , weeping powers to
nu l :~ .
,,_ In crush dissent.
Mu shan . r"s leadership is
rhreatened by the Islamic
militant movement that has
.spread from border regions to
the capital, the reemergence
of political rivals, including
former prime minister,
Benazir Bhutto, and an
increasingly defiant Supreme
Court.
. . The court has emerged as
the
chief . check
on
Musharraf, who has been
promising democracy ever
since he seized power. The
judiciary has proved surprisingly independent for a country that has been under military rule for most of the 60
years since it was founded.
. The emergency decree
appeared aimed primarily at
heading off any Supreme
Coun challenge to Musharraf
prolonging his eight-year
rule.

The opposition has been
demanding Musharraf relinquish his post as army chief
and says he should be disqualified becau!!C he contested the presidential vote as
army Chief.
Musharraf has also moved
quickly to control the media,
which he said was partly to
blame for the current crisis.
Authorities have blacked out
TV networks and threatened
broadcasters with jail time,
but so far have spared the
Internet and most newspapers. Most people in
Pakistan, where illiteracy is
rife, get their news from TV
or radio.
Police raided and briefly
sealed a printing press
belonging to Pakistan's
largest media group on
Monday. They also tried to
storm a press club in
Karachi. Broadcasts by independent news networks
remained blocked, and
domestic transmissions of
BBC and CNN went off the
air..
Lawyers - who were the
driving force behind protests
earlier this year when'
Musharraf tried unsuccessfully to fire independentminded chief justice Iftikhar
Mohammed Chaudhry - .
attempted to stage rallies in
major cities on Monday. But
the protests were quickly ·
staunped out.
In 'Lahore, about 2,000
lawyers congregated at the
Hig~ Court. As lawyers tried
to exit onto a main road, hundreds of police stormed
inside, swinging batons and
firing tear gas. Lawyers,
shouting "Go Musharraf
Go!" responded by throwing
stones and beating police
with tree branches.
An Associated Press
repnrter saw police bundle
about 250 lawyers into waiting vans. About 20 were
injured, at least two bleeding
from !he head and were treated in a waiting ambulance
before being spirited away.
In the capital, Islamabad,
hundreds of pcilice and paramilitary troops lined roads
and rolled out barbed-wire
barricades on Monday to seal
off the Supreme Court.
Rana Bhagwandas, a
Supreme Court judge who
refused to take . oath under
Musharraf's proclamation of
emergency orders, said he
has been locked inside his
official
residence
in·
Islamabad and that other
judges were being pressured
to support the government
"They are still working on
some ju&lt;;llles, they are under
pressure,' Bhagwandas told
Geo J'V in a phone interview.
Chief justice Chaudhry
was removed from his post
on ~aturday, just as the
Supreme Court was prepar,ing to rule on the valtdity of
Musharraf's Oct. 6 re-election.
"I am virtually arrested,"
Chaudhry said in a written
statement, describing the
emergency declaration as a
"naked attack" on the rule of
law." "The main gate of my
residence has been locked."
Even lawyers who were
not involved in protests
appeared to be targeted.
lmran Qadi Khan said
police pulled him off a bus
near Musharraf's army office
in Rawalpindi, just south of
the capital, as he was.heading
to work.
e

Local stocks
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Akzo (NASDAQ)- 83
Ashland Inc. (NYSE)- 55.61
Big Lots (NYSE)- 22.19 . .
Bob Evans (NASDAQ)- ·

26.06
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Century Aluminum (NASDAQ)

-55.77
Champion (NASDAQ) - 6.23
Charming Shops (NASDAQ) -

' 6.66
City Holding (NASDAQ) -

34.52
Collins (NYSE) - 74.34
DuPont (NYSE) - 47.69
US Bank (NYSE) - 31.24
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40.20
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48.46
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Limited Brands (NYSE) -

21.45
Norfolk Southern ( NYSE) -

50.87

a

"We have been sitting here
since morning," he said from
prison, sitting alongside
other lawyers who stood out
because of their traditional
attorney dress, black jackets
and black ties. "The police
are not telling us anything
a~ut what they plan to do
with us."

Since . late
Saturday,
between I,500 and 1,800
people' have been detained
nationwide, an Interior
Ministry official said on condition of anonymity because
he was not authorized 1 (o
speak to the media.
But Ahsan ~qbal , a
spokesman for former Prime
Minister Nawaz Sharif's
opposition party, said author- ·
ities had rounded up around
2,300 of their supporters.
Other political activists,
human rights groups, and · Federal Consumer Protection
lawyers added another 1,200
detentions to that tolL
They included at least 173
workers and supporters of
Bhutto, who has held taJks in "BOSTON- National Fuelsaver
recent
months
with
Corp. has developed a low
Musharraf over a possible
cost automotive accessory
alliance to fight extremism,
called the Platinum Gas
said Pakistan People's Party
spokesman
Farhatullah
Saver which is guarantee,d
Babar.
to increase gas mileage by
22% while meeting all
emission ·standards.
With a simple connection
to a. vacuum line, the Gas
Saver adds platinum vapor
economically to the air and
fu~l entering the engine.
Since platinum enables
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• 10 e-mail addrttllll! w~h WetlmaiH
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Since unburnt fuel leaving
.

AP photo

has
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.

Device may increase gas mileage by 22%
an engine is pollution , this
22% of each gallon
normally burns when it
reaches the platinum of the
catalytic converter.
Unfortunately, the converter's
platinum burns this fuel
outside of the engine, where
the heat and energy produced
from this fuel cannot give
you more miles per gallon.
But when the air and fuel
cany the platinum into the
engine, 22% more of each
gallon burns inside the
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gallons are required to drive
the same distance.
After a five year study,
the government concluded:
"Independent testing shows
greater fuel savings with the

Gas Saver than the 22%
claimed by the developer."
In addition, the Gas Saver
has received patents for
cleaning out the carbon and
ralsmg octane, making
premium fuels unnecessary
for most vehicles.
Joe Robinson, the developer,
commented: "Since the
government concluded its
study, we have sold a half
million Gas Savers. To our
surprise, more people buy
the Gas Saver because it
extends engine life by
cleaning out the carbon than
buy it to increase gas
mileage or to raise octane."
For further information call:
1-800-LESs-GAS

1-800·537· 7427

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Community Calendar

'

Public meeting

Eastern Music Boosters 7 Harvest Festival, 4-8 p.m.,
p.m., band room .
•
Reedsville
United
POMEROY
Drew
Methodist Church. Chicken
Thesday, Nov. 6
Webster
Post
39,
7
p.m.
at
noodle dinner, karaoke,
. REEDSVILLE - Olive
the
post
home.
games,
country store.
Township Trustees, 7:30
SYRACUSE
p.m., Olive Township
Wildwood Garden Club,
Sunday, Nov. 11
Garage.
6:30
p.m.
in
the
Syracuse
·
POMEROY
-Carleton
PAGEVJLLE - Scipio
Community
Center.
Janet
Church, special service with
Township trustees will meet
Bolin
to
present
workshop
guest singers Sound gf
at 6:30p.m. at the Pageville
for
Christmas
flower
show.
Praise. 10 a.m. with former
town hall.
pastor speaking. Potluck to
ALFRED Orange
Nov.
8
Thursday,
follow
service with singspiTownship Trustees, 7:30
TUPPERS
PLAINS
ration
at
I :30 p.m.
p.m. home of the fi scal oftlVFW Post 9053 will meet at
POMEROY Point
cer, Osie Follrod.
7 p.m. at the hall . Mel Rock Nazarene homecomserved at 6:30 p.m.
ing, II a.m.
. Wednesday, Nov. 7
RACINE
The
ALBANY - "Day of
POMEROY
The
Sonshine
Circle
will
meet
at
Celebration,"
with Brother
Meigs County Board of
7
p.m.
at
the
Bethany
Clifford
B.
Coleman,
speHealth, regular meeting, 5
p.m ., Meigs County Health United Methodi st Church. cial music, I 0:30 a.m. - 7
Department, third and final Letha Proffitt and Jo Lee, p.m ., Carpenter Baptist
Church.
public reading of proposed hostesses.
POMEROY - Alpha Iota
sewage treatment system
Masters,
II :30 a.m. at the
rules, public comments
United
Methodist
Church.
accepted.
CHESTER - Shade River
CHESTER Chester
Sunday, Nov. 11
Lodge
453, 7:30p.m. for the
Township Trustees meet at 7
RACINE
- "Honor the
p:m., town halL Meeting purpose of the annual elec- Veterans," 10:40 a.m.,
tion of officers. Annual dues
changed due to election.
First
Baptist
payable. Oyster stew fol- Racine
Church,
veterans
of the
lowing meeting.
armed forces invited to the
· service meant to show
appreciation for those who
have served America, dinThesday, Nov. 6
Saturday, Nov. 10
ner served immediately
TUPPERS PLAINS
REEDSVILLE
afterwards.

Other events

Clubs and
organizations

-

Church events

adVises gardeners on soil

· POMEROY Meigs
County's
Agriculture
Extension Educator, Hal
Kneen, was the featured
speaker
at
Wildwood
Garden Club's recent meeting held at the home of Betty
Milhoan .
. Kneen spoke on the
1mportance of soil testing to
measure the acidity or alkalinity of the garden. He said
soil te sting is needed for
healthier plants. A soil test
provides valuable information needed for successful
gardening: soil pH, organic
matter content, levels of
phosph&lt;:&gt;rils,
potass!um,
. :magnesiUm, and calciUm,
: ·and fertilizer recommenda: :lions based on crops that
::will be planted. The pH
. scale ranges from I to 14.
: Acid soils ran~e from I to
: 6.9, neutral sotls are 7, and
, .alkaline soils measure 7.I to
14. It is important to know
: the pH of the soil because if
· affects the availability' of
· plant nutrients. At the pH
: extremes, . nutrients become
· .Jess available. For example,
if the soil is too alkahne,
plants cannot take up iron,
which results in leaves yellowing. Iron sulfate or alu-

minum sulfate can be added
to the soil to correct this
problem.
Most soils in Meigs
County range from 5 to 7,
but when commercial fertilizers are used, the soil
becomes more acidic. Lime
will need to be applied to
make the soil more alkaline,
he .said. The fall is the best
time to add amendments to
the soil to get gardens readY.
for spring planting. Sotl
saunples can be dug with a
~arden. spade from IS points
tn a ztg-zag pattern across
the fieJd .or garden. The soil
$amples are placed in a plastic container, mixed and
allowed to dry naturally.
The samples can then be
taken to the M.eigs County
Extension office to be sent
away for analysis.
.
Kneen also stated that soil
nutrients utilized by cropsneed to be replaced annually. Planting a cover crop.
adding three to four inches
of organic matter and crop
rotation are all important
steps in amending the soil.
Kneen cautioned about
applying pesticides for
grubs and insects since they
are deadly to earthworms

and beneficial insects such
as bees.
Kneen completed his presentation by announcing that
Master Gardener classes
be
held
on
would
Wednesdays during January
and February at the O.S. U.
Extension Office.
President Shirley _Hamm
announced · plans and the
dates for the O.A.G.C Fall
Regional Meeting and presented "Now is the Time" to
dig cannas and begonias,
divide perennials, harvest
green tomatoes and squash,'
prepare beds for spring, and
have the soil tested. Sara
Roush read devotions, and
Joy Bentley distributed the
new
program
books.,
Hostesses Betty Milhoan
and Peggy Moore serv\Jd
refreshments to Diana Ash,
Rita Cunningham, Evelyn
Hollon, Linda Russell,
Riona Nally, and members
previously mentioned. The
next meeting is scheduled
for November 8 at the
Syracuse
Community
Genter with Janet Bolin presenting a workshop for the
Christmas Flower Show.

Teachers take trip to Amish area
POMEROY - .The Alpha
Omicron Chapter of Delta
Kappa Gamma society ·
members recently took a
field trip to the Keirn Family
Amish store in Adams
County.
_
. The members enjoyed seemg all the handcrafted ttems
made by the workers there,
as well as the homemade
food items they had made.
After the tour, members had
lunch at a restaurant in
Waverly where the business
meeting took place.
In October the group met
at a steak house in Jackson
where the topic of discussion
revolved around projects ,

one of which will be submit·
The next meeting will be
ted for the 75th anniversary held on Nov. 10 at the
of Delta Kappa Gamma. Dr. Golden Corral in Gallipolis.
Mary Jane Kaufman, · the Each member is asked to
state president, reported that bring a basket to be raffled
the theme for the next con- off· for the scholarship fund,
vention is "Sharing the Joy and to bring a bread recipe
of ~he Journey". Each chap- for the cook book project.
ter ts to select an outstanding
Alpha Omicron Chapter of
member and to feature a dis- Delta Kappa Gamma, is a
play of that person's accom- three-county group made up
plishments. for their chapter of teachers, both active and
at the convention. Fund rais- retired,' from
Vinton,
ers including a sale of &lt;;ook- Jackson, and Meigs. Those
books are projects that will attending the recent meeting
be conducted to help raise from Meigs County were
money for scholarships, and Emma Ashley, Paula Whitt,
to help women and children Becky Zurcher, Jo Ann
in need at the Serenity House Hayes, Marge Fetty, Rosalie
and Shepherd's House.
· Story, and Gay Perrin.

PageA3
Tuesday, November 6,

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•

RACINE
Projects
underway at Star Mill Park
• we're reported on at the
recent meeting of the Racine
Area
Community
· Organization.
• Dale hart noted that the
new restrooms at the park
: are nearing completion, that
school items had been deliv• ered to the Home land
Security group, and that the
skateboard park is under
construction. Kathryn Ha
conducted the meeting with
officers giving reports. ·It
was noted that RACO is
already collecting items for
the spring yard sale.
Several thank you notes'
were read including one
from Rocksprings Rehab
Center for donated yard sale
items and from Marshall
University for scholarship
money for Adaun Phillips.
Appreciation plaques will be
given to Ary!P-Ohio and
•'

Pleasant Valley Hospital for
purchasing t-shirts which
were worn while members
worked at the Meigs County
fair gates.
.
The RACO food drive will
be held Dec. I in downtown
Racine . Again this year
RACO will be preparing
Christmas treats for those
confined to their homes, will
be sponsoring the decorating
contest, and will be carrying
out other projects for local
nursing homes.
A discussion was held on
making improvements to the
Star Mill Park building. The
money earned from working
the fair gates will fund part
of the work, it was reported.
The Chri stmas villages will
be displayed in the park this
year. ·
·
For the potluck dinner,
Tonja Hunter gave the blessing. The pledge to the flag
concluded the meeting .

2007

ANNIE'-S MAILBOX

Devotion to uncle key to helping him
change ones personality and
that could be adding to his
AND MARCY SUGAR
intrac tability. Also, his docDear 'Annie: My "Uncle tor may not have adequately
Mike" is 82. He has prostate explamed that antidepresproblems and is legally sants can take as long as six
blind and currently recover- weeks to be effective. and
ing from a mild stroke. He that initial side effects can
takes medication and has include nausea. Please talk
' physical therapy every to Uncle Mike and tell him
week . Uncle Mike never how much you love him and
married, but he has three sis- want to mal&lt;e his life better.
ters and many grown nieces Ask if you can accompany
and nephews, all of whom him to liis next appointment
would do anything for him. and discuss the problem in
Uncle Mike is extremely front of the·doctor.
Dear Annie: We vi sit
depressed about his physical
often
with my husband's
limitations. We try to
encourage him, but it's brother and his wife. Last
impossible to cheer him up. night, we were playing cards
Whenever we call or visit, at their house and my brothwe hear the saune complaints er-in-law said my husband's
over and over. Hj: hates his ex-girlfriend was trying· to
life, he feels -miserable and get in touch with him and
on and on. He never has a gave my husband her phone
positive thing to say to any- number. I told my husband
upset me and he should
one. We have begged him to this
have told his brother he wasseek help for his depression. n't interested.
He says he took an antideI take a lot of verbal abuse
pressant for three days 18 from my in-law s. They have
months ago, but didn't like nicknamed me "Dumb
the way it made him feel, so Dora" and make unkind
he stopped. Since then, he remarks about my height.
insists nothing can possibly (They also mock ·my new
help.
·
sister-in-law. ) My husband
Uncle Mjke's doctor says insists it's all in fun and I
we cannot force him to seek need to get over the hurt . It
treatment. Many family seems after 30 years, they
members have stopped call- still think my husband can
ing or visiting because he is do better. I worry they are
just too diftlcult. The Uncle making him believe it, too.
Mike I remember was a kind What can I do? - Not So
and loving person. 1 have Dumb Dora
not seen that man in a very
Dear Dora: Your in-laws
long time, but I know he's are bullies who feel superior
still in there somewhere. only · when they can bring
How can I help?
everyone else down to their
California
level. Your husband should
Dear California: You are stick up for you, but it seems
a kind and devoted soul to unlikely. Yes, he should
stick by Uncle Mike, no" have said he wasn't interestmatter how difficult he ed in the phone number or
makes it. A stroke can thrown it out. The question
BY KATHY MITCHELL

is, do yo u tru st your husband
enough to let him deal with
the ex-girlfriend from more
than 30 years ago'' If you do,
don't make an issue of the
phone number. If you &lt;;lon't,
your marri age is already in
tro uble.
Dear Annie: Will you
please do your adult readers
a favor and stop printing letters fro m children and
teen s? For heaven's sake,
isn't anything sacred anymore 0 We now live in a
world where virtually all
print and TV . media suck up
to youth . We adults would
prefer to read about adult
issues, not whether some
third-grader is popular.
Enough! - Fru.~trated in ·
California
Dear Frustrated: We
offer advice to anyone who
writes. Young people have
problems. too, and if you're
not interested in those,
there's always another letter
m the column that may work
tor you. When we were in
grade school, we read Ann
Landers' column every day
and learned a lot - including not to turn our backs on
anyone who needs a shoulder to lean on .
Annie's Mailbox is written by Kathy Mitchell and
Marcy Sugar, longtime editors of the Ann Landers column. Please e-mail your
questions 'to anniesmailbox@comcast.net, or write
to: Annie's Mailbox, P.O.
Box 118190, Chicago, JL
60611. To find out more
about Annie's Mailbox, and
read features by other
Creators Syndicate writers
and cartoonists, visit the
Creators Syndicate Web
page at www.creators.com.

Literary members hear historic novel review
POMEROY - Nadine
(Joebel reviewed "East
Wind, Rain," a historical
novel by Caroline Paul,
when
the
Middleport
Literary Club met recently
at the Pomeroy Library.
The book is set at the time
of the Japane~e attack on
Pearl Harbor in December,
1941 which brought the
United States of America
into World War II. ''East
Wind, Rain" was the
Japanese code name for the
United States.
Paul's book tells the story
of a Japanese pilot who took
part in the attack and is
unable to return to his aircraft carrier because of his
plane's gas tank having been
hit. He lands his craft on the
Island of Niihau in the
Hawaiian group which he
believes to be uninhabited. It
. isn't.
The Robinson family privately owns the small island
and the people on the island
work for Mr. Robinson.
They are dependent upon
htm · for
everything.
Robinson doesn't want the
Niihauans to be disturbed by
any outside. influences so
they have no knowledge of
the war.
Over the next seven days
the people feed and care for
the pilot while waiting for
Robinson to come and take
care of the situation.
There are only· three
Japanese people on the

island who can communicate with the pilot whose
gun and papers have been
taken. Playing on their
wavering loyalties, the pilot
convinces these three to help
him. On Dec. 13, 1941, it all
comes to an end. Goebel
said the conclusion is not
one you would likely have
guessed.

The next meeting will be
on Nov. 14 at the Pomeroy ·
Library with Jeanne Bowen
reviewing "Last Flag Down,
Epic Journey of the Last
Confederate Warship" by
John Baldwin and Ron
Powers. Marlene Kuhn will
be the hostess.
Pat Holter · hosted the
October meeting.

MEIGS COUNTY CDBG 07 COMMUNITY
HOUSING
IMPROVEMENT PROGRAM
NOTICE OF EXPLANATION FLOOD PLAIN
DEVELOPMENT
Meigs County intends to undertake a CDBG 07 CDBG
Community Distress Program Clearance project, for the
purpose of home repair/home rehab1litalion/homeownership 'of
various housing units within the Meigs County. Ponions of the
project may be located 111 lhe I00 year tloodplain. the
proposed projects cannot be undertaken in any other location
as there is no practical alternati ve liJr the location of the
projects . The CHIP project can only take place where there js
a need and il is known thai the need may he targeted in these
base tlood areas. Therefore, it is the judgment of the Meigs
County Commissioners thai the henel'ils LO the LMI residems
that live in these areas in various locations in Meigs County.
outweighs considemliun of Executive Orders 11988 and
11990.

A more detailed description of the project and the FIRM Flood
Maps are available for citizen review al the Meigs Coumy
Grants Office, 117 East Memorial Drive. Suite 7, Pomeroy,
Ohio 45769.
Meigs Coumy Commissioners
Mi~k Davenport, Presidem

RACO planning holiday activities

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Premier {NASDAQ) - 13
Rockwell (NYSEI - 68.18
Rocky Boots (NASDAQ) -

2007

A pollee offi. cer kicks
tear gas canister towards
lawyers at
the High
Court who
are protesting again.st
Pakistan's
military ruler
President
Gen. Pervez
Musharraf,
for imposing
the emergency,
Monday,
Nov. 5,
2007, in
Lahore,
Pakistan.
Police fired
tear gas and
used batons
during clashes with
lawyers .

Police in Pakistan clash with
lawyers protesting state of emergency

The Dally Sentinel

JeHBassett
Home Loan Specialist

421 Main Street
P.O. Box 37
Point Pleasant, WV
www.peoplesbancorp.com
jbassett@pebo.com

304-674-4406
Toll Free 800-374-6123
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Ce/1304-210-7016
Member FDIC

�The Daily $entinel

PageA2

NATION • WORLD

Tuesday, November 6,

Bv ROBIN McDOWELL
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

ISLAMAB'AD, Pakistan
- Police fired tear gas and
clubbed lawyers protesting
Monday against President
Gen . Pervez Musharraf's
emergency rule. The U.S.
and other nations called for
elections to be held on schedule and said · they were
reviewing aid to Pakistan.
In the largest protest in the
eastern city of Lahore,
lawyers dressed in black suits
and ties chanted "Musharraf
Go'" as they defied the government's ban on rallies.
Some fought back with
stones and tree branches.
The crackdown mainly targeted Musharraf's most
potent critics - the judiciary
and lawyers, independent
television stations and opposition activists. Opposition
groups said 3,500 had been
arrested, though the govern. ment reported half that totaL
President Bush urged
Musharraf to hold parliamentary elections as scheduled in
January and relinquish his
army post as soon as possi . ble. ''Our hope is that he will
restore democracy as quickly
as possible," Bush said.
But there did not appear to
be a unified position among
senior government officials
on whether they planned to
hold the election as planned.
The attorney general said the
vote would take place as
scheduled but then conceded
there was a chance of a'delay.
The prime minister also left
open the possibility of a
delay.
The demonstrations so far
have been limited largely to
opposition activists, rights
workers and lawyers angered
by his attacks on the judiciary. There does .not appear to
be a groundswell of popular
resistance and all the protests
have been quickly and sometimes brutally stamped out.
The streets of Pakistan
appeared normal Monday
with people going about
business as usual for the most
part.
Musharraf, who took
power in a 1999 coup and is
also head of Pakistan's army,
suspended 'the constitution
on Saturday ahead of a
Supreme Court ruling on
whether his recent re-election
as president was legaL He
ousted seven independentminded Supreme ·Court
judges, put a stranglehold on
independe nt media · and
gran· ' , weeping powers to
nu l :~ .
,,_ In crush dissent.
Mu shan . r"s leadership is
rhreatened by the Islamic
militant movement that has
.spread from border regions to
the capital, the reemergence
of political rivals, including
former prime minister,
Benazir Bhutto, and an
increasingly defiant Supreme
Court.
. . The court has emerged as
the
chief . check
on
Musharraf, who has been
promising democracy ever
since he seized power. The
judiciary has proved surprisingly independent for a country that has been under military rule for most of the 60
years since it was founded.
. The emergency decree
appeared aimed primarily at
heading off any Supreme
Coun challenge to Musharraf
prolonging his eight-year
rule.

The opposition has been
demanding Musharraf relinquish his post as army chief
and says he should be disqualified becau!!C he contested the presidential vote as
army Chief.
Musharraf has also moved
quickly to control the media,
which he said was partly to
blame for the current crisis.
Authorities have blacked out
TV networks and threatened
broadcasters with jail time,
but so far have spared the
Internet and most newspapers. Most people in
Pakistan, where illiteracy is
rife, get their news from TV
or radio.
Police raided and briefly
sealed a printing press
belonging to Pakistan's
largest media group on
Monday. They also tried to
storm a press club in
Karachi. Broadcasts by independent news networks
remained blocked, and
domestic transmissions of
BBC and CNN went off the
air..
Lawyers - who were the
driving force behind protests
earlier this year when'
Musharraf tried unsuccessfully to fire independentminded chief justice Iftikhar
Mohammed Chaudhry - .
attempted to stage rallies in
major cities on Monday. But
the protests were quickly ·
staunped out.
In 'Lahore, about 2,000
lawyers congregated at the
Hig~ Court. As lawyers tried
to exit onto a main road, hundreds of police stormed
inside, swinging batons and
firing tear gas. Lawyers,
shouting "Go Musharraf
Go!" responded by throwing
stones and beating police
with tree branches.
An Associated Press
repnrter saw police bundle
about 250 lawyers into waiting vans. About 20 were
injured, at least two bleeding
from !he head and were treated in a waiting ambulance
before being spirited away.
In the capital, Islamabad,
hundreds of pcilice and paramilitary troops lined roads
and rolled out barbed-wire
barricades on Monday to seal
off the Supreme Court.
Rana Bhagwandas, a
Supreme Court judge who
refused to take . oath under
Musharraf's proclamation of
emergency orders, said he
has been locked inside his
official
residence
in·
Islamabad and that other
judges were being pressured
to support the government
"They are still working on
some ju&lt;;llles, they are under
pressure,' Bhagwandas told
Geo J'V in a phone interview.
Chief justice Chaudhry
was removed from his post
on ~aturday, just as the
Supreme Court was prepar,ing to rule on the valtdity of
Musharraf's Oct. 6 re-election.
"I am virtually arrested,"
Chaudhry said in a written
statement, describing the
emergency declaration as a
"naked attack" on the rule of
law." "The main gate of my
residence has been locked."
Even lawyers who were
not involved in protests
appeared to be targeted.
lmran Qadi Khan said
police pulled him off a bus
near Musharraf's army office
in Rawalpindi, just south of
the capital, as he was.heading
to work.
e

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50.87

a

"We have been sitting here
since morning," he said from
prison, sitting alongside
other lawyers who stood out
because of their traditional
attorney dress, black jackets
and black ties. "The police
are not telling us anything
a~ut what they plan to do
with us."

Since . late
Saturday,
between I,500 and 1,800
people' have been detained
nationwide, an Interior
Ministry official said on condition of anonymity because
he was not authorized 1 (o
speak to the media.
But Ahsan ~qbal , a
spokesman for former Prime
Minister Nawaz Sharif's
opposition party, said author- ·
ities had rounded up around
2,300 of their supporters.
Other political activists,
human rights groups, and · Federal Consumer Protection
lawyers added another 1,200
detentions to that tolL
They included at least 173
workers and supporters of
Bhutto, who has held taJks in "BOSTON- National Fuelsaver
recent
months
with
Corp. has developed a low
Musharraf over a possible
cost automotive accessory
alliance to fight extremism,
called the Platinum Gas
said Pakistan People's Party
spokesman
Farhatullah
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Babar.
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BY THE BEND

Community Calendar

'

Public meeting

Eastern Music Boosters 7 Harvest Festival, 4-8 p.m.,
p.m., band room .
•
Reedsville
United
POMEROY
Drew
Methodist Church. Chicken
Thesday, Nov. 6
Webster
Post
39,
7
p.m.
at
noodle dinner, karaoke,
. REEDSVILLE - Olive
the
post
home.
games,
country store.
Township Trustees, 7:30
SYRACUSE
p.m., Olive Township
Wildwood Garden Club,
Sunday, Nov. 11
Garage.
6:30
p.m.
in
the
Syracuse
·
POMEROY
-Carleton
PAGEVJLLE - Scipio
Community
Center.
Janet
Church, special service with
Township trustees will meet
Bolin
to
present
workshop
guest singers Sound gf
at 6:30p.m. at the Pageville
for
Christmas
flower
show.
Praise. 10 a.m. with former
town hall.
pastor speaking. Potluck to
ALFRED Orange
Nov.
8
Thursday,
follow
service with singspiTownship Trustees, 7:30
TUPPERS
PLAINS
ration
at
I :30 p.m.
p.m. home of the fi scal oftlVFW Post 9053 will meet at
POMEROY Point
cer, Osie Follrod.
7 p.m. at the hall . Mel Rock Nazarene homecomserved at 6:30 p.m.
ing, II a.m.
. Wednesday, Nov. 7
RACINE
The
ALBANY - "Day of
POMEROY
The
Sonshine
Circle
will
meet
at
Celebration,"
with Brother
Meigs County Board of
7
p.m.
at
the
Bethany
Clifford
B.
Coleman,
speHealth, regular meeting, 5
p.m ., Meigs County Health United Methodi st Church. cial music, I 0:30 a.m. - 7
Department, third and final Letha Proffitt and Jo Lee, p.m ., Carpenter Baptist
Church.
public reading of proposed hostesses.
POMEROY - Alpha Iota
sewage treatment system
Masters,
II :30 a.m. at the
rules, public comments
United
Methodist
Church.
accepted.
CHESTER - Shade River
CHESTER Chester
Sunday, Nov. 11
Lodge
453, 7:30p.m. for the
Township Trustees meet at 7
RACINE
- "Honor the
p:m., town halL Meeting purpose of the annual elec- Veterans," 10:40 a.m.,
tion of officers. Annual dues
changed due to election.
First
Baptist
payable. Oyster stew fol- Racine
Church,
veterans
of the
lowing meeting.
armed forces invited to the
· service meant to show
appreciation for those who
have served America, dinThesday, Nov. 6
Saturday, Nov. 10
ner served immediately
TUPPERS PLAINS
REEDSVILLE
afterwards.

Other events

Clubs and
organizations

-

Church events

adVises gardeners on soil

· POMEROY Meigs
County's
Agriculture
Extension Educator, Hal
Kneen, was the featured
speaker
at
Wildwood
Garden Club's recent meeting held at the home of Betty
Milhoan .
. Kneen spoke on the
1mportance of soil testing to
measure the acidity or alkalinity of the garden. He said
soil te sting is needed for
healthier plants. A soil test
provides valuable information needed for successful
gardening: soil pH, organic
matter content, levels of
phosph&lt;:&gt;rils,
potass!um,
. :magnesiUm, and calciUm,
: ·and fertilizer recommenda: :lions based on crops that
::will be planted. The pH
. scale ranges from I to 14.
: Acid soils ran~e from I to
: 6.9, neutral sotls are 7, and
, .alkaline soils measure 7.I to
14. It is important to know
: the pH of the soil because if
· affects the availability' of
· plant nutrients. At the pH
: extremes, . nutrients become
· .Jess available. For example,
if the soil is too alkahne,
plants cannot take up iron,
which results in leaves yellowing. Iron sulfate or alu-

minum sulfate can be added
to the soil to correct this
problem.
Most soils in Meigs
County range from 5 to 7,
but when commercial fertilizers are used, the soil
becomes more acidic. Lime
will need to be applied to
make the soil more alkaline,
he .said. The fall is the best
time to add amendments to
the soil to get gardens readY.
for spring planting. Sotl
saunples can be dug with a
~arden. spade from IS points
tn a ztg-zag pattern across
the fieJd .or garden. The soil
$amples are placed in a plastic container, mixed and
allowed to dry naturally.
The samples can then be
taken to the M.eigs County
Extension office to be sent
away for analysis.
.
Kneen also stated that soil
nutrients utilized by cropsneed to be replaced annually. Planting a cover crop.
adding three to four inches
of organic matter and crop
rotation are all important
steps in amending the soil.
Kneen cautioned about
applying pesticides for
grubs and insects since they
are deadly to earthworms

and beneficial insects such
as bees.
Kneen completed his presentation by announcing that
Master Gardener classes
be
held
on
would
Wednesdays during January
and February at the O.S. U.
Extension Office.
President Shirley _Hamm
announced · plans and the
dates for the O.A.G.C Fall
Regional Meeting and presented "Now is the Time" to
dig cannas and begonias,
divide perennials, harvest
green tomatoes and squash,'
prepare beds for spring, and
have the soil tested. Sara
Roush read devotions, and
Joy Bentley distributed the
new
program
books.,
Hostesses Betty Milhoan
and Peggy Moore serv\Jd
refreshments to Diana Ash,
Rita Cunningham, Evelyn
Hollon, Linda Russell,
Riona Nally, and members
previously mentioned. The
next meeting is scheduled
for November 8 at the
Syracuse
Community
Genter with Janet Bolin presenting a workshop for the
Christmas Flower Show.

Teachers take trip to Amish area
POMEROY - .The Alpha
Omicron Chapter of Delta
Kappa Gamma society ·
members recently took a
field trip to the Keirn Family
Amish store in Adams
County.
_
. The members enjoyed seemg all the handcrafted ttems
made by the workers there,
as well as the homemade
food items they had made.
After the tour, members had
lunch at a restaurant in
Waverly where the business
meeting took place.
In October the group met
at a steak house in Jackson
where the topic of discussion
revolved around projects ,

one of which will be submit·
The next meeting will be
ted for the 75th anniversary held on Nov. 10 at the
of Delta Kappa Gamma. Dr. Golden Corral in Gallipolis.
Mary Jane Kaufman, · the Each member is asked to
state president, reported that bring a basket to be raffled
the theme for the next con- off· for the scholarship fund,
vention is "Sharing the Joy and to bring a bread recipe
of ~he Journey". Each chap- for the cook book project.
ter ts to select an outstanding
Alpha Omicron Chapter of
member and to feature a dis- Delta Kappa Gamma, is a
play of that person's accom- three-county group made up
plishments. for their chapter of teachers, both active and
at the convention. Fund rais- retired,' from
Vinton,
ers including a sale of &lt;;ook- Jackson, and Meigs. Those
books are projects that will attending the recent meeting
be conducted to help raise from Meigs County were
money for scholarships, and Emma Ashley, Paula Whitt,
to help women and children Becky Zurcher, Jo Ann
in need at the Serenity House Hayes, Marge Fetty, Rosalie
and Shepherd's House.
· Story, and Gay Perrin.

PageA3
Tuesday, November 6,

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•

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•

RACINE
Projects
underway at Star Mill Park
• we're reported on at the
recent meeting of the Racine
Area
Community
· Organization.
• Dale hart noted that the
new restrooms at the park
: are nearing completion, that
school items had been deliv• ered to the Home land
Security group, and that the
skateboard park is under
construction. Kathryn Ha
conducted the meeting with
officers giving reports. ·It
was noted that RACO is
already collecting items for
the spring yard sale.
Several thank you notes'
were read including one
from Rocksprings Rehab
Center for donated yard sale
items and from Marshall
University for scholarship
money for Adaun Phillips.
Appreciation plaques will be
given to Ary!P-Ohio and
•'

Pleasant Valley Hospital for
purchasing t-shirts which
were worn while members
worked at the Meigs County
fair gates.
.
The RACO food drive will
be held Dec. I in downtown
Racine . Again this year
RACO will be preparing
Christmas treats for those
confined to their homes, will
be sponsoring the decorating
contest, and will be carrying
out other projects for local
nursing homes.
A discussion was held on
making improvements to the
Star Mill Park building. The
money earned from working
the fair gates will fund part
of the work, it was reported.
The Chri stmas villages will
be displayed in the park this
year. ·
·
For the potluck dinner,
Tonja Hunter gave the blessing. The pledge to the flag
concluded the meeting .

2007

ANNIE'-S MAILBOX

Devotion to uncle key to helping him
change ones personality and
that could be adding to his
AND MARCY SUGAR
intrac tability. Also, his docDear 'Annie: My "Uncle tor may not have adequately
Mike" is 82. He has prostate explamed that antidepresproblems and is legally sants can take as long as six
blind and currently recover- weeks to be effective. and
ing from a mild stroke. He that initial side effects can
takes medication and has include nausea. Please talk
' physical therapy every to Uncle Mike and tell him
week . Uncle Mike never how much you love him and
married, but he has three sis- want to mal&lt;e his life better.
ters and many grown nieces Ask if you can accompany
and nephews, all of whom him to liis next appointment
would do anything for him. and discuss the problem in
Uncle Mike is extremely front of the·doctor.
Dear Annie: We vi sit
depressed about his physical
often
with my husband's
limitations. We try to
encourage him, but it's brother and his wife. Last
impossible to cheer him up. night, we were playing cards
Whenever we call or visit, at their house and my brothwe hear the saune complaints er-in-law said my husband's
over and over. Hj: hates his ex-girlfriend was trying· to
life, he feels -miserable and get in touch with him and
on and on. He never has a gave my husband her phone
positive thing to say to any- number. I told my husband
upset me and he should
one. We have begged him to this
have told his brother he wasseek help for his depression. n't interested.
He says he took an antideI take a lot of verbal abuse
pressant for three days 18 from my in-law s. They have
months ago, but didn't like nicknamed me "Dumb
the way it made him feel, so Dora" and make unkind
he stopped. Since then, he remarks about my height.
insists nothing can possibly (They also mock ·my new
help.
·
sister-in-law. ) My husband
Uncle Mjke's doctor says insists it's all in fun and I
we cannot force him to seek need to get over the hurt . It
treatment. Many family seems after 30 years, they
members have stopped call- still think my husband can
ing or visiting because he is do better. I worry they are
just too diftlcult. The Uncle making him believe it, too.
Mike I remember was a kind What can I do? - Not So
and loving person. 1 have Dumb Dora
not seen that man in a very
Dear Dora: Your in-laws
long time, but I know he's are bullies who feel superior
still in there somewhere. only · when they can bring
How can I help?
everyone else down to their
California
level. Your husband should
Dear California: You are stick up for you, but it seems
a kind and devoted soul to unlikely. Yes, he should
stick by Uncle Mike, no" have said he wasn't interestmatter how difficult he ed in the phone number or
makes it. A stroke can thrown it out. The question
BY KATHY MITCHELL

is, do yo u tru st your husband
enough to let him deal with
the ex-girlfriend from more
than 30 years ago'' If you do,
don't make an issue of the
phone number. If you &lt;;lon't,
your marri age is already in
tro uble.
Dear Annie: Will you
please do your adult readers
a favor and stop printing letters fro m children and
teen s? For heaven's sake,
isn't anything sacred anymore 0 We now live in a
world where virtually all
print and TV . media suck up
to youth . We adults would
prefer to read about adult
issues, not whether some
third-grader is popular.
Enough! - Fru.~trated in ·
California
Dear Frustrated: We
offer advice to anyone who
writes. Young people have
problems. too, and if you're
not interested in those,
there's always another letter
m the column that may work
tor you. When we were in
grade school, we read Ann
Landers' column every day
and learned a lot - including not to turn our backs on
anyone who needs a shoulder to lean on .
Annie's Mailbox is written by Kathy Mitchell and
Marcy Sugar, longtime editors of the Ann Landers column. Please e-mail your
questions 'to anniesmailbox@comcast.net, or write
to: Annie's Mailbox, P.O.
Box 118190, Chicago, JL
60611. To find out more
about Annie's Mailbox, and
read features by other
Creators Syndicate writers
and cartoonists, visit the
Creators Syndicate Web
page at www.creators.com.

Literary members hear historic novel review
POMEROY - Nadine
(Joebel reviewed "East
Wind, Rain," a historical
novel by Caroline Paul,
when
the
Middleport
Literary Club met recently
at the Pomeroy Library.
The book is set at the time
of the Japane~e attack on
Pearl Harbor in December,
1941 which brought the
United States of America
into World War II. ''East
Wind, Rain" was the
Japanese code name for the
United States.
Paul's book tells the story
of a Japanese pilot who took
part in the attack and is
unable to return to his aircraft carrier because of his
plane's gas tank having been
hit. He lands his craft on the
Island of Niihau in the
Hawaiian group which he
believes to be uninhabited. It
. isn't.
The Robinson family privately owns the small island
and the people on the island
work for Mr. Robinson.
They are dependent upon
htm · for
everything.
Robinson doesn't want the
Niihauans to be disturbed by
any outside. influences so
they have no knowledge of
the war.
Over the next seven days
the people feed and care for
the pilot while waiting for
Robinson to come and take
care of the situation.
There are only· three
Japanese people on the

island who can communicate with the pilot whose
gun and papers have been
taken. Playing on their
wavering loyalties, the pilot
convinces these three to help
him. On Dec. 13, 1941, it all
comes to an end. Goebel
said the conclusion is not
one you would likely have
guessed.

The next meeting will be
on Nov. 14 at the Pomeroy ·
Library with Jeanne Bowen
reviewing "Last Flag Down,
Epic Journey of the Last
Confederate Warship" by
John Baldwin and Ron
Powers. Marlene Kuhn will
be the hostess.
Pat Holter · hosted the
October meeting.

MEIGS COUNTY CDBG 07 COMMUNITY
HOUSING
IMPROVEMENT PROGRAM
NOTICE OF EXPLANATION FLOOD PLAIN
DEVELOPMENT
Meigs County intends to undertake a CDBG 07 CDBG
Community Distress Program Clearance project, for the
purpose of home repair/home rehab1litalion/homeownership 'of
various housing units within the Meigs County. Ponions of the
project may be located 111 lhe I00 year tloodplain. the
proposed projects cannot be undertaken in any other location
as there is no practical alternati ve liJr the location of the
projects . The CHIP project can only take place where there js
a need and il is known thai the need may he targeted in these
base tlood areas. Therefore, it is the judgment of the Meigs
County Commissioners thai the henel'ils LO the LMI residems
that live in these areas in various locations in Meigs County.
outweighs considemliun of Executive Orders 11988 and
11990.

A more detailed description of the project and the FIRM Flood
Maps are available for citizen review al the Meigs Coumy
Grants Office, 117 East Memorial Drive. Suite 7, Pomeroy,
Ohio 45769.
Meigs Coumy Commissioners
Mi~k Davenport, Presidem

RACO planning holiday activities

Oak Hilt Rnanclat (NASDAQ)
Ohio 1/altey Bane Corp. (NASDAQ)-25
BBT (NYSE) - 34.06
Peopl" {NASDAQ)- 22.42
Pepsico {NYSE)- 72.78
Premier {NASDAQ) - 13
Rockwell (NYSEI - 68.18
Rocky Boots (NASDAQ) -

2007

A pollee offi. cer kicks
tear gas canister towards
lawyers at
the High
Court who
are protesting again.st
Pakistan's
military ruler
President
Gen. Pervez
Musharraf,
for imposing
the emergency,
Monday,
Nov. 5,
2007, in
Lahore,
Pakistan.
Police fired
tear gas and
used batons
during clashes with
lawyers .

Police in Pakistan clash with
lawyers protesting state of emergency

The Dally Sentinel

JeHBassett
Home Loan Specialist

421 Main Street
P.O. Box 37
Point Pleasant, WV
www.peoplesbancorp.com
jbassett@pebo.com

304-674-4406
Toll Free 800-374-6123
.Fax 740-373·8874
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�The Daily Sentinel ·

The Daily Sentinel
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(740) 992·2156 • FAX (740) 992·2157
www.mydallysantlnal.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 exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of
speech, or of the puss; or the right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the
Government for a redress of grievances.
- The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

TODAY IN HISTORY
Today is Tuesday, Nov. 6, the 310th day of 2007. There
are 55 days left in the year. Thi s is Election Day.
Today's Highlight in History:
On No'v. 6, 1860, former Illinois congressman Abraham
Lincoln defeated three other candidates for the presidency :
John Breckinridge, John Bell and Stephen Douglas.
On this date:
In 1861, Confederate President Jefferson Davis was
elected to a six'year term of office.
In 1888, BenJamin Harrison won the presidential election, defeating incumbent Grover Cleveland with enough
electoral votes, even though Cleveland led in the popular
vote.
'
In 1893, composer Peter llyich Tchai kovsky died in St .
Petersburg, Russia, at age 53.
In 1900, President William McKinley was re-elected;
beating Democrat William Jennings Bryan. ·
In !906, Republican Charles Evans Hughes was elected
governor of New York,. defeating newspaper publisher
William .Randolph Hearst.
In 1944, British official Lord Moyne was assassinated i.n
Cairo, Egypt, by members of the ZIOnist Stern gang.
In 1956, President Dwight D. Eisenho,wer won re-election, defeating Democrat Adlai E. Stevenson.
In !976, Benjamin L. Hooks was chosen to be the new
executive director of the National Association for the
Advancement of Colored People, succeeding Roy Wilkins:
Five years ago: A jury in Beverly Hills, Calif., convicted
Winona Ryder of stealing $5 ,500 wonh of high-fashion
merchandise from Saks Fifth Avenue, but adrosecutor said
she would not seek to put the actress behin bars.
One year ago: On the eve of midterm elections,
Democrats criticized Republicans as stewards of a stale status quo while President Bush campaigned from Florida to
Arkansas to Texas in a drive to preserve GOP control of
Congress. Kenny Chesney won entertainer of the year and
Brooks &amp; Dunn's inspirational song "Believe" wqn three
trophies, including single and song of the year, at the 40th
Annual Country Music Association Awards.
Today's Birthdays: Director Mike Nichols is 76. Country
singer Stonewall Jackson is 75 . Singer Eugene Pitt (The
Jive Five) is 70. Singer P.J. Proby is 69. Country singer
Guy Clark is 66. Actress Sally Field is 6!. Pop singer-musician Glenn Frey (The Eagles) is 59. Singer Rory Block is
58. Jazz musician Arturo Sandoval is 58. TV host Catherine
Crier is 53. California's first lady, broadcast journalist
· Maria Shriver, is 52. Actress Lori Singer is 50. Actor Lance
~erwin is 47: Rock musician Pa~l Brindley (The Sundays)
IS 44. Rock smger Corey Glover ts 43. Actor Peter DeLuise
is 41. Actress Kelly Rutherford is 39. Actor Ethan Hawke
is 37. Actress Thandie Newton is 35. Model-actress
Rebecca Romijn is 35. Actress Zoe McLellan is 33. Actress
Nicole Dubuc is 29. Ac'tress Mercedes Kastner is 18.
. Thought for Today: "The ~ecret of staying young is to
hve honestly, eat slowly, and he about your age."- Lucille
'Ball, American actress-comedian ( 191 I -!989).

OPINION
Surely there are better
ways to stop Iran's nuclear
program than Republican
war threats or most
Democrats '
hat-in-hand
diplomacy. Rep. Mark Kirk,
R-IlL, has several good
ideas.
Co-chaiqnan of the bipartisan House Iran Working
Group, Kirk for three years
has been advocating cutting
off Iran's gasoline supplies
to suppl ement other economic sanctions and weake n · President M ahmoud
Ahmadinejad's hold on
power.
Kirk also is trying to persuade the Bush administration to block $870 mill io n
in World Bank loans to Iran.
including one for a watertreatment facilitY. near the
Islamic republic 's nuclear
facility at Natanz.
,As co-chairman of another bipartisan ad-hoc House
panel , the China Working
Group, he has bee n pushing
for creation of a multinational fund to develop alternative sources of energy for
China in order to weaken
Chinese diplomati c support
for Iran .
And as a Naval Re se rve
intelligence officer: he is
advocating inclusion of
Israel and Bahrain in the
U.S. . national anti -mi ssile
defense system against Iran.
A leader of the moderate
Republican Tuesday Group,
Kirk has a reputation · for
developing creative "third
way': ideas, including ttle
GOP "suburban agenda"
designed to appeal to
disDemocratic-leaning
tricts like his own, located
,
north of Chicago.
He formed the Iran
Working . Group with Rep.
Robert Andrews, D-N .J .,
and · the China Working
Group with Rep. Rick
Larsen, D-Wash .., to give
backCongressional
benchers a role in developing policy. The two panels
now have 35 and 75 members, respectively. Kirk has
a formal foreign-policy .
swatch as a member of the
House
Appropriations
. Subcommittee on State,
Foreign Operations and

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In an interview, Kirk told
me he differs from the Bush
administration and most
GOP candidates for president in favoring direct
negotiations with Iran and
in avoiding talk about military action. He also favors
tougher measutes than the
" unconditional" diplomacy
advoca ted
by
most
Democrats.
" I do agree that we should
be talking to (Iran)," he
said, "because direct negoti wi!h
(fo rmer
ati o ns·
Yugoslav
dictator
Slobodan) Milosevic were
part of undermining hi s
wi lL And there were a number of direc t di sc ussions
with
(Libya n
ruler
Muamm ar) el-Qaddafi. and
we undermined him . So. I
thihk we shou ld always talk
because the di scussion ca n
we aken the will of the other
side."
Kirk said he favo rs talks
not only ·with Ahmadinejad
but with his Iranian political
rivals, including for mer
Pre sident
Ali
Akbar
Hashemi Rafsanjani .
As to GOP presidential
candidates' talk of bombing
or blockading Iran, Kirk
said, " If you are running for
president , you could BE
president, so the best thing
to do is talk about what you
would do if you actually
WERE president of the
United States, not just playing one on TV. . .. If you
actually were president, you
would look at the most
robust economic sanctions
that would actually work
before launching any kind
of unpredictable and hugely
expensive military operation."
On the basis of unclassified sources, Kirk said he's
convinced that Iran is at

Tuesday, November 6,

2007

'
The Daily Sentinel
• Page A5 .

www.mydailysentinel.com

Tuesday, November 6 , 2007

Drop war talk, cut off Iran sga5, Kirk urges
, least two to three years
away from developing fissile material for a bomb, "so
we're nm talking about an
urgent crisis right now." It
would take even longer to
manufacture a deliverable
we11pon that would threaten
Israel and other U.S. allies,
he said.
He said it large ly has
escaped notice - "because
it's a good-news story"· but " 10 years of tough sanctions anp diplomacy" convinced Qaddafi to give up
Libya 's nuclear program .
"He just called up the CIA,
and they carted it away to
Oak ~idge , Tenn., where
it's buried," he said.
As to war threats by the
Bush admini stration, Kirk
said, "I don 't think it's necessary. A president should
always be ambiguou s as to
what he wou ld do or not do
to protect the U.S. and its
allies. And war pl anning
should go on behind closed
doors, which is the work of
the Pentagon anyway.
"But my recommendati on
is. it 's far more productive
to advance the ca use of
etlect ive sanctions because
thi s is a big step for our
alli es," who may be reluctant to participate in .a run up to war.
"
Among the Democratic
candidates, he said Sen.
Hillary Rodham Clinton
(New York) was "responsible'' during Tuesday night 's
TV debate in Philadelphia
by ,advocating a poli~y of
sanction s plus diplomacy.
As to other candidates.
though, "if you say, ' Well,
we're not go ing to take
action against terrorism and
undermining the nonproliferation policy of the West,'
what are you going to do?
She's pretty good . For the
rest of them, I'm not sure
where they are."
For several months, Kirk
has been urging Bush to
adopt the kil'ld of stiff sanctions against the Iranian
Revolutionary Guard Corps
that the . admini stration
announced last week - a
move
denounced
by
Clinton's Democratic rivals
as a step toward war.

For even longer, Kirk has
been advocating a "quarantine" to cut off Iran's gasoline supplies. Even though
Iran is a major oil producer,
it imports 40 percent of its
gasoline, and this summer
Ahmadinejad
imposed
gasoline rationing, causing
riots in Tehran.
If sanctions were imposed
on Iran's gasoline suppliers
- the Dutch energy broker
Vito!, ship insurer Lloyds of
London and refineries in
Ind ia and the United Arab
Emirates· shi pments likely would stop without naval
action, he said,. though it
would be a backup.
"Ahmadinejad's nuclear
program is very popular,"
Ki rk said, "but his domesti c
program is not. The moment
· the average guy starts to
have problems ru nnin g his
bu si ness or gelling to work ,
Ahmadinejad is go ing to
have real political problems."
So far, th e administrat io n
opposes a gasoline cutoff,
fea ring $ 100-a-barrel oil.
But Kirk said that Saud i
Arabia, which fe ars Iran,
could prevent a price spike
hy in creasing proll ti ct ion .
China ha.s underc ut other
sanctions because it imports
oil fro m Iran, so Kirk · has
been urgi ng th e admin istration to establi sh a lendi ng
program for ·Central Asian
sources. The admi nistrati on
·also is reluctant to cut off
Wc&gt;rJd Bank loans, but Kirk
argues, "imagi ne the e mbarrass me nt of ... culling a
check from I'Jth Street in
Washing ton to the government
of
President
· Ahmadinejad."
As a backup, Kirk advocates including Israel and
Bahrain as sites, along with
Poland, in the U.S. missiledefen se system . All thi s
makes eminent good sense
to me, far better sense than
talking about invasions,
bombing raids, World War ·
III - or "unconditional"
talks .

(Morton Kondracke is
executive editor of Roll
Call, the newspaper of
Capitol Hill.)

The education of Michael Mukasey

In a dramatic confrontation
during
Attorney
General nominee Michael
Mukasey 's confirmation
hearings before the senate
Judiciary Committee on
Oct. . I 8, Sen. Sheldon
Whitehouse, D-R.I., asked
him: "is waterboarding constitutional?'' Responding
about a form of interrogation that has been used by
the CJ A, Mukasey said: "I
don't know what is involved
· Letters to the editor are welcome. They should be less in the technique. If waterthan 300 words. All letters are subject to editing, must be boarding is torture, tonure is
signed, and include address and telephone number. No not constitutional ."
unsigned letters will be published. Letters should be in ' After that testimony, John
good taste, pddressing issues, not personalities. Letters of Hutson, for[ller Judge
thanks to organizations and individuals will not be accept- Advocate General of the
ed for publication.
Navy, told the New York
Sun: "Waterboarding was
devised in the Spanish
Inquisition. Next to the rack
and thumbscrews, it's the
(USPS 213-960)
most iconic example of torOhio Valley Publishing
ture."
Co.
Correction Polley
And Martin Lederman ,
Published every afternoon, Monday
Our main concern in all stories is to
who was an attorney adviser
through Friday, 111 Court Street,
be accurate. If·you know of an error
in
the Department of
Pomeroy. Ohio.
Second-class
In a alory, call the newsroom at (740) postage paid at Pome roy.
Justice's Office of Legal
992-2156.
Counsel from 1994 to 2002,
Member: The Associated Prass and
said about Mukasey's "not
the Qhio Newspaper Association.
Poatm~atar: Send address correc·
knowing. enough to say
Our main number Is
tiona to The Daily Senlinel, 111 Court
whether waterboarding, or
(740) eez-21sa.
Street, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.
any other technique, is torDepartment elltenatoria are:
ture ... or otherwise unlawSubscription Rates
ful (shows) how far we have
By carrier or motor route
News
fallen when a jurist of Judge
One month
' 10.27
Editor: Char1ene Hoeflich, Ex!. 12
Mukasey's caliber cannot
One year
' 115.84
Dally
so·
Reporter; Brian Reed , Ex!. 14
answer such q~es ti on s withSantor Citizen rates
out hesitation" (from the
Reporter; B~th Sergent, Ext. 13
One month
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'1 03. 90
Yale Law professor Jack
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Advertising
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Among others startled by
scription by mall permitted in areas
Olftlde S.teo: Brenda Davis, Ext 16 where home earner set\'lce is avail·
Mukasey's
evasiveness,
CtouJCirc.: Judy Clarl&lt;, Ex!. 10
able.
George L. Gordon, a former
chief appellate attorney in
Mall Sub8Crlptlon
the U.S. Attorney 's Office in
General Manager
lnotde Meigs County
the Southern Di strict of
Char1ene Hoefticll, Ex!. 12
13 Weeks
'32.26
New York said in an Oct. 20
26 Weeks
'64.20
52
Weeks
'127
.11
lett
er to The New York
E-man:
Times:
newsOmydailysentinel .com
Outside Meigs County
" How ca n th e United
13 Weaks
'53.55
States hope to regai n its
Wob: .
26 Weaks
' 107 .10
position
as a respected
52 Weeks
'2 14.2 1
www.mydailysentinel.com
world leader on the great

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR

PageA4

Torture" by American Civil
Al so, Mukasey will disLiberties Union attorneys cover that this maltreatment,
.
. Jameel Jaffer and Amrit to use a euphemism, "took
Singh (Columbia University pllice because of (official)
Press).
policy, not in spite of it - in
At
its
core
are
more
than
large part," wrote Jaffe r and
Nat
350 pages selected from Singh, "from decisions
Hentoff
thousands of actual govern- made by senior official s,
ment documents obtained both military and civilians.
through the Freedom of
Information Act that specifi- These decisions (going up to
issues of human rights if its cally detail systematic abus- the White House) were reafchief law enforcement can- es of prisoners, including firmed repeatedly, even in
not bring himself to form s of torture that cannot . the fact of complaints form
acknowledge the undeniable - in our law and interna' law enforcement and miliverity that waterboat'ding . tiona! treaties
be tary personnel that the poli(making a prisoner feel he is described denotatively in cies were illegal and ineffecimminently about to drown) another way than some of tive."
constitutes torture, applying the "coercive interrogation
These U.S. government
any conceivable definition techniques"
of
which documents
from
of that term?"
·
M ukasey professed igno- Afghanistan,
t[,lld
Iraq
During his testimony, rance.
Guantanamo .
Future
Mukasey also. said· il would
Also, "Administration of American historians will not
be irresponsible of him to Tort11re"
prints
Final flinch from calling th em
comment on any of the Autopsy Reports from the records of war crimes - not
"coercive
interrogation Office of the Armed Forces only from soldiers from the
techniques" (that the presi - Regional Examiner and the field, but all !he way up "the
dent has approved) because allied institute of Pathology.
chain of co nimand."
he has not been "read in" on For example, a 52-year-old
Louis Brandeis sai d:
them by being allowed to Iraqi male "found unresponsee classified information sive ... in isolation at "Courage is the secre t of libon those techniques.
Whitehorse
detainment . erty." The Senate Judi ciary 's
Trying to further the edu- facility, Nasiriyah, Iraq. co nfirm ation of Michae l
cation of our prospective Cause
of
· death: Mukascy would not be an
chief law enforcement offi- Strangulation. Manner of act of courage. And wi II any
cer, Lederman suggests he .Death : Homicide." There canuidate fo r the presidency
carefull y
''The
ask FBI Director Robert were· extensive head, neck, read
Mueller to show him th e e- torso and extremity injuries. Administration of Torture?"
mail s sent to him hy FBI
Another autopsy report of
It '~ also important tu
agents in the tield "com- an Iraqi death "while in U.S. re member Muka sey tes tified
plaining that the' C IA-run c~stody" states the homicide that in these ci rcumst ances,
interrogation
program w·as caused by blunt force the president ca n u' e hi s
torture." injuries and asphyxia.
amounted
to
constitutional authori ty to
Lederman . quotes a senior
Other documents that act outside of laws Congress
federal law enforcement should greatly interest the
has passed and he has
official in the FBI messages: likely new attorney general
signed.
"'Those guys were using verify that prisoners were
Thi s
IS
Muka s~y·s
techniques that we didn ' t shackled in · extremely
America·J
even want to be in the room painful "stress positions,"
(Nat Hento.ff iJ a nationalfor.'"
stripped in freezing cold
· A series of these appalled ' cells and deprived of human ly renow11ed autlwril\•mtthe
FBI complaints are in a contact
for
months. First Amendment ,;lid tlr"
newly published b9ok th at Moreover, th e record s.show Bill of Rights mid author of
Mukasey, membe rs of . that the Defense Department . 11111/i)' book.\. incl11ding "Tir;·
Congress and Americans authori zed the caging of War on the Bill of Rights
concerned with the degrad- pri soners in cells as small as a~~d
the
Gathering
. ing of our rul e of law should 3. 1 feet by 4 feet by 1- 1/2 Resistance" (Seven Stories
read: "Admini stration of feet .
Press, 2004 ). )

Obituaries

Local Briefs

.Robert H. Crow
SYRACUSE - Raben H. Crow, 86, of College Road,
S:tracus~. died Saturday, Nov. 3, 2007, at the Ravenswood
Vtllage 10 Ravenswood, W.Va. where he had been a resi ,
,
·
dent for several weeks. .
Born on Jun~ 19, 1921 at Pomeroy, he was the ·son of the
late Thomas H. Crow and Josephine Webster Crow and was
the owner/operator of Craw's Family Restaurant established about 1957, which latter became Craw's, KFC-US .
. He was a. veteran of the U.S. Army, World War II , havmg served m the South Pacific theatre for three years.
. He was preceded in de ath by his wife, Kathryn H. Crow,
hts paren!s, and a brother, Thomas D. Crow.
·
.
Surviving are two sons, Robert W. (Ruella) Crow and
James H. Crow; seven grandchildren: Lori (Randy) Rou sh
of Westervtlle; Rub Crow of Columbus; Meridith Crow
(Gle nn ) .. Washin gto n, D. C.; Wes Crow (Trista) of
N~lsonvtiie; Cam~ Crow of Columbus; Chri sti (Todd)
Lisle, Racme; Kelhe L (John) Harmon, Syracuse; six greatgrandchildren,and a .sister-in-law, Vera Crow, Pomeroy.
Funeral semces Wi ll be held at II a:m. today (Tuesday)
at the Ew mg Funeral Home with burial in the Letart Falls
Cemetery.
.Calling ho.urs were held at the funeral home Monday
n~ght , and wtll be held for one hour today prior to the ser- .

Clothing
giveaway

free straw for pet bedding
from 10 a.m. - I p.m. on
Saturday behind the Humane
Society Thrift Store .

TUPPERS PLAINS
The Bethel Worship Center
located south of Tuppers
Plains will have a free infant
clothing give-away from 9
a.m. to I p.m. on Saturday.
Infant clothing and furniture
from birth to three year olds.
will be available. These items
are not for resale. For more
information call 985-3505.

Straw giveaway
MIDDLEPORT The
Meigs County Humane
Society will be giving away

a. m. to I :30 p.m. on Sunday
at the VFW building. Turkey .
and dressing, mashed potatoes and gravy, homemade
noodles, green beans, cole
slaw
a roll and assorted
desserts will be served.
The cost is $7 for adults
and $4 for children. Take-out
CHESTER
- Chester is available.
Township Trustees will meet
at 7 p.m. on Wedne sday
instead of Tuesday at the
town hall due to the election.
RACINE - The an nu al
Racine Uni ted Methodi st
Women 's Christmas bazaar
will be held beginning at 9
RACINE
-Ladi es a.m. on Nov. 17' at the
Auxiliary of Tuppers Plains church. There will be handVFW Post 9053 will have a made holiday decoration s,
turkey dinner from 11:30 baked goods, and cutl ery.

Meeting
changed

·aazaar set

Turkey dinner

Crafters wanting to rent
tables are to call 949-2454.

Road closing
POMEROY
- County
Roau 15, Hysell Run, will be
closed a quarter-mile south
of Jeffers Road for two to
three weeks beginning Nov.
13.
The alternate route is T.R.
175, Jeffers Road.

Office closed
POMEROY - The Meigs
Countr
Health Department .
.
Will be close on Monday for
observance of Veteran's Day.
~

For the Record

VICe.

Worthy Love
SOUTHSIDE, W.Va. - Worthy Wayne "Hop" Love, 80,
of Southstde, W.Va., died Sunday evening, Nov. 4, 2007, at
Pleasant Valley Hospital in Point Pleasant, W.Va. He was
the hu sband of Virginia H. Myers Love.
Service will be held at I p.m. on Wednesday, Nov. 7,
2007, at Cro w-Hu ssell Funeral Home in Point Pleasant
wit~ Re~. Isaiah Crump and Monty Foster officiating:
Bun~! Will be m Concord Cemetery in Henderson, W.Va.
Fnends ttlay call from 6 to g p.m. on Tuesday at the
funeral home .

Woman pleads guilty
in case of slain pregnant
woman, -to testify
Bv JOE MILICIA
ASSOCIATED PR ESS WR ITER

CANTON Minutes
before a jury was to begin
considering her fate, a
woman struck a deal that
will give prosecutors important te stimony against a city
police offic er accused in the
slaying of a preg nant
woman.
Myisha Ferrell , 30, of
Canton, the high school
classmate of Patrolman
Bobby Cutts Jr., pleaded
guilty Monday to two
counts in the death ofJessie
Davis, including helping
dispose of the body, which
she admitted to with a barely audible "guilty."
The plea gives prosecutors a witness with firsthand
knowl edge of the crime, but
leaves many questions in
the case publicly unan s.wered until Cutts' trial on
agg ravated murder and
other charges begins Feb. 4.
He could face the death
penalty if convicted.
. Davis, 26, was believed
mi ssing for nine days in
June, and thou sands gathered to search grassy fields
and woods close to . her
· home near North Canton,
about 45 miles south of
Cleveland.
Prosecutors say Ferrell
·knew what happened to
Davis and she pleaded
guilty Monday · in Stark
County Common Pleas
Court to obstructing justice
for Iyi ng to authorities. She
also admitted to complicity
to gross abuse of a corpse. ·
Ferrell was se ntenced to
two years in prison and will
be eligible for release after
one year, according to the
terms of her plea agreement.
She had faced .up to six
years in prison if convicted
on both counts.
Ferrell agreed to testify

Dinner
from PageA1
opposition .
.
Understanding the critical
importance of fundraising
to the party's success,
De Wine plays an aggressive role in cultivating new
financi al support and building s!ron g relationships
with contributors. His
efforts to expand the party's
donor base are essential to
maintaining the candidate
services and grassroots programs that provide a competitive
advantage on
Election Day
In addition to hi s role as
deputy chairman, DeWine
is currently serving his
fourth and final term representing the 70th District in
Ohio
Hou se
of
the
.Represent atives. He also
I

against Cutts. 30, who has
been suspended from the
Canton
police
force .
Investigators say Davis was
killed in her home June 14
in northeast Ohio's Lake
Town ship, ne ar . North
Canton.
Authorities have not said
how she died, or what
motive there may have been
behind her killing.
Ferrell's attorney, John
Alexander, said after the
hearing that the plea agreement was a result of more
than a dozen hours of weekend negotiations. The plea
agreement papers· weren't
. si¥ned until 8:15 a.m. , 15
mmutes before opening
statettlents were scheduled
for the trial.
" It was pretty contentious,
both sides were dug in and
both sides believed in their
case," Alexander said. He
called the decision to plead
guilty "a business decisian."
"She is very upset about
the
whole
situation.
Unfortunately, I'm not
allowed to go into her side
of
the
story,"
said
Alexander, citing Cutts'
pending trial.
·
· Alexander would only say
that hi s client 's testimony in
·the Cutts' case is important
Stark County Prosecutor
John Ferrero wouldn't comment about what weight
Ferrell's testimony would
carry at Cutts' trial. He said
Davi s' family backed rrosecutors oil the Ferrel plea
agreement.
"It's a good solution,"
Ferrero said.
Ferrell's mother left the
courthouse holding her coat
over her face as she passed
television cameras. A brother, who would identify himself only' as Mr. Robinson,
said of his sister, "She's
doing OK."
serves as speaker pro tempore · of the House, th e
chamber's second-highest
ranking member.
His legi slative accomplishm ents include e xtensive efforts to improve
voter confidence in Ohio's
elections process. De Wine
has been instrumental in
crafting major reforms to
state campaign finan ce
laws. which now require
greater
accountability, '
transparency and adhe(ence
to ethical standards. Most
recently, he led a major legislative campaign to protect
the integrity of Ohio's elections system by sponsoring
reforms that safeguard tl)e
voter registration process
and prevent fraud at the ballot box.
De Wine has earned a reputation during his ,legislative career as ali advocate
for Ohio's economic devel -

Marriage license

USA, Orlando, Fla., against Dona ld
Randolph, Jr., Pomeroy, and others.
A civil action was filed by Ohio
POMEROY - A marriage license Department of Job and Family
was issued in Meigs County Probate Services, Columbus, against John's
Court to Bryan Lee Stewart, Jr., 19, Superior Auto Body, Inc ., Middleport.
and Chelsea Lyn.Manley, 19. Pomeroy.

Arraigned

Divorces
POMEROY - Actions , for divorce
were filed in Meigs County Common
Pleas Court by Tamara L. Taylor,
Middleport, against Derrick M. Taylor,
Ripley, W.Va.; Carl E. Demoskey;
Pomeroy, against Anna D. Demosky,
Middlepon; and Joseph M. Powell,
.Middleport, against Laura A. Powell,
Winfield, W.Va.

Foreclosure
POMEROY -An action for foreclosure was filed in Meigs County
Common Pleas Court by HSBC Bank

POMEROY - The following were
arraigned in Meigs County Common
Pleas Court on secret indictments followed by Meigs County Grand Jury:
• Tina Johnson, on a charge of tampering with evidence. $1,000personal
recogniza nce bond , $1,000 surety
bond, and $1,000 appearance bond .
Trial set for Dec. II. Adam Salisbury
appointed as counsel.
• Laura Hysell, on a charge of illegal
manufacture of methamphetamine .
$1,000 personal recognizance bond,
$5;000 surety bond, and $10,000
ap~arance bond. Trial set for Dec. II .
Wtlliam Conley appointed as cdunsel.
• Anthony· Smith, on charges of ille-

gal manufacture of drugs, illegal
assembly or possess ion of chemicals
for manufacture of drugs. $2,500 personal recogni zance bond, $2,500 surety bond, $25,000 appearance bond.
Trial set for Dec. II . Rick Hedges·
appointed as co un sel.

Sentenced
POMEROY - Danny I. Morgan
was sentenced in Meigs County
Common Pleas Court to 18 months in
pri son on a charge of unlawful sexual
~onductwitha •minor. He pled guilty to
the charge. The sentence will be served
consecutively wi th a sentence on
another case in the court.

Dissolution
POMEROY -A dissolution was
gra nted in Meigs County Common
Pleas Court to Carrie Renea Jone s and
Billy Gene Jones. ·

Perspective: Muddy primary another headache for Republicans .
Bv JOHN McCARTHY

1994. The GOP now has an
11 -7 majority in Ohio, so a
swing of three seats would
COLUMBUS - Facing give Democrats control.
next year's congressional Republicans have said they
elections minus three incum- will make a serious run at
bents, Republicans are doing Qemocrat Zack Space of
themselves no favors by Dover, who easily took the
staging a bitter primary for a . eastern Ohio seat held by
fourth U.S, House , on Bob Ney, now imprisoned
after a bribery scandal.
TUesday.
Recent
polling
by
Steve Buehrer and Bob
Latta are waging a mud- Quinnipiac College in ·Ohio
soaked campaign for the seat found Democrats leading
that belonged to Paul Republicans in each possible
presidential matchup, and
Gillmor, who died Sept. 5 in
Republicans are still smartan apparent fall down the ing from last year's near
stairs in his suburban
sweep by Democrats of
Washington home. The win- statewide offices the C'..OP
ner will run Dec. II for the had held for more than a
seat that's been Republican decade.
for decades.
The Democrats' best
The outcome of that elec- chance is in Pryce's central
tion will provide a compass Ohio district, which has been
for 2008~s congressional in the GOP column for
contests.
Reps .
David decades. However, Pryce
Hobson of Sptjngfield, won last year only after a
Deborah Pryce of suburban · recount and the loser, Mary
Columbus and Ralph Regula Jo Kilroy, is a lock for the
oJ the Canton area already Democratic nominiltion next
have announced they won't year.
seek re-election.
Republicans had been
Hobson's di strict is consid- struggling to find a candidate
ered safe for the Republican after
former
Attorney
candidate, bot Regula's and General Jim Petro turned
especially Pryce's will take them down. Another strong
strong - and expensive candidate, state Sen. Steve
campaigns to stay in the Stivers, initially turned party
GOP column. Democrats are officials down, but he told
expected to also charge hard The Columbus Dispatch on
for the seats held by Sunday that he planned to
Republicans Steve Chabot of run for the seat and was
Cincinnati, who got 52 per- expected
to
formally
cent of the vote in 2006, and announce his candidacy at a
Jean Schmidt of Loveland, Monday afternoon news conwho won by fewer than ference.
3,000 votes.
Kirk Schuring, a state senRepublicans have con- ator from Canton, is the liketrolled the Ohio delegation ly GOP candidate for
since the GOP sweep of Regula 's northeast Ohio seat.
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

opment, working to create
much-needed jobs and winning the Guardian of Small
Business Award from the
National Federation of
Independent Bu sinesses.
DeWine holds a bache-

lor's degree in business
from the University of
Dayton and an MBA from
Wright State University. He
and his wife, Kelle, reside
in Fairborn wit]) their four
sons.

Democratic state Sen. John
Boccieri of New Middletown
has the field J o himself for
· the Democratic nomination.
Ohio,
In
southwest
Democrat Victoria Wulsin of
Cincinnati is repeating her
run against Schmidt and
Democrats are confident that
state Rep. Steve Driehaus,
also of Cincinnati, can finally
topple · Chabot
Republicans are clearing the
field for Hobson's western
Ohio seat for state Sen. Steve
Austria of suburban Dayton.
Gillmor's northwest Ohio
district is one· of the most
Republican-leaning 'in the
state, but GOP leaders worry
the bruising primary between
Buehrer and Latta, both state
lawmakers, could give
Democrats an opening.
Each has highlighted the
other's vote for the "Bob Taft
gas tax" increase, invoking
the unpopular former gover. nor's name. And both have
brought Tom Noe into the
race, pointing out in ads that
the other took campaign
money from the imprisoned
rare-coin dealer and GOP
fundraiser who played a big
part in a state Bureau of
Workers '
Compensation
investment scandal that ctip-

pled Republican'candidates. ·
All the vitriol finally led ,
state Rep. Kevin DeWine, .:
the Ohio GOP's deputy .
chairman, to send rebukes to ·
both campaigns.
"The direction this camo
paign is headed will tarnish :
your reputations and those of ;
your campaign consultants ..
and supporters. But more ,
important than the reputation
of any individual, the tenor
of the race is poised to harm
our party," DeWine wrote.
·
Both Latta and Buehrer .
feel the· party can survive ·.
their primary .and defeat the :
likely Democratic nominee, ..
Robin Weirauch , who is .
making her third bid for the .
seat.
Buehrer said the key is .
making sure people go to the
polls when ordinarily they .
would be holiday shopping. :
" A complicator in this race
is the very short time frame," .
he said. "There will be some ·
challen~es
in
pushing
turnout. '
.t--1'\N CtRJ:

. i ';:. ot
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�The Daily Sentinel ·

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

(740) 992·2156 • FAX (740) 992·2157
www.mydallysantlnal.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 exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of
speech, or of the puss; or the right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the
Government for a redress of grievances.
- The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

TODAY IN HISTORY
Today is Tuesday, Nov. 6, the 310th day of 2007. There
are 55 days left in the year. Thi s is Election Day.
Today's Highlight in History:
On No'v. 6, 1860, former Illinois congressman Abraham
Lincoln defeated three other candidates for the presidency :
John Breckinridge, John Bell and Stephen Douglas.
On this date:
In 1861, Confederate President Jefferson Davis was
elected to a six'year term of office.
In 1888, BenJamin Harrison won the presidential election, defeating incumbent Grover Cleveland with enough
electoral votes, even though Cleveland led in the popular
vote.
'
In 1893, composer Peter llyich Tchai kovsky died in St .
Petersburg, Russia, at age 53.
In 1900, President William McKinley was re-elected;
beating Democrat William Jennings Bryan. ·
In !906, Republican Charles Evans Hughes was elected
governor of New York,. defeating newspaper publisher
William .Randolph Hearst.
In 1944, British official Lord Moyne was assassinated i.n
Cairo, Egypt, by members of the ZIOnist Stern gang.
In 1956, President Dwight D. Eisenho,wer won re-election, defeating Democrat Adlai E. Stevenson.
In !976, Benjamin L. Hooks was chosen to be the new
executive director of the National Association for the
Advancement of Colored People, succeeding Roy Wilkins:
Five years ago: A jury in Beverly Hills, Calif., convicted
Winona Ryder of stealing $5 ,500 wonh of high-fashion
merchandise from Saks Fifth Avenue, but adrosecutor said
she would not seek to put the actress behin bars.
One year ago: On the eve of midterm elections,
Democrats criticized Republicans as stewards of a stale status quo while President Bush campaigned from Florida to
Arkansas to Texas in a drive to preserve GOP control of
Congress. Kenny Chesney won entertainer of the year and
Brooks &amp; Dunn's inspirational song "Believe" wqn three
trophies, including single and song of the year, at the 40th
Annual Country Music Association Awards.
Today's Birthdays: Director Mike Nichols is 76. Country
singer Stonewall Jackson is 75 . Singer Eugene Pitt (The
Jive Five) is 70. Singer P.J. Proby is 69. Country singer
Guy Clark is 66. Actress Sally Field is 6!. Pop singer-musician Glenn Frey (The Eagles) is 59. Singer Rory Block is
58. Jazz musician Arturo Sandoval is 58. TV host Catherine
Crier is 53. California's first lady, broadcast journalist
· Maria Shriver, is 52. Actress Lori Singer is 50. Actor Lance
~erwin is 47: Rock musician Pa~l Brindley (The Sundays)
IS 44. Rock smger Corey Glover ts 43. Actor Peter DeLuise
is 41. Actress Kelly Rutherford is 39. Actor Ethan Hawke
is 37. Actress Thandie Newton is 35. Model-actress
Rebecca Romijn is 35. Actress Zoe McLellan is 33. Actress
Nicole Dubuc is 29. Ac'tress Mercedes Kastner is 18.
. Thought for Today: "The ~ecret of staying young is to
hve honestly, eat slowly, and he about your age."- Lucille
'Ball, American actress-comedian ( 191 I -!989).

OPINION
Surely there are better
ways to stop Iran's nuclear
program than Republican
war threats or most
Democrats '
hat-in-hand
diplomacy. Rep. Mark Kirk,
R-IlL, has several good
ideas.
Co-chaiqnan of the bipartisan House Iran Working
Group, Kirk for three years
has been advocating cutting
off Iran's gasoline supplies
to suppl ement other economic sanctions and weake n · President M ahmoud
Ahmadinejad's hold on
power.
Kirk also is trying to persuade the Bush administration to block $870 mill io n
in World Bank loans to Iran.
including one for a watertreatment facilitY. near the
Islamic republic 's nuclear
facility at Natanz.
,As co-chairman of another bipartisan ad-hoc House
panel , the China Working
Group, he has bee n pushing
for creation of a multinational fund to develop alternative sources of energy for
China in order to weaken
Chinese diplomati c support
for Iran .
And as a Naval Re se rve
intelligence officer: he is
advocating inclusion of
Israel and Bahrain in the
U.S. . national anti -mi ssile
defense system against Iran.
A leader of the moderate
Republican Tuesday Group,
Kirk has a reputation · for
developing creative "third
way': ideas, including ttle
GOP "suburban agenda"
designed to appeal to
disDemocratic-leaning
tricts like his own, located
,
north of Chicago.
He formed the Iran
Working . Group with Rep.
Robert Andrews, D-N .J .,
and · the China Working
Group with Rep. Rick
Larsen, D-Wash .., to give
backCongressional
benchers a role in developing policy. The two panels
now have 35 and 75 members, respectively. Kirk has
a formal foreign-policy .
swatch as a member of the
House
Appropriations
. Subcommittee on State,
Foreign Operations and

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In an interview, Kirk told
me he differs from the Bush
administration and most
GOP candidates for president in favoring direct
negotiations with Iran and
in avoiding talk about military action. He also favors
tougher measutes than the
" unconditional" diplomacy
advoca ted
by
most
Democrats.
" I do agree that we should
be talking to (Iran)," he
said, "because direct negoti wi!h
(fo rmer
ati o ns·
Yugoslav
dictator
Slobodan) Milosevic were
part of undermining hi s
wi lL And there were a number of direc t di sc ussions
with
(Libya n
ruler
Muamm ar) el-Qaddafi. and
we undermined him . So. I
thihk we shou ld always talk
because the di scussion ca n
we aken the will of the other
side."
Kirk said he favo rs talks
not only ·with Ahmadinejad
but with his Iranian political
rivals, including for mer
Pre sident
Ali
Akbar
Hashemi Rafsanjani .
As to GOP presidential
candidates' talk of bombing
or blockading Iran, Kirk
said, " If you are running for
president , you could BE
president, so the best thing
to do is talk about what you
would do if you actually
WERE president of the
United States, not just playing one on TV. . .. If you
actually were president, you
would look at the most
robust economic sanctions
that would actually work
before launching any kind
of unpredictable and hugely
expensive military operation."
On the basis of unclassified sources, Kirk said he's
convinced that Iran is at

Tuesday, November 6,

2007

'
The Daily Sentinel
• Page A5 .

www.mydailysentinel.com

Tuesday, November 6 , 2007

Drop war talk, cut off Iran sga5, Kirk urges
, least two to three years
away from developing fissile material for a bomb, "so
we're nm talking about an
urgent crisis right now." It
would take even longer to
manufacture a deliverable
we11pon that would threaten
Israel and other U.S. allies,
he said.
He said it large ly has
escaped notice - "because
it's a good-news story"· but " 10 years of tough sanctions anp diplomacy" convinced Qaddafi to give up
Libya 's nuclear program .
"He just called up the CIA,
and they carted it away to
Oak ~idge , Tenn., where
it's buried," he said.
As to war threats by the
Bush admini stration, Kirk
said, "I don 't think it's necessary. A president should
always be ambiguou s as to
what he wou ld do or not do
to protect the U.S. and its
allies. And war pl anning
should go on behind closed
doors, which is the work of
the Pentagon anyway.
"But my recommendati on
is. it 's far more productive
to advance the ca use of
etlect ive sanctions because
thi s is a big step for our
alli es," who may be reluctant to participate in .a run up to war.
"
Among the Democratic
candidates, he said Sen.
Hillary Rodham Clinton
(New York) was "responsible'' during Tuesday night 's
TV debate in Philadelphia
by ,advocating a poli~y of
sanction s plus diplomacy.
As to other candidates.
though, "if you say, ' Well,
we're not go ing to take
action against terrorism and
undermining the nonproliferation policy of the West,'
what are you going to do?
She's pretty good . For the
rest of them, I'm not sure
where they are."
For several months, Kirk
has been urging Bush to
adopt the kil'ld of stiff sanctions against the Iranian
Revolutionary Guard Corps
that the . admini stration
announced last week - a
move
denounced
by
Clinton's Democratic rivals
as a step toward war.

For even longer, Kirk has
been advocating a "quarantine" to cut off Iran's gasoline supplies. Even though
Iran is a major oil producer,
it imports 40 percent of its
gasoline, and this summer
Ahmadinejad
imposed
gasoline rationing, causing
riots in Tehran.
If sanctions were imposed
on Iran's gasoline suppliers
- the Dutch energy broker
Vito!, ship insurer Lloyds of
London and refineries in
Ind ia and the United Arab
Emirates· shi pments likely would stop without naval
action, he said,. though it
would be a backup.
"Ahmadinejad's nuclear
program is very popular,"
Ki rk said, "but his domesti c
program is not. The moment
· the average guy starts to
have problems ru nnin g his
bu si ness or gelling to work ,
Ahmadinejad is go ing to
have real political problems."
So far, th e administrat io n
opposes a gasoline cutoff,
fea ring $ 100-a-barrel oil.
But Kirk said that Saud i
Arabia, which fe ars Iran,
could prevent a price spike
hy in creasing proll ti ct ion .
China ha.s underc ut other
sanctions because it imports
oil fro m Iran, so Kirk · has
been urgi ng th e admin istration to establi sh a lendi ng
program for ·Central Asian
sources. The admi nistrati on
·also is reluctant to cut off
Wc&gt;rJd Bank loans, but Kirk
argues, "imagi ne the e mbarrass me nt of ... culling a
check from I'Jth Street in
Washing ton to the government
of
President
· Ahmadinejad."
As a backup, Kirk advocates including Israel and
Bahrain as sites, along with
Poland, in the U.S. missiledefen se system . All thi s
makes eminent good sense
to me, far better sense than
talking about invasions,
bombing raids, World War ·
III - or "unconditional"
talks .

(Morton Kondracke is
executive editor of Roll
Call, the newspaper of
Capitol Hill.)

The education of Michael Mukasey

In a dramatic confrontation
during
Attorney
General nominee Michael
Mukasey 's confirmation
hearings before the senate
Judiciary Committee on
Oct. . I 8, Sen. Sheldon
Whitehouse, D-R.I., asked
him: "is waterboarding constitutional?'' Responding
about a form of interrogation that has been used by
the CJ A, Mukasey said: "I
don't know what is involved
· Letters to the editor are welcome. They should be less in the technique. If waterthan 300 words. All letters are subject to editing, must be boarding is torture, tonure is
signed, and include address and telephone number. No not constitutional ."
unsigned letters will be published. Letters should be in ' After that testimony, John
good taste, pddressing issues, not personalities. Letters of Hutson, for[ller Judge
thanks to organizations and individuals will not be accept- Advocate General of the
ed for publication.
Navy, told the New York
Sun: "Waterboarding was
devised in the Spanish
Inquisition. Next to the rack
and thumbscrews, it's the
(USPS 213-960)
most iconic example of torOhio Valley Publishing
ture."
Co.
Correction Polley
And Martin Lederman ,
Published every afternoon, Monday
Our main concern in all stories is to
who was an attorney adviser
through Friday, 111 Court Street,
be accurate. If·you know of an error
in
the Department of
Pomeroy. Ohio.
Second-class
In a alory, call the newsroom at (740) postage paid at Pome roy.
Justice's Office of Legal
992-2156.
Counsel from 1994 to 2002,
Member: The Associated Prass and
said about Mukasey's "not
the Qhio Newspaper Association.
Poatm~atar: Send address correc·
knowing. enough to say
Our main number Is
tiona to The Daily Senlinel, 111 Court
whether waterboarding, or
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ture ... or otherwise unlawSubscription Rates
ful (shows) how far we have
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News
fallen when a jurist of Judge
One month
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Editor: Char1ene Hoeflich, Ex!. 12
Mukasey's caliber cannot
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answer such q~es ti on s withSantor Citizen rates
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Olftlde S.teo: Brenda Davis, Ext 16 where home earner set\'lce is avail·
Mukasey's
evasiveness,
CtouJCirc.: Judy Clarl&lt;, Ex!. 10
able.
George L. Gordon, a former
chief appellate attorney in
Mall Sub8Crlptlon
the U.S. Attorney 's Office in
General Manager
lnotde Meigs County
the Southern Di strict of
Char1ene Hoefticll, Ex!. 12
13 Weeks
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26 Weeks
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52
Weeks
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lett
er to The New York
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Times:
newsOmydailysentinel .com
Outside Meigs County
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LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR

PageA4

Torture" by American Civil
Al so, Mukasey will disLiberties Union attorneys cover that this maltreatment,
.
. Jameel Jaffer and Amrit to use a euphemism, "took
Singh (Columbia University pllice because of (official)
Press).
policy, not in spite of it - in
At
its
core
are
more
than
large part," wrote Jaffe r and
Nat
350 pages selected from Singh, "from decisions
Hentoff
thousands of actual govern- made by senior official s,
ment documents obtained both military and civilians.
through the Freedom of
Information Act that specifi- These decisions (going up to
issues of human rights if its cally detail systematic abus- the White House) were reafchief law enforcement can- es of prisoners, including firmed repeatedly, even in
not bring himself to form s of torture that cannot . the fact of complaints form
acknowledge the undeniable - in our law and interna' law enforcement and miliverity that waterboat'ding . tiona! treaties
be tary personnel that the poli(making a prisoner feel he is described denotatively in cies were illegal and ineffecimminently about to drown) another way than some of tive."
constitutes torture, applying the "coercive interrogation
These U.S. government
any conceivable definition techniques"
of
which documents
from
of that term?"
·
M ukasey professed igno- Afghanistan,
t[,lld
Iraq
During his testimony, rance.
Guantanamo .
Future
Mukasey also. said· il would
Also, "Administration of American historians will not
be irresponsible of him to Tort11re"
prints
Final flinch from calling th em
comment on any of the Autopsy Reports from the records of war crimes - not
"coercive
interrogation Office of the Armed Forces only from soldiers from the
techniques" (that the presi - Regional Examiner and the field, but all !he way up "the
dent has approved) because allied institute of Pathology.
chain of co nimand."
he has not been "read in" on For example, a 52-year-old
Louis Brandeis sai d:
them by being allowed to Iraqi male "found unresponsee classified information sive ... in isolation at "Courage is the secre t of libon those techniques.
Whitehorse
detainment . erty." The Senate Judi ciary 's
Trying to further the edu- facility, Nasiriyah, Iraq. co nfirm ation of Michae l
cation of our prospective Cause
of
· death: Mukascy would not be an
chief law enforcement offi- Strangulation. Manner of act of courage. And wi II any
cer, Lederman suggests he .Death : Homicide." There canuidate fo r the presidency
carefull y
''The
ask FBI Director Robert were· extensive head, neck, read
Mueller to show him th e e- torso and extremity injuries. Administration of Torture?"
mail s sent to him hy FBI
Another autopsy report of
It '~ also important tu
agents in the tield "com- an Iraqi death "while in U.S. re member Muka sey tes tified
plaining that the' C IA-run c~stody" states the homicide that in these ci rcumst ances,
interrogation
program w·as caused by blunt force the president ca n u' e hi s
torture." injuries and asphyxia.
amounted
to
constitutional authori ty to
Lederman . quotes a senior
Other documents that act outside of laws Congress
federal law enforcement should greatly interest the
has passed and he has
official in the FBI messages: likely new attorney general
signed.
"'Those guys were using verify that prisoners were
Thi s
IS
Muka s~y·s
techniques that we didn ' t shackled in · extremely
America·J
even want to be in the room painful "stress positions,"
(Nat Hento.ff iJ a nationalfor.'"
stripped in freezing cold
· A series of these appalled ' cells and deprived of human ly renow11ed autlwril\•mtthe
FBI complaints are in a contact
for
months. First Amendment ,;lid tlr"
newly published b9ok th at Moreover, th e record s.show Bill of Rights mid author of
Mukasey, membe rs of . that the Defense Department . 11111/i)' book.\. incl11ding "Tir;·
Congress and Americans authori zed the caging of War on the Bill of Rights
concerned with the degrad- pri soners in cells as small as a~~d
the
Gathering
. ing of our rul e of law should 3. 1 feet by 4 feet by 1- 1/2 Resistance" (Seven Stories
read: "Admini stration of feet .
Press, 2004 ). )

Obituaries

Local Briefs

.Robert H. Crow
SYRACUSE - Raben H. Crow, 86, of College Road,
S:tracus~. died Saturday, Nov. 3, 2007, at the Ravenswood
Vtllage 10 Ravenswood, W.Va. where he had been a resi ,
,
·
dent for several weeks. .
Born on Jun~ 19, 1921 at Pomeroy, he was the ·son of the
late Thomas H. Crow and Josephine Webster Crow and was
the owner/operator of Craw's Family Restaurant established about 1957, which latter became Craw's, KFC-US .
. He was a. veteran of the U.S. Army, World War II , havmg served m the South Pacific theatre for three years.
. He was preceded in de ath by his wife, Kathryn H. Crow,
hts paren!s, and a brother, Thomas D. Crow.
·
.
Surviving are two sons, Robert W. (Ruella) Crow and
James H. Crow; seven grandchildren: Lori (Randy) Rou sh
of Westervtlle; Rub Crow of Columbus; Meridith Crow
(Gle nn ) .. Washin gto n, D. C.; Wes Crow (Trista) of
N~lsonvtiie; Cam~ Crow of Columbus; Chri sti (Todd)
Lisle, Racme; Kelhe L (John) Harmon, Syracuse; six greatgrandchildren,and a .sister-in-law, Vera Crow, Pomeroy.
Funeral semces Wi ll be held at II a:m. today (Tuesday)
at the Ew mg Funeral Home with burial in the Letart Falls
Cemetery.
.Calling ho.urs were held at the funeral home Monday
n~ght , and wtll be held for one hour today prior to the ser- .

Clothing
giveaway

free straw for pet bedding
from 10 a.m. - I p.m. on
Saturday behind the Humane
Society Thrift Store .

TUPPERS PLAINS
The Bethel Worship Center
located south of Tuppers
Plains will have a free infant
clothing give-away from 9
a.m. to I p.m. on Saturday.
Infant clothing and furniture
from birth to three year olds.
will be available. These items
are not for resale. For more
information call 985-3505.

Straw giveaway
MIDDLEPORT The
Meigs County Humane
Society will be giving away

a. m. to I :30 p.m. on Sunday
at the VFW building. Turkey .
and dressing, mashed potatoes and gravy, homemade
noodles, green beans, cole
slaw
a roll and assorted
desserts will be served.
The cost is $7 for adults
and $4 for children. Take-out
CHESTER
- Chester is available.
Township Trustees will meet
at 7 p.m. on Wedne sday
instead of Tuesday at the
town hall due to the election.
RACINE - The an nu al
Racine Uni ted Methodi st
Women 's Christmas bazaar
will be held beginning at 9
RACINE
-Ladi es a.m. on Nov. 17' at the
Auxiliary of Tuppers Plains church. There will be handVFW Post 9053 will have a made holiday decoration s,
turkey dinner from 11:30 baked goods, and cutl ery.

Meeting
changed

·aazaar set

Turkey dinner

Crafters wanting to rent
tables are to call 949-2454.

Road closing
POMEROY
- County
Roau 15, Hysell Run, will be
closed a quarter-mile south
of Jeffers Road for two to
three weeks beginning Nov.
13.
The alternate route is T.R.
175, Jeffers Road.

Office closed
POMEROY - The Meigs
Countr
Health Department .
.
Will be close on Monday for
observance of Veteran's Day.
~

For the Record

VICe.

Worthy Love
SOUTHSIDE, W.Va. - Worthy Wayne "Hop" Love, 80,
of Southstde, W.Va., died Sunday evening, Nov. 4, 2007, at
Pleasant Valley Hospital in Point Pleasant, W.Va. He was
the hu sband of Virginia H. Myers Love.
Service will be held at I p.m. on Wednesday, Nov. 7,
2007, at Cro w-Hu ssell Funeral Home in Point Pleasant
wit~ Re~. Isaiah Crump and Monty Foster officiating:
Bun~! Will be m Concord Cemetery in Henderson, W.Va.
Fnends ttlay call from 6 to g p.m. on Tuesday at the
funeral home .

Woman pleads guilty
in case of slain pregnant
woman, -to testify
Bv JOE MILICIA
ASSOCIATED PR ESS WR ITER

CANTON Minutes
before a jury was to begin
considering her fate, a
woman struck a deal that
will give prosecutors important te stimony against a city
police offic er accused in the
slaying of a preg nant
woman.
Myisha Ferrell , 30, of
Canton, the high school
classmate of Patrolman
Bobby Cutts Jr., pleaded
guilty Monday to two
counts in the death ofJessie
Davis, including helping
dispose of the body, which
she admitted to with a barely audible "guilty."
The plea gives prosecutors a witness with firsthand
knowl edge of the crime, but
leaves many questions in
the case publicly unan s.wered until Cutts' trial on
agg ravated murder and
other charges begins Feb. 4.
He could face the death
penalty if convicted.
. Davis, 26, was believed
mi ssing for nine days in
June, and thou sands gathered to search grassy fields
and woods close to . her
· home near North Canton,
about 45 miles south of
Cleveland.
Prosecutors say Ferrell
·knew what happened to
Davis and she pleaded
guilty Monday · in Stark
County Common Pleas
Court to obstructing justice
for Iyi ng to authorities. She
also admitted to complicity
to gross abuse of a corpse. ·
Ferrell was se ntenced to
two years in prison and will
be eligible for release after
one year, according to the
terms of her plea agreement.
She had faced .up to six
years in prison if convicted
on both counts.
Ferrell agreed to testify

Dinner
from PageA1
opposition .
.
Understanding the critical
importance of fundraising
to the party's success,
De Wine plays an aggressive role in cultivating new
financi al support and building s!ron g relationships
with contributors. His
efforts to expand the party's
donor base are essential to
maintaining the candidate
services and grassroots programs that provide a competitive
advantage on
Election Day
In addition to hi s role as
deputy chairman, DeWine
is currently serving his
fourth and final term representing the 70th District in
Ohio
Hou se
of
the
.Represent atives. He also
I

against Cutts. 30, who has
been suspended from the
Canton
police
force .
Investigators say Davis was
killed in her home June 14
in northeast Ohio's Lake
Town ship, ne ar . North
Canton.
Authorities have not said
how she died, or what
motive there may have been
behind her killing.
Ferrell's attorney, John
Alexander, said after the
hearing that the plea agreement was a result of more
than a dozen hours of weekend negotiations. The plea
agreement papers· weren't
. si¥ned until 8:15 a.m. , 15
mmutes before opening
statettlents were scheduled
for the trial.
" It was pretty contentious,
both sides were dug in and
both sides believed in their
case," Alexander said. He
called the decision to plead
guilty "a business decisian."
"She is very upset about
the
whole
situation.
Unfortunately, I'm not
allowed to go into her side
of
the
story,"
said
Alexander, citing Cutts'
pending trial.
·
· Alexander would only say
that hi s client 's testimony in
·the Cutts' case is important
Stark County Prosecutor
John Ferrero wouldn't comment about what weight
Ferrell's testimony would
carry at Cutts' trial. He said
Davi s' family backed rrosecutors oil the Ferrel plea
agreement.
"It's a good solution,"
Ferrero said.
Ferrell's mother left the
courthouse holding her coat
over her face as she passed
television cameras. A brother, who would identify himself only' as Mr. Robinson,
said of his sister, "She's
doing OK."
serves as speaker pro tempore · of the House, th e
chamber's second-highest
ranking member.
His legi slative accomplishm ents include e xtensive efforts to improve
voter confidence in Ohio's
elections process. De Wine
has been instrumental in
crafting major reforms to
state campaign finan ce
laws. which now require
greater
accountability, '
transparency and adhe(ence
to ethical standards. Most
recently, he led a major legislative campaign to protect
the integrity of Ohio's elections system by sponsoring
reforms that safeguard tl)e
voter registration process
and prevent fraud at the ballot box.
De Wine has earned a reputation during his ,legislative career as ali advocate
for Ohio's economic devel -

Marriage license

USA, Orlando, Fla., against Dona ld
Randolph, Jr., Pomeroy, and others.
A civil action was filed by Ohio
POMEROY - A marriage license Department of Job and Family
was issued in Meigs County Probate Services, Columbus, against John's
Court to Bryan Lee Stewart, Jr., 19, Superior Auto Body, Inc ., Middleport.
and Chelsea Lyn.Manley, 19. Pomeroy.

Arraigned

Divorces
POMEROY - Actions , for divorce
were filed in Meigs County Common
Pleas Court by Tamara L. Taylor,
Middleport, against Derrick M. Taylor,
Ripley, W.Va.; Carl E. Demoskey;
Pomeroy, against Anna D. Demosky,
Middlepon; and Joseph M. Powell,
.Middleport, against Laura A. Powell,
Winfield, W.Va.

Foreclosure
POMEROY -An action for foreclosure was filed in Meigs County
Common Pleas Court by HSBC Bank

POMEROY - The following were
arraigned in Meigs County Common
Pleas Court on secret indictments followed by Meigs County Grand Jury:
• Tina Johnson, on a charge of tampering with evidence. $1,000personal
recogniza nce bond , $1,000 surety
bond, and $1,000 appearance bond .
Trial set for Dec. II. Adam Salisbury
appointed as counsel.
• Laura Hysell, on a charge of illegal
manufacture of methamphetamine .
$1,000 personal recognizance bond,
$5;000 surety bond, and $10,000
ap~arance bond. Trial set for Dec. II .
Wtlliam Conley appointed as cdunsel.
• Anthony· Smith, on charges of ille-

gal manufacture of drugs, illegal
assembly or possess ion of chemicals
for manufacture of drugs. $2,500 personal recogni zance bond, $2,500 surety bond, $25,000 appearance bond.
Trial set for Dec. II . Rick Hedges·
appointed as co un sel.

Sentenced
POMEROY - Danny I. Morgan
was sentenced in Meigs County
Common Pleas Court to 18 months in
pri son on a charge of unlawful sexual
~onductwitha •minor. He pled guilty to
the charge. The sentence will be served
consecutively wi th a sentence on
another case in the court.

Dissolution
POMEROY -A dissolution was
gra nted in Meigs County Common
Pleas Court to Carrie Renea Jone s and
Billy Gene Jones. ·

Perspective: Muddy primary another headache for Republicans .
Bv JOHN McCARTHY

1994. The GOP now has an
11 -7 majority in Ohio, so a
swing of three seats would
COLUMBUS - Facing give Democrats control.
next year's congressional Republicans have said they
elections minus three incum- will make a serious run at
bents, Republicans are doing Qemocrat Zack Space of
themselves no favors by Dover, who easily took the
staging a bitter primary for a . eastern Ohio seat held by
fourth U.S, House , on Bob Ney, now imprisoned
after a bribery scandal.
TUesday.
Recent
polling
by
Steve Buehrer and Bob
Latta are waging a mud- Quinnipiac College in ·Ohio
soaked campaign for the seat found Democrats leading
that belonged to Paul Republicans in each possible
presidential matchup, and
Gillmor, who died Sept. 5 in
Republicans are still smartan apparent fall down the ing from last year's near
stairs in his suburban
sweep by Democrats of
Washington home. The win- statewide offices the C'..OP
ner will run Dec. II for the had held for more than a
seat that's been Republican decade.
for decades.
The Democrats' best
The outcome of that elec- chance is in Pryce's central
tion will provide a compass Ohio district, which has been
for 2008~s congressional in the GOP column for
contests.
Reps .
David decades. However, Pryce
Hobson of Sptjngfield, won last year only after a
Deborah Pryce of suburban · recount and the loser, Mary
Columbus and Ralph Regula Jo Kilroy, is a lock for the
oJ the Canton area already Democratic nominiltion next
have announced they won't year.
seek re-election.
Republicans had been
Hobson's di strict is consid- struggling to find a candidate
ered safe for the Republican after
former
Attorney
candidate, bot Regula's and General Jim Petro turned
especially Pryce's will take them down. Another strong
strong - and expensive candidate, state Sen. Steve
campaigns to stay in the Stivers, initially turned party
GOP column. Democrats are officials down, but he told
expected to also charge hard The Columbus Dispatch on
for the seats held by Sunday that he planned to
Republicans Steve Chabot of run for the seat and was
Cincinnati, who got 52 per- expected
to
formally
cent of the vote in 2006, and announce his candidacy at a
Jean Schmidt of Loveland, Monday afternoon news conwho won by fewer than ference.
3,000 votes.
Kirk Schuring, a state senRepublicans have con- ator from Canton, is the liketrolled the Ohio delegation ly GOP candidate for
since the GOP sweep of Regula 's northeast Ohio seat.
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

opment, working to create
much-needed jobs and winning the Guardian of Small
Business Award from the
National Federation of
Independent Bu sinesses.
DeWine holds a bache-

lor's degree in business
from the University of
Dayton and an MBA from
Wright State University. He
and his wife, Kelle, reside
in Fairborn wit]) their four
sons.

Democratic state Sen. John
Boccieri of New Middletown
has the field J o himself for
· the Democratic nomination.
Ohio,
In
southwest
Democrat Victoria Wulsin of
Cincinnati is repeating her
run against Schmidt and
Democrats are confident that
state Rep. Steve Driehaus,
also of Cincinnati, can finally
topple · Chabot
Republicans are clearing the
field for Hobson's western
Ohio seat for state Sen. Steve
Austria of suburban Dayton.
Gillmor's northwest Ohio
district is one· of the most
Republican-leaning 'in the
state, but GOP leaders worry
the bruising primary between
Buehrer and Latta, both state
lawmakers, could give
Democrats an opening.
Each has highlighted the
other's vote for the "Bob Taft
gas tax" increase, invoking
the unpopular former gover. nor's name. And both have
brought Tom Noe into the
race, pointing out in ads that
the other took campaign
money from the imprisoned
rare-coin dealer and GOP
fundraiser who played a big
part in a state Bureau of
Workers '
Compensation
investment scandal that ctip-

pled Republican'candidates. ·
All the vitriol finally led ,
state Rep. Kevin DeWine, .:
the Ohio GOP's deputy .
chairman, to send rebukes to ·
both campaigns.
"The direction this camo
paign is headed will tarnish :
your reputations and those of ;
your campaign consultants ..
and supporters. But more ,
important than the reputation
of any individual, the tenor
of the race is poised to harm
our party," DeWine wrote.
·
Both Latta and Buehrer .
feel the· party can survive ·.
their primary .and defeat the :
likely Democratic nominee, ..
Robin Weirauch , who is .
making her third bid for the .
seat.
Buehrer said the key is .
making sure people go to the
polls when ordinarily they .
would be holiday shopping. :
" A complicator in this race
is the very short time frame," .
he said. "There will be some ·
challen~es
in
pushing
turnout. '
.t--1'\N CtRJ:

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PERFOfl _\li~G ..\HTSl .l~liiE

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LocAL • STATE.

The Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, November 6,

2007

Inside

The Daily Sentinel

•

'

..

Bl.

OHSAA playoff pairings, Page BZ

'

Meigs honor rolls for first nine weeks released
POMEROY · - Honor Hanstine, Brittany Hill ,
ro ll s for the firs t nine weeks Seth Jo hnson, Bradley
grading period for schools Jones, Jacob, Jones, Kay lee
in the Meigs Local School Kennedy,
Kirk Legar,
Di strict
have
been Lindsay McKinney. Shane
annou nced
by Milhoan; Timothy Neely,
Su perintendent William Bri ttany Preast, Casey
Buckley.
Smith. Merissa Snyder,
The studen ts making the Steven S tewart, William
grades to qualify . for the Stewart, J a mes Story, Alexa
honor ro ll in their res pee- Venoy, ·Patti
Vining,
ti ve .school s are as follows: Richard Well , Holly White,
MEIGS HIGH
Cassady Willford.
SCHOOL
MEIGS MIDDLE.
FreshtiJan
Al aine
SCHOOL
ArntJi d, Olivia Bevan,
Sixth g rade - Morgan
Cameron Bolin, Rrianna Barton, Shandi Beaver,
Buffington ,
Frede rick Breanne Bonnett , Megan
Crow. Brandon King, Cleland, Olivia Cremeans,
Sh annon
McLaughlin. Kimbe rly
Cunningham,
Katey Patterson. Kasey Michaela Davidson, Alyson
Roush, Austin Sayre, Dettwiller, Devan Dugan,
Connor Swartz, Sarah ' Brittany Durst, Jarret Durst,
Thomas.
Mere01th Gaul, David
SophomoreTyler Hayes, Bradley Helton ,
Andrews, Lauren Barnes', Derik Hill, Abigail Houser,
Dawn
Bissell,
lan Jamee John son, Sara Klein,
Bullington, Justin Cotterill , Misti Lee, , Brandon Mahr,
Chel sey Dal'is, Travis Morgan Marnati, Andrea
Dunham, Jacob Dunn, McGrath . Daniel Morman,
Autumn Ebersbach, Darby Joshua
Myers , Brody
Gilmore, Ashley Good, Peyton,
Trenton
Alyss Green, Benjamin Prater;Tyler Quails, Selena
Hood, Bradley Hood, Scott Re ynolds , Cassidy Rose,
Kennedy, Annisha Kopec, Taylor Rowe, Morgan
Christa Martin, Shelby Russell , Alexis Schwab,
Ohlinger, Erin Patterson. Briana Smith, Eric Smith,
Jennifer Payne, Latricia Levi Smith,
Samantha
Smith.
Spires, Carolann Stewart,
Junior - Nicole Andrus, Carly Taylor, Anthony
Jamie Bailey. Brittany Vance, Kyle Vanmeter,
Black, Clayton Bolin, Shannon Walker, Tara
Crockett Crow, Kenneth Walzer-Kuharic, Morgan
Delong,
Stephanie Wayland, Cody White,
Will,
Victoria
Donaldson,
Amber Darrin
Ebersbach, Jemlifer Fife, Young.
Amanda Gilkey, Christian
Seventh grade - Braden
Haley, Amber Hockman, Baker Thomas· Boyer,
Lian Hoffman, Jessica Matthew Casci, Kayla
Holliday, Ma.tthew Hosken, Conlin, Alyssa Cremeans,
Johanna Huber, Lilly jacks, Brittany Cremeans, Megan
Cara Lawless, Morgan Dyer, Haley
English,
Lentes , .Jahnna Lydic, Codey Fink, Delilah Fish,
Mason Metts, April Oiler, · Mercadies George, Karlie
Alexandria Patterson , Erin Hall, Edward Hendricks,
Perkins, Ripley Raubenolt, Justin
Hettinger,
Calee Reeves, Brian Rice, Christopher Jones, Corey
Kelsey . Sauters, Megan King,
Hannah
King,
Smith, Caitlin Swartz, Kristen · McGuire, Tyler
Kimberly Swisher, Eric Pabon,
Shawnella
Tolar, James Welsh, Catie Patterson, Rahcel Payne,
Wolfe,
Emma Perrin, Tess Phelps,
Senior - Jacob Barnes, Keaq~ .Robinson, Asbleigh
Amy Barr, Talisha Beha, Sayre, Maggie · Smith,
Kyle Boggs, Megan Bush, Bethany . Spaun , Kyrie
Mason Conde, , Emi ly . Swann,,. A.utumn Tackett,
Davis, Samantha Dequasie, Madelyn , Thomas, Haley
Brandon Dodson , Robert Will.
Foreman ,
Rebecca
Eighth
grade

Cheyenne Beaver, Bruno
Casc i,
Olivia
Cleek,
Charles R Crow, Kimberly
Curl , Michael Davis, Tyler
Dunham, Che lsey Eads,
Tiffa ny Francis, Etnalee
Glass. Cody Hanning,
Savanna Henry. Stephanie
Hoalcraft, Marlee Hoffman,
Cassidy Hood , Taylor
Jones, Jeffrey
Kimes,
Amelia King, Austin King,
Samantha King, Bethany
Lunsford, Steven Mahr,
Christopher
Morman ,
Cody Mattox. Lawrence
McQuaid,
Kassandra
Mullin s, Kasey Napper,
Brady Norville, Timothy
Parsons, Ben Reed, DiJaun
Robinson ,
Jennifer
Robinson, Nathan Rothgeb,
Jeffrey Roush, Michelle
Satterfield, Zachary Sayre,
Kayla Shane, Zachary
Sheets, Cayelynn Smith,
Elizabeth Sprouse, Travis
Tackett, Zane Warner.
MEIGS INTERMEDIATE SCHOOL
Grade 3 - Layne Acree,
Grant
Adams,
Katie
Allman, Tyler Bachtel;
Joseph Billingsley, Taylor
Boggs Megan
Bragg,
Amanda Cole, Dakota
Connolly, Xavier Cooper,
Adam Cotterill , Sarah Curl,
Kylie
Di lion,
Aaron
Dunham, Madison Dyer,
Abby Eads, Jessie Engle,
Nicole Folmer, Alishia
Foster, Cynthia Frederick,
Olivia Fulayter, William
Gentile, Emily Graham,
Alii Hatfiel&amp;, Tyler 'Haynes,
Emily Henry, Brooke
Hettinger, Gracie Hoffman,
Trae
Hood,
Keaton
Huffman, Luke Humphrey,
Stephen Hysell, Courtney
Jones, Jared Kennedy,
Hannah Kennedy, Alexis
King, Kylie King, Kristian
Lemley, Morgan Lodwick,
Dillon
Mahr,
Makya
Milhoan, Danielle Morris,
Elena Musser, . Karlee
Norton, . Brendan Nuscis,
Dillyn Ohlinger, Devyn
Oliver, Kevin. Paxton,
Larissa Petrie, Raeline
. Rc;ev~~• .¥ariah Jte,yt)oJds,
Kendra Roble; Jake· Roush,
Keynath Rowe, Tyler Shull,
. l&lt;.llffii:Y.!l . Smith.•. ~ll;vannah
Smith:· K.J. Tracy; Brittany
Whitt, Tyler Williams,
Lindsay Wise, Hanna

Local weather
Thesday ...Mostly sunny
in the
morning .. .Then
becoming mostly cloudy.
Much cooler with highs in
the upper 40s. West winds
10 to 15 mph with gusts up
to 25 mph.
Thesday night...Cioudy.
Cold with lows in the lower
30s. West ·winds 5 to I 0
mpli. Gusts up to 25 mph in
the evening . .
·
. Wednesday ... Part I y
sunny. Highs in the mid 40s.
.West winds around 5 mph.

Wednesday night...Partly
cloudy. Cold with lows in
the lower 30s. South winds
around 5 mph.
.
Thursday ...Mostly sunny.
Highs around 50.
Thursday nlght ... Mostly
cloudy. A chance of showers
after midnight. Lows in the
upper 30s. Chance of rain 30
percent.
Friday .. . Mostly cloudy
with a 40 percent chance of
showers. Highs around 50.
Friday
night...Mostly

cloudy in the evening ... Then
becoming partly cloudy.
Cold with lows in the mid
30s.
Saturday and Saturday
night...Partly cloudy. Highs
in .the mid 50s. Lows in the
upper 30s.
Sunday ...Mostly sunny.
Highs around 60.
Sunday
night
and
Monday ...Mostl y cloudy.
Lows in the lower 40s.
Highs around 60.

Young.
Grade 4 - Brenn an Bell ,
Trey Coares, Kaylea Cox,
p avid
Doerfer, Tyler
Fields, Sadie Fox, Evan
George, Katie Gilkey,
Miranda Gillilan, Madison
Greene, Matthew Hawkins, ·
Austin Hendricks, Tracy
Herdman ,
Alexandria
Houdashelt,
Mackenzi
'Hunter. Skylar. Jenkins,
Jackie Jordan, Wyatt King,
Brayden Kopec, Jake Korn,
Colton
Lilly,
Austin
AP pltoto/Th8 Plain Dealer, Lila DeJonc
McClintic,
William Tim King, left, sings a Buck Owens song wh ile playing the
Milliron, Collin Neutzling, bass for the roots rock n' roll nonprofit organization · Music
Tyler O'Connor, Adriahna on a Miss ion" at the Louis Stokes Cleveland Department of
Patterson, Lara. Perrin, . Veterans Affairs Medical Center in Brecksville, Ohio, Tuesday,
Kelsie Powell , Gregory Oct. 30, 2007. This is a new musical endeavor that brings
Priddy, Cory Scarberry, music to nursing homes, homeless shelters and schools.
Kalynn Seymour, Breanna
Smith, Zachary Warnecke,
Haley Wilson, Jaden Wolfe,
Sonja Young.
Grade 5 Chai sty
Abbott, Savannah Abshire ,
Brook Andrus, Jordyn
Zeidner is director of the.
Arnold, Drama Arnott , Bv MOLLY KAVANAUGH
THE ASSOCIATED PRE SS
Hou se women 's
Genesis
Sammy Ash, McKayla
shelter in Lorain. She has
Barrett,
Destinee
BRECKSVILLE
brought music into the shelBlackwell, Tyra Boothe,
Robert
McAtee
prefers
the
ter
by handing out portable
Sariah Brinker, Brittany
solitude
of
his
rooin,
but
on
players to the women and
Cochran, ·Alexis Coleman,
a
recent
night
he
joined
scheduling
music programs
Shaun Coleman, Amber
other
residents
at
the
VA
.for
the
children.
Seeing
Davidson , Jordan Dean ,
Medical
Center
in
northeast
firsthand how mu sic has
Emily Deem, Gage Gilkey,
soothed
Ohio
to
hear
four
men
belt
the di straught resi Josh Gilkey, Marissa Hall ,
out
oldies
to
the
beat
of
guidents,
she
wanted to bring
Sierra
Hall, Rheanna
melodic
comfort
tars
and
drums.
to others in
Harmon , Orville Hill ,
·
As McAtee closed his need.
Mitchell Howard, Katelyn
eyes
and
played
imaginary
.
She
had
no
trouble
findHysell, Haley Kennedy,
Brennan Klein, A.J. Kopec, drums; another resi,lent sat ing local musicians willing
Rachel Landers, Cheyenna· quietly in his chair, tears to share their talent in return
for a small fee. Zeidner is
Lewis, Samantha Loar, streaming down his face.
· Across the room Clenzy the booking agent for
Nate McClintock, Mitchell
Baker
couldn' t sit still. Savannah Bar &amp; Grille in
Metts, Bre Mitchell, Kerri
During
the hourlong con- Westlake.
.
Moon, Kaylee Nelson ,
"It's like my- worlds col - .
Lindsay Patterson, Wesley cert, he sang, tapped hi s feet
and
drummed
his
hands
on
lided."
she said.
Patterson, Ty Phelps, Paige
the
table.
Phillips, · Brooke Reynolds,
The tledgling group phms
"You guys got it, I tell to brin g live music into
Cody Robinson, Courtney
Rohinson, Jason Robinson , ya' ," 79-year-old Baker shelters and nursing homes,
Hailey Roush, Matthew yelled out as the band and is awaiting word on
Smallwood,
Christian played "Pretty Woman ."
grant applications to start
The
magic
of
music
is
the
Spaun, Breahna Th0mpson,
booking events. Music on a
Tanner Vanaman, Mikayla moving force of Music on a Mission also includes
VanMatre, Victoria Walker, Mission, a nonprofit organi- Eastlake dancers Neal and
· Issac Watson, Kacie Welsh, zation that was started this Christy Dorenkott, who will
Austin Wolfe; Collen summer . by
Marilyn teach movement to people
Young.
·
Zeidner.
with disabilities. ·

liVe

need

Honor·Our
Heroes
On November 11, our nation will pause to pay tribute to the thousands
of men and women who have proudly served their country during times of
crises and peace.
This Veteran's Day, the Sunday Times-Sentinel will publish a very
special' tribute honoring area veterans. You ca11 join i11 our salute by
including the veteran in your life, living or deceased, who has served or is
currently serving in any branch of the U.S. Armed Forces.

Your choice of Two Styles ...

·Ad Only $8.00
(shown actual size)

In Honor Of

.

Major
Earl Jones
1969-1971
Army
VietNam

.

·Love, Your Family
Ad With Photo- $15.00
(Shown actual size)

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

Rlllllllllltl ....

It ~fl R*ipH

... I

n, effrt.llltl t"

Mf1

Photo of

Your
Veteran

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

,

011111:

•

2S02~Avonut .
Polat ......
wv 25550
'

In Honor of (name and rank)
Dates.of Active Duty
Branch of Service
Confl ict!War

AD DEADLINE WEDNESDAY, NOV. 7, 2007

5:00 PM Tributes must be prepaid.
Photos may be picked up after Nov. 11th
Your Name: ___________________

I

In Honor Of

Corporal .
Bob Johnson
1991-1992 '

Marines Desert Storm
Love, Your Family

L-----------------~

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court St.
Pomeroy, OH 45769
Phone (7 40) 992-2155 .

•

Rooney considers himself 'last man standing' among NFL pioneers
BY ALAN ROBINSON
AP SPORTS WRITER

PITTSBURGH - Dan
Rooney turned 75 this year,
INSTITUTE ,
W.Va . and the . Pittsburgh Steelers
(AP) - Concern s over a are playing their 75th seadrug-resistant staph infec- son.
tion had a visible focal
Good thing
Steelers
point la st month when founder Art Rooney Sr.'s
ni
West Virginia State first son came along at neariversity football play- ly the same time the elder
. ers ere reported to have Rooney was buying his footcom down with the ail- ball team, because neither
me .
Dan · Rooney nor the frans it turns out, that was chise would have seemed
exaggerated . Four. not the same without the other.
Dan Rooney, the son of an
nine, players actually te sted positive for methicillin- NFL pioneer and a Pro
resistant Staphylococcus Football Hall of Farner like
aureus, or MRSA, accord- his dad, considers himself
ing to Dr. Kerry Gateley, the last link to the league 's
director of the Charleston- early days when college
Kanawha
Health football was king and pro
football was an afterthought.
Department.
·
A number of pl ayers told
Gateley they had never
even seen a doctor, while
others showed him lab
results that indicated they
had tested positive for regBY ALAN ROBINSON
AP SPORT S WRITER
ular staph infections,
instead of MRSA.
PITTSBURGH - Hall of
"You need to have an
Famers
galore lined the
appropriate medical confirmation for thi s thing," Steelers' side Iine, with
Gateley said. "You can't Terry Bradshaw and Mean
line people up who all Joe Greene, Jack Ham, Mel
have a boil and say they Blount and Franco Harris
all have MRSA."
out front. No wonder the
The university reported Baltimore Ravens probably
last month that nine play- thought they were playing
ers had the infection.
all of them and the current
"The players have to day Steelers, too.
·
self-report that to us ," said
Ben Roethlisberger tied
Jl.niversity spokeswoman the Steelers' single-game
record with five touchdown
Please see Staph, 82
passes in the first half as
Bradshaw stood nearby'
cheering him on, and
SPORTS BRIEFS
Pittsburgh put on a Steel
Curtain-like defensive show
fqr its returning stars by
forcing four turnovers
before halftime in a 38-7
victory over Baltimore on
Monday night.
The Ravens (4-4) had a
MASON, W.Va. - P.J.
chance
to tie for the AFC
Gibbs of New Haven
recorded the I 2th hole-in- North lead by beating the
one of the 2007 golf season . Steelers (6-2) for a fourth
at Riverside Golf Club on straight time dating to 2005 .
In reality, they had no
Saturday, November 3rd.
chance
at all. Not with all
Gibbs' ace was made on
the
big
names gathered to
the 9th h9le, a 145-yard par3 on· the front nine . ·Gibbs celebrate the Steelers' 75th
J.lsed a 9-iron for the first anniversary, whooping it up
hole-in-one of his career. and pounding each others'
Witnessing the event was backs with every big hit and
turnover. ·
Sterling Shields of Mason.
The Steelers forced
t\.dvanced tickets for three fumbles in the first
quarter alone, with James
Wahama playoff
Harrison hitting All -Pro
safety Ed Reed so hard on
game now on sale
a punt return ball new
nearly 15 feet before
MASON, W.Va.
Advanced
tickets
for Pittsburgh recovered. Four
Saturday 's opening round plays later, Roethli sberger
playoff · game between found Santonio Holme s
Wahama and Pocahontas for 15 yards on the first of
County are now on sale in their two opening-half
the office at Wahatna High touchdown pass plays and
School.
a 14-0 Steelers lead.
Tickets can be purchased Holmes had II 0 yards on
during school hours, with four receptions.
adults costing $7 apiece and
Right about then , it was
students running $5 each. becoming obvious this
All tickets will be $7 at the
gat~ on Saturday. The kickPlease see Steelers. 82
off is scheduled for 1:30
p.m.
Also, no posters or banners are to be hung on the
field at any time and there is
BY ToM WITHERS
also no re served seating.
AP SPORTS WRITER
Only WVSSAC passes will
be honored at the gate.
BEREA - In an almost
Anyone leaving the stadium
emp
ty locker room, a
must pay to re-enter. There
teary-eyed Kellen Winslow
will be no pass outs.
struggled while stuffing
personal items into a bag
Southern AthleUc
after an elltra-long workBoosters meeting today day. His shoulder ached,
hi s knee throbbed and his
RACINE
The hip killed him .
Southern
Athletic
He was hurting all over. .
Boosters will have a meetMost of his teammates had
ing on Today, November already
showered . and
6, at the high school cafe- walked past . Winslow
teria. The meeting wi·ll moved slowly, looking more
start at 6:30p.m.
like he was 54 than the 24year-old phy sical specimen
who routinely runs past NFL
. cornerbacks.
Winslow left everything
on
the field Sunday, playing
1-740-446-2342 ext. 33
like his Hall of Fame father'
Fa•- 1-740.446-3008
t'aniously did during an AFC
E-mall - .sportsC mydailysentinel.com
playoff game on a humid
. Soort1 Staff
December night in Miami
Bryan Waller&amp;, Sports Wrller decade s ago. Anyone el se
might have succumbed to
(740) 446·2342. ext. 33
bwalters Omydallytrlbune.com
the pain.
Not Winslow. Cleveland 's
Larry Crum, Sports Wrller
tough tight end, who se
(740) 446·2342. ••1. 33
promising career nearly
~c rum @ mydai lyregi s ter. c om
.,

Players were paid next to
nothing, yet the gate receipt s
sometimes didn 't meet the
payroll.
The Steelers weren' t one
of the NFL's original fran chis' s in the early 1920s, bl!t
they've been a member
1933,
when
since
Portsmouth, Ohio, still had
an NFL team. Dan Rooney
was barely out of diapers
when he first met NFL trailblazers such as George
Halas, George Preston
Marshall, Curley Lambeau
and Wellington Mara, and he
became friends with all of
them .
"I really consider myself
the last man standing," said
Rooney, whose Steelers celebrated their 75th season
with ceremonies during

Monday
night's game
against
Baltimore.
"Obviously I was n' t there in
1920. but I knew the people
that were . I was able to talk
to them and experience
them."
Rooney officially took
over the Steelers' front
office in 1975, but, in reality,
had been in . charge since
1965. His son, Art II. is now
Steelers president, but Dan
is the chairman and remains
heavily involved in league
affairs . When Roger Goodell
was chosen as the NFL commissioner in 2006, Rooney
and
Carolina's
Jerry
Richardson were the hiring
committee co-chairmen.
Dari Rooney can remember the long-ago days before
Goodell and Paul Tagliabue

and Pete Rozelle before him
- when Elmer Layden and
Bert Bell were NFL commi ss ioners, ne twork TV
coverage was only a dream,
and, later, when games were
always blac ked out in the
home team market.
Rooney helped re shape
the league when he and his
father agreed to move the
Steelers from what now is
the NFC, C\}mposed mostly
of pre-1967 NFL members,
into the newly formed AFC,
made up mostly of former
AFL clubs. Cleveland and
Baltimore al so went along .
"I was for giving it no
thought. We fought with
t.hose guys (the AFL) for
years," said Rooney, whose
thinking was swayed by his
father and Rozelle.

In honor of · the twin
·anniversaries, Rooney has·
written a book called "Dan
Roone y, My 75 Years with
the Pittsburgh Sieelers and
the NFL" in which he offers
considerable iosight into
league and team affairs.
He wanted to include
more, he said , but hi s publi shers "told . me I'd better
watch what I' m saying
because I don 't wam to get
·sued."
Among his memories,
which began during his days
as a Steelers water boy in the
early 1940s:
- Halas and Marshall
pushed to install former F£1
offic ial Austin Gunsel as
commi ssioner in 1960 rather

Please see Rooney, 82

Roethlisberger, Steelers overpower Ravens Bengals
turn back
clocks to
the bad
old days
BY JOE KAY
M" SPORTS WRITER

CINCINNATI - Over
the weekend, the Cincinnati
Bengals turned back their
clocks ... five years, 'to the
bad old days.
Halfway home, their seas o n ' s

Gibbs records
12th ace this year
at Riverside G.C.

ComAcrUs

304.675.4500·
•

FewerWVSU
football players
than thought had
MRSA infection

AP photo

Pittsburgh Steelers quarterback Ben Roethlisberger (7) eludes Baltimore Ravens line·
tlacker Terrell Suggs, right, during second quarter NFL football action in Pittsburgh Monday. .
Roethlisberger connected with receiver Nate Washington for a touchdown on the play.

done. And
the ugliness is far
f r o m
over.
T h e
Notebook coach 1s
tired of
talking about it. The players
don't know how it's gotten
so bad. The sun has already
set on this season with eight
games left. .
Sound faintly familiar?
A 33-21 loss in Buffalo on
Sunday left the Bengals
marooned at 2-6, all by their
lonesome in last place in the
AFC North . It's their worst
midseason record since they
went 1-7 in 2002, on their
way to a 2-14 finish that
doomed coach Dick LeBeau
and opened the way for
Marvin Lewi s to take over.
They' re having a throwback season.
"It's kind of all for nothing when you' re 2-6, really,"·
receiver
T.J.
Hou shmandzadeh
said
Monday. "You're 2-6,
nobody cares. You're losing, nobody cares. h's all
for nothing."
· ·
The latest los.s pushed
them over the edge.

Please see 8engals, 82

Winslow fights pain to rally Browns

Love, (Name relationship to veteran)

Address:·- - - - - - - - - - - - Phone: _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ 1
,

O.'riJint

'

r-----------------,

I Please Fill Out And Return With
:
. Your Payment to:
I
VETERAN SALUTE
I
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1
C/9 Daily Sentinel
I
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Pomeroy, Ohio 45679

Thesday, November 6, 2007

----'-- .

~

ended two years ago from the field."
injuries sustained in a nearMaybe the Browns should
fatal motorcycle crash, have carried him -on their
refused to quit during a J3- shoulders.
30 overtime win against
If not for Winslow,
Seattle.
Cleveland probably would"You've got to love that n't have won. The four-year
guy," cornerback Leigh veteran made five catches
Bodden said as Winslow for 58 y_ards in the fourth
packed up behind him. "He quarter, with four picking up
loves this game."
first downs as the Browns
Beyond his II catches for came back from a 21-9 half125 yards, Winslow 's hard- time deticit.
With Cleveland trailing
nosed performance perhaps
embodted these never-say- late in the 'third quarter,
die Browns (5-3). Winslow Winslow snagged a 14-yard
just might wi II them to the pass from Derek Anderson
playoffs.
on third-and-8. Winslow
He's becoming a leader, landed hard on the turf from
the guy everyone in the the tackle and was sluggish
locker room follows . No one getting up. He staggered to
can debate Winslow's heart , the bench, his left side
determination or drive . He noticeably sagging.
has lived up to his hype.
On Cleveland's sideline,
"I told you, I'm a soldier, · TV cameras showed Brown s
man," Winslow said with a trainers massaging hi s left
smile, playfully referencin g leg as Winslow sat grimachis infamou s "''m a soldier" ing. Moments later, he was
rant that drew him publi c up and weavi1i g his way
scorn when he was a Mi ami t~roug h players and coaches
Hurri cane . "They weren' t to get b&lt;1ck on t~e ·fie ld .
go ing to keep me out.
They'd have to drag me off Please see Browns, Bl

·------- - - - - -- - - - -------

-·"

-·

AP photo

Cleveland Browns tight end Kellen Wins low (80) is dragged
out of bounds at the one yard ljne by Seattle Seahawks
saf€ty Dean Grant in the fou rth quarter of an NFL football
game Su nday in Cleveland.

·.

�..

•?

J

PageA6
.

LocAL • STATE.

The Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, November 6,

2007

Inside

The Daily Sentinel

•

'

..

Bl.

OHSAA playoff pairings, Page BZ

'

Meigs honor rolls for first nine weeks released
POMEROY · - Honor Hanstine, Brittany Hill ,
ro ll s for the firs t nine weeks Seth Jo hnson, Bradley
grading period for schools Jones, Jacob, Jones, Kay lee
in the Meigs Local School Kennedy,
Kirk Legar,
Di strict
have
been Lindsay McKinney. Shane
annou nced
by Milhoan; Timothy Neely,
Su perintendent William Bri ttany Preast, Casey
Buckley.
Smith. Merissa Snyder,
The studen ts making the Steven S tewart, William
grades to qualify . for the Stewart, J a mes Story, Alexa
honor ro ll in their res pee- Venoy, ·Patti
Vining,
ti ve .school s are as follows: Richard Well , Holly White,
MEIGS HIGH
Cassady Willford.
SCHOOL
MEIGS MIDDLE.
FreshtiJan
Al aine
SCHOOL
ArntJi d, Olivia Bevan,
Sixth g rade - Morgan
Cameron Bolin, Rrianna Barton, Shandi Beaver,
Buffington ,
Frede rick Breanne Bonnett , Megan
Crow. Brandon King, Cleland, Olivia Cremeans,
Sh annon
McLaughlin. Kimbe rly
Cunningham,
Katey Patterson. Kasey Michaela Davidson, Alyson
Roush, Austin Sayre, Dettwiller, Devan Dugan,
Connor Swartz, Sarah ' Brittany Durst, Jarret Durst,
Thomas.
Mere01th Gaul, David
SophomoreTyler Hayes, Bradley Helton ,
Andrews, Lauren Barnes', Derik Hill, Abigail Houser,
Dawn
Bissell,
lan Jamee John son, Sara Klein,
Bullington, Justin Cotterill , Misti Lee, , Brandon Mahr,
Chel sey Dal'is, Travis Morgan Marnati, Andrea
Dunham, Jacob Dunn, McGrath . Daniel Morman,
Autumn Ebersbach, Darby Joshua
Myers , Brody
Gilmore, Ashley Good, Peyton,
Trenton
Alyss Green, Benjamin Prater;Tyler Quails, Selena
Hood, Bradley Hood, Scott Re ynolds , Cassidy Rose,
Kennedy, Annisha Kopec, Taylor Rowe, Morgan
Christa Martin, Shelby Russell , Alexis Schwab,
Ohlinger, Erin Patterson. Briana Smith, Eric Smith,
Jennifer Payne, Latricia Levi Smith,
Samantha
Smith.
Spires, Carolann Stewart,
Junior - Nicole Andrus, Carly Taylor, Anthony
Jamie Bailey. Brittany Vance, Kyle Vanmeter,
Black, Clayton Bolin, Shannon Walker, Tara
Crockett Crow, Kenneth Walzer-Kuharic, Morgan
Delong,
Stephanie Wayland, Cody White,
Will,
Victoria
Donaldson,
Amber Darrin
Ebersbach, Jemlifer Fife, Young.
Amanda Gilkey, Christian
Seventh grade - Braden
Haley, Amber Hockman, Baker Thomas· Boyer,
Lian Hoffman, Jessica Matthew Casci, Kayla
Holliday, Ma.tthew Hosken, Conlin, Alyssa Cremeans,
Johanna Huber, Lilly jacks, Brittany Cremeans, Megan
Cara Lawless, Morgan Dyer, Haley
English,
Lentes , .Jahnna Lydic, Codey Fink, Delilah Fish,
Mason Metts, April Oiler, · Mercadies George, Karlie
Alexandria Patterson , Erin Hall, Edward Hendricks,
Perkins, Ripley Raubenolt, Justin
Hettinger,
Calee Reeves, Brian Rice, Christopher Jones, Corey
Kelsey . Sauters, Megan King,
Hannah
King,
Smith, Caitlin Swartz, Kristen · McGuire, Tyler
Kimberly Swisher, Eric Pabon,
Shawnella
Tolar, James Welsh, Catie Patterson, Rahcel Payne,
Wolfe,
Emma Perrin, Tess Phelps,
Senior - Jacob Barnes, Keaq~ .Robinson, Asbleigh
Amy Barr, Talisha Beha, Sayre, Maggie · Smith,
Kyle Boggs, Megan Bush, Bethany . Spaun , Kyrie
Mason Conde, , Emi ly . Swann,,. A.utumn Tackett,
Davis, Samantha Dequasie, Madelyn , Thomas, Haley
Brandon Dodson , Robert Will.
Foreman ,
Rebecca
Eighth
grade

Cheyenne Beaver, Bruno
Casc i,
Olivia
Cleek,
Charles R Crow, Kimberly
Curl , Michael Davis, Tyler
Dunham, Che lsey Eads,
Tiffa ny Francis, Etnalee
Glass. Cody Hanning,
Savanna Henry. Stephanie
Hoalcraft, Marlee Hoffman,
Cassidy Hood , Taylor
Jones, Jeffrey
Kimes,
Amelia King, Austin King,
Samantha King, Bethany
Lunsford, Steven Mahr,
Christopher
Morman ,
Cody Mattox. Lawrence
McQuaid,
Kassandra
Mullin s, Kasey Napper,
Brady Norville, Timothy
Parsons, Ben Reed, DiJaun
Robinson ,
Jennifer
Robinson, Nathan Rothgeb,
Jeffrey Roush, Michelle
Satterfield, Zachary Sayre,
Kayla Shane, Zachary
Sheets, Cayelynn Smith,
Elizabeth Sprouse, Travis
Tackett, Zane Warner.
MEIGS INTERMEDIATE SCHOOL
Grade 3 - Layne Acree,
Grant
Adams,
Katie
Allman, Tyler Bachtel;
Joseph Billingsley, Taylor
Boggs Megan
Bragg,
Amanda Cole, Dakota
Connolly, Xavier Cooper,
Adam Cotterill , Sarah Curl,
Kylie
Di lion,
Aaron
Dunham, Madison Dyer,
Abby Eads, Jessie Engle,
Nicole Folmer, Alishia
Foster, Cynthia Frederick,
Olivia Fulayter, William
Gentile, Emily Graham,
Alii Hatfiel&amp;, Tyler 'Haynes,
Emily Henry, Brooke
Hettinger, Gracie Hoffman,
Trae
Hood,
Keaton
Huffman, Luke Humphrey,
Stephen Hysell, Courtney
Jones, Jared Kennedy,
Hannah Kennedy, Alexis
King, Kylie King, Kristian
Lemley, Morgan Lodwick,
Dillon
Mahr,
Makya
Milhoan, Danielle Morris,
Elena Musser, . Karlee
Norton, . Brendan Nuscis,
Dillyn Ohlinger, Devyn
Oliver, Kevin. Paxton,
Larissa Petrie, Raeline
. Rc;ev~~• .¥ariah Jte,yt)oJds,
Kendra Roble; Jake· Roush,
Keynath Rowe, Tyler Shull,
. l&lt;.llffii:Y.!l . Smith.•. ~ll;vannah
Smith:· K.J. Tracy; Brittany
Whitt, Tyler Williams,
Lindsay Wise, Hanna

Local weather
Thesday ...Mostly sunny
in the
morning .. .Then
becoming mostly cloudy.
Much cooler with highs in
the upper 40s. West winds
10 to 15 mph with gusts up
to 25 mph.
Thesday night...Cioudy.
Cold with lows in the lower
30s. West ·winds 5 to I 0
mpli. Gusts up to 25 mph in
the evening . .
·
. Wednesday ... Part I y
sunny. Highs in the mid 40s.
.West winds around 5 mph.

Wednesday night...Partly
cloudy. Cold with lows in
the lower 30s. South winds
around 5 mph.
.
Thursday ...Mostly sunny.
Highs around 50.
Thursday nlght ... Mostly
cloudy. A chance of showers
after midnight. Lows in the
upper 30s. Chance of rain 30
percent.
Friday .. . Mostly cloudy
with a 40 percent chance of
showers. Highs around 50.
Friday
night...Mostly

cloudy in the evening ... Then
becoming partly cloudy.
Cold with lows in the mid
30s.
Saturday and Saturday
night...Partly cloudy. Highs
in .the mid 50s. Lows in the
upper 30s.
Sunday ...Mostly sunny.
Highs around 60.
Sunday
night
and
Monday ...Mostl y cloudy.
Lows in the lower 40s.
Highs around 60.

Young.
Grade 4 - Brenn an Bell ,
Trey Coares, Kaylea Cox,
p avid
Doerfer, Tyler
Fields, Sadie Fox, Evan
George, Katie Gilkey,
Miranda Gillilan, Madison
Greene, Matthew Hawkins, ·
Austin Hendricks, Tracy
Herdman ,
Alexandria
Houdashelt,
Mackenzi
'Hunter. Skylar. Jenkins,
Jackie Jordan, Wyatt King,
Brayden Kopec, Jake Korn,
Colton
Lilly,
Austin
AP pltoto/Th8 Plain Dealer, Lila DeJonc
McClintic,
William Tim King, left, sings a Buck Owens song wh ile playing the
Milliron, Collin Neutzling, bass for the roots rock n' roll nonprofit organization · Music
Tyler O'Connor, Adriahna on a Miss ion" at the Louis Stokes Cleveland Department of
Patterson, Lara. Perrin, . Veterans Affairs Medical Center in Brecksville, Ohio, Tuesday,
Kelsie Powell , Gregory Oct. 30, 2007. This is a new musical endeavor that brings
Priddy, Cory Scarberry, music to nursing homes, homeless shelters and schools.
Kalynn Seymour, Breanna
Smith, Zachary Warnecke,
Haley Wilson, Jaden Wolfe,
Sonja Young.
Grade 5 Chai sty
Abbott, Savannah Abshire ,
Brook Andrus, Jordyn
Zeidner is director of the.
Arnold, Drama Arnott , Bv MOLLY KAVANAUGH
THE ASSOCIATED PRE SS
Hou se women 's
Genesis
Sammy Ash, McKayla
shelter in Lorain. She has
Barrett,
Destinee
BRECKSVILLE
brought music into the shelBlackwell, Tyra Boothe,
Robert
McAtee
prefers
the
ter
by handing out portable
Sariah Brinker, Brittany
solitude
of
his
rooin,
but
on
players to the women and
Cochran, ·Alexis Coleman,
a
recent
night
he
joined
scheduling
music programs
Shaun Coleman, Amber
other
residents
at
the
VA
.for
the
children.
Seeing
Davidson , Jordan Dean ,
Medical
Center
in
northeast
firsthand how mu sic has
Emily Deem, Gage Gilkey,
soothed
Ohio
to
hear
four
men
belt
the di straught resi Josh Gilkey, Marissa Hall ,
out
oldies
to
the
beat
of
guidents,
she
wanted to bring
Sierra
Hall, Rheanna
melodic
comfort
tars
and
drums.
to others in
Harmon , Orville Hill ,
·
As McAtee closed his need.
Mitchell Howard, Katelyn
eyes
and
played
imaginary
.
She
had
no
trouble
findHysell, Haley Kennedy,
Brennan Klein, A.J. Kopec, drums; another resi,lent sat ing local musicians willing
Rachel Landers, Cheyenna· quietly in his chair, tears to share their talent in return
for a small fee. Zeidner is
Lewis, Samantha Loar, streaming down his face.
· Across the room Clenzy the booking agent for
Nate McClintock, Mitchell
Baker
couldn' t sit still. Savannah Bar &amp; Grille in
Metts, Bre Mitchell, Kerri
During
the hourlong con- Westlake.
.
Moon, Kaylee Nelson ,
"It's like my- worlds col - .
Lindsay Patterson, Wesley cert, he sang, tapped hi s feet
and
drummed
his
hands
on
lided."
she said.
Patterson, Ty Phelps, Paige
the
table.
Phillips, · Brooke Reynolds,
The tledgling group phms
"You guys got it, I tell to brin g live music into
Cody Robinson, Courtney
Rohinson, Jason Robinson , ya' ," 79-year-old Baker shelters and nursing homes,
Hailey Roush, Matthew yelled out as the band and is awaiting word on
Smallwood,
Christian played "Pretty Woman ."
grant applications to start
The
magic
of
music
is
the
Spaun, Breahna Th0mpson,
booking events. Music on a
Tanner Vanaman, Mikayla moving force of Music on a Mission also includes
VanMatre, Victoria Walker, Mission, a nonprofit organi- Eastlake dancers Neal and
· Issac Watson, Kacie Welsh, zation that was started this Christy Dorenkott, who will
Austin Wolfe; Collen summer . by
Marilyn teach movement to people
Young.
·
Zeidner.
with disabilities. ·

liVe

need

Honor·Our
Heroes
On November 11, our nation will pause to pay tribute to the thousands
of men and women who have proudly served their country during times of
crises and peace.
This Veteran's Day, the Sunday Times-Sentinel will publish a very
special' tribute honoring area veterans. You ca11 join i11 our salute by
including the veteran in your life, living or deceased, who has served or is
currently serving in any branch of the U.S. Armed Forces.

Your choice of Two Styles ...

·Ad Only $8.00
(shown actual size)

In Honor Of

.

Major
Earl Jones
1969-1971
Army
VietNam

.

·Love, Your Family
Ad With Photo- $15.00
(Shown actual size)

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

Rlllllllllltl ....

It ~fl R*ipH

... I

n, effrt.llltl t"

Mf1

Photo of

Your
Veteran

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

,

011111:

•

2S02~Avonut .
Polat ......
wv 25550
'

In Honor of (name and rank)
Dates.of Active Duty
Branch of Service
Confl ict!War

AD DEADLINE WEDNESDAY, NOV. 7, 2007

5:00 PM Tributes must be prepaid.
Photos may be picked up after Nov. 11th
Your Name: ___________________

I

In Honor Of

Corporal .
Bob Johnson
1991-1992 '

Marines Desert Storm
Love, Your Family

L-----------------~

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court St.
Pomeroy, OH 45769
Phone (7 40) 992-2155 .

•

Rooney considers himself 'last man standing' among NFL pioneers
BY ALAN ROBINSON
AP SPORTS WRITER

PITTSBURGH - Dan
Rooney turned 75 this year,
INSTITUTE ,
W.Va . and the . Pittsburgh Steelers
(AP) - Concern s over a are playing their 75th seadrug-resistant staph infec- son.
tion had a visible focal
Good thing
Steelers
point la st month when founder Art Rooney Sr.'s
ni
West Virginia State first son came along at neariversity football play- ly the same time the elder
. ers ere reported to have Rooney was buying his footcom down with the ail- ball team, because neither
me .
Dan · Rooney nor the frans it turns out, that was chise would have seemed
exaggerated . Four. not the same without the other.
Dan Rooney, the son of an
nine, players actually te sted positive for methicillin- NFL pioneer and a Pro
resistant Staphylococcus Football Hall of Farner like
aureus, or MRSA, accord- his dad, considers himself
ing to Dr. Kerry Gateley, the last link to the league 's
director of the Charleston- early days when college
Kanawha
Health football was king and pro
football was an afterthought.
Department.
·
A number of pl ayers told
Gateley they had never
even seen a doctor, while
others showed him lab
results that indicated they
had tested positive for regBY ALAN ROBINSON
AP SPORT S WRITER
ular staph infections,
instead of MRSA.
PITTSBURGH - Hall of
"You need to have an
Famers
galore lined the
appropriate medical confirmation for thi s thing," Steelers' side Iine, with
Gateley said. "You can't Terry Bradshaw and Mean
line people up who all Joe Greene, Jack Ham, Mel
have a boil and say they Blount and Franco Harris
all have MRSA."
out front. No wonder the
The university reported Baltimore Ravens probably
last month that nine play- thought they were playing
ers had the infection.
all of them and the current
"The players have to day Steelers, too.
·
self-report that to us ," said
Ben Roethlisberger tied
Jl.niversity spokeswoman the Steelers' single-game
record with five touchdown
Please see Staph, 82
passes in the first half as
Bradshaw stood nearby'
cheering him on, and
SPORTS BRIEFS
Pittsburgh put on a Steel
Curtain-like defensive show
fqr its returning stars by
forcing four turnovers
before halftime in a 38-7
victory over Baltimore on
Monday night.
The Ravens (4-4) had a
MASON, W.Va. - P.J.
chance
to tie for the AFC
Gibbs of New Haven
recorded the I 2th hole-in- North lead by beating the
one of the 2007 golf season . Steelers (6-2) for a fourth
at Riverside Golf Club on straight time dating to 2005 .
In reality, they had no
Saturday, November 3rd.
chance
at all. Not with all
Gibbs' ace was made on
the
big
names gathered to
the 9th h9le, a 145-yard par3 on· the front nine . ·Gibbs celebrate the Steelers' 75th
J.lsed a 9-iron for the first anniversary, whooping it up
hole-in-one of his career. and pounding each others'
Witnessing the event was backs with every big hit and
turnover. ·
Sterling Shields of Mason.
The Steelers forced
t\.dvanced tickets for three fumbles in the first
quarter alone, with James
Wahama playoff
Harrison hitting All -Pro
safety Ed Reed so hard on
game now on sale
a punt return ball new
nearly 15 feet before
MASON, W.Va.
Advanced
tickets
for Pittsburgh recovered. Four
Saturday 's opening round plays later, Roethli sberger
playoff · game between found Santonio Holme s
Wahama and Pocahontas for 15 yards on the first of
County are now on sale in their two opening-half
the office at Wahatna High touchdown pass plays and
School.
a 14-0 Steelers lead.
Tickets can be purchased Holmes had II 0 yards on
during school hours, with four receptions.
adults costing $7 apiece and
Right about then , it was
students running $5 each. becoming obvious this
All tickets will be $7 at the
gat~ on Saturday. The kickPlease see Steelers. 82
off is scheduled for 1:30
p.m.
Also, no posters or banners are to be hung on the
field at any time and there is
BY ToM WITHERS
also no re served seating.
AP SPORTS WRITER
Only WVSSAC passes will
be honored at the gate.
BEREA - In an almost
Anyone leaving the stadium
emp
ty locker room, a
must pay to re-enter. There
teary-eyed Kellen Winslow
will be no pass outs.
struggled while stuffing
personal items into a bag
Southern AthleUc
after an elltra-long workBoosters meeting today day. His shoulder ached,
hi s knee throbbed and his
RACINE
The hip killed him .
Southern
Athletic
He was hurting all over. .
Boosters will have a meetMost of his teammates had
ing on Today, November already
showered . and
6, at the high school cafe- walked past . Winslow
teria. The meeting wi·ll moved slowly, looking more
start at 6:30p.m.
like he was 54 than the 24year-old phy sical specimen
who routinely runs past NFL
. cornerbacks.
Winslow left everything
on
the field Sunday, playing
1-740-446-2342 ext. 33
like his Hall of Fame father'
Fa•- 1-740.446-3008
t'aniously did during an AFC
E-mall - .sportsC mydailysentinel.com
playoff game on a humid
. Soort1 Staff
December night in Miami
Bryan Waller&amp;, Sports Wrller decade s ago. Anyone el se
might have succumbed to
(740) 446·2342. ext. 33
bwalters Omydallytrlbune.com
the pain.
Not Winslow. Cleveland 's
Larry Crum, Sports Wrller
tough tight end, who se
(740) 446·2342. ••1. 33
promising career nearly
~c rum @ mydai lyregi s ter. c om
.,

Players were paid next to
nothing, yet the gate receipt s
sometimes didn 't meet the
payroll.
The Steelers weren' t one
of the NFL's original fran chis' s in the early 1920s, bl!t
they've been a member
1933,
when
since
Portsmouth, Ohio, still had
an NFL team. Dan Rooney
was barely out of diapers
when he first met NFL trailblazers such as George
Halas, George Preston
Marshall, Curley Lambeau
and Wellington Mara, and he
became friends with all of
them .
"I really consider myself
the last man standing," said
Rooney, whose Steelers celebrated their 75th season
with ceremonies during

Monday
night's game
against
Baltimore.
"Obviously I was n' t there in
1920. but I knew the people
that were . I was able to talk
to them and experience
them."
Rooney officially took
over the Steelers' front
office in 1975, but, in reality,
had been in . charge since
1965. His son, Art II. is now
Steelers president, but Dan
is the chairman and remains
heavily involved in league
affairs . When Roger Goodell
was chosen as the NFL commissioner in 2006, Rooney
and
Carolina's
Jerry
Richardson were the hiring
committee co-chairmen.
Dari Rooney can remember the long-ago days before
Goodell and Paul Tagliabue

and Pete Rozelle before him
- when Elmer Layden and
Bert Bell were NFL commi ss ioners, ne twork TV
coverage was only a dream,
and, later, when games were
always blac ked out in the
home team market.
Rooney helped re shape
the league when he and his
father agreed to move the
Steelers from what now is
the NFC, C\}mposed mostly
of pre-1967 NFL members,
into the newly formed AFC,
made up mostly of former
AFL clubs. Cleveland and
Baltimore al so went along .
"I was for giving it no
thought. We fought with
t.hose guys (the AFL) for
years," said Rooney, whose
thinking was swayed by his
father and Rozelle.

In honor of · the twin
·anniversaries, Rooney has·
written a book called "Dan
Roone y, My 75 Years with
the Pittsburgh Sieelers and
the NFL" in which he offers
considerable iosight into
league and team affairs.
He wanted to include
more, he said , but hi s publi shers "told . me I'd better
watch what I' m saying
because I don 't wam to get
·sued."
Among his memories,
which began during his days
as a Steelers water boy in the
early 1940s:
- Halas and Marshall
pushed to install former F£1
offic ial Austin Gunsel as
commi ssioner in 1960 rather

Please see Rooney, 82

Roethlisberger, Steelers overpower Ravens Bengals
turn back
clocks to
the bad
old days
BY JOE KAY
M" SPORTS WRITER

CINCINNATI - Over
the weekend, the Cincinnati
Bengals turned back their
clocks ... five years, 'to the
bad old days.
Halfway home, their seas o n ' s

Gibbs records
12th ace this year
at Riverside G.C.

ComAcrUs

304.675.4500·
•

FewerWVSU
football players
than thought had
MRSA infection

AP photo

Pittsburgh Steelers quarterback Ben Roethlisberger (7) eludes Baltimore Ravens line·
tlacker Terrell Suggs, right, during second quarter NFL football action in Pittsburgh Monday. .
Roethlisberger connected with receiver Nate Washington for a touchdown on the play.

done. And
the ugliness is far
f r o m
over.
T h e
Notebook coach 1s
tired of
talking about it. The players
don't know how it's gotten
so bad. The sun has already
set on this season with eight
games left. .
Sound faintly familiar?
A 33-21 loss in Buffalo on
Sunday left the Bengals
marooned at 2-6, all by their
lonesome in last place in the
AFC North . It's their worst
midseason record since they
went 1-7 in 2002, on their
way to a 2-14 finish that
doomed coach Dick LeBeau
and opened the way for
Marvin Lewi s to take over.
They' re having a throwback season.
"It's kind of all for nothing when you' re 2-6, really,"·
receiver
T.J.
Hou shmandzadeh
said
Monday. "You're 2-6,
nobody cares. You're losing, nobody cares. h's all
for nothing."
· ·
The latest los.s pushed
them over the edge.

Please see 8engals, 82

Winslow fights pain to rally Browns

Love, (Name relationship to veteran)

Address:·- - - - - - - - - - - - Phone: _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ 1
,

O.'riJint

'

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Thesday, November 6, 2007

----'-- .

~

ended two years ago from the field."
injuries sustained in a nearMaybe the Browns should
fatal motorcycle crash, have carried him -on their
refused to quit during a J3- shoulders.
30 overtime win against
If not for Winslow,
Seattle.
Cleveland probably would"You've got to love that n't have won. The four-year
guy," cornerback Leigh veteran made five catches
Bodden said as Winslow for 58 y_ards in the fourth
packed up behind him. "He quarter, with four picking up
loves this game."
first downs as the Browns
Beyond his II catches for came back from a 21-9 half125 yards, Winslow 's hard- time deticit.
With Cleveland trailing
nosed performance perhaps
embodted these never-say- late in the 'third quarter,
die Browns (5-3). Winslow Winslow snagged a 14-yard
just might wi II them to the pass from Derek Anderson
playoffs.
on third-and-8. Winslow
He's becoming a leader, landed hard on the turf from
the guy everyone in the the tackle and was sluggish
locker room follows . No one getting up. He staggered to
can debate Winslow's heart , the bench, his left side
determination or drive . He noticeably sagging.
has lived up to his hype.
On Cleveland's sideline,
"I told you, I'm a soldier, · TV cameras showed Brown s
man," Winslow said with a trainers massaging hi s left
smile, playfully referencin g leg as Winslow sat grimachis infamou s "''m a soldier" ing. Moments later, he was
rant that drew him publi c up and weavi1i g his way
scorn when he was a Mi ami t~roug h players and coaches
Hurri cane . "They weren' t to get b&lt;1ck on t~e ·fie ld .
go ing to keep me out.
They'd have to drag me off Please see Browns, Bl

·------- - - - - -- - - - -------

-·"

-·

AP photo

Cleveland Browns tight end Kellen Wins low (80) is dragged
out of bounds at the one yard ljne by Seattle Seahawks
saf€ty Dean Grant in the fou rth quarter of an NFL football
game Su nday in Cleveland.

·.

�Page B2 • The Daily Sentinel

www .mydailysentinel.com

Tuesday, November 6,

Cardinals ready to right seas~n against Mountaineers
LOU ISV ILLE. Ky (AP)
- LoUis\t lle t~n' t ready to
be relegated to spoiler status
JUSt yet
Headmg mto Thursday 's
game m No 6 West V1rg1 ma,
the Cmltn,ds thmk there's
st1ll tune to s,n e a dJSap
pomtmg season
It s an opportumt y to go
and get a btg. btg upset and
go out there and show on
natiOnal TV th.n we' re sull a
good football team and we
can sull pl.ty,' ql!arterback
Bn,m Brohm smd
It s " phrdse Brl!hm wuld
n't have unagmed saymg m
the pt eseason , v. hen It
appeaJ ed the Cmdmal s and
the Mountameers would
once agam meet m early
November with Btg East
braggmg nghts on the Ime.
The v.mner of the last two
game s has gone on to clatm
the conference tttle and a
Bowl Champ10nshtp Senes
game vtctory Loutsvtlle
won a 44-34 thnller last year
m arguabl) the btggest \ tctory m program htstory
Thursday's game could be
JUSt as btg for the Cardmals,
who plummeted from No 8
111 September to out of the
polls enttrely after a stnng of
embarrassmg losses

Steelers
from PageBl
wouldn't be a repeat of
Balumore 's two routs of the
Steelers by scores of 31 7
and 27-0 a season ago
Harn son, a one tune nondrafted free agent who
became a starter after former Pro Bowl hnebacker
Joey Porter was released
dunng
the
olfseason,
seemed to torment R&lt;~vens
quarterback Ste~e McNmr
on nearly every down
Hamson had . two forced
fumbles, a fumble recovery
and mtercepuon and 2 1/2
sacks before halftime m a
Jack Lambert-ltke performance Lambert, comctdentally, v. as one of the few
members of the Steelers'
75th ann1versary all-ttme
team who dtdn't attend
Btl!
Former
coach
Cov. her got the crowd
gmng by makmg a previously unannounced on held
appearance shortly before
the opemng ktckoff as a
steady ratn fell, and the
Steelers hved up to coach

Bengals
fromPageBl
Coach Marvtn Lewts
reassured them last week
that they sttll had a chance
to make tbe playoffs He
posted the AFC teams'
records on the board m the
meetmg room, shov.mg hts
players how thmgs could
sull work out tf they got on
a run startmg v.tth a vtctory
m Buffalo
One player after another
called tt a must -wm game,
undersconng the dtre sttuatmn Quarterback Carson
the
Palmer suggested
Bengals oould wm out and
ftntsh 11-5 Runnmg back
Rudt Johnson satd he was
confident of a wm
So much talk
The offense managed
only a patr ot touchdowns

Browns
from PageBl
"He plays through a lot,"
Bodden satd "You have to
respect that guy He plays
hard no matter what"
A tew plays later,
Wmslow made a 13-yard
catch on fourth down, setling up a 2-yard run by
Jamal Lewts
On the Browns' fmal posseSSion of regulation,
Winslow made four catches
for 45 yards, mcludmg a 14·
yarder that moved the ball
to Seattle's I, where Lewts
barreled m for his fourth TO
to put Cleveland ahead
The Seahawks knew
Wtnslow was good Not thts
good
"He's out there ltke
another r ecetver,' Seattle
lmebacker Lata Tatupu
satd "I know he plays ttght
end but he gets open , has

1

· Ob\lously It has n't gone
the way we pl anned."'
Brahm satd "But I thmk
we' ve got to put that behmd
us and look at tl hke 1t's a
new season these last three
games and make the most
out of the season we can "
The Gardmals (5·4, 2-2
Btg East) wtll hkely need to
wm at least two out of thetr
fma I three ag,u nst the
Mountameers (7 - 1, 2- 1)
South Flonda and Rutgers to
earn a bowl berth for the
I Oth stratght seas6n
It won't be easy The last
ttme the Cardmals played at
Mountameer Fteld, they let a
24-7 second-half lead get
away m a 46·44 tnple-overume loss that proved to be
West Vtrgtnta star Steve
Slaton's breakout game
Slaton scored stx touchdowns as the vtctory propelled the Mountameers to a
conference crown and a win
m the Sugar Bowl
Mtke Tomhn's pregame
predtctton they would feed
off the notse and enthusiasm
Hamson's hard htt caused
Steve McNatr to fumble m a
thtrd-down
play
on
Balttmore.'s first poisesston
and Harnson recovered
htmself
at
the
20
Roethhsberger responded
by stepping out of the
Ravens' pass rush to hll
ttght end Heath Mtller on a
17 -yard sconng pass mtdway through the first quarter
A tamthar pattern then
settled m the Ravens would
turn the ball over, and the
Steelers would score in a
hurry as Roethltsberger also
threw two TD passes to
backup Nate Washmgton
Hamson and Anthony
Smith forced another fumble ap1ece, and Harrison
stepped m front of a McNatr
pass for an mte~cepllon
McNatr was 13 of-22 for 63
yards before being pulled in
the fourth quarter, about the
ttme the early departmg
fans from the crowd of
63,457 had already created
a huge traffic Jam around
Hemz Fteld.
agamst one of the NFL's
lowest-rated defenses, Chad
Johnson dropped a potential
touchdown pass that could
have changed the game, and
the defense had another
mmd-bogglmg collapse
The Bills (4-4) piled up
23 ftrst downs and 479
yards agamst a defense
ranked second-worst m the
league Only Cleveland has
gtven up more yards The
Bengals and the winless
Dolphms each have given
up 244 pomts, the most m
the league
The defimng moment of
the game and the season
came wtth 2 22 to go, when
runmng back Marshawn
Lyncb was trapped m the
backfield by three Bengals
defenders He sltpped out of
hnebacker Rashad Jeanty's
attempted tackle, then eluded defenstve end Justm
Smtth and cornerback
Deltha 0' Neal
speed and runs good routes
We had our hands full."
Desptle all hts clutch
catches, Wmslow lamented
one he didn't make.
Before hts 14-yard grab,
Wmslow got hts hands on a
pass from Anderson m the
end zone but couldn't bnng
ll111
"I mtssed tt," he satd "To
be great, you can't drop
those."
Winslow wouldn't have
satd something like that a
few years a~o That he
would now ts a sign of
maturity
He came mto the league
with a reputation, and it
wasn't a good one The son
of Kellen Winslow, the San
Otego Chargers great, the
younger Wmslow had all
the phystcal tools But he
was aloof, cocky, even
mean-spmted
He played m )liSt two
games as a rookte before
breakmg hts nght leg
Fmally recovered, he was

Brohm ended that game
JUSt short of the goal Ime
while trymg to score a
game tymg 2-potnt con ve~­
ston 111 the thtrd overttme
More than two years later,
the energy that pul sed
through the stadtum dunng
West Vtrgtnta's comeback
sttll echoes
" It was es pectall y loud
toward the end of the game
when they were com111g
back, all that momentum.
you could feeltt m the stadtum," he satd
The Cardtnals would hke
nothmg better than to mqke
one of the more rowdy
places m college football fall
qutet after ru111111g the
Mountmneers' outstde shot
at a berth tn the BCS nallonaltttle game
And
though
the
Mountameers rank 111 the top
10 m the natiOn m total
offense and total defense,
Louisvtlle ts hardly shymg
away from the challenge
"We feel v. e can play wtth
anybody, and we feel we're
matched evenly wtth West
Vtrgrma," Brahm satd "We
don't feel hke they have any
supenor talent or any advanta~e over us We can play
wtth them, we can play wtth
everybody that's left on our

schedule There s no 111ttmtdatton factor go111g 111 there "
Maybe, but the Cardmals
wtll need to play more
cnsply th an they have
rece ntly Loutsvtlle began
the season as one of the
natmn's
htghest-sconng
offenses but has averaged
JUSt 26 potnts a game agamst
conference opponents
"We have too many negattve play s," Brohm satd
"We JUSt need to avmd gettmg 111 thtrd-and-longs If we
can keep mov111g the ball
forward, throw the ball
.tway, .tvotd a sack, we can
stop hurt111g ourselves "
Ju st as troubhng has been
the team's mabthty to put
opponent s
away
The
Cardmals let a I0-pomt le.td
agamst connectiCUt get
away then needed a goallme
fumble by Plltsburgh m the
hnal mmutes to avotd overtune
"! thmk we need to learn
to ftntsh games," coach
Steve Kragthorpe satd
"When we' ve gotten ourselves m the lead, we
haven't played parttcularly
well We have to understand
at that pomt m ume, to me,
that the game ts sttll 0-0 m
terms of the way we play
each snap"

Roethltsberger, sttll m the
game wtth the Steelers
holdmg a 28-pomt lead, was
pushed to the turf by Terrell
Suggs on a 45-yard completiOn to Holmes m the thtrd
quarter, but returned early
m the fourth quarter after
havmg hts nght htp examined. He fimshed 13-of-16
for 209 yards and hts five
TO throws gave ht m a
career-record 20 in half a
season, two more than hts
prevtous smgle-season htgh

of 18
Notes: Mark Malone was
the only other Steelers QB
to throw five TO passes m a
game, on Sept. 8, 1985,
agamst Indtanapolis
Roethhsberger threw a
touchdown pass for a 13th
consecuttve game, brea!Png
Bradshaw's prevtous team
record of 12 .. The Steelers
have won thetr last 12
Monday night homes games
datmg to a 1991 loss to the
Gmnts

VOUEYBALL

DAYTON (AP) - State sem1fmal par,
1ngs for tho girls state high school volley
ball to urna ment at Wn ght State
Un1vers1ty
DIVISION I
Mt Notre Dame (16-12) vs Roc ky R1ver

Magn1f1cat (24 4) Friday half hour after
11rs1 DiviSIO n II sem •hnal Mother of
Morey {27 1) vs Mentor (27 2) Fnday
half hour aher ftrst Dtvtston I se m fmal
ChampionShip -

Saturday, 3 p m

DIVISION II
Salem (27 0) vs Tol Cent Cath (24 4)
Fnday 11 a m Cots Hartley (22 5) vs
Ttpp Ctty Tippecanoe (2 8 0) Fnday half
hour after hrst semifmal
Champronsh1p - saturday, 1 p m
DIVISION Ill
L ma Central Calholtc (25 2} vs St
Bern ard Roger Bacon (19 8) Thursday
6 p m Albany Alexander (24 3) vs
Gates Mtlls Gtlmour (24 3) Thursday
half hour aher. ftrst semtf nat
ChampionshiP - Sa turday 11 am
DIVISION IV
Jackson Center (25 3) vs Norwalk St
Paul (25 2) Fnday half hour after sec
and Orvtston I semifinal Mana Stetn
Manon Local (26 1) vs Newark Cath
(21 7) Fr day halt hour after hr st semtf
nal
ChampionShip - Saturday 5 p m
BOYS SOCCER
DIVISION!

At SOlon High School Tuesday, 7 p m
Sytvan1a Northv1ew (20·3 0 } vs Mentor
(14 52)
At Cedarvtlle Un verstty Tuesday 7 p m
Cln Elder (18 3 O) vs Hilliard Davidson
(16·2·2)
State charnp1onshm
At Columbus Crew Stad1um Frt day 7
pm
QJVISIDN II

At Lyndhurst Brush
Tuesday. 7 p m

H1gh School

Napoleon (18-3 1) vs Cuya Falls CVCA
(16 1 3)
At Upper Arlmgton H1gh Schoo
Tuesday 7 p m
Kettenng Alter (17 2 2) vs Cols
Watterson (12 4 5)
State champronshtp
At Columbus Crew Stadtum Satwday
11 am
DIVISION Ill
Ar BrunswiCk Hrgh School Tuesday, 7
pm
K1dron Cent Chnshan (17 2·2) vs Gates
Mills Hawken (17·1 2)
At Centervtlle Soccer Stadtum Tuesday
7p m
Sprtng
Cath
Cent
(19- 1 1) vs
Worthtngton Chnsttan (15-5-1)
State champ1ooshm
At Columbus Crew Stadtum Fr day 3
pm
GIRLS SOCCER
DIVISION I

At Solon H1gh ScHool Wednesday, 7
pm
Strongsville (17 0 4) vs Cuya Falls
Walsh JesUtt (13-3-5)
At Clayton Northmont H1gh School
Wednesday 7 p m
C n St Ursula {18 1 2) vs Htlltard
Oavtdson (13 4 4)
Stale champ!Onshtp
,At Columbus Crew Stadium Salurclay 7
pm
DIVISION II

Akr Hoban (15·3·1) vs Shaker Hts
Hathaway Brown ( 17 3 1)
At Dublin Coffman H1gh School
Wednesday 7 p m
Ctn Made1ra (1 S-2 2) vs Hamilton Bad n
(15 5)
State chamo!QnShiQ
At Columbus Crew Stadrum Saturday 3
pm
FooTBALL
Regtonal semtltnal htgh school football
playoff patr ngs wtth seedmgs as pro
vtded by the Oh1o High School Athletic
ASSOCtattOn
DIVISION I
Alf Games ar 7 p m Saturday unlsss

noted

JUSt two months from
report111g to trammg camp
m 2005 when he suffered
senous mternal mJunes m a
motorcycle wreck whtle
dom~ tncks m a parkmg lot
Wmslow would undergo
several operattons, mcludmg mtcrofracture surgery
on hts nght knee last wmter
The adverstty could have
broken htm Instead, tt
made htm stronger
"When I came m as a
rookte, I felt I had a lot to
prove, but I dtdn't know
how to go about it, I thmk,"
he satd "I wanted to tell
everybody how good I was
I learned you don't have to
do that The great ones
don't do that. You JUSt go
out and do tt and let other
people tell you about tt
"You JUSt go do 11 You
ltve and learn I was 20
years bid I'm 24 now, I'm
marned, I'm growmg up"
Whtle he can be ~tctous
to anyone weanng a helmet,
Wmslow has a softer stde,

With so much at stake,
they were so bad all-around,
dousmg what httle hope
was left
No 3 recetver Chris
Henry returns from his
etght-game suspension this
week, gtvmg the offense a
boost, and runmng back
Chns Perry wtll reJOin the
team m practice on
Wednesday Thmgs would
have been Iookmg up, tf
they'd won m Buffalo
Perry broke a bone m hts
lower right le~ last season,
and started thts one on the
phystcally unable to perform hst The Bengals wtll
have to dectde m the next
three weeks whether to activate htm or put htm on an
tnJury ltst for the rest of the
season
Asked how he feels, Perry
satd, 'T m good enough to
pracuce"
At thts pomt, that's about
all the}' ve got left
''
too
Followmg
Sunday's
game, Wmslow sat qUietly
at hts locker and dtssected
perhaps Cleveland's btggest
regular season wm m h ve
years He was asked about
the d~y in 1982 when hts
dad,
dehydrated
and
exhausted, caught 13 passes
for 166 yards and blocked a
field goal 111 the fmal seconds to lead the Chargers
past the Dolphms
Afterward, the elder
Winslow had to be helped
off the fteld by teammates,
an tcomc NFL tmage.
"It's JUSt want-to, man,"
Kellen satd of the W111slow
way "That's all tt ts It's
how bad do ,YOU want It m
crum;h ttme'
Thim Wmslow bowed his
head and fell stlent He
cried. After a long pause, he
looked up as a tear streaked
down hts face.
'T m sorry," he sat d.
Wmslow had no reason to
be

Tuesda~Novernber6,2007

www.rnydallysentlnel.com

Regton 1 1 Mentor (8 2) vs 4 Solon (8
2) at Parma Byers Fteld 7 Cleve
Glenville (9 2) vs 6 Youngs Boardman
(8-3) at Twmsburg T gar Stadtum
Reg1on 2 1 Brunswick (11 O) vs 4 Tol
Whitmer {9 2) at Fremont Ross Paul
Stad um at Harmon F eld 2 N Canton
Hoover (9--2) vs 3 Macedoma Nordonta
( 10 1) at Massillon Washmgton Paul
Brown Tiger Stadtum
Region 3 1 Htlltard Darby (10-1) vs 5
Groveport Mad1son (8 3) at Upper
Arlington Moorehead Me mortal Stadtum
2 Ptckerngton Cent (11 0) vs 3 Dubin
Coffman (11 O) at Gahanna Ltncoln

Stadtum
Aegton 4 1 Ctn St XaVIer ( 11 0) '.is 4
Cenlervtle (9 2) at 5 p m at Ctnctnn att
Paul Brown Sta d1um 2 C1n Co lerain
(1 1 O)vs 6Ctn Moeller(7-3)at 2pm at
C1nctnnau Paul Brown Sta d1um
DIVISION II

CLASSIFIED

A!/ Games at 7 30 p m Fnday
Regton 5 1 Warren Howland ( 11.0) vs 5
Mayfteld (8 3) at Solon Stew art Fteld 2
Tallmadge (1 0 1) vs 3 Parma Normandy
(9 2) at Bedtord Stewart Field at Bearcat
Stadtum
RegtOn 6 1 Avon lake ( 11 0) vs 4
Ashland ( 10 1) at Brunswtck K trsh Fteld
2 Sylvama Southvtew (1 0 1) vs 6 Ptqua
(8 3) at Ltma SeniOr Stadtu m
Regton 7 1 Cols DeS ales ( 11 0) vs 4
Ca nftel d (1 0 1) at Canton Fawcett
Stadtum 2 LOUISVIlle (9 2) VS 6 Dresden
Tn Valley (10 1) at New PhlladQiphta
Woody Hayes Quaker Stadtu m
Regton 8 1 Cm Turpn (11-0) vs 5
Trotwood Mad1son (8 3) at Ce nta rv~Ue
Stadium 2 Cm Anderson (9 2) vs 6
Day Ca rrol (10 1) at Ctn Pnnceton
Manc uso Fteld tn Vtktng Stad •um
DIVISION Ill
All games a/ 7 30 p m Fnday
Regton 9 1 CuyahOga Falls Walsh
Jesu t (9 1) vs 5 Cortland Lakevtew (9 2) at Ra11enna StadtumfGtlcrest F1eld 2
Rocky R1ver (11 0) vs Mentor Lake
Cath (7 4) at l akewood Stadtum
Aegton 10 1 Sunbury Btg Walnut (10-1 )
vs 5 Shelby (9-2) at Lewts Ctr
Olentangy Braves Field 2 Napoleon (10
1) vs 6 Clyde I I 0 1) al Tot Cent Calh
Gallagher Athlettc Complex
Regan 11 1 Canal Fulton Northwest
(11 O) vs 4 Do11er (8 3) at Massillon Paul
Brown T1ger Stad1um 2 Newark L ckmg
Valley (10 1) vs 3 Beloit West Branch
(9-2) at Wooster Follts Field
Regan 12 1 Cln lndlon H1ll (9 2) vs 5
Ctrclev lie (8·3) at Htllsboro A chards
Memonal Fteld 2 Canal Wnchesler {101) vs 6 Monroe (9 2) at Dayton
Welcome Stadtum
DIVISION IV

Alf Games

Gallia
County

OH

E-maU
classtfted@ mydatlylnbune com

noted
Region 17 1 N Lma S Range 111 0)
vs 4 Gates Mills Gilmour Acad (9-1) at
Warren Hardtng Mollenkopf StaCt1 um 2
Youngs Ursut ne (9 2) vs 3 Apple Creek
Waynedale (9 2) at Canton Cent Cath
Klinefelter Stad1um
Reg ton 18 1 Patrtck Henry ( 10 1) vs 4
llma Cent Cath (10 1) at Ftndtay
Donnell Stadtum 2 Fmdlay Ltberty
Benton ~11 0) vs 6 Def ance Tinora (9·2)
at Uma Bath Stad tum
Regton 19 1 Cots Ready (10 1)vs 4
Johnstown· Monroe (9 2) at Newark
Whtte Fteld 7 Fredertcktown (9-2) at 3
Wheelersburg {8 3) at Lancas ter Fulton
Fteld
Reg1on 20 1 West Jefrerson ( 11 0) vs 4
West ltberty Salem (10 1) at Urbana
H1gh School Stad1um 2 Mana Stetn
Mariorl Loca (11 O) vs 3 Ctn Deer Park
(9 2) at 1 30 p m at Clavton Northmont
Stad1um/Dudon Memorial F1eld
OIVISIONVI

All Games at 7 p m Saturday unless
noted
Reg1on 21 1 Bascom Hopewell Laudon
(11 01 vs 4 Mogadore (10 1) al 7 30
p m at Ashland Com munrty Stad urn 2
Norwalk St Paul (10 1) vs 3 Warren
JFK (9 2) at 7 p m at Medma Dukes
Stadium
Reg ton 22 1 McComb (1 0 1) vs 4
Art ngton (9 2) at Ftndlay Donnell
Stadtum 7 Defrance Ayersvllle (8 3) vs
3 Ada (7 4) at ltma Semor Stadtum
Regton 23 1 Newark Cath (9 2) vs 4
Danville (8 3) at 1 p m at Mount Vernon
Yellow Jacket S!ad1um 2 Shadys tde (10
1) vs 3 Hanntbal Rtver (I 0·1 ) at Marttns
Ferry Purple A der Alumn Field
RegiOn 24 1 Covrngton ( 11 0) vs 5
Stdney Lehman {8 3) at Troy Memonal
Stadtum 2 Sprtngfte ld Cath Cent ~11 0)
vs 6 Mechamcsburg (7 4) at Stdney
Memona Stadtum

from PageBl
than Rozelle, who ts credited with butldmg NFL football mto the nat10n 's most
popular sport
-Unwtlhng to repeat the
errors made when the
Steelers released Johnny
Unitas and fatled to draft
Dan Manno,
Roonev
strongly pushed coach B1fl
Cowher and dtrector of
football operattons Kevm
Colbert to draft quarterback
Ben Roethhsberger m 2004
Unttas, comctdentally,
once was the ftrst-team
quarterback
on
the
Ptttsburgh Cathohc all-star
htgh school football team
Dan Rooney was the second
team QB
-Hall of Fame 9uarterback Bobby Layne s con.
tract negotJaltons were so
easy, he once stgned a blank
contract and told the
Rooneys to f1Il 111 the
amount
-Once Dan Rooney
began runmng the Steelers'

Staph
from Page Bl
Pat Dtckmson Lab results
ulttmately proved the
on~mal report of nme to
be maccurate
Whtle
compltcattons
from MRSA are beheved
to have ktlled a student m
Vtrgtma recently, an ep1 -

front offtce, hts father told
htm, "Do tt your way, but
don't make any mtstakes"
- One of Ius btggest
regrets was allowmg Hall of
Fame runmng back Franco
Harns' 1984 contract stalemate to end wtth Hams'
release
"
-Art Rooney once sent a
then-6-vear-old
Dan
Rooney to break mto a
Bears t~am meeung and ask
Halas to take tt easy on the
Steelers
-Dan ts among the many
NFL owners who d tshkes
Ratders boss AI Davts, and
not only because the
Steelers-Ratders nvalry was
so mtense m the 1970s that
tt sptlled tnto federal court.
Rooney
satd
Vmce
Lombardi was so unhappy
that Davts was fightmg the
AFL-NFL ahgnment plan
drawn up by Rozelle, the
Packers coach backed Davts
agamst a wall and grabbed
hts collar
"If you're gomg to cause
people twuble, you'll be
run out of here," Rooney
quotes Lombardt as saymg
to Davts
demmlogtst wnh the state
Department of Health and
Human Resources says
there ts no cause for pamc
Humbert Zappia says
most futahttes occur m the
elderly or those wah
weakened tmmune systems
Whtle MRSA doesn't
respond to pentctlhn and
related anttbmttcs , n can
be treated wtth other
drugs

'

Websttes·
www.mydatlylrtbune com
www mydatlysenhnel com
www mydatlyregtster com

l\egtster
(304) 675-1333
Word Ads

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

at 7 p m Saturday

Reg on 13 1 Youngs Mooney (11 0) vs
4 Akron St Vtncent-St Mary (9 2) at
Belotl W Branch Heacock Stadium 2
Steubenvtlte (11 0) vs 3 Canton Cent
Cath (10 1) at Austintown Fitch Falcon
Stadtum
Aegton 14 1 Pembervtlle Eastwood (10
1) vs 5 Genoa Area (10-1) ~;~t Mtllbury
lake Flyer Stadtum 7 Ottawa-Glandorf
(9·21 vs 3 Mar on P le~sant (10 1) at
Ttffm Columbian NatiOnal Fteld at FrostKalnow Stadtum
Reg on 15 1 St Clatrsv tlle ( 11 0) vs 4
Pataskala Ltckmg Hetghts (10 1) at
Zanesvt lle
Sulzberger
Memonal
Stadtum 2 Williamsport West1all (11 0)
vs 3 Waverly (10 1) at Ashvtlle Teays
Valley Vtkmg Stad1um
Reg on 16 1 Kettenng Alter (1 1 0) vs 5
Coldwater (10 1) at Pqua Alexander
Stadtum/Purk Fteld 2 West Mtlton
Mtlton. Unton (10 1) vs 3 Clarksvtlle
ChntCJn Masse (10 1) at Kettenng
Fatrmont Roush Stad1um
DIVISION V
All Games at 7 30 p m Fnday unless

In One Week With Us
REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS
PLUS YOUR AD NOW ONLINE

Dally In-Column. 1 00 p.m
Monday-Friday for ln•ertlon

All Dl•play: 12 Noon :z
Business Days Prior To

In NeJCt Day's Paper
Sunday In-Column: 1:00 p m.

Publication
Sunday Dl•play: 1:00 p.m.

Por Sundays Paper

Ohio Valley

Publishing reserves
the right to adll
reject or cancel an~
ad at any time

Errors

Must

eportod

on the

B
II

ay of publication an
he Tribune-Sentinel
will b
agistor
esponslble for n
ore lhan the cost o
he apace occuplo

the error and onl
he flrtl lnaertlon W
hall not be liable I

\ \ \ I l l \( l \ 11 ' ""

r

rI

%~

Thursday for Sundays

• All ads must ba prepaid"

POLICIES Ohio Valley Publishing reHJVII the right to edH refed Of cancel any ad et any time Errors must bll reported on the first day ot
Trlbune-sentlnet-Regltter will be responelble for no more thn the ca.t of the apace occupled by the error end only the ftrst Insertion We ehsll not
any ION or 111:pente thst reeultt from the publication or omtselon of an lld~IMment Correction will btl made in the lim aveilable edlllon • Bo~~:
are atway1 contldentlll • Current rMe card IPPIIes • All real e~talit advertiHmente are eub)ect to the Federal Fair Houelng Act ot lHI • Thle ~;,;.;;;1
eccepta only help wanted adl
We •Ill not knowingly accept sny advlftlalng In vlollllon of the law

Description • Include A Prlu • AvOid Abbreviations
• lndude Phone Number And Addreu When Needed
• Adl Should Run 7 Daya

•POLICIES*

KIT &amp; CARLYLE

HOME'i

r

I

G~WA~

2BA &amp; Master BR w/ walk m
dosets 2BA Ranch Style
house over 2 000 sq It
Huge kitchen lots of cabtnet
space LA DR Laundry
Room on 1 acre of land
Ask1ng $115 000
OBO
(7401441 7842

-2-84_2____________

Asbestos root shmgles new
1 male Black tab puppy or used Charlene Hoeflich
about 5 months old very 74Q-992-5292
lnendly 304 937 3192
~------'-Want to buy Junk Cars call

3 bdr 1 ba Ranch tn
Syracuse Oh carport plus 1
car garage &amp; shed 740 992
314 1 or (740)442 1281

;.74,;;().~38~8-~0~88~4~~~""1

Gtveaway
1112 yr old female Golden
ret neve r very fnendly
304 743 5753

t

r

WE BUY USED
MOBILE HOMES

rr~'ID

Adam (740)828-2750

I \ JI'II l\\ 11 \ I

made

1n the tlr
vallable eclltlon.

Box number ada a
lwaya confidential

Current
ppllea
All

Real

Eatat

dvertlsements

ar

ubjoctlo the Feelers
air Housing Act

968
This
nawspape
ccop1a only hel
ntad acls mootln
OE standards.
We will not knowln
y accept any ad. .
laemont In vlola!IO
I tho law

4x4 •a

"I I{\ f( I "'
FOUND
Boxer call to
tden11ty 304-395 2601
ii~r;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,;;

11 10

Found
Long
like pup
on h81red
LowerSprtnger
At 7
Wants to come home Call
11110pm 446·8027

IIEu&gt;WANIDl

·
--. - - - - - - - '

A local manufacturer has
openmgs for Expenenced
Mtg Welders and Pamter for
Lost on 143 gray tom ltxed
Manufactured Equtpment
NEA,Inc
front paws dewclawed
Apply 1n person at 2, 50
belongs to Er tn &amp; Emily
Reward call Marge F Easlern Avenue Gallipolis ..,,.........................,
(740)992 6862
OH NO phone caHs please
lfEu&gt;

r
r

I

ro

YARD SAlE-

L-..iPI:oiil
. I'Liw&gt;ANTi.illiiil.iiiii.,J
...,
lnstde Sate at J&amp;F Auto 6
mtles out Jerrys Run Ad
Apple Grove
Lots of
Chnstmas ttems Lots of
Used 1tems also Nov 5th
lhru Nov 1Olh 304 576·2635

CLASSIFIED INDEX

For Sate

• 725

Announcement ••...

... 030

Antiques........ ...... •
.. .. 530
Apartments for Rant
..... 440
Auction and Flea Market
080
Auto Parts &amp; Accassorles.
...... 760
Auto Repair
........ • • •
Autos for Sale
•
710
Boats &amp; Motors for Sale....
.. ... 750
Building Supplies... ... ......... • .......... • ... 550
Buotneas and Buildings...
.. ... 340
Buatnesa Opportunity
.210
Business Training ... ........ ............... .. ... 140
Campers llo Motor Homes..
.. ... 790
Camping Equipment • ..
..... 780
Cards at Thanka........... ....... ...........
...010
Child/Elderly Care. ... ...................... .. ... 190
Electrtcai/Refrtgorallon
.840
Equipment for Rant
• • 480

E•cavatlng............ . .•...•.. , .................... 830

Farm Equlpmenl .........................................610

Fanno for Rent
.,...
430
Fenno for sate • •
• .330
For Lesae....... ..... ............ ................. 490
For Sale............ ..... •
• ... 585
For Sale or Trade • •
• .590
Fruits &amp; Vegetables • ... ... • ........... ...580
Furnlehed Rooms..... .... ..... • .. ........
.450
General Hauling .. •
850
Giveaway...
.040
Happy Ada. ... .. ...........
......... •.. e5o
Hay &amp; Grain...
.640
Help Wanted ..
t1
Home Jmpro,.,.nta
.. 810
Homes lor Sale ..... ..
...310
Household Goods
.... 510
Houaea for Rent
... 410
In Memoriam
..... 020
Insurance .. .......
• ... 130
Lawn &amp; Garden Equipment
.... 660
Llveatock
..... ... .........
.630
Lost and Found..... • .....
• •• 060
Lots " Acreage • •
• 350
Mlscellaneoua
170
Mlacellaneous Merchandlae. • .........
.540
Mobile Home Repair.
860
Mobile Homes for Ran1
... 420
Mobile Homes for sate .. • ... ..
.320
Money to Loan ......
• .220
Motorcyclea &amp; 4 Wheelers
740
Muslcallnatrumonls ..... ........
.. ... 570
Personals • •
.. • • 005
Pets for Sal a... ...
560
Plumbing &amp; Heating
820
Professional Services • • .....
...230
Radio, TV &amp; CB Repair .....
• .160
Real Eollle Wanted
... 360
Schools Instruction • • ....
.........
.150
Seed , Plant &amp; Fertilizer..... ............ ... 650
Situations Wanted •
120
Space for Rent
... 460
Sporting Goode ..... • .. .... ..........
.. .. 520
SUV's lor Sale. ....
720
Truckl for Sale
• 715
Upholstery
• • ...
..... 870
Vans For Sale ... .......
730
Wanted Ia Buy ...
• 090
Wanted to Buy· Farm Supplies.........
...620

o

WantedToDo ......... ....................... , ••••• 180
Wanted to Rent. .. ..
...470
Yard Sll.. Galllpotta. • • .. •
..... • • 072
Yard SII..PomerayiUtddla ... ....... ........ .... 074
Yard SII..Pt. Pl-ant....... .. ........ .. ..... 076

Appalachian Ttre Products a
company that has been tn
bustness for over 60 years
has an excellent opportunity
for the nght tndi'w'ldual We
are seektn
store manage
to overse
PI Pleasant
locatton
fhe nght candt
date wtll have strong leader
Ship sktlls atnltty to OOtid &amp;
maintain a strong team while
betng dnven to provtde out
standmg customer serv1ce
We prov1de a competttlve

Mtddleton Estates IS accept·
ing appltcattons for D1rect
Care Staff and LPN s II you
would like to take advenlage
of this opportunity you may
apply at 8204 Carla Dr
GallipoliS Ohto Monday
through Fnday 8am·4pm
~n
equal
opportuntty
employer FIMJDN

IIIC::~

OPEN
INTERVIEWS

AVON! All Areas• To Buy or

WEDNESDAY

Sell
Shirley Spears 304
675 1429

NOVEMBER 7th

Food Service Workers. pndishwasher PIT on call
caterers Apply tn person at
URG cafetena 740 2455660
Home Health Care of SEQ IS
currently accepting appltca
!tons for LPN s Full time part
ltme per dtem Competitt\18
wages
1 866 368-1100
toll free

~------~

• •

Now accepting applications
lor Bar Manager 811 P
requtred Send resumes 10
PO Box 303 G~hpolls Oh
45631 Attn Mtke
salary along wtth a benefit - - - - - - - -

package tncludmg maJor
medical Insurance 401 K
w/p ro111 shanng plan paid
vacat1on
If Interested
please send resume to
Appalachian Ttre Products
Attention
Greg Stover
2907
4th
A11enue
Char leston wv 25312

www.comics com

WANIDl 11116 liEu&gt; WANI1lll

An Excellent way to earn •

money The New Avon
Call Marilyn 304 882·2645

YAIID SALE

'

FOR SALE

kltncarlyle@lcomcast net

Absolute Top Dollar us
Sliver and Gold Cams
Ftrewood 2yrs atr-dned cut Proolsels Gold Rmgs Pre
and spl t 98%oak 2% htcko 1935
US
Currency
ry you haul or I haul Soltta1re Dtamonds M T S
OH HEAP Vender 949 2038 Cotn Shop 151 Second
Avenue Gall polls 740·446

ANNOUNCEMENTS

Now you can have borders and graphics
~
added to your classified ads
J~;.
Jm
Borders$3.00/perad
I!
Graphics SOC for small
S1.00 for large

Display Ads

AD • Start Your Adl With A Keyword • Include Complete

no

Rooney

The Daily Sentinel • Page 83

m:rtbune- Sentinel- l\egtster

OHSAA Tournaments

At Ashland Communrty Socc;er Stad1um
Wednesday, 7 p m

Once Lynch got away
from those three, there was
nobody left to catch htm
Hts 56-yard touchdown run
chnched the game for
Buffalo and left Lewts
stewmg about another
defenstve breakdown
After the game, Lewts
called the play "ndtculous."
A day later, he had no destre
to rehash the poor tackhng
that has been the hallmark
of hts defense all season
"Agam, you go back to
the same dead horse."
Lewts satd "It's dead
enough We have to make
the play m the backfield
We have to tackle better"
After tmproving tn the
runmng game the l?ast two
weeks, the Bengals stgmticantly regressed
Rud1
Johnson earned mne ttmes
for II yards, and Kenny
Watson ran four ttmes for
II yards Cmcmnau , averaged 5 feet per carry

2007

9 QOam • 3 OOpm
lnfoCision
242 3rd Avenue
GallipoliS OH
"Up Ia $8 50/hr FT
' Health Benefits for
FT &amp; PT employees
' Paid Holidays OFF
• Vacahort &amp; Persona!
Time attar Sill months
If unabJe to attend
please call to schedule
your lnterv1ew
1-888 IMC.PAYU

Ext '256

www lnfoclslon com

I'll!,........,.................,

ILr.ao--w~T~::,:,Do;::._.,J
• ..,

POST OFFICE NOW
HIRING

Georges Portable Sawmtll
don, haul your Logs to the
Mill rust call 304-675-1957

Avg Pay $20fhr or
$57K annually
Including Federal Benefits
and OT.Pald Tralntng
Vacations-FTIPT
1·866·542-1531
USWA

Guttar Player looking to start
an ongtnal Rock Band IF
mterested call 740·9854416 after 5 oo PM

ProfeSSionally
Clean
Homes
&amp;
Bustness
PreK Teacher for new part Reasonable
Aales
time program $7 85/hr to References 74Q-446 2262
$11 30/hr dependtng on
education Send resu me to
Earty Ed ucaliOn s taltan
Je
lhrn..~
2122 lferson Ave
DL' .-x~..~

ji;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
riO

-------Sell Avon make 50% Call
446-3358
The Ohto Valley Pubhshtng
Co ts seektng a Sports
Writer to add to tiS staff cov
ertng local athtettc events.
The position Is a fullttme 40
hours a week wtth a beneftts
and 401k plan available
Newspaper page layout
skills are d881red txJt not
necessary Must be wtll1ng to
learn and be people friendly
Send resumes to t&lt;evm
Kelly, Managtng Edtlor Oh10
Valley Publlolling Co 825
Third Ave Galhpohs Oh

~==O~I'I'O;;RniN;:riY:~
•NOTICE•
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH·
lNG CO recommends
that you do busmess wHh
people you know and
NOT to send money
through the mat t unt1l you
have lnvesttgated the

et Two covered porches and
a br ck paver pat o The 2 112
car garage has att1c storage
cement dnvaway with plenty
58 A 2BA brick style ranch of patt; ng Must see to
on 36 acres at 452 Cox Ad apprectale all amen1t1es
Crown City Ohto Basement Southern Local Schools
FA DR K tchen has fndge Ca ll 740 441 5171
range oven dtsp 8. dish
washer Basement has FP
and 9fl cethngs wtth 2x6
studs Heat pump 2 car
attached garage new tenc
ng extra bldgs Brmks
Secu nty System back deck
For sale by owner Call tor
Appt 740 256 6075 or 740
262 1123 _ _ _ __ For Sale 5Bfl 2 BA, 2 600
:::_:.:_:::__
sq f1 home located on
Attention!
Raccoon Creek tn Gall polls
Local company offermg "NO
DOWN PAYMENT" pro 1 3 acre yard wtth large
detached pole garage for
gt!lms for you to buy your
car/boat storage and paved
home 1nstead ot rennng •
u·shaped drt\f8WQ)' Access
• tOO% financing
• Less than perfect credit to boat ramp Wrap around
deck and hot tub Many
accepted
• Payment could be the extras call (740)441 8257

\

Locators

••NOTICE••

MONEY

ro LoAN

Borrow Smart Contact
the Ohto Dtvts1on of
lnstttut1on s
Ftnanc at
Office of Consumer
Alfatrs BEFORE you refl
nance your home or
obla1n a loan BEWARE
ot requests for any large
advance payments of
tees or Insurance Call the
Office of Consumer
Affatrs toll free at 1-866
278 0003 to learn I the
mortgage
broker or
lender
ts
properly
lteensed (This ts a public
servtce annou ncement
from the Ohio Valley
Pubhshmg Company)

r PRo=~AL

TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY 1551?
No Fee Unless We Wlnt
1 888 582 3345

HI \I I " I \ I I

HOMES

FOR SAlE
0 down payment 4 bed
rooms Large yard Covered
ded&lt; Attached garage 740
367 7129

Sc

2 story Home w/Atver tot
3br 2ba 2 car garage 304
675 7285
House
and 1 acre At 2
North approx 6 miles from
Pt Pleasant
Many new
upgrades Motivated Seller
Price to Setl 304 675 5590
Call lor detolls

~ --~--

---

~- -

----

All reel estate advertising
In thle newapaper Ia
subject to the Federal
Falr Hou .. ng Acl ol1968
which makes It mega! to
advertlae any
preference llmllaHon or
discrimination b11ed on
race color, reUgion sex
familial atatu• or national
origin or any lntentton to
make any auch
preference limitation or
dlscrtmlnatlon
This newspaper will not
knowingly eecept
advertisements for real
eatate which 10 In
vlolatlon of ttletaw Our
readers are hereby
lnformedthatall
dwelllnga advertised tn
this newspaper are
available on •n equal

~~..,~·~·~:u:":rly:b~••:";;;::::!
'!'"'"

L--.:FO;:.;:R;.Rmr:;:;:;,:._.,J
2BR WDSR $400/mo
$400 dep 88 Gaif19ld Hud
ok 1 3BR 2BA doublewtde
$575/mo $575 dep 172 112
Chatham Ave Hud ok 740
446 2515
--- - - -- - - 2 bd House n Mason
Covered Carport K1tchen
furntshed Gas heat No
Pets'$375 permo Oep Req
304 675 7783
2

bedroom

house

m

Pt Pleasant very clean and
ntce No Pets 304 675 13B6
2 story house wtth 2BA 1
bath New carpet 1n both
bedrooms and large living
room new refngeralor large
dry spactous basement
(could be used as xtra BR or
FA) No Pets can see at
t638
Chatham
Ave
Gallipolis (740)446-4234 or
(740 )208 7861

:.:.:.:::::.::.=_:__--:_
28R s 122 Lower Garfteld
Gallipolis Depostl reqUired

_7.:_:40:_4_4.:_:6~1.:.258:.::_'----­

3 bedroom House available
Now thru May $475 rent
Mtddleport 1n town out ot $300 depostt ref req 740
flood platn 8 moms 2 112 441 7193 or 740 339 9713

Ntce 3BA newly remodeled
New WH &amp; Furn C/A

Wanted someone 2417 to Sit
Wllh Elderly Aunt must have
exp &amp; be able to lift 100 lbs
304 675 1846

11!10

Approx 2 acres wl &amp;losttng
28x60 house foundatton
Also 24x40 fm 1shed garage
tenance free home located Has water etec 7 sewer
n Syracuse 3 BR &amp; 2 112 Located tn centenary on
BA 2 800 sq ft ol fimshed Herman Rd Askmg $55 000
liVIng space 40 year dtmen Please call 740 208 6704
s10nal shtngtes natural gas
Green Acres (10) Farm
heal Th s mull level home
Ltvtn Fresh Atr 3 m~es from
s n tmmaculate condthOn
New Haven WV $34 500
and has oak hardwood tnm
304 773 5881
throughout The basement IS
parttally fmrshed and could MOBILE HOME LOT FOR
be used as a 4th bedroom RENT 1031 Georges Creek
workout room or a chtldren s Ad 4411111
play room Large family
IH \1 \I 'room wtth 40 cabtnets all
butlt m appltances and
ceramiC ttle floor alSO laun ~rr':t0r""-~----~
dry room Wtlh 6 of cabtnets
HOl_J'SES

3BR 2BA 1BOO sq ft
remOdeled Ranch on 1 acre
mllrn city New kit WI pantry
&amp; laundry rm Huge master
sutte w/ FP &amp; pnvate
entrance DR LR wf gas FP/
Attached carport 2 car
garage &amp; pnvacy fence Nat Master bedroom wtlh walk
n closet maiiter bath wtlh
gas Heat pump &amp; CIA Exc
double bO'M vamty ceramtc
Cond Ready to move In
t1lo floor and marble shower
$98 500 neg 740 645-8751
Bedrooms 2 &amp; 3 have large
closets matn bath has a 7
vanity marble bathtub sep
arate shower and ltnen clos

same as rent
Mortgage
(740)
367 0000

tors&amp;
ACREAGE

2 grave lots tn Chnstus
Gardens
Oh1o
Valley
Memory Gardens (740)446
4383 day (740)256 6637
eventng

~~:::::;;:;;::;

j

TRUCK DRIVER NEEOEO
Henderson WV Based
COL License &amp; 2yts
EMperlenca MVA Requtred
Call (304)675 7434

Overbropk Center IS an
Magtc Years Day C@re E 0 E and a participant of
:u&lt;XJlS
Center Inc 1s now taking
INsrRucnoN
the
Drug
Free
Workplace
L--iillliiliililiiiiO.rl
app1tcat1ons for a full time
Program
SubstitUte Please apply 1n ----"---~­ Golllpollo CarHr College
perso n or send resume 10
(Careers Close To Home)
201 High St Pt Pleasant Patrlotk: Foodllnc Grand
Call
Today! 740 446·4367
Openmg
WV 25550
on Nov 12
1 800-214 0452
;.._:~~:..,..____ lmmedtate Sa!es positions
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established Veteran 15yr old and clean record
Call Accred 1IKI Member Accredit ng
Cou~l lei nctependen\ COIII!IQGI
Band 304 675 4094
Derek 304 812 0270 Now
and Schools 12746

r

IIOME'i

FOR SALF.

baths 2 garages 2 ftre
places 2 tots plenty of stor
age (7401992 4197
..::.:.:..:...-"---'- - - New home n Galltpol s
2BA 2BA 3 acres MIL
$B2 500 Call 740 446 7029

::off;e:nn=g~:===~

45631

Overbrook Center Located
@ 333 Page Sl Middleport
Ohto
ts
pleased
to
Announce we w II be holdtng
an STNA Class scheduled
for November hours will be
Sam 4 30pm II you are
mterested m 101ntng our
frtendly and dedtcated staff
please stop by our front
oHu::e Man Fn
9am 5pm
and 1111 out an application
lull ttme and part t!me posl
tons ava~able to lhose qualtiled 1nd1vtduals compleltng
the class applicant must be
dependable (anenda.nce Is a
must) team players With pos
tttve attitudes to jotn us tn
provtdtng outstanding quail
Machlntst and Welders ty care to our reSidents.
Less than 4 yrs ellper ence 11 you have any questtons
need not Apply Ambrosia contact HoiHe Bumgarner
Machine Inc 304 675 1722 LPN staff development
Morr Fn 7 30 4 00
coordrnalor (740)992 6472

10

3 Bedroom House
n
Syracuse $ 500}month +
deposll No Pels (304)675
5332 weekends 740 591
0265
3 Bedroom 2 Bath home on
ntce lavel lol $4 7:J month
(740)446 7101
ask for

Appltance nctuded Across .":.::•:::m:::m:::
'•--- - - - from Vmton Elem $65 000
740 245 5555 or 441 5105 3 br house tn Middleport all
electr c $425 plus $425
Racme /ranch home 1500 depostt No Pets (740)992
sq fl 3/2 seller ass1sted 6068
ftnancnig (740)416 3977
740 222 5570
32 Btrch Lane 2BR 1BA
frtdge &amp;Stove ncluded WlfiJf
WALKING DISTANCE TO hook up $475/mon $475
RIO 'fRANDE COLLEGE dep No pels 740 645 5785
1600sq ft all electr c heat
pump &amp; Nood burn er 48R 3BR 1 1/2 BA 2 car garage
full s1ze basement 2 car w/ fenced yard tn famtly on 1
garage (740)44 t 9510
enled netghbortlood 5 rot es
from town Would consider
1\(0811 F. HOI\ II'.X
renttng part ally furnished
t-'OR SM li
wt \h ulthttes lo constructton
worke rs on a week to week
2000 14x70 3BA 2BA l ots basts Ava11 Dec 1 Ca ll 740
of up grades on rented lot 446 873 1
34
Kra us Back
Ad
38 A 1 bath 2 story older
Galltpolts 3 mt les fr om
farm hoL se on SR 554
Galltpohs off SA 588 446 Btdwetl RV
sch ool s
8935 Prtce reduced
$575 mo plus sec dep Pets
2000 Fleet...Yood {Wtnd gate) under 15 lbs w/$575 pet
14)(70 3br 2 bathr ooms depo stl Avatlable 10 13 07
linoleum fl oors new balh Call 446 3644 lor apphca

=::.______

House for sale m Ractne
area Approx 4 acres all
professionally landscap ed
Ranch style house wtth 4
bedrooms ltvtng room dtn rooms
good
condtl1on tton
tng room kttchen large tam $14 000 no cal ls alter 9pm 3BR 1BA laundry room 65
liy room central atr gas heat ~pl::e•::'::e::3:_04:_6:::7.:5.:3::92:::7__ M 11 Creek No pets 740
and 1 fireplace AdditiOn of a New 3 Bed room homes fro m 445 9523 or 446 1443
large Flonda room com $2 14 36 per month Includes
4 Bd Home Apple Grove
Pletely cedar opens on to
many upgrades delivery &amp; Oh
$400
h d
N
palto &amp; pool area Healed tn
10
Wtt
ep
o
ground pool enclosed by pn- set up (740)385 24 34
pe ts A"uer 6 00 ca11 740
vacy fenctng end lan d 6
:9
::8:_60
~
02:..,.._ _ _ __
scoped Finished 2 car
OWNER FINANCING
4~ room s ana balh stove and
garage attached to house
NICe 3/2 s•nglewides
fndge 52 Olive Galhpolts
and f1mshed &amp; heated 3 car
From $1 800 down
No Pets $3951mo 446 3945
garage
unattached
payment
5 Ro om House tn R10
Excellenl condttton ready to
Adam (7401828 2750
Grande area References
move tn $255 000 00 Call
·
No ms de Pets 304 675
(740)949-221 7
:__:.'..__ _ _ __ _
7624
For sale by owner 3BR
ABnch
1 bath Famtl y
House for rent In Pomeroy 4
Room StoveiFr1dge WID
Bd Rm 2 bath a1r central
mcluded Ask1ng S70 000
heat $525 per month 740
Call 740 709-6339
591 3486

�Page B2 • The Daily Sentinel

www .mydailysentinel.com

Tuesday, November 6,

Cardinals ready to right seas~n against Mountaineers
LOU ISV ILLE. Ky (AP)
- LoUis\t lle t~n' t ready to
be relegated to spoiler status
JUSt yet
Headmg mto Thursday 's
game m No 6 West V1rg1 ma,
the Cmltn,ds thmk there's
st1ll tune to s,n e a dJSap
pomtmg season
It s an opportumt y to go
and get a btg. btg upset and
go out there and show on
natiOnal TV th.n we' re sull a
good football team and we
can sull pl.ty,' ql!arterback
Bn,m Brohm smd
It s " phrdse Brl!hm wuld
n't have unagmed saymg m
the pt eseason , v. hen It
appeaJ ed the Cmdmal s and
the Mountameers would
once agam meet m early
November with Btg East
braggmg nghts on the Ime.
The v.mner of the last two
game s has gone on to clatm
the conference tttle and a
Bowl Champ10nshtp Senes
game vtctory Loutsvtlle
won a 44-34 thnller last year
m arguabl) the btggest \ tctory m program htstory
Thursday's game could be
JUSt as btg for the Cardmals,
who plummeted from No 8
111 September to out of the
polls enttrely after a stnng of
embarrassmg losses

Steelers
from PageBl
wouldn't be a repeat of
Balumore 's two routs of the
Steelers by scores of 31 7
and 27-0 a season ago
Harn son, a one tune nondrafted free agent who
became a starter after former Pro Bowl hnebacker
Joey Porter was released
dunng
the
olfseason,
seemed to torment R&lt;~vens
quarterback Ste~e McNmr
on nearly every down
Hamson had . two forced
fumbles, a fumble recovery
and mtercepuon and 2 1/2
sacks before halftime m a
Jack Lambert-ltke performance Lambert, comctdentally, v. as one of the few
members of the Steelers'
75th ann1versary all-ttme
team who dtdn't attend
Btl!
Former
coach
Cov. her got the crowd
gmng by makmg a previously unannounced on held
appearance shortly before
the opemng ktckoff as a
steady ratn fell, and the
Steelers hved up to coach

Bengals
fromPageBl
Coach Marvtn Lewts
reassured them last week
that they sttll had a chance
to make tbe playoffs He
posted the AFC teams'
records on the board m the
meetmg room, shov.mg hts
players how thmgs could
sull work out tf they got on
a run startmg v.tth a vtctory
m Buffalo
One player after another
called tt a must -wm game,
undersconng the dtre sttuatmn Quarterback Carson
the
Palmer suggested
Bengals oould wm out and
ftntsh 11-5 Runnmg back
Rudt Johnson satd he was
confident of a wm
So much talk
The offense managed
only a patr ot touchdowns

Browns
from PageBl
"He plays through a lot,"
Bodden satd "You have to
respect that guy He plays
hard no matter what"
A tew plays later,
Wmslow made a 13-yard
catch on fourth down, setling up a 2-yard run by
Jamal Lewts
On the Browns' fmal posseSSion of regulation,
Winslow made four catches
for 45 yards, mcludmg a 14·
yarder that moved the ball
to Seattle's I, where Lewts
barreled m for his fourth TO
to put Cleveland ahead
The Seahawks knew
Wtnslow was good Not thts
good
"He's out there ltke
another r ecetver,' Seattle
lmebacker Lata Tatupu
satd "I know he plays ttght
end but he gets open , has

1

· Ob\lously It has n't gone
the way we pl anned."'
Brahm satd "But I thmk
we' ve got to put that behmd
us and look at tl hke 1t's a
new season these last three
games and make the most
out of the season we can "
The Gardmals (5·4, 2-2
Btg East) wtll hkely need to
wm at least two out of thetr
fma I three ag,u nst the
Mountameers (7 - 1, 2- 1)
South Flonda and Rutgers to
earn a bowl berth for the
I Oth stratght seas6n
It won't be easy The last
ttme the Cardmals played at
Mountameer Fteld, they let a
24-7 second-half lead get
away m a 46·44 tnple-overume loss that proved to be
West Vtrgtnta star Steve
Slaton's breakout game
Slaton scored stx touchdowns as the vtctory propelled the Mountameers to a
conference crown and a win
m the Sugar Bowl
Mtke Tomhn's pregame
predtctton they would feed
off the notse and enthusiasm
Hamson's hard htt caused
Steve McNatr to fumble m a
thtrd-down
play
on
Balttmore.'s first poisesston
and Harnson recovered
htmself
at
the
20
Roethhsberger responded
by stepping out of the
Ravens' pass rush to hll
ttght end Heath Mtller on a
17 -yard sconng pass mtdway through the first quarter
A tamthar pattern then
settled m the Ravens would
turn the ball over, and the
Steelers would score in a
hurry as Roethltsberger also
threw two TD passes to
backup Nate Washmgton
Hamson and Anthony
Smith forced another fumble ap1ece, and Harrison
stepped m front of a McNatr
pass for an mte~cepllon
McNatr was 13 of-22 for 63
yards before being pulled in
the fourth quarter, about the
ttme the early departmg
fans from the crowd of
63,457 had already created
a huge traffic Jam around
Hemz Fteld.
agamst one of the NFL's
lowest-rated defenses, Chad
Johnson dropped a potential
touchdown pass that could
have changed the game, and
the defense had another
mmd-bogglmg collapse
The Bills (4-4) piled up
23 ftrst downs and 479
yards agamst a defense
ranked second-worst m the
league Only Cleveland has
gtven up more yards The
Bengals and the winless
Dolphms each have given
up 244 pomts, the most m
the league
The defimng moment of
the game and the season
came wtth 2 22 to go, when
runmng back Marshawn
Lyncb was trapped m the
backfield by three Bengals
defenders He sltpped out of
hnebacker Rashad Jeanty's
attempted tackle, then eluded defenstve end Justm
Smtth and cornerback
Deltha 0' Neal
speed and runs good routes
We had our hands full."
Desptle all hts clutch
catches, Wmslow lamented
one he didn't make.
Before hts 14-yard grab,
Wmslow got hts hands on a
pass from Anderson m the
end zone but couldn't bnng
ll111
"I mtssed tt," he satd "To
be great, you can't drop
those."
Winslow wouldn't have
satd something like that a
few years a~o That he
would now ts a sign of
maturity
He came mto the league
with a reputation, and it
wasn't a good one The son
of Kellen Winslow, the San
Otego Chargers great, the
younger Wmslow had all
the phystcal tools But he
was aloof, cocky, even
mean-spmted
He played m )liSt two
games as a rookte before
breakmg hts nght leg
Fmally recovered, he was

Brohm ended that game
JUSt short of the goal Ime
while trymg to score a
game tymg 2-potnt con ve~­
ston 111 the thtrd overttme
More than two years later,
the energy that pul sed
through the stadtum dunng
West Vtrgtnta's comeback
sttll echoes
" It was es pectall y loud
toward the end of the game
when they were com111g
back, all that momentum.
you could feeltt m the stadtum," he satd
The Cardtnals would hke
nothmg better than to mqke
one of the more rowdy
places m college football fall
qutet after ru111111g the
Mountmneers' outstde shot
at a berth tn the BCS nallonaltttle game
And
though
the
Mountameers rank 111 the top
10 m the natiOn m total
offense and total defense,
Louisvtlle ts hardly shymg
away from the challenge
"We feel v. e can play wtth
anybody, and we feel we're
matched evenly wtth West
Vtrgrma," Brahm satd "We
don't feel hke they have any
supenor talent or any advanta~e over us We can play
wtth them, we can play wtth
everybody that's left on our

schedule There s no 111ttmtdatton factor go111g 111 there "
Maybe, but the Cardmals
wtll need to play more
cnsply th an they have
rece ntly Loutsvtlle began
the season as one of the
natmn's
htghest-sconng
offenses but has averaged
JUSt 26 potnts a game agamst
conference opponents
"We have too many negattve play s," Brohm satd
"We JUSt need to avmd gettmg 111 thtrd-and-longs If we
can keep mov111g the ball
forward, throw the ball
.tway, .tvotd a sack, we can
stop hurt111g ourselves "
Ju st as troubhng has been
the team's mabthty to put
opponent s
away
The
Cardmals let a I0-pomt le.td
agamst connectiCUt get
away then needed a goallme
fumble by Plltsburgh m the
hnal mmutes to avotd overtune
"! thmk we need to learn
to ftntsh games," coach
Steve Kragthorpe satd
"When we' ve gotten ourselves m the lead, we
haven't played parttcularly
well We have to understand
at that pomt m ume, to me,
that the game ts sttll 0-0 m
terms of the way we play
each snap"

Roethltsberger, sttll m the
game wtth the Steelers
holdmg a 28-pomt lead, was
pushed to the turf by Terrell
Suggs on a 45-yard completiOn to Holmes m the thtrd
quarter, but returned early
m the fourth quarter after
havmg hts nght htp examined. He fimshed 13-of-16
for 209 yards and hts five
TO throws gave ht m a
career-record 20 in half a
season, two more than hts
prevtous smgle-season htgh

of 18
Notes: Mark Malone was
the only other Steelers QB
to throw five TO passes m a
game, on Sept. 8, 1985,
agamst Indtanapolis
Roethhsberger threw a
touchdown pass for a 13th
consecuttve game, brea!Png
Bradshaw's prevtous team
record of 12 .. The Steelers
have won thetr last 12
Monday night homes games
datmg to a 1991 loss to the
Gmnts

VOUEYBALL

DAYTON (AP) - State sem1fmal par,
1ngs for tho girls state high school volley
ball to urna ment at Wn ght State
Un1vers1ty
DIVISION I
Mt Notre Dame (16-12) vs Roc ky R1ver

Magn1f1cat (24 4) Friday half hour after
11rs1 DiviSIO n II sem •hnal Mother of
Morey {27 1) vs Mentor (27 2) Fnday
half hour aher ftrst Dtvtston I se m fmal
ChampionShip -

Saturday, 3 p m

DIVISION II
Salem (27 0) vs Tol Cent Cath (24 4)
Fnday 11 a m Cots Hartley (22 5) vs
Ttpp Ctty Tippecanoe (2 8 0) Fnday half
hour after hrst semifmal
Champronsh1p - saturday, 1 p m
DIVISION Ill
L ma Central Calholtc (25 2} vs St
Bern ard Roger Bacon (19 8) Thursday
6 p m Albany Alexander (24 3) vs
Gates Mtlls Gtlmour (24 3) Thursday
half hour aher. ftrst semtf nat
ChampionshiP - Sa turday 11 am
DIVISION IV
Jackson Center (25 3) vs Norwalk St
Paul (25 2) Fnday half hour after sec
and Orvtston I semifinal Mana Stetn
Manon Local (26 1) vs Newark Cath
(21 7) Fr day halt hour after hr st semtf
nal
ChampionShip - Saturday 5 p m
BOYS SOCCER
DIVISION!

At SOlon High School Tuesday, 7 p m
Sytvan1a Northv1ew (20·3 0 } vs Mentor
(14 52)
At Cedarvtlle Un verstty Tuesday 7 p m
Cln Elder (18 3 O) vs Hilliard Davidson
(16·2·2)
State charnp1onshm
At Columbus Crew Stad1um Frt day 7
pm
QJVISIDN II

At Lyndhurst Brush
Tuesday. 7 p m

H1gh School

Napoleon (18-3 1) vs Cuya Falls CVCA
(16 1 3)
At Upper Arlmgton H1gh Schoo
Tuesday 7 p m
Kettenng Alter (17 2 2) vs Cols
Watterson (12 4 5)
State champronshtp
At Columbus Crew Stadtum Satwday
11 am
DIVISION Ill
Ar BrunswiCk Hrgh School Tuesday, 7
pm
K1dron Cent Chnshan (17 2·2) vs Gates
Mills Hawken (17·1 2)
At Centervtlle Soccer Stadtum Tuesday
7p m
Sprtng
Cath
Cent
(19- 1 1) vs
Worthtngton Chnsttan (15-5-1)
State champ1ooshm
At Columbus Crew Stadtum Fr day 3
pm
GIRLS SOCCER
DIVISION I

At Solon H1gh ScHool Wednesday, 7
pm
Strongsville (17 0 4) vs Cuya Falls
Walsh JesUtt (13-3-5)
At Clayton Northmont H1gh School
Wednesday 7 p m
C n St Ursula {18 1 2) vs Htlltard
Oavtdson (13 4 4)
Stale champ!Onshtp
,At Columbus Crew Stadium Salurclay 7
pm
DIVISION II

Akr Hoban (15·3·1) vs Shaker Hts
Hathaway Brown ( 17 3 1)
At Dublin Coffman H1gh School
Wednesday 7 p m
Ctn Made1ra (1 S-2 2) vs Hamilton Bad n
(15 5)
State chamo!QnShiQ
At Columbus Crew Stadrum Saturday 3
pm
FooTBALL
Regtonal semtltnal htgh school football
playoff patr ngs wtth seedmgs as pro
vtded by the Oh1o High School Athletic
ASSOCtattOn
DIVISION I
Alf Games ar 7 p m Saturday unlsss

noted

JUSt two months from
report111g to trammg camp
m 2005 when he suffered
senous mternal mJunes m a
motorcycle wreck whtle
dom~ tncks m a parkmg lot
Wmslow would undergo
several operattons, mcludmg mtcrofracture surgery
on hts nght knee last wmter
The adverstty could have
broken htm Instead, tt
made htm stronger
"When I came m as a
rookte, I felt I had a lot to
prove, but I dtdn't know
how to go about it, I thmk,"
he satd "I wanted to tell
everybody how good I was
I learned you don't have to
do that The great ones
don't do that. You JUSt go
out and do tt and let other
people tell you about tt
"You JUSt go do 11 You
ltve and learn I was 20
years bid I'm 24 now, I'm
marned, I'm growmg up"
Whtle he can be ~tctous
to anyone weanng a helmet,
Wmslow has a softer stde,

With so much at stake,
they were so bad all-around,
dousmg what httle hope
was left
No 3 recetver Chris
Henry returns from his
etght-game suspension this
week, gtvmg the offense a
boost, and runmng back
Chns Perry wtll reJOin the
team m practice on
Wednesday Thmgs would
have been Iookmg up, tf
they'd won m Buffalo
Perry broke a bone m hts
lower right le~ last season,
and started thts one on the
phystcally unable to perform hst The Bengals wtll
have to dectde m the next
three weeks whether to activate htm or put htm on an
tnJury ltst for the rest of the
season
Asked how he feels, Perry
satd, 'T m good enough to
pracuce"
At thts pomt, that's about
all the}' ve got left
''
too
Followmg
Sunday's
game, Wmslow sat qUietly
at hts locker and dtssected
perhaps Cleveland's btggest
regular season wm m h ve
years He was asked about
the d~y in 1982 when hts
dad,
dehydrated
and
exhausted, caught 13 passes
for 166 yards and blocked a
field goal 111 the fmal seconds to lead the Chargers
past the Dolphms
Afterward, the elder
Winslow had to be helped
off the fteld by teammates,
an tcomc NFL tmage.
"It's JUSt want-to, man,"
Kellen satd of the W111slow
way "That's all tt ts It's
how bad do ,YOU want It m
crum;h ttme'
Thim Wmslow bowed his
head and fell stlent He
cried. After a long pause, he
looked up as a tear streaked
down hts face.
'T m sorry," he sat d.
Wmslow had no reason to
be

Tuesda~Novernber6,2007

www.rnydallysentlnel.com

Regton 1 1 Mentor (8 2) vs 4 Solon (8
2) at Parma Byers Fteld 7 Cleve
Glenville (9 2) vs 6 Youngs Boardman
(8-3) at Twmsburg T gar Stadtum
Reg1on 2 1 Brunswick (11 O) vs 4 Tol
Whitmer {9 2) at Fremont Ross Paul
Stad um at Harmon F eld 2 N Canton
Hoover (9--2) vs 3 Macedoma Nordonta
( 10 1) at Massillon Washmgton Paul
Brown Tiger Stadtum
Region 3 1 Htlltard Darby (10-1) vs 5
Groveport Mad1son (8 3) at Upper
Arlington Moorehead Me mortal Stadtum
2 Ptckerngton Cent (11 0) vs 3 Dubin
Coffman (11 O) at Gahanna Ltncoln

Stadtum
Aegton 4 1 Ctn St XaVIer ( 11 0) '.is 4
Cenlervtle (9 2) at 5 p m at Ctnctnn att
Paul Brown Sta d1um 2 C1n Co lerain
(1 1 O)vs 6Ctn Moeller(7-3)at 2pm at
C1nctnnau Paul Brown Sta d1um
DIVISION II

CLASSIFIED

A!/ Games at 7 30 p m Fnday
Regton 5 1 Warren Howland ( 11.0) vs 5
Mayfteld (8 3) at Solon Stew art Fteld 2
Tallmadge (1 0 1) vs 3 Parma Normandy
(9 2) at Bedtord Stewart Field at Bearcat
Stadtum
RegtOn 6 1 Avon lake ( 11 0) vs 4
Ashland ( 10 1) at Brunswtck K trsh Fteld
2 Sylvama Southvtew (1 0 1) vs 6 Ptqua
(8 3) at Ltma SeniOr Stadtu m
Regton 7 1 Cols DeS ales ( 11 0) vs 4
Ca nftel d (1 0 1) at Canton Fawcett
Stadtum 2 LOUISVIlle (9 2) VS 6 Dresden
Tn Valley (10 1) at New PhlladQiphta
Woody Hayes Quaker Stadtu m
Regton 8 1 Cm Turpn (11-0) vs 5
Trotwood Mad1son (8 3) at Ce nta rv~Ue
Stadium 2 Cm Anderson (9 2) vs 6
Day Ca rrol (10 1) at Ctn Pnnceton
Manc uso Fteld tn Vtktng Stad •um
DIVISION Ill
All games a/ 7 30 p m Fnday
Regton 9 1 CuyahOga Falls Walsh
Jesu t (9 1) vs 5 Cortland Lakevtew (9 2) at Ra11enna StadtumfGtlcrest F1eld 2
Rocky R1ver (11 0) vs Mentor Lake
Cath (7 4) at l akewood Stadtum
Aegton 10 1 Sunbury Btg Walnut (10-1 )
vs 5 Shelby (9-2) at Lewts Ctr
Olentangy Braves Field 2 Napoleon (10
1) vs 6 Clyde I I 0 1) al Tot Cent Calh
Gallagher Athlettc Complex
Regan 11 1 Canal Fulton Northwest
(11 O) vs 4 Do11er (8 3) at Massillon Paul
Brown T1ger Stad1um 2 Newark L ckmg
Valley (10 1) vs 3 Beloit West Branch
(9-2) at Wooster Follts Field
Regan 12 1 Cln lndlon H1ll (9 2) vs 5
Ctrclev lie (8·3) at Htllsboro A chards
Memonal Fteld 2 Canal Wnchesler {101) vs 6 Monroe (9 2) at Dayton
Welcome Stadtum
DIVISION IV

Alf Games

Gallia
County

OH

E-maU
classtfted@ mydatlylnbune com

noted
Region 17 1 N Lma S Range 111 0)
vs 4 Gates Mills Gilmour Acad (9-1) at
Warren Hardtng Mollenkopf StaCt1 um 2
Youngs Ursut ne (9 2) vs 3 Apple Creek
Waynedale (9 2) at Canton Cent Cath
Klinefelter Stad1um
Reg ton 18 1 Patrtck Henry ( 10 1) vs 4
llma Cent Cath (10 1) at Ftndtay
Donnell Stadtum 2 Fmdlay Ltberty
Benton ~11 0) vs 6 Def ance Tinora (9·2)
at Uma Bath Stad tum
Regton 19 1 Cots Ready (10 1)vs 4
Johnstown· Monroe (9 2) at Newark
Whtte Fteld 7 Fredertcktown (9-2) at 3
Wheelersburg {8 3) at Lancas ter Fulton
Fteld
Reg1on 20 1 West Jefrerson ( 11 0) vs 4
West ltberty Salem (10 1) at Urbana
H1gh School Stad1um 2 Mana Stetn
Mariorl Loca (11 O) vs 3 Ctn Deer Park
(9 2) at 1 30 p m at Clavton Northmont
Stad1um/Dudon Memorial F1eld
OIVISIONVI

All Games at 7 p m Saturday unless
noted
Reg1on 21 1 Bascom Hopewell Laudon
(11 01 vs 4 Mogadore (10 1) al 7 30
p m at Ashland Com munrty Stad urn 2
Norwalk St Paul (10 1) vs 3 Warren
JFK (9 2) at 7 p m at Medma Dukes
Stadium
Reg ton 22 1 McComb (1 0 1) vs 4
Art ngton (9 2) at Ftndlay Donnell
Stadtum 7 Defrance Ayersvllle (8 3) vs
3 Ada (7 4) at ltma Semor Stadtum
Regton 23 1 Newark Cath (9 2) vs 4
Danville (8 3) at 1 p m at Mount Vernon
Yellow Jacket S!ad1um 2 Shadys tde (10
1) vs 3 Hanntbal Rtver (I 0·1 ) at Marttns
Ferry Purple A der Alumn Field
RegiOn 24 1 Covrngton ( 11 0) vs 5
Stdney Lehman {8 3) at Troy Memonal
Stadtum 2 Sprtngfte ld Cath Cent ~11 0)
vs 6 Mechamcsburg (7 4) at Stdney
Memona Stadtum

from PageBl
than Rozelle, who ts credited with butldmg NFL football mto the nat10n 's most
popular sport
-Unwtlhng to repeat the
errors made when the
Steelers released Johnny
Unitas and fatled to draft
Dan Manno,
Roonev
strongly pushed coach B1fl
Cowher and dtrector of
football operattons Kevm
Colbert to draft quarterback
Ben Roethhsberger m 2004
Unttas, comctdentally,
once was the ftrst-team
quarterback
on
the
Ptttsburgh Cathohc all-star
htgh school football team
Dan Rooney was the second
team QB
-Hall of Fame 9uarterback Bobby Layne s con.
tract negotJaltons were so
easy, he once stgned a blank
contract and told the
Rooneys to f1Il 111 the
amount
-Once Dan Rooney
began runmng the Steelers'

Staph
from Page Bl
Pat Dtckmson Lab results
ulttmately proved the
on~mal report of nme to
be maccurate
Whtle
compltcattons
from MRSA are beheved
to have ktlled a student m
Vtrgtma recently, an ep1 -

front offtce, hts father told
htm, "Do tt your way, but
don't make any mtstakes"
- One of Ius btggest
regrets was allowmg Hall of
Fame runmng back Franco
Harns' 1984 contract stalemate to end wtth Hams'
release
"
-Art Rooney once sent a
then-6-vear-old
Dan
Rooney to break mto a
Bears t~am meeung and ask
Halas to take tt easy on the
Steelers
-Dan ts among the many
NFL owners who d tshkes
Ratders boss AI Davts, and
not only because the
Steelers-Ratders nvalry was
so mtense m the 1970s that
tt sptlled tnto federal court.
Rooney
satd
Vmce
Lombardi was so unhappy
that Davts was fightmg the
AFL-NFL ahgnment plan
drawn up by Rozelle, the
Packers coach backed Davts
agamst a wall and grabbed
hts collar
"If you're gomg to cause
people twuble, you'll be
run out of here," Rooney
quotes Lombardt as saymg
to Davts
demmlogtst wnh the state
Department of Health and
Human Resources says
there ts no cause for pamc
Humbert Zappia says
most futahttes occur m the
elderly or those wah
weakened tmmune systems
Whtle MRSA doesn't
respond to pentctlhn and
related anttbmttcs , n can
be treated wtth other
drugs

'

Websttes·
www.mydatlylrtbune com
www mydatlysenhnel com
www mydatlyregtster com

l\egtster
(304) 675-1333
Word Ads

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

at 7 p m Saturday

Reg on 13 1 Youngs Mooney (11 0) vs
4 Akron St Vtncent-St Mary (9 2) at
Belotl W Branch Heacock Stadium 2
Steubenvtlte (11 0) vs 3 Canton Cent
Cath (10 1) at Austintown Fitch Falcon
Stadtum
Aegton 14 1 Pembervtlle Eastwood (10
1) vs 5 Genoa Area (10-1) ~;~t Mtllbury
lake Flyer Stadtum 7 Ottawa-Glandorf
(9·21 vs 3 Mar on P le~sant (10 1) at
Ttffm Columbian NatiOnal Fteld at FrostKalnow Stadtum
Reg on 15 1 St Clatrsv tlle ( 11 0) vs 4
Pataskala Ltckmg Hetghts (10 1) at
Zanesvt lle
Sulzberger
Memonal
Stadtum 2 Williamsport West1all (11 0)
vs 3 Waverly (10 1) at Ashvtlle Teays
Valley Vtkmg Stad1um
Reg on 16 1 Kettenng Alter (1 1 0) vs 5
Coldwater (10 1) at Pqua Alexander
Stadtum/Purk Fteld 2 West Mtlton
Mtlton. Unton (10 1) vs 3 Clarksvtlle
ChntCJn Masse (10 1) at Kettenng
Fatrmont Roush Stad1um
DIVISION V
All Games at 7 30 p m Fnday unless

In One Week With Us
REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS
PLUS YOUR AD NOW ONLINE

Dally In-Column. 1 00 p.m
Monday-Friday for ln•ertlon

All Dl•play: 12 Noon :z
Business Days Prior To

In NeJCt Day's Paper
Sunday In-Column: 1:00 p m.

Publication
Sunday Dl•play: 1:00 p.m.

Por Sundays Paper

Ohio Valley

Publishing reserves
the right to adll
reject or cancel an~
ad at any time

Errors

Must

eportod

on the

B
II

ay of publication an
he Tribune-Sentinel
will b
agistor
esponslble for n
ore lhan the cost o
he apace occuplo

the error and onl
he flrtl lnaertlon W
hall not be liable I

\ \ \ I l l \( l \ 11 ' ""

r

rI

%~

Thursday for Sundays

• All ads must ba prepaid"

POLICIES Ohio Valley Publishing reHJVII the right to edH refed Of cancel any ad et any time Errors must bll reported on the first day ot
Trlbune-sentlnet-Regltter will be responelble for no more thn the ca.t of the apace occupled by the error end only the ftrst Insertion We ehsll not
any ION or 111:pente thst reeultt from the publication or omtselon of an lld~IMment Correction will btl made in the lim aveilable edlllon • Bo~~:
are atway1 contldentlll • Current rMe card IPPIIes • All real e~talit advertiHmente are eub)ect to the Federal Fair Houelng Act ot lHI • Thle ~;,;.;;;1
eccepta only help wanted adl
We •Ill not knowingly accept sny advlftlalng In vlollllon of the law

Description • Include A Prlu • AvOid Abbreviations
• lndude Phone Number And Addreu When Needed
• Adl Should Run 7 Daya

•POLICIES*

KIT &amp; CARLYLE

HOME'i

r

I

G~WA~

2BA &amp; Master BR w/ walk m
dosets 2BA Ranch Style
house over 2 000 sq It
Huge kitchen lots of cabtnet
space LA DR Laundry
Room on 1 acre of land
Ask1ng $115 000
OBO
(7401441 7842

-2-84_2____________

Asbestos root shmgles new
1 male Black tab puppy or used Charlene Hoeflich
about 5 months old very 74Q-992-5292
lnendly 304 937 3192
~------'-Want to buy Junk Cars call

3 bdr 1 ba Ranch tn
Syracuse Oh carport plus 1
car garage &amp; shed 740 992
314 1 or (740)442 1281

;.74,;;().~38~8-~0~88~4~~~""1

Gtveaway
1112 yr old female Golden
ret neve r very fnendly
304 743 5753

t

r

WE BUY USED
MOBILE HOMES

rr~'ID

Adam (740)828-2750

I \ JI'II l\\ 11 \ I

made

1n the tlr
vallable eclltlon.

Box number ada a
lwaya confidential

Current
ppllea
All

Real

Eatat

dvertlsements

ar

ubjoctlo the Feelers
air Housing Act

968
This
nawspape
ccop1a only hel
ntad acls mootln
OE standards.
We will not knowln
y accept any ad. .
laemont In vlola!IO
I tho law

4x4 •a

"I I{\ f( I "'
FOUND
Boxer call to
tden11ty 304-395 2601
ii~r;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,;;

11 10

Found
Long
like pup
on h81red
LowerSprtnger
At 7
Wants to come home Call
11110pm 446·8027

IIEu&gt;WANIDl

·
--. - - - - - - - '

A local manufacturer has
openmgs for Expenenced
Mtg Welders and Pamter for
Lost on 143 gray tom ltxed
Manufactured Equtpment
NEA,Inc
front paws dewclawed
Apply 1n person at 2, 50
belongs to Er tn &amp; Emily
Reward call Marge F Easlern Avenue Gallipolis ..,,.........................,
(740)992 6862
OH NO phone caHs please
lfEu&gt;

r
r

I

ro

YARD SAlE-

L-..iPI:oiil
. I'Liw&gt;ANTi.illiiil.iiiii.,J
...,
lnstde Sate at J&amp;F Auto 6
mtles out Jerrys Run Ad
Apple Grove
Lots of
Chnstmas ttems Lots of
Used 1tems also Nov 5th
lhru Nov 1Olh 304 576·2635

CLASSIFIED INDEX

For Sate

• 725

Announcement ••...

... 030

Antiques........ ...... •
.. .. 530
Apartments for Rant
..... 440
Auction and Flea Market
080
Auto Parts &amp; Accassorles.
...... 760
Auto Repair
........ • • •
Autos for Sale
•
710
Boats &amp; Motors for Sale....
.. ... 750
Building Supplies... ... ......... • .......... • ... 550
Buotneas and Buildings...
.. ... 340
Buatnesa Opportunity
.210
Business Training ... ........ ............... .. ... 140
Campers llo Motor Homes..
.. ... 790
Camping Equipment • ..
..... 780
Cards at Thanka........... ....... ...........
...010
Child/Elderly Care. ... ...................... .. ... 190
Electrtcai/Refrtgorallon
.840
Equipment for Rant
• • 480

E•cavatlng............ . .•...•.. , .................... 830

Farm Equlpmenl .........................................610

Fanno for Rent
.,...
430
Fenno for sate • •
• .330
For Lesae....... ..... ............ ................. 490
For Sale............ ..... •
• ... 585
For Sale or Trade • •
• .590
Fruits &amp; Vegetables • ... ... • ........... ...580
Furnlehed Rooms..... .... ..... • .. ........
.450
General Hauling .. •
850
Giveaway...
.040
Happy Ada. ... .. ...........
......... •.. e5o
Hay &amp; Grain...
.640
Help Wanted ..
t1
Home Jmpro,.,.nta
.. 810
Homes lor Sale ..... ..
...310
Household Goods
.... 510
Houaea for Rent
... 410
In Memoriam
..... 020
Insurance .. .......
• ... 130
Lawn &amp; Garden Equipment
.... 660
Llveatock
..... ... .........
.630
Lost and Found..... • .....
• •• 060
Lots " Acreage • •
• 350
Mlscellaneoua
170
Mlacellaneous Merchandlae. • .........
.540
Mobile Home Repair.
860
Mobile Homes for Ran1
... 420
Mobile Homes for sate .. • ... ..
.320
Money to Loan ......
• .220
Motorcyclea &amp; 4 Wheelers
740
Muslcallnatrumonls ..... ........
.. ... 570
Personals • •
.. • • 005
Pets for Sal a... ...
560
Plumbing &amp; Heating
820
Professional Services • • .....
...230
Radio, TV &amp; CB Repair .....
• .160
Real Eollle Wanted
... 360
Schools Instruction • • ....
.........
.150
Seed , Plant &amp; Fertilizer..... ............ ... 650
Situations Wanted •
120
Space for Rent
... 460
Sporting Goode ..... • .. .... ..........
.. .. 520
SUV's lor Sale. ....
720
Truckl for Sale
• 715
Upholstery
• • ...
..... 870
Vans For Sale ... .......
730
Wanted Ia Buy ...
• 090
Wanted to Buy· Farm Supplies.........
...620

o

WantedToDo ......... ....................... , ••••• 180
Wanted to Rent. .. ..
...470
Yard Sll.. Galllpotta. • • .. •
..... • • 072
Yard SII..PomerayiUtddla ... ....... ........ .... 074
Yard SII..Pt. Pl-ant....... .. ........ .. ..... 076

Appalachian Ttre Products a
company that has been tn
bustness for over 60 years
has an excellent opportunity
for the nght tndi'w'ldual We
are seektn
store manage
to overse
PI Pleasant
locatton
fhe nght candt
date wtll have strong leader
Ship sktlls atnltty to OOtid &amp;
maintain a strong team while
betng dnven to provtde out
standmg customer serv1ce
We prov1de a competttlve

Mtddleton Estates IS accept·
ing appltcattons for D1rect
Care Staff and LPN s II you
would like to take advenlage
of this opportunity you may
apply at 8204 Carla Dr
GallipoliS Ohto Monday
through Fnday 8am·4pm
~n
equal
opportuntty
employer FIMJDN

IIIC::~

OPEN
INTERVIEWS

AVON! All Areas• To Buy or

WEDNESDAY

Sell
Shirley Spears 304
675 1429

NOVEMBER 7th

Food Service Workers. pndishwasher PIT on call
caterers Apply tn person at
URG cafetena 740 2455660
Home Health Care of SEQ IS
currently accepting appltca
!tons for LPN s Full time part
ltme per dtem Competitt\18
wages
1 866 368-1100
toll free

~------~

• •

Now accepting applications
lor Bar Manager 811 P
requtred Send resumes 10
PO Box 303 G~hpolls Oh
45631 Attn Mtke
salary along wtth a benefit - - - - - - - -

package tncludmg maJor
medical Insurance 401 K
w/p ro111 shanng plan paid
vacat1on
If Interested
please send resume to
Appalachian Ttre Products
Attention
Greg Stover
2907
4th
A11enue
Char leston wv 25312

www.comics com

WANIDl 11116 liEu&gt; WANI1lll

An Excellent way to earn •

money The New Avon
Call Marilyn 304 882·2645

YAIID SALE

'

FOR SALE

kltncarlyle@lcomcast net

Absolute Top Dollar us
Sliver and Gold Cams
Ftrewood 2yrs atr-dned cut Proolsels Gold Rmgs Pre
and spl t 98%oak 2% htcko 1935
US
Currency
ry you haul or I haul Soltta1re Dtamonds M T S
OH HEAP Vender 949 2038 Cotn Shop 151 Second
Avenue Gall polls 740·446

ANNOUNCEMENTS

Now you can have borders and graphics
~
added to your classified ads
J~;.
Jm
Borders$3.00/perad
I!
Graphics SOC for small
S1.00 for large

Display Ads

AD • Start Your Adl With A Keyword • Include Complete

no

Rooney

The Daily Sentinel • Page 83

m:rtbune- Sentinel- l\egtster

OHSAA Tournaments

At Ashland Communrty Socc;er Stad1um
Wednesday, 7 p m

Once Lynch got away
from those three, there was
nobody left to catch htm
Hts 56-yard touchdown run
chnched the game for
Buffalo and left Lewts
stewmg about another
defenstve breakdown
After the game, Lewts
called the play "ndtculous."
A day later, he had no destre
to rehash the poor tackhng
that has been the hallmark
of hts defense all season
"Agam, you go back to
the same dead horse."
Lewts satd "It's dead
enough We have to make
the play m the backfield
We have to tackle better"
After tmproving tn the
runmng game the l?ast two
weeks, the Bengals stgmticantly regressed
Rud1
Johnson earned mne ttmes
for II yards, and Kenny
Watson ran four ttmes for
II yards Cmcmnau , averaged 5 feet per carry

2007

9 QOam • 3 OOpm
lnfoCision
242 3rd Avenue
GallipoliS OH
"Up Ia $8 50/hr FT
' Health Benefits for
FT &amp; PT employees
' Paid Holidays OFF
• Vacahort &amp; Persona!
Time attar Sill months
If unabJe to attend
please call to schedule
your lnterv1ew
1-888 IMC.PAYU

Ext '256

www lnfoclslon com

I'll!,........,.................,

ILr.ao--w~T~::,:,Do;::._.,J
• ..,

POST OFFICE NOW
HIRING

Georges Portable Sawmtll
don, haul your Logs to the
Mill rust call 304-675-1957

Avg Pay $20fhr or
$57K annually
Including Federal Benefits
and OT.Pald Tralntng
Vacations-FTIPT
1·866·542-1531
USWA

Guttar Player looking to start
an ongtnal Rock Band IF
mterested call 740·9854416 after 5 oo PM

ProfeSSionally
Clean
Homes
&amp;
Bustness
PreK Teacher for new part Reasonable
Aales
time program $7 85/hr to References 74Q-446 2262
$11 30/hr dependtng on
education Send resu me to
Earty Ed ucaliOn s taltan
Je
lhrn..~
2122 lferson Ave
DL' .-x~..~

ji;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
riO

-------Sell Avon make 50% Call
446-3358
The Ohto Valley Pubhshtng
Co ts seektng a Sports
Writer to add to tiS staff cov
ertng local athtettc events.
The position Is a fullttme 40
hours a week wtth a beneftts
and 401k plan available
Newspaper page layout
skills are d881red txJt not
necessary Must be wtll1ng to
learn and be people friendly
Send resumes to t&lt;evm
Kelly, Managtng Edtlor Oh10
Valley Publlolling Co 825
Third Ave Galhpohs Oh

~==O~I'I'O;;RniN;:riY:~
•NOTICE•
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH·
lNG CO recommends
that you do busmess wHh
people you know and
NOT to send money
through the mat t unt1l you
have lnvesttgated the

et Two covered porches and
a br ck paver pat o The 2 112
car garage has att1c storage
cement dnvaway with plenty
58 A 2BA brick style ranch of patt; ng Must see to
on 36 acres at 452 Cox Ad apprectale all amen1t1es
Crown City Ohto Basement Southern Local Schools
FA DR K tchen has fndge Ca ll 740 441 5171
range oven dtsp 8. dish
washer Basement has FP
and 9fl cethngs wtth 2x6
studs Heat pump 2 car
attached garage new tenc
ng extra bldgs Brmks
Secu nty System back deck
For sale by owner Call tor
Appt 740 256 6075 or 740
262 1123 _ _ _ __ For Sale 5Bfl 2 BA, 2 600
:::_:.:_:::__
sq f1 home located on
Attention!
Raccoon Creek tn Gall polls
Local company offermg "NO
DOWN PAYMENT" pro 1 3 acre yard wtth large
detached pole garage for
gt!lms for you to buy your
car/boat storage and paved
home 1nstead ot rennng •
u·shaped drt\f8WQ)' Access
• tOO% financing
• Less than perfect credit to boat ramp Wrap around
deck and hot tub Many
accepted
• Payment could be the extras call (740)441 8257

\

Locators

••NOTICE••

MONEY

ro LoAN

Borrow Smart Contact
the Ohto Dtvts1on of
lnstttut1on s
Ftnanc at
Office of Consumer
Alfatrs BEFORE you refl
nance your home or
obla1n a loan BEWARE
ot requests for any large
advance payments of
tees or Insurance Call the
Office of Consumer
Affatrs toll free at 1-866
278 0003 to learn I the
mortgage
broker or
lender
ts
properly
lteensed (This ts a public
servtce annou ncement
from the Ohio Valley
Pubhshmg Company)

r PRo=~AL

TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY 1551?
No Fee Unless We Wlnt
1 888 582 3345

HI \I I " I \ I I

HOMES

FOR SAlE
0 down payment 4 bed
rooms Large yard Covered
ded&lt; Attached garage 740
367 7129

Sc

2 story Home w/Atver tot
3br 2ba 2 car garage 304
675 7285
House
and 1 acre At 2
North approx 6 miles from
Pt Pleasant
Many new
upgrades Motivated Seller
Price to Setl 304 675 5590
Call lor detolls

~ --~--

---

~- -

----

All reel estate advertising
In thle newapaper Ia
subject to the Federal
Falr Hou .. ng Acl ol1968
which makes It mega! to
advertlae any
preference llmllaHon or
discrimination b11ed on
race color, reUgion sex
familial atatu• or national
origin or any lntentton to
make any auch
preference limitation or
dlscrtmlnatlon
This newspaper will not
knowingly eecept
advertisements for real
eatate which 10 In
vlolatlon of ttletaw Our
readers are hereby
lnformedthatall
dwelllnga advertised tn
this newspaper are
available on •n equal

~~..,~·~·~:u:":rly:b~••:";;;::::!
'!'"'"

L--.:FO;:.;:R;.Rmr:;:;:;,:._.,J
2BR WDSR $400/mo
$400 dep 88 Gaif19ld Hud
ok 1 3BR 2BA doublewtde
$575/mo $575 dep 172 112
Chatham Ave Hud ok 740
446 2515
--- - - -- - - 2 bd House n Mason
Covered Carport K1tchen
furntshed Gas heat No
Pets'$375 permo Oep Req
304 675 7783
2

bedroom

house

m

Pt Pleasant very clean and
ntce No Pets 304 675 13B6
2 story house wtth 2BA 1
bath New carpet 1n both
bedrooms and large living
room new refngeralor large
dry spactous basement
(could be used as xtra BR or
FA) No Pets can see at
t638
Chatham
Ave
Gallipolis (740)446-4234 or
(740 )208 7861

:.:.:.:::::.::.=_:__--:_
28R s 122 Lower Garfteld
Gallipolis Depostl reqUired

_7.:_:40:_4_4.:_:6~1.:.258:.::_'----­

3 bedroom House available
Now thru May $475 rent
Mtddleport 1n town out ot $300 depostt ref req 740
flood platn 8 moms 2 112 441 7193 or 740 339 9713

Ntce 3BA newly remodeled
New WH &amp; Furn C/A

Wanted someone 2417 to Sit
Wllh Elderly Aunt must have
exp &amp; be able to lift 100 lbs
304 675 1846

11!10

Approx 2 acres wl &amp;losttng
28x60 house foundatton
Also 24x40 fm 1shed garage
tenance free home located Has water etec 7 sewer
n Syracuse 3 BR &amp; 2 112 Located tn centenary on
BA 2 800 sq ft ol fimshed Herman Rd Askmg $55 000
liVIng space 40 year dtmen Please call 740 208 6704
s10nal shtngtes natural gas
Green Acres (10) Farm
heal Th s mull level home
Ltvtn Fresh Atr 3 m~es from
s n tmmaculate condthOn
New Haven WV $34 500
and has oak hardwood tnm
304 773 5881
throughout The basement IS
parttally fmrshed and could MOBILE HOME LOT FOR
be used as a 4th bedroom RENT 1031 Georges Creek
workout room or a chtldren s Ad 4411111
play room Large family
IH \1 \I 'room wtth 40 cabtnets all
butlt m appltances and
ceramiC ttle floor alSO laun ~rr':t0r""-~----~
dry room Wtlh 6 of cabtnets
HOl_J'SES

3BR 2BA 1BOO sq ft
remOdeled Ranch on 1 acre
mllrn city New kit WI pantry
&amp; laundry rm Huge master
sutte w/ FP &amp; pnvate
entrance DR LR wf gas FP/
Attached carport 2 car
garage &amp; pnvacy fence Nat Master bedroom wtlh walk
n closet maiiter bath wtlh
gas Heat pump &amp; CIA Exc
double bO'M vamty ceramtc
Cond Ready to move In
t1lo floor and marble shower
$98 500 neg 740 645-8751
Bedrooms 2 &amp; 3 have large
closets matn bath has a 7
vanity marble bathtub sep
arate shower and ltnen clos

same as rent
Mortgage
(740)
367 0000

tors&amp;
ACREAGE

2 grave lots tn Chnstus
Gardens
Oh1o
Valley
Memory Gardens (740)446
4383 day (740)256 6637
eventng

~~:::::;;:;;::;

j

TRUCK DRIVER NEEOEO
Henderson WV Based
COL License &amp; 2yts
EMperlenca MVA Requtred
Call (304)675 7434

Overbropk Center IS an
Magtc Years Day C@re E 0 E and a participant of
:u&lt;XJlS
Center Inc 1s now taking
INsrRucnoN
the
Drug
Free
Workplace
L--iillliiliililiiiiO.rl
app1tcat1ons for a full time
Program
SubstitUte Please apply 1n ----"---~­ Golllpollo CarHr College
perso n or send resume 10
(Careers Close To Home)
201 High St Pt Pleasant Patrlotk: Foodllnc Grand
Call
Today! 740 446·4367
Openmg
WV 25550
on Nov 12
1 800-214 0452
;.._:~~:..,..____ lmmedtate Sa!es positions
Needed Base Player for well ava table Must have truck www ga1Mpo115ce eera:JI ege com
established Veteran 15yr old and clean record
Call Accred 1IKI Member Accredit ng
Cou~l lei nctependen\ COIII!IQGI
Band 304 675 4094
Derek 304 812 0270 Now
and Schools 12746

r

IIOME'i

FOR SALF.

baths 2 garages 2 ftre
places 2 tots plenty of stor
age (7401992 4197
..::.:.:..:...-"---'- - - New home n Galltpol s
2BA 2BA 3 acres MIL
$B2 500 Call 740 446 7029

::off;e:nn=g~:===~

45631

Overbrook Center Located
@ 333 Page Sl Middleport
Ohto
ts
pleased
to
Announce we w II be holdtng
an STNA Class scheduled
for November hours will be
Sam 4 30pm II you are
mterested m 101ntng our
frtendly and dedtcated staff
please stop by our front
oHu::e Man Fn
9am 5pm
and 1111 out an application
lull ttme and part t!me posl
tons ava~able to lhose qualtiled 1nd1vtduals compleltng
the class applicant must be
dependable (anenda.nce Is a
must) team players With pos
tttve attitudes to jotn us tn
provtdtng outstanding quail
Machlntst and Welders ty care to our reSidents.
Less than 4 yrs ellper ence 11 you have any questtons
need not Apply Ambrosia contact HoiHe Bumgarner
Machine Inc 304 675 1722 LPN staff development
Morr Fn 7 30 4 00
coordrnalor (740)992 6472

10

3 Bedroom House
n
Syracuse $ 500}month +
deposll No Pels (304)675
5332 weekends 740 591
0265
3 Bedroom 2 Bath home on
ntce lavel lol $4 7:J month
(740)446 7101
ask for

Appltance nctuded Across .":.::•:::m:::m:::
'•--- - - - from Vmton Elem $65 000
740 245 5555 or 441 5105 3 br house tn Middleport all
electr c $425 plus $425
Racme /ranch home 1500 depostt No Pets (740)992
sq fl 3/2 seller ass1sted 6068
ftnancnig (740)416 3977
740 222 5570
32 Btrch Lane 2BR 1BA
frtdge &amp;Stove ncluded WlfiJf
WALKING DISTANCE TO hook up $475/mon $475
RIO 'fRANDE COLLEGE dep No pels 740 645 5785
1600sq ft all electr c heat
pump &amp; Nood burn er 48R 3BR 1 1/2 BA 2 car garage
full s1ze basement 2 car w/ fenced yard tn famtly on 1
garage (740)44 t 9510
enled netghbortlood 5 rot es
from town Would consider
1\(0811 F. HOI\ II'.X
renttng part ally furnished
t-'OR SM li
wt \h ulthttes lo constructton
worke rs on a week to week
2000 14x70 3BA 2BA l ots basts Ava11 Dec 1 Ca ll 740
of up grades on rented lot 446 873 1
34
Kra us Back
Ad
38 A 1 bath 2 story older
Galltpolts 3 mt les fr om
farm hoL se on SR 554
Galltpohs off SA 588 446 Btdwetl RV
sch ool s
8935 Prtce reduced
$575 mo plus sec dep Pets
2000 Fleet...Yood {Wtnd gate) under 15 lbs w/$575 pet
14)(70 3br 2 bathr ooms depo stl Avatlable 10 13 07
linoleum fl oors new balh Call 446 3644 lor apphca

=::.______

House for sale m Ractne
area Approx 4 acres all
professionally landscap ed
Ranch style house wtth 4
bedrooms ltvtng room dtn rooms
good
condtl1on tton
tng room kttchen large tam $14 000 no cal ls alter 9pm 3BR 1BA laundry room 65
liy room central atr gas heat ~pl::e•::'::e::3:_04:_6:::7.:5.:3::92:::7__ M 11 Creek No pets 740
and 1 fireplace AdditiOn of a New 3 Bed room homes fro m 445 9523 or 446 1443
large Flonda room com $2 14 36 per month Includes
4 Bd Home Apple Grove
Pletely cedar opens on to
many upgrades delivery &amp; Oh
$400
h d
N
palto &amp; pool area Healed tn
10
Wtt
ep
o
ground pool enclosed by pn- set up (740)385 24 34
pe ts A"uer 6 00 ca11 740
vacy fenctng end lan d 6
:9
::8:_60
~
02:..,.._ _ _ __
scoped Finished 2 car
OWNER FINANCING
4~ room s ana balh stove and
garage attached to house
NICe 3/2 s•nglewides
fndge 52 Olive Galhpolts
and f1mshed &amp; heated 3 car
From $1 800 down
No Pets $3951mo 446 3945
garage
unattached
payment
5 Ro om House tn R10
Excellenl condttton ready to
Adam (7401828 2750
Grande area References
move tn $255 000 00 Call
·
No ms de Pets 304 675
(740)949-221 7
:__:.'..__ _ _ __ _
7624
For sale by owner 3BR
ABnch
1 bath Famtl y
House for rent In Pomeroy 4
Room StoveiFr1dge WID
Bd Rm 2 bath a1r central
mcluded Ask1ng S70 000
heat $525 per month 740
Call 740 709-6339
591 3486

�•
Tuesday, November

6, 2007
Tuesday, November

6, 2007

The Daily Sentinel• Page B5

www.mydallysentinel.com

ALLEYOOP
•r llkwtl

3br Mobile Home
all
rurnlshed,
DOWN PAYMENr pro- Including Washer &amp; Dryer
grwne b )'00 to buy your 36l-593-+t96
home 1nltaad of renting.
-:--::--:-:--:--":""-:'" 100'4 Rna....u...
;;... r,
2ba, Heal Pump,
~
· • leu ··--..
than perfect: creclt Dishwasher,
1 112 miles
occ.ptad
from Pl. Pleosant (Jericho)
• Payment could bt the 304-273-6622(0)) 304-67"·

local ClCimplnj oftering "NO 4ppllances

2 btdroOms, living room ,
kitchen, 1 balh, spanmen1
haw central air. Furnished
with couch, chairs, washer,
dry1r, stove, microwave,
bedl, dinning table and
chairs -•·~ deposit, -••50 8
month call 304-882-2523
le8Y8 a meesage and num-

home

ber il not at
3 er. $395, M.,plus utll
Mobile Homl Loti tor Rent &amp;dep,no
pets,
3rd
and two • two blclroome
ST., Raclne.740-247-4292.
for
Rent end lor
one • Rent
ltnt 6 rooms &amp; bath. ~e &amp;
I&gt;Od"'omo
·-·•
COuntry setting locM8d an· fridge furnished. Very
Clean.
I
t a in town. Call 441-0596
Alhton WV, coN

same aa rent.

620" (E) •

M17::1':~~

--:--:-:c-::---:---:-:-::-::

Locator&amp;.

Beautiful 38R house in the
_.........
.. -~
countoy.
.,...ionoes ~
t
F
eshl
'ntod
-~
carpe . r
~ par
...
IU
~od • CIA· w~·~I""
,_,.._,..,
rv-- "'
" "1

r ._ . . --.....

room. $5001month 614-595- Alhton Elementary 3047773 or 8()().. 798·4686
S7a:-2M2
Apartment for rent , 1-2
F0J rent. .Three bedroom.
Bdrm., remodeled, new carJ'U"l'Ulli\V.l''U3
pet, stove &amp; frig., water.
one bath. eat-in kitchen.
FOR..__
--• pd Middfervut

"'""'

laundry room, 1.,--oiiiiiiiiiiiito-,.t
attached garage, and fenced (1)
ta·
rt
t fur
~ard near Pt. Pleasant.
ups rrs apa men
·
$695/mth. pius deposit. Call nished, 2br. (1) downstairs
3C:W.531.1197.
apartment, furnished, 1br. ln
New Haven NO PETS 304·
Off SA 141, 3BA, 2BA., 882-2326 or 304·882·2793
appliances, basement. 1 car - - - - - - - - garage, $500/mo plus 1 &amp; 2 Bedroom Apartments
..........
(614)..,"),C
,.,,59
,..........,..
"\TVQ
for Rent, Meigs County, In
separate

i

I
Rmr~
.

u-'- - H
••JUDlUO.FOR

1
· t4x70 2 br. '~~:Ia
home,
NUI
-$300, $250 deposit, 1otal
.l ~nc
· , No rw
~ts, (740)742·
V\&lt;l
2714

2··2Bd rm.,Hud '"""· homes

_,.

rent &amp; deposit required. 740·

992 5639
-----'-....,.,--:•
·
Tralfer tor rent, 3BR, 2 BA.
Call367-n62 or 446-4060

Immaculate 1 bedroo.n
apartment New carpet &amp;
cabinets, freshly painted &amp;
decorated. W/0 hookup.
Beaulitul counlry se"lng.
Must see to appreciate.
$32"'
iOJIJJlO. ("14"'"'7773
u
,-v
or
1-800-798-488e.
-----,--~-Immaculate 2 bedroom
apartment New carp"et &amp;
cabinets, freshly paintad &amp;
decorated, WID hookup.
Beautiful country sen 1ng.
Must see to appreciate
$400/mo. (614)595·7773 or
__
79'-'08,.-1_6;_B6_. _ __
-1-800Large 2BR upstairs apt
Large covered deck, close to
hospital, alSo 1BA. apts_Ref.
&amp; dep. required. 740-446·
2957

sower,,,_,
·
~"·
S42S.OO.. No peta, Ref. ,.-,-,..-------:-~--:required.

740--843-5264.

Middleport, 1 &amp; 2 br. furnished apar1ments, no pets,
Apt. lor rent! 3 Bd., 1 bath. In deposit
&amp;
references,
Racine. $725 all utilities pd .. F40)992-0165
$200 D&amp;posit.Call247·2098
or leave message.
Modern Bedroom apt. Call
446..()390
Apt. for Rent. No Pets. 740992·5858.
Modem t BR Apt. Call 446-

1

::C-'---------

a--

town, No Pets, Deposit
ttlul • MO ~ J~·-u
.,Wes1wood
"'"".....,,
Required, (740) 992-5174 or E
t I 1 "'"'-·
s· 2
(740)441-0110
oI · at t • . $3651o$560
·
nve, rom
Equal·
740-446 2568 '
•
·
1 and 2 bedroom apart- H
.
·
0
t •y Tho·s
OUSing ppor unn .
rTtents, furnished and unfur- .lnstrl. ut·ron ·IS an Equa 1
nished, and hou ses in 0
1 ·t p ·de and
ppor un1 Y rovl r
Pom'eroy and Middleport, Employer
security depOSit required, no _ : . . . . . ; ' - - - - - pets, 740-992-221 8.
CONVENIENTLY LOCATED &amp; AFFORDABLE!
-------:--:1
1 BR Apt 1
'
·n 5pnng
· va11ey, •ownhouse
apartments.
WID Hookups. (740)339· andlor SCma11 ( houses F0 R
0362
RENT. a1I 740)441•1111
for application &amp; in_formation.

Ellm View
Apartments
•2&amp;3 bedroom apartments
•Central heat &amp; .A/C
• Washer!dryer hookup
• Tenant pays electric
(304)882·3017

~37_36..;_______

like

new
American AKC Golden Retriever pups
Si!1llllure living room set. 2 mates 16wks, Stlots &amp;
Sofa &amp; lovesear..are taupe wormed, $300 304-273colored with ornate pattern. 2066 or 304-481-0208
Includes 3 large metal &amp;
glass top tables. $1000. 740· lft AKC Lab puppies 5«&amp;-1663
Choc, 2 Bl.id&lt;, 12 -ko
- - - - , - - - - - , - - - okl. wormed &amp; Shots S200
M~ohan Fll(nlture _ Nawo.ach:;;,__c304.;_-8:c7:..~_1_884_~Sofa&amp;Love Seat $400. Queen size ·tllppabje pillow AKC Pekingnese pup. S300
top only $429.95. 202 Oar!&lt; Call?40-ae6-! 664
Chapel Rd. Bidwell . Oh AKC reg. mini dachstlund, 1
M
....... ...
M-F
45614 . 7~17 3.
, btack female t bladt male 1
9-4 Sat 9-3
red female, vet checked
$300 each call.
304•·~~n
1_ _ _ __
nl"'lftl\Jr.:J
_ _3:..·5_10_

i

45" Round Oak Dinner Table
on PedestaL Washstand

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

r

I

sell lor tess than 112 price. 11
=~--~---.,
uI'ARM
Instruction included, 1

r10

Charokaa, North Carolina

Apartments
•2&amp;3 bedroom apar1ments
•Central heat &amp; AJC
•Washer/drye_r hookup
•All electric- averaging
$50-$60/month
•Owner pays water, sewer,

trash

Chartered Coach

(304)882-3017

Transportation

fJ

Friday, November 30, 2007 to
Sunday. December 2, 2007
$195/parson (double occupancy)
$250/parson (single occupancy)
Staying at Hampton Inn
Gladly accepfcash, check,
credit cards and monay orders
Plaasa make all checks
payable to PVH Foundation
LIMITED SPACES!
To make reservations plaasa
call PVH Community
Ralalions,

(304) 675·434\),

• Ext. 1492

czr.;,;;~~~--,

i

SPACE
•uR RF.Nr

-Commercial building "For
Aenr 1800 square teet, ott
street parking. Great toeation! 749 Third Avenue in
Ga!Upolis. Rent $300/mo.
Call Wayne (404)456-3802
Office space, utilities paid,

423
Second
Ave:nue,
Gallipolis. Ohio· 4563 1.
- - - - - - - (740)446-4383
Furnished upstairs 3 roorr\s
and bath . Clean, no pets, Retail Space Appx 1,400 Sq.
deposit req. 740-445- 1519
fl:, for rent/lease. 4th Street
Point Pleasant wv 304Grock!ut Living 1 end 2 675-3786
Bedroom Apts. at Village
Mancr and Riverside Apts. in
Middleport, from $327 to jiiT,~;;;::~~~~;;;

IBM Comp. w/wrndows 95
$75. Punchbowlandcup set
from Topes $50. Pressure
canner $30. Skiers Edge &amp;
Nor.dic Track abs $ 80. 367·
0638 or 208.0134

JET
AERATION MOTORS
Repaired , New &amp; Rebuilt In
Stock. can Ron Evans. 1800-537-9528.
_ _ _..;_____
NEW AND USED STEEL
Steel Beams, Pipe Rebar
For
Concrete,
Angle.
C
Fl
hanna 1,
at 8 ar, 5 tee 1
Grating
For
Drains.
Driveways &amp; Walkways. l&amp;L
M 10
Mo d
crap eta B pen
n ay,
Tuesday, Wednesday &amp;
Friday, Sam-4:30pm. Closed

s

Thursday,
Saturday
Sunday. (740)446-7300

A(J('(l;

1

H p

Hyundai

Accent

Hatchback. 5 speed trans,
65,310 miles, good condllion. needs catalytic convert·
'er. Asking $3200. Call740709·6339
- - - ·- - - - 01 Red Neon. 4 cyl, AIC,
90,000. miles. automatic.
$2600 080. 740-256-1652
or 256-1233
t998 Ford Tau rus S.E.,
excellent condition. pi, pw,
ale, crui se. keyless entry, ps.
new tires, 53995 . (7401992 •

Advertise

in this
space

•

West

MONTY

• New Homes

· ·A K

• Garages
Remodeling

BASEMENT
.WATERPROOFING
Unconditional lifetime guarantee. Local references furnished. Established 1975.
·
H
(
Call 24 rs. · 7 40 ) 446 •
0870, Rogers Basement
Wat erproofing.
.:.:::.:c.!.:::..:=c_
___
wanted:

Dealer: North

. Pass

vw Jetta 192,000 miles.

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

H&amp;H

s

rvtLISHING

Seamless Gutters
Roofing, Siding, Gutters

co.

II L
ONE MAN, ONE
VOTE !! IT'S A
SACRED DUT't' !!

www.ti:ftlbe:JocrukeabJnetry.eem

740 446 9200
t

t

•

••

•

...

BARNEY

Hardwood Cabinetry And Furnilure

HORSEFEATHERS

IF '(A ONl:.'i

WHY WOU\.D..lA
WANNA WASTE IT

GOT ONE
' VOTE .•.

·

A POLITICIAN i'l

2459 St. Rt. 160. GalbpoUs

J&amp;l
ConstrUCtl"on
• Vinyl Siding
• Replacement

Hill's Self
Storage
29670 Bashan Road

Windows

Racine, Ohio

• Roofing
, Decks

45771
740-949-2217

Ga rages

.

Pole Buildings

• Room Add~lons

THE BORN LOSER
,.-.JU:)T Ltl&gt;-\11 i'&lt;l6 Hit POLL!~
~TI&gt;-TIO~, E.f.l.?

...

,.-f.I.OW t&gt;IP Tf\E. i'IEW TOUC.I-\-""'
SC.it.E.EN

'lou~'i-I (OULt&gt;K'T WHJ.\t&gt;AAJ
r.N.'i&lt;A~!

I'V'I...!\1 ~t;.;&gt;..l!.

7:00AM - 8:00 PM

ATA orC'ftA£11• •

IIIII
ffnl1 .

12n1.
All StO.Ck
'710

Pass

Pass

In yesterday's deal, Easl made a leaddirecting double to get hie partner off lo
lhe only lethal lead. In today's deal, Weal
does not find the killing start. But later,
he knows that ~ the contract can be
deleated and he finds lhe nght shift, ha
will boal it. Bul should he swHch to a
club, or to a diamond?
~ook sl the Wosl and North hands.
Defending against four spades, you load
the heart rona : three, four, ace. Declarer
immedialely plays the spade live: king,
seven, two. Whal would you do now?
Easl wanted to bid over one club, bulla
overcall one diamond would have been
dangerous, although i1 would have
worl&lt;ed wall here. And South, after his
partner rebid one no-trump to show a
balanced 12-14 points, look a shol at
game. He had no clue whelher 1he con·
!tact would have any chance, but he
knew that one neOds only lhe flim~est of
oxcu"'!S to bid game.
Back lo your predicament as West.
Since rt is unliltely thai partner can ruff a
hear1, you should shift to a minor. And
maybe your partnership uses low trumps
fo send surt-preferenoe signals. If so,
perhaps you swrtched immedialely to a
club. Unlucky! South wins wnh his ace,
overtakes his heart queen with dummy's
king, and discards all three of his
monds on the club king and heart iack1 You get only two spade&amp;
Delay lhe decision by one Irick: cash
your spede ace. II Easl follows suil, shift
to a club. But here he should discard lite
discouraging club lhree. Now Y&lt;tu know
lo swilch lo the diamond 10, defeal01g
the contract.

aa-

ones

6 52, 10 Livy
7 19n wttale
movie
8 Drink wllh
scones·
9 Aardvarl&lt;
snti~k
10 Goddess of
dawn
13 Overhaul

15 lmilated
19 Lab or corgi
22 SotJih
African
people
23 Qatar ruler
25 Sahaway
26 "- do for
now"
27 Flcllonal
captain
29 Tw&lt;&gt;BR
unil
30 Fox
eompethor
31 Pleased
sighs
32 Warm-up
34 The "Bionic
Woman"
39 French

s1o.s·0/1. 00

V~!r!,

BIG NATE
PEPPERMINT INt:REMES

YOLJR BRAIN

Wedneldly, Nov. 7, 2007

POWER!

IF you LET OS HI'\\IE

By Bernice Becte Ooot
In tho year ahead, a number o1 pleasant
surprises could be in store for you, brln~
ing abOut successes lh!lt yoi.J ne11er

PEOPrEIIJ11NT5, 'I'Ot.J'RE
HE~PINb U!&gt; 8ECCI'IE

BETTER STUPENTS!

Au1o

thought possible. These fortunate occurrence.s will relate to your work or career,

friend
At anchor
42 Sklppm'
okays
44 Obey&amp;
45 The bleha
46 Evonlngo
out
48 Calligraphy
supply

40

49 Name In
bluejeens

50 ROOI

.

vogellble
51 Flah roe
52 Moppet
54 "Bien"
opposite

CELEBRITY CIPHER

by Luis Campos
Celebril~ Cipha CI")'!Xograms are created lrom ~s ttv famouspeo!)e. past

Each lell&amp;r in tile c•p/181" stands tor ardher

and present
·

Today's clue: Pequals W

"GXCMKMVI,
KXX CXWU

MK IYYJI

DXB ...

ZNI SYYW VXWVYBWYH

PMKZ BMUZK
BMUZK

KX JY,

XB

CYDK

XB PBXWU."

MWIKYNH XD

• BMVZNBH

NBJXFB
PREVIOUS SOLUTION - "An athlele cannol run with mon~y in his JMlCkels
He musl run with hope in his heart and dreams tn h1s head. • Emtl Zatopek

~Astro-

feed

99 Monle Carlo, $2600;
1997 Chevy Blazer, has
small dent in fender, $2100;
1997DodgeSt ratus, $1995 ;
1966 Toyo:ta Pickup 4x4,
Chevy
$1495;
1 997
500 M
Cavalier, $2
. any more

Pass

Barrette
35 Medieval
·entertainer
36 " Nightmare"
street
37 Round tent
38 Ernesto
Guevara
39 Poloe
41 Tinned mall

o.

Hours

N

~===74:2:·:233=2==~=::;::::::::::

96 Crown Vic, great condilion, 121.000 mile&amp; call 304882-2057

1 NT

s

34

East
Pass

Maybe wait when
help is needed

GuHerl'ng

~========-=:::;;:::::::::=~

mp

North

payment

stance
58 Zany
' 16 Diner sign
59 Coasted
17 Wyoming
60 Family
range
mom.
18 Artthmollc
verb
DOWN
20 Downgrade
21 ~oak
1 Wears well
24 Annoying
2 Kick out
28 Mo.
3 Takt care of
Thurman
.• (2 wds.)
30 Ponytail aile 4 Black eye
33 Summer. In
Clumsy

Quebec

Opening lead: ¥ 9

740-653·9657

James eeeee

,.

Vulnerable: Both

Insured &amp; Bonded

Owner:
K

• A QJ 8
•QJ 8763

Pess

month

•
•

• 2
• 1 2·

West

part

57 Up for

circum-

• 76 3
• A

South

bark
49 Golfer Ochoa
50 Dresa part
53 Coming to
light
55 Henz rival
56 Cathedral

town

•AQ

Slop &amp; Compere

47 Puppy' s

14 Particular

SGuth
. 1 0986543

.140-992-1611

per

.

11 -0&amp;-(17

K 54
East

. 9 8765
• 10 9 2
.. 10 9 2

for
S90

IMPR.OVEMFNTS

AJC, 4DR, Auto, Exc. Cond.
1500 080 _
740 .

KC

BISSELL
CllmiCTIII

~;:;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;~
~==:::!~~~~~~~~~;!iiiii!ii
r1.6
HOME

- - - - - : - - - - - - 29 Serious People to Wor~
92 Dodge Spirit 83000 from home using ~ cqmput·
miles, good cond. minor
er.
Up to $500.00 to
repairs needed. 4500 080. $t,sorioo
PTIFT
_
44_6c_-7__:8_2o_ _ _ _ _ _ www.Hometncome4-U.corn

grea1 deals,
(740)446-81 72

North
• Q J'
¥ K J 10 3
e K 54

• Complete

2006 Honda Gold Wi ng
$4.000 in accessories. Paid
$24,000 new-·$19,600. Call
740-367-7129.

2064

95

ROBERT

!.5 )'l"i. Exp. Free Es1lma1cs

&amp; 367·0596
=--=~-----

Pole
Barns
30x50)(10
$6,495
Free
Delivery
937 716 1471
$592. 740·992-5064. Equal
(
"
Housing Opponurilty.
----.
SWim Spas Arrived! Save
Twin Rivers Tower is accept·
$$$Tiki Tubs Hot Tub Outlet
Closeout s
ing applications for waiting Whirl......,.,.balt11ubw/~Ojets
t"-"""
aver·1a ble.
list for Hud-subslzed, 1· bt', $300, 6 ft vanity $250, 1 Ashland, KY 606-929·5655
apartment,for
the commode $40, Maytag dishwasher $200, All in new
.
elderly/disabled call 675cond. Priced to sell. ca!l 441·
Equal . Housing 9162
CLASSIFIED$
6679
Opportunity

riD H~

740-992-5929
'740-416-1698

I H \ \SI'OR I \110\

I'O

types of concre1e

Owner- Rick Wise

2003 Dodge Dakota .Ouad
Cab, 4x4, auto.- PW.PL. CO
playor, AM/FM radio, ner1
bars, bed liner &amp; cover. tow·
ing package, 4.7 liter.
PS,PB, cruise AJC, sliding
back window. Going thru
Di vorce sell for $14,000
books for ·over $15,000
70,000 miles 304-675-0463
leave message

r__

E~ecellent$255.: AisoHave5 ~-.__...FOiiiiRiiSiiiALEiiii.__.l

Pool, Patio. Start $4251Mo.
No .Pets. lease Plus
Securily Depos;1 Required,
(740)446·3461.

AU

.__ _ittiitittiliiii-w

Guardian Plus Generator. L---EQu""iiiiPI\IiiiiiENfl.ii-.,1
_
---:-----:=
runs on natu ral or propane
oc
5 b b
350 va
gas, This generator is ideal
9 hevy u ur an ,
·
61oot Brush Hogg, 3 blades, Auto, AC , Custom Interior,
lor smell home, ca mp1ng like new. $800 firm 304-675trar·1er, vacatron,
,
hun 1·1ng 2902
304-675-5646 4pm-8pm
·
cabin 304-882-27 11
-------ittiiSioUViiiiSiiio_rl
- - - : - : --:-::--:- John Deer e 100 Series 07.
FUR SALE
Electric Scooter, Excellent Must sell, new St600. Make
condition. Made in USA. offer, less than 50 hrs. 44101 Dodge Durango. Heated
$700. Call 740-446-4 167
9193 or 937-925-3247
leather seats . 4WD. darK
Gall•polis Da11y Tribune WO Allis Chalmers Farm blue. 99000 mi $7500 080.
issues in binders. Jan · June Tractor 45 HP w.l stt pole 7 40-992-3639 eves on I .
t939 , July- Dec 1900, Jan- type bush hog. $1750 080
40 MOTORCYru:sl
June 1899. 740-367-0638 or 740-367-0596
4WUEELERS
208-0134

2 Bedroom s, CIA., 1 . 1/2 $75.00.740-533-3870
Bath, Adult Pool &amp; Baby
.

Ellm View

Wise Concrete

L~--------" ---:-:--:---::-:---::-~

Townhouse - Tubes of BB's Marked '
~ar1ments, Very Spacious, "Win chester". Very Colorful 01

Harrah's Cherokee
Casino
&amp; Tanger Outlet Mall
for Christmas ·
Shopping

"'l'lir""-":::"~~--,
TRUCKS
1
FOR SALE

Brown ol
big banda
· 4 Recital
piece
8 - kwon db
11 ~umbar- ·
·
liCk'a lool
12 Mane
13 Nevada

1

Alder

r•s

43 EKtlalmed

ower

Phillip

i

Spacious second-floor apt.
o\Jerlooking Gallipolis City
"Park and river. L.A. den,
large kitchen·drning area
with all new appliances &amp;
cupboards. 3BR. laundry
area, 2 1/2 baths_$900 per -:--:-:--:-~-----month. Call 446_4425, or Have 2 Ball Perfect Mason
1/2 Pint Green Jars.
446 _2325
Tara

ACROSS

1989 CheiJrolet Suburban
454 motor, fual injection,
400 trans, 410 axle ration,
very ·clean, ihSide like new,
AKC Registered Female This truck was buil1 to Tow,
Maltese. DOB 2122/2004. Loaded 304·675--5934 .
$700. 740-256-8184 ask lor --:--:-:c--:-:~:-::-,.-:--:Leanna.
1994 Che~ 1500 PU Aulo
-:.::::..:::.____-::--:-.,
·
AIC. $4500 080. CaH 740·
Standard Poodle. BK (F), 20
_
446 9315
months old , $150 OBO - - - - - - - - - (740)645 2404
l:!,io;.;.;;;.·~~---, 2001 Ford Ranger 4x2. )(LT,
FoR SALE
A67ir5G5906ondilion $5,000 304-

complete with towel bar,
$500 for both or $300 each.
Call (740)441-()615
-------Seth Thomas clock, wash
stand, phonograph, scales,
glassware, glass Coke sign, OR TRADE
organs, oil tamps, misc .. 2
walnut
show
cases ,
(l40) 992•4197 '
For sale or trade. 1991
~~;:..-------~ Mazda Truck 82200, 1991 '
M&amp;1!uANMERffiAl
ND
'EOUSISE
Ford LTD, 1995 Dodge
Avenger. Call after 5 pm.
740-446-3243

Move-in special during
November!$100offdeposit!
2BR Apts 6 ml from Holzer. 1 Premier Whi rlpool Bath
Some utilities paid . $400/mo Tu b as advertised on TV will

+· Oep. 740-388-9343, 9886130"
'--:----:-::---:
One Bedroom Art. for rent
S
992 4568
...:..yr_ac,..u_se-:--- --:-·_ _
-::Partially furnished apt on
2nd Alie . in Middle!X)rl , $350
a mo_plus utilities, depos1! &amp;
ref. ph. (7 40)992-3987, leave
a message must see 10
appreciate.

COOK
MOTORS
Jackson Pike.. Chev, DOdge,
Ford, GMC Full Size Trucks.
S-10,
Ranger,
Focus,
Stratus, Cavalier, Lesabre,
Impala, Grand-Am and
other. Compare quality and ·
price with warranty. 740446-()103

..

"-------·

NEA Crossword Puzzle

BRIDGE

wou
GAM I

0 r.:'i'"..":'mb~''!.,;d', ::

law 10 form lOIII' llmplo words.
,-_,.;.,....,....,....,......,.,_..,

I

I

GH A R A N.

,_Til'"!'"T~-..,.,2;-TI---1

~-T,

1

I

1.=~:;::;:~:;:::;:-""
r"

l EJ yL

as welt as your social tile.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) - Give
.
more credence than usual to those inner
instincts or leetings you get in regards to
that which could be profitable po!J&amp;ibili- . ::::;~-=~==~
ties not readily apparent to others.
"You must
SAG!TIARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) 0 X ~ EN
you extend gratitude,"
Normally, you're pretty good at working
4
with groups, but this ability will be further
11
granny lecrured, "because
heightened. Involve yourself- In something that has a larger potential than you
silent gra1i1ude isn' t much
usua\ty go alter.
ECR 0 N E
good to--- ---."
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) - Go all
out to fulfill your ambitious objectives,
P§.....
,.
A Ccmpleto
dtvckle quolod
because vou haw a grwater chance of
V by fillin.g In the missing words
1
succeeding than normaL Challenges
L.......L-.L-...L-..___.__ you d~elop from lft!OI No. 3 bllow.
only waken your lalents to achieve IB!'QOf
go81s.
~ PRINT NUMBERED lEITERS IN
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-FGb. 19) - You're
t::l' THESE SQUARES
likely to be able ta reach someone
whom, up until now. you were ooabte to
A UNSCRAMBLE ABOVE tfTTERS
get near, so try once again to open that
V
TO GEl ANSWER
door. For unknown reasons, he or she
may suddenly be aiJailable to you.
'
11 ~
07
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) - This 1s a
beHer-than·average day to implement
Viableany changes you believe could make or
·save you big bucks. Iron out those wrinkles, and you'll find a.smoother path for
adding to your bank account.
if you
ARIES (March 21-April 19) - You may
have to make an instant decision about
something that could have far-reaching
efi8cts. Trust what you have at hand and
the courage of your convictions·. They'll
turn out lucky.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) - It could ,be
brouQht to the attention oi the powersthat-be that an effort tor whiCh you have
labored has been denied you. The situation could be immediately - and generously - rec1ified .
GEMINI (May 21 -June 20) - An excel!ant contact you have developed through
goodwill and support could suddenly
prove to be quite valuabte lor you and
!lOOP
those you represent What you've nurI
tured will be rewarded .
CANCER (June 21.July 22)- BecaUSf!
you haven't given \JP on something you
believed to be quhe wor1hwhlle, the good
results you have been diligently pursuing
Could be in the offing.
LEO (Ju\V 23-Aug. 22) - Your .mental
attributes are your moat for1unate aBSeil.
The mora resourceful your-thinking, the
luckier you'll be wlttr friends and aCIIvltltl
In which you're now lnvolwd .
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sopt. 22) - Although It
might bt rare for aomt, you pou111 tht
knt.Ck to turn toaln.g thuatlonl ln10 win·
nlng on11. You'll uH thl•·mattrlal advan·
1ag1 In two or more inatanoet.
·
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) - Tt\lt thould
be a rewarding day tor you - not only
btoluH you'll beluoky but alao beoauM
you'll tMm iJP with thoM wl'lo know how
to m1kl thlngi hap~n. Makl the moat of
thaN oocurrence1.

l--.-,...,,1""'"...,..,·"""1,ri]r-l

r-

*Promp1 and Quality

I

Work

REACH 3 COUNTIES

*Reasonable Ra1es

*Insured
*Experienced
References Avail able!
Call Gary S1anley @
740-742-2293
Please leave

V .C

PR06ASL.'i'

YOUNG Ill
99&lt; 6210

p

)/11{'1{)~'

i' Yt dl~

lo

0 111 0

CORNER STONE
CONSTRUCTION

I CAiolT BELIEVE WE'RE
IN THE MIDDLE OF FALL
~NO THERE'S LIKE NO
LEAVES ON THE GI10UND

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

740-992·3894
. . . MOndn-frldiV 9:10 am-6:011•
SIIUrtiV9:GO -12:DO•m

GARFIELD
1&amp; If ANY WONC'eR WHI,I
"fHERt:'&amp; NO ROOM IN HI&amp; HeAP
FOR A BAAIN~?,;:.,..-.:::-:----1

rI
•

PAYING TOP PIICES fiR
111111111mCIII •111111111• WIIHis
CIIIIVIIC CMVWtllrS • C•aer

••111ers Iii• Mare!

llllllltr Clrr•t PriCes!

GRIZZWELLS

~~t ~albpolis mailp ~ribune

740-446-2342

www .mydai~tribune.com

Joint Jleasant legister The Daily Sentinel
304-675-1333

www.mydailyreg~tericom

740·992-2155
. www.mydailysentiriel.com

I

...,,r'lg..,.,-T,"'"""l·

the

ARLO &amp; JANIS

Local Contractor
7 40·367·0544
Free Estimates
740-367·0536

Manley's
Recycling

I

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERs
s•
Teeth- Emend - Giggle- HAVE the TIME •
''I tbink." the elderly gent commented, "everything is in
wallcing distJince
HAVE lhe TIME."

BOY

508 Ul Sl• MMIIepolt, OH 45760

REACH OVER
17,000 HOUSEHOLDS!

1-....

ll ~X A' IP II (

COW and

Place Your Paid Classified Ad In Wednesday's
Gallipolis Daily Tribune, Point Pleasant Register or
Daily Sentinel, And ItWill Run For FREE In
The Tri-County Marketplace!

TJ.IIS 15 A CROWDED
ROOM, ISN'T IT'?

J

.~ ~~t 1\\Al' 6UY
1'\M~ tAl{ R1i(

~~\PEl-IT

YeP... GeT W~iLe 1He
Gel'nN 's GooD ..

·

------ . - - · - - -

- - -- -- ------ - -------·~-·--·

�•
Tuesday, November

6, 2007
Tuesday, November

6, 2007

The Daily Sentinel• Page B5

www.mydallysentinel.com

ALLEYOOP
•r llkwtl

3br Mobile Home
all
rurnlshed,
DOWN PAYMENr pro- Including Washer &amp; Dryer
grwne b )'00 to buy your 36l-593-+t96
home 1nltaad of renting.
-:--::--:-:--:--":""-:'" 100'4 Rna....u...
;;... r,
2ba, Heal Pump,
~
· • leu ··--..
than perfect: creclt Dishwasher,
1 112 miles
occ.ptad
from Pl. Pleosant (Jericho)
• Payment could bt the 304-273-6622(0)) 304-67"·

local ClCimplnj oftering "NO 4ppllances

2 btdroOms, living room ,
kitchen, 1 balh, spanmen1
haw central air. Furnished
with couch, chairs, washer,
dry1r, stove, microwave,
bedl, dinning table and
chairs -•·~ deposit, -••50 8
month call 304-882-2523
le8Y8 a meesage and num-

home

ber il not at
3 er. $395, M.,plus utll
Mobile Homl Loti tor Rent &amp;dep,no
pets,
3rd
and two • two blclroome
ST., Raclne.740-247-4292.
for
Rent end lor
one • Rent
ltnt 6 rooms &amp; bath. ~e &amp;
I&gt;Od"'omo
·-·•
COuntry setting locM8d an· fridge furnished. Very
Clean.
I
t a in town. Call 441-0596
Alhton WV, coN

same aa rent.

620" (E) •

M17::1':~~

--:--:-:c-::---:---:-:-::-::

Locator&amp;.

Beautiful 38R house in the
_.........
.. -~
countoy.
.,...ionoes ~
t
F
eshl
'ntod
-~
carpe . r
~ par
...
IU
~od • CIA· w~·~I""
,_,.._,..,
rv-- "'
" "1

r ._ . . --.....

room. $5001month 614-595- Alhton Elementary 3047773 or 8()().. 798·4686
S7a:-2M2
Apartment for rent , 1-2
F0J rent. .Three bedroom.
Bdrm., remodeled, new carJ'U"l'Ulli\V.l''U3
pet, stove &amp; frig., water.
one bath. eat-in kitchen.
FOR..__
--• pd Middfervut

"'""'

laundry room, 1.,--oiiiiiiiiiiiito-,.t
attached garage, and fenced (1)
ta·
rt
t fur
~ard near Pt. Pleasant.
ups rrs apa men
·
$695/mth. pius deposit. Call nished, 2br. (1) downstairs
3C:W.531.1197.
apartment, furnished, 1br. ln
New Haven NO PETS 304·
Off SA 141, 3BA, 2BA., 882-2326 or 304·882·2793
appliances, basement. 1 car - - - - - - - - garage, $500/mo plus 1 &amp; 2 Bedroom Apartments
..........
(614)..,"),C
,.,,59
,..........,..
"\TVQ
for Rent, Meigs County, In
separate

i

I
Rmr~
.

u-'- - H
••JUDlUO.FOR

1
· t4x70 2 br. '~~:Ia
home,
NUI
-$300, $250 deposit, 1otal
.l ~nc
· , No rw
~ts, (740)742·
V\&lt;l
2714

2··2Bd rm.,Hud '"""· homes

_,.

rent &amp; deposit required. 740·

992 5639
-----'-....,.,--:•
·
Tralfer tor rent, 3BR, 2 BA.
Call367-n62 or 446-4060

Immaculate 1 bedroo.n
apartment New carpet &amp;
cabinets, freshly painted &amp;
decorated. W/0 hookup.
Beaulitul counlry se"lng.
Must see to appreciate.
$32"'
iOJIJJlO. ("14"'"'7773
u
,-v
or
1-800-798-488e.
-----,--~-Immaculate 2 bedroom
apartment New carp"et &amp;
cabinets, freshly paintad &amp;
decorated, WID hookup.
Beautiful country sen 1ng.
Must see to appreciate
$400/mo. (614)595·7773 or
__
79'-'08,.-1_6;_B6_. _ __
-1-800Large 2BR upstairs apt
Large covered deck, close to
hospital, alSo 1BA. apts_Ref.
&amp; dep. required. 740-446·
2957

sower,,,_,
·
~"·
S42S.OO.. No peta, Ref. ,.-,-,..-------:-~--:required.

740--843-5264.

Middleport, 1 &amp; 2 br. furnished apar1ments, no pets,
Apt. lor rent! 3 Bd., 1 bath. In deposit
&amp;
references,
Racine. $725 all utilities pd .. F40)992-0165
$200 D&amp;posit.Call247·2098
or leave message.
Modern Bedroom apt. Call
446..()390
Apt. for Rent. No Pets. 740992·5858.
Modem t BR Apt. Call 446-

1

::C-'---------

a--

town, No Pets, Deposit
ttlul • MO ~ J~·-u
.,Wes1wood
"'"".....,,
Required, (740) 992-5174 or E
t I 1 "'"'-·
s· 2
(740)441-0110
oI · at t • . $3651o$560
·
nve, rom
Equal·
740-446 2568 '
•
·
1 and 2 bedroom apart- H
.
·
0
t •y Tho·s
OUSing ppor unn .
rTtents, furnished and unfur- .lnstrl. ut·ron ·IS an Equa 1
nished, and hou ses in 0
1 ·t p ·de and
ppor un1 Y rovl r
Pom'eroy and Middleport, Employer
security depOSit required, no _ : . . . . . ; ' - - - - - pets, 740-992-221 8.
CONVENIENTLY LOCATED &amp; AFFORDABLE!
-------:--:1
1 BR Apt 1
'
·n 5pnng
· va11ey, •ownhouse
apartments.
WID Hookups. (740)339· andlor SCma11 ( houses F0 R
0362
RENT. a1I 740)441•1111
for application &amp; in_formation.

Ellm View
Apartments
•2&amp;3 bedroom apartments
•Central heat &amp; .A/C
• Washer!dryer hookup
• Tenant pays electric
(304)882·3017

~37_36..;_______

like

new
American AKC Golden Retriever pups
Si!1llllure living room set. 2 mates 16wks, Stlots &amp;
Sofa &amp; lovesear..are taupe wormed, $300 304-273colored with ornate pattern. 2066 or 304-481-0208
Includes 3 large metal &amp;
glass top tables. $1000. 740· lft AKC Lab puppies 5«&amp;-1663
Choc, 2 Bl.id&lt;, 12 -ko
- - - - , - - - - - , - - - okl. wormed &amp; Shots S200
M~ohan Fll(nlture _ Nawo.ach:;;,__c304.;_-8:c7:..~_1_884_~Sofa&amp;Love Seat $400. Queen size ·tllppabje pillow AKC Pekingnese pup. S300
top only $429.95. 202 Oar!&lt; Call?40-ae6-! 664
Chapel Rd. Bidwell . Oh AKC reg. mini dachstlund, 1
M
....... ...
M-F
45614 . 7~17 3.
, btack female t bladt male 1
9-4 Sat 9-3
red female, vet checked
$300 each call.
304•·~~n
1_ _ _ __
nl"'lftl\Jr.:J
_ _3:..·5_10_

i

45" Round Oak Dinner Table
on PedestaL Washstand

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

r

I

sell lor tess than 112 price. 11
=~--~---.,
uI'ARM
Instruction included, 1

r10

Charokaa, North Carolina

Apartments
•2&amp;3 bedroom apar1ments
•Central heat &amp; AJC
•Washer/drye_r hookup
•All electric- averaging
$50-$60/month
•Owner pays water, sewer,

trash

Chartered Coach

(304)882-3017

Transportation

fJ

Friday, November 30, 2007 to
Sunday. December 2, 2007
$195/parson (double occupancy)
$250/parson (single occupancy)
Staying at Hampton Inn
Gladly accepfcash, check,
credit cards and monay orders
Plaasa make all checks
payable to PVH Foundation
LIMITED SPACES!
To make reservations plaasa
call PVH Community
Ralalions,

(304) 675·434\),

• Ext. 1492

czr.;,;;~~~--,

i

SPACE
•uR RF.Nr

-Commercial building "For
Aenr 1800 square teet, ott
street parking. Great toeation! 749 Third Avenue in
Ga!Upolis. Rent $300/mo.
Call Wayne (404)456-3802
Office space, utilities paid,

423
Second
Ave:nue,
Gallipolis. Ohio· 4563 1.
- - - - - - - (740)446-4383
Furnished upstairs 3 roorr\s
and bath . Clean, no pets, Retail Space Appx 1,400 Sq.
deposit req. 740-445- 1519
fl:, for rent/lease. 4th Street
Point Pleasant wv 304Grock!ut Living 1 end 2 675-3786
Bedroom Apts. at Village
Mancr and Riverside Apts. in
Middleport, from $327 to jiiT,~;;;::~~~~;;;

IBM Comp. w/wrndows 95
$75. Punchbowlandcup set
from Topes $50. Pressure
canner $30. Skiers Edge &amp;
Nor.dic Track abs $ 80. 367·
0638 or 208.0134

JET
AERATION MOTORS
Repaired , New &amp; Rebuilt In
Stock. can Ron Evans. 1800-537-9528.
_ _ _..;_____
NEW AND USED STEEL
Steel Beams, Pipe Rebar
For
Concrete,
Angle.
C
Fl
hanna 1,
at 8 ar, 5 tee 1
Grating
For
Drains.
Driveways &amp; Walkways. l&amp;L
M 10
Mo d
crap eta B pen
n ay,
Tuesday, Wednesday &amp;
Friday, Sam-4:30pm. Closed

s

Thursday,
Saturday
Sunday. (740)446-7300

A(J('(l;

1

H p

Hyundai

Accent

Hatchback. 5 speed trans,
65,310 miles, good condllion. needs catalytic convert·
'er. Asking $3200. Call740709·6339
- - - ·- - - - 01 Red Neon. 4 cyl, AIC,
90,000. miles. automatic.
$2600 080. 740-256-1652
or 256-1233
t998 Ford Tau rus S.E.,
excellent condition. pi, pw,
ale, crui se. keyless entry, ps.
new tires, 53995 . (7401992 •

Advertise

in this
space

•

West

MONTY

• New Homes

· ·A K

• Garages
Remodeling

BASEMENT
.WATERPROOFING
Unconditional lifetime guarantee. Local references furnished. Established 1975.
·
H
(
Call 24 rs. · 7 40 ) 446 •
0870, Rogers Basement
Wat erproofing.
.:.:::.:c.!.:::..:=c_
___
wanted:

Dealer: North

. Pass

vw Jetta 192,000 miles.

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

H&amp;H

s

rvtLISHING

Seamless Gutters
Roofing, Siding, Gutters

co.

II L
ONE MAN, ONE
VOTE !! IT'S A
SACRED DUT't' !!

www.ti:ftlbe:JocrukeabJnetry.eem

740 446 9200
t

t

•

••

•

...

BARNEY

Hardwood Cabinetry And Furnilure

HORSEFEATHERS

IF '(A ONl:.'i

WHY WOU\.D..lA
WANNA WASTE IT

GOT ONE
' VOTE .•.

·

A POLITICIAN i'l

2459 St. Rt. 160. GalbpoUs

J&amp;l
ConstrUCtl"on
• Vinyl Siding
• Replacement

Hill's Self
Storage
29670 Bashan Road

Windows

Racine, Ohio

• Roofing
, Decks

45771
740-949-2217

Ga rages

.

Pole Buildings

• Room Add~lons

THE BORN LOSER
,.-.JU:)T Ltl&gt;-\11 i'&lt;l6 Hit POLL!~
~TI&gt;-TIO~, E.f.l.?

...

,.-f.I.OW t&gt;IP Tf\E. i'IEW TOUC.I-\-""'
SC.it.E.EN

'lou~'i-I (OULt&gt;K'T WHJ.\t&gt;AAJ
r.N.'i&lt;A~!

I'V'I...!\1 ~t;.;&gt;..l!.

7:00AM - 8:00 PM

ATA orC'ftA£11• •

IIIII
ffnl1 .

12n1.
All StO.Ck
'710

Pass

Pass

In yesterday's deal, Easl made a leaddirecting double to get hie partner off lo
lhe only lethal lead. In today's deal, Weal
does not find the killing start. But later,
he knows that ~ the contract can be
deleated and he finds lhe nght shift, ha
will boal it. Bul should he swHch to a
club, or to a diamond?
~ook sl the Wosl and North hands.
Defending against four spades, you load
the heart rona : three, four, ace. Declarer
immedialely plays the spade live: king,
seven, two. Whal would you do now?
Easl wanted to bid over one club, bulla
overcall one diamond would have been
dangerous, although i1 would have
worl&lt;ed wall here. And South, after his
partner rebid one no-trump to show a
balanced 12-14 points, look a shol at
game. He had no clue whelher 1he con·
!tact would have any chance, but he
knew that one neOds only lhe flim~est of
oxcu"'!S to bid game.
Back lo your predicament as West.
Since rt is unliltely thai partner can ruff a
hear1, you should shift to a minor. And
maybe your partnership uses low trumps
fo send surt-preferenoe signals. If so,
perhaps you swrtched immedialely to a
club. Unlucky! South wins wnh his ace,
overtakes his heart queen with dummy's
king, and discards all three of his
monds on the club king and heart iack1 You get only two spade&amp;
Delay lhe decision by one Irick: cash
your spede ace. II Easl follows suil, shift
to a club. But here he should discard lite
discouraging club lhree. Now Y&lt;tu know
lo swilch lo the diamond 10, defeal01g
the contract.

aa-

ones

6 52, 10 Livy
7 19n wttale
movie
8 Drink wllh
scones·
9 Aardvarl&lt;
snti~k
10 Goddess of
dawn
13 Overhaul

15 lmilated
19 Lab or corgi
22 SotJih
African
people
23 Qatar ruler
25 Sahaway
26 "- do for
now"
27 Flcllonal
captain
29 Tw&lt;&gt;BR
unil
30 Fox
eompethor
31 Pleased
sighs
32 Warm-up
34 The "Bionic
Woman"
39 French

s1o.s·0/1. 00

V~!r!,

BIG NATE
PEPPERMINT INt:REMES

YOLJR BRAIN

Wedneldly, Nov. 7, 2007

POWER!

IF you LET OS HI'\\IE

By Bernice Becte Ooot
In tho year ahead, a number o1 pleasant
surprises could be in store for you, brln~
ing abOut successes lh!lt yoi.J ne11er

PEOPrEIIJ11NT5, 'I'Ot.J'RE
HE~PINb U!&gt; 8ECCI'IE

BETTER STUPENTS!

Au1o

thought possible. These fortunate occurrence.s will relate to your work or career,

friend
At anchor
42 Sklppm'
okays
44 Obey&amp;
45 The bleha
46 Evonlngo
out
48 Calligraphy
supply

40

49 Name In
bluejeens

50 ROOI

.

vogellble
51 Flah roe
52 Moppet
54 "Bien"
opposite

CELEBRITY CIPHER

by Luis Campos
Celebril~ Cipha CI")'!Xograms are created lrom ~s ttv famouspeo!)e. past

Each lell&amp;r in tile c•p/181" stands tor ardher

and present
·

Today's clue: Pequals W

"GXCMKMVI,
KXX CXWU

MK IYYJI

DXB ...

ZNI SYYW VXWVYBWYH

PMKZ BMUZK
BMUZK

KX JY,

XB

CYDK

XB PBXWU."

MWIKYNH XD

• BMVZNBH

NBJXFB
PREVIOUS SOLUTION - "An athlele cannol run with mon~y in his JMlCkels
He musl run with hope in his heart and dreams tn h1s head. • Emtl Zatopek

~Astro-

feed

99 Monle Carlo, $2600;
1997 Chevy Blazer, has
small dent in fender, $2100;
1997DodgeSt ratus, $1995 ;
1966 Toyo:ta Pickup 4x4,
Chevy
$1495;
1 997
500 M
Cavalier, $2
. any more

Pass

Barrette
35 Medieval
·entertainer
36 " Nightmare"
street
37 Round tent
38 Ernesto
Guevara
39 Poloe
41 Tinned mall

o.

Hours

N

~===74:2:·:233=2==~=::;::::::::::

96 Crown Vic, great condilion, 121.000 mile&amp; call 304882-2057

1 NT

s

34

East
Pass

Maybe wait when
help is needed

GuHerl'ng

~========-=:::;;:::::::::=~

mp

North

payment

stance
58 Zany
' 16 Diner sign
59 Coasted
17 Wyoming
60 Family
range
mom.
18 Artthmollc
verb
DOWN
20 Downgrade
21 ~oak
1 Wears well
24 Annoying
2 Kick out
28 Mo.
3 Takt care of
Thurman
.• (2 wds.)
30 Ponytail aile 4 Black eye
33 Summer. In
Clumsy

Quebec

Opening lead: ¥ 9

740-653·9657

James eeeee

,.

Vulnerable: Both

Insured &amp; Bonded

Owner:
K

• A QJ 8
•QJ 8763

Pess

month

•
•

• 2
• 1 2·

West

part

57 Up for

circum-

• 76 3
• A

South

bark
49 Golfer Ochoa
50 Dresa part
53 Coming to
light
55 Henz rival
56 Cathedral

town

•AQ

Slop &amp; Compere

47 Puppy' s

14 Particular

SGuth
. 1 0986543

.140-992-1611

per

.

11 -0&amp;-(17

K 54
East

. 9 8765
• 10 9 2
.. 10 9 2

for
S90

IMPR.OVEMFNTS

AJC, 4DR, Auto, Exc. Cond.
1500 080 _
740 .

KC

BISSELL
CllmiCTIII

~;:;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;~
~==:::!~~~~~~~~~;!iiiii!ii
r1.6
HOME

- - - - - : - - - - - - 29 Serious People to Wor~
92 Dodge Spirit 83000 from home using ~ cqmput·
miles, good cond. minor
er.
Up to $500.00 to
repairs needed. 4500 080. $t,sorioo
PTIFT
_
44_6c_-7__:8_2o_ _ _ _ _ _ www.Hometncome4-U.corn

grea1 deals,
(740)446-81 72

North
• Q J'
¥ K J 10 3
e K 54

• Complete

2006 Honda Gold Wi ng
$4.000 in accessories. Paid
$24,000 new-·$19,600. Call
740-367-7129.

2064

95

ROBERT

!.5 )'l"i. Exp. Free Es1lma1cs

&amp; 367·0596
=--=~-----

Pole
Barns
30x50)(10
$6,495
Free
Delivery
937 716 1471
$592. 740·992-5064. Equal
(
"
Housing Opponurilty.
----.
SWim Spas Arrived! Save
Twin Rivers Tower is accept·
$$$Tiki Tubs Hot Tub Outlet
Closeout s
ing applications for waiting Whirl......,.,.balt11ubw/~Ojets
t"-"""
aver·1a ble.
list for Hud-subslzed, 1· bt', $300, 6 ft vanity $250, 1 Ashland, KY 606-929·5655
apartment,for
the commode $40, Maytag dishwasher $200, All in new
.
elderly/disabled call 675cond. Priced to sell. ca!l 441·
Equal . Housing 9162
CLASSIFIED$
6679
Opportunity

riD H~

740-992-5929
'740-416-1698

I H \ \SI'OR I \110\

I'O

types of concre1e

Owner- Rick Wise

2003 Dodge Dakota .Ouad
Cab, 4x4, auto.- PW.PL. CO
playor, AM/FM radio, ner1
bars, bed liner &amp; cover. tow·
ing package, 4.7 liter.
PS,PB, cruise AJC, sliding
back window. Going thru
Di vorce sell for $14,000
books for ·over $15,000
70,000 miles 304-675-0463
leave message

r__

E~ecellent$255.: AisoHave5 ~-.__...FOiiiiRiiSiiiALEiiii.__.l

Pool, Patio. Start $4251Mo.
No .Pets. lease Plus
Securily Depos;1 Required,
(740)446·3461.

AU

.__ _ittiitittiliiii-w

Guardian Plus Generator. L---EQu""iiiiPI\IiiiiiENfl.ii-.,1
_
---:-----:=
runs on natu ral or propane
oc
5 b b
350 va
gas, This generator is ideal
9 hevy u ur an ,
·
61oot Brush Hogg, 3 blades, Auto, AC , Custom Interior,
lor smell home, ca mp1ng like new. $800 firm 304-675trar·1er, vacatron,
,
hun 1·1ng 2902
304-675-5646 4pm-8pm
·
cabin 304-882-27 11
-------ittiiSioUViiiiSiiio_rl
- - - : - : --:-::--:- John Deer e 100 Series 07.
FUR SALE
Electric Scooter, Excellent Must sell, new St600. Make
condition. Made in USA. offer, less than 50 hrs. 44101 Dodge Durango. Heated
$700. Call 740-446-4 167
9193 or 937-925-3247
leather seats . 4WD. darK
Gall•polis Da11y Tribune WO Allis Chalmers Farm blue. 99000 mi $7500 080.
issues in binders. Jan · June Tractor 45 HP w.l stt pole 7 40-992-3639 eves on I .
t939 , July- Dec 1900, Jan- type bush hog. $1750 080
40 MOTORCYru:sl
June 1899. 740-367-0638 or 740-367-0596
4WUEELERS
208-0134

2 Bedroom s, CIA., 1 . 1/2 $75.00.740-533-3870
Bath, Adult Pool &amp; Baby
.

Ellm View

Wise Concrete

L~--------" ---:-:--:---::-:---::-~

Townhouse - Tubes of BB's Marked '
~ar1ments, Very Spacious, "Win chester". Very Colorful 01

Harrah's Cherokee
Casino
&amp; Tanger Outlet Mall
for Christmas ·
Shopping

"'l'lir""-":::"~~--,
TRUCKS
1
FOR SALE

Brown ol
big banda
· 4 Recital
piece
8 - kwon db
11 ~umbar- ·
·
liCk'a lool
12 Mane
13 Nevada

1

Alder

r•s

43 EKtlalmed

ower

Phillip

i

Spacious second-floor apt.
o\Jerlooking Gallipolis City
"Park and river. L.A. den,
large kitchen·drning area
with all new appliances &amp;
cupboards. 3BR. laundry
area, 2 1/2 baths_$900 per -:--:-:--:-~-----month. Call 446_4425, or Have 2 Ball Perfect Mason
1/2 Pint Green Jars.
446 _2325
Tara

ACROSS

1989 CheiJrolet Suburban
454 motor, fual injection,
400 trans, 410 axle ration,
very ·clean, ihSide like new,
AKC Registered Female This truck was buil1 to Tow,
Maltese. DOB 2122/2004. Loaded 304·675--5934 .
$700. 740-256-8184 ask lor --:--:-:c--:-:~:-::-,.-:--:Leanna.
1994 Che~ 1500 PU Aulo
-:.::::..:::.____-::--:-.,
·
AIC. $4500 080. CaH 740·
Standard Poodle. BK (F), 20
_
446 9315
months old , $150 OBO - - - - - - - - - (740)645 2404
l:!,io;.;.;;;.·~~---, 2001 Ford Ranger 4x2. )(LT,
FoR SALE
A67ir5G5906ondilion $5,000 304-

complete with towel bar,
$500 for both or $300 each.
Call (740)441-()615
-------Seth Thomas clock, wash
stand, phonograph, scales,
glassware, glass Coke sign, OR TRADE
organs, oil tamps, misc .. 2
walnut
show
cases ,
(l40) 992•4197 '
For sale or trade. 1991
~~;:..-------~ Mazda Truck 82200, 1991 '
M&amp;1!uANMERffiAl
ND
'EOUSISE
Ford LTD, 1995 Dodge
Avenger. Call after 5 pm.
740-446-3243

Move-in special during
November!$100offdeposit!
2BR Apts 6 ml from Holzer. 1 Premier Whi rlpool Bath
Some utilities paid . $400/mo Tu b as advertised on TV will

+· Oep. 740-388-9343, 9886130"
'--:----:-::---:
One Bedroom Art. for rent
S
992 4568
...:..yr_ac,..u_se-:--- --:-·_ _
-::Partially furnished apt on
2nd Alie . in Middle!X)rl , $350
a mo_plus utilities, depos1! &amp;
ref. ph. (7 40)992-3987, leave
a message must see 10
appreciate.

COOK
MOTORS
Jackson Pike.. Chev, DOdge,
Ford, GMC Full Size Trucks.
S-10,
Ranger,
Focus,
Stratus, Cavalier, Lesabre,
Impala, Grand-Am and
other. Compare quality and ·
price with warranty. 740446-()103

..

"-------·

NEA Crossword Puzzle

BRIDGE

wou
GAM I

0 r.:'i'"..":'mb~''!.,;d', ::

law 10 form lOIII' llmplo words.
,-_,.;.,....,....,....,......,.,_..,

I

I

GH A R A N.

,_Til'"!'"T~-..,.,2;-TI---1

~-T,

1

I

1.=~:;::;:~:;:::;:-""
r"

l EJ yL

as welt as your social tile.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) - Give
.
more credence than usual to those inner
instincts or leetings you get in regards to
that which could be profitable po!J&amp;ibili- . ::::;~-=~==~
ties not readily apparent to others.
"You must
SAG!TIARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) 0 X ~ EN
you extend gratitude,"
Normally, you're pretty good at working
4
with groups, but this ability will be further
11
granny lecrured, "because
heightened. Involve yourself- In something that has a larger potential than you
silent gra1i1ude isn' t much
usua\ty go alter.
ECR 0 N E
good to--- ---."
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) - Go all
out to fulfill your ambitious objectives,
P§.....
,.
A Ccmpleto
dtvckle quolod
because vou haw a grwater chance of
V by fillin.g In the missing words
1
succeeding than normaL Challenges
L.......L-.L-...L-..___.__ you d~elop from lft!OI No. 3 bllow.
only waken your lalents to achieve IB!'QOf
go81s.
~ PRINT NUMBERED lEITERS IN
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-FGb. 19) - You're
t::l' THESE SQUARES
likely to be able ta reach someone
whom, up until now. you were ooabte to
A UNSCRAMBLE ABOVE tfTTERS
get near, so try once again to open that
V
TO GEl ANSWER
door. For unknown reasons, he or she
may suddenly be aiJailable to you.
'
11 ~
07
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) - This 1s a
beHer-than·average day to implement
Viableany changes you believe could make or
·save you big bucks. Iron out those wrinkles, and you'll find a.smoother path for
adding to your bank account.
if you
ARIES (March 21-April 19) - You may
have to make an instant decision about
something that could have far-reaching
efi8cts. Trust what you have at hand and
the courage of your convictions·. They'll
turn out lucky.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) - It could ,be
brouQht to the attention oi the powersthat-be that an effort tor whiCh you have
labored has been denied you. The situation could be immediately - and generously - rec1ified .
GEMINI (May 21 -June 20) - An excel!ant contact you have developed through
goodwill and support could suddenly
prove to be quite valuabte lor you and
!lOOP
those you represent What you've nurI
tured will be rewarded .
CANCER (June 21.July 22)- BecaUSf!
you haven't given \JP on something you
believed to be quhe wor1hwhlle, the good
results you have been diligently pursuing
Could be in the offing.
LEO (Ju\V 23-Aug. 22) - Your .mental
attributes are your moat for1unate aBSeil.
The mora resourceful your-thinking, the
luckier you'll be wlttr friends and aCIIvltltl
In which you're now lnvolwd .
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sopt. 22) - Although It
might bt rare for aomt, you pou111 tht
knt.Ck to turn toaln.g thuatlonl ln10 win·
nlng on11. You'll uH thl•·mattrlal advan·
1ag1 In two or more inatanoet.
·
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) - Tt\lt thould
be a rewarding day tor you - not only
btoluH you'll beluoky but alao beoauM
you'll tMm iJP with thoM wl'lo know how
to m1kl thlngi hap~n. Makl the moat of
thaN oocurrence1.

l--.-,...,,1""'"...,..,·"""1,ri]r-l

r-

*Promp1 and Quality

I

Work

REACH 3 COUNTIES

*Reasonable Ra1es

*Insured
*Experienced
References Avail able!
Call Gary S1anley @
740-742-2293
Please leave

V .C

PR06ASL.'i'

YOUNG Ill
99&lt; 6210

p

)/11{'1{)~'

i' Yt dl~

lo

0 111 0

CORNER STONE
CONSTRUCTION

I CAiolT BELIEVE WE'RE
IN THE MIDDLE OF FALL
~NO THERE'S LIKE NO
LEAVES ON THE GI10UND

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

740-992·3894
. . . MOndn-frldiV 9:10 am-6:011•
SIIUrtiV9:GO -12:DO•m

GARFIELD
1&amp; If ANY WONC'eR WHI,I
"fHERt:'&amp; NO ROOM IN HI&amp; HeAP
FOR A BAAIN~?,;:.,..-.:::-:----1

rI
•

PAYING TOP PIICES fiR
111111111mCIII •111111111• WIIHis
CIIIIVIIC CMVWtllrS • C•aer

••111ers Iii• Mare!

llllllltr Clrr•t PriCes!

GRIZZWELLS

~~t ~albpolis mailp ~ribune

740-446-2342

www .mydai~tribune.com

Joint Jleasant legister The Daily Sentinel
304-675-1333

www.mydailyreg~tericom

740·992-2155
. www.mydailysentiriel.com

I

...,,r'lg..,.,-T,"'"""l·

the

ARLO &amp; JANIS

Local Contractor
7 40·367·0544
Free Estimates
740-367·0536

Manley's
Recycling

I

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERs
s•
Teeth- Emend - Giggle- HAVE the TIME •
''I tbink." the elderly gent commented, "everything is in
wallcing distJince
HAVE lhe TIME."

BOY

508 Ul Sl• MMIIepolt, OH 45760

REACH OVER
17,000 HOUSEHOLDS!

1-....

ll ~X A' IP II (

COW and

Place Your Paid Classified Ad In Wednesday's
Gallipolis Daily Tribune, Point Pleasant Register or
Daily Sentinel, And ItWill Run For FREE In
The Tri-County Marketplace!

TJ.IIS 15 A CROWDED
ROOM, ISN'T IT'?

J

.~ ~~t 1\\Al' 6UY
1'\M~ tAl{ R1i(

~~\PEl-IT

YeP... GeT W~iLe 1He
Gel'nN 's GooD ..

·

------ . - - · - - -

- - -- -- ------ - -------·~-·--·

�B6 The Daily Sentinel

www.mydail ysentinel.com

November 6, 2007

OHIO VALLEY
BANK.

760 Sec:ond Ave.
Gallipolis, OH 45631
740-446-4460

414 East C St
Wellston, OH 45692
740-384-3058

Inside Foodland
Inside Walmart

800-538-7 67 4

Pomeroy

"We c.. brat .. 0ccntc A"f T• .. ~
·

ronstrophiesinc@verizon.net

"'~
~

~

236SeoondA••- --

---~

441-3575

st. ----------------- -

992-2357

2145 Eaotem Ave .

100 w. Main

•

446-2168

-

www.ovbc.com

'""-

WeekS
Winner

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

Jesse Eads
Gallipolis

,-;o t'I-.:'\TS • \ ol. :;-. :'\o. -:;

Pomerog. OH

• Cavs outlast Warriors.

·

. SeePageB1

Open Sun-Sat 7om-10pm
(740) 992-5252

1. _____________________

We~re

Everywhere You Are!

2.·--------------~----

·
Phormoc:y
Open m-F 9om....,.7pm
Sat9am-1pm
Closed Sundo_y
(740) 992-15:;J6
www.f'oodf'alrmk.com

3;

·------------------------

4. ____________________

5. __________________

~

6.·----------~--------Uoutt:
"""' .." ,,10-5, '!:it. 1().4.

mavor

levv,

SPORTS
700 E. main street

'"'"·"')&lt;l;til)"'"hm·l.•·•""

\\' 1-,i)NESJ&gt;,\Y , NO\'El\IKER -, 2007

•

h

HOLZER CLINIC

Wahama makes
another return
to playoffs, Bt

Vennari celebrates tooth birthday, A3

'·~- ------------------~
8. ____________________

BY

J.

Vance defeated Mayor April mated $40,000 for current
BREEO@MVDAtLVSENTIN£L.COM
Burke, ,95 to 28 votes. expenses, including police
· Barbara Anderson Musser, a department operations, was .
POMEROY - Voters in newcomer to local politics, approved 230 to 199 votes.
Unofficial results are as
Rutland elected a new led the votes for Meigs
mayor in Tuesday's elec- School Board, with 1,248 follows:
tion, the Meigs .Local Board votes.. Roger
Abbott
Middleport
Mayor :
of Education will have two received 887 votes: while Michael Gerlach, 352;
new members, and a three- Larry D. Thcker, also elect- Middleport Village Council
·mill levy in Middleport ed for'the first time, received (2 to be elected): Julia A.
finally passed.
817 votes. Board Member Proctor (R), 218, Shawn A.
Only 31 percent of the Norman Randy Humphreys Rice (R), 263.
county's registered voters received 733 votes, and
Pomeroy Mayor: John F.
cast ballots in yesterday's · Todd Cullums 778.
Musser (R), 193, Victor C
election.
·
Middleport's tax levy, Young III, I I 2; Pomeroy
In Rutland, Lowell E. . which will generate an esti- . Clerk-Treasurer:
Kathy
BRIAN

REED

Hysell (R), 226: Pomeroy
Village Council (2): Shawn
A. Amott (R) , 182, Ruth
Spaun (R), 190.
Racine Mayor: No candi date;
Racine
Clerk- ·
Treasurer,
David
H.
Spencer,
116;
Racine
Council : No candidate;
Racine Board of Public
Affairs : No candidate.
Rutland Mayor : Vance.
95, Burke, 28; Rutland
Council: No caQdidale.
Syracuse Mayor: Eric D.
Cunningham, 217; Dencil

R. Hudson II, 51; Syracuse
C!'erk-Treasurer: Sharon S .
Cottrill, 137, Debra Hood,
48, Judy A. Williams , 95 .
Syracuse Council (2) :
Bobby J. Ord, 191 , Dorothy
Amberger, 188 . Syracu se
Board of Public Affairs : No
candidate.
Bedford Trustee: John W
Dean . 120: Bedford Fiscal
Officer: Barbara Grue ser,
133; Chester Tru stee (I) :
Larry Life . 190. Elmer
Please see Votes, AS

Pomeroy
investigates
accident,
arrests
fugitive

Middleport
holiday
parade set

BY BETH SERGENT

BREEOOMYDAILYSENTI NELCOM

for Dec. 1
BY BRIAN

J.

REED

BSERGENTOMVOAILVSENTINEL.COM

9 . ___________________

10. ___________________
U71 Elllo1ern Ave, (iallip&lt;~is. OH
Next to Irvin's Gla.&lt;oS

11.___________________

Tinting Lifetime Warranty
4 Door Cars $139 •l Door Cars $119

. Trucks starting at ~

12 . ____________________

OBITUARIES

13.'---------------------

Page A$
• William Gillogly, 73

14 . ____________________

INSIDE
• AAA housing
coordinator earns
certification.
See Page A2
• Turkey Trot run/walk
set for.Satui'day.
See Page A3 .
:• ·War bonuses would
•be paid under Ohio
.treasurer's plan.
$ee Page AS
. :• · November Arts for ·
: ; Ohio Cinematheque
:Screenings announced.
See Page A6

NAME: _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
ADDRESS: _ _ _ _ _ __
PHONE: _ _ _ _ _ _ __

PLEASANT
VALLEY
HOSPITAL

lSlO \'w.lley Drtn • Point Pleasant, W\' • 201-hcd f•('lli1y

. 304-675-4340 '
The Family of Professionals

Each Thesday through Dec. ll, a numbered game will
appear in each participating merchant's ad.
Indicate your pick of winners and write It beside the
corresponding number.
Entries must be dropped otT at the: ·
«;;allipolis Daily Tribune or mailed to:
FootballSmackdown
c/o Gallipolis Dally Tribune
825 3rd Avenue
GaiUpolls, OH 45631
Entries must be postmarked by Thursday to qualify
for that week's contest. The prize will be awarded
weekly on the basis of most winners selected correctly
and In case of ties, winner will be determined by blind
draw. You must be 16 years of age or older to enter.
Only one entry per per5on per week.

*?~

........,.

C11 piUJ 4fllll 11pni

eat. IIIII I""

llslahlllllftry lay
CaU Mike or Vlckv Justus
AU Credit Cards }(c:Cepled
304-675-3331 • Hours: Mon.frl 8-5, Sat 8-1

U Regular Cab GMC Sierras

Specialists In:
OXYGEN 8c RESPIRATORY
EQUIPMENT 8. SUPPLIES
• Locally Owned and Operated
• 24hr. Emergency Service
• Free Delivel)i
• Stop By Our Showroom
• Many More Items

70 Pine Street • Gallipolis,

7 40- 446-0007

Yesterday voters like Ruth
Crouch and Vicki Morrow.
pictured here with
Syracuse poll workers at
the Syracuse Community
Center, cast their ballots
on election day. After vot·
ing, many peopie ate lunch
and dinner at the center
which was serving nine
kettles of soup· as well as
sandwiches·. hot dogs,
sloppy joes and desserts .
Proceeds helped benefit
ongoing projects at the
center. Pictured here is
Sally Ebersbach (left) and
Ora Bass serving wp soup
and filling lunch orders.
Beth Serl!entjpllotoa

Amish community growing in Meigs County
Seeing the local Amish
men doing contract work on
homes and buildings and
POMEROY ' Road their families selling home·
signs warning motori~;ts to grown produce and baked
watch out for buggies are goods at markets is becom·
springing up along high- ing a more familiar sight in
ways in Meigs County, an Meigs County.
indication of the growing
The lifestyle of Amish
Amish communjty here.
families may be different
Other signs of that are from yours or mine, but the
homes ~ith buggies parked - people are considered good
nearby and horses grazing neighbors and of a congein
nearby
fields. nial nature.
Construction of a small
Rachel Martindale, ajourschool building beside one nlllism major interning at
of those homes on Route The Daily Sentinel, recently
I 43 just before going into interviewed the Dennis
Harrisonville was complet- Zook family about everyday
ed recently.
· life in an Amish home. Her
A neighbor of an Amish account of the interview is
·
family who built a large as follows:
home on a hill near the
In the first week of July,
school said he was told Dennis Zook turned 62.
there are about 10 families That morning. neighbors
already in the Harrisonville- surprised him with a cake.
Pageville community and Later that day, his relatives
that five more are expected made · him homemade ice
to move ·in soon. He was cream and ·all that good
also told that already there stuff, he said.
are 23 children to · be
He an·d his wife, Amanda
enrolled in the new.Jy con- Zook, are parents of 14 children and grandparents of
structed school.
BY CHARLENE HoEFLICH

HOEFLICHOMYDAILVSENTINEL.COM

For Sixty Months
Until October 31, 2007

'S

..

',.,~

C '· ·.•·
'

,

'·

Dehlla on Pop A&amp;

INDEX

sClS.lis
OHIO VALLEY

446-2404

1-886-4&lt;46-2684

· 21S Upper Rlv..- Rd. Gallipolis, Ohio
112 mile south of the Silver Bridge
liioe!&gt;lse oc 1001077-'000 allldl 001

OH

Gettil}g
out the
vote, and
the food

PleaH see Pomeroy, AS

. '

WEATIIER

OXYGEN

8r: MEDICAL EQUIPMENT, INC.

POMEROY
The
Pomeroy Police Department
has been busy investigating
an accident which ·tied up
traffic on West Main Street
Monday and arresting a fugitive on the top 10 niost wanted list of Adams County, Pa.
Patrolman Ronnie Spaun
finished the
on the
Qecident
vehicles Monday aftl~m&lt;&gt;On
on West Main Street in front
of Crow's KFC/Long John
Silvers
restaurant.
According to the accident
report, Carolyn R. Brown,
Albany, was cited for
assured clear distance . .
Brown allegedly failed to
slow down and stop before
hitting a pickup driven by
James H.
Billingsler.
Pomeroy.
Bilhngsley s
truck then struck a vehicle
driven by Jennifer L.
Reeves, Albany.
· Reeves. Billingsley and
Anna Elkins, Albany, a passenger in· Brown's vehicle
were taken to Holzer
Medical Center for treatment of their injuries.
Vehicles driven by Brown
and 'Billingsley were towed
from the scene.
Spaun also arrested a ·
young man on the top 10
most wanted list of Adams
County, Pa. after he was
recently pulled over for a
traffic violation. Spaun said
Cory M. Amoss, Gettysburg,

license Ct

7~-0QO

allldl 00 l

2 SI!CTIONS -12 PAGES

Calendars

A3
A3

CJassifieds

82-4

Annie's Mailbox ·

Comics

B5

EditQrials

, A4

-· Obituaries

As

Sports

Weather

B Section
Ab

©. 2007 Oblo Valley PubiJohln&amp; Co,

RltChel Martindale/photo

With more Amish families moving into Meigs County, more
signs advising caution are being erected along highways.
77. A recent letter from a white Jack Russell I
daughter in Kentucky Chihuahua mix would tum
announced the birth of their one year old in September.
newest grandchi Id. The old- "She likes to go with me
estisl6.
wherever I go," Zook said .
The Amish couple lives
The Zooks moved . to
on a hill above a winding Meigs
County
last
backroad in Meigs County. November in response to a
That week, an equine "lawn limd advertisement in an
mower" munched on hill- Ami sh n(fwspaper. 'Ten
side grass, while a waggly- Amish families live in the
tailed dog, Rosie, barked at
Pleese see Amish. AS
company. The- black-and•

- :\-·-·

-

MIDDLEPORT -The
Middleport
Community
Association 's
annual
Christmas parade will be
held at 4 p.m. on Dec. I.
The parade will be followed by the ligllting of the
town's Christmas tree in the
park area adjace nt to
Peoples Bank, and a brief
service conducted by members of the Middleporl
Ministerial Association.
The
Comrimnity
Association mel Tuesday
morning lo discuss plans for
the parade and other holiday
events: The association had
considered holding its parade
the
Sunday
after
Thanksgiving. to coincide
with the Pomeroy parade and
merchant events, but decided,
instead, to hold the parade the
next -weekend, but earlier in
the day than in years past.
The parade will line up at 4
p.m. at lhe Rejoicing Life
Church . and proceed down
North Second Avenue to the
"T " Association President
Brenda Phalin said merchants
are encouraged to remain
open during the festivities.
Free carriage rides are
planned again this year, along
with an open fire, free refreshments and a live nativity.
Peoples Bank will again
offer free photographs of
children with Santa Claus in
the bank lobby.
Participating merchant s
will begin their annual holiday giveaways after the
parade , and the association
will hold a drawing for
prizes with entries taken in
the days before Christmas.
Phalin said those items will
be announced.
The as sociation is now
looking for a Christmas tree
to be used as the centerpiece
for the downtown holiday
celebration. Anyone with a
large evergreen suitable for
use as . the community
Christmas tree is asked to
contact Phalin at 992-0000.
In other business, mem·
bers discussed the success of
two recent events, a
Bear/Basket Bingo fundraiser and the Pumpkinporl
Halloween party in Dave
· Diles Park. Phalin said the
bingo game raised over
$3,000 for holiday giveaway s. decorations and
other purchases for the
Christmas season. She said
it was one of the most successful bingo fundraisers the
association has held to date.
The Pumpkinport eve m
continues to grow each
year, she said. This was the
firsl year I he event has been
held on Salurday. and the
first time il has been held in
Diles Park.
The association's next
meeting will be held on
Dec . 4 at Peoples B.ank.

•
•

•

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