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                  <text>Page B6 • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel .com
N :[.uuRE

0:·1007 UNIVERSf.L ME.OlA SYNDICATE' SPECIAL ADVfRTISf

---

------,-- ___ _

-----

~~ERTIS_EMENT _

Tuesd'ay, November 20. 2007
rQR 'NORLD RESERVE ~NETARY ExCHAfiiE ]939 EVERHARD RD CANTON OH 44709

More young
hunters out for
deer-gun season, AS

of new·u~s. Gov't
I Dollar
coins surge as public snaps them up free

•

at

Valuable Presidential Golden Dollar coins being given away free with orders for Framed Money
Gallery, but frame shop workers under strain of Christmas. rush, impose household limit of2
.

Free money: it's the valuable gift that no one will ever return, it easily takes care of everyone's shopping list
By

Adam K. Oyler

V ~ l 'll~S.O.L

MEDIA SHILJILAil

Have you heard about the free money giveaway that's sweeping the nation?
Well, listen up because here it is.
Everyone who gets in on this will be among
the first to get the U.S. Government's daz.
zling new Presidential Dollar coins.
But the government is not the one to tbimk.·
The World Reserve has just announced it is
banding out the entire year of the valuable
coins free.
These extraordinary coins are being given
away free to everyone who beats the deadline
to. cover shipping and the discounted framing fee for the newly unveiled Presidential
Framed Money Gallery.
So, what's the catch?
There is none. Just be absolutely sure to
call in your claim before the 72 hour deadline
if you want to get the entire year of Presiden·
tial coins free.
This is all happening because the World
Reserve is issuing the Presidential Framed
Money Gallery to the general public to display
all forty of the U.S. Government's first ever .
Presidential Dollar coins. Rations of these
never-circulated coins are uncertain because
each dollar coin is only minted for just 93 days
according to the release schedule of the U.S.
Government.
"These new Presidential coins are so stunning because they're actually engraved with
edge lettering bearing the date, Mint mark, IN
GOD WE TRUST and E PLURIBUS UNUM,
which results in the coin's rare tactile feel,"
said Director Aaron L. Stryker from the
World Reserve Monetary Exchange.
"Once they're gone, they're gone and by law • SNEAK PEAK AT THIS YEAR'S HOTTEST CHRISTMAS GIFT: Thi s is the incredible Presidential Framed Money Gallery -that displays some of the

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
:;o l'I:~TS • \ 'ol. :;-. 1'\11 . H:;

The Toll Free Dl{ept
,..open. All ·tl:los11 who
•.
deattll'rle will nAt•. ,!)
!'residential. OoJI,ar

BY BRIAN J_ REED
BREEO@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY The
Daily Sentinel will be
published Thursday but
1ts offices will be closed
for the Thanksgiving hoi•
iday.
Regular business hours
resume on Friday.

SPORTS
• Lady Eagles fall in
season opener.
See PageB1

OBITUARIES
Page A5
• Alan Keith Haley
• Paul L. Bush II

• During busy holiday
travel period, security
screeners expect to find
unusual items in luggage.
See Page A2
• Supreme Court
to decide challenge
to District of Columbia
handgun ban.
$ee Page A5
• Meigs educator
attends teachers institute
on art. See Page A6
• Fed forecasts slower
growth and more out
of work next year.
See Page A7

ALL LINES CLI?SE IN,72 HOURS

• EVERYONE LOVES THE GIFT OF MONEY: The va luable co.ns are • TURNS ANY ROOM INTO A SHOWPLACE:

The Framed Money
on ly being relea sed from the U.S . Government fOr 93 days , t hen on ly fo ur 'Galle ry is so tmp re ssive, local fr ame shop s normally charge $231 but a
t imes a ye~r. for th e next ten years . So 1magine the look on everyone's face special di scoun ted f ram1ng fee 1s bemg g1ven so the Framed Money Ga ll ery
wh.en they recei ve the Framed Money Gallery With the entire fltSt year set 1s a rea l steal at rust $28 for those who beat the deadlme and get the free
of President ia l Dol lars free .
Pres 1dent1al cam s

,•

Detallo on Pa&amp;e AS

INDEX
ZSECI10NS calendars

'16 PAGES

AJ

9lassifieds

B4-6

Comics

B7

Annie's Mailbox

AJ
A4
As

Editorials
Obituaries

Sports
Weather

B Section

AB

© 0007 Ohio VaHey Publishlna Co.

'

Brian J. Reedj plloto

This mobile home on Middleport's Ash Street was raised six feet to comply with loca l flood plain regulations .

Merchants·
Association
·
•
sponsonng
holiday contests

BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT®MYOAILYSENTINELCOM

• MILLIONS IN FREE MONEY: The giveaway of these Presidential Dolla r • VALUABLE COLLECTION: Eve.ryone who gets the free
i
coi ns has co llecto r s in a stir be ca use of the never-before-seen special Dollar coi ns w1ll have a very valuable collection of U.S. Government
edge engraving. causmg_them to be snatc hed up befo re .tile public ever coins that you would expect to only see ha ng ing under guard in the Oval
gets to see them.
Office.

THE INCREASE IN COLLECTIBLE VALUE OF CER·
JAIN PRIOR ISSUES OF THE U.S: COINS A~D CUR·
RENCY DOES NOT GUARANTEE THAT CURRENT IS·
SVES WILL ALSO IN8REASE IN VALUE. THE '1/0RLD
RESERVE MONETARY EXCHANGE IS NOT AFFILIATED
WITH THE UNITED STATES GOVERNMENT OR ANY
GOVERNMENT AGENCY .. ALL fRANSACT IO~$. \.E,S~ '
SHIPPING ARE BACKED BY THE WORLD MESERVE
MONETARY EXCHANGE WITH A MONEY BACI&lt; GUAR·
ANTEEOF THE PURCHASE PRICEUP TO $10.000.00.

.,..:.'I{·L..;):".

\1 .i.rt: ""

Seeking support
for tobacco
prevention grant

WEATHER

, The entire year of free coins will ·be
' delivered in never-circulated condition
and protected with professional display
·c'apsules that !Ire also being lssueq ~tee for
vlewipg the special edge engraving. The
entire first year of Presidential Dollar coins
will be delivered witt! the Framed Money
Gallery in never·clrcL!Iated condition.
Those who miss the deadline will be
turned away and requirE~dtowait for·tuture
an·nouncemenls authorized by the World
Reserve in th is and other publications.

"""·"'~d.•ihwnl11n·l.• ·om

21 , :.!on-

l ,: i .

MIDDLEPORT' - Compliance with
local flood plain ordinances may ensure that
. people and property remain safe, but the
result of one flood plain di spute 1;11ay take
getting used to.
A new mobile home placed on Ash Street
in Middleport is a good example of what
can result from compliance with the .law.
The home has been placed on blocks to
raise it above the flood plain, in keepi ng ·
with local flood pJain ordinances, after vii·
!age officials refused to gra nt a flood plain
variance.
The home has been the subje-ct of discussion at meetings of Middleport Village
Council and its variance committee. Matt
Lyons. the land owner, asked the vill age
variance committee, and later village cou ncil, to consider a variance on the basi s of
personal hardship. The trailer 's owner,
Betty Gilkey, had purchased the trailer and

Please see Homes, AS

CENTRAL TIME ZONE

, ·r,•.

\VEDNESD/\\', NO\'El\IBER

Elevated mobile home·result of following law.·

Offices
closed

free Presidential Doll ar co in s that are be ing given aw~y. This hot Christmas gift garnered exciting chee rs'as it was unveiled to the shoppin g mall crowd,

once the U.S. Government shuts off, they will everyone was tr ying to get them . But readers of toda y's newspaper can call the Direct Cia 1m Lme to be among the f~rst to get them free.
neverbemintedagain. That's why the World's
.
premier. private monetary exchange is widely beat the 72 hour deadline right now.
everybody wants.
counted framing fee is a real steal.
advertising its plans to issue the Presidential "At the rate we are giving these away we
And, since everyone is trying to get them,
"And remember, these are never-circulated
Framed Money Gallery along with the free will be forced to band out millions of dollars of one thing is for sure, those lucky enough to get coins. To be among the first to get these nevercoins. We want to make absolutely sure read- the valuable new Presidential Dollars free to in on this now are certain to get an entire year circulated Presidential Dollar coins you must
ers of this newspaper know that there are the general public," Stryker said.
of Presidential Dollar coins free.
make sure you get through to the Direct Claim
only 72 ·hours left on this aQnouncement to Collectors are trying to get all they can be·
What does all this mean for you?
Hotlines. Iflines are busy please be patient,''
get the entire year of Presidential Dollar coins cause these are no ordinary coins. These are
W.ell, coin values always fluctuate. But, just Stryker said.
free," Stryker said.
. real U.S. Government first issues in never· thi.nk if you would have saved just one uncirBut whatever you do keep trying, because
Those who get in on this free giveaway by circulated condition. Smart collectors know culated Eisenhower Dollar from as recently as all claims will be honored before the 72 hour
claiming the Framed Money Gallery will have bow valuable first issue coins can be.
1973. Believe it or not, it's now worth 1200% deadline expires. •
a magnificent display to show off the entire U.S. Savings Bonds used to be the most more today. So, getting four Presidential
collection of all 40 of the valuable U.S. Presi· popular gift to give. But now these never- Dollar coins free with the Presidential Framed
dential coins. That's why it's so important to circulated Presidential Dollar coins are what Money Oallery for the twenty-eight dollar dis-

\lALLEY
HOSPITAL

POMEROY
The
Holzer Tobacco Prevention
Center is preparing its
. Community Grant application with the Ohio Tobacco
Prevention Foundation and
written support from members of the Meigs County
. Tobacco
Prevention
Coalition is vitaL
Letters of commitment
and/or support for the work
the grant has funded can be
sent to Todd Tucker, MPA,
project director, Certified
Tobacco·
Treatment
Specialist, Holzer Tobacco
Prevention Center, Holzer
Center,
l 00
Medical
Jackson Pike, Gallipolis,
45631 - 1563, or to ttucker@holzer.org. Letters from
locals who have been
helped by cessation or prevention programs are also
welcome. All letters are due
by Dec. 4.
· The deadline for the
$500,000 grant application
is I p.m., Dec. 12. The
grant, funded for three
years, will begin its funding
cycle on July I, 2008, if
awarded. Hol zer Tobacco
Prevention
previously
received the ·grant for three
years plus a one-year extension but according to
Tucker this year the grant is
more competitive with the
OTPF accepting applications from more Ohio agen·
cies.
.
The new grant will focus
on provision of tobacco prevention and cessation services to low socioeconomic
status (SES) populations in
the
three-county
Appalachian service area.
Holzer Tobacco Prevention
services not only Holzer
Tobacco
Prevention 's
Meigs County Resource
Center on Second Street but
center 's in Gallia and
Jackson Counties.
"Letters of support are a
'critical part of any
Community Grant from the
OTPF," Tucker said, adding
the OTPF looks al coalition
development and support.
"They (OTPF) believe
the coalition is truly· where
change happens on a grasslevel."
Tucker
roots
·
explained.
Without ·funding for
Holzer
Tobacco
Prevention 's service area.
Tucker said prevention services would suffer and the
local resource center would
likely close. Though cessation classes may not stop all
together, Tucker said they

Please see Cirant. AS

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
HOEFLI CH@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

ees to conduct an annual drive involving the
public to see that no child comes to school
without a coat.
Over the years more than 2.000 coats
have been given to disadvantaged school
children in Meigs County through community involvement. Every year good coats
outgrown by their own children are contributed by residents, fund raisers are conducted by bank employees, and organizations contribute money with which to buy
coats as needed to assure that every child

POMEROY - Again this
year as a part of the
· Christmas celebration , the
Pomeroy
Merchants
Association will' staging
three contests - one for
candies on Dec. l , one for
cookies on Dec. 9, and
another for crafts on Dec.
15 .
Sponsoring the contests
will be Peoples Bank in
Pom ero y, candi es: Ohio
Valley Bank at · 700 West
Main St. (Save-0-Lot),
cookies, and Farmers Bank ,
holiday nafts.
In all three contests first
place winners will receive a
$50 savi ngs bond , whil e
second and third place winners will receive merchandise· or other prizes. In 1he
ca nd y and cookie contests,
entries of six pieces are to
be submitted on paper
plates with lhe name,
address and phone number
of the person emerin g writ·
ten on the bottom and a
copy of the recipe attached.
Residents are encouraged to
enter the contests.
As for the candy-making
conte st. those entering are
asked to have their entries ai
Peoples Bank by 9 a. m.
since this year selected cus·
1omers of the bank will be
given samples and then be
asked to vote for first , second and third places. The

Please see Coats, AS

Please see Contests, AS

Charlene Hoefllch/ photo

The Fraternal Order of the Eagles 2171 of Pomeroy is a first-tirne contributor to the Coats
for Kids program. Here Eagles trustee Harry Davidson presents a check for $250 to
Peoples Bank employee Erin McCabe.
·

DISTRIBUTION IN 'COATS FOR
KIDS' PROGRAM UNDERWAY
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
HOEFLICH@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY For . more than two
decades many area school children have
been' able to keep warm in winter because of
the effort s of Peoples Bank employees and
the community's contributions toward the
Coats for Kids program.
The program started out in 1984 when
teachers began to notice that some of the
children were coming to sch'ool not wearing a warm coat or one which was too small
or too big. That inspired the bank employ-

Hol·iday preparations
In preparation for upcoming
holid ay events. volunteers
and village workers were
erecting and decoratmg the
Middleport vi ll age
Christmas tree Tuesday. .
The tree was placed on the
Farmers Bank mini-park lot
in downtown Middleport,
and' will be joined by other
holiday decorations.
B~an

J. Reed/ photo

�.NATION • WORLD

The Daily Sentinel

During busy holiday travel .
period, security screeners expect
to find unusual items in luggage
BY JANET
FRANKSTON LORIN
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

NEWARK,
N.J.
Security screeners at the
Newark airport could
almost open a department
store with all the banned
items: nine bottles of wine,
three sets of kitchen knives,
a replica antique gun, pool
cues, golf clubs and baseball bats.
The objects, confiscated
from travelers over several
recent days. also included
martial-arts weapons and a
belt with fake bullets.
"Every day is a surprise,"
screener Janice Hnyda said.
' During . the
busy .
Thanksgiving travel period,
screeners at the nation 's airports are prepared to find
the unexpected in passengers' carry-on luggage.
Other bi zarre items
. around the country included: a two-headed snake
(Newark); 10 human eyeballs floating in liquid for
medical purposes · (0' Hare
Airport in Chicago): and a
collection of hermit crabs
carried by a family returnAP photo
ing from the Gulf of Mexico
Transportation
Security
Administration
officers
Janice
Hnyda,
(San Antonio).
Lara Uselding, a spokes- left, and Shalonda McCall stand next to a table with confiswoman
for
the cated goods at a security check point at 1\Jewark Liberty
Transportation
Security International Airport in Newark, · N.J., Thursday. With a
Administration, said air- Thanksgiving crush of passengers expected at airports
lines can accept . some around the country this week, federal Transportation Security
unusual items with advance Administration screeners want to remind holiday travelers
planning, as long as they are about items that are not permitted to be carried on board.
not prohibited by the TSA.
That was the case With the 185;000 prohibited items at
Many passengers forget
snake, which was going Newark. Of those, 536 were about the rules in their effort
through Newark to appear considered deadly or dan- to avoid checking baggage.
on "Live with Regis and gerous. Nearly 160,000
"That's the dilemma for
Kelly" with a zoo curator. It were lighters.
short
trips
or
for.
was eventually checked.
Screeners were criticized Thanksgivi ng, when you
But other prohibited items last week after a govern- want tb do what you can to
must either be placed in ment report revealed that minimi ze the hassle factor,"
checked baggage, given to investigators had been able said Walter Sive of Seattle,
someone not traveling or to smuggle liquid explo- who once had to give up a
left in a car. Some airports sives and detonators past quart of maple syrup from
offer paid services to mail airport security. The covert his favorite upstate New
objects home. Belongings ·tests were conducted at 19 York farm when he tried to
that ·are voluntarily surren- airports earner this year.
take it back to the West
dered become property of
Uselding defended the Coast.
the federal governmen t, screeners. "Our people are
The rules also prohibit
which discards all food and vigilant every day," she canned purnpkin pie filling,
liquids.
said.
honey, or a JUicy pie. Snow
· During the holiday travel
Their vigilance will be globes are not permitted and
crunch, screeners are under tested during the holidays, · wrapped gifts aren't a good
pressure to move passen- when planes are expected to idea, Uselding sai d.
gers along quickly. And be 90 percent fulL
Sandy Druckman, who
they have learned to anticiAt Newark, prohibited will fly with her husband
pate just about anything.
items are taken to a state from ·Fort Lauderdale, Fla. ,
"We get power drills," surplus
center
in to Newark, said she plans to
said Luther Duke, a screen- Pennsylvania, where they check everything to avoid
er for five years at Newark are auctioned on eBay. any problems.
Liberty
International Since the program began in
"For Thanksgiving, I'.m
Airport, which expects to 2004, Pennsylvania has just taking my book and my
handle 547,000 travelers received about $380,000 purse," said Druckman, 75.
over Thanksgiving.
· from the sales of items "We just want to breeze
This year, screeners have taken .from 13 airports in through and get on the
·
intercepted more than five states.
plane."

Airlines' unaccompanied
minor traveler policie~ vary
BY THE ASSOCIATEO PRESS
Airlines have different policies when i1 comes to handling
unaccompanied minors on
their planes.
Major U.S. airlines don't .tet
children under 5 years old fly
alone, and they require an
extra fee for unaccompanied
children from 5 to II -or 14,
depending on the airline.
Airlines reserve the right to
demand proof of age, so have
the ~hild 's birth certificate or
passport.
Get to the gate at least 30 to
45 minutes early to fill out
forms, and the parent should
stay in the gate area until the
plane leaves. Adults meeting
an unaccompanied minor at
the arrival gate must first
• obtain a pa\s from a ticketing
agent allowing them beyond
the security checkpoint.
Airlines will not administer
medicine to children, so if your
child needs medicine that he
can't administer himself, talk
to your doctor before booking.
Here are highlights for the
largest carriers. See airline
Web sites for details.
- American Airlines:
Fee of $75 each way for
domestic and international
flights. Ages 5 to 14, and parents may opt to pay for those
15 to 17 to travel as unaccompanied minors. Ages 5 to 7 can
only take nonstop or direct
flights - those IHJt requiring a
change of planes. Ages 8 to 14

••

can't connect from another airline. Rights must be booked
through a reservations agent.
not the airline's Web site.
·
-Continental Airlines:
$50 each way for nonstop
tlig~ts and $95 with a connection within the United States,
Canada and Mexico: $70 and
$95 for other international

trips. Ages 5 to 14, optional for
those 15 to 17. Ages 5 to 7
allowed only on nonstop or
direct flights: No departures
after 9 p.m. except on international, Hawaii or Alaska flights
or trips of two hours or less.
Not allowed on last connecting
fli ght of the day to their final
destination.

Day
4pm-4am

(Drive-Thro Closes

Wednesday, November 21,

www.mydailysentinel.com

Page A3- The Daily Sentinel

20Q.7
•

Sarkozy defiant as civil servantsjoin ra#! ·
workers in strikes disrupting life in Franc~
BY JOHN LEICESTER
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

surrender and we wi II not
retreat"
Sarkozy appears to have the
PARIS
President upper hand in his test of
Nicolar. Sarkozy stood firm strength with powc1i'ul transagainst spreading strikes port unions fighting tougher
TUesday, insisting he will not pension rules - opinion polls
water down plans for a thor- say the public strongly supough overhaul of France, ports the president and strikeven as civil servants joined ers have been trickling back
the walkouts and thousands of to work on subway and longprotesters took to the streets.
distance trains.
Sarkozy was characteristilf he wins the faceoff.
cally defiant as he broke what Sarkozy wi ll improve his
had been an unusual silence chances for pushing through
during a ~eek of transit even bigger and more ambistrikes that have disrupted tious reforms. One involves
travel across the nation. He slimming down and reformaccused the strikers of hold- ing the civil service, whose 5
ing commuters·"hostage" and million workers make it
called for them to return to France's largest employer
work.
·sarkozy insisted in his
Turning to critics who hope speech that he didn't deliberhe can be forced to back away ately pick the fight with the
from deep economic, social train unions.
and political changes for a
But he certainly chose the
country that has proved diffi- field of combat well: Pension
cult to reform, Sarkozy had a rights that train drivers and
simple message: Forget it..
other specially classed work"France needs· reforms to ' ers are fighting to protect are
meet the challenges imposed cushier than those enjoyed by
on it by the world," he said in most. m Fmnce. Sarkozy says
a spirited speech to mayors. penston nghts should he
"These refonns have been too equal for all - and he has
long in coming, ... After so public opinion on his side.
much hesitation, so much
Sarkozy "hasn't won t~e
procrastination, so many gamble yet, because the trains
backward steps, we will not still aren't running. But it

seems he will win," said
Etienne Schweisglith, ; a
researcher at the respect~d
Sciences Po school of political sciences in Paris.
·
" If he wins this first test of
strength then a bastivn will
have given way. Unions,
workers, leftists· will be Ie6s
disposed to strike in tfle
future." Schweisguth said in a
telephone interview. "He will
have weakened the opponent5
of refonn."
The question now is when
;mu how the transport strike,
which was heading into its
eighth full day Wednesday,
might end.
Talks with tnmsport unions
were to start Wednesday and
the government said state representatives would take part.
In his speech, Sarkozy said,
"You have to know how to
stop a strike when the time for
discussion opens."
Transport workers are not
his only challenge.
·
Hundreds of thousands of
civil servants - teachers.
customs agents, tax inspectors
and others - stayed off the
job Tuesday to press their sep'arate demands for pay raises
and job security. That walkout
clos·ed schools and caused
flight delays.

SHOP LOCALLY
Pomeroy Merchants Jlssociatlon Invites You to
t:BBISf'MIJS JJ£11NS f'BB BIVBB IIPBN BOUSE

SUIIDIJ Y liD fl.. Blif'B IB-Ii PJI
CHRISTMAS PARADE
2:00PM
Kids or Pets with Santa at
Peoples Bank after the
Parade!

Stop In
For Our
OPEN
HOUSE!

Sunday, November 25th 12-4
Sign Up To Win $25 Gift Certificate

DAN'S

Your local source for quality natural and Of'Kanicfoods!

· 212 Ea~t Maio Street, Pomeroy, OH 45769
Phone: 740.992-3785

Pomeroy !}[ower Sliop ·
invites !JOU to come into our sfiop
&amp; see a[( tfie items avaifa6(e
to mak_~ your fio(Ufay specia!.

~~e.t«qy
J!r~

Sunday, 9{ov. 25tfi 10-5
'Door Prius tlirougfiout tfie ia!J
induiing a irawing for a
Jiffea £onga.berger !Meaium
Mark~t 'BasK:Jt

~~~~~~an~
~'

J~

.

for
Brillg this cuupoll ill to :
order &amp; ~0111 erS enter our drwing durillg our

bnuai.Opan House
Saaday, ln. 2til2:18:1pm

chris•:a-1t free 1 Hof!.~ £fe.!!. '!!"!! ~v;_25th
no o.~'belivtr'J· r
Coupon
· 1
(.oC

I Name

I

I Address:
r eleJlora
...,~ce
I
"jr£ se ones
.
r Loved , I Phone.
f ofar }I.waY· ._ - - -

Parad~ Line-Up At The Football Stadium,

. Step Off 2:00
Bring Your Pet And
Be APart ()fOur Pet Parade...
Santa Photos And Treats After The Parade
Sponsored By Peoples Bank!

I

I

- - - - -

.
I,

...1 .

Say It With Flowers!
106 Butternut .... ~'"··

7\nderson s
CJ/o{kfal g;ilrnituPe

Safe
•
•
•
•
•

Recliners
Curio's
. Hall Trees
Dining Sets
Lamps

•
•
•
•
M

GliderrRockert
Wood Acc:en1ts
Pictures
Sofas
TV Stands

WIIH IJI•••
Regjster to Win a ·$ 50.00 Gift Certificate

___

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

·

Drawing to be held Sunday at 3:30 PM
24t;Jz Whitman
120z Russel Stovver Santa Tin ·

.,;,__..,

The following good
through Thesday.

Christmas
•
wrappmg
pa

1/2 price

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�.NATION • WORLD

The Daily Sentinel

During busy holiday travel .
period, security screeners expect
to find unusual items in luggage
BY JANET
FRANKSTON LORIN
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

NEWARK,
N.J.
Security screeners at the
Newark airport could
almost open a department
store with all the banned
items: nine bottles of wine,
three sets of kitchen knives,
a replica antique gun, pool
cues, golf clubs and baseball bats.
The objects, confiscated
from travelers over several
recent days. also included
martial-arts weapons and a
belt with fake bullets.
"Every day is a surprise,"
screener Janice Hnyda said.
' During . the
busy .
Thanksgiving travel period,
screeners at the nation 's airports are prepared to find
the unexpected in passengers' carry-on luggage.
Other bi zarre items
. around the country included: a two-headed snake
(Newark); 10 human eyeballs floating in liquid for
medical purposes · (0' Hare
Airport in Chicago): and a
collection of hermit crabs
carried by a family returnAP photo
ing from the Gulf of Mexico
Transportation
Security
Administration
officers
Janice
Hnyda,
(San Antonio).
Lara Uselding, a spokes- left, and Shalonda McCall stand next to a table with confiswoman
for
the cated goods at a security check point at 1\Jewark Liberty
Transportation
Security International Airport in Newark, · N.J., Thursday. With a
Administration, said air- Thanksgiving crush of passengers expected at airports
lines can accept . some around the country this week, federal Transportation Security
unusual items with advance Administration screeners want to remind holiday travelers
planning, as long as they are about items that are not permitted to be carried on board.
not prohibited by the TSA.
That was the case With the 185;000 prohibited items at
Many passengers forget
snake, which was going Newark. Of those, 536 were about the rules in their effort
through Newark to appear considered deadly or dan- to avoid checking baggage.
on "Live with Regis and gerous. Nearly 160,000
"That's the dilemma for
Kelly" with a zoo curator. It were lighters.
short
trips
or
for.
was eventually checked.
Screeners were criticized Thanksgivi ng, when you
But other prohibited items last week after a govern- want tb do what you can to
must either be placed in ment report revealed that minimi ze the hassle factor,"
checked baggage, given to investigators had been able said Walter Sive of Seattle,
someone not traveling or to smuggle liquid explo- who once had to give up a
left in a car. Some airports sives and detonators past quart of maple syrup from
offer paid services to mail airport security. The covert his favorite upstate New
objects home. Belongings ·tests were conducted at 19 York farm when he tried to
that ·are voluntarily surren- airports earner this year.
take it back to the West
dered become property of
Uselding defended the Coast.
the federal governmen t, screeners. "Our people are
The rules also prohibit
which discards all food and vigilant every day," she canned purnpkin pie filling,
liquids.
said.
honey, or a JUicy pie. Snow
· During the holiday travel
Their vigilance will be globes are not permitted and
crunch, screeners are under tested during the holidays, · wrapped gifts aren't a good
pressure to move passen- when planes are expected to idea, Uselding sai d.
gers along quickly. And be 90 percent fulL
Sandy Druckman, who
they have learned to anticiAt Newark, prohibited will fly with her husband
pate just about anything.
items are taken to a state from ·Fort Lauderdale, Fla. ,
"We get power drills," surplus
center
in to Newark, said she plans to
said Luther Duke, a screen- Pennsylvania, where they check everything to avoid
er for five years at Newark are auctioned on eBay. any problems.
Liberty
International Since the program began in
"For Thanksgiving, I'.m
Airport, which expects to 2004, Pennsylvania has just taking my book and my
handle 547,000 travelers received about $380,000 purse," said Druckman, 75.
over Thanksgiving.
· from the sales of items "We just want to breeze
This year, screeners have taken .from 13 airports in through and get on the
·
intercepted more than five states.
plane."

Airlines' unaccompanied
minor traveler policie~ vary
BY THE ASSOCIATEO PRESS
Airlines have different policies when i1 comes to handling
unaccompanied minors on
their planes.
Major U.S. airlines don't .tet
children under 5 years old fly
alone, and they require an
extra fee for unaccompanied
children from 5 to II -or 14,
depending on the airline.
Airlines reserve the right to
demand proof of age, so have
the ~hild 's birth certificate or
passport.
Get to the gate at least 30 to
45 minutes early to fill out
forms, and the parent should
stay in the gate area until the
plane leaves. Adults meeting
an unaccompanied minor at
the arrival gate must first
• obtain a pa\s from a ticketing
agent allowing them beyond
the security checkpoint.
Airlines will not administer
medicine to children, so if your
child needs medicine that he
can't administer himself, talk
to your doctor before booking.
Here are highlights for the
largest carriers. See airline
Web sites for details.
- American Airlines:
Fee of $75 each way for
domestic and international
flights. Ages 5 to 14, and parents may opt to pay for those
15 to 17 to travel as unaccompanied minors. Ages 5 to 7 can
only take nonstop or direct
flights - those IHJt requiring a
change of planes. Ages 8 to 14

••

can't connect from another airline. Rights must be booked
through a reservations agent.
not the airline's Web site.
·
-Continental Airlines:
$50 each way for nonstop
tlig~ts and $95 with a connection within the United States,
Canada and Mexico: $70 and
$95 for other international

trips. Ages 5 to 14, optional for
those 15 to 17. Ages 5 to 7
allowed only on nonstop or
direct flights: No departures
after 9 p.m. except on international, Hawaii or Alaska flights
or trips of two hours or less.
Not allowed on last connecting
fli ght of the day to their final
destination.

Day
4pm-4am

(Drive-Thro Closes

Wednesday, November 21,

www.mydailysentinel.com

Page A3- The Daily Sentinel

20Q.7
•

Sarkozy defiant as civil servantsjoin ra#! ·
workers in strikes disrupting life in Franc~
BY JOHN LEICESTER
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

surrender and we wi II not
retreat"
Sarkozy appears to have the
PARIS
President upper hand in his test of
Nicolar. Sarkozy stood firm strength with powc1i'ul transagainst spreading strikes port unions fighting tougher
TUesday, insisting he will not pension rules - opinion polls
water down plans for a thor- say the public strongly supough overhaul of France, ports the president and strikeven as civil servants joined ers have been trickling back
the walkouts and thousands of to work on subway and longprotesters took to the streets.
distance trains.
Sarkozy was characteristilf he wins the faceoff.
cally defiant as he broke what Sarkozy wi ll improve his
had been an unusual silence chances for pushing through
during a ~eek of transit even bigger and more ambistrikes that have disrupted tious reforms. One involves
travel across the nation. He slimming down and reformaccused the strikers of hold- ing the civil service, whose 5
ing commuters·"hostage" and million workers make it
called for them to return to France's largest employer
work.
·sarkozy insisted in his
Turning to critics who hope speech that he didn't deliberhe can be forced to back away ately pick the fight with the
from deep economic, social train unions.
and political changes for a
But he certainly chose the
country that has proved diffi- field of combat well: Pension
cult to reform, Sarkozy had a rights that train drivers and
simple message: Forget it..
other specially classed work"France needs· reforms to ' ers are fighting to protect are
meet the challenges imposed cushier than those enjoyed by
on it by the world," he said in most. m Fmnce. Sarkozy says
a spirited speech to mayors. penston nghts should he
"These refonns have been too equal for all - and he has
long in coming, ... After so public opinion on his side.
much hesitation, so much
Sarkozy "hasn't won t~e
procrastination, so many gamble yet, because the trains
backward steps, we will not still aren't running. But it

seems he will win," said
Etienne Schweisglith, ; a
researcher at the respect~d
Sciences Po school of political sciences in Paris.
·
" If he wins this first test of
strength then a bastivn will
have given way. Unions,
workers, leftists· will be Ie6s
disposed to strike in tfle
future." Schweisguth said in a
telephone interview. "He will
have weakened the opponent5
of refonn."
The question now is when
;mu how the transport strike,
which was heading into its
eighth full day Wednesday,
might end.
Talks with tnmsport unions
were to start Wednesday and
the government said state representatives would take part.
In his speech, Sarkozy said,
"You have to know how to
stop a strike when the time for
discussion opens."
Transport workers are not
his only challenge.
·
Hundreds of thousands of
civil servants - teachers.
customs agents, tax inspectors
and others - stayed off the
job Tuesday to press their sep'arate demands for pay raises
and job security. That walkout
clos·ed schools and caused
flight delays.

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Page.~

Wednesday, November 21, 2008

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Jewelry

Complete Stock

1/2 OFF

10am- 12Noon
25'\'o Off
12noon-Spm

Timex
Watches

1/2 Price
Limit 2 per customer
250/0 Off
12 noon-Sp m

'Amity Billfolds
Mens &amp; Warne

1/2 Price
25% Off
· t 2noon-Spm

TOYS

at lOpm)

1/2 Price
25% Off
12noon-5 pm

Free Coffee and Soft Drink&amp;

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30% Off

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"

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�'

The Daily Sentinel

.

PageA4

OPINION

Wednesday, November

Wednesday, November.21, 2007

Obituaries

High
hopes
for
Connerly
to
end
race
dependency
The Daily Sentinel

· Believe it or not, we have
of ridiculous and desperate
attacks. A radio ad from
come a long way regarding
One United Michigan
race in America. Though
blacks have gone from
asked, "If you could have
.,
being discriminated against
prevented 9-11 from ever
happening
in
tl]e
law
to
being
victim... would you
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Kathryn
ized by laws intended to
have?" It continued, "If you
Lopez
help
them
,
there
have
been
could
have prevented
Dan Goodrich
po sitive changes . Wltrd
Katrina ... what would you
PubHsher
Connerly, head of the
have done?" Then, "On
American Civil Rights
Nov. 7, there's a national
Charlene Hoeflich
headed · for
Institute: hopes to make ballots could mark "the end disaster
General Manager-News Editor
next of an era."
more " changes
Michigan ... the elimination
November - by breaking
Conn~rly is in a good of affirmative action." The
black Americans free from position to make such grand ad argued that a "yes" on
the chains of dependency. · claims and have such high the referendum would issue
Congress shall make no law respecting an
Racial preferences are hope s. Whereas Election a "no" to equal opportunity
.establishment of religion, or prohibiting the
"the last thing that connects Day 2006 was a widespread for women and minorities.
In truth, Connerly's effort
free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom black people to the era wipeout for Republicans, he
when
blacks
were
depen'was
a
rare
winner
that
day.
is
all about equal opportuniof speech, or of the press; or the right of the
dent on · the government," His Michigan Civil Rights ty. It is about ending dispeople peaceably to assemble, and to petition Connerly told me earlier Initiative received an affir- crimination against white
thi s month. With an · eye · mative from 58 percent of males, and ending the
tire Government for a redress of grievances.
toward nailin g tr " coffin voters to amend the state stigmatization of blacks as
shut
on black victi ,.,•zation constitution to prohibit state . victims. As we head into
- The Fitst Amendment to the U.S. Constitution
by the government, he is and local government "from 2008. Connerly sees a con"
calling his Election Day discriminating against or vergence of factors pointing
2008 campaign, "S uper granting preferential treat- toward a time of real transi"
Tuesday for Equal Rights-." ment to any individual or tion for America. Barack
Today is Wednesday, Nov. 21, the 32Sth day of 2007. On that day. he is hoping for group based on race, sex, Obama, whose interracial
a victory over racial prefer- color, _ethnicity or national parents could not have gotThere are 40 days left in the year.
ences
in referendums in origin in the areas of public ten married in some states a
Today's Highlight in Hi story:
Arizona, employment, public con- few decades ago, is a seriOn Nov. 21, 1927. picketing strike~'!; at the Columbine Nebraska,
Colorado,
Missouri
and tracting and public educa- . ous Democratic contel)der
Mine in northern Colorado were fired on by state police;
Oklahoma. According to tion."
six miners were killed.
for president. Blacks and
On this date:
Connerly, victories on these · He won despite a ·barrage whites alike see the power.
In 1789; North Carolina became the 12t.h state to ratify
the U.S. Constitution.
In 1922, Rebecca L. Felton of Georgia was sworn in as
the first woman to serve in the U.S. Senate.
In 1934, the Cole Porter musical "Anything Goes," starring Ethel Merman as Reno Sweeney, opened in New York.
In 1942, the Alaska Highway was formally open~d.
In 1964, the upper level of New York's Verrazano
Narrows Bridge. which connected Brooklyn and Staten
Island, was opened.
In 1967, President Johnson signed the Air Quality Act.
In 1979, a mob attacked the U.S. Embassy in Islamabad,
Pakistan, killing two Americans.
Ten years ago: U.N. arms inspectors returned to Iraq after
Saddam Hussein's three-week standoff with the United
Nations over the presence of Americans on the team.
President Clinton signed .a law giving the FDA new powers
to speed the approval of drugs to combat a host of killer
diseases, including cancer and AIDS.
One year ago: Kathryn Johnston, 92, was killed in a hail
of bullets during a botched drug raid by Atlanta police.
Lebanon's industry minister, Pierre Gemayel. seton of
Lebanon's most prominent Christian family, was assassinated in a brazen daytime hit. A methane gas explosion at
the Halemba coal mine in southern Poland killed 23 people.
Justin Morneau won the American League's Most Valuable
Player Award.
Today's Birthdays: Baseball Hall-of-Farner Stan Musial
is 87. Actor Joseph Campanella is 80. Country singer Jean
Shepard is 74. Actor Laurence Luck.inbill is 73. Actress
Marlo Thomas is 70. Actor Rick Lenz is 68. Singer Dr.
John is 67. Actress Juliet Mills is 66. Comedian-director
Harold Ramis is 63. Television producer Marcy Carsey is
63. Actress Goldie Hawn is .62. Movie director Andrew
Davis is 61. Rock musician Lonnie Jordan (War) is 59.
Singer Livingston Taylor is 57. Actress-singer Lorna Luft is
55. Journalist Tina Brown is 54. Actress Cherry Jones is 51 .
Rock musician Brian Ritchie (The Violent Femmes) is 47 .
Gospel singer Steven Curtis Chapman is 45. Actress
· Nicollette Sheridan is 44. Singer-actres&amp; Bjork is 42.
Football player Troy Aikman is 41. Rhythm-and-blues
singer Chauncey Hannibal (BLACKstreet) is 39. Rock
musician Alex James (Blur) is 39. Baseball player Ken
Griffey Jr. is 38. Rapper Pretty Lou (Lost Boyz) is 36.
Country singer Kels; Osborn (SHeDAISY) is 33. Actress
Jena Malone is 23.
· Thought for Today: "Modesty is the only sure bait when
you angle for praise." - The 4th Earl of Chesterfield,
.English author ( 1694-1773).
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio ·
(740) 992-2156 • FAX (740) 992-2157
viww.mydallysentlnel.com

TODAY IN HISTORY

of Oprah Winfrey. Bill
Cosby, in his book with
Alvin F. Poussaint, "Come
On People: On the Path
from Victims to Victors"
(Thomas Nelson, 2007),
encou·rages
individual
responsibility and "no more
excuses."
Cosby
and
Poussaint point out that in
2002, there were 1.2 million
black-owned businesses irt
the United . States, which
marked a 45 percent
increase in five years. More
than ever, this is a land of
opportunity.
Fifty years ago this fall,
we needed the 10 I st
Airborne to get black children into their Little Rock,
Ark .. high school. America
has "come so far, " Connerly
tells me. "And now the roll"
back against government
victimization of blacks may
soon be complete." That
would be quite the Super
Tuesday.

(Kathryn Lopez is the editor of National Review
Online (www.nationalreview.com). She can be contacted at klopez@nationalreview.com.)

The Daily Sentinel
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' ..

Jim
Mullen

for will be a Christmas
party, gas is ideal for lastminute shopping . What
could be easier? It saves a
lot of running around,
which saves gas! ·
·
The brighHed gas containers already come in
Christmas red, but I' m sure
companies will start making
"gift cans" with the appropriate decorations when
barrels top $200. Birthday ·
cans, anniversary . cans and
graduation gas cans for your
favorite
student.
Remember, nothing says ,
"class" like a vintage
import .
I was surprised that this
year 's Neiman Marcus
Christmas Book featured a
$1 .5 million submarine
instead of. say, your own
personal, backyard oil field

'

and refinery. I'm sure the
submarine is a swell gift,
and certainly better than
their cheesy $73,000 . dia- ·
mond-incrusted cell phone
or the low-end · $398
"Hobo" purse. If that's all
you can afford for a purse,
why bother? You probably
don't have any money to
put in it.
But really, wouldn't a personal, backyard oil field and
refinery have been a better
gift choice for Neiman
Marcus'1 After all, how
often were you going to use
the stupid submarine? And
what's it going to run on?
Nuclear power? Of course
not. It'll need tons of that
$100-a-barrel oil.
Now a lot of people .will
say that petroleum is not a
very romantic present. Sure,
nothing _says "I love you"
like a crock pot, a gift certificate to a tattoo parlor.or
that little dressed:up hammer that lets you shatter the
window
when . you're
trapped in your car under
water. But a gas can ; e
romantic as any. We have a
saying around our house,
"Little gifts come In small

Alan Keith Haley was
released from the burdens of
this .life on Nov. 18, 2007.
He was born at 7:47 a.m. on
Nov. 9, 1980 to Lawrence
(Larry) T. Haley and Rita
E(Taylor) Haley, who survtve.
. Alan fought a courageous
)ife long battle with a very
serious congenital heart
defect. He knew that his best
hope for healing came from
his Creator, to whom he real ized he owed his very existence. When fac ed with seriAlan Keith Haley
ous decisions regarding hi s
health , he often stated that he
knew it was God who had kept him alive up to that point.
. By the grace of God, Alan was privileged to be involved
m the 4-H program for several years, showing various animals. pnma~tly sheep. God gave Alan the ability to gradu"
~te from Oh10 Valley Christian School in May of 1999. He
also' earned his license to auction and sell real estate and
was working with Evans-Moore Realty of Gallipolis for
the past few years.
•
· While his physical condition prevented him from rigorous physical labor, he very much ef!joyed the outdoors and
especially enjoyed working with, being around and talking
about cattle.
In the last years of his fife, Alan became a more serious
student of the Word of God. and was growing in his understanding of the purpose of living here on earth.
. In addition to hi s parents, Alan is survived by hi s brothe~ and sister-in-law, Kent and Alison Haley of Gallipolis,
hts two nephews. Bradley and Ethan Haley, and his maternal grandparents. Fred and Odella Taylor of Bidwell,
Ohio. Alan al so leaves behind several uncle s, aunts ani:!
cousins
.
He was preceded in death by his paternal grandparents,
Ed and Peggy Haley of Pittsburgh, PA.
The pain he experienced was untold. but the joy he
spread Wl\s felt by all.
Services will be 10 a.m., Saturday, Nov. 24, 2007 at the
First Baptist Church in Gallipolis with Pastor Ray Stagno,
Pastor Alvis Pollard. Pastor Matt Townsend, and Pastor
Ken Leedy officiating. Burial will follow in Denney
Cemetery. Friends may call at the church on Friday, Nov.
23, 2007 from 5-8 p.m.
- In lieu of flowers. the family request s contiibutions in
Alan's memory to the National Right to Life, 5 12 IOth St.
NW, Washington, DC 20004 or online at www.nrlc.org or
the Samaritan's Purse . P.O. Box 3000, Boone, NC 28607 .
Please visit www.willisfuneralhome.com to send e-mail
condolences.
•

Paul L Bush II
MIDDLEPORT - PaulL. Bush II, 61 , Middleport, died
Nov. 18, 2007, at the Veterans Administration Medical
Center in Chillicothe.,
He was a retired river boat engineer, amd a U. S. Army
vetera.n of the Vietnam War. He was born July 25, 1946,
son of the late Paul L. Bush. Sr. and Reatha Bush.
Surviving are his daughters: Kelly Bush of Georgia,
Kimberly Bush of Middleport, Reatha (Michael) Klein of
McArthur, and Elizabeth Bush of Pomeroy; a son, Jason
(Kim) Bush of Mason, W.Va., II grandchildren, a great
granddaughter, and several brothers, sisters, nieces and
nephews.
.
A Mass of Christian B.urial will be held at II -a.m. on
Saturday, Nov. 24, 2007, at Sacred Heart Church in
Pomeroy with Rev. Walter Heinz officiating. Burial will
follow at Sacred Heart Cemetery.
.
Mr. Bush's family has requested donations in memory of
Paul to be made to Sacred Heart Catholic Churcti, 161
Mulberry Ave., Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.
Arrangements are under direction of Foglesong-Tucker
Funeral Home in Mason. Friends may e-mail condolences
to fogelsongtucker@tnyway.com.

www.mydailysentinel.com

BY MARK SHERMAN
ASSOCI ATED PRESS WRITER

WASHINGTON - The
Supreme
Court
said
Tuesday it will decide
whether the District of
Columbia can ban hand guns. a case that could produce the most in -depth
examination of the constitutional right to "keep and
bear arms" in nearly 70.
years.
The justices' decision to
hear the case could make the
divisive debate over gun s an
issue in the 2008 presidential and congressional elections .
City officials said the law
is designed to reduce gurl
violence, noting that four
out of every five homicides
this year was committed
with a gun. Opponents of
the .ban pointed to the level
of violence to make their
case that Washington residents should be allowed to
have guns to protect themselves in their homes.
"This is clearly going to
be or1e of the biggest ...
cases decided this year,"
said Georgetown University
law
professor
Randy

ATHENS - The Ohio
Department of Natural
Resources
(ODNR)
Division ~· Wildlife has
launched a pilot grant program in the cities of
Coshocton and Mari etta in
an effort to assist with the
processing costs associated
with donating venison to a
food bank.
"'After evaluating the pilot
effort, we will look towards
expanding thi s program
, statewide" said James
Marshall, Assistant Chief of
the Division of Wildlife.
"Our hope is to establish a
dedicated fund to provide
money to help donate venison to food banks throughout Ohio."
The grant program awards
a $2000 subsidy grant to
help to pay the processing
fee on donated venison. The
grant money awarded by the
Division of Wildlife must be
matched with $2000 of
funds. generated or collected
by the organization that
receives the grant.
Venison that is donated to

food banks must be
processed by a state inspected and insured meat processor. Hunters wi shing to
donate their deer to a food
bank are. in most cases,
required to pay for the pro' cessing of the venison.
Organizations such a~
Farmers
and
Hunters
Feeding the Hungry (FHFH)
and
Safari
Club
International, as well as private meat processors have
helped absorb the cost of
deer processing in some
areas. The grant from the
Division of Wildlife is
intended to further help with
the costs of venison processing .
In Coshocton, the grant
was awardee to the local
chapter of FHFH. Last year
6.320 pounds of venison
. were donated to local, nonprofit food mi ssions in the
Coshocton area.
Meat
processors that participate in
the Coshocton area FHFH
program are Olde Village
Meats in Frazeysburg,
Beitzel's in Stone Creek ,

Homes

ing such a variance would
be a violation of local law,
since the village adopted
its flood plain regulation s
as a local ordinance.
According to Thoms,
excessive and imprudent
variances could disqualify
the village's resident s for
flood insurance, and could
subject the village to sanctions.
" Individual
hardship
must never be the rationale
for allowing an individual
to violate minimum flood
safety standards." Thoms

from PageA1

is all handled in a confidential way so as to avoid any
embarrassment for the chil- prepared the site before the
variance request was made
dren .
from PageA1
and
denied.
This week I00 coats were
After
reviewing a written
who needs a coat gets one. distributed to children i.n the
The whole process begins Southern and Meigs Local opinion from Christopher
when the Bank sends otit Schools, to those in Head · Thoms of the Ohio
letters and form s to the Start. aud those enrolled at Department of Natural
schools for use by the teach- Carletoil School. "There are Resources, village council
ers who observe a need. The still 30 orders to be filled," refused to grant a variance
forms with numbers and said one of the bank to Lyons and Gilkey.
Thoms, in fact, said grantsizes noted are returned, and employees.
Some of those will be purthen bank personnel begins
chased
with a check for
matching coats to kids.
Money donated is then $250 contributed this week
used to purchase coats in by the Fraternal Order of
sizes to fill the needs noted the Eagles 2171 of
from PageA1
by the teachers. The process Pomeroy.
votes will he counted at
"In Galli-a, Jackson and noon .
Meigs Counties we have
Those entering the cookie
co.
nte st are to take their
strong coalitions going on,
and in Meigs the coalition entries of six pieces to the
from PageA1
has been going more than Ohio Valley Bank anytime
seven
years at this point," from 9 a.m. to noon when
will likely be reduced and
the location would not be Tucker said.· "We're truly
consistent. Other agencies blessed to 'have the support
which have been able to we do in each county we
step back from tobacco pre- serve."
Call Tucker toll-free at J.
vention and cessation classes would likely have to pick 866-855-8702 for more
up the slack, Tucker added. information.

Grant

tias, a response to 18th-century fears of an all-powerful
national government . Gun
rights . proponents contend
the amendment gives individuals the right to keep
guns for private uses,
including self-defense .
Alan Gura, a lawyer for
Washington residents who
challenged the han, said he
was pleased that the justices
were considering the case.
Guns be regulated but not
banned, Gura said. "Thi s
isn't going to let crazy people have guns or felons have
guns," he said at a news con.ference outside the court.
Wayne LaPierre,. execu tive vice president of the
National Rifle Association.
noted that 44 state constitutions contain silme form of
gun rights, which are not
affected by the court's consideration of Washi ngton·s
restrictions. "The American
people know this is an individual right the way they
know that water quenches
their thirst," LaPierre said.
'The Second Amendment
allows no line to be drawn
between individuals and
their firearms."
Washington Mayor Adrian
M. Fenty said city officials

the judging will begin.
In the craft contest s,
entries can be brought to
Farmers Bank any tim~ the
week before judging where
they will be displayed and
then judged on Dec. 15 after
the bank closes at noon.
The winners in all three
contests will be notified by
telephone immediately after
being selected.

were grateful the Supreme
' Court took the handgun s
case and believed they
would ultimately prevail.
Fenty. speaking at a new s
conference in a District
office building. called it "the
most important court case
the Di strict of Columbia has
been involved in and possibly the most important deci- ·
sion a city or state has been
involved in for decades."
Paul Helmke. president of
the Brady Center to Prevent
Gun Violence, said the
Supreme Court · should
"reverse a clearly erroneous
decision and make it clear
tl)at the Constitution does
not prevent communitie s
from having the gun law s
they believe are needed to
protect public safety."
Barnett, the Georgetown
professor, said that even if
the court decides tht~re is an
individual right to have
guns, it still could determine
that broad restrictions short
of a ban are legal.

Community
Calendar
Clubs and
organizations

and Young 's Locker in
Wednesday, Nov. 28
Danvillti.
POMEROY - OhKan
In Marietta, where there is Coin Club .will meet at 7
already a waiting list of food p.m. at the Pomeroy
pantries wishing to receive Library. Public welcome.
venison, the subsidy grant
was awarded to the Marietta
Community Foundation.
The Community Foundation
·Sunday, Nov. 25
along with the Mid-Ohio
ALBANY - . Carpenter
Valley chapter of Whitetail s Baptist Church will host a
Unlimited has provided the wild game dinner and confunds to match the Divi sion cert by "Dayspring." 6-8
of Wildlife grant. Hunters p.m . Public invited.
wishing to donate venison in
Washington County can take .
deer to Warren and Son
Meat
Proces sing
in
Whipple.
For more information on
donating venison , visit
www.FHFH.org.
POMEROY
-The
Coshocton
and
Washington counties · are Parish Shop at the Mulberry
typically in the top ten coun- Community Center will
ties of the number of deer have a $1 bag clothing sale
harvested in Ohio. In 2005 beginning Monday.
the cities of Coshocton and
Marietta passed an ordinance to.allow for restricted
archery hunting within city
MIDDLEPORT - The
limits.
Corner Restaurant
in
Middleport will serve a free
Thanksgiving dinner from
said.
II a.m. to 2 p.m. on
Meanwhile , the unusual Thursday.
looking mobile home on
Ash Street is a good example of what can happen
S~f11NG :JP.I I FV
when guidelines are folj ~(
&gt;
,
lowed to the letter,
Building In spector Randall
Mullins.

Church events

Local Briefs
Clothing sale

Free dinner

7

&lt; l .! I

' .
~Y~
o.1c:i..

~

OPEN

~~~

'((

uJ

&gt;

6:30 PM FOR EVENING SHOWS &amp;
1UO PM FOR FRI SAT&amp; SUN
MATINEES
TUES. IS BARGAIN NIGHT

1--~ l\ Ctf'1;

s

1 ,.\

I

I'

'

\

..

~

.

).&gt;"

·-1

"'v / •• ,. . £;;'

----···-··-····"'········

I'ERmR\tJSE; ~IHS( ·n:nu:

River City Players
"Hooray for
Hollywood"
Sat., Nov. 24, 2007
7:30
Ohio Valley Symphony
Christmas Show
Sat, Dec. 1, 2001
Box OHice: 428 2nd Ave.
Gallipolis, OH (740) 446-ARTS

WONDER
EMPORIUM (G)

OPENING NOV. 30, 2007

BELLA

P:;p~~~~~"""""~

'lf(JU/1, e~ Qi/J

~

I
~

J

Stop in and see our selection of:

Middleport

.

• Sch~ofJacketsJ
• T-shuts
• ·Hoodies
.

J

N Second Ave.

J

b.~*'~;tr~~~~~"Lr~~
-..- ---

Middleport Church of Christ
presenlsJheir annual
Dinner Theater

"In the Fullness of Time"

1. Gym Bags
l •Back Packs
l •Ball Caps

(Jim Mullen is the auJiwt ·
of "It Takes a Village Idiot;
Complicating the Simplt:
Life" and "Baby's First
Tattoo. " You can reach him
at jim_mullen@myway.com.)
- ------- · --~·----

Barnett. ·•Jt is one of the
very few times when the
Sup'reme Court has the
opportunity to interpret a
provision
of
the
Constitution ... unencumbered by previous S6preme
Court rulings."
The
government
of
Washington. D.C., is asking
the court to uphold its 31·year ·ban on handgun owner·
snip in the face of a federal
appe'al s court ruling that
struck down the ban as
incompatible with the
Second
Amendment.
Tuesday's announcement
was widely expected, especially after both the District
and the man who challenged
the handgun ban asked for
the high court review.
The main issue before the
justices .is whether the
Second Amendment protects an individual's right to
own guns or instead merely
sets forth the collective right
of states to maintain militias. The former interpretation would permit fewer
restrictions on gun ownership.
Gun-control advocates
say the Second Amendment
was intended to ensure that
states could maintain mili-

Gram program assists fnod pantrJ donadons

Contests .

packages, and no one wants
a little gift." You give someone a 5-gallon container full
of gas - they know they've
been gifted. · ·
·
'Perhaps it's the world's
largest diamond,' they will
think. Or a waJI safe. Or a
lifetime supply of hair gel.
And when they shake it,
few people can guess what's
inside - unless you've forgotten to screw on the cap
the enti(e way. (Let me tell
you, that is a hard smell to
get out of a sofa, no matter
what you do.)
So why . not think outside
the gift box this Christmas,
and think inside the gas
container. The next time
you're at the pump, instead
of thinking how mucl]
money you're pumping out
of your bank account and
into your car, you' llthink of
all the joy you've brought to
your friends and family.
And OPEC.

The Daily Sentinel • Page A5

.Supreme Court to·decide challenge
to .District of Columbia handgun ban

Coats

The gift ofgas
Wi!h oil close to $100 a
barrel and Christmas right
around the comer, gasoline
may turn out to be this
year's Tickle Me Elmo. The
most popular "Santa" may
be tpe person who shows up
with a gift-wrapped, 5-gallon jerry can of regular, not
the guy with the latest iPod
or the smallest cell phone·.
And oil makes a great present for everyone - granny
or grandk id . boss or
employee, rich or poor.
What do you get for the
person who has everything?
Gas! What do you get that
hard-to-shop-for relative?
Gas! What do you bring for
the host of Christmas dinner? Candles·) A boule of
wine? Homemtide cookies''
Flowers? Why not 5 gallons
of gas?' (Just a note · from
personal experience. make
sure your host doesn't put it
near the open,flame chafing
·
dishes.)
No one returns gas the
day after Christmas, you
can give as much or as little
as you wanl, and you can do
all your shopping in one
place. Say you find out that
someone .you didn't shop

Alan Keith Haley

1

LETTERS TO THE
E.DITOR
'Letters io 'the editor are welcome. They should be less
!han 300 words. All letters are subject to editing, must be
)"igned, and include address and telephone number. No
:unsigned letters will be published. Leuers should be in
.good raste, addressing issues, not persmzalities. Letters of
!hanks to organizations and individuals will not be accept- ·
:erl for publication.
·

21,2007

Friday, December 14th
and Saturday, December 15
Middleport Church of Christ
Family Life Center
Dinner at6 pm. Program to follow
Tickets $5 pn person
Available at Farmers Bank
In l'om.roy and Middleport Church of Christ
Ticket Sale begins Nov. 26th
Proceeds to benelit Ohio Valley l:hristian Academy
Child """' available for ages 5 &amp; under
Call 992-1914 for information

•

•

�'

The Daily Sentinel

.

PageA4

OPINION

Wednesday, November

Wednesday, November.21, 2007

Obituaries

High
hopes
for
Connerly
to
end
race
dependency
The Daily Sentinel

· Believe it or not, we have
of ridiculous and desperate
attacks. A radio ad from
come a long way regarding
One United Michigan
race in America. Though
blacks have gone from
asked, "If you could have
.,
being discriminated against
prevented 9-11 from ever
happening
in
tl]e
law
to
being
victim... would you
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Kathryn
ized by laws intended to
have?" It continued, "If you
Lopez
help
them
,
there
have
been
could
have prevented
Dan Goodrich
po sitive changes . Wltrd
Katrina ... what would you
PubHsher
Connerly, head of the
have done?" Then, "On
American Civil Rights
Nov. 7, there's a national
Charlene Hoeflich
headed · for
Institute: hopes to make ballots could mark "the end disaster
General Manager-News Editor
next of an era."
more " changes
Michigan ... the elimination
November - by breaking
Conn~rly is in a good of affirmative action." The
black Americans free from position to make such grand ad argued that a "yes" on
the chains of dependency. · claims and have such high the referendum would issue
Congress shall make no law respecting an
Racial preferences are hope s. Whereas Election a "no" to equal opportunity
.establishment of religion, or prohibiting the
"the last thing that connects Day 2006 was a widespread for women and minorities.
In truth, Connerly's effort
free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom black people to the era wipeout for Republicans, he
when
blacks
were
depen'was
a
rare
winner
that
day.
is
all about equal opportuniof speech, or of the press; or the right of the
dent on · the government," His Michigan Civil Rights ty. It is about ending dispeople peaceably to assemble, and to petition Connerly told me earlier Initiative received an affir- crimination against white
thi s month. With an · eye · mative from 58 percent of males, and ending the
tire Government for a redress of grievances.
toward nailin g tr " coffin voters to amend the state stigmatization of blacks as
shut
on black victi ,.,•zation constitution to prohibit state . victims. As we head into
- The Fitst Amendment to the U.S. Constitution
by the government, he is and local government "from 2008. Connerly sees a con"
calling his Election Day discriminating against or vergence of factors pointing
2008 campaign, "S uper granting preferential treat- toward a time of real transi"
Tuesday for Equal Rights-." ment to any individual or tion for America. Barack
Today is Wednesday, Nov. 21, the 32Sth day of 2007. On that day. he is hoping for group based on race, sex, Obama, whose interracial
a victory over racial prefer- color, _ethnicity or national parents could not have gotThere are 40 days left in the year.
ences
in referendums in origin in the areas of public ten married in some states a
Today's Highlight in Hi story:
Arizona, employment, public con- few decades ago, is a seriOn Nov. 21, 1927. picketing strike~'!; at the Columbine Nebraska,
Colorado,
Missouri
and tracting and public educa- . ous Democratic contel)der
Mine in northern Colorado were fired on by state police;
Oklahoma. According to tion."
six miners were killed.
for president. Blacks and
On this date:
Connerly, victories on these · He won despite a ·barrage whites alike see the power.
In 1789; North Carolina became the 12t.h state to ratify
the U.S. Constitution.
In 1922, Rebecca L. Felton of Georgia was sworn in as
the first woman to serve in the U.S. Senate.
In 1934, the Cole Porter musical "Anything Goes," starring Ethel Merman as Reno Sweeney, opened in New York.
In 1942, the Alaska Highway was formally open~d.
In 1964, the upper level of New York's Verrazano
Narrows Bridge. which connected Brooklyn and Staten
Island, was opened.
In 1967, President Johnson signed the Air Quality Act.
In 1979, a mob attacked the U.S. Embassy in Islamabad,
Pakistan, killing two Americans.
Ten years ago: U.N. arms inspectors returned to Iraq after
Saddam Hussein's three-week standoff with the United
Nations over the presence of Americans on the team.
President Clinton signed .a law giving the FDA new powers
to speed the approval of drugs to combat a host of killer
diseases, including cancer and AIDS.
One year ago: Kathryn Johnston, 92, was killed in a hail
of bullets during a botched drug raid by Atlanta police.
Lebanon's industry minister, Pierre Gemayel. seton of
Lebanon's most prominent Christian family, was assassinated in a brazen daytime hit. A methane gas explosion at
the Halemba coal mine in southern Poland killed 23 people.
Justin Morneau won the American League's Most Valuable
Player Award.
Today's Birthdays: Baseball Hall-of-Farner Stan Musial
is 87. Actor Joseph Campanella is 80. Country singer Jean
Shepard is 74. Actor Laurence Luck.inbill is 73. Actress
Marlo Thomas is 70. Actor Rick Lenz is 68. Singer Dr.
John is 67. Actress Juliet Mills is 66. Comedian-director
Harold Ramis is 63. Television producer Marcy Carsey is
63. Actress Goldie Hawn is .62. Movie director Andrew
Davis is 61. Rock musician Lonnie Jordan (War) is 59.
Singer Livingston Taylor is 57. Actress-singer Lorna Luft is
55. Journalist Tina Brown is 54. Actress Cherry Jones is 51 .
Rock musician Brian Ritchie (The Violent Femmes) is 47 .
Gospel singer Steven Curtis Chapman is 45. Actress
· Nicollette Sheridan is 44. Singer-actres&amp; Bjork is 42.
Football player Troy Aikman is 41. Rhythm-and-blues
singer Chauncey Hannibal (BLACKstreet) is 39. Rock
musician Alex James (Blur) is 39. Baseball player Ken
Griffey Jr. is 38. Rapper Pretty Lou (Lost Boyz) is 36.
Country singer Kels; Osborn (SHeDAISY) is 33. Actress
Jena Malone is 23.
· Thought for Today: "Modesty is the only sure bait when
you angle for praise." - The 4th Earl of Chesterfield,
.English author ( 1694-1773).
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio ·
(740) 992-2156 • FAX (740) 992-2157
viww.mydallysentlnel.com

TODAY IN HISTORY

of Oprah Winfrey. Bill
Cosby, in his book with
Alvin F. Poussaint, "Come
On People: On the Path
from Victims to Victors"
(Thomas Nelson, 2007),
encou·rages
individual
responsibility and "no more
excuses."
Cosby
and
Poussaint point out that in
2002, there were 1.2 million
black-owned businesses irt
the United . States, which
marked a 45 percent
increase in five years. More
than ever, this is a land of
opportunity.
Fifty years ago this fall,
we needed the 10 I st
Airborne to get black children into their Little Rock,
Ark .. high school. America
has "come so far, " Connerly
tells me. "And now the roll"
back against government
victimization of blacks may
soon be complete." That
would be quite the Super
Tuesday.

(Kathryn Lopez is the editor of National Review
Online (www.nationalreview.com). She can be contacted at klopez@nationalreview.com.)

The Daily Sentinel
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' ..

Jim
Mullen

for will be a Christmas
party, gas is ideal for lastminute shopping . What
could be easier? It saves a
lot of running around,
which saves gas! ·
·
The brighHed gas containers already come in
Christmas red, but I' m sure
companies will start making
"gift cans" with the appropriate decorations when
barrels top $200. Birthday ·
cans, anniversary . cans and
graduation gas cans for your
favorite
student.
Remember, nothing says ,
"class" like a vintage
import .
I was surprised that this
year 's Neiman Marcus
Christmas Book featured a
$1 .5 million submarine
instead of. say, your own
personal, backyard oil field

'

and refinery. I'm sure the
submarine is a swell gift,
and certainly better than
their cheesy $73,000 . dia- ·
mond-incrusted cell phone
or the low-end · $398
"Hobo" purse. If that's all
you can afford for a purse,
why bother? You probably
don't have any money to
put in it.
But really, wouldn't a personal, backyard oil field and
refinery have been a better
gift choice for Neiman
Marcus'1 After all, how
often were you going to use
the stupid submarine? And
what's it going to run on?
Nuclear power? Of course
not. It'll need tons of that
$100-a-barrel oil.
Now a lot of people .will
say that petroleum is not a
very romantic present. Sure,
nothing _says "I love you"
like a crock pot, a gift certificate to a tattoo parlor.or
that little dressed:up hammer that lets you shatter the
window
when . you're
trapped in your car under
water. But a gas can ; e
romantic as any. We have a
saying around our house,
"Little gifts come In small

Alan Keith Haley was
released from the burdens of
this .life on Nov. 18, 2007.
He was born at 7:47 a.m. on
Nov. 9, 1980 to Lawrence
(Larry) T. Haley and Rita
E(Taylor) Haley, who survtve.
. Alan fought a courageous
)ife long battle with a very
serious congenital heart
defect. He knew that his best
hope for healing came from
his Creator, to whom he real ized he owed his very existence. When fac ed with seriAlan Keith Haley
ous decisions regarding hi s
health , he often stated that he
knew it was God who had kept him alive up to that point.
. By the grace of God, Alan was privileged to be involved
m the 4-H program for several years, showing various animals. pnma~tly sheep. God gave Alan the ability to gradu"
~te from Oh10 Valley Christian School in May of 1999. He
also' earned his license to auction and sell real estate and
was working with Evans-Moore Realty of Gallipolis for
the past few years.
•
· While his physical condition prevented him from rigorous physical labor, he very much ef!joyed the outdoors and
especially enjoyed working with, being around and talking
about cattle.
In the last years of his fife, Alan became a more serious
student of the Word of God. and was growing in his understanding of the purpose of living here on earth.
. In addition to hi s parents, Alan is survived by hi s brothe~ and sister-in-law, Kent and Alison Haley of Gallipolis,
hts two nephews. Bradley and Ethan Haley, and his maternal grandparents. Fred and Odella Taylor of Bidwell,
Ohio. Alan al so leaves behind several uncle s, aunts ani:!
cousins
.
He was preceded in death by his paternal grandparents,
Ed and Peggy Haley of Pittsburgh, PA.
The pain he experienced was untold. but the joy he
spread Wl\s felt by all.
Services will be 10 a.m., Saturday, Nov. 24, 2007 at the
First Baptist Church in Gallipolis with Pastor Ray Stagno,
Pastor Alvis Pollard. Pastor Matt Townsend, and Pastor
Ken Leedy officiating. Burial will follow in Denney
Cemetery. Friends may call at the church on Friday, Nov.
23, 2007 from 5-8 p.m.
- In lieu of flowers. the family request s contiibutions in
Alan's memory to the National Right to Life, 5 12 IOth St.
NW, Washington, DC 20004 or online at www.nrlc.org or
the Samaritan's Purse . P.O. Box 3000, Boone, NC 28607 .
Please visit www.willisfuneralhome.com to send e-mail
condolences.
•

Paul L Bush II
MIDDLEPORT - PaulL. Bush II, 61 , Middleport, died
Nov. 18, 2007, at the Veterans Administration Medical
Center in Chillicothe.,
He was a retired river boat engineer, amd a U. S. Army
vetera.n of the Vietnam War. He was born July 25, 1946,
son of the late Paul L. Bush. Sr. and Reatha Bush.
Surviving are his daughters: Kelly Bush of Georgia,
Kimberly Bush of Middleport, Reatha (Michael) Klein of
McArthur, and Elizabeth Bush of Pomeroy; a son, Jason
(Kim) Bush of Mason, W.Va., II grandchildren, a great
granddaughter, and several brothers, sisters, nieces and
nephews.
.
A Mass of Christian B.urial will be held at II -a.m. on
Saturday, Nov. 24, 2007, at Sacred Heart Church in
Pomeroy with Rev. Walter Heinz officiating. Burial will
follow at Sacred Heart Cemetery.
.
Mr. Bush's family has requested donations in memory of
Paul to be made to Sacred Heart Catholic Churcti, 161
Mulberry Ave., Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.
Arrangements are under direction of Foglesong-Tucker
Funeral Home in Mason. Friends may e-mail condolences
to fogelsongtucker@tnyway.com.

www.mydailysentinel.com

BY MARK SHERMAN
ASSOCI ATED PRESS WRITER

WASHINGTON - The
Supreme
Court
said
Tuesday it will decide
whether the District of
Columbia can ban hand guns. a case that could produce the most in -depth
examination of the constitutional right to "keep and
bear arms" in nearly 70.
years.
The justices' decision to
hear the case could make the
divisive debate over gun s an
issue in the 2008 presidential and congressional elections .
City officials said the law
is designed to reduce gurl
violence, noting that four
out of every five homicides
this year was committed
with a gun. Opponents of
the .ban pointed to the level
of violence to make their
case that Washington residents should be allowed to
have guns to protect themselves in their homes.
"This is clearly going to
be or1e of the biggest ...
cases decided this year,"
said Georgetown University
law
professor
Randy

ATHENS - The Ohio
Department of Natural
Resources
(ODNR)
Division ~· Wildlife has
launched a pilot grant program in the cities of
Coshocton and Mari etta in
an effort to assist with the
processing costs associated
with donating venison to a
food bank.
"'After evaluating the pilot
effort, we will look towards
expanding thi s program
, statewide" said James
Marshall, Assistant Chief of
the Division of Wildlife.
"Our hope is to establish a
dedicated fund to provide
money to help donate venison to food banks throughout Ohio."
The grant program awards
a $2000 subsidy grant to
help to pay the processing
fee on donated venison. The
grant money awarded by the
Division of Wildlife must be
matched with $2000 of
funds. generated or collected
by the organization that
receives the grant.
Venison that is donated to

food banks must be
processed by a state inspected and insured meat processor. Hunters wi shing to
donate their deer to a food
bank are. in most cases,
required to pay for the pro' cessing of the venison.
Organizations such a~
Farmers
and
Hunters
Feeding the Hungry (FHFH)
and
Safari
Club
International, as well as private meat processors have
helped absorb the cost of
deer processing in some
areas. The grant from the
Division of Wildlife is
intended to further help with
the costs of venison processing .
In Coshocton, the grant
was awardee to the local
chapter of FHFH. Last year
6.320 pounds of venison
. were donated to local, nonprofit food mi ssions in the
Coshocton area.
Meat
processors that participate in
the Coshocton area FHFH
program are Olde Village
Meats in Frazeysburg,
Beitzel's in Stone Creek ,

Homes

ing such a variance would
be a violation of local law,
since the village adopted
its flood plain regulation s
as a local ordinance.
According to Thoms,
excessive and imprudent
variances could disqualify
the village's resident s for
flood insurance, and could
subject the village to sanctions.
" Individual
hardship
must never be the rationale
for allowing an individual
to violate minimum flood
safety standards." Thoms

from PageA1

is all handled in a confidential way so as to avoid any
embarrassment for the chil- prepared the site before the
variance request was made
dren .
from PageA1
and
denied.
This week I00 coats were
After
reviewing a written
who needs a coat gets one. distributed to children i.n the
The whole process begins Southern and Meigs Local opinion from Christopher
when the Bank sends otit Schools, to those in Head · Thoms of the Ohio
letters and form s to the Start. aud those enrolled at Department of Natural
schools for use by the teach- Carletoil School. "There are Resources, village council
ers who observe a need. The still 30 orders to be filled," refused to grant a variance
forms with numbers and said one of the bank to Lyons and Gilkey.
Thoms, in fact, said grantsizes noted are returned, and employees.
Some of those will be purthen bank personnel begins
chased
with a check for
matching coats to kids.
Money donated is then $250 contributed this week
used to purchase coats in by the Fraternal Order of
sizes to fill the needs noted the Eagles 2171 of
from PageA1
by the teachers. The process Pomeroy.
votes will he counted at
"In Galli-a, Jackson and noon .
Meigs Counties we have
Those entering the cookie
co.
nte st are to take their
strong coalitions going on,
and in Meigs the coalition entries of six pieces to the
from PageA1
has been going more than Ohio Valley Bank anytime
seven
years at this point," from 9 a.m. to noon when
will likely be reduced and
the location would not be Tucker said.· "We're truly
consistent. Other agencies blessed to 'have the support
which have been able to we do in each county we
step back from tobacco pre- serve."
Call Tucker toll-free at J.
vention and cessation classes would likely have to pick 866-855-8702 for more
up the slack, Tucker added. information.

Grant

tias, a response to 18th-century fears of an all-powerful
national government . Gun
rights . proponents contend
the amendment gives individuals the right to keep
guns for private uses,
including self-defense .
Alan Gura, a lawyer for
Washington residents who
challenged the han, said he
was pleased that the justices
were considering the case.
Guns be regulated but not
banned, Gura said. "Thi s
isn't going to let crazy people have guns or felons have
guns," he said at a news con.ference outside the court.
Wayne LaPierre,. execu tive vice president of the
National Rifle Association.
noted that 44 state constitutions contain silme form of
gun rights, which are not
affected by the court's consideration of Washi ngton·s
restrictions. "The American
people know this is an individual right the way they
know that water quenches
their thirst," LaPierre said.
'The Second Amendment
allows no line to be drawn
between individuals and
their firearms."
Washington Mayor Adrian
M. Fenty said city officials

the judging will begin.
In the craft contest s,
entries can be brought to
Farmers Bank any tim~ the
week before judging where
they will be displayed and
then judged on Dec. 15 after
the bank closes at noon.
The winners in all three
contests will be notified by
telephone immediately after
being selected.

were grateful the Supreme
' Court took the handgun s
case and believed they
would ultimately prevail.
Fenty. speaking at a new s
conference in a District
office building. called it "the
most important court case
the Di strict of Columbia has
been involved in and possibly the most important deci- ·
sion a city or state has been
involved in for decades."
Paul Helmke. president of
the Brady Center to Prevent
Gun Violence, said the
Supreme Court · should
"reverse a clearly erroneous
decision and make it clear
tl)at the Constitution does
not prevent communitie s
from having the gun law s
they believe are needed to
protect public safety."
Barnett, the Georgetown
professor, said that even if
the court decides tht~re is an
individual right to have
guns, it still could determine
that broad restrictions short
of a ban are legal.

Community
Calendar
Clubs and
organizations

and Young 's Locker in
Wednesday, Nov. 28
Danvillti.
POMEROY - OhKan
In Marietta, where there is Coin Club .will meet at 7
already a waiting list of food p.m. at the Pomeroy
pantries wishing to receive Library. Public welcome.
venison, the subsidy grant
was awarded to the Marietta
Community Foundation.
The Community Foundation
·Sunday, Nov. 25
along with the Mid-Ohio
ALBANY - . Carpenter
Valley chapter of Whitetail s Baptist Church will host a
Unlimited has provided the wild game dinner and confunds to match the Divi sion cert by "Dayspring." 6-8
of Wildlife grant. Hunters p.m . Public invited.
wishing to donate venison in
Washington County can take .
deer to Warren and Son
Meat
Proces sing
in
Whipple.
For more information on
donating venison , visit
www.FHFH.org.
POMEROY
-The
Coshocton
and
Washington counties · are Parish Shop at the Mulberry
typically in the top ten coun- Community Center will
ties of the number of deer have a $1 bag clothing sale
harvested in Ohio. In 2005 beginning Monday.
the cities of Coshocton and
Marietta passed an ordinance to.allow for restricted
archery hunting within city
MIDDLEPORT - The
limits.
Corner Restaurant
in
Middleport will serve a free
Thanksgiving dinner from
said.
II a.m. to 2 p.m. on
Meanwhile , the unusual Thursday.
looking mobile home on
Ash Street is a good example of what can happen
S~f11NG :JP.I I FV
when guidelines are folj ~(
&gt;
,
lowed to the letter,
Building In spector Randall
Mullins.

Church events

Local Briefs
Clothing sale

Free dinner

7

&lt; l .! I

' .
~Y~
o.1c:i..

~

OPEN

~~~

'((

uJ

&gt;

6:30 PM FOR EVENING SHOWS &amp;
1UO PM FOR FRI SAT&amp; SUN
MATINEES
TUES. IS BARGAIN NIGHT

1--~ l\ Ctf'1;

s

1 ,.\

I

I'

'

\

..

~

.

).&gt;"

·-1

"'v / •• ,. . £;;'

----···-··-····"'········

I'ERmR\tJSE; ~IHS( ·n:nu:

River City Players
"Hooray for
Hollywood"
Sat., Nov. 24, 2007
7:30
Ohio Valley Symphony
Christmas Show
Sat, Dec. 1, 2001
Box OHice: 428 2nd Ave.
Gallipolis, OH (740) 446-ARTS

WONDER
EMPORIUM (G)

OPENING NOV. 30, 2007

BELLA

P:;p~~~~~"""""~

'lf(JU/1, e~ Qi/J

~

I
~

J

Stop in and see our selection of:

Middleport

.

• Sch~ofJacketsJ
• T-shuts
• ·Hoodies
.

J

N Second Ave.

J

b.~*'~;tr~~~~~"Lr~~
-..- ---

Middleport Church of Christ
presenlsJheir annual
Dinner Theater

"In the Fullness of Time"

1. Gym Bags
l •Back Packs
l •Ball Caps

(Jim Mullen is the auJiwt ·
of "It Takes a Village Idiot;
Complicating the Simplt:
Life" and "Baby's First
Tattoo. " You can reach him
at jim_mullen@myway.com.)
- ------- · --~·----

Barnett. ·•Jt is one of the
very few times when the
Sup'reme Court has the
opportunity to interpret a
provision
of
the
Constitution ... unencumbered by previous S6preme
Court rulings."
The
government
of
Washington. D.C., is asking
the court to uphold its 31·year ·ban on handgun owner·
snip in the face of a federal
appe'al s court ruling that
struck down the ban as
incompatible with the
Second
Amendment.
Tuesday's announcement
was widely expected, especially after both the District
and the man who challenged
the handgun ban asked for
the high court review.
The main issue before the
justices .is whether the
Second Amendment protects an individual's right to
own guns or instead merely
sets forth the collective right
of states to maintain militias. The former interpretation would permit fewer
restrictions on gun ownership.
Gun-control advocates
say the Second Amendment
was intended to ensure that
states could maintain mili-

Gram program assists fnod pantrJ donadons

Contests .

packages, and no one wants
a little gift." You give someone a 5-gallon container full
of gas - they know they've
been gifted. · ·
·
'Perhaps it's the world's
largest diamond,' they will
think. Or a waJI safe. Or a
lifetime supply of hair gel.
And when they shake it,
few people can guess what's
inside - unless you've forgotten to screw on the cap
the enti(e way. (Let me tell
you, that is a hard smell to
get out of a sofa, no matter
what you do.)
So why . not think outside
the gift box this Christmas,
and think inside the gas
container. The next time
you're at the pump, instead
of thinking how mucl]
money you're pumping out
of your bank account and
into your car, you' llthink of
all the joy you've brought to
your friends and family.
And OPEC.

The Daily Sentinel • Page A5

.Supreme Court to·decide challenge
to .District of Columbia handgun ban

Coats

The gift ofgas
Wi!h oil close to $100 a
barrel and Christmas right
around the comer, gasoline
may turn out to be this
year's Tickle Me Elmo. The
most popular "Santa" may
be tpe person who shows up
with a gift-wrapped, 5-gallon jerry can of regular, not
the guy with the latest iPod
or the smallest cell phone·.
And oil makes a great present for everyone - granny
or grandk id . boss or
employee, rich or poor.
What do you get for the
person who has everything?
Gas! What do you get that
hard-to-shop-for relative?
Gas! What do you bring for
the host of Christmas dinner? Candles·) A boule of
wine? Homemtide cookies''
Flowers? Why not 5 gallons
of gas?' (Just a note · from
personal experience. make
sure your host doesn't put it
near the open,flame chafing
·
dishes.)
No one returns gas the
day after Christmas, you
can give as much or as little
as you wanl, and you can do
all your shopping in one
place. Say you find out that
someone .you didn't shop

Alan Keith Haley

1

LETTERS TO THE
E.DITOR
'Letters io 'the editor are welcome. They should be less
!han 300 words. All letters are subject to editing, must be
)"igned, and include address and telephone number. No
:unsigned letters will be published. Leuers should be in
.good raste, addressing issues, not persmzalities. Letters of
!hanks to organizations and individuals will not be accept- ·
:erl for publication.
·

21,2007

Friday, December 14th
and Saturday, December 15
Middleport Church of Christ
Family Life Center
Dinner at6 pm. Program to follow
Tickets $5 pn person
Available at Farmers Bank
In l'om.roy and Middleport Church of Christ
Ticket Sale begins Nov. 26th
Proceeds to benelit Ohio Valley l:hristian Academy
Child """' available for ages 5 &amp; under
Call 992-1914 for information

•

•

�PageA6

BYTHEBEND
ANNIE'S MAILBOX
Meigs
educator
attends
Sometimes help begins with self
teachers institute on art

The Daily Sentinel

BY KATHY MITCHELL
AND MARCY SUGAR

Dear Annie: My hu sband
comes from a family with a
hi storv of manic depression, inood di sorders, · s ui~
cides. addictions. etc. He
self-medicates· bv overeating. gambling.- watching
too much TV and wanting a
Jut of sex. It is exceptionally bad 'in the winter. and I
am o.n edge all the time , not
knowing what kind of
mood he will be in.
I go to therapy tn cope .. I
have repeatedly told h1s
cardiologist. famil y physi cian and sleep .disorder .
doctor about his beha' ior
and hi s family hi story. but
ihey ignore me or say the y
can't do anything if my hu sband won't .admit he's
d'epressed. He does. of
course. put·on a good front
to others.
Why dO all the experts
say "tell your family docior" about a loved one's
problems when the doctors
refuse to deal with it'' Do
you have any suggestions?
_ MSFM
Dear MSFM: A doctor
~an only do so much . If
your husband refu ses to
admit he may have mental
health issues, he .is not likeIy to accept help from anyone. The best you can do is
get help on your own, and
you already are doing this.
Discuss the situation with
your therapist so you can
determine. whether there "
any aspect of your. husband's behavior that you
can work on at home and, if
not, what the best course of
action is for YOU. Also
contact
the
National
Alliance on Mental Illness
(nami.org) at 1-800-950NAMI (1-800-950-6264)
for support and sugges-

tiuns .
Dear Annie: Rece ntly,
the parents of two of my
closest
friends
have
divorced. This has caused
me to look at my own parents, who have been married over 30 vears. Mom
and Dad are wonderful peopic who gave my brother
and me a loving childhood.
Yet, 1\e seen a growing
strain in their relationship.
When ever they talk to
me. they end up griping
ahDut 1he other one at some
p~ nnl in the C&lt;?anv.~rsation . I
te.t lll.e ventm, trustt.ttlon
can be he.a lth y, but I honestly. c'an I re member the
last ume e1ther of them smd
anyllung po stttve about the
Ill her. For years. 1 have sugges.ted they talk through
th e1r problems and gnevanccs 1nstead ot sweepmg
them lll~der the rug , bill
they don t l1sten. They conlinually . throw themselves
further mto the1r se parate
l1vcs as the nft grow s
wider. Most of my mother's
ln ends ~re 111 unhappy marria&amp;es. and I'm . afra!d she
believes th1s snuat1on 1s
normal.
I want. to talk to them
abo~t thetr marnage, but I
don ·t know how to do 11.
Both of ~hem are ~ery po?r
commumcators. I ll_l afratd
talkmg could make It worse
and they will resent me fo~
bnngmg It up. Nenher ot
them would cons1der marriage counseling. I want
them to be happy. !"ow can
I help? - Worrted Out
West
Dear Worried: Some
long -married couples get
into the habit of griping,
and you shouldn't jump to
the conclusion that they are
looking to divorce. But the
next time Mom disparages
your father, ask "Are you

Wednesday, November 21, 2007

unhappy'&gt;'' The tjuestion
alone may force her to
think carefully about the
relationship ; and more
importantly. make her see
the impact her complaints
are having on you. (You
can do the same with your
father.)
Dear Annie: Thi s is for
"The First Wife ," who
asked if the relation ship
between a parent and child
suffers when the parent
abandons the marriage. In
my case. divorce was a
godsend for the relationship between my ex and our
sons .

WASHINGTON ·
Jennifer E. Tesar from
Meigs Middle School in
Pomeroy, wa s among 50
educators attending the
National Gallery of Art' s
2007 Teacher In stitute on
17th century Dutch art held
in Washington, DC ,
The ·two six-day seminars
brought together teachers of
art, social studies, and related subjects from 25
American states and South
Australia. Focusing on the
Gallery's collection of 17th
century Dutch art , they
explored ways , including
image-enhanced podcasting,
to integrate art objects into
their classrooms.
Generous grants from the
William Randolph Hearst
Foundation. Annetta J.
Coffelt and Rubert M.
Coffelt Jr. , the Park
Foundation, the Geraldine
R. Dodge Foundation, and
the Sara Shallenberger
Brown Fund have provided
inva1uable support for the
Teacher Institute.
The program, through
lectures. gallery talks, dis-

Before the divorce, my
husband would refuse to
come home at a reasonable
hour and basically ignored
the
boys. Once
we
divorced. he actually made
an invest ment in the time
he spent with them. It
forced him to be a "handson" father when he used to
believe parenting was all
"women's work.~' He actually started coming to their
ball games and school
function s. - Happier ExWife
Dear Ex-Wife: We ' re
sorry it took such a huge
knock in the head for your
husband to wake up, but
better late than never.
Annie's Mailbox is writ··
telr by Kathy Mitchell and
Marcy 'Sugar, longtime editors of the Ann Landers
c(}lumn. Please e-mail
your questions to anniesmailhox@comcast.net, or
write to: Annie's Mailbox,
P.O. Box II8190, Chicago,
IL 60611. To filld out more
about Annie's Mailbox,
and read features by other
Creators Syndicate writers
and cartoo11ists, visit the
Creators Syndicate Web
page at www.creators.com.

cussion s, and hands-on
activities, emphasized direct
encounters with original
objects. Teachers studied
works by Dutch masters
such as Johannes Vermeer,
Rembrandt va1.1 Rijn, Gerard
ter Borch, Frans Hals. Judith
Leyster, and Pieter de
Hooch. By presenting these
paintings within the bro~der
social context of I 7thcentury Dutch life, these seminars
were particularly appropriate for teachers of history
and social studies. as well as
0~ studio art and art history.
Many of the paintings
discussed were created for a
newly afflu ent middle t:lass.
From the beginning of the
17th century and the de facto
. peace with Spain. Holland
flourished as a nation of seafaring traders. Their prosperity soon spread throughout the _Netherlands and
helped shift the balance of
economic and politi cal
power
from
the
Mediterranean to northern
Europe: Qutch society
became known as the most
urbanized, international. and

.

-- ~~

_ERS HFAR

BY

oauio

WASHINGTON - The
)lousing collapse and credit
crisis will slow economic
growth and nudge up
unemployment next year,
the Federal Reserve said
Tuesday in a first-of-itskind forecast that some
economists believe will
lead to interest rate cuts
. eatly in 2008.
Don't count on a cut in
rates
at
the
Fed's
December meeting, however, analysts say. The Fed
called its rate reduction in
late October a "close call"
and hinted that its two cuts
this year may be sufficient
to energize the economy.
according to minutes of the
Oct. 3 I. closed-door meeting made public Tuesday.
Policy makers raised concerns at that meeting that
inflation might flare up
again in the short term,
especially in the face of
rising energy prices. ·
But with the Fed's
longer-term forecast calling for moderating intlation next year and beyo'nd,
economists believe the
central bank will have leeway to reduce rates next
year.
"The ecoqomy is walking on a high wire .
Eventually the Fed will
have to cut rates again to
put a net or a cushion
under a falling economy,"
said Stuart Hoffman, chief
at
PNC
economist
Financial Services Group.
He and other, economists
predicted more rates cuts
early next year to prevent
the possibility of the economy falling into a recession.
On Wall Street, the Dow
Jones industrials gained
ground after the Fed issued
its forecast and minutes of

literate in Europe, with an
unusually large number of
people owning works of art.
These patrons of the arts
championed a range of secular subjects that spoke of
social rank, personal accomplishments. and aspirations,
as revea led through portraits, history paintings, still
lifes, land- and seascapes,
and genre scenes.
During the last two days
of the program, teachers created image-enhanced podcasts about a Dutch painting
of their choice. Ideally suited for teaching and studying
visuctl art. this new digital
tec hnlllugy expands learning
options fur students who are
visually, mu sically, and
kinest11etically oriented.
For 19 years the Gallery's
Teacher Institute has otfered
educators the opportunity
for intell ectual renewal and
professional exchange with
colleagues in a museum setting. To dat e, approximately
2,250 teac hers have pariici pated in the program.

~

Holiday Celebrations!

Saturday, December 1st ·
3pm-Historical Walking Tour w/Mike Gerlach
Begins @ Mural
4pm-Parade Lineup @ R~joicing Ufe Parking Lot
4:30-Parade Begins-traveling downtown o~to
free! ·
Race 'Strcet to Middleport Fire Station
11
pi~ w.'J:d ~~ Christmas Tree Lighting following the parade
provt pank at Farmers Bank Mini-Park
t·ree

~·n
D~·

~
P. e~s
.,·ddlepo
1

tJorse g'd"
sleigh

JEANNINE AVERSA
AP ECONOMICS WRITER

1

PageA7

NATION • WORLD

Fed forecasts

./fti~ldlepOI"t
Sileo"'\\\\!, Hl"'77_ /9L . • t.
CfJ,:fh e"
\s 'fo"'" , t'J ne um't&amp; ma.r· t ~
til

of '"

:oF

The Daily Sentinel

ruroWih·

the October meeting. The
Dow Jones industrials
were up more than 50
point,;.
The Federal Reserve, in
the first of its quarterly
economic reports to the
nation, said it believes
business growth will slow
next year, with the ~ross
domestic product gaming
between 1.8 percent and
2.5 percent. That would be
weaker than how the Fed
expects th'e economy to
perform this year and
would mark a downgrade
to · a previous projection
released in the summer.
GDP is the value of all
goods and services produced within the United
States and is the best
barometer of the country's
economic fitness.
The downgrade to GDP
was due to a number of
factors, including "·the
tightened
terms
and
reduced availability of subprime and jumbo mortgages,
weaker-thanexpected housing data and
rising oil prices," the Fed
explained.
The credit crunch has
made it both more costly
and more difficult for peopie and companies to borrow money. The worst carnage has taken place in the
market for subprime home
Ioans - those made to
people with spotty credit
histories. Credit problems
started there and have
spread to more creditworthy borrowers, including
those who are looking for
home loans of more than
$417 ,000, so-called jumbo
loans.
The big worry is that
these housing and credit
problems will make people
and
businesses
less
inclined to spend, dealing a
larger-than-expected blow
. to national economic

· growth.
"The possibilities that
markets could relapse or
that current tighter credit
conditions could exert
unexpectedly
large
restraint on household and
business spending were
viewed as downSide risks
to economic activity," the
Fed .said in its quarterly
forecast.
'.'Participants
'were concenaed about the
possibility for adverse
feedbacks in which eco·nomic weakness could lead
to further tightening in
credit conditions, which
could in turn slow the
economy further.'"
T.J. Marta, fixed income
strategist at RBC Capital
Markets, said he expects
. "negative developments in
financial markets will tip
the Fed toward easing"
interest rates by the first
quarter of next year.
With economic growth
slowing , the unemployment rate would rise to
between 4.8 percent arid
4.9 percent next year still low by historical standards. A previous forecast
estimated the unemployment rate next year would
be about 4.75 percent. For
all of last year, the jobless
rate. dipped to 4.6 percent,
a six-year low.
The Fed said the "unemployrilent rate would
mcrease modestly" in
2008, stabilize in 2009 and
then decline slightly in
20 I 0.
Overall inflation should
ebb next year to between
1.8 percent and 2. 1 per·cent. Inflation should moderate further in 2009 and
20 I0, the Fed said.
"Overall inflation was
expected to edge down
over the next few years,
fostered by an assumed
flattening
of
energy
prices," the Fed said.

Wednesday, November 21,

out of
So far, surging energy
prices this year haven ' t
touched off a major inflation problem throughout
the economy.
~
Oil prices last week hit' a
record high of $98.62 a
barrel. They have ebbed a
bit and are hovering above
$96 a barrel. Gasoline
prices . have topped "$3 a
gallon.
_ The Fed's forecasts are .
based on . estimates of
activity in the final quarter
of one year compared with
the same period of a previous year.
Meanwhile, the central
bank 's decision on Oct. 31
to slice interest rates for a
second time this year to
combat housing and credit
troubles was··not necessarily an easy one for Fed officials.
"Many members noted
that this policy decision
was' a close call ,'' the minutes revealed.
In the end, Fed Chairman
Ben Bernanke and all but
one of his colleagues
agreed to lower its key
interest rate by a one-quarter percentage point to 4.50
percent. It marked the second rate reduction in six
weeks.
Thomas Hoenig, president of the Federal Reserve
Bank of Kansas City·, was
the sole dissenter at the
meeting. He preferred no
change in the funds rate.
The smaller, October rate
cut followed up a bolder,
half
percentage-paint
reduction in September,
the first time the Fed had
lowered its key rate in
more than four years .
The decision to cut rates
last month was seen by
most Fed officials as a way
to protect the business climate against the possibility
that these problems could

2007

nextvear

worsen and throw the
economy into a recession.
"Most members saw substantial downside risks to
!he economic outlook and
judged that a rate reduction
at this meeting would provide valuable additional
insurance against an unexpectedly severe weakening
in economic activity," the
minutes said.
Moreover, many Fed policymakers believed the rate
cut could help calm stillfragile financial markets.
Wall Street has been suffering through an especially turbulent period over the
past several months due to
the spreading credit troubles and the deepening
housing slump.
. Tuesday's
economic
forecast was a fulfillment
of Bernanke 's pledge to
bring more openness to an
institution that historically
has been enshrouded in
secrecy.
It marked the biggest
move yet by Bernanke to
put his imprint on the Fed,
which he has been running
since February 2006.
Alan
Greenspan,
Bernanke's predecessor,
made progress on .that front
in his 18 1/2 years, but
Bernanke has sought to prythe door open even further,
providing investors, businesses and individuals with
more insights into the
thinking of Fed policymak·
ers.
'
Doing that helps the Fed
do its· job - keeping the
economy and inflation on

an even keeL
Improving the public ' s
understanding of the Fed's
objectives and strategies
reduces uncertainty, allowing businesses and. people.
to make more in formed
financial decisions. lf
investors have a better
understanding of how Fe&lt;l
policy is likely to respond
to incoming information,
stock prices and bond
yields will tend to respond
to economic data in ways
that further the central
bank's objectives.
Bernankc last week
announced steps to bring
greater openness to th~
institution that hi storically
has substantially operat"d
behind closed doors. With
Tuesday 's report, the Feq
is now releasing quarterly
economic forecasts, versus _
twice-a-year projections,
The Fed is also saying
what it thinks the business
environment will be for the
following three years, not
two. The Fed also is giving
unprecedented detail into
policymakers '
thinking
into the economy's outlook
and the risks facing it.
A
research
paper
released Tuesday by Fed
drove home the point that
forecasting is as much an
art as it is a science.
"If past performance is ;i
reasonable guide to th~
accuracy of future fore ;
casts, considerable uncertainty surrounds all macro,
economic projections" - .
including those of Fed pol~
icymakers
the paper
said.
·

Thank You

To The Voters
Of Lebanon Township
For Electing Me
Your Trustee

Dale
C.
Teaford
Sr.
AP Interview: Outgoing board chaitman
says Amtrak back on track

free I te
tJol ChOco a

Pd lor by the CandidAte

caroling

'THE LAsT FLAG DOWN'

POMEROY - Jeanne
And so in October 1864 released. The amazing
Bowen, using handouts of the odyssey of . the CSS saga of the Shenandoah
a world map and pictures Shenandoah began. The was over.
for visual effect, reviewed ship sailed down and
The reviewer said that
"The Last Flag Down" by around Africa towards reading the book was an
Ron Powers and John Australia and then north- enjoyable experience, even
throughout
the though the reader knows
Baldwin,· published in ·ward
2007, at the recent meeting Pacific toward the Bering the outcome, the details of
of the Middleport Literary Sea and the Arctic Circle. the cap·" ' c s and the
When they encountered a
Club.
account ' , , 1iling through
The book is the adven- Yankee merchant vessel or trr ,''" nJ u u , '. arms and
ture-filled story of the CSS whaler, their method was s' " ~ ~ ing through ice and
Shenandoah, a sleek black to fire a blank cartridge to fug 111 the northern seas.
clipper ship that was pur- scare the other vessel and The notes from Conway
(:hased by the Confederacy force it to surrender. None Whittles diary add to the
in London in I 864 and could outrun them.
assigned to find and
After stripping the quar- human element of the
•
oestroy Yankee commer- ry of useful supplies and story, she said.
Following
Bowen's
tial ships and whaling ves- provisions.
th.e
sels.
·
Confedaate s took the offt- review twelve members
: . Th
Sh
d . h .. , cers and crew aboard the answered roll call by nam.: e
enan. oa
"as . Shenandoah and then ing a ship, a ship's captain~
~hat was then call~d an burned the captured vessel. or pirate from another
Jeff Warner
~}ltreme clipper or ' 1uxll- When their load of prison- novel or nonfict'ion work.
Nationwide"
JIIfY steamer, .whtch meant ers became too great, they
113
W.
2nd
St.
The
next
meeting
of
the
that tn add1t1on to Jts would put them aboard one
On Your Side
Pomeroy, OH ·
~Iron g. teak hull and .huge of the captured vessels and club will be at the
~ails It ~ad an aux1hary release them to sail to the Pomeroy Library on Nov.
Auto Home Life Business
Stop by for a quote
992-5479
sJeam butler and propeller nearest port. In ten months 28. Dana Kessinger will
and receive a
free ccmoatJflage hat."'
Whtch allowed . It to sail they captured almost forty review "in an Instant' by
Lee and Bob Woodruff.
rap1dly even tf the wmd Union vessels.
·umited quantity available
c....,.,.,...
111'1
will
be
the
Vanessa
Folmer
irxl&lt;OrM~tj&lt;
,.,,,.,.~
fWn&lt;~·•OO MIJ"-"11
Nol
"' "'~· SUI&gt;foo&lt;ll ~ ~&lt;o&lt;l"""r&lt;l"'!!
~fld
The damage to American
was calm.
The
story
of the commerce totaled millions hostess.
Shenandoah has been told of dollars. And it was done
in books before, but what without firing a single live
makes The Last Flag shell and with no loss of
Down different is that it life on either side . In late
was written from the diary June I 865 they left the ice
and notes of Lt . Conway and fog of the Arctic and
Whittle, the Flfst Offtcer began to sail southward
of the Shenandoah, accord- along the American coast.
ing to the reviewer. And so
Of course what Whittle
it is a fascinating naval and Waddell didn't know
yarn and a very personal for sure was that the war
look at the war through the was lost and the South had
eyes of this intelli,gent and surrendered in · April, so
devout young off1cer, she technically they were
satd.
pirate s. In Augu st they
Conway Whittle was a learned from a passi.ng
graduate of Annapoli s and British ship that the war
an officer in the U.S. Navy was ,pver. Waddell ordered
We're proud to announce a partnership with HIMG to provide cardiology services to 'the communities we serve. These highly
when the War Between the all . guns remo ved and
acdaimed physicians are amongst the absolute best in the diagnosl• and treatment or your cnrdiac health. We are acrepting new
States broke out. -· Like stowed and the ship began
patients today!
many other Southern naval a lonely and dispirited sail
officers , he resigned his back to England. They did
PLEASANT
commission in the Federal not know if they were''
navy to defend hi s home- being hunted or what fate .
VALLEY
"
land. The same is true of would await them. They
HOSPITAL
Captain Jame s Waddell , might all be hung as pirate•..
the reclusive skipper of the . Once back in Liverpool,
Partner~ in Health
Shenandoah.
In
late Wa(:)dell surrendered the
September 1864 the ship Shenandoah . ami its crew
was purchased in a clan- to the British · aut horities.
destine ' operation
in They had traveled almost
England and sailed away 60,000 miles around the
from . there di sguised as a globe. To their surprise,
coal freighter.
the men: were eventually

BY SARAH KARUSH

D

~ NO&lt;iltw1dlt ~·~1 1 1-::~&lt; ~~C\;Imll$,. • r.tl ~ ~liillod
Cin '!'uti Sllll Dl "
r&lt;y&lt; ""Od
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NIWonrtlf&gt; Ctr.. Ho:l&lt;•i•""'CowciOIW '""'"' ""'"; !":r:I"'"C..'; ~":t&gt;O ~J~ I.'&gt;· OilW NUia"JWIM . !NI N$l»l'lf\(jt Fltrr&gt;t!I'W~
I&lt;ISl.H'lOO Colnpoi&gt;y
li•lii&lt;Oo '1 . ,
fl"lltlij r&gt;OG "" " "'
!OWWfli

;

know if the administration
was pleased with the results.
"They don't talk to me," he
WASHINGTON
said. "There'~ probably some
Amtrak has restored its erect. people over there who think I
ibility and is not the fmancial should have wiped Arntrak
basket case it was five years off the map, but that wasn't
· ago, the national passenger my job."
railroad's putgoing chairman
Amtrak's biggest critics
said.
saY. long-distance passenger
But David Laney, whom rrul - particularly trips. that
President Bush did not nQmi- take more than a·day - IS an
nate for another tenn on the anachronism and that shorter
J:lqard, told The Associated trips could be run more effec•
Press that there are probably tiv~Iy by the private sector.
some in the White House
White. House spokesman
who would have preferred to Scott Stanzel said he could
see Amtrak eliminated.
not discuss why Laney was
Laney's five-year term as a not reappointed because it is
.
member of the board of a personnel matter.
As for Amtrak's existence,
directors expires at the end of
November. At its Nov. 8 he said: "The administration .
meeting, the board chose believes that if properly
Donna McLean, a transporta- reformed .Amtrak's interi:iiy
tion COnSI,tltant and a board passenger rail system can be
member since July 2006, to an important component of
replace him as chainnan. our nation's transportation
Laney had served as chair- network, particularly on our
most congested intercity cor- ·
man since 2003.
ridors."
As a Bush appointee,
Fiscal conseryati ves say
Laney init.ially was greeted
warily by Amtrak supporters. Amtrak continues to eat up
But the Texas lawyer said his too many taxpayer dollars record shows he worked with $1.3 billion last year.
· the company's interest in
McLean said efficiency
and
"tighter intemal managerirind.
"I do think we've rebuilt ment controls'' would be key
and re-established credibili- · themes for her as chairman.
ty," Laney said in a telephone "Any organization that
receives any kind of subsidy
interview.
His one regret, he said, was should strive to be as effeAmtrak's failure to resolve a cient as possible," she said
protracted labor dispute. Tuesday. "The team at
Most Amtrak workers have Amtrak is becoming more
been without a contract since and more focused on that
the end of 1999. The National goal."
The Heritage Foundation's
Mediation Board released the
parties from mediation earlier Ron Utt said Laney made
this month, setting in motion Amtrak more businesslike
a series of events that could but that. more transparency
force a deal or allow workers ' was needed and labor costs
· to strike. Laney predicted a remained excessive.
Ross Capon, "xecutive
deal would be reached early
director
of the National
next year.
Laney joined the board just Association of Railroad
after a financial crisis that Passengers, said Laney
was solved only when the tllrned out to be a better chairDepartment of Transportation man than mosi rail supporters
'
made
emergency loan of expected.
He
said
Amtri!k
supporters
$I()() million .to the railroad.
Laney said he was able to put were nervous when Laney
stricter financial controls in considered breaking off the
place and pointed to the busy northeast corridor to· be
reduction in the company's managed separately from the
Iong-tenn debt from $4 bil- rest of Amtrak. But Capon
lion in 2002 to less than $3.5 said Laney allowed the idea
"to die gmcefully."
billion.
Laney said he looked at the .
But ·Laney said he didn't
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

')

an

•

northeast corridor scenarios
out of a responsibility to
"tum over every rock possible to find an advantage for
Amtrak:' But separating the .
conidor didn't make sense
and it's doubtful anyone
could run it better than
Amtrak, he said.
McLean declined to comment on .the issue, except to
call the northeast conidor "an
incredible success stacy for
Amtrak right now."
Capon called McLean, a
fanner assistani secretary for
budget and programs at th~
Department
of ·
Transportation, an "unknown
qu311tity." Her election comes
as the makeup of Amtrak's
board is shifting. Bus!) nomina(ed three new people to the
board last week to replace
Laney and others.
In a news release announcing her election, McLean said
Laney · had
improved
Amtrak's business model,
accountability and service.

UPCOMING BANDS -IN DECEMBER
Dec. 1st-Bart &amp; The Chasers
Dec. 8th-Swamp Juece
Dec. 15th-Flint
.

CR 7 A • Pomeroy, OH • 740-992-7986

Urgent Care Hours
Thanksgiving Weekend
Thanksgiving Day
Main ·Facility
1pm-6pm

HOLZER

Jackson, Athens, .Meigs Facilities
12pm-6pm

CLINIC

Friday, Saturday, and Sunday
Main Facility
Meigs Facility
Jackson Facility
Athens Facility

t
1pm-9pm
11am-9pm
11am-9pm
9am-9pm

�PageA6

BYTHEBEND
ANNIE'S MAILBOX
Meigs
educator
attends
Sometimes help begins with self
teachers institute on art

The Daily Sentinel

BY KATHY MITCHELL
AND MARCY SUGAR

Dear Annie: My hu sband
comes from a family with a
hi storv of manic depression, inood di sorders, · s ui~
cides. addictions. etc. He
self-medicates· bv overeating. gambling.- watching
too much TV and wanting a
Jut of sex. It is exceptionally bad 'in the winter. and I
am o.n edge all the time , not
knowing what kind of
mood he will be in.
I go to therapy tn cope .. I
have repeatedly told h1s
cardiologist. famil y physi cian and sleep .disorder .
doctor about his beha' ior
and hi s family hi story. but
ihey ignore me or say the y
can't do anything if my hu sband won't .admit he's
d'epressed. He does. of
course. put·on a good front
to others.
Why dO all the experts
say "tell your family docior" about a loved one's
problems when the doctors
refuse to deal with it'' Do
you have any suggestions?
_ MSFM
Dear MSFM: A doctor
~an only do so much . If
your husband refu ses to
admit he may have mental
health issues, he .is not likeIy to accept help from anyone. The best you can do is
get help on your own, and
you already are doing this.
Discuss the situation with
your therapist so you can
determine. whether there "
any aspect of your. husband's behavior that you
can work on at home and, if
not, what the best course of
action is for YOU. Also
contact
the
National
Alliance on Mental Illness
(nami.org) at 1-800-950NAMI (1-800-950-6264)
for support and sugges-

tiuns .
Dear Annie: Rece ntly,
the parents of two of my
closest
friends
have
divorced. This has caused
me to look at my own parents, who have been married over 30 vears. Mom
and Dad are wonderful peopic who gave my brother
and me a loving childhood.
Yet, 1\e seen a growing
strain in their relationship.
When ever they talk to
me. they end up griping
ahDut 1he other one at some
p~ nnl in the C&lt;?anv.~rsation . I
te.t lll.e ventm, trustt.ttlon
can be he.a lth y, but I honestly. c'an I re member the
last ume e1ther of them smd
anyllung po stttve about the
Ill her. For years. 1 have sugges.ted they talk through
th e1r problems and gnevanccs 1nstead ot sweepmg
them lll~der the rug , bill
they don t l1sten. They conlinually . throw themselves
further mto the1r se parate
l1vcs as the nft grow s
wider. Most of my mother's
ln ends ~re 111 unhappy marria&amp;es. and I'm . afra!d she
believes th1s snuat1on 1s
normal.
I want. to talk to them
abo~t thetr marnage, but I
don ·t know how to do 11.
Both of ~hem are ~ery po?r
commumcators. I ll_l afratd
talkmg could make It worse
and they will resent me fo~
bnngmg It up. Nenher ot
them would cons1der marriage counseling. I want
them to be happy. !"ow can
I help? - Worrted Out
West
Dear Worried: Some
long -married couples get
into the habit of griping,
and you shouldn't jump to
the conclusion that they are
looking to divorce. But the
next time Mom disparages
your father, ask "Are you

Wednesday, November 21, 2007

unhappy'&gt;'' The tjuestion
alone may force her to
think carefully about the
relationship ; and more
importantly. make her see
the impact her complaints
are having on you. (You
can do the same with your
father.)
Dear Annie: Thi s is for
"The First Wife ," who
asked if the relation ship
between a parent and child
suffers when the parent
abandons the marriage. In
my case. divorce was a
godsend for the relationship between my ex and our
sons .

WASHINGTON ·
Jennifer E. Tesar from
Meigs Middle School in
Pomeroy, wa s among 50
educators attending the
National Gallery of Art' s
2007 Teacher In stitute on
17th century Dutch art held
in Washington, DC ,
The ·two six-day seminars
brought together teachers of
art, social studies, and related subjects from 25
American states and South
Australia. Focusing on the
Gallery's collection of 17th
century Dutch art , they
explored ways , including
image-enhanced podcasting,
to integrate art objects into
their classrooms.
Generous grants from the
William Randolph Hearst
Foundation. Annetta J.
Coffelt and Rubert M.
Coffelt Jr. , the Park
Foundation, the Geraldine
R. Dodge Foundation, and
the Sara Shallenberger
Brown Fund have provided
inva1uable support for the
Teacher Institute.
The program, through
lectures. gallery talks, dis-

Before the divorce, my
husband would refuse to
come home at a reasonable
hour and basically ignored
the
boys. Once
we
divorced. he actually made
an invest ment in the time
he spent with them. It
forced him to be a "handson" father when he used to
believe parenting was all
"women's work.~' He actually started coming to their
ball games and school
function s. - Happier ExWife
Dear Ex-Wife: We ' re
sorry it took such a huge
knock in the head for your
husband to wake up, but
better late than never.
Annie's Mailbox is writ··
telr by Kathy Mitchell and
Marcy 'Sugar, longtime editors of the Ann Landers
c(}lumn. Please e-mail
your questions to anniesmailhox@comcast.net, or
write to: Annie's Mailbox,
P.O. Box II8190, Chicago,
IL 60611. To filld out more
about Annie's Mailbox,
and read features by other
Creators Syndicate writers
and cartoo11ists, visit the
Creators Syndicate Web
page at www.creators.com.

cussion s, and hands-on
activities, emphasized direct
encounters with original
objects. Teachers studied
works by Dutch masters
such as Johannes Vermeer,
Rembrandt va1.1 Rijn, Gerard
ter Borch, Frans Hals. Judith
Leyster, and Pieter de
Hooch. By presenting these
paintings within the bro~der
social context of I 7thcentury Dutch life, these seminars
were particularly appropriate for teachers of history
and social studies. as well as
0~ studio art and art history.
Many of the paintings
discussed were created for a
newly afflu ent middle t:lass.
From the beginning of the
17th century and the de facto
. peace with Spain. Holland
flourished as a nation of seafaring traders. Their prosperity soon spread throughout the _Netherlands and
helped shift the balance of
economic and politi cal
power
from
the
Mediterranean to northern
Europe: Qutch society
became known as the most
urbanized, international. and

.

-- ~~

_ERS HFAR

BY

oauio

WASHINGTON - The
)lousing collapse and credit
crisis will slow economic
growth and nudge up
unemployment next year,
the Federal Reserve said
Tuesday in a first-of-itskind forecast that some
economists believe will
lead to interest rate cuts
. eatly in 2008.
Don't count on a cut in
rates
at
the
Fed's
December meeting, however, analysts say. The Fed
called its rate reduction in
late October a "close call"
and hinted that its two cuts
this year may be sufficient
to energize the economy.
according to minutes of the
Oct. 3 I. closed-door meeting made public Tuesday.
Policy makers raised concerns at that meeting that
inflation might flare up
again in the short term,
especially in the face of
rising energy prices. ·
But with the Fed's
longer-term forecast calling for moderating intlation next year and beyo'nd,
economists believe the
central bank will have leeway to reduce rates next
year.
"The ecoqomy is walking on a high wire .
Eventually the Fed will
have to cut rates again to
put a net or a cushion
under a falling economy,"
said Stuart Hoffman, chief
at
PNC
economist
Financial Services Group.
He and other, economists
predicted more rates cuts
early next year to prevent
the possibility of the economy falling into a recession.
On Wall Street, the Dow
Jones industrials gained
ground after the Fed issued
its forecast and minutes of

literate in Europe, with an
unusually large number of
people owning works of art.
These patrons of the arts
championed a range of secular subjects that spoke of
social rank, personal accomplishments. and aspirations,
as revea led through portraits, history paintings, still
lifes, land- and seascapes,
and genre scenes.
During the last two days
of the program, teachers created image-enhanced podcasts about a Dutch painting
of their choice. Ideally suited for teaching and studying
visuctl art. this new digital
tec hnlllugy expands learning
options fur students who are
visually, mu sically, and
kinest11etically oriented.
For 19 years the Gallery's
Teacher Institute has otfered
educators the opportunity
for intell ectual renewal and
professional exchange with
colleagues in a museum setting. To dat e, approximately
2,250 teac hers have pariici pated in the program.

~

Holiday Celebrations!

Saturday, December 1st ·
3pm-Historical Walking Tour w/Mike Gerlach
Begins @ Mural
4pm-Parade Lineup @ R~joicing Ufe Parking Lot
4:30-Parade Begins-traveling downtown o~to
free! ·
Race 'Strcet to Middleport Fire Station
11
pi~ w.'J:d ~~ Christmas Tree Lighting following the parade
provt pank at Farmers Bank Mini-Park
t·ree

~·n
D~·

~
P. e~s
.,·ddlepo
1

tJorse g'd"
sleigh

JEANNINE AVERSA
AP ECONOMICS WRITER

1

PageA7

NATION • WORLD

Fed forecasts

./fti~ldlepOI"t
Sileo"'\\\\!, Hl"'77_ /9L . • t.
CfJ,:fh e"
\s 'fo"'" , t'J ne um't&amp; ma.r· t ~
til

of '"

:oF

The Daily Sentinel

ruroWih·

the October meeting. The
Dow Jones industrials
were up more than 50
point,;.
The Federal Reserve, in
the first of its quarterly
economic reports to the
nation, said it believes
business growth will slow
next year, with the ~ross
domestic product gaming
between 1.8 percent and
2.5 percent. That would be
weaker than how the Fed
expects th'e economy to
perform this year and
would mark a downgrade
to · a previous projection
released in the summer.
GDP is the value of all
goods and services produced within the United
States and is the best
barometer of the country's
economic fitness.
The downgrade to GDP
was due to a number of
factors, including "·the
tightened
terms
and
reduced availability of subprime and jumbo mortgages,
weaker-thanexpected housing data and
rising oil prices," the Fed
explained.
The credit crunch has
made it both more costly
and more difficult for peopie and companies to borrow money. The worst carnage has taken place in the
market for subprime home
Ioans - those made to
people with spotty credit
histories. Credit problems
started there and have
spread to more creditworthy borrowers, including
those who are looking for
home loans of more than
$417 ,000, so-called jumbo
loans.
The big worry is that
these housing and credit
problems will make people
and
businesses
less
inclined to spend, dealing a
larger-than-expected blow
. to national economic

· growth.
"The possibilities that
markets could relapse or
that current tighter credit
conditions could exert
unexpectedly
large
restraint on household and
business spending were
viewed as downSide risks
to economic activity," the
Fed .said in its quarterly
forecast.
'.'Participants
'were concenaed about the
possibility for adverse
feedbacks in which eco·nomic weakness could lead
to further tightening in
credit conditions, which
could in turn slow the
economy further.'"
T.J. Marta, fixed income
strategist at RBC Capital
Markets, said he expects
. "negative developments in
financial markets will tip
the Fed toward easing"
interest rates by the first
quarter of next year.
With economic growth
slowing , the unemployment rate would rise to
between 4.8 percent arid
4.9 percent next year still low by historical standards. A previous forecast
estimated the unemployment rate next year would
be about 4.75 percent. For
all of last year, the jobless
rate. dipped to 4.6 percent,
a six-year low.
The Fed said the "unemployrilent rate would
mcrease modestly" in
2008, stabilize in 2009 and
then decline slightly in
20 I 0.
Overall inflation should
ebb next year to between
1.8 percent and 2. 1 per·cent. Inflation should moderate further in 2009 and
20 I0, the Fed said.
"Overall inflation was
expected to edge down
over the next few years,
fostered by an assumed
flattening
of
energy
prices," the Fed said.

Wednesday, November 21,

out of
So far, surging energy
prices this year haven ' t
touched off a major inflation problem throughout
the economy.
~
Oil prices last week hit' a
record high of $98.62 a
barrel. They have ebbed a
bit and are hovering above
$96 a barrel. Gasoline
prices . have topped "$3 a
gallon.
_ The Fed's forecasts are .
based on . estimates of
activity in the final quarter
of one year compared with
the same period of a previous year.
Meanwhile, the central
bank 's decision on Oct. 31
to slice interest rates for a
second time this year to
combat housing and credit
troubles was··not necessarily an easy one for Fed officials.
"Many members noted
that this policy decision
was' a close call ,'' the minutes revealed.
In the end, Fed Chairman
Ben Bernanke and all but
one of his colleagues
agreed to lower its key
interest rate by a one-quarter percentage point to 4.50
percent. It marked the second rate reduction in six
weeks.
Thomas Hoenig, president of the Federal Reserve
Bank of Kansas City·, was
the sole dissenter at the
meeting. He preferred no
change in the funds rate.
The smaller, October rate
cut followed up a bolder,
half
percentage-paint
reduction in September,
the first time the Fed had
lowered its key rate in
more than four years .
The decision to cut rates
last month was seen by
most Fed officials as a way
to protect the business climate against the possibility
that these problems could

2007

nextvear

worsen and throw the
economy into a recession.
"Most members saw substantial downside risks to
!he economic outlook and
judged that a rate reduction
at this meeting would provide valuable additional
insurance against an unexpectedly severe weakening
in economic activity," the
minutes said.
Moreover, many Fed policymakers believed the rate
cut could help calm stillfragile financial markets.
Wall Street has been suffering through an especially turbulent period over the
past several months due to
the spreading credit troubles and the deepening
housing slump.
. Tuesday's
economic
forecast was a fulfillment
of Bernanke 's pledge to
bring more openness to an
institution that historically
has been enshrouded in
secrecy.
It marked the biggest
move yet by Bernanke to
put his imprint on the Fed,
which he has been running
since February 2006.
Alan
Greenspan,
Bernanke's predecessor,
made progress on .that front
in his 18 1/2 years, but
Bernanke has sought to prythe door open even further,
providing investors, businesses and individuals with
more insights into the
thinking of Fed policymak·
ers.
'
Doing that helps the Fed
do its· job - keeping the
economy and inflation on

an even keeL
Improving the public ' s
understanding of the Fed's
objectives and strategies
reduces uncertainty, allowing businesses and. people.
to make more in formed
financial decisions. lf
investors have a better
understanding of how Fe&lt;l
policy is likely to respond
to incoming information,
stock prices and bond
yields will tend to respond
to economic data in ways
that further the central
bank's objectives.
Bernankc last week
announced steps to bring
greater openness to th~
institution that hi storically
has substantially operat"d
behind closed doors. With
Tuesday 's report, the Feq
is now releasing quarterly
economic forecasts, versus _
twice-a-year projections,
The Fed is also saying
what it thinks the business
environment will be for the
following three years, not
two. The Fed also is giving
unprecedented detail into
policymakers '
thinking
into the economy's outlook
and the risks facing it.
A
research
paper
released Tuesday by Fed
drove home the point that
forecasting is as much an
art as it is a science.
"If past performance is ;i
reasonable guide to th~
accuracy of future fore ;
casts, considerable uncertainty surrounds all macro,
economic projections" - .
including those of Fed pol~
icymakers
the paper
said.
·

Thank You

To The Voters
Of Lebanon Township
For Electing Me
Your Trustee

Dale
C.
Teaford
Sr.
AP Interview: Outgoing board chaitman
says Amtrak back on track

free I te
tJol ChOco a

Pd lor by the CandidAte

caroling

'THE LAsT FLAG DOWN'

POMEROY - Jeanne
And so in October 1864 released. The amazing
Bowen, using handouts of the odyssey of . the CSS saga of the Shenandoah
a world map and pictures Shenandoah began. The was over.
for visual effect, reviewed ship sailed down and
The reviewer said that
"The Last Flag Down" by around Africa towards reading the book was an
Ron Powers and John Australia and then north- enjoyable experience, even
throughout
the though the reader knows
Baldwin,· published in ·ward
2007, at the recent meeting Pacific toward the Bering the outcome, the details of
of the Middleport Literary Sea and the Arctic Circle. the cap·" ' c s and the
When they encountered a
Club.
account ' , , 1iling through
The book is the adven- Yankee merchant vessel or trr ,''" nJ u u , '. arms and
ture-filled story of the CSS whaler, their method was s' " ~ ~ ing through ice and
Shenandoah, a sleek black to fire a blank cartridge to fug 111 the northern seas.
clipper ship that was pur- scare the other vessel and The notes from Conway
(:hased by the Confederacy force it to surrender. None Whittles diary add to the
in London in I 864 and could outrun them.
assigned to find and
After stripping the quar- human element of the
•
oestroy Yankee commer- ry of useful supplies and story, she said.
Following
Bowen's
tial ships and whaling ves- provisions.
th.e
sels.
·
Confedaate s took the offt- review twelve members
: . Th
Sh
d . h .. , cers and crew aboard the answered roll call by nam.: e
enan. oa
"as . Shenandoah and then ing a ship, a ship's captain~
~hat was then call~d an burned the captured vessel. or pirate from another
Jeff Warner
~}ltreme clipper or ' 1uxll- When their load of prison- novel or nonfict'ion work.
Nationwide"
JIIfY steamer, .whtch meant ers became too great, they
113
W.
2nd
St.
The
next
meeting
of
the
that tn add1t1on to Jts would put them aboard one
On Your Side
Pomeroy, OH ·
~Iron g. teak hull and .huge of the captured vessels and club will be at the
~ails It ~ad an aux1hary release them to sail to the Pomeroy Library on Nov.
Auto Home Life Business
Stop by for a quote
992-5479
sJeam butler and propeller nearest port. In ten months 28. Dana Kessinger will
and receive a
free ccmoatJflage hat."'
Whtch allowed . It to sail they captured almost forty review "in an Instant' by
Lee and Bob Woodruff.
rap1dly even tf the wmd Union vessels.
·umited quantity available
c....,.,.,...
111'1
will
be
the
Vanessa
Folmer
irxl&lt;OrM~tj&lt;
,.,,,.,.~
fWn&lt;~·•OO MIJ"-"11
Nol
"' "'~· SUI&gt;foo&lt;ll ~ ~&lt;o&lt;l"""r&lt;l"'!!
~fld
The damage to American
was calm.
The
story
of the commerce totaled millions hostess.
Shenandoah has been told of dollars. And it was done
in books before, but what without firing a single live
makes The Last Flag shell and with no loss of
Down different is that it life on either side . In late
was written from the diary June I 865 they left the ice
and notes of Lt . Conway and fog of the Arctic and
Whittle, the Flfst Offtcer began to sail southward
of the Shenandoah, accord- along the American coast.
ing to the reviewer. And so
Of course what Whittle
it is a fascinating naval and Waddell didn't know
yarn and a very personal for sure was that the war
look at the war through the was lost and the South had
eyes of this intelli,gent and surrendered in · April, so
devout young off1cer, she technically they were
satd.
pirate s. In Augu st they
Conway Whittle was a learned from a passi.ng
graduate of Annapoli s and British ship that the war
an officer in the U.S. Navy was ,pver. Waddell ordered
We're proud to announce a partnership with HIMG to provide cardiology services to 'the communities we serve. These highly
when the War Between the all . guns remo ved and
acdaimed physicians are amongst the absolute best in the diagnosl• and treatment or your cnrdiac health. We are acrepting new
States broke out. -· Like stowed and the ship began
patients today!
many other Southern naval a lonely and dispirited sail
officers , he resigned his back to England. They did
PLEASANT
commission in the Federal not know if they were''
navy to defend hi s home- being hunted or what fate .
VALLEY
"
land. The same is true of would await them. They
HOSPITAL
Captain Jame s Waddell , might all be hung as pirate•..
the reclusive skipper of the . Once back in Liverpool,
Partner~ in Health
Shenandoah.
In
late Wa(:)dell surrendered the
September 1864 the ship Shenandoah . ami its crew
was purchased in a clan- to the British · aut horities.
destine ' operation
in They had traveled almost
England and sailed away 60,000 miles around the
from . there di sguised as a globe. To their surprise,
coal freighter.
the men: were eventually

BY SARAH KARUSH

D

~ NO&lt;iltw1dlt ~·~1 1 1-::~&lt; ~~C\;Imll$,. • r.tl ~ ~liillod
Cin '!'uti Sllll Dl "
r&lt;y&lt; ""Od
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NIWonrtlf&gt; Ctr.. Ho:l&lt;•i•""'CowciOIW '""'"' ""'"; !":r:I"'"C..'; ~":t&gt;O ~J~ I.'&gt;· OilW NUia"JWIM . !NI N$l»l'lf\(jt Fltrr&gt;t!I'W~
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;

know if the administration
was pleased with the results.
"They don't talk to me," he
WASHINGTON
said. "There'~ probably some
Amtrak has restored its erect. people over there who think I
ibility and is not the fmancial should have wiped Arntrak
basket case it was five years off the map, but that wasn't
· ago, the national passenger my job."
railroad's putgoing chairman
Amtrak's biggest critics
said.
saY. long-distance passenger
But David Laney, whom rrul - particularly trips. that
President Bush did not nQmi- take more than a·day - IS an
nate for another tenn on the anachronism and that shorter
J:lqard, told The Associated trips could be run more effec•
Press that there are probably tiv~Iy by the private sector.
some in the White House
White. House spokesman
who would have preferred to Scott Stanzel said he could
see Amtrak eliminated.
not discuss why Laney was
Laney's five-year term as a not reappointed because it is
.
member of the board of a personnel matter.
As for Amtrak's existence,
directors expires at the end of
November. At its Nov. 8 he said: "The administration .
meeting, the board chose believes that if properly
Donna McLean, a transporta- reformed .Amtrak's interi:iiy
tion COnSI,tltant and a board passenger rail system can be
member since July 2006, to an important component of
replace him as chainnan. our nation's transportation
Laney had served as chair- network, particularly on our
most congested intercity cor- ·
man since 2003.
ridors."
As a Bush appointee,
Fiscal conseryati ves say
Laney init.ially was greeted
warily by Amtrak supporters. Amtrak continues to eat up
But the Texas lawyer said his too many taxpayer dollars record shows he worked with $1.3 billion last year.
· the company's interest in
McLean said efficiency
and
"tighter intemal managerirind.
"I do think we've rebuilt ment controls'' would be key
and re-established credibili- · themes for her as chairman.
ty," Laney said in a telephone "Any organization that
receives any kind of subsidy
interview.
His one regret, he said, was should strive to be as effeAmtrak's failure to resolve a cient as possible," she said
protracted labor dispute. Tuesday. "The team at
Most Amtrak workers have Amtrak is becoming more
been without a contract since and more focused on that
the end of 1999. The National goal."
The Heritage Foundation's
Mediation Board released the
parties from mediation earlier Ron Utt said Laney made
this month, setting in motion Amtrak more businesslike
a series of events that could but that. more transparency
force a deal or allow workers ' was needed and labor costs
· to strike. Laney predicted a remained excessive.
Ross Capon, "xecutive
deal would be reached early
director
of the National
next year.
Laney joined the board just Association of Railroad
after a financial crisis that Passengers, said Laney
was solved only when the tllrned out to be a better chairDepartment of Transportation man than mosi rail supporters
'
made
emergency loan of expected.
He
said
Amtri!k
supporters
$I()() million .to the railroad.
Laney said he was able to put were nervous when Laney
stricter financial controls in considered breaking off the
place and pointed to the busy northeast corridor to· be
reduction in the company's managed separately from the
Iong-tenn debt from $4 bil- rest of Amtrak. But Capon
lion in 2002 to less than $3.5 said Laney allowed the idea
"to die gmcefully."
billion.
Laney said he looked at the .
But ·Laney said he didn't
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

')

an

•

northeast corridor scenarios
out of a responsibility to
"tum over every rock possible to find an advantage for
Amtrak:' But separating the .
conidor didn't make sense
and it's doubtful anyone
could run it better than
Amtrak, he said.
McLean declined to comment on .the issue, except to
call the northeast conidor "an
incredible success stacy for
Amtrak right now."
Capon called McLean, a
fanner assistani secretary for
budget and programs at th~
Department
of ·
Transportation, an "unknown
qu311tity." Her election comes
as the makeup of Amtrak's
board is shifting. Bus!) nomina(ed three new people to the
board last week to replace
Laney and others.
In a news release announcing her election, McLean said
Laney · had
improved
Amtrak's business model,
accountability and service.

UPCOMING BANDS -IN DECEMBER
Dec. 1st-Bart &amp; The Chasers
Dec. 8th-Swamp Juece
Dec. 15th-Flint
.

CR 7 A • Pomeroy, OH • 740-992-7986

Urgent Care Hours
Thanksgiving Weekend
Thanksgiving Day
Main ·Facility
1pm-6pm

HOLZER

Jackson, Athens, .Meigs Facilities
12pm-6pm

CLINIC

Friday, Saturday, and Sunday
Main Facility
Meigs Facility
Jackson Facility
Athens Facility

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1pm-9pm
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�'

The Daily Sentinel

Page AS

O HIO

Wednesday, November 21,

More young hunters out for deer-gun season
CARROLLTON (AP) Seventeen-year-old Jessica
Capestrain has a hard time
gening up early for school. .
But when it comes to deer
hunting, she was up at 4 a.m.
to participate in last week end's special youth deer
hunt.
"You can't beat the feeling
of being alone in the woods
with all the anticipation of
getting a big buck," said
Capestrain, a senior at North
Canton Hoover High School.
''And there is no feeling like
the incredible Adrenal in rush
you get when you shoot a
deer."
Capestrain was among the
growing number of young
people who participated in
the special hunt for youth
under 18 last weekend as the
Ohio Department of Natural
Resources continues to add
pmgrams and hunting weekends to bolster the number of
hunters in Ohio. The regular
deer-gun
season
runs
Monday through Dec. 2 with
an additional weekend Dec.
15-16.
"The kids are the future for
hunting," said Vicki Mountz,
executive administrator for
information and education
for the Ohio Department of
Natural Resources. "And we
realized there was more and
more competition for their
time every year with all the
things like video games,
computers that were evolving.'
The youth season was created in 2003 and it's proven
to be popular, Mountz said.·
The preliminary deer kill
statewide for the weekend
surged 19 percent to 10,515,
according to data released
Monday.
.
It's also safer, despite the
fact that hunters as young as
7 can be fouod toting, aiming
and firing a 12-gauge shotgun in the woods, according
to Jamey Graharp, Wildlife
Communications Specialist
for 19 counties in northeast
Ohio.

2007

Air Force moving
forward• with synthetic fuel

~rocer

(NYSE) -

28.28

Umlted Brande (NYSE) -

17.53

Norfolk Southam (NYSE) "9.57

Girls prep basketball scores, Page 82
Mens college basketball roundup, Page 84

Wednesday, November 21, 2007

Bv JAMES HANNAH

AP photo

Jessica Capestrain, right, and her father Carl keep a watchful eye, out for whitetail deer while
taking part of the first day of the two-day youth deer hunt Saturday, Nov. 17 in Carrollton .
Pat Tilton, a loogtime
Stark County hunter and
father of a teen hunter,
agreed.
"It's great to get the kids
out there on their own
because you don't have a lot
of lead flying around," he
said. "I think it's a lot safer
than the regular season."
Capestrain became interested in hunting from stories
her father, Carl.
She started spending time
in the woods at age 3 or 4 and
at 7 was shooting with a
i;caled-dowri bow and arrow.
She shot a 7-point buck with
a 12-gauge shotgun in her
first deer-gun season in 2004.
The ·peak in Ohio deer·
hunting came in 1949 when
737,675 licenses were sold,
about one licens~ for every
I 0 Ohio residents.
Sales slumped thmughout
the next three decades, bottorning at 216,055 in 1980
and rising last year to about

440,000 for all forms of deer
permits - or about one in
every 26 residents.
Several factors were cited
for the decline, including
increased
recreational
options and television. Other
factors included the need to
create living space for the
baby boom, which caused
Ohio's popuhttion to grow
froin 7.9 million in 1950 to
·11.5 million in recent years,
and farmers' concern for
safety and liability.
The state 's first effort to
turn around the hunting
decline was the creation of
the half-price youth deerhunting license in 1992,
available to anyone under
age 16.
Young hunters also must
complete the eight- to ninehour hunter training course
that all first-time ·hunters
must attend and must be
accompanied by a non-hunting adult at least 18.

In 2006, the qualified age
was rai sed -to 17, accounting
for a sharp increase last year.
A third change was made
last year - an apprentice
license - with a cost of $10
and temporary exemption
from the hunter-education
course. The apprentice does
have to be accompanied tiy a
licensed hunter at least21.
A youngster may purchase
an apprentice license three
times. There were 33,817
youth deer-hunting pennits
sold in Ohio in 1996. A
decade later, the number had
nearly doubled to 66,626.
"The apprentice program
really has helped the numbers. grow," Graham said.
''We' re finding that kids who
won't invest the time to take
a hunter safety course before
they hunt will get hooked on
the hunting experience and
then will take the course in
order to get the youth
license."

DAYTON - In hopes of protecting the nation from terrorist acts or natural di sasters that could reduce the supply
of oil, the Air Force has approved using a blend of s ynthe~­
IC and petroleum-based fuel 10 some of 1ts planes and ts
testing 1t in others.
It's part of an initiative intended to eventually lead to the
use of synthetic fuel derived from coal, natural gas or biomass. Wright-Patterson Air Force Base in Day ton has
played a lead role in the initiative and the testing.
"The pilots who have tlown on this stuff have noticed no
. di fference. Every indication is it will be successful ," said
Kevin Billings, deputy assistant secretary of the A1r Force
for environment, safety and occupational health .
The Pentagon began looking at coal in 200 I when
Congress earmarked $ 13 million to investigate the FischerTropsch process in which coal is gasifieo and then liquefied
into fuel. The technology was developed by Germany in
the 1920s and used by South Africa beginning in the 1950s.
The fuel being tested by the Air Force is a 50-50 blend of
fuel refined from n!ltural gas ~ s in g_ th_e Fischer-Tropsch
process and fuel reftned from 011 . L1qutd fuel made from
coal is expected to be available by 201 2.
.
In August, the Air Force certified its lleet of B-52s to use
the blend. It is expected to fini sh testing the blend in C-17s
by May. Next week it will begin ground testing the blend
on a B-1 bomber engine at Arnold Air Force Base in
Tennessee.
The reason for using a blend instead of pure synthetic
fuel is that the Fischer-Tropseh process removes contaminants, and the resulting fuel doesn 't have the lubricating
qualities that fuel from refined oil has. Using all synthetic
fuel could result in a lack of lubrication for engine seals and
gaskets, increasing the possibility of fuel leaks.
After the 50-50 blend is certified for the entire Air Force
lleet - expected by early 20 II - the Air Force will test
lefiner and leaner versions, adding inore synthetic fuel to
the blend to figure out where the tipping point is.
The Air Force has committed to use - by 2016 - . a
blend of domestically produced synthetic fuel and oilrefined fuel for half of the fuel it buy s for its planes in the
continental United States.
Last year, it used 1.6 billion gallons of fuel for that fleet,
most Of it for transport planes like the C- 17.
The. Fischer-Tropsch process promises to produce a
cleaner fuel that gives off more energy per pound and be
less subject to freezing. It would reduce transportation
dosts and ease logistical headaches by enabling the military
to use one fuel for all of its planes and vehicles instead of
the more than half do zen different fuels now used .
The Middle East has about 685 billion barrels of oil compared with .22 billion barrels in the United States. However,
there is enough coal in the United States to produce 964 billion barrels of fuel, according to the Pentagon.
The United States produced 1.16 billion tons of coal in
2006, up from 1.13 billion in 2005, It was used mainly to
. generate electricity and in steel-making.

.

'

Oak Hill Financial ( NAS.
DAQ)- 28.23
Ohio Valley Bane Corp.
(NASDAQ) - 25
BBT (NYSE) - 33.07
Peoples (NASDAQ)-24.27
Pepsico (NYSE) - 74.84
Premier (NASDAQ) 13.28
'
Rockwell (NYSE) - 68.87
Rocky Boots (NASDAQ) 6.87
Royal Dutch Shell - 82.21
Sears Holding (NASDAQ) 111.85
Wai-Mart (NYSE) - 45.50
Wendy's (NYSE) - ,27.97
Worthln&amp;'ton (NYSE) 21.02 .
Dally stock reports ani the
4 p.m. ET cloalnc quotes .of
transactions for Nov. 20,
2007, provided by Edward
Jonas financial advisors
Isaac Mills In Gallipolis at
('740) 441-9441 and Lesley
Marrero In Point Pleasant
at (304) 674-0174.
Member SIPC.

Wednesday ... Partly sunny. Highs around 70. Southwest
winds 5 to 10 mph with gusts up to 20 mph.
• Wednesday mght .. .A chance of thunderstorms. Showers
likely in the evening .. :Then showers after midnight. Lows
in the lower 50s. Southwest winds 10 to 15 mph with gusts
up to 25 mph. Chance of rain 90 percent.
. Thursday ... Mostly cloudy with showers with a chance
of thunderstorms. Much cooler with highs in the lower 50s.
Temperature falling into the upper 40s in the afternoon.
Nonhwest winds I0 to IS mph with gusts up to 25 mph.
Chance of rain 80 percent.
Thursday night...Mostly cloudy with a slight chance of
rain and snow showers. Much cooler with lows around 30.
West winds 5 to 10 mph. Chance of precipitation 20 percent. ,
Friday ... Partly sunny. Highs in the lower 40s.
. Friday night...Mostly clear. Cold with lows .in the mid
20s.
Saturday ... Partly sunny. Highs in the mid 40s.
Saturday night... Mostly cloudy. A chance of rain ... Sleet
and free zing rain after midnight. Lows in the lower 30s.
Chance of precipitation 40 percent.
Sunday .. .A chance of freezirig rain in the morn ing.
Cloudy with a chance of rain. Highs around 50. Chance of
precipitation 40 percent.
· .
· 1 Sunday nighi...Rain likely. Lows in the mid 30s. Chance
Of rain 60 percent.
Monday ...Cloudy. Showers likely in the morning.. .Thcn
a chance of showers in the afternoon. Highs .in the upper
50s. Chance of rain 60 percent.
Monday night...&lt;;:Ioudy with a 40 percent chance of
showers. Lows in the upper 30s.
Thesday .. .Mostl y cloudy. Hi ghs in the mid 50s.

'

LocAL SCHEDULE
POMER OY - A sChedule or upcoming high
achoo l ve rsl!y sporting events invol'ling
teems from Meigs Cou nty.

Frtdav. Noyambar 23
Soya Basketball
Vinton County at Southern , 6 p.m.
$aturdey Noyamblr 24
·soya Basketball

Eastern at River Valley, 6 p.m.
Wellston at Southern, 6 p.m.
Glrla Baeketball·
Eastern at Meigs, 6 p.m.

SS Rollins
.winsNL

MVPAward
BY MIKE FITZPATRICK
AP BASEBALL WRITER

'

NEW YORK - Back in
January, when Jimmy
Rollins was making bold
predictions, he left one out.
Not only were his Phillies
the team to beat in the NL
East,
he
was headed
foranMVP
season.
Rollins
won
the
National
League
M V P
a w a r d
Tuesday ,
Rollins
edging
M a I I
Holliday in a close race
~flee
propelling
Philadelphia to its first playoff berth in 14 ye!lfS with
his speed and steady all.around play.
· "It never crossed my
mind that I would go out
there and win an MVP,"
~ollins said on a confetence
call from ·California. "I had
a real big smile on my face,
to make it simple. I was
~xcited but I wasn 't quite
sure what to feet."
. . "I:he Gold Glove shortstop
received 16 of 32 first-place
votes and finished with 353
points in balloting by the
Baseball
Writers'
Association of America.
· Ro1lins, left off the AllStar team in July, proved ·a
prophet after sayin~ last
Winter that Philadelphm was
the team to beat in a compctitiy~,divi_sion. He backed
ll;up wtth h1s stellar play on
~he field and never
backed off his confident
. ·''If I say something it's
I believe in it," he
eiplained Thesday.
' ·Holliday, the left fielder
who led Colorado's surprising charge to the World
·series, got 11 first-place
votes and 336 points.
Milwaukee slugger Prioce
Fielder came in third, with
five first-place votes and
284 points.
It was the closest election
for NL MVP since Atlanta
third
baseman
Terry
Pendleton
beat
out
Pittsburgh's Barry Bonds by
15 points in 1991. ·
"I don't know what they
look at," Rollins said, "but
being a shortstop, that's No.
I. Defense is first. Defense
is always first."
,
Rollins batted .296 with
30 homers, 94 RBis and 41
steals from the leadoff spot,
helping Philadelphia rally
from a big September
deficit to win the' NL East.
He led the leal!ue in runs
(139) and tnples (20).
becoming the second consecutive Phillies player to
v.:in the MVP following
Ryan Howard last year.
.
: "I was like, if he can win
it I can win it. The only
thin~ he can do better than
me 1s hit home runs further
~han me," Rollins silid.
~ecause

'l1le ... of dle Aut n Chk il to rslw•lllla p1tle111 willa a,.,.,., Clift

r' $ 'dn. v_, I ..... .., - Vra •• c.. a ... ,. 'I ..,

'"I ... ,..,..

• • an: •c' lW • ..., dda is IIDt va1 alit effecdue. 'l'lle .A'i'U• CU•Ie
will enJu1e a J I fat
I Wllllt pleir, a f t pliylk:lu wwLI .
'M •nil ilwJdr fGrl ...lr, d1 f t f lie I dac111Dt Jane tile 'qzlr of
...,.., .. &amp;.1 ,..., owas' ;dd•. ftc Acre u atwlet. •&amp;•)JIUBvww,
Nw PtMIIIk a ... tile Mrlkal Dbtcloa t. Ollpi) Mfct..-,IID.

A....

· Please see Rollins, 84

CoNrAcrUs

HOLZER
·cLINIC

: ·1-740-446-2342· ext. 33

~·· -1 -740-446-3008
~4m1111 -

sports@mydailysentinel.com

900rtt Staff

.

'

Bryan Walters, Sports Wrller
(140) 446-2342, ox1. 33
bwalters 0 mydailytribune .com

740.441.3296.

.

.

t,.arry Crum, Sports Wrller
(740) 446-2342 , oxt. 33
tcrUmCmydallyregi ster.com

.

1

Redd leads Bucks past Cavaliers, 111-107
BY ToM WITHERS

LeBron James arr ived.
·:we broke the road los ing
streak, the Cleve I"· I losing
streak . It means a ." Redd
said. " It was big for us to
come in here and get a win. I
think it 's &gt;omething we can
build on ."
The Bucks, who went just
1- 15 in the Central Divi sion
las t season, are 2-0 with
win s over Cleveland and
Chicago.
"We got beat up four times
by the Cavs (last season), it's
something we talked about
during the summer," Bucks
coach Larry Kry stkowiak
said . "It ·wasn' t just
Cleveland. It was the whole
divi sion. We knew we need-

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Johnson gets even with Knaus, Page 82

'

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JP Morcan (NYSE)-

. Inside

CLEVELAND The
Milwaukee Bucks are 1-forLeBron.
Michael Redd scored a
season-high 34 points, Mo
Williams added 20 and the
Bucks ended a seven-game
losing
streak
again st
Cleveland with their first
road win, 111-107 over the
Cavaliers on Tuesday night.
The Bucks hadn 't beaten
the Cavs since Dec. 10,
2005 . They also snapped an
eight-game losing streak in
Cfevefand, where they had
been winless since Jan. 6,
2003 - the season before

ed to play better."
James fini shed with 34
points, seven assists and
seven rebounds in 44 minutes. He played the entire
second half, and Cleveland 's
superstar nearly ' rallied the
Cavs , who trailed I04-95
with 2: 19 left after a basket
by Williams.
James then converted a
three-point play, and isolated "defensively on Redd, he
stripped Milwaukee 's guard
and raced down for a layup
to bring Cleveland within
four. A free throw by Daniel
Gibson pulled the '· Cavs
within three , but Redd, who
scored 18 points in the third,
dropped two free throws to

Reds, region
pour out
tributes for
Nuxhall

put Milwaukee up I09-104.
Gibson, who scored a regular-season, career-high 26,
hit a 3-pointer with 1.6 seconds left but it was way too
late for Cleveland , which
gave up easy bas kets all
BY DAN SEWELL
night. Zydrun as llgauskas
A.SSOCIAT
ED PRESS WRITER
added 16 point s and 12
rebounds for the Cav s, who
CINCINNATI
led by 14 in the nrst half but
failed to put the Bucks away Cincinnati Reds sta rs to
people who knew Joe
when they had the chance.
"We didn't defend,'' James Nuxhall only as the "old
said. "We have to find a way left-hander" from his radio
to defend better. We know broadcasts or c h &lt;~ritable
what we have to do. We' re work are paying their last
not soul searching or any- respects to the man who
made hi story as the
thing.like that."
youngest player in major
Please see Cavs, 84
league hi story.
Nuxhall 's death last week
at age 79 uncapped an outpouring of mourning and
tributes that his family says ·
has been overwhe-lming,
The high sc hool in his home
of Fairfield, a northern suburb of Cincinnati, opened
Tue sday · for a four-hour
public vi sitation to allow
fans to vi elY Nuxhall 's open
~a s ket in irs basketball
arena. Officials were ready
for as many as I 0,000 people to walk through. .
"We knew it would be
large; it's even more than
we thought," Fairfield
schools spoke sman Randy
Oppenheimer said of the
mournin g. ''I think the
scope of it has surprised

Lady Eagles fall to River Valley in opener
BY BRYAN WALTERS
BWALTERS@MVD4!LVTRIBUNE. COM

CHESHIRE - New and
improved . You
better
believe it.
River Valley doubled last
season's · win total and
remained
unbeaten
this . year
following a
hard-fought
63-56 triumph over
v i.s i t i n g
Ea s tern
during
a
non-conference girls
basketball
g a m e
Tuesday
night.
The Lady
Raiders
continu ed
their great
start to the
2007 - 08
campaign,
establishMarcum
ing a comfonable 21-11 advantage
after eight minutes of play.
The Silver and · Black
extended that lead to 35-18
six minutes into the second
period, but that was about as
good as things got for the
hosts.
The Lady Eagles (0-1)
ended the first half on a 12. 5 run to pull within I 0
points (40-30) at the break,
setting up one dramatic second half showdown.
The Green and White
started the second half with
a 13-6 run over the opening
4:55 to pull within one possession at 46-43, but River
Please se, Eastern, 8:11

us."

1

Bryan Walterslpholo

Eastern sophomore Audrianna Pullins , left, dritltlles past River Valley defender Jenna Ward
(45) during Tuesday 's non-conference girls tlaskettlall game in Cheshire.
.
'

Oppenheimer
said
Nuxhall was a familiar fig- ·
ure around hi s home area of
Hamilton and neighboring
Fairfield, but the passing of .
such a long-entrenched figure has drawn reactions
from people around the
country.
"People got to know him.
even if 'it was just through
the radio,". he said.
Nuxhall 's involvement in
professional
baseball
spanned more than six
decades from his 1944 Reds
debut at the age of 15, with
a solid 16-year career as a
pitcher followed by radio
broadca sts for .th e Reds
from 196 7 through 2004.
He occ asionally bel ped
announce games each season after his retirement.
Nuxhall's son Kim is a
and
Fairfield
teacher
worked c Jo sely w.ith his
father on a character education program, one of many
causes, . including scholarships for students in Butler
County, that Nuxhall actively supported.
'
Nuxhall died No.v. 15

Pleise see Nuxhall. 84

'

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

Marshall's Tirrell Baines celebrates the Thundering
8483 victory against East Tennessee State in a college baske!tlall
game on Tuesday at the Cam Henderson Center in Huntington.

O.fln•·""

Herd outlasts ETSU in OT
HUNTINGTON, W.Va.
(AP) _ Markel Humphrey hit
a jumper with 44 seconds left
in overtime to give Marshall
an 81-83 victory over East
Tennessee State on Tuesday.
Marshall turned the ball
over. with three ~econds left
in overtime, giving East
Tennessee another chance ,
but Courtney Pigram missed
a 3-point attempt.
The Thundering Herd (20) trailed throughout most of
regulation. Darryl Merthie
hit a layup with five seconds
left in regulation to tie the
score at 77-77 and send the
game into overtime.
Marshall got its first lead

•

at 79-77 on a jumper by
Tirrell Baines with 4:39 left
in overtime.
Tyler Wilkerson scored a
career-hi gh 22 points for
Marshall. Mark Dorri s
added 17 points, Humphrey
had 15 points and Baines
scored 14 poi11ts. Merthie
scored all seven of his points
in the second half of regulation.
Ke vin Ti ggs sco red 26
points and grab bed g
rebounds to lead East
Tennessee ( 1-2, 0-0). Pigram
and Mike Smith added 13
points each,
Kenyoila
Swader scored 12 and
Andrew Reed had I0 points.

Ofllcta

2SOJ ,Jtfttrtem Avonuo

Potm '""*''- wv 2uso

304.675.4500
AmpdltJ MW ptlt#fltll .

�'

The Daily Sentinel

Page AS

O HIO

Wednesday, November 21,

More young hunters out for deer-gun season
CARROLLTON (AP) Seventeen-year-old Jessica
Capestrain has a hard time
gening up early for school. .
But when it comes to deer
hunting, she was up at 4 a.m.
to participate in last week end's special youth deer
hunt.
"You can't beat the feeling
of being alone in the woods
with all the anticipation of
getting a big buck," said
Capestrain, a senior at North
Canton Hoover High School.
''And there is no feeling like
the incredible Adrenal in rush
you get when you shoot a
deer."
Capestrain was among the
growing number of young
people who participated in
the special hunt for youth
under 18 last weekend as the
Ohio Department of Natural
Resources continues to add
pmgrams and hunting weekends to bolster the number of
hunters in Ohio. The regular
deer-gun
season
runs
Monday through Dec. 2 with
an additional weekend Dec.
15-16.
"The kids are the future for
hunting," said Vicki Mountz,
executive administrator for
information and education
for the Ohio Department of
Natural Resources. "And we
realized there was more and
more competition for their
time every year with all the
things like video games,
computers that were evolving.'
The youth season was created in 2003 and it's proven
to be popular, Mountz said.·
The preliminary deer kill
statewide for the weekend
surged 19 percent to 10,515,
according to data released
Monday.
.
It's also safer, despite the
fact that hunters as young as
7 can be fouod toting, aiming
and firing a 12-gauge shotgun in the woods, according
to Jamey Graharp, Wildlife
Communications Specialist
for 19 counties in northeast
Ohio.

2007

Air Force moving
forward• with synthetic fuel

~rocer

(NYSE) -

28.28

Umlted Brande (NYSE) -

17.53

Norfolk Southam (NYSE) "9.57

Girls prep basketball scores, Page 82
Mens college basketball roundup, Page 84

Wednesday, November 21, 2007

Bv JAMES HANNAH

AP photo

Jessica Capestrain, right, and her father Carl keep a watchful eye, out for whitetail deer while
taking part of the first day of the two-day youth deer hunt Saturday, Nov. 17 in Carrollton .
Pat Tilton, a loogtime
Stark County hunter and
father of a teen hunter,
agreed.
"It's great to get the kids
out there on their own
because you don't have a lot
of lead flying around," he
said. "I think it's a lot safer
than the regular season."
Capestrain became interested in hunting from stories
her father, Carl.
She started spending time
in the woods at age 3 or 4 and
at 7 was shooting with a
i;caled-dowri bow and arrow.
She shot a 7-point buck with
a 12-gauge shotgun in her
first deer-gun season in 2004.
The ·peak in Ohio deer·
hunting came in 1949 when
737,675 licenses were sold,
about one licens~ for every
I 0 Ohio residents.
Sales slumped thmughout
the next three decades, bottorning at 216,055 in 1980
and rising last year to about

440,000 for all forms of deer
permits - or about one in
every 26 residents.
Several factors were cited
for the decline, including
increased
recreational
options and television. Other
factors included the need to
create living space for the
baby boom, which caused
Ohio's popuhttion to grow
froin 7.9 million in 1950 to
·11.5 million in recent years,
and farmers' concern for
safety and liability.
The state 's first effort to
turn around the hunting
decline was the creation of
the half-price youth deerhunting license in 1992,
available to anyone under
age 16.
Young hunters also must
complete the eight- to ninehour hunter training course
that all first-time ·hunters
must attend and must be
accompanied by a non-hunting adult at least 18.

In 2006, the qualified age
was rai sed -to 17, accounting
for a sharp increase last year.
A third change was made
last year - an apprentice
license - with a cost of $10
and temporary exemption
from the hunter-education
course. The apprentice does
have to be accompanied tiy a
licensed hunter at least21.
A youngster may purchase
an apprentice license three
times. There were 33,817
youth deer-hunting pennits
sold in Ohio in 1996. A
decade later, the number had
nearly doubled to 66,626.
"The apprentice program
really has helped the numbers. grow," Graham said.
''We' re finding that kids who
won't invest the time to take
a hunter safety course before
they hunt will get hooked on
the hunting experience and
then will take the course in
order to get the youth
license."

DAYTON - In hopes of protecting the nation from terrorist acts or natural di sasters that could reduce the supply
of oil, the Air Force has approved using a blend of s ynthe~­
IC and petroleum-based fuel 10 some of 1ts planes and ts
testing 1t in others.
It's part of an initiative intended to eventually lead to the
use of synthetic fuel derived from coal, natural gas or biomass. Wright-Patterson Air Force Base in Day ton has
played a lead role in the initiative and the testing.
"The pilots who have tlown on this stuff have noticed no
. di fference. Every indication is it will be successful ," said
Kevin Billings, deputy assistant secretary of the A1r Force
for environment, safety and occupational health .
The Pentagon began looking at coal in 200 I when
Congress earmarked $ 13 million to investigate the FischerTropsch process in which coal is gasifieo and then liquefied
into fuel. The technology was developed by Germany in
the 1920s and used by South Africa beginning in the 1950s.
The fuel being tested by the Air Force is a 50-50 blend of
fuel refined from n!ltural gas ~ s in g_ th_e Fischer-Tropsch
process and fuel reftned from 011 . L1qutd fuel made from
coal is expected to be available by 201 2.
.
In August, the Air Force certified its lleet of B-52s to use
the blend. It is expected to fini sh testing the blend in C-17s
by May. Next week it will begin ground testing the blend
on a B-1 bomber engine at Arnold Air Force Base in
Tennessee.
The reason for using a blend instead of pure synthetic
fuel is that the Fischer-Tropseh process removes contaminants, and the resulting fuel doesn 't have the lubricating
qualities that fuel from refined oil has. Using all synthetic
fuel could result in a lack of lubrication for engine seals and
gaskets, increasing the possibility of fuel leaks.
After the 50-50 blend is certified for the entire Air Force
lleet - expected by early 20 II - the Air Force will test
lefiner and leaner versions, adding inore synthetic fuel to
the blend to figure out where the tipping point is.
The Air Force has committed to use - by 2016 - . a
blend of domestically produced synthetic fuel and oilrefined fuel for half of the fuel it buy s for its planes in the
continental United States.
Last year, it used 1.6 billion gallons of fuel for that fleet,
most Of it for transport planes like the C- 17.
The. Fischer-Tropsch process promises to produce a
cleaner fuel that gives off more energy per pound and be
less subject to freezing. It would reduce transportation
dosts and ease logistical headaches by enabling the military
to use one fuel for all of its planes and vehicles instead of
the more than half do zen different fuels now used .
The Middle East has about 685 billion barrels of oil compared with .22 billion barrels in the United States. However,
there is enough coal in the United States to produce 964 billion barrels of fuel, according to the Pentagon.
The United States produced 1.16 billion tons of coal in
2006, up from 1.13 billion in 2005, It was used mainly to
. generate electricity and in steel-making.

.

'

Oak Hill Financial ( NAS.
DAQ)- 28.23
Ohio Valley Bane Corp.
(NASDAQ) - 25
BBT (NYSE) - 33.07
Peoples (NASDAQ)-24.27
Pepsico (NYSE) - 74.84
Premier (NASDAQ) 13.28
'
Rockwell (NYSE) - 68.87
Rocky Boots (NASDAQ) 6.87
Royal Dutch Shell - 82.21
Sears Holding (NASDAQ) 111.85
Wai-Mart (NYSE) - 45.50
Wendy's (NYSE) - ,27.97
Worthln&amp;'ton (NYSE) 21.02 .
Dally stock reports ani the
4 p.m. ET cloalnc quotes .of
transactions for Nov. 20,
2007, provided by Edward
Jonas financial advisors
Isaac Mills In Gallipolis at
('740) 441-9441 and Lesley
Marrero In Point Pleasant
at (304) 674-0174.
Member SIPC.

Wednesday ... Partly sunny. Highs around 70. Southwest
winds 5 to 10 mph with gusts up to 20 mph.
• Wednesday mght .. .A chance of thunderstorms. Showers
likely in the evening .. :Then showers after midnight. Lows
in the lower 50s. Southwest winds 10 to 15 mph with gusts
up to 25 mph. Chance of rain 90 percent.
. Thursday ... Mostly cloudy with showers with a chance
of thunderstorms. Much cooler with highs in the lower 50s.
Temperature falling into the upper 40s in the afternoon.
Nonhwest winds I0 to IS mph with gusts up to 25 mph.
Chance of rain 80 percent.
Thursday night...Mostly cloudy with a slight chance of
rain and snow showers. Much cooler with lows around 30.
West winds 5 to 10 mph. Chance of precipitation 20 percent. ,
Friday ... Partly sunny. Highs in the lower 40s.
. Friday night...Mostly clear. Cold with lows .in the mid
20s.
Saturday ... Partly sunny. Highs in the mid 40s.
Saturday night... Mostly cloudy. A chance of rain ... Sleet
and free zing rain after midnight. Lows in the lower 30s.
Chance of precipitation 40 percent.
Sunday .. .A chance of freezirig rain in the morn ing.
Cloudy with a chance of rain. Highs around 50. Chance of
precipitation 40 percent.
· .
· 1 Sunday nighi...Rain likely. Lows in the mid 30s. Chance
Of rain 60 percent.
Monday ...Cloudy. Showers likely in the morning.. .Thcn
a chance of showers in the afternoon. Highs .in the upper
50s. Chance of rain 60 percent.
Monday night...&lt;;:Ioudy with a 40 percent chance of
showers. Lows in the upper 30s.
Thesday .. .Mostl y cloudy. Hi ghs in the mid 50s.

'

LocAL SCHEDULE
POMER OY - A sChedule or upcoming high
achoo l ve rsl!y sporting events invol'ling
teems from Meigs Cou nty.

Frtdav. Noyambar 23
Soya Basketball
Vinton County at Southern , 6 p.m.
$aturdey Noyamblr 24
·soya Basketball

Eastern at River Valley, 6 p.m.
Wellston at Southern, 6 p.m.
Glrla Baeketball·
Eastern at Meigs, 6 p.m.

SS Rollins
.winsNL

MVPAward
BY MIKE FITZPATRICK
AP BASEBALL WRITER

'

NEW YORK - Back in
January, when Jimmy
Rollins was making bold
predictions, he left one out.
Not only were his Phillies
the team to beat in the NL
East,
he
was headed
foranMVP
season.
Rollins
won
the
National
League
M V P
a w a r d
Tuesday ,
Rollins
edging
M a I I
Holliday in a close race
~flee
propelling
Philadelphia to its first playoff berth in 14 ye!lfS with
his speed and steady all.around play.
· "It never crossed my
mind that I would go out
there and win an MVP,"
~ollins said on a confetence
call from ·California. "I had
a real big smile on my face,
to make it simple. I was
~xcited but I wasn 't quite
sure what to feet."
. . "I:he Gold Glove shortstop
received 16 of 32 first-place
votes and finished with 353
points in balloting by the
Baseball
Writers'
Association of America.
· Ro1lins, left off the AllStar team in July, proved ·a
prophet after sayin~ last
Winter that Philadelphm was
the team to beat in a compctitiy~,divi_sion. He backed
ll;up wtth h1s stellar play on
~he field and never
backed off his confident
. ·''If I say something it's
I believe in it," he
eiplained Thesday.
' ·Holliday, the left fielder
who led Colorado's surprising charge to the World
·series, got 11 first-place
votes and 336 points.
Milwaukee slugger Prioce
Fielder came in third, with
five first-place votes and
284 points.
It was the closest election
for NL MVP since Atlanta
third
baseman
Terry
Pendleton
beat
out
Pittsburgh's Barry Bonds by
15 points in 1991. ·
"I don't know what they
look at," Rollins said, "but
being a shortstop, that's No.
I. Defense is first. Defense
is always first."
,
Rollins batted .296 with
30 homers, 94 RBis and 41
steals from the leadoff spot,
helping Philadelphia rally
from a big September
deficit to win the' NL East.
He led the leal!ue in runs
(139) and tnples (20).
becoming the second consecutive Phillies player to
v.:in the MVP following
Ryan Howard last year.
.
: "I was like, if he can win
it I can win it. The only
thin~ he can do better than
me 1s hit home runs further
~han me," Rollins silid.
~ecause

'l1le ... of dle Aut n Chk il to rslw•lllla p1tle111 willa a,.,.,., Clift

r' $ 'dn. v_, I ..... .., - Vra •• c.. a ... ,. 'I ..,

'"I ... ,..,..

• • an: •c' lW • ..., dda is IIDt va1 alit effecdue. 'l'lle .A'i'U• CU•Ie
will enJu1e a J I fat
I Wllllt pleir, a f t pliylk:lu wwLI .
'M •nil ilwJdr fGrl ...lr, d1 f t f lie I dac111Dt Jane tile 'qzlr of
...,.., .. &amp;.1 ,..., owas' ;dd•. ftc Acre u atwlet. •&amp;•)JIUBvww,
Nw PtMIIIk a ... tile Mrlkal Dbtcloa t. Ollpi) Mfct..-,IID.

A....

· Please see Rollins, 84

CoNrAcrUs

HOLZER
·cLINIC

: ·1-740-446-2342· ext. 33

~·· -1 -740-446-3008
~4m1111 -

sports@mydailysentinel.com

900rtt Staff

.

'

Bryan Walters, Sports Wrller
(140) 446-2342, ox1. 33
bwalters 0 mydailytribune .com

740.441.3296.

.

.

t,.arry Crum, Sports Wrller
(740) 446-2342 , oxt. 33
tcrUmCmydallyregi ster.com

.

1

Redd leads Bucks past Cavaliers, 111-107
BY ToM WITHERS

LeBron James arr ived.
·:we broke the road los ing
streak, the Cleve I"· I losing
streak . It means a ." Redd
said. " It was big for us to
come in here and get a win. I
think it 's &gt;omething we can
build on ."
The Bucks, who went just
1- 15 in the Central Divi sion
las t season, are 2-0 with
win s over Cleveland and
Chicago.
"We got beat up four times
by the Cavs (last season), it's
something we talked about
during the summer," Bucks
coach Larry Kry stkowiak
said . "It ·wasn' t just
Cleveland. It was the whole
divi sion. We knew we need-

AP SPORTS WRIT ER

~omments.

Local weather

•

•

ASSOCIATE D PR ESS WRITER

Local stocks

"1-83

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

Johnson gets even with Knaus, Page 82

'

..,..

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. Inside

CLEVELAND The
Milwaukee Bucks are 1-forLeBron.
Michael Redd scored a
season-high 34 points, Mo
Williams added 20 and the
Bucks ended a seven-game
losing
streak
again st
Cleveland with their first
road win, 111-107 over the
Cavaliers on Tuesday night.
The Bucks hadn 't beaten
the Cavs since Dec. 10,
2005 . They also snapped an
eight-game losing streak in
Cfevefand, where they had
been winless since Jan. 6,
2003 - the season before

ed to play better."
James fini shed with 34
points, seven assists and
seven rebounds in 44 minutes. He played the entire
second half, and Cleveland 's
superstar nearly ' rallied the
Cavs , who trailed I04-95
with 2: 19 left after a basket
by Williams.
James then converted a
three-point play, and isolated "defensively on Redd, he
stripped Milwaukee 's guard
and raced down for a layup
to bring Cleveland within
four. A free throw by Daniel
Gibson pulled the '· Cavs
within three , but Redd, who
scored 18 points in the third,
dropped two free throws to

Reds, region
pour out
tributes for
Nuxhall

put Milwaukee up I09-104.
Gibson, who scored a regular-season, career-high 26,
hit a 3-pointer with 1.6 seconds left but it was way too
late for Cleveland , which
gave up easy bas kets all
BY DAN SEWELL
night. Zydrun as llgauskas
A.SSOCIAT
ED PRESS WRITER
added 16 point s and 12
rebounds for the Cav s, who
CINCINNATI
led by 14 in the nrst half but
failed to put the Bucks away Cincinnati Reds sta rs to
people who knew Joe
when they had the chance.
"We didn't defend,'' James Nuxhall only as the "old
said. "We have to find a way left-hander" from his radio
to defend better. We know broadcasts or c h &lt;~ritable
what we have to do. We' re work are paying their last
not soul searching or any- respects to the man who
made hi story as the
thing.like that."
youngest player in major
Please see Cavs, 84
league hi story.
Nuxhall 's death last week
at age 79 uncapped an outpouring of mourning and
tributes that his family says ·
has been overwhe-lming,
The high sc hool in his home
of Fairfield, a northern suburb of Cincinnati, opened
Tue sday · for a four-hour
public vi sitation to allow
fans to vi elY Nuxhall 's open
~a s ket in irs basketball
arena. Officials were ready
for as many as I 0,000 people to walk through. .
"We knew it would be
large; it's even more than
we thought," Fairfield
schools spoke sman Randy
Oppenheimer said of the
mournin g. ''I think the
scope of it has surprised

Lady Eagles fall to River Valley in opener
BY BRYAN WALTERS
BWALTERS@MVD4!LVTRIBUNE. COM

CHESHIRE - New and
improved . You
better
believe it.
River Valley doubled last
season's · win total and
remained
unbeaten
this . year
following a
hard-fought
63-56 triumph over
v i.s i t i n g
Ea s tern
during
a
non-conference girls
basketball
g a m e
Tuesday
night.
The Lady
Raiders
continu ed
their great
start to the
2007 - 08
campaign,
establishMarcum
ing a comfonable 21-11 advantage
after eight minutes of play.
The Silver and · Black
extended that lead to 35-18
six minutes into the second
period, but that was about as
good as things got for the
hosts.
The Lady Eagles (0-1)
ended the first half on a 12. 5 run to pull within I 0
points (40-30) at the break,
setting up one dramatic second half showdown.
The Green and White
started the second half with
a 13-6 run over the opening
4:55 to pull within one possession at 46-43, but River
Please se, Eastern, 8:11

us."

1

Bryan Walterslpholo

Eastern sophomore Audrianna Pullins , left, dritltlles past River Valley defender Jenna Ward
(45) during Tuesday 's non-conference girls tlaskettlall game in Cheshire.
.
'

Oppenheimer
said
Nuxhall was a familiar fig- ·
ure around hi s home area of
Hamilton and neighboring
Fairfield, but the passing of .
such a long-entrenched figure has drawn reactions
from people around the
country.
"People got to know him.
even if 'it was just through
the radio,". he said.
Nuxhall 's involvement in
professional
baseball
spanned more than six
decades from his 1944 Reds
debut at the age of 15, with
a solid 16-year career as a
pitcher followed by radio
broadca sts for .th e Reds
from 196 7 through 2004.
He occ asionally bel ped
announce games each season after his retirement.
Nuxhall's son Kim is a
and
Fairfield
teacher
worked c Jo sely w.ith his
father on a character education program, one of many
causes, . including scholarships for students in Butler
County, that Nuxhall actively supported.
'
Nuxhall died No.v. 15

Pleise see Nuxhall. 84

'

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

Marshall's Tirrell Baines celebrates the Thundering
8483 victory against East Tennessee State in a college baske!tlall
game on Tuesday at the Cam Henderson Center in Huntington.

O.fln•·""

Herd outlasts ETSU in OT
HUNTINGTON, W.Va.
(AP) _ Markel Humphrey hit
a jumper with 44 seconds left
in overtime to give Marshall
an 81-83 victory over East
Tennessee State on Tuesday.
Marshall turned the ball
over. with three ~econds left
in overtime, giving East
Tennessee another chance ,
but Courtney Pigram missed
a 3-point attempt.
The Thundering Herd (20) trailed throughout most of
regulation. Darryl Merthie
hit a layup with five seconds
left in regulation to tie the
score at 77-77 and send the
game into overtime.
Marshall got its first lead

•

at 79-77 on a jumper by
Tirrell Baines with 4:39 left
in overtime.
Tyler Wilkerson scored a
career-hi gh 22 points for
Marshall. Mark Dorri s
added 17 points, Humphrey
had 15 points and Baines
scored 14 poi11ts. Merthie
scored all seven of his points
in the second half of regulation.
Ke vin Ti ggs sco red 26
points and grab bed g
rebounds to lead East
Tennessee ( 1-2, 0-0). Pigram
and Mike Smith added 13
points each,
Kenyoila
Swader scored 12 and
Andrew Reed had I0 points.

Ofllcta

2SOJ ,Jtfttrtem Avonuo

Potm '""*''- wv 2uso

304.675.4500
AmpdltJ MW ptlt#fltll .

�"

Page B2 • The Daily Sentinel

Tuesday High School Basketball Scores
BY THE ASSOCIATED' PRESS
Girls Basketball
Albany Al~xande r 52. Corning Miller 21
Andover Pymatuning
Valley
62,
Heertlancl Chrishan 1a
Arcanum 52, W. 'Aiexandna Tw1n Valley
5. 39
.

1\;ohland 60. Sandusky 46
Attica Seneca E. 49, Monroeville 46
Beal lsville 80, Caldwell 73

Del phos

Jefferson

52 .

Sherwood

· Fairview 36
Dover 6D, Byesvi ll e M ea dow broo~ 46

Doylestown
Chippe wa
6D. AJ.: r.
Manchester 48
Dresden Tri-Valley 53. Mcj:onneiS\IIIIe
Morgan 34
'
Dublin Cottman 43. Cols. Brookhaven 31

Ealon 55, Camden Pre ble Shawnee 22
Elida 71: Lima Sr. 67
Fayetteville 64 , Lee.,burg Fair.field 46
Fo storia St. Wendel in 85. Vanlue 3D
Franklin 55 , W. Ca rrolllon 48
Fran klin Middletown Christia n 3 1.

Bellbrook 56, Day. Oakwood 45
Bellefonlairm 54, Spring. NW 36
Bellevue 62. Huron 23
Belmont Union Local 56, Yellow Springs
Spring. Em manu t:~ l Christian 15
34
Fl. Loramie 52, Sidney Fa1rlawn 23
Beverly Ft. f rye 31 , Zan ~sv ille
Garfield Hts. Trinity 6.2 , Cle St Joseph
Rosecra ns 30
51
Bloomdale Elmwood
Bowling Green
Geneva 62. Perry 54
50
Georgetown 49 . Ba tavia 40
Bowerston
Con otton
va lley
52
· Grove City 70. Worthington Kilbourne 34
Newcomerstown 28
·Hamilton Ross 30, Reading 29
Bucyrus 62 , Galion 16
Hamler Patrick Henry 44. Defiance 40
Burton Berkshire 62 . Gates Mills
Haviland Wa yne Trace 71 , Ro ckford
Hawken 42
Parkway 45
Cambridge 41 , New Philadelphia 38
Hilliard Davidson 82, Galloway Westland
Can. McKinley 79, Wooster 27
41
Can. T1mken 53, Heritage Christian 21
' 41
Houston 44, Anna
Canal Winchester 60, Ashville Teays
Huber Hts. Wayne 63. Piqua 32
Valley 33
Casstown Miami E. 80, Union Ci ty Independence 66, Columbia Station
Columbia 42
Mississinawa Valley 20
Ki
ngs Mills Kiilgs 139, Oxford Talawanda
Centerburg 36, Worthington Christian 32
41
Chagrin Falls 43, Chardon NDCL 32
Cheshire River Valley 63, Reedsville Kit11and 61, Painesville Harvey 25
Lahcaster 52, Cols. Independence 29
Eastern 56
Chillicothe Huntington 66, Southeastern Lancaster Fairfield Union 51, AmandaClearcre€k 47
33
Lancaster
Fisher Calh. 64 , M1llersport 30
Chillicothe Unioto 59, Frankfort Adena
Lewistown
Indian Lake 67, New Carlisle
41
Tecumseh 34
Cin. Colerain 84, Cin. NW 57
Cin. Hughes 52; Uberty Twp. l a kota E. Lima Bath 79, Ft. Wayne Luers. Ind. 46
Lima Cent. Cath. 52, Fl. Jennings 31
32
Lima Shawnee 74, SpenC ervi lle 42
Cln. Madeira 41, Cin. N. College Hill 14
Logan 59, New l e ~~: i n gto n 2 4
Cin. Mariemont 51 , Milford 46
Lyndhurst
Bru sh 6.2, Eastlake N. 40
Cin. Taft 61 , Cin. Aiken 20
Macedonia Nordonia 55, Painesvill e
Cin. Turpin 47, Cin. Mt. Healthy 40
Cin. Walnut Hills 66, Gin. Purcell Marian Riverside 51
Madison 49, Conneaut 36
46
Mansfield Christian 53. New London 52
Cin. Western Hills 55, Cin. Shrader 26
Mansfield Madison 48. Nof')Nalk 37
Cin. Woodward 57, Cin. Withrow 36
Mansfield St. Peter's 45, Bellville Clear
Circleville 62. Bloom-Carroll 33
Circleville Logan Elm 55, Cols. Hamilton Fork 33
. McArthur Vinton County 62, Athens 35
Twp. 47
Cots . East 101 , Cols . South Urban McGuffey Upper Scioto Valley 55, Ada
51
Academy 17
Mechanicsburg 50, Xenia Christian 29
Cols. Franklin Hts. 38. Cots. Briggs 28
Cols. Grandview Hts. 35, Sugar Grove Medina 72, Cle. John Marshall 39
Mento r 51, Mentor LaRe Cath. 39
Same Llrllon 2D
Milan Edison 43, Vermilion 42
Cols. Northland 91 , 'Cols. West 26
Milford Center Fa1rba nks 62, N.
Cols. Ready 67, London 59
Lewisburg Triad 31
Cols. WatterSon 49, Newark 28
MI. Orab Western Brown 51, Bet h el~ Tate
Cols. Whetstone 59, Tree of Life 36
Coshocton 39, Gnadenhutten Indian 46
Valley 21
N. Ridgeville lake Ridge 35, Fuchs
Mizrachi 17
Covington 37, Newton 19
Dalton 43, Wooster Triway 32
New Albany 54, Cols. Upper Arlington 43
Day. Belmont 56. Yellow Springs 34
New Boston Glenwood 60. Ironton St .
Day. Christian 65, Day. Stiyers 38
Joseph 23

so:

New Riegel 51. Oregon Slritch 43
New Washmgton Buckey e Cent. 46,
Plymouth 40
Newark Licking Valley 58, Cols. Be~~: ley

49
Norths1de Christi an 32. Granv ille
Chri stian 30
N0rthwo od 71, Tal. Libbey 67, OT
Norton 52, Barberton 22
Orrville 63. Massillon Jackson 52
Parma Normand.y 37, Roc ky Rive r
Lutheran W. 36
Parma Padua 54 , Gates Mills Gilmour 42 .
Pataskala Watkins Memorial 59 . Cols.
Beechcrolt 42
Paulding 55, Antwe rp 54
Piketo n .S3, Chillicothe Zane Trace 50
Pitsburg Franklin-Mo nroe 68, New Paris
National Trail 40
Por1 Clinton 56, Lakeside Danbury 48
Richfield Revere 64, Cuyahoga Fa lls
CVCA39
R i chm o ~d Hts. 92, Ora nge 54
Riverside Stebbins 52, Spring. Gref:'non
43 .
Rootstown 64 , Mantua Crestwood 55
Sandusky St. Mary 63, Greenwich S.
Cent . 54
Shelby 48, Mansfield Sr. 40
Smithville 66, 'Nava rre Fairless 26
Solon 55, Akr. Firestone 3t
Spring. Kel')ton Ridge 66 , Bellefontaine
Benjamin Logan 4B
Springboro 58, Fairborn.26
Stow-Munroe Falls 59, Massillon
Washington 33
Stra sburg -Franklin 52 , Malvern 32
Streetsboro 62, Aurora 39
Stryker 49, Delianc9 Tinora 37
Sugarcreek Garaway 46. Tuscarawas
Cent. Cath. 2B
Sut11van Black A1ver 49, lucas 39
Thomville Sheridan 49,- New Concord
John Glenn 37
Troy Christian 67, Cedarville 29
Twinsburg 6 4, Brecksville -Broadview
Hts. 57
Uniontown lake 51 , ·Louisville 23.
Urbana 58. Spring. Shawnee 40
Van Buren 52, Pemberville Eastwood 30
Vandalia Butler 72 , Greenville 42
W. Jefferson 62 , Pataskala Licking Hts.·

39 .

W. Lafayene Ridgewood 52, Magnolia
Sandy Valley 38
Warren Harding 71, Warren Champion

33

.

Warsaw River View 38, Uhrichsvill e
Clayman! 35
Waynesfield-Gosh en 75, McComb 59
Westerville Cent. 50, Westerville N. 21
Will iamsporl Westfall -38, Bainbridge
Paint Valley 33
Willoughby S. 30, Cheslerland W.
Geauga 28
Zanesville Maysville 61 , Philo 53
z a·nesvill e
W.
Muskingum
63,
Croo ksville 36

Eastern
from Page 81
· Valley responded with a
short surge to take a 49°45
lead into the final quarter.
Eastern pulled to within
two (49-47) at the 6:30
mark and were down two
. again (56-54) with 1:41
remaining. but the Lady
Raiders . finish ed strong
'With a 7-2 run to secure
the seven-poin! victory.
River Valley. which finished 1-20 overall last
year, now enters the holiday · break unblemished
with a 2-0 overall record.
RVHS first-year coach
Renee Gilmore couldn ' t be
more pleased with the way
her kids have performed to
this point.
"I'm really proud of
them. The girls have
worked really hard from
the · beginning and they
have been determined to
make the change to a more
team-oriented
philosophy," Gilmore commented. "We still have some
things to work on and
wor~ out, but we feel real
positive about where we
are right now."
And rightfully so.
All 12 players saw significant tiine on the floor,
with seven of them scoring
in the decision . Freshman
Brooke Marcum scored a
game-high 18 point s to
lead the Lady Raiders, I 0
of which came in the open ing quarter.
Junior Molly Ruff was
nex.t with 14 points, fol lowed by senior Courtney
Circle with nine and
sophomore Jenna Ward
with eight markers. Senior
Kirsten Carter and Rachel
Walburn also contributed
five points apiece, with
junior Mackenzie Clux.ton
rounding out the scoring
with four markers.
The Lady Raiders were
also 12-of-23 at the foul
line overall for 52 percent,
but made S-of-7 attempts
during their pivotal fourth
·quarter stand.
Conversely,
Eastern
made just half of its 24
free throw attempts in the
contest - including 2-of-8
in the second hal f.
The slow start ultimately
proved di sastrous · for
Eastern in its season open er, but first-year coach
Brad Quillen was pleased
that hi s squad never qu it

Wednesday, November 21,

. www.mydailysentinel.com

November 21, 2007

2007

Johnson pays back crew chief
Knaus with champagne soak

www . m ydail yse ntin e l .~~m

.

'

OHIO VALLEY
414 East C St
Wellston, OH 45692
7 40-384-3058

CHARLOTIE, N.C.
Jimmie Johnson carried a
vendetta all season . And after
winning his second Nextel
Cup title, he promptly took
care of busmess. ·
To celebrate his first title last
season , crew chief Chad
Knaus and Atlanta Braves
pitcher Mike Hampton burst
through his hotel-room door
the morning after the finale
and dou sed a' sleeping
Johnson with champagne.
Johnson vowed to get even.
On Monday morning, he
and wife · Chandra had
returned from a night of partying wh~n they stopped by the
front Jesk to .change room
keys. They wanted to ensure
Knaus &amp; Co. could not gain
access to his room this tnne.
At precisely that moment, the
clerk stopped to take a phone
calL
"The guy is on the phone
say ing, "Yes. Mr. Knaus, we'll
send a couple of cheesebur~­
ers ri ght up, room 3305,"
Johnson said. "Chani and I
· AP photo
just looked at each othef and JJmmie Johnson , left: pours champagne on crew chief Chad
said, 'This is totally unbeliev- Knaus as they celebrate after winning the NASCAR Nextel
~?~.·. :.We are totally getting Cup Series championship in Homestead , ~Ia. on Sunday.

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The Johnsons hustled back n't make it quite to sunri se I'm looking forward to it
to their own room, where they because I had the presence of because I don' t get to experipromptly emptied the minibar mind 1o know I still had to ence a lot of those types of
of "anything that fizzed ." pack. 1 missed the sun. but 1 things. But then we'll head
Posing as room service, they went to bed smiling."
·back to New York City midknocked on the . door and
·
day Sund&lt;~y and get ready f~t
attacked as soon as Knaus
Johnson's Q&amp;A with AP the·banquet.
:
opened.it.
Auto Racing Writer Jenna
Q: Looking forward til
"We hammered him," Fryer:
another champions week lp
Johnson said. "He couldn' t
Q: What was the best part of New York?
·
believe it, he was so floored . Sunday for you?
JJ : I am. I really am. I Cat):t
We were chasin~ him around
JJ: Cross m~ the tinish line, wait to do all the fun thinM,
the room, soaking him with that's what its all about. You and I know I' m not going to
everything we had and (girl- just want to make sure you · get a lot of sleep. But it"s
friend) Bruna had to dive · make it all 400 miles. I really wonh it.
" ·:
behind the door to take cover. enjoyed the race, we had a
Q: Two championships
It was awesome."
good car and the whole vibe now. Do you feel any diffet!And all in llood fun for a was really just a great experi- ent?
·
driver-crew chief combo that ence.
JJ : I do feel different. I doo ~t
became the first team in
Q: Which championship think I am, not outside at least.
almost I0 years to win consec- !eels.better, the ftrSt or the sec- But inside my head, I just f~l
utive Cup titles. The last team ond?
contident and comfonable as a
to 'do so was Jeff Gordon's in
JJ : Man, last year I was just Nex.tel Cup driver in our spo(t
1997 and 1998, and the No. 48 so relieved and caught up. in and I have a great outlook o(l
crew used a remarkable I0- the emotions. This year, I kmd my future m thiS senes.
:.
race Chase to beat Gordon to of want to enjoy it. Going
Q: Chad said within minthe title this year.
through it now, I am so much utes of the race ending Sunday
Johnwn's seventh-place fill" happier I think.
that he can"t wait for Deli!
ish Sunday at HomesteadQ : What's on your schedule year's Daytona 500. Is ~
Miami Speedway gave him thi s week?
·
nonnal ?
•
his second championship by a
JJ: I had to go to Bristol
JJ: That's him, man. He's
77-point margin over Gordon. (Connecticut) to stop by already been working on
The
two
Hendrick ESPN and I have a full round Daytona for a month. Tha!}
Motorsports teammates then of New York media. We get my guy. That's what he doeS.·
partied early into Monday back home · to Charlotte
Q: Any big plans for the ofl:morni'ng · in South Beach tonight•. I shoot a Gatorade season?
::
beforeJohnsonheadedoutfor commercial oh Wednesday in
JJ : We' ll be home fix
a full sched!Jie of champion Pittsburgh and on Thursday Christmas, maybe make some
activities.
it's off to see the in-laws for plans for New Year's, Ditt
"I am tired, but I am in Thanksgiving.
we're not really sure yet. BUt
much better shape than I was
Q: Oh, a mce little getaway? as soon as January rolll;
last year," he said. "I paced
JJ: We're going to go to .the around, I've got testing fo~ th~
myself (Sunday) night The Oklahoma-Oklahoma
St. Daytona Rolex and then t:?lip
nightclub 1'{3S just jammed game on Saturday. That's real- testing. I' m going to get rii!:lit
and time flew by so fast. I did- ly a highlight for Chani and back m the car pretty quicldY:

'--'.. , .hA

Bryan Walters/photo

BANK.

BY JENNA FRYER
AP AUTO RACING WRI TER

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992-2155

''TIE BREAKER".
Total Points in the Monday Nite
·Football Game!
' ~ia:tmi @ •Pittsburgh.____;;,·- - "i

.. bring back winter'indoor
Eastern senior Katie Haymfm (10) dribbles past River Valley
defender Jenna Ward, right , during Tuesday's non-conference girls basketball game in Cheshire .
battling until the final play
. on • Thu~sday,
buzzer. Actually,·he saw a November 29 when it
lot of positives from it.
hosts South Point in the
" I told the girls at the Ohio Valley Conference
beginning of the year that I opener. Gilmore hopes that
do things a little back- the confidence from this
wards . There will be first week of the season
ni ghts that we win by 3(l will still be there eight
points and I'll be upset and days from now.
there will be nights that we
"We can enjoy this into
· lose by 30 and I mi ght be the break, but that's over
happy," Quillen comment - when we come back. It 's
ed. "This was one of those time io focus on the ne x.t
nights. · We could have game and we need to keep
folded up the tent s after playing hard the rest of the
that start, but we didn't. way, start to finish ,"
We kept fi ghting back and Gilmore said. "The girl s
kept the intensity up and have re ally needed thi s
made things very competi - · start. They are learning
tive at the end, but we just that they can be competididn ' t shoot the ball very tive."
·
well - es pecially earl y
Eas tern returns to action
on."
thi s Saturday when it travSenior Katie Ha yman . els to Meigs for a non -conled the . Lady Eag les with ference TVC match up .
15 points, followed by Both contests will start at
Junior Kaylee Mil am with 6 p.m.
nine . Eme ry Connery and
River VaUey 63, Eaetern 58
Allie Rawson both added
eight ma'rke rs to the losin g Eastern 11 19 15 11 - 56
Aiver Valley21 19 9
14 - 63
cause as well .
Sophomore Aud rianna EASTERN (0·1)- Katie Hayman
' 7 1·
Pullin s was nex.t with 3 15, Kaylee Milam 4 O·O 9, Ka rlaaa
0 0·0 0. Beverly Maxson 1 1·2
seven, while Amanda Connolly
3, Audrlanna Pulllnl 3 1·5 7, Aly111
Durham and Beverl y Newland 1 0·0 2. Morcan Werry o 0·0 o,
Maxson chipped in fo ur· Emery Conn ery 2 4·7 8, Katie Thoma• 0
D. Amanda Ourham 2 D·D 4. Allie
artd three point s, res pec- 0·0
Aawaon 1 5·6 8. TOTALS : 21 12·24 56.
tively. Al yss a Newl and Three-point goals {2): Milam 1, Rawson
Fouls - 21.
rounded out th e scoring 1.RITeam
VER VALLE Y (2·0) - Kelcie Baird 0
with two points.
o-o D. Amanda Hagar o o-o o, R a~ hel
EHS outscored the hosts Walburn 2 1-4 5, Marissa Marcum 0 D·O
Kelsey Sands 0 0-0 D. Kirsten Caner
45-42 over the fi nal three 0.2 1·2
S." Courtney Circle 3 3-3 9. Molly
quarte rs.
Ruff 6 2·4 14, Mackenz;ie C l u~~:ton 2 0·0
lliana Corfias 0 0·0 D. Janna Wai'd 2
Ri ve r Valley, wi th the 4,
3- 5 6. Bro oke Marcum 8 2 -5 18.
win , improves to 2-0 th is TOTALS: 25 12·23 63. Three-poinT
year at home and will next goals ( 1): Ward 1. Te am Fou ls - 18

8 3 The Daily Sentinel

Upivef!lity ,of Rio
once agam hav·
softball
and ages

'.

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appear in each participating merchant's ad .
Indicate your pick of winners :md write it beside the
corresponding number.•
Entries must be dropped off at the:
Gallipolis Daily Tribune or mailed to:
Football Smackdown
c/o Gallipolis Daily Tribune
1
825 3rd Avcnn•
t
Gallipolis, OH 45631
Entries must be postmarked by Wednc&lt;day 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
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Only one.entry per person per week.

'?~

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1·888-446-2684

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1/2 mile south of the Si lver Bridge
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Page B2 • The Daily Sentinel

Tuesday High School Basketball Scores
BY THE ASSOCIATED' PRESS
Girls Basketball
Albany Al~xande r 52. Corning Miller 21
Andover Pymatuning
Valley
62,
Heertlancl Chrishan 1a
Arcanum 52, W. 'Aiexandna Tw1n Valley
5. 39
.

1\;ohland 60. Sandusky 46
Attica Seneca E. 49, Monroeville 46
Beal lsville 80, Caldwell 73

Del phos

Jefferson

52 .

Sherwood

· Fairview 36
Dover 6D, Byesvi ll e M ea dow broo~ 46

Doylestown
Chippe wa
6D. AJ.: r.
Manchester 48
Dresden Tri-Valley 53. Mcj:onneiS\IIIIe
Morgan 34
'
Dublin Cottman 43. Cols. Brookhaven 31

Ealon 55, Camden Pre ble Shawnee 22
Elida 71: Lima Sr. 67
Fayetteville 64 , Lee.,burg Fair.field 46
Fo storia St. Wendel in 85. Vanlue 3D
Franklin 55 , W. Ca rrolllon 48
Fran klin Middletown Christia n 3 1.

Bellbrook 56, Day. Oakwood 45
Bellefonlairm 54, Spring. NW 36
Bellevue 62. Huron 23
Belmont Union Local 56, Yellow Springs
Spring. Em manu t:~ l Christian 15
34
Fl. Loramie 52, Sidney Fa1rlawn 23
Beverly Ft. f rye 31 , Zan ~sv ille
Garfield Hts. Trinity 6.2 , Cle St Joseph
Rosecra ns 30
51
Bloomdale Elmwood
Bowling Green
Geneva 62. Perry 54
50
Georgetown 49 . Ba tavia 40
Bowerston
Con otton
va lley
52
· Grove City 70. Worthington Kilbourne 34
Newcomerstown 28
·Hamilton Ross 30, Reading 29
Bucyrus 62 , Galion 16
Hamler Patrick Henry 44. Defiance 40
Burton Berkshire 62 . Gates Mills
Haviland Wa yne Trace 71 , Ro ckford
Hawken 42
Parkway 45
Cambridge 41 , New Philadelphia 38
Hilliard Davidson 82, Galloway Westland
Can. McKinley 79, Wooster 27
41
Can. T1mken 53, Heritage Christian 21
' 41
Houston 44, Anna
Canal Winchester 60, Ashville Teays
Huber Hts. Wayne 63. Piqua 32
Valley 33
Casstown Miami E. 80, Union Ci ty Independence 66, Columbia Station
Columbia 42
Mississinawa Valley 20
Ki
ngs Mills Kiilgs 139, Oxford Talawanda
Centerburg 36, Worthington Christian 32
41
Chagrin Falls 43, Chardon NDCL 32
Cheshire River Valley 63, Reedsville Kit11and 61, Painesville Harvey 25
Lahcaster 52, Cols. Independence 29
Eastern 56
Chillicothe Huntington 66, Southeastern Lancaster Fairfield Union 51, AmandaClearcre€k 47
33
Lancaster
Fisher Calh. 64 , M1llersport 30
Chillicothe Unioto 59, Frankfort Adena
Lewistown
Indian Lake 67, New Carlisle
41
Tecumseh 34
Cin. Colerain 84, Cin. NW 57
Cin. Hughes 52; Uberty Twp. l a kota E. Lima Bath 79, Ft. Wayne Luers. Ind. 46
Lima Cent. Cath. 52, Fl. Jennings 31
32
Lima Shawnee 74, SpenC ervi lle 42
Cln. Madeira 41, Cin. N. College Hill 14
Logan 59, New l e ~~: i n gto n 2 4
Cin. Mariemont 51 , Milford 46
Lyndhurst
Bru sh 6.2, Eastlake N. 40
Cin. Taft 61 , Cin. Aiken 20
Macedonia Nordonia 55, Painesvill e
Cin. Turpin 47, Cin. Mt. Healthy 40
Cin. Walnut Hills 66, Gin. Purcell Marian Riverside 51
Madison 49, Conneaut 36
46
Mansfield Christian 53. New London 52
Cin. Western Hills 55, Cin. Shrader 26
Mansfield Madison 48. Nof')Nalk 37
Cin. Woodward 57, Cin. Withrow 36
Mansfield St. Peter's 45, Bellville Clear
Circleville 62. Bloom-Carroll 33
Circleville Logan Elm 55, Cols. Hamilton Fork 33
. McArthur Vinton County 62, Athens 35
Twp. 47
Cots . East 101 , Cols . South Urban McGuffey Upper Scioto Valley 55, Ada
51
Academy 17
Mechanicsburg 50, Xenia Christian 29
Cols. Franklin Hts. 38. Cots. Briggs 28
Cols. Grandview Hts. 35, Sugar Grove Medina 72, Cle. John Marshall 39
Mento r 51, Mentor LaRe Cath. 39
Same Llrllon 2D
Milan Edison 43, Vermilion 42
Cols. Northland 91 , 'Cols. West 26
Milford Center Fa1rba nks 62, N.
Cols. Ready 67, London 59
Lewisburg Triad 31
Cols. WatterSon 49, Newark 28
MI. Orab Western Brown 51, Bet h el~ Tate
Cols. Whetstone 59, Tree of Life 36
Coshocton 39, Gnadenhutten Indian 46
Valley 21
N. Ridgeville lake Ridge 35, Fuchs
Mizrachi 17
Covington 37, Newton 19
Dalton 43, Wooster Triway 32
New Albany 54, Cols. Upper Arlington 43
Day. Belmont 56. Yellow Springs 34
New Boston Glenwood 60. Ironton St .
Day. Christian 65, Day. Stiyers 38
Joseph 23

so:

New Riegel 51. Oregon Slritch 43
New Washmgton Buckey e Cent. 46,
Plymouth 40
Newark Licking Valley 58, Cols. Be~~: ley

49
Norths1de Christi an 32. Granv ille
Chri stian 30
N0rthwo od 71, Tal. Libbey 67, OT
Norton 52, Barberton 22
Orrville 63. Massillon Jackson 52
Parma Normand.y 37, Roc ky Rive r
Lutheran W. 36
Parma Padua 54 , Gates Mills Gilmour 42 .
Pataskala Watkins Memorial 59 . Cols.
Beechcrolt 42
Paulding 55, Antwe rp 54
Piketo n .S3, Chillicothe Zane Trace 50
Pitsburg Franklin-Mo nroe 68, New Paris
National Trail 40
Por1 Clinton 56, Lakeside Danbury 48
Richfield Revere 64, Cuyahoga Fa lls
CVCA39
R i chm o ~d Hts. 92, Ora nge 54
Riverside Stebbins 52, Spring. Gref:'non
43 .
Rootstown 64 , Mantua Crestwood 55
Sandusky St. Mary 63, Greenwich S.
Cent . 54
Shelby 48, Mansfield Sr. 40
Smithville 66, 'Nava rre Fairless 26
Solon 55, Akr. Firestone 3t
Spring. Kel')ton Ridge 66 , Bellefontaine
Benjamin Logan 4B
Springboro 58, Fairborn.26
Stow-Munroe Falls 59, Massillon
Washington 33
Stra sburg -Franklin 52 , Malvern 32
Streetsboro 62, Aurora 39
Stryker 49, Delianc9 Tinora 37
Sugarcreek Garaway 46. Tuscarawas
Cent. Cath. 2B
Sut11van Black A1ver 49, lucas 39
Thomville Sheridan 49,- New Concord
John Glenn 37
Troy Christian 67, Cedarville 29
Twinsburg 6 4, Brecksville -Broadview
Hts. 57
Uniontown lake 51 , ·Louisville 23.
Urbana 58. Spring. Shawnee 40
Van Buren 52, Pemberville Eastwood 30
Vandalia Butler 72 , Greenville 42
W. Jefferson 62 , Pataskala Licking Hts.·

39 .

W. Lafayene Ridgewood 52, Magnolia
Sandy Valley 38
Warren Harding 71, Warren Champion

33

.

Warsaw River View 38, Uhrichsvill e
Clayman! 35
Waynesfield-Gosh en 75, McComb 59
Westerville Cent. 50, Westerville N. 21
Will iamsporl Westfall -38, Bainbridge
Paint Valley 33
Willoughby S. 30, Cheslerland W.
Geauga 28
Zanesville Maysville 61 , Philo 53
z a·nesvill e
W.
Muskingum
63,
Croo ksville 36

Eastern
from Page 81
· Valley responded with a
short surge to take a 49°45
lead into the final quarter.
Eastern pulled to within
two (49-47) at the 6:30
mark and were down two
. again (56-54) with 1:41
remaining. but the Lady
Raiders . finish ed strong
'With a 7-2 run to secure
the seven-poin! victory.
River Valley. which finished 1-20 overall last
year, now enters the holiday · break unblemished
with a 2-0 overall record.
RVHS first-year coach
Renee Gilmore couldn ' t be
more pleased with the way
her kids have performed to
this point.
"I'm really proud of
them. The girls have
worked really hard from
the · beginning and they
have been determined to
make the change to a more
team-oriented
philosophy," Gilmore commented. "We still have some
things to work on and
wor~ out, but we feel real
positive about where we
are right now."
And rightfully so.
All 12 players saw significant tiine on the floor,
with seven of them scoring
in the decision . Freshman
Brooke Marcum scored a
game-high 18 point s to
lead the Lady Raiders, I 0
of which came in the open ing quarter.
Junior Molly Ruff was
nex.t with 14 points, fol lowed by senior Courtney
Circle with nine and
sophomore Jenna Ward
with eight markers. Senior
Kirsten Carter and Rachel
Walburn also contributed
five points apiece, with
junior Mackenzie Clux.ton
rounding out the scoring
with four markers.
The Lady Raiders were
also 12-of-23 at the foul
line overall for 52 percent,
but made S-of-7 attempts
during their pivotal fourth
·quarter stand.
Conversely,
Eastern
made just half of its 24
free throw attempts in the
contest - including 2-of-8
in the second hal f.
The slow start ultimately
proved di sastrous · for
Eastern in its season open er, but first-year coach
Brad Quillen was pleased
that hi s squad never qu it

Wednesday, November 21,

. www.mydailysentinel.com

November 21, 2007

2007

Johnson pays back crew chief
Knaus with champagne soak

www . m ydail yse ntin e l .~~m

.

'

OHIO VALLEY
414 East C St
Wellston, OH 45692
7 40-384-3058

CHARLOTIE, N.C.
Jimmie Johnson carried a
vendetta all season . And after
winning his second Nextel
Cup title, he promptly took
care of busmess. ·
To celebrate his first title last
season , crew chief Chad
Knaus and Atlanta Braves
pitcher Mike Hampton burst
through his hotel-room door
the morning after the finale
and dou sed a' sleeping
Johnson with champagne.
Johnson vowed to get even.
On Monday morning, he
and wife · Chandra had
returned from a night of partying wh~n they stopped by the
front Jesk to .change room
keys. They wanted to ensure
Knaus &amp; Co. could not gain
access to his room this tnne.
At precisely that moment, the
clerk stopped to take a phone
calL
"The guy is on the phone
say ing, "Yes. Mr. Knaus, we'll
send a couple of cheesebur~­
ers ri ght up, room 3305,"
Johnson said. "Chani and I
· AP photo
just looked at each othef and JJmmie Johnson , left: pours champagne on crew chief Chad
said, 'This is totally unbeliev- Knaus as they celebrate after winning the NASCAR Nextel
~?~.·. :.We are totally getting Cup Series championship in Homestead , ~Ia. on Sunday.

760Second Ave.
Gallipolis, OH 45631
740-446-4460

Inside Food land
Inside Wat.:nart

800-538-7674 .

Pomeroy

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Open Sun-Sat 7am-10pm
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The Johnsons hustled back n't make it quite to sunri se I'm looking forward to it
to their own room, where they because I had the presence of because I don' t get to experipromptly emptied the minibar mind 1o know I still had to ence a lot of those types of
of "anything that fizzed ." pack. 1 missed the sun. but 1 things. But then we'll head
Posing as room service, they went to bed smiling."
·back to New York City midknocked on the . door and
·
day Sund&lt;~y and get ready f~t
attacked as soon as Knaus
Johnson's Q&amp;A with AP the·banquet.
:
opened.it.
Auto Racing Writer Jenna
Q: Looking forward til
"We hammered him," Fryer:
another champions week lp
Johnson said. "He couldn' t
Q: What was the best part of New York?
·
believe it, he was so floored . Sunday for you?
JJ : I am. I really am. I Cat):t
We were chasin~ him around
JJ: Cross m~ the tinish line, wait to do all the fun thinM,
the room, soaking him with that's what its all about. You and I know I' m not going to
everything we had and (girl- just want to make sure you · get a lot of sleep. But it"s
friend) Bruna had to dive · make it all 400 miles. I really wonh it.
" ·:
behind the door to take cover. enjoyed the race, we had a
Q: Two championships
It was awesome."
good car and the whole vibe now. Do you feel any diffet!And all in llood fun for a was really just a great experi- ent?
·
driver-crew chief combo that ence.
JJ : I do feel different. I doo ~t
became the first team in
Q: Which championship think I am, not outside at least.
almost I0 years to win consec- !eels.better, the ftrSt or the sec- But inside my head, I just f~l
utive Cup titles. The last team ond?
contident and comfonable as a
to 'do so was Jeff Gordon's in
JJ : Man, last year I was just Nex.tel Cup driver in our spo(t
1997 and 1998, and the No. 48 so relieved and caught up. in and I have a great outlook o(l
crew used a remarkable I0- the emotions. This year, I kmd my future m thiS senes.
:.
race Chase to beat Gordon to of want to enjoy it. Going
Q: Chad said within minthe title this year.
through it now, I am so much utes of the race ending Sunday
Johnwn's seventh-place fill" happier I think.
that he can"t wait for Deli!
ish Sunday at HomesteadQ : What's on your schedule year's Daytona 500. Is ~
Miami Speedway gave him thi s week?
·
nonnal ?
•
his second championship by a
JJ: I had to go to Bristol
JJ: That's him, man. He's
77-point margin over Gordon. (Connecticut) to stop by already been working on
The
two
Hendrick ESPN and I have a full round Daytona for a month. Tha!}
Motorsports teammates then of New York media. We get my guy. That's what he doeS.·
partied early into Monday back home · to Charlotte
Q: Any big plans for the ofl:morni'ng · in South Beach tonight•. I shoot a Gatorade season?
::
beforeJohnsonheadedoutfor commercial oh Wednesday in
JJ : We' ll be home fix
a full sched!Jie of champion Pittsburgh and on Thursday Christmas, maybe make some
activities.
it's off to see the in-laws for plans for New Year's, Ditt
"I am tired, but I am in Thanksgiving.
we're not really sure yet. BUt
much better shape than I was
Q: Oh, a mce little getaway? as soon as January rolll;
last year," he said. "I paced
JJ: We're going to go to .the around, I've got testing fo~ th~
myself (Sunday) night The Oklahoma-Oklahoma
St. Daytona Rolex and then t:?lip
nightclub 1'{3S just jammed game on Saturday. That's real- testing. I' m going to get rii!:lit
and time flew by so fast. I did- ly a highlight for Chani and back m the car pretty quicldY:

'--'.. , .hA

Bryan Walters/photo

BANK.

BY JENNA FRYER
AP AUTO RACING WRI TER

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N•xt to lrnn's(ilas.•

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14•.____________________

992-2155

''TIE BREAKER".
Total Points in the Monday Nite
·Football Game!
' ~ia:tmi @ •Pittsburgh.____;;,·- - "i

.. bring back winter'indoor
Eastern senior Katie Haymfm (10) dribbles past River Valley
defender Jenna Ward, right , during Tuesday's non-conference girls basketball game in Cheshire .
battling until the final play
. on • Thu~sday,
buzzer. Actually,·he saw a November 29 when it
lot of positives from it.
hosts South Point in the
" I told the girls at the Ohio Valley Conference
beginning of the year that I opener. Gilmore hopes that
do things a little back- the confidence from this
wards . There will be first week of the season
ni ghts that we win by 3(l will still be there eight
points and I'll be upset and days from now.
there will be nights that we
"We can enjoy this into
· lose by 30 and I mi ght be the break, but that's over
happy," Quillen comment - when we come back. It 's
ed. "This was one of those time io focus on the ne x.t
nights. · We could have game and we need to keep
folded up the tent s after playing hard the rest of the
that start, but we didn't. way, start to finish ,"
We kept fi ghting back and Gilmore said. "The girl s
kept the intensity up and have re ally needed thi s
made things very competi - · start. They are learning
tive at the end, but we just that they can be competididn ' t shoot the ball very tive."
·
well - es pecially earl y
Eas tern returns to action
on."
thi s Saturday when it travSenior Katie Ha yman . els to Meigs for a non -conled the . Lady Eag les with ference TVC match up .
15 points, followed by Both contests will start at
Junior Kaylee Mil am with 6 p.m.
nine . Eme ry Connery and
River VaUey 63, Eaetern 58
Allie Rawson both added
eight ma'rke rs to the losin g Eastern 11 19 15 11 - 56
Aiver Valley21 19 9
14 - 63
cause as well .
Sophomore Aud rianna EASTERN (0·1)- Katie Hayman
' 7 1·
Pullin s was nex.t with 3 15, Kaylee Milam 4 O·O 9, Ka rlaaa
0 0·0 0. Beverly Maxson 1 1·2
seven, while Amanda Connolly
3, Audrlanna Pulllnl 3 1·5 7, Aly111
Durham and Beverl y Newland 1 0·0 2. Morcan Werry o 0·0 o,
Maxson chipped in fo ur· Emery Conn ery 2 4·7 8, Katie Thoma• 0
D. Amanda Ourham 2 D·D 4. Allie
artd three point s, res pec- 0·0
Aawaon 1 5·6 8. TOTALS : 21 12·24 56.
tively. Al yss a Newl and Three-point goals {2): Milam 1, Rawson
Fouls - 21.
rounded out th e scoring 1.RITeam
VER VALLE Y (2·0) - Kelcie Baird 0
with two points.
o-o D. Amanda Hagar o o-o o, R a~ hel
EHS outscored the hosts Walburn 2 1-4 5, Marissa Marcum 0 D·O
Kelsey Sands 0 0-0 D. Kirsten Caner
45-42 over the fi nal three 0.2 1·2
S." Courtney Circle 3 3-3 9. Molly
quarte rs.
Ruff 6 2·4 14, Mackenz;ie C l u~~:ton 2 0·0
lliana Corfias 0 0·0 D. Janna Wai'd 2
Ri ve r Valley, wi th the 4,
3- 5 6. Bro oke Marcum 8 2 -5 18.
win , improves to 2-0 th is TOTALS: 25 12·23 63. Three-poinT
year at home and will next goals ( 1): Ward 1. Te am Fou ls - 18

8 3 The Daily Sentinel

Upivef!lity ,of Rio
once agam hav·
softball
and ages

'.

•

NAME: ______________
AD~RESS: __- - ' - - - - - -

PHONE:._ _ _ _ _ _ __

'
•'
'

..'
..

.r

' '

PLEASANT
VALLEY
HOSPITAL

2520 V" lley

Orin~

• Pnint Pleasant, W\1 • 201-bcd rat•ll it y

304-675-4340
The Family of Professionals

Each Tuesday through Dec. II, a numbered game will
appear in each participating merchant's ad .
Indicate your pick of winners :md write it beside the
corresponding number.•
Entries must be dropped off at the:
Gallipolis Daily Tribune or mailed to:
Football Smackdown
c/o Gallipolis Daily Tribune
1
825 3rd Avcnn•
t
Gallipolis, OH 45631
Entries must be postmarked by Wednc&lt;day 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 or age or older to enter.
Only one.entry per person per week.

'?~

Be MEDICAL EQUIPMENT. INC .

Specialists In:
OXYGEN &amp; RESPIRATORY
EOUIPME]IIT &amp; SUPPLIES

• Locally Owned and Operated
• 24h ~. Emergency Service ·
• Free Delivery
• Stop By Our Showroom
• Many More Items

·. Jiaeek'• ~ongltont
' m.. .!/loJrel

70 Pine Street • Gallipolis, OH

Stop By And See The
All .New Acadia
I
I
I.
I

SMITH'S GMC
133l'lne St. Rt. 160 Down Town GaiUpolls, OH 45631
.

740-446-2532

$C:AS:U $
OHIO VALLEY

446-2404

1·888-446-2684

216 Uppe r Riv11r Rd. Gallipo lis. Ohio
1/2 mile south of the Si lver Bridge
License CC 700077 000 ami 001
License Cl 750048 -00tl and 00 1

7 40- 446-0007

(304) 273-3600
Aavenswoqd, WV
f

•

'

'

�· Page 84 • The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, November 21, 2007

www.mydailysentinel.com

UCLA rallies to beat Michigan State, 68-63
KANSAS CITY. Mo.
(AP) - Kev 10 Love got
UCLA started. Luc Rtchard
Mbah a Moute finished it
o.ff.
Love had 21 pmnts and II
rebounds. and Mbah a
Moute hn a 3-pointer with
28 seconds left, help10g second-ranked UCLA rebound
from a mi serable lirst half to
beat No. 10 Michtgan State
68-63 on Tuesday night in
the champiOnship game of
the CBE Classic.
UCLA (5-0J couldn't get
anything going in the first
half. forcing up shots inside,
missing open ones on the
outside. The Bruins got back
10 11 beh10d the shootmg of
Josh Shipp and Russell
Westbrook.
Saint Mary's 99,
No. 12 Oregon 87
MORAGA, Calif. (AP) Patt)' Mills had the best
sconng output by a freshman in program history with
37 points, and also had live
asststs, two steals and only
one turnover that came with
3 ·minutes to go. and Saint
Mary's stunned the Ducks
Mtlls Jed the feisty Gaels
(4-0) to their first win over a
· ranked opponent m nearly
three years in a rockmg,
sold-out arena. It was only
his fourth college game and
the effort lied htm for sixthbest ever at Saint Mary's.
Students rushed the floor
as soon as the buzzer sound ed to celebrate the upset.
Kamyron Brown scored
20 points, Maarty Leunen
had 17 and II rebounds, and
Tajuan Porter 13 before
fouling out for Ore~im (4-1).
No. IN. Carohna 110,
South Carolina St. 64
CHAPEL HILL, N.C.
(AP) - Tyler Hansbrough
scored 26 pomts and Wayne
Ellington added 19 to help
North Carolina beat South
Carolina State.
Danny Green had 15
points for the Tar Heels (30), who earned their second
straight blowout win in the
Las Vegas Invitational.
North Carolma next faces
Old Dominion in Las Vegas,
beginning an extended road
tnp that wtll keep them
away from home for nearly a
month.
Everett Spencer scored 12
points to lead the Bulldogs
(0-4). who managed an early
8-4 lead before bemg overwhelmed
by
North

Carolina-Wilmington ( 1-2).
.No. 11 Marquette 91,
Oklahoma State 61
LAHAINA, Hawaii (AP)
- Marquette defended and
Hustled it s way into the
championship game of the
EA Sports Maut Invitational.
Jerel McNeal had 20
points and Dominic James
added I8 to lead the Golden
Eagles in ~ never-in-doubt
semifinal
victory over
Oklahoma State. Terrel
Harris had 17 points and
freshman James Anderson
added 14 for the Cowboys
(2-2).
Marquette (4-0) will go
· for the IItle on Wednesday
night.
No. 13 Duke 79,
Illinois 66
LAHAINA, Hawaii (AP)
- Gerald Henderson scored
23 points and DeMarcus
Nelson added 16 to lead the
Blue Devils over Illinots m
the semifinals of the EA
Sports Maui Invitational.
Duke (4-0) will meet No.
I J, Marquette, which beat
AP photo Oklahoma State 91 -61. on
Duke coach Mike Krzyzewskl calls a play during the second Wednesday night for the
half of Duke's 79-66 win over llltnots 1n a second-round shot at title No. 4.
The Blue Devtls are I I -0
game 1n the EA Sports Maui InvitatiOnal oasketoall tournaon
the island, having won
ment In Lahaina, Hawaii, on Tuesday.
the championship in 1992,
Carolina's stze and athleti- (4-0). who snapped the Blue 1997 and 2001. No other
cism.
Ratders' streak of 216 con- school has more than two
secuttve games without Maui titles in the 24 years of
No. 3 Memphis 84,
Arkansas State 63
allowing I 00 points.
the tournament.
MEMPHIS, Tenn. (AP)Kevin Kanaskie had nine
Brian Randle had 16
Wtllie Kemp scored a points and Nigel Johnson points to lead the Ftghting
career-high 22
points, added seven for Middle Illini (3-1)
includmg 6-for-8 from 3- Tennessee (1-3), which shot
No. 23 Virginia 72,
point range, and Doneal only 31 percent and lost to'
Drexel 58
Mack added 19 to lead Tennessee for the sixth conCHARLOTTESVILLE,
Memphis over Arkansas secutive ttme.
Va. (AP) - Sean Singletary
State. ·
No. 8 Indiana 95,
had 24 points, seven
Chns Dougla.s-Roberts
UNC-Wilmington 71
rebounds and five assists
added
16 pomts for
BLOOMINGTON. Ind. and Virgmm returned to
Memphis (5-0), which has (AP) - Eric Gordon scored John Paul Jones Arena after
won all of its ~arnes by dou- 30 points and Armon Bassett an impressive trip out West
ble-digit margms.
added 19 to help lndmna with a victory against
Adrian Banks led the beat
North
Carolina- Drexel.
Indians (0-3) with 32 points, Wilmington.
The Cavaliers (4-0) led
Indiana (3-0) tlirted wtth 31-25 at halftime and used a
one short of his career high,
and provided the most con- the I00-point mark for the I 0-2 run in the second half
sistent offensive threat for third strai ght game and to stretch their lead to douArkansas State.
probably would have hit ble digits.
triple digits' in back-to-hack • Mamadi Diane capped the
No. 7 Tennessee 109,
Middle Tennessee 40
games 1f coach Kelvin burst with a 3-pointer and
KNOXVILLE, Tenn. (AP) Sampson hadn't pulled his the Cavaliers gr~dually
- JaJ uan Smtih scored 26 starters early. The Hoosiers stretched their advanta~e to
of his carc;er-high 32 points haven ' t scored 100 points in 18 in the second half. Dtane,
in the first half and Chris consecutive games since Adrian Joseph and Calvin
Lofton added I7 points to November 2005 and have Baker each added II points
help Tennessee beat Middle won 20 stratght . home for the Cavaliers.
Tennessee.
games.
Frank Elegar led Drexel
Todd Hendley scored 20 (3-1) with 23 points and
Ramar Smith had 12
points and Tyler ' Smith points and Chad Tomko Tramayne Hawthorne had
added II for the Volunteers added
17
for
North 10'.
needed him most, he was at
his best. Despite being
booed vigorously in New
York all season, Rollins batted .346 with six homers
and IS RBis against the
Mels. That helped the
Phillies go 12-6 in the season series, winning the final
eight meetings with their
NL East rivals.
Philadelphia,
which
trailed the first-place Mets
by seven games on Sept. 12,
went 13-4 down the stretch
and clinched the division
title on the last day of the
regular season.
"I never really thought
about winning an MVP. If I
won a Gold Glove, then that
was the MVP for a sh'Ortstop," Rollins said.
Born in Oakland, Calif.,
Rollins grew up idolizing
and studying another outstanding leadoff hitter,
Rkkey Henderson. The
Phillies' star said thai's
where he got a lot of hi s

baseball.
"I hope they one day say,
I want to be Cy Young or I
want to be MVP," Rollins
said. "I know how black
kids feel about baseball. I
really do. They don 't think
tl's street credible.
"It• would be a sad day if
one day we are - quote,
unquote - extinct from this
game."
Voting took place before
the
postseason,
when
Holliday and the Rockies
completed a three- game
sweep of Philadelphia in the
first round.
Holliday 's performance in
the wild-card tiebreaker·
against San Diego did
count, however. He hit a
tying triple off career saves
leader Trevor Hoffman 10
the bottom of the 13th
inning and scored the winning run on a shallow saciitice fly with a headfirst dive
at the plate. Still , it wasn't
enough to catch Rolhns.
"You look at Matt
Holliday's numbers - I
looked at them myself and
I'm JUSt amazed. It's stck
what he 's done," Rollms
said.
Fielder also was impressive. In his second full sea-

son 111 the maJors, the 23year-old first baseman led
the league with 50 homers
- bl:coming the youngest
player to reach the plateau.
· He ranked second in slugging percentage (.618) and
batted .288 with 119 RBls,
but his MVP candidacy
probably was hurt when the
Brewers blew their NL
Central lead and missed the
playoffs. ·
"I can't tmagine hitting
50 1f I was 43 and had every
advantage in the world ,"
said Rollins, a switch-hitter
generously listed at S-foot8, 174 pounds.
His pint-sized stature ts
one reason he's not worried
about his new fame becoming a burden.
"Fortunately for me, I'm
still only 5-7 so I can still
hide behind a few people,"
Rollins said.
New York Mets third
baseman David Wright finished fourth in the balloting
and Howard came in fifth.
Braves slugger Chipper
Jones, the 1999 winner, was
sixth and Padres ace Jake
Peavy, who won the Cy
Young Award unammously
last week, finished seventh.

coached by George Karl Redd said. "I was seetng the
and featured a starting line- !low of the game and JUSt
up of Sam Cassell, Ray being aggressive. I just took
Allen,
Joel
Przybilla, advantage of how they were
from Page 81
Anthony Mason and Tim guarding me . I( they were
Thomas.
going to guard nie loosely,
No, but t~ey are hurting.
Redd was a reserve on then attack."
Already shorthanded, the that squad, but he's a star
The Buck\ were able to
Cavaliers announced after now. and he showed why
get several easy baskets
the game tha,t veteran for- durin g a dazzling third · inside as they exploi ted
ward Donyell Marshall wtll quarter.
Cleveland's thin frontline,
be out for two months with
After scoring 12 pmnts in especi ally Williams, who
a badly sprained right wrist. the opemng half, Redd, who ,blasted down the lane for
The club is already missing was courted in free agency baskets without any defend'starting guard Larry Hughes by C,leveland a few years ers in hts path .
(bone brui se). forward back, hit a quick 3-pointer
"We know we are a much
Anderson VareJao (contract early in the third and later better te am than we're
fo rw ard scored I 3 stt'atght points as showing right now," Cavs
holdout)
and
Cedric Stmmons (sprained Mil waukee opened an 84- forward Drew Gooden satd.
ank le).
80 lead going mto the "We saw what happened
Reserve
Chari ie fourth .
last year, what made us get
Villanueva had 17 points
In the third, rhe former to the finals It 's playing
and Royallvey came off the Ohio State star went 5-of-6 defen se."
bench and added 15 for the from the floor and n\ade
Notes: James is averaging
Bucks, who came in 4-0 at , three 3-pointers.
37.7 points 10 rebounds and
home and 0-4 on the road.
Redd finished 15-of-20 I0 ass tsts in hi s past three
The last time Milwaukee from the free-throw line.
games. .. Williams didn 't
beat the Cavs they were
"I was just attacktng," have a turnover in 41 min-

utes .... It's only November,
but at 29.2 points per game,
James leads the NBA in
scoring. He was asked if
tliat might .hold up until the
end of the season. "No," he
said. "A guy out in L.A. is
not going to let anybody
lead the league in scoring
but him " Corey Maggette,
nght? Of course, James was
referring to Kobe Bryant. ...
Kry stkowiak has been
impressed with Chinese
rookte Yi Jianlian 's adjustment to the NBA and a new
culture. "He 's fit in. Even
though he 's only 20, he's
very mature. A lot of young
kids come in the league and
you can tell by looking at
them they ' re kind of awed,
but that hasn' t been the case
with htm." .. Cavs G Eric
Snow was active for the
first time this season but
didn't play. He underwent
knee surgery in October.

Ro11ins
'

from PageBl
Holliday, the NL championship series MVP, hit .340
with 137 RBis - becoming
the third player since 1967
to lead a league in both categones. He also had 36
homers and topped the NL
in hits (216 ), total · bases
(386) and doubles (50).
"It's Jimmy Rollins' day,
and I don't want to step on
his day," Holliday said in a
statement through the
Rockies.
Rollins; who turns 29
next week, was a leader all
year for the injury-ravaged
Phillies, practically carrying
them at times because
Howard, Chase Utley and
several key pitchers were
stdelined for significant
stretches.
The tirst player in major
league htstory to have 30
homers, 30 doubles, 30
steals and 20 tnples in one
season. Rollins was durable,
too. He became the tirst NL
shortstop in 34 years to play
in every game.
And when the Phillies

"'flair."
Rollins was particularly
proud that he, Fielder and
AL Cy Young Award winner C.C. Sabathia, also from
the Bay Area, have set an
example that might encourage more black kids to play

Cavs

ohio hiatt school football sta~ ·..
semifinal playoff pa!riDgS
•

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~ribune

- Sentinel - l\egi~ter
CLASSIFIED

'

Galli a

County,
OH

'

DIVISIOM II

'

.• Gomoll II( 7;30/&gt;.fil. Fliday ·
Mentor ,Lal(e ,Clalh. (~) yo. NfNI!rk.

(12-1) -.art MaNnion
Bmwn 11ger Stadium.
Sljllliwy Big Wohlut (12-t) V$ Monroe
(11-2) at Lima Senior S1odl\'"'·
l.iclllng

V$11ey

~Paul

Tribe signs Japanese
closer to 2-year deal
CLEVELAND (AP) Not to be confused with his
hot-dog chomping countryman, this Kobayashi might
make fate innings easier to
stomach for the Cleveland
Indians.
Looking to strengthen the
back end of their bullpen and
add insurance for closer Joe
Borowski, the
Indians
signed Japanese free agent
Masahide Kobayashi to a
$6.25 million, two-year contract on Tuesday.
The deal includes a $3.25
million club option for 20 lO
with a $250,000 buyout.
The
33-year-old
Kobayashi spent the past
nine seasons with the Chiba
Lotte Marines, currently
managed
by
Bobby
Valentine. The right-handed
reliever is one of three pitchers in Japanese baseball history wtth more than 200
saves. ·
He will 'join Clevel'IJld's
bullpen as a setup man for
Borowski, who in his first
season with the Indians led
the AL with 45 saves many of them shaky ones.
Cleveland recently exercised
Borowski's $4 million
option for 2008.
"This is a guy who has
extensive closing experience," Indians general manager Mark Shapiro said at a
news conference to introduce Kobayashi. "I view
him in the upper echelon of
guys who were available on
the market."
Kobayashi is the first
Japfl.nese player signed by
the Indians. The club has
scouted him for several seasons.
Cleveland had one of the
top bullpens in the AL this
year, but as Shapiro has
learned, injuries and ineffectiveness are two factors that
can pop up on a team at any
time.
"I don't think we'll ever be
satisfied with our bullpen,"
he said. "We'll continue to
work to reinforce' and today
was a big step."

Manager Eric Wedge can
give the ball to Kobayashi in
the seventh and eighth
innings. He'll be a nice complement for right-hander
Rafael Betancourt and lefty
Rafael Perez, who were two
of the league's top setup men
last season.
"If we're as good a team as
we think we're going to be,
there are going to be many
opportunities to pitch in .
meaningful situations in the
late innings," Shapiro said.
"That's what we envision for
him."
Kobayashi has saved at
least 20 games in each of the
last seven seasons.
The Indians, who took
World Series champion
Boston to Game 7 of the AL
championship series, are
hoping they can follqw the
success the Red Sox had in
signing Japanese pttchers.
Starter Datsuke Matsuzaka
and reliever Hideki Okajima
were instrumental in helping
the Red Sox win their second Series title in four years.
Last season, Kobayashi
went 2-7 with a 3.61 ERA
and 27 saves in 49 appearances. He was on the disabled list in September with
a minor neck injury but fmished the regular season on
the active roster and pitched
in the playoffs.
Kobayashi relies mainly
on a slider as his out pitch.
His fastball has been clocked
in the mid-90s (mph) and he
also throws a splitter.
"No, I don't throw the
gyroball," Kobayashi said,
referring to Matsuzaka's
famed pttch.
Kobayashi went 36-34
with a 2.79 ERA' and 227
saves in 303 games for
Chiba Lotte. In 2005, he led
the Pacific League with 34
saves. He was a member of
Japan's Olympic baseball
team in 2004.
Because Kobayashi was
an unrestricted free agent,
Cleveland did not have to
pay a posting fee to Chiba
Lotte to negotiate with him.

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AVON• All Areas! To Buy or
Sell Shtrley Spears, 304675-1429
- - - - - - --

For sale by owner 3BR
Ranch, 1 bath, Famtly
Room Stove/Frtdge WID
tncluded A!!ktng $70,000
Call740-709-6339

I W;il~ If'

A local manufacturer has
open1ngs for Expenenced
Mtg Welders and Painter for
Manufactured Equipment
Apply in person at 2150
Eastern Avenue, Galltpohs,
OH NO phone call s please

Yoo''lf. PV&lt;M Suifo%t&gt;
io $1'~'( t:;COI'!Nl!

House for sale 1n Ractne
area Approx 4 acres, all
professtonally landscaped
Ranch style house wtth 4
bedrooms. Nvmg room, dtnmg room kttchen, large famtly room, cenllal atr, gas heal
and 1 ftreplace Addttton of a
la rge Flonda room completely cedar opens onto
pat10 &amp; pool area Heated tn
ground pool enclosed by pnvacy lencmg and landscaped Flntshed 2 car
garage attached to house
and fm1shed &amp; heated 3 car
ga rage
unattached
Excellent condtlton ready to
move tn $255,00000, Call
(740)949-2217

1'~ 1V~~ ~ ~y

~~~ 11\AN~S&lt;:JtVlN~.

An EKcell ent way to earn
money The New Avon
Call Manlyn 304-882-2645
Auto

Body

Aepa1r

Techn•c•an. full 11me pas•- '
l•on. pa1d vacat1ons very

candtdates should drop off a

1 1•

Real

Eslal
dvertlsementa ar
ub)actto lho Fedora
air Housing Ac1 o

® 2007

z.,

3BA, 1 bath m Btdwell,
$575/mo • sec dep 4463644
-~-----­
38R, 18A laundry room, 65
Mtll Creek No pets 740,
446·9523
.--roo
- m-sa-n-d-ba-lh-.-s,-o,-.-.-nd
fridge, 52 Oltve, GaUtpolls
No Pets $395/mo 446_3945
AHentlonl
Local company offenng "NO
DOWN PAYMENT" programs tor you to buy your
home tnstead ol renttng
' 100%tma nc1ng
~c~=~~.~han perlecl cred11
· Payment could be the
same as rent
Mortgage
Locators
{740)367-0000
'--...:.._______
Off SA 141 , 3BR, 2BA,
appltances basement, 1car
garage, $500/mo plus
depoSII (614)226·0659

New home m Galhpohs
2BA, 2BA, 3 acres MIL
REDUCED• sso.ooo. Call Spill level house wl3bribath '

L...+~
(,A.)/1-Jt £ttf

www.comlcs.com

ruo

Ir

I

Inc.

740-446-7029

Elim View
Apartments
•2&amp;3 bedroom apartments
•Central heat &amp; AJC
•Washer/dryer hookup
•Tenant pays electnc
(304)882·3017

--=::-:----:-::---Eilm View
Apartments

•2&amp;3 bedroom apartments
•Central heat &amp; AJC
•Washer/dryer hookup
•AU electnc- averagmg
$50·$60/month
•Owner pays water sewer,
trash
(304)882-3817

rl\ir

furntshed kttchen, large covered porch. btg level yard
"''ll'"'"______, - - : : : - - - - - - - ,
NICe 3BA, newly remodeled mce house, no mstde pets
r110
i»Rol:'L''-'CION&lt;\L
New WH &amp; Furn CJA no smoking, $625 month
HEI.P\VANJID
HELP WANTED
SE,.RVI~CIX.'
Apphance 1nctuded Across $300 depostl, Aactne area, - - - - - - - ..
"--..,;iiiiiiliiiii~-_.1. from Vtnton Elem $65 000 (740)949-3019
Furmshed upstairs 3 rooms
968.
'
740-245-5555 or 44 1.510 5
and bath Clean, no pets,
MOBILE Hor.n:s depoS!I roq 740·446·1519
TURNED DOWN ON
POST OFFICE NOW
This
newapape
SOCIAL
SECURITY
ISSI?
On
land
contract
beaultful
___
J&lt;UH lb.Nr
,
HIRING
ccepts only hel
3 5 acres m Ascensmn
Gracious Living 1 and 2
No
Fee
Unless
We
Wtnl
Avg
Pay
$20/hr
or
nted ad1 meetln
Partsh
Loulstana,
large
oak
3BA
m
Fatrland
or
South
Bedroom Apts at Vtllage
1·886·582·3345
S57K annually
OE alandardl.
trees
flowenng
trees,
pond
Gallta
SO
2BA
m Hannan Manor andAtverStde Apts tn
I~
I
\I
I
"i
I
\II
lncludtng Federal Beneftts
wtlh dock, 14x70, 2 bed- Trace - South Galha SO Mtddleport, from $327 to
and OT,Patd Tratn1ng
We will not knowln
iO
H
room, 2 baths all ut 1ht 1es, 740-256-1686
$592 740-992-5064 Equal
1
Vacattons-FTIPT
accept any adver
OMS
$130
000
110
000
down
Housmg Opportuntty
1·866·542 1531
FOR A.t.r.
' month
'
' mterest,' Ntce 2BR at Johnsons - - - - - - - IHment In vlolatlo
------_.1
$500
2%
~
WSWA
tile law.
have ptctures 1f tnterest&amp;d, MobtIe Horne Par k 740 -446- Immaculate 2 bedroom
0 down payment. 4 bed- (740 )992-a 174 Opportunity _20_0_3______ apartment New carpet &amp;
Certifted Occupattonal
Teen/Genealogtst to take rooms Large yard Covered for Work GreEn
cabtnets, fresh ly patnted &amp;
Therapy ASSIStant (COTA)
D1gltal Photo's of Cemetery deck Attached garage 740· m:~~;,;,;;,~:---, Tratler lor rent 3BA. 2 BA decorated, WID hookup
Full
ttme
Position
CLASSIFIED INDEX
&amp; Famtly Headstones In 367-7129
MOBR.E H~ Call 367-7762 or 446-4060 Beauttful country selling
1year expertence In LTC
41(4'1 For Sale .............................................. n5
Hartford
Neg
by
Pay
Pal.
fOR SALE
APARTMENTS
Only 10 Mtnutes from town
setttng prelerred
Announcement ............................................ 030
donc401
3@yahoo
com
or
story
home
w/
RIVer
lot,
L.-..;liiiiilliiiiio-.-J
roN
Rt:NT
Must see to apprectate
2
"Every
life
we
touch
· Antlques ....................................................... 530
321
725
581
Must be tn a pos1ftve wayl"
· - 8
3br, 2 ba, 2car garage 304- New 3Bedroom homes from
S400/mo. (614)595-7773 or
. Apartmentelor Rent.. ................................. 440
~-~~~~-,
675
2867
$214
36
per
m
onlh,
Includes
1-800-798-4686
W
e
offer
Auction and Flea Market .............................08D
1'1ISO
1 and 2 bedroom apart· --------=---:Top Pay
Auto Parts &amp; Accessories .......................... 760
ScHooLS
many upgrades delivery &amp; ments, furmshed and unfur- Modern 1Bedroom apt Call
Patd Hohdays
Auto Repair .................................................. no
"--.OINsmiiiiiiiiiiUCflONiiiiiiiiio_.l·1
AttenUonf
set-up. (740)385-2434
ntshed, and houses tn 446-0390
Vacatton
Autoe lor 5818.............................................. 11 o
'
~ocal ~mp_g_ny off~nng ~No ------,-----,-::: Pomeroy and Mtddleport, :-:-:---::::-:----=:--:---:1 112 security depostt requtred, no Modern 1BA Apt Call 446401K
Boats i Motors lor Sate ............................. 750
'Golllpollo Career College DOWN PAVMENr pro- Rent 10 own 228ed
Building Suppllos ........................................ 550 D1rect resumeslinqutnes td:
3736
(Careers Close To Home) grams .tor you to buy your bath MH, $ ·000 down, pets 740-992-2218
$432 00 month tor 48
-------Amanda Htll.
Buelneu and Buildings ............................. 340
Call Today' 740-446-4367, home mstead at renttng
Rehab Manager
, 100% lrnanctng
months Includes lot rent, 1br Apartment lurntshed, Spac1ous second-floor apt
· Buotn- Opportunlty................................. 210
1-800-214-0452
31 1Buckndge Ad ,
· Less than per1ect credit water, trash &amp; sewer 388 $475 all utilt!tes pa~d, qu1et o~~erlook1ng Galltpolls Ctly
Buetn- Tralnlng ....................................... t40
WW&gt;N g&amp;lllpohsc.llrflflrcollege com
Bidwell, Ohto
. · Campers &amp; Motor Homes ........................... 790
Accredited Yembe r Accredlllng accepted
- 0173
ne~ghborhood, References, Park and nver LA den
Coord lor lr.d&amp;penden1 CoHegea * Payment could be the "'r~---us·INFSS---.,, Deposit 304-593,8187
. Camping Equipment ..........,........................ 780 ahlll@scentchlllsnurstng com
large kttchen-d1mng area
8
and SCf'H&gt;ots 12748
Carde of Thanks .........................................:OtO
Ph 740-446-7150
same
as
rent
ANU
BUUJlJNGS
BA
Apt,
WID
hookups,
wtth
all new appliances &amp;
1
tro .
· ChlkiiEtderly Care ....................................... 19D www vrableheahhcare com
Mortgage
Locators
mternel/satelltte TV mel cupboards 3BR, laundry
·
MiscELLANEOus
: Eleclrlca11Relrlgeratlon ............................... 840
$900 per
Lunch room Vendtng atten- .._______,. (740)367"000
"'-'
Two story Appartment w/rent, close tohospttal Call area,
month2 1/2
Callbaths
· Equtpmenllor Reni ........ :............................ 4BO Chnshan Company seektng dant,
446 _4425 or
part
ttme,
M
-F,
Bam
::-~-----Bwldtng
For
Sale,
tn
New
7
40-339-0362
_
Excavating ................................................... 830 Manager to work from home 1pm, product delivered to Seasoned f1rewoob -Oak &amp; By Butlder, aHordable new Haven, wv $ ,
- - - - - - - 446 2325
27 000 304 _ Farm Equlpment .......................................... 61 0 $2,000·$6,000 per mon1h, you Paid tra1n1ng, holidays, Ash Call 446·9204 after 4BA, 2 112 bath. 2 car
2Bdrm, downtown, renovat- _
Farmalar Rent ................... :......................... 430 exc , Beneftts FT/PT call vacation. 401k Pre-employ- 6;1
'
~
El em area
ed, lam•nalelloors S525 mo Tara
Townhouse
garage
\llreen
Farmalor Sale ............................................. 33.0 886·434·6256
=6
1nclud8s
water
&amp; trash No Apartments, Very Spac1ous,
II
G
446
9
ment drug testing EOE Call
W"'n'-'"
rea ocatton - "''i
For Leau ..................................................... 49D
ru' w
l--.::~~i,._.J Pets (740)709-1690
2 Bedrooms, CIA, 1 112
For Sele ........................................................ 585 Courtside Bar &amp; Grtll now _30-:-4~-48-5·-54_2_1-----To Do
r--~:::---""'1
- - - - - - - - Bath, Adult Pool &amp; Baby
For Sale or Trade ......................................... 59D
MachtniSI and Welders
MOBILE HOME LOT FOR $600 a month, $200 deposit No Pets, Lease Plus
Frul11 &amp; Vegetables ..................................... 58D washer Must be h1ghly mot1- Less
10 clean rental
than
4
yrs
expertence
Woul
d
like
RENT· 1031 Georges Creek No Pels tn Pt Pleasant call Secunty DepoSit Requtred.
k
II
C
Furnlehed Rooms ........................................ 450 vated and hard wor mg a need not Apply Ambrm&gt;ra property Reasonable rates
Ad, 441·11 i 1
General Haullng ........................................... B50 441-9371 to set up an tnter MachJOe Inc. 304-675-1722 CaM446-2873
304 675-8872
(740)446-3481
vtew
or
stop
by
at
308
2nd
lllveaway ......................................................040
7
4
30
00
Apartment lor rent, 1·2 Twtn Atvers Tower ts accept' Happy Ada .................................................... OSD Ave to fl11 out an appltcatlon Mon-Frt All real estate advertising
Bdrm remodeled • new car· '"'I appltcaltons for wailtng
· Hay &amp; Gratn ..................................................640
Manpower IS now hirtng for
BuslNb.~
in this newspaper Ia .
1 1 &amp; f
1
· Help Wanled ................................................. t1 0 Gallm-Melgs Community the lollowmg posttlons
nn......RlllNliY
iO
Hous·~.
, I pe 5 ovesh d rtgMddlwa er, hst for Hud·substzed 1- br,
subject
to
the Federal
n'"N'I .
sewer, Ira p t aport
the
Home lmprovemanla......................... ,.. , .....81 0 Ac1lon Agency ts accepttng Automob1le
A 1 apartment,tor
IUK tu.i
Produtton ~==u~n-u~~=~ Fair Housing Act of 1968
Homealor Sale ............................................ 3tO resumes lor the postttoo of Workers tn the Buffalo, WV
which mabslt Illegal to "--..,;iiiiioiiiiiiiio-r $42.500 No pets e elderly/dtSB.bled cal! 67574 84 5264
Household Goods ....................................... 51 D Meigs County ' PFS Area Benehts avatlable CaJI
advertlse 'any
6679 Equal Houstng
2br 1bath new carpet, new requtred 0- 3·
•NOTICE•
Houses lor Rent.. ........ ,.............................. 41 D Coordtnator Aequtrements Today 304 _757 _3338
p~erence, llmltaUon
or kitChen appllattces lg base- Apt for Rent No Pets 740 t::Op~p:-o-rlu_n,.;rty~----,
discrimination
baaed on
In Memoriam ................................................ 020 Mmtmum HS Oiploma/GEO - - ' - - - - - - - OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHrace,
color,
religion,
sex
ment, 1638 Chatham Ave 992-5858
Sr•ACE
lnaurance ..................................................... t30 but prefer an Associate's Need someone to take care lNG CO recommends
FOR Rmr
Lawn &amp; Garden Equlpmenl ........................ 660 Degree tn Admtntstratton of your loved-one m thetr that you do busmess wtth famll1al slatus or national (740)446-4234 or 740- Apts 1n Metgs County. In
town, No Pets. Oeposlt
Llveetoc:k ......................................................63D Management Education or home 1n Galltpolts 1 PI, people you know and ortg1n,or an~ intentton to 208· 786 1
· Loot and Found ........................................... D&amp;D related f1eld The abtltty to Pleasant Call me (740)446- NOT to send money
y
make
an
such
-R-ho_m_e-,n-N-ew-H-aY-enReqUired (740)992-5174 or Offtce/Warehouse/Storage
Preference, 11m1taUon or 28
through the matl unttl you
Loll &amp; Acreage ............................................ 350 present to provtde leader- 7165
(7401441-0110
Great locatton tn Galltpohst
discrimination "
Atver Frontage, references
Space
starting
at
Mlacellaneoua.............................................. 170 shtp for collaboration ---'------, have mveshgated the
credtt check requ1red Call Beautiful Apta, ar Jac~son $150 CO/month tor 700 sqfl
Mlacallaneouo Merchandlse........................ 540 process mtile county, mam- Oh1o Valley Home Health, ottermg
Thts newspaper will not 304-932-7462 or 304-573- Estates. 52 Westwood call 404 _456_3802
. Mobile Home Repalr.................................... B60 tam and momtor program Inc htrmg STNA, CNA,
knowtngly accept
6334
Dnve lrom $365 to $560
Mobile Homes lor Ren1.. ............................. 420 acltvtt1es. conduct commum- Home Health Atdes and
\II IH II \ "1 11\l
advertlaementl tor real - - - - - - - - 740-446-2568
Equal
Mobile Homes lor Sele................................ 320 ty meet1ngs, turntsh staff Personal Care AideS Full,
MONf;)
estate
which
Is
In
2BR
in
town
(Gall1polts)
Housmg
Oppoth.Jnlty
This
l!'r•~o~":":'--~---,
Money lo Laan ............................................. 220 support to the Metgs County Part T1me and Per Dtem
1lJ LoAN
violation of the law Our $550/mo n, No pels Call tnSt1tUI10n 1S an Equal
Hm
'~~w
'su.._~n..t
Motorcycles &amp; 4 Wheelers .......................... 740 FCFC Coord1nator . expert- pos1h0ns available Apply
readers are hereby
441-01 10or 992-5174
Opportuntly Provtder and ·..,__llliiGooliiiii•l5""'-"
Mualcallnslruments ................................... 570 ence researchtng amj devel at 1480 Jackson Ptke,
informed that all
-------Personals ......:............................................. oos opmg fund1ng proposals Galltpohs phone 441 -1393
dwel!lng!l edvertteed in 3 bd house close to Employer
Pets lor Sale ............................................... 560 Coorcltnator must be detatl for Skilled Of1tce or apply at
this newepeper are
0d
1
' - ' - - - - - -- ,. 112 SIZe 8/S &amp; Mat $150 00
1 avellabte on an equal
r tnance elem 495 pus
Close to college, 2BA W/0 New sofa &amp; love seat
Plumbing &amp; Heating .................................... 820 onented possess good com- 1456 Jackson P1ke phono Borrow Smart Conlact
depostl and references hookup, stove, fndge lur- 5400 00 Reclmer s:;~le
Praloaatonat Services ................................. 23D puter and management 441-9263
lor the Ohio Division of L,..,;O;:;.PP:;;O..;".;;"";;;'IV:.b;;,;•.;;18;;,;1;.·-.1 Avat
l able Dec 1 304-755- ntshed 740-441-3702 or $ 199 951 202 Cllllrk ChaPel
Radio, TV &amp; CB Repair .., ................. ....:.... t6D skttls, must have a strong Passpor!IPnvate , Care Fmanctal
lnsttlulton
s
-::---:-:------9744
or 304-675-6757
740-286-5789
Ad, Bidwell, Oh
_38a.
Real Ealala Wanled ..................................... 360 underslandtng of the Offtce Compet1hve Wages
of Consumer CozY home close to now 3bdrm 1 bth , Lr ,Or ktl &amp; 2 CONVENIENTLV LOCAT· 0173 M-F9a 4p 740
Schoolalnotructlon..................................... 150 Appalachian culture, and a and Beneftts mcludmg Offtce
Sat 9a BEFORE you reltSeed , Plant &amp; Fer111lzer .............................. 650
valtd drlwrs hcense. vehtcle health msurance and Affatrs
Metgs Elementary' 3 BA t car garage ctty school diS- EO &amp; AFFORDABLE!
nance
your
home
or
Slluatlona Wanted ...................................... t20 tnsurance and reltable trans- mtleage
bath, utdtly room large trlct, water mctuded Townhouse apa'rtmenls,
MISClllANEOUS
Space lor Rent ............................ ................ 460 portalton Must be bond- -O-TR.,..c..D-nv-e-rs_n_e_ed_ed_M_u_sl obtam a loan BEWARE kttchen/dlntng
room
$650
oo
a
mth
ret
+
dep,
andfor
small
houses
FOR
MEHt.ltANDISE
of requests for any large
Sporting Gooda ........................................... 520 able Resumes Will be
Covered patio wtlh (740)446-0969
RENT Call (740)441 -t111 ~~-lliiiiiiiiioiioilliii..-1·
advance
payments
of
be
at
IE!ast
24
yrs
old
anCI
SUV'a lor Solo ..............................................720
Anderson alrtum door out to -~---~-- torappt 1ca1ton &amp; 1nformatton .
C
Trucks lor Sale ............................................ 715 accepted at Gallta-Metgs have 3yrs e~~:penence Apply lees or tnsurance Call the patto ott ol d1mng room 2 3 Bedroom House m --'-'------3 gas 1urnaces o1eman
Community
ActiOn
Agency
m
person
at
2204
Jackson
Oll1
ce
of
Consumer
Upholllery .............................................. ... 870
out butldtngs plus extra out- Syracuse $500/month + Immaculate 1 bedroom 15k for tratlers $200 each
NorthSR 7 Cheshtte, Ptke
Affatrs toll free at 1-866- stde storage attached to depostt No Pets (304)675- apartment New carpet &amp; 740-367-7762 or 367-7272
Vane For Sate............................................... 730 8010
45620 unttl 4 00 pm on - - - - - - - - - 278-0003 to learn tf the
wanted to Buy ............................................ D90 OH
All on a level lot on 5332 weekends 740-591· cab1nets. !rashly, patnled &amp; - - - , - - -- N
ovember
Person lor ltve tn wt1h elderly mortgage broker or home
Wanted to Buy-Farm Supplies .................. 620 IS an EOE 26, 2007 GMCAA lady
Happy Hollow Ad near New 0265
decorated, WID hookup Arch Steel ButldlrygsCall740-367-7129
lender IS properly Ltma Ad tn Hutchmson
Wanted To Do .............................................. 180
Beauttlul country sellmg Canceled Orders &amp; RePos
licensed (Thts 1s a publtc SubdiVISIOn (Not tn flood 3 BA house 1n Galltpohs, Only 10 mmutes from town Only 3 Butldtngs Leltl
Wanted lo Reni ............................................ 47D
FIND A JOB OR A NEW CAREER , service announcement zone) Great vtiW of open W/0 connec1ton, $450/mo, Must see to apprectate 25'x34' &amp; 30')132' Pay only
Yard Set•llalllpollo.................................... D72
from the Ohto Valley fteld and deer Asktng $250/dep You pay all ultltltes $325/mo (6 14)595-7773 or the balance Call Now 866Yard Sei•Pomeray/Middle......................... D74
Yard Sel•Pt. Pleaoanl ................................ 076
IN THE CLASSIFIEDS
Publtshmg Company)
69 500 Call 742·101 1 f 404-456-3802
1-800-798-4686
352·0469
All

US Currency
Dtamonds- MTS
Com Shop, 151 Second
Avenue, Galltpoi1S 740-4462642
Want to buy Junk Cars, call
74().388-0884

10

kltncarlyle@comcast.net

1 male &amp; 1 lemala, medtum
stze 4H dogs, lo good lovtng homes Call 446·351 1
46"Httachl ultra scan HO ,
On/Oft bunon not worktng
call 304-675-2810
Beaul1ful Golden Male dog,
approx 1 -2 yrs old Looks
like a mtnl Shepherd About
251bs 740-388-0069
For scrap 40 gallon water
heater &amp; 27" range and
hood 446-4883 after 430
l1rst come ftrst served
Free F Yellow Lab Pup
w/papers shots current
wJbox.Call 992-6164 tor 1nfo
after 6 00 P:M
WAMID
mBuv

1935

ads must be prepaid'

I "i

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r

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POLICIES: Ohio Valley Publiahing re.ervaathe right to edit, reject, or cancel any ad at any time Errore must e,. ~ned on
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I not
any lou or e11penae that na.ulta from the publication or omlaalon of an adwtrtleamenl Correction will be made In the l lrat aullebla edition • Boll nu:;~;,::l
era atwaya confidential. •Current rate card appllea. • All reat ..tata advertlaements are aubject to tile Federal Fair Hguelnll Act at 196B •Thla n
accepta
wanted ada meeting EOE atandarda. We will not kn.owlngl';' accept
In violation of the taw.

• SUrt Your Ad5 With A Keyword • Include complete
Description • InClude A Price • Avoid Abbreviations
a Include Phone Number And Addreu When Needed
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AP photo
Ctncmnatt Reds' Ken Griffey Jr. views the body of the late
Joe Nuxhall as he Jays on display m the gymnasium at
Fairfield High School In Fairfield before the start of the public visitation at the school Tuesday.

Nuxhall
.
from PageBl
after the latest in a series of
bouts with cancer. Soon
after the news of his death,
flowers , baseballs, ballcaP.s
and other tributes began p1l-

ing up at the statue depicting him pitching outside the
Great American Ball Park .
The family flanned private
funera
services
Wednesday, after a procession taking Nuxhall s body
past landmarks of his life
mcluding the fields where
he played youth baseball
and high school football.

• •
~

.

.,

. . . ..

•

r

I

.• ,,-~,,..,..._...-_,.,..._ _..,.._,.,..,.,.... , ... ,;r,. .

•

I

�· Page 84 • The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, November 21, 2007

www.mydailysentinel.com

UCLA rallies to beat Michigan State, 68-63
KANSAS CITY. Mo.
(AP) - Kev 10 Love got
UCLA started. Luc Rtchard
Mbah a Moute finished it
o.ff.
Love had 21 pmnts and II
rebounds. and Mbah a
Moute hn a 3-pointer with
28 seconds left, help10g second-ranked UCLA rebound
from a mi serable lirst half to
beat No. 10 Michtgan State
68-63 on Tuesday night in
the champiOnship game of
the CBE Classic.
UCLA (5-0J couldn't get
anything going in the first
half. forcing up shots inside,
missing open ones on the
outside. The Bruins got back
10 11 beh10d the shootmg of
Josh Shipp and Russell
Westbrook.
Saint Mary's 99,
No. 12 Oregon 87
MORAGA, Calif. (AP) Patt)' Mills had the best
sconng output by a freshman in program history with
37 points, and also had live
asststs, two steals and only
one turnover that came with
3 ·minutes to go. and Saint
Mary's stunned the Ducks
Mtlls Jed the feisty Gaels
(4-0) to their first win over a
· ranked opponent m nearly
three years in a rockmg,
sold-out arena. It was only
his fourth college game and
the effort lied htm for sixthbest ever at Saint Mary's.
Students rushed the floor
as soon as the buzzer sound ed to celebrate the upset.
Kamyron Brown scored
20 points, Maarty Leunen
had 17 and II rebounds, and
Tajuan Porter 13 before
fouling out for Ore~im (4-1).
No. IN. Carohna 110,
South Carolina St. 64
CHAPEL HILL, N.C.
(AP) - Tyler Hansbrough
scored 26 pomts and Wayne
Ellington added 19 to help
North Carolina beat South
Carolina State.
Danny Green had 15
points for the Tar Heels (30), who earned their second
straight blowout win in the
Las Vegas Invitational.
North Carolma next faces
Old Dominion in Las Vegas,
beginning an extended road
tnp that wtll keep them
away from home for nearly a
month.
Everett Spencer scored 12
points to lead the Bulldogs
(0-4). who managed an early
8-4 lead before bemg overwhelmed
by
North

Carolina-Wilmington ( 1-2).
.No. 11 Marquette 91,
Oklahoma State 61
LAHAINA, Hawaii (AP)
- Marquette defended and
Hustled it s way into the
championship game of the
EA Sports Maut Invitational.
Jerel McNeal had 20
points and Dominic James
added I8 to lead the Golden
Eagles in ~ never-in-doubt
semifinal
victory over
Oklahoma State. Terrel
Harris had 17 points and
freshman James Anderson
added 14 for the Cowboys
(2-2).
Marquette (4-0) will go
· for the IItle on Wednesday
night.
No. 13 Duke 79,
Illinois 66
LAHAINA, Hawaii (AP)
- Gerald Henderson scored
23 points and DeMarcus
Nelson added 16 to lead the
Blue Devils over Illinots m
the semifinals of the EA
Sports Maui Invitational.
Duke (4-0) will meet No.
I J, Marquette, which beat
AP photo Oklahoma State 91 -61. on
Duke coach Mike Krzyzewskl calls a play during the second Wednesday night for the
half of Duke's 79-66 win over llltnots 1n a second-round shot at title No. 4.
The Blue Devtls are I I -0
game 1n the EA Sports Maui InvitatiOnal oasketoall tournaon
the island, having won
ment In Lahaina, Hawaii, on Tuesday.
the championship in 1992,
Carolina's stze and athleti- (4-0). who snapped the Blue 1997 and 2001. No other
cism.
Ratders' streak of 216 con- school has more than two
secuttve games without Maui titles in the 24 years of
No. 3 Memphis 84,
Arkansas State 63
allowing I 00 points.
the tournament.
MEMPHIS, Tenn. (AP)Kevin Kanaskie had nine
Brian Randle had 16
Wtllie Kemp scored a points and Nigel Johnson points to lead the Ftghting
career-high 22
points, added seven for Middle Illini (3-1)
includmg 6-for-8 from 3- Tennessee (1-3), which shot
No. 23 Virginia 72,
point range, and Doneal only 31 percent and lost to'
Drexel 58
Mack added 19 to lead Tennessee for the sixth conCHARLOTTESVILLE,
Memphis over Arkansas secutive ttme.
Va. (AP) - Sean Singletary
State. ·
No. 8 Indiana 95,
had 24 points, seven
Chns Dougla.s-Roberts
UNC-Wilmington 71
rebounds and five assists
added
16 pomts for
BLOOMINGTON. Ind. and Virgmm returned to
Memphis (5-0), which has (AP) - Eric Gordon scored John Paul Jones Arena after
won all of its ~arnes by dou- 30 points and Armon Bassett an impressive trip out West
ble-digit margms.
added 19 to help lndmna with a victory against
Adrian Banks led the beat
North
Carolina- Drexel.
Indians (0-3) with 32 points, Wilmington.
The Cavaliers (4-0) led
Indiana (3-0) tlirted wtth 31-25 at halftime and used a
one short of his career high,
and provided the most con- the I00-point mark for the I 0-2 run in the second half
sistent offensive threat for third strai ght game and to stretch their lead to douArkansas State.
probably would have hit ble digits.
triple digits' in back-to-hack • Mamadi Diane capped the
No. 7 Tennessee 109,
Middle Tennessee 40
games 1f coach Kelvin burst with a 3-pointer and
KNOXVILLE, Tenn. (AP) Sampson hadn't pulled his the Cavaliers gr~dually
- JaJ uan Smtih scored 26 starters early. The Hoosiers stretched their advanta~e to
of his carc;er-high 32 points haven ' t scored 100 points in 18 in the second half. Dtane,
in the first half and Chris consecutive games since Adrian Joseph and Calvin
Lofton added I7 points to November 2005 and have Baker each added II points
help Tennessee beat Middle won 20 stratght . home for the Cavaliers.
Tennessee.
games.
Frank Elegar led Drexel
Todd Hendley scored 20 (3-1) with 23 points and
Ramar Smith had 12
points and Tyler ' Smith points and Chad Tomko Tramayne Hawthorne had
added II for the Volunteers added
17
for
North 10'.
needed him most, he was at
his best. Despite being
booed vigorously in New
York all season, Rollins batted .346 with six homers
and IS RBis against the
Mels. That helped the
Phillies go 12-6 in the season series, winning the final
eight meetings with their
NL East rivals.
Philadelphia,
which
trailed the first-place Mets
by seven games on Sept. 12,
went 13-4 down the stretch
and clinched the division
title on the last day of the
regular season.
"I never really thought
about winning an MVP. If I
won a Gold Glove, then that
was the MVP for a sh'Ortstop," Rollins said.
Born in Oakland, Calif.,
Rollins grew up idolizing
and studying another outstanding leadoff hitter,
Rkkey Henderson. The
Phillies' star said thai's
where he got a lot of hi s

baseball.
"I hope they one day say,
I want to be Cy Young or I
want to be MVP," Rollins
said. "I know how black
kids feel about baseball. I
really do. They don 't think
tl's street credible.
"It• would be a sad day if
one day we are - quote,
unquote - extinct from this
game."
Voting took place before
the
postseason,
when
Holliday and the Rockies
completed a three- game
sweep of Philadelphia in the
first round.
Holliday 's performance in
the wild-card tiebreaker·
against San Diego did
count, however. He hit a
tying triple off career saves
leader Trevor Hoffman 10
the bottom of the 13th
inning and scored the winning run on a shallow saciitice fly with a headfirst dive
at the plate. Still , it wasn't
enough to catch Rolhns.
"You look at Matt
Holliday's numbers - I
looked at them myself and
I'm JUSt amazed. It's stck
what he 's done," Rollms
said.
Fielder also was impressive. In his second full sea-

son 111 the maJors, the 23year-old first baseman led
the league with 50 homers
- bl:coming the youngest
player to reach the plateau.
· He ranked second in slugging percentage (.618) and
batted .288 with 119 RBls,
but his MVP candidacy
probably was hurt when the
Brewers blew their NL
Central lead and missed the
playoffs. ·
"I can't tmagine hitting
50 1f I was 43 and had every
advantage in the world ,"
said Rollins, a switch-hitter
generously listed at S-foot8, 174 pounds.
His pint-sized stature ts
one reason he's not worried
about his new fame becoming a burden.
"Fortunately for me, I'm
still only 5-7 so I can still
hide behind a few people,"
Rollins said.
New York Mets third
baseman David Wright finished fourth in the balloting
and Howard came in fifth.
Braves slugger Chipper
Jones, the 1999 winner, was
sixth and Padres ace Jake
Peavy, who won the Cy
Young Award unammously
last week, finished seventh.

coached by George Karl Redd said. "I was seetng the
and featured a starting line- !low of the game and JUSt
up of Sam Cassell, Ray being aggressive. I just took
Allen,
Joel
Przybilla, advantage of how they were
from Page 81
Anthony Mason and Tim guarding me . I( they were
Thomas.
going to guard nie loosely,
No, but t~ey are hurting.
Redd was a reserve on then attack."
Already shorthanded, the that squad, but he's a star
The Buck\ were able to
Cavaliers announced after now. and he showed why
get several easy baskets
the game tha,t veteran for- durin g a dazzling third · inside as they exploi ted
ward Donyell Marshall wtll quarter.
Cleveland's thin frontline,
be out for two months with
After scoring 12 pmnts in especi ally Williams, who
a badly sprained right wrist. the opemng half, Redd, who ,blasted down the lane for
The club is already missing was courted in free agency baskets without any defend'starting guard Larry Hughes by C,leveland a few years ers in hts path .
(bone brui se). forward back, hit a quick 3-pointer
"We know we are a much
Anderson VareJao (contract early in the third and later better te am than we're
fo rw ard scored I 3 stt'atght points as showing right now," Cavs
holdout)
and
Cedric Stmmons (sprained Mil waukee opened an 84- forward Drew Gooden satd.
ank le).
80 lead going mto the "We saw what happened
Reserve
Chari ie fourth .
last year, what made us get
Villanueva had 17 points
In the third, rhe former to the finals It 's playing
and Royallvey came off the Ohio State star went 5-of-6 defen se."
bench and added 15 for the from the floor and n\ade
Notes: James is averaging
Bucks, who came in 4-0 at , three 3-pointers.
37.7 points 10 rebounds and
home and 0-4 on the road.
Redd finished 15-of-20 I0 ass tsts in hi s past three
The last time Milwaukee from the free-throw line.
games. .. Williams didn 't
beat the Cavs they were
"I was just attacktng," have a turnover in 41 min-

utes .... It's only November,
but at 29.2 points per game,
James leads the NBA in
scoring. He was asked if
tliat might .hold up until the
end of the season. "No," he
said. "A guy out in L.A. is
not going to let anybody
lead the league in scoring
but him " Corey Maggette,
nght? Of course, James was
referring to Kobe Bryant. ...
Kry stkowiak has been
impressed with Chinese
rookte Yi Jianlian 's adjustment to the NBA and a new
culture. "He 's fit in. Even
though he 's only 20, he's
very mature. A lot of young
kids come in the league and
you can tell by looking at
them they ' re kind of awed,
but that hasn' t been the case
with htm." .. Cavs G Eric
Snow was active for the
first time this season but
didn't play. He underwent
knee surgery in October.

Ro11ins
'

from PageBl
Holliday, the NL championship series MVP, hit .340
with 137 RBis - becoming
the third player since 1967
to lead a league in both categones. He also had 36
homers and topped the NL
in hits (216 ), total · bases
(386) and doubles (50).
"It's Jimmy Rollins' day,
and I don't want to step on
his day," Holliday said in a
statement through the
Rockies.
Rollins; who turns 29
next week, was a leader all
year for the injury-ravaged
Phillies, practically carrying
them at times because
Howard, Chase Utley and
several key pitchers were
stdelined for significant
stretches.
The tirst player in major
league htstory to have 30
homers, 30 doubles, 30
steals and 20 tnples in one
season. Rollins was durable,
too. He became the tirst NL
shortstop in 34 years to play
in every game.
And when the Phillies

"'flair."
Rollins was particularly
proud that he, Fielder and
AL Cy Young Award winner C.C. Sabathia, also from
the Bay Area, have set an
example that might encourage more black kids to play

Cavs

ohio hiatt school football sta~ ·..
semifinal playoff pa!riDgS
•

www.mydailysentinel.com

~ribune

- Sentinel - l\egi~ter
CLASSIFIED

'

Galli a

County,
OH

'

DIVISIOM II

'

.• Gomoll II( 7;30/&gt;.fil. Fliday ·
Mentor ,Lal(e ,Clalh. (~) yo. NfNI!rk.

(12-1) -.art MaNnion
Bmwn 11ger Stadium.
Sljllliwy Big Wohlut (12-t) V$ Monroe
(11-2) at Lima Senior S1odl\'"'·
l.iclllng

V$11ey

~Paul

Tribe signs Japanese
closer to 2-year deal
CLEVELAND (AP) Not to be confused with his
hot-dog chomping countryman, this Kobayashi might
make fate innings easier to
stomach for the Cleveland
Indians.
Looking to strengthen the
back end of their bullpen and
add insurance for closer Joe
Borowski, the
Indians
signed Japanese free agent
Masahide Kobayashi to a
$6.25 million, two-year contract on Tuesday.
The deal includes a $3.25
million club option for 20 lO
with a $250,000 buyout.
The
33-year-old
Kobayashi spent the past
nine seasons with the Chiba
Lotte Marines, currently
managed
by
Bobby
Valentine. The right-handed
reliever is one of three pitchers in Japanese baseball history wtth more than 200
saves. ·
He will 'join Clevel'IJld's
bullpen as a setup man for
Borowski, who in his first
season with the Indians led
the AL with 45 saves many of them shaky ones.
Cleveland recently exercised
Borowski's $4 million
option for 2008.
"This is a guy who has
extensive closing experience," Indians general manager Mark Shapiro said at a
news conference to introduce Kobayashi. "I view
him in the upper echelon of
guys who were available on
the market."
Kobayashi is the first
Japfl.nese player signed by
the Indians. The club has
scouted him for several seasons.
Cleveland had one of the
top bullpens in the AL this
year, but as Shapiro has
learned, injuries and ineffectiveness are two factors that
can pop up on a team at any
time.
"I don't think we'll ever be
satisfied with our bullpen,"
he said. "We'll continue to
work to reinforce' and today
was a big step."

Manager Eric Wedge can
give the ball to Kobayashi in
the seventh and eighth
innings. He'll be a nice complement for right-hander
Rafael Betancourt and lefty
Rafael Perez, who were two
of the league's top setup men
last season.
"If we're as good a team as
we think we're going to be,
there are going to be many
opportunities to pitch in .
meaningful situations in the
late innings," Shapiro said.
"That's what we envision for
him."
Kobayashi has saved at
least 20 games in each of the
last seven seasons.
The Indians, who took
World Series champion
Boston to Game 7 of the AL
championship series, are
hoping they can follqw the
success the Red Sox had in
signing Japanese pttchers.
Starter Datsuke Matsuzaka
and reliever Hideki Okajima
were instrumental in helping
the Red Sox win their second Series title in four years.
Last season, Kobayashi
went 2-7 with a 3.61 ERA
and 27 saves in 49 appearances. He was on the disabled list in September with
a minor neck injury but fmished the regular season on
the active roster and pitched
in the playoffs.
Kobayashi relies mainly
on a slider as his out pitch.
His fastball has been clocked
in the mid-90s (mph) and he
also throws a splitter.
"No, I don't throw the
gyroball," Kobayashi said,
referring to Matsuzaka's
famed pttch.
Kobayashi went 36-34
with a 2.79 ERA' and 227
saves in 303 games for
Chiba Lotte. In 2005, he led
the Pacific League with 34
saves. He was a member of
Japan's Olympic baseball
team in 2004.
Because Kobayashi was
an unrestricted free agent,
Cleveland did not have to
pay a posting fee to Chiba
Lotte to negotiate with him.

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ny loss or eapen
at resutls from t

ubllcatlon ·or omls
ion of an advert!

ant. Correcllons wll
made In the firs

vallllble edlllon.

t

"I In II

KIT &amp; CARLYLE

competitiVe salary, opportunity for overt1me We would
l1ke someone e)(penenced,
dependable, h1ghly motiVated. and someone who w011&lt;s
well m a team enwonmenl
Mmtmum 5 years expenence requ1red
Interested

Absolute Top Dollar US
Silver and Golcf Cams
Proo1sets Gold A1ngs. Pre

resume @ Super1or Auto
Body m M•ddlei)Ofl Oh10
Mon-Fr• , aam-Spm

.._-•lii~iii~l-~IFSiiiALiliE.... ~,r.·O-oiFI ~i i~.O~i iE'Si 'l ;,;·_.l..,t_....~i ~i iK.ORFxfi EN'JSioio-".

Sohta~re

AVON• All Areas! To Buy or
Sell Shtrley Spears, 304675-1429
- - - - - - --

For sale by owner 3BR
Ranch, 1 bath, Famtly
Room Stove/Frtdge WID
tncluded A!!ktng $70,000
Call740-709-6339

I W;il~ If'

A local manufacturer has
open1ngs for Expenenced
Mtg Welders and Painter for
Manufactured Equipment
Apply in person at 2150
Eastern Avenue, Galltpohs,
OH NO phone call s please

Yoo''lf. PV&lt;M Suifo%t&gt;
io $1'~'( t:;COI'!Nl!

House for sale 1n Ractne
area Approx 4 acres, all
professtonally landscaped
Ranch style house wtth 4
bedrooms. Nvmg room, dtnmg room kttchen, large famtly room, cenllal atr, gas heal
and 1 ftreplace Addttton of a
la rge Flonda room completely cedar opens onto
pat10 &amp; pool area Heated tn
ground pool enclosed by pnvacy lencmg and landscaped Flntshed 2 car
garage attached to house
and fm1shed &amp; heated 3 car
ga rage
unattached
Excellent condtlton ready to
move tn $255,00000, Call
(740)949-2217

1'~ 1V~~ ~ ~y

~~~ 11\AN~S&lt;:JtVlN~.

An EKcell ent way to earn
money The New Avon
Call Manlyn 304-882-2645
Auto

Body

Aepa1r

Techn•c•an. full 11me pas•- '
l•on. pa1d vacat1ons very

candtdates should drop off a

1 1•

Real

Eslal
dvertlsementa ar
ub)actto lho Fedora
air Housing Ac1 o

® 2007

z.,

3BA, 1 bath m Btdwell,
$575/mo • sec dep 4463644
-~-----­
38R, 18A laundry room, 65
Mtll Creek No pets 740,
446·9523
.--roo
- m-sa-n-d-ba-lh-.-s,-o,-.-.-nd
fridge, 52 Oltve, GaUtpolls
No Pets $395/mo 446_3945
AHentlonl
Local company offenng "NO
DOWN PAYMENT" programs tor you to buy your
home tnstead ol renttng
' 100%tma nc1ng
~c~=~~.~han perlecl cred11
· Payment could be the
same as rent
Mortgage
Locators
{740)367-0000
'--...:.._______
Off SA 141 , 3BR, 2BA,
appltances basement, 1car
garage, $500/mo plus
depoSII (614)226·0659

New home m Galhpohs
2BA, 2BA, 3 acres MIL
REDUCED• sso.ooo. Call Spill level house wl3bribath '

L...+~
(,A.)/1-Jt £ttf

www.comlcs.com

ruo

Ir

I

Inc.

740-446-7029

Elim View
Apartments
•2&amp;3 bedroom apartments
•Central heat &amp; AJC
•Washer/dryer hookup
•Tenant pays electnc
(304)882·3017

--=::-:----:-::---Eilm View
Apartments

•2&amp;3 bedroom apartments
•Central heat &amp; AJC
•Washer/dryer hookup
•AU electnc- averagmg
$50·$60/month
•Owner pays water sewer,
trash
(304)882-3817

rl\ir

furntshed kttchen, large covered porch. btg level yard
"''ll'"'"______, - - : : : - - - - - - - ,
NICe 3BA, newly remodeled mce house, no mstde pets
r110
i»Rol:'L''-'CION&lt;\L
New WH &amp; Furn CJA no smoking, $625 month
HEI.P\VANJID
HELP WANTED
SE,.RVI~CIX.'
Apphance 1nctuded Across $300 depostl, Aactne area, - - - - - - - ..
"--..,;iiiiiiliiiii~-_.1. from Vtnton Elem $65 000 (740)949-3019
Furmshed upstairs 3 rooms
968.
'
740-245-5555 or 44 1.510 5
and bath Clean, no pets,
MOBILE Hor.n:s depoS!I roq 740·446·1519
TURNED DOWN ON
POST OFFICE NOW
This
newapape
SOCIAL
SECURITY
ISSI?
On
land
contract
beaultful
___
J&lt;UH lb.Nr
,
HIRING
ccepts only hel
3 5 acres m Ascensmn
Gracious Living 1 and 2
No
Fee
Unless
We
Wtnl
Avg
Pay
$20/hr
or
nted ad1 meetln
Partsh
Loulstana,
large
oak
3BA
m
Fatrland
or
South
Bedroom Apts at Vtllage
1·886·582·3345
S57K annually
OE alandardl.
trees
flowenng
trees,
pond
Gallta
SO
2BA
m Hannan Manor andAtverStde Apts tn
I~
I
\I
I
"i
I
\II
lncludtng Federal Beneftts
wtlh dock, 14x70, 2 bed- Trace - South Galha SO Mtddleport, from $327 to
and OT,Patd Tratn1ng
We will not knowln
iO
H
room, 2 baths all ut 1ht 1es, 740-256-1686
$592 740-992-5064 Equal
1
Vacattons-FTIPT
accept any adver
OMS
$130
000
110
000
down
Housmg Opportuntty
1·866·542 1531
FOR A.t.r.
' month
'
' mterest,' Ntce 2BR at Johnsons - - - - - - - IHment In vlolatlo
------_.1
$500
2%
~
WSWA
tile law.
have ptctures 1f tnterest&amp;d, MobtIe Horne Par k 740 -446- Immaculate 2 bedroom
0 down payment. 4 bed- (740 )992-a 174 Opportunity _20_0_3______ apartment New carpet &amp;
Certifted Occupattonal
Teen/Genealogtst to take rooms Large yard Covered for Work GreEn
cabtnets, fresh ly patnted &amp;
Therapy ASSIStant (COTA)
D1gltal Photo's of Cemetery deck Attached garage 740· m:~~;,;,;;,~:---, Tratler lor rent 3BA. 2 BA decorated, WID hookup
Full
ttme
Position
CLASSIFIED INDEX
&amp; Famtly Headstones In 367-7129
MOBR.E H~ Call 367-7762 or 446-4060 Beauttful country selling
1year expertence In LTC
41(4'1 For Sale .............................................. n5
Hartford
Neg
by
Pay
Pal.
fOR SALE
APARTMENTS
Only 10 Mtnutes from town
setttng prelerred
Announcement ............................................ 030
donc401
3@yahoo
com
or
story
home
w/
RIVer
lot,
L.-..;liiiiilliiiiio-.-J
roN
Rt:NT
Must see to apprectate
2
"Every
life
we
touch
· Antlques ....................................................... 530
321
725
581
Must be tn a pos1ftve wayl"
· - 8
3br, 2 ba, 2car garage 304- New 3Bedroom homes from
S400/mo. (614)595-7773 or
. Apartmentelor Rent.. ................................. 440
~-~~~~-,
675
2867
$214
36
per
m
onlh,
Includes
1-800-798-4686
W
e
offer
Auction and Flea Market .............................08D
1'1ISO
1 and 2 bedroom apart· --------=---:Top Pay
Auto Parts &amp; Accessories .......................... 760
ScHooLS
many upgrades delivery &amp; ments, furmshed and unfur- Modern 1Bedroom apt Call
Patd Hohdays
Auto Repair .................................................. no
"--.OINsmiiiiiiiiiiUCflONiiiiiiiiio_.l·1
AttenUonf
set-up. (740)385-2434
ntshed, and houses tn 446-0390
Vacatton
Autoe lor 5818.............................................. 11 o
'
~ocal ~mp_g_ny off~nng ~No ------,-----,-::: Pomeroy and Mtddleport, :-:-:---::::-:----=:--:---:1 112 security depostt requtred, no Modern 1BA Apt Call 446401K
Boats i Motors lor Sate ............................. 750
'Golllpollo Career College DOWN PAVMENr pro- Rent 10 own 228ed
Building Suppllos ........................................ 550 D1rect resumeslinqutnes td:
3736
(Careers Close To Home) grams .tor you to buy your bath MH, $ ·000 down, pets 740-992-2218
$432 00 month tor 48
-------Amanda Htll.
Buelneu and Buildings ............................. 340
Call Today' 740-446-4367, home mstead at renttng
Rehab Manager
, 100% lrnanctng
months Includes lot rent, 1br Apartment lurntshed, Spac1ous second-floor apt
· Buotn- Opportunlty................................. 210
1-800-214-0452
31 1Buckndge Ad ,
· Less than per1ect credit water, trash &amp; sewer 388 $475 all utilt!tes pa~d, qu1et o~~erlook1ng Galltpolls Ctly
Buetn- Tralnlng ....................................... t40
WW&gt;N g&amp;lllpohsc.llrflflrcollege com
Bidwell, Ohto
. · Campers &amp; Motor Homes ........................... 790
Accredited Yembe r Accredlllng accepted
- 0173
ne~ghborhood, References, Park and nver LA den
Coord lor lr.d&amp;penden1 CoHegea * Payment could be the "'r~---us·INFSS---.,, Deposit 304-593,8187
. Camping Equipment ..........,........................ 780 ahlll@scentchlllsnurstng com
large kttchen-d1mng area
8
and SCf'H&gt;ots 12748
Carde of Thanks .........................................:OtO
Ph 740-446-7150
same
as
rent
ANU
BUUJlJNGS
BA
Apt,
WID
hookups,
wtth
all new appliances &amp;
1
tro .
· ChlkiiEtderly Care ....................................... 19D www vrableheahhcare com
Mortgage
Locators
mternel/satelltte TV mel cupboards 3BR, laundry
·
MiscELLANEOus
: Eleclrlca11Relrlgeratlon ............................... 840
$900 per
Lunch room Vendtng atten- .._______,. (740)367"000
"'-'
Two story Appartment w/rent, close tohospttal Call area,
month2 1/2
Callbaths
· Equtpmenllor Reni ........ :............................ 4BO Chnshan Company seektng dant,
446 _4425 or
part
ttme,
M
-F,
Bam
::-~-----Bwldtng
For
Sale,
tn
New
7
40-339-0362
_
Excavating ................................................... 830 Manager to work from home 1pm, product delivered to Seasoned f1rewoob -Oak &amp; By Butlder, aHordable new Haven, wv $ ,
- - - - - - - 446 2325
27 000 304 _ Farm Equlpment .......................................... 61 0 $2,000·$6,000 per mon1h, you Paid tra1n1ng, holidays, Ash Call 446·9204 after 4BA, 2 112 bath. 2 car
2Bdrm, downtown, renovat- _
Farmalar Rent ................... :......................... 430 exc , Beneftts FT/PT call vacation. 401k Pre-employ- 6;1
'
~
El em area
ed, lam•nalelloors S525 mo Tara
Townhouse
garage
\llreen
Farmalor Sale ............................................. 33.0 886·434·6256
=6
1nclud8s
water
&amp; trash No Apartments, Very Spac1ous,
II
G
446
9
ment drug testing EOE Call
W"'n'-'"
rea ocatton - "''i
For Leau ..................................................... 49D
ru' w
l--.::~~i,._.J Pets (740)709-1690
2 Bedrooms, CIA, 1 112
For Sele ........................................................ 585 Courtside Bar &amp; Grtll now _30-:-4~-48-5·-54_2_1-----To Do
r--~:::---""'1
- - - - - - - - Bath, Adult Pool &amp; Baby
For Sale or Trade ......................................... 59D
MachtniSI and Welders
MOBILE HOME LOT FOR $600 a month, $200 deposit No Pets, Lease Plus
Frul11 &amp; Vegetables ..................................... 58D washer Must be h1ghly mot1- Less
10 clean rental
than
4
yrs
expertence
Woul
d
like
RENT· 1031 Georges Creek No Pels tn Pt Pleasant call Secunty DepoSit Requtred.
k
II
C
Furnlehed Rooms ........................................ 450 vated and hard wor mg a need not Apply Ambrm&gt;ra property Reasonable rates
Ad, 441·11 i 1
General Haullng ........................................... B50 441-9371 to set up an tnter MachJOe Inc. 304-675-1722 CaM446-2873
304 675-8872
(740)446-3481
vtew
or
stop
by
at
308
2nd
lllveaway ......................................................040
7
4
30
00
Apartment lor rent, 1·2 Twtn Atvers Tower ts accept' Happy Ada .................................................... OSD Ave to fl11 out an appltcatlon Mon-Frt All real estate advertising
Bdrm remodeled • new car· '"'I appltcaltons for wailtng
· Hay &amp; Gratn ..................................................640
Manpower IS now hirtng for
BuslNb.~
in this newspaper Ia .
1 1 &amp; f
1
· Help Wanled ................................................. t1 0 Gallm-Melgs Community the lollowmg posttlons
nn......RlllNliY
iO
Hous·~.
, I pe 5 ovesh d rtgMddlwa er, hst for Hud·substzed 1- br,
subject
to
the Federal
n'"N'I .
sewer, Ira p t aport
the
Home lmprovemanla......................... ,.. , .....81 0 Ac1lon Agency ts accepttng Automob1le
A 1 apartment,tor
IUK tu.i
Produtton ~==u~n-u~~=~ Fair Housing Act of 1968
Homealor Sale ............................................ 3tO resumes lor the postttoo of Workers tn the Buffalo, WV
which mabslt Illegal to "--..,;iiiiioiiiiiiiio-r $42.500 No pets e elderly/dtSB.bled cal! 67574 84 5264
Household Goods ....................................... 51 D Meigs County ' PFS Area Benehts avatlable CaJI
advertlse 'any
6679 Equal Houstng
2br 1bath new carpet, new requtred 0- 3·
•NOTICE•
Houses lor Rent.. ........ ,.............................. 41 D Coordtnator Aequtrements Today 304 _757 _3338
p~erence, llmltaUon
or kitChen appllattces lg base- Apt for Rent No Pets 740 t::Op~p:-o-rlu_n,.;rty~----,
discrimination
baaed on
In Memoriam ................................................ 020 Mmtmum HS Oiploma/GEO - - ' - - - - - - - OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHrace,
color,
religion,
sex
ment, 1638 Chatham Ave 992-5858
Sr•ACE
lnaurance ..................................................... t30 but prefer an Associate's Need someone to take care lNG CO recommends
FOR Rmr
Lawn &amp; Garden Equlpmenl ........................ 660 Degree tn Admtntstratton of your loved-one m thetr that you do busmess wtth famll1al slatus or national (740)446-4234 or 740- Apts 1n Metgs County. In
town, No Pets. Oeposlt
Llveetoc:k ......................................................63D Management Education or home 1n Galltpolts 1 PI, people you know and ortg1n,or an~ intentton to 208· 786 1
· Loot and Found ........................................... D&amp;D related f1eld The abtltty to Pleasant Call me (740)446- NOT to send money
y
make
an
such
-R-ho_m_e-,n-N-ew-H-aY-enReqUired (740)992-5174 or Offtce/Warehouse/Storage
Preference, 11m1taUon or 28
through the matl unttl you
Loll &amp; Acreage ............................................ 350 present to provtde leader- 7165
(7401441-0110
Great locatton tn Galltpohst
discrimination "
Atver Frontage, references
Space
starting
at
Mlacellaneoua.............................................. 170 shtp for collaboration ---'------, have mveshgated the
credtt check requ1red Call Beautiful Apta, ar Jac~son $150 CO/month tor 700 sqfl
Mlacallaneouo Merchandlse........................ 540 process mtile county, mam- Oh1o Valley Home Health, ottermg
Thts newspaper will not 304-932-7462 or 304-573- Estates. 52 Westwood call 404 _456_3802
. Mobile Home Repalr.................................... B60 tam and momtor program Inc htrmg STNA, CNA,
knowtngly accept
6334
Dnve lrom $365 to $560
Mobile Homes lor Ren1.. ............................. 420 acltvtt1es. conduct commum- Home Health Atdes and
\II IH II \ "1 11\l
advertlaementl tor real - - - - - - - - 740-446-2568
Equal
Mobile Homes lor Sele................................ 320 ty meet1ngs, turntsh staff Personal Care AideS Full,
MONf;)
estate
which
Is
In
2BR
in
town
(Gall1polts)
Housmg
Oppoth.Jnlty
This
l!'r•~o~":":'--~---,
Money lo Laan ............................................. 220 support to the Metgs County Part T1me and Per Dtem
1lJ LoAN
violation of the law Our $550/mo n, No pels Call tnSt1tUI10n 1S an Equal
Hm
'~~w
'su.._~n..t
Motorcycles &amp; 4 Wheelers .......................... 740 FCFC Coord1nator . expert- pos1h0ns available Apply
readers are hereby
441-01 10or 992-5174
Opportuntly Provtder and ·..,__llliiGooliiiii•l5""'-"
Mualcallnslruments ................................... 570 ence researchtng amj devel at 1480 Jackson Ptke,
informed that all
-------Personals ......:............................................. oos opmg fund1ng proposals Galltpohs phone 441 -1393
dwel!lng!l edvertteed in 3 bd house close to Employer
Pets lor Sale ............................................... 560 Coorcltnator must be detatl for Skilled Of1tce or apply at
this newepeper are
0d
1
' - ' - - - - - -- ,. 112 SIZe 8/S &amp; Mat $150 00
1 avellabte on an equal
r tnance elem 495 pus
Close to college, 2BA W/0 New sofa &amp; love seat
Plumbing &amp; Heating .................................... 820 onented possess good com- 1456 Jackson P1ke phono Borrow Smart Conlact
depostl and references hookup, stove, fndge lur- 5400 00 Reclmer s:;~le
Praloaatonat Services ................................. 23D puter and management 441-9263
lor the Ohio Division of L,..,;O;:;.PP:;;O..;".;;"";;;'IV:.b;;,;•.;;18;;,;1;.·-.1 Avat
l able Dec 1 304-755- ntshed 740-441-3702 or $ 199 951 202 Cllllrk ChaPel
Radio, TV &amp; CB Repair .., ................. ....:.... t6D skttls, must have a strong Passpor!IPnvate , Care Fmanctal
lnsttlulton
s
-::---:-:------9744
or 304-675-6757
740-286-5789
Ad, Bidwell, Oh
_38a.
Real Ealala Wanled ..................................... 360 underslandtng of the Offtce Compet1hve Wages
of Consumer CozY home close to now 3bdrm 1 bth , Lr ,Or ktl &amp; 2 CONVENIENTLV LOCAT· 0173 M-F9a 4p 740
Schoolalnotructlon..................................... 150 Appalachian culture, and a and Beneftts mcludmg Offtce
Sat 9a BEFORE you reltSeed , Plant &amp; Fer111lzer .............................. 650
valtd drlwrs hcense. vehtcle health msurance and Affatrs
Metgs Elementary' 3 BA t car garage ctty school diS- EO &amp; AFFORDABLE!
nance
your
home
or
Slluatlona Wanted ...................................... t20 tnsurance and reltable trans- mtleage
bath, utdtly room large trlct, water mctuded Townhouse apa'rtmenls,
MISClllANEOUS
Space lor Rent ............................ ................ 460 portalton Must be bond- -O-TR.,..c..D-nv-e-rs_n_e_ed_ed_M_u_sl obtam a loan BEWARE kttchen/dlntng
room
$650
oo
a
mth
ret
+
dep,
andfor
small
houses
FOR
MEHt.ltANDISE
of requests for any large
Sporting Gooda ........................................... 520 able Resumes Will be
Covered patio wtlh (740)446-0969
RENT Call (740)441 -t111 ~~-lliiiiiiiiioiioilliii..-1·
advance
payments
of
be
at
IE!ast
24
yrs
old
anCI
SUV'a lor Solo ..............................................720
Anderson alrtum door out to -~---~-- torappt 1ca1ton &amp; 1nformatton .
C
Trucks lor Sale ............................................ 715 accepted at Gallta-Metgs have 3yrs e~~:penence Apply lees or tnsurance Call the patto ott ol d1mng room 2 3 Bedroom House m --'-'------3 gas 1urnaces o1eman
Community
ActiOn
Agency
m
person
at
2204
Jackson
Oll1
ce
of
Consumer
Upholllery .............................................. ... 870
out butldtngs plus extra out- Syracuse $500/month + Immaculate 1 bedroom 15k for tratlers $200 each
NorthSR 7 Cheshtte, Ptke
Affatrs toll free at 1-866- stde storage attached to depostt No Pets (304)675- apartment New carpet &amp; 740-367-7762 or 367-7272
Vane For Sate............................................... 730 8010
45620 unttl 4 00 pm on - - - - - - - - - 278-0003 to learn tf the
wanted to Buy ............................................ D90 OH
All on a level lot on 5332 weekends 740-591· cab1nets. !rashly, patnled &amp; - - - , - - -- N
ovember
Person lor ltve tn wt1h elderly mortgage broker or home
Wanted to Buy-Farm Supplies .................. 620 IS an EOE 26, 2007 GMCAA lady
Happy Hollow Ad near New 0265
decorated, WID hookup Arch Steel ButldlrygsCall740-367-7129
lender IS properly Ltma Ad tn Hutchmson
Wanted To Do .............................................. 180
Beauttlul country sellmg Canceled Orders &amp; RePos
licensed (Thts 1s a publtc SubdiVISIOn (Not tn flood 3 BA house 1n Galltpohs, Only 10 mmutes from town Only 3 Butldtngs Leltl
Wanted lo Reni ............................................ 47D
FIND A JOB OR A NEW CAREER , service announcement zone) Great vtiW of open W/0 connec1ton, $450/mo, Must see to apprectate 25'x34' &amp; 30')132' Pay only
Yard Set•llalllpollo.................................... D72
from the Ohto Valley fteld and deer Asktng $250/dep You pay all ultltltes $325/mo (6 14)595-7773 or the balance Call Now 866Yard Sei•Pomeray/Middle......................... D74
Yard Sel•Pt. Pleaoanl ................................ 076
IN THE CLASSIFIEDS
Publtshmg Company)
69 500 Call 742·101 1 f 404-456-3802
1-800-798-4686
352·0469
All

US Currency
Dtamonds- MTS
Com Shop, 151 Second
Avenue, Galltpoi1S 740-4462642
Want to buy Junk Cars, call
74().388-0884

10

kltncarlyle@comcast.net

1 male &amp; 1 lemala, medtum
stze 4H dogs, lo good lovtng homes Call 446·351 1
46"Httachl ultra scan HO ,
On/Oft bunon not worktng
call 304-675-2810
Beaul1ful Golden Male dog,
approx 1 -2 yrs old Looks
like a mtnl Shepherd About
251bs 740-388-0069
For scrap 40 gallon water
heater &amp; 27" range and
hood 446-4883 after 430
l1rst come ftrst served
Free F Yellow Lab Pup
w/papers shots current
wJbox.Call 992-6164 tor 1nfo
after 6 00 P:M
WAMID
mBuv

1935

ads must be prepaid'

I "i

GIVF.AWAY

r

Thur&amp;day for Sundays

POLICIES: Ohio Valley Publiahing re.ervaathe right to edit, reject, or cancel any ad at any time Errore must e,. ~ned on
Tr!bun&amp;-Stlntlne,..Reglater will be reaponalble tor no more than the coat of I he apace occupied by the error end only the first lnaMtlon
I not
any lou or e11penae that na.ulta from the publication or omlaalon of an adwtrtleamenl Correction will be made In the l lrat aullebla edition • Boll nu:;~;,::l
era atwaya confidential. •Current rate card appllea. • All reat ..tata advertlaements are aubject to tile Federal Fair Hguelnll Act at 196B •Thla n
accepta
wanted ada meeting EOE atandarda. We will not kn.owlngl';' accept
In violation of the taw.

• SUrt Your Ad5 With A Keyword • Include complete
Description • InClude A Price • Avoid Abbreviations
a Include Phone Number And Addreu When Needed
'
• Ads Should Run 7 Days

1\11'1( 1\\ IJ\1

Now you can have borders and graphics
~
added to your classified ads
(.~
lm
Borders $3.00/per ad
~
Graphics 50¢ for small
S1.00 for large

Display Ads

I

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-----=-----

I'

, •r

·····-~--

r·O

·--.. "-.. -

r

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I'AJ

i

AP photo
Ctncmnatt Reds' Ken Griffey Jr. views the body of the late
Joe Nuxhall as he Jays on display m the gymnasium at
Fairfield High School In Fairfield before the start of the public visitation at the school Tuesday.

Nuxhall
.
from PageBl
after the latest in a series of
bouts with cancer. Soon
after the news of his death,
flowers , baseballs, ballcaP.s
and other tributes began p1l-

ing up at the statue depicting him pitching outside the
Great American Ball Park .
The family flanned private
funera
services
Wednesday, after a procession taking Nuxhall s body
past landmarks of his life
mcluding the fields where
he played youth baseball
and high school football.

• •
~

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. . . ..

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.• ,,-~,,..,..._...-_,.,..._ _..,.._,.,..,.,.... , ... ,;r,. .

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�Page B6 • The Daily Sentinel
Help Wanled

Wednesday, November 21,2007

W'JIW.mydailysentlriel.com
VANS

Help Wanted

Wednesday, November 21, 2007
ALLEY OOP

www.mydailysentinel.com

. The t;&gt;aily Sentinel • Page B7

FoR SALE
01 Dodge Caravan. auto, a1r,
gooel clean van. 64,000
miles. $3000 oeo. 740-256-

WANTED: Part-time position
available to assist an individual
with mental retardation in
Middleport: Sat 3p-Ba Tues;
daytime hours off; sleep-over
required. Must ha~e high school
diploma or GED, valid driver's
license, three years good driving
experience and adequate
automobile insurance. $7.50/hr.
Send resume to:
Buckeye Comm~nity Services
P.O. Box 604, Jackson, OH 45640
Deadline for applicants: 11/23/07
Pre-employment drug testing.
Equal Opportunity Employer.

r

ACROSS

Phillip
Alder

1233 or 256·1652

•

.

MOIURcrrusl

4WHm.ERS

North

RIBERT
CIIISTIICTIII
• New Homes
• Garages
• Complete
Remodeling

lloAl~ &amp; M&lt;JIUKS
FOR SALE

lt -21-07

.AK J
.. 7 5
t 8 75 42
• K J 9
East

BISSEll

98 Polaris Sports"man 500 4
whee ler, warn winch. 803
· miles, $1900. 74()-645-6857
or 379·9515

MONTY

West

•

5 3 2
• Q 9 •• 3
t A 3

•

• 8 6 3

J 8'
t II •
o!o A 54 2

9 7 6 4

•

South

•Q108
. " A K to
• Q J 10 9
"' Q 10 7

140·992-1&amp;n
Stop &amp; Compare

Deale~

North

Vulnerable: Both
Help Wanted

Help Wanled

0

..

;,r

Submil R~.· ~ um c lo:
Pleasant \'alh·:r Hospita l,
c/o Jluman Rcsourc.·cs
2520 Volley Dri ve.
l•oint 1•1e asanl, \'VV. 25550
rax to .104-675-6975:
or apply online at ~· ww . p,· ullc.)'. or~

AA/EOE

Lp1&lt;1&lt;4N,.,..Eonp.ylJ7o- •F.U.""'P.""'I'IId.O.•I&lt;m,•JI

Oerk-f.url1-0tp.rtMJ. hrt-liw.t~i11-. (lncluda lltnditJ.)
QIA· !/JuVS-&amp;"ID'I•""" FJ/-rivfoitio&lt;(l•l•doo Bowf1• )
lilliot !ip&lt;W01· F.JI...,,..IiH. (lollllirs hli•)
5iill Coriutar(IIN)·F.JI....,..,... ~"""" """~• )

-~

l'lu_, TodUiu....,.... ,.... (lodlllirs llcr&lt;!•)

,., -

...••

_

,

•••••
••

•

dttah• ...... )IOIItlonl, pluH

'!.

Pole

$6,495 Free
(937)7 18·1471

o

12ga870 brl $150. 740·446·
2905

••

!A

••

!tA

••

•

••

NOMA

Seamless Gutters
Roofi ng, Siding, Gutters

740-992-6971

Insured &amp; Bonded
740-653-9657

Insured
Estimate s

BARNEY

WHAT
STYLE. ..

8E

VIIIIUI

• VInyl Siding
• Replacement
Windows
• Roofing
• Decks
• Garages
• Pple B~lldlngs
• Room Additions
Owner:
James Keesee II
742-2332

... THE

She is vet checked, 100 %
healthy, AKC reg, all there
shots ere up to date and
dewormed, ready tor there
new home. All there papers
Vtlill accompany them. email
egan yypne@vanoo com
grab them for $400 each

HAS
SOMETHING

FOR YOU!!

Register and The Daily Sentinel Friday, December 28, 2007

•

The winning pets will be featured in this
unique calendar.
The winner will be highlighted on the cover.

play. $100. 304-675·824 I ·
Wurlit2er piano S:JJO. Call

_::=====::::~

740·446-7029

Public Notice

I

i 987 IJidsm obile 98 ldr
more
informati on
ca ll

Name of pet:
: Your Name:

. (74. \16-6967

'•
·'

1

Address: _ _ _ __ _~-----~-

(740)Y92·2335
I

••
: Phone:_·-----------------~ )
I

I

I

Please send or bring this entry form along with your photo to
-.; ~alhpohs ~ailp
~oint ~leasant
:
~rtbune
.Register
Daily Sentinel
: · "Pet Calendar"
"Pet Calendar"·
"Pet Calendar"
,1 825 Third Avenue
200 Main St.
111 Court St.
CGallipolis, OH 45631 Pt Pleasant, WV 25550 , Pomeroy, OH 45769

i 999 Dodge Durango, runs
and looks Gre~t ! 4x4, auto·
mal ic, power seats, power
windows, cruise control , 3rd
row sealing, rear ai r, towing
package
NADA
value
$7025 00 rnake an offer,

I
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,

I

www.mydailysentinel.com •

-:.-- -l.---- '(i ---- "---·-------- ~--- ··; --- i:- •.

given
that
on
·Saturday, Novembar
24, 2007 at 10:00 a.m.,
li public sale will be
held at 211 W. Second
St., Pomeroy, Ohio.
The Farmers Bank and

Savings Company Is
selling for cash In
hand
or
cartlfled
check the following
collateral:
1982 GMC Pickup
1GTEK14HOCF700933
1997 Ford Explorer
1FMDU34E7VUB24646
The Farmers Bank and

Savings
Pomeroy,

Company,
Ohio,

reserveS the right

to

2000 Che vy Cava lier, 4
Door
Automa hc,
AC,
AMIFM Cassette. New tires,
cleAn,
50k ,
$3950,

bid at this sala, and to
withdraw the above
collateral prlono sale.

(740)379-2748

Bank and Savings
Company reserves the
right to reJect any or
all bids submlnecl.
The above deacrlbed
collateral will be sold

r

SUVs
IUR SALE

1997 Ford Exp lore r. while,
66,000 miles, tinted win·
dows, all power, keyle ss
entry, asking $4,900. 304·

882·2494

4x4
FoR SALE
05 F-150 4x4 STX, white,
41 ,000 miles, 17i n, Am . Rae.
Aims $16.200 304 -5 93·
2805 or 304-593-,034

P"

..

""'

t:t\OW 1\0W TR:-11'\0f'llllt.l ~!&gt;
SLE£1"/

'We.LL.; t JUSHIIOUGI-\T or A.""'
:)OLUTIOM!

A.HE:.IZ

Hours
7:00 AM ·8:00PM

named
39 Promos
40 Money in

50

poles

23 Green film

Pseudo
Pantyhose
color
nbetan ox
Blow awitv
Indy 500
month
Leia's

rescuer

24 Pressed

51 One,

25 Registered
in Bonn
on sonar
52 Cagey
28 Kyo1o hoilorHic
30 -Alamos
34 Swerved
France
35 Probate
9 - choy
concerns
tO Countdown 40 Sighed with
number
delight
12 Magnate
41 Mr. Kenton

,.,Stanley
. . - Tree-

·~~=

BIG NATE

Pomt'Hl), OH

YOUNG 'S

CARPENTER
SERVICE

Soffit, Decks,
Doors, Windows,
Electric, Plumbing,
Drywall,
Remodeling, Room
Additions

Local Contractor

Room Addlt~e &amp;
A...-htll

NewGtriSJtl
Electrtcel &amp; Plumbing

Roofing I Outltl'l

a

Vlnvt Siding Pelntlng
Petlo end Porch Dec:U

wv 038725

V.C YOUNG Ill
Y~l

f'i

•

2°

l

r" 1
•I

'1

Implied
given.

warranty

For further informs·

lion, or for an appolntmentlo inspect collst•

eral, prior to

sate

date

contact Cyndle or Ken
at 992-2t36.
(11) 21 22,23

'(ES, MA'AM ?

'-"''~"'"·~··,., DICKENS~

'(OU KNOW Tlo!AT 7

,I

Wise Concrete
All types of concrete
Owner- Rick Wise

740-992-5929
740-416-1698

Frea Estimates

15

yr~ . E~ p . Frt:~

Estimates

Manlay'a
Rac:yc:llng

GARFIELD
t 1'HINK I'LL ORPI&lt;R A
81,JRG6R.

HOW A800'1' YO-

503 lUI It •1-IIIR.II 45'111 ·
140-992-4

-

Sf R, J.lOW DID

Uh1 t

II f ~f!' II(

PIYIIIG TOP PRICES fOI

•III•••CU•·••-••WIIMII
CIIIIIWIIC t:IIVIrl.. •. . .
1111111.........

(CI)) fir .. I . . Prlcal

ADVERTISE IN THIS
SPACE FOR $60
PER MONTH

,,YOUviNI~'Rf)We5'1'~MING OP 1'HI&lt;
IN ·n.u:: PI!&lt; CAS!&lt; I

t•

Thursd•y, Nov. 22, 2007
By Bernice Bede Osol
Knowledge acquired over time, through
both .experience and schooling, can be
your ticket to success In the year ahead.
Utilize the advantage you've coura·
geous!y and doggedly obtained in order
to reap that which you deserve .
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) - Should
you lind yourself in a partnership situation, don't try to do e\lerything yourself
and don't expect your cohort to carry
most of the load, either.·tf parity preva ils,
the undertaking win be successful
SAG ITIARIUS (NOv. 23-Dec. 21) - It
can be one of those days where many of
your amb itious objecllves can be
achiewd. Organization Is key - so don't
allow yourself to go about things In a helter-skelter manner.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22·Jan. 19) - Don't
hesitate to do a little patchwork it you find
that something you have organlzad cout_d
use a bit of an adjustment Usually most
things can ~and should) ba Improved
upon as time goes by.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) - All it
might take is a bit ol tenacity and
patience to finalize .a situation that has
been causing you both concern , and
aggravation. You have the grit to conceive a new game plan that 'll succeed.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) · I~ you care·
fully evaluate your decisions, you should
be right on target, so avoid acting hastily
or erratically when it !==Omes to objectives
that are important to yOU . Proceed sloWtv and steadily.
· ARIES (March 21 \ pril 19) - Your financial interests Bftl starting to look quite
secure, owing in large part to the solid
base you have establ ish9d through oldfashioned hard work. You'll be reaping
what you sowed.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) - Whether
you like it or not , the responsibility for a
sltuetlon that invoiVBS those you love wi!l
be sitting squarely on your shoulders.
Your dependents will be glad that you're
·running the show.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20)- You 're oM&amp;
sign who can do several tasks at the
same time, but you'd be smart to finish
· what you've already begun before starting somethi ng new: otherwi6e, nothing is
apt to get ~one property.
CANCER (June 21-July 22) - Should
you find yourso ll tnvoiVad with an individual who has a habit of talking about others, eMcuse yourself from this conversation or you could be a'ccused of being an
accessory.
LEO (July 23-Aug . 22) .- A number of
objectives of a material nature can be
gratified, provided you remain focused
on your goals and not spin off on tan·
gents. It'll take steady course to realize
your alms.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)- Strive to be
a listener Instead of merely a talker,
especially It you lind yourse lf In the company of someone whoae Intelligence you
ad mire. You can learn som eth ln~ of
Immense value.
LIBRA (Sept 23·0ct. 23) - There are
be nefits to.be gained In your commercia l
arrangemenhl, provided you r expects·
tlons dO not excud that to which you're
honestly entitled. F\atlltm , not greed, It

a

._.ltfi'..IIII:IO -e:11•11
SIIUniiiii:OO 1111-12:01••

Further, The ·Farmers

" as is-where-le", with
no
eKpressed
or

PEANUTS

COW and BOY

740·367-&lt;1544
740·367 -0536

lllt

Vt ,!1 ~

G21

d~1rl!u­

~Astro-

740-965-3831

Trimming
&amp; Removal

00 Chevy Silverado 4:&lt;4, 01
Harley Fet Boy, 97 Jeep PUBLIC NOTICE
Grand Cherokee ·LTD. 740- NOTICE: Is hereby

'l'.·............. ----.. --.......... -,-.-.. ---------

29670 Bashan Road
Raci ne, Ohio
45771
74D-949·22t7

35537 St. Rt. 7 tlurth

709·6339.

amis"
38 Once

.13 Sumptuous 43
18 Colombie's 45
capital
19 Thrillad
46
20 Silt
47
deposl1s
48
22 Car\'ed

and what is the correcc counter by the
defens~? And what do you think of the
bidding?
The auction has a modern taste . In the
old days, South would ha~e t"esponded
two no-trump. But' that sometimes left
the responde~ awkwardly placed with
game-invitational strength and no fourcard major. Now'.' two no-trump invites

jacks - •quacks') and 4-3-3-3

Shade River Ag. Service

Public Notice

:• ·

lovers

23 Apple seed
DOWN
26 Bullring
1 Derek and
shout
27 Meadow cry
Jackson .
28 Bombay
2 Molassesattire
besed drink
29 Chivalrous 3 Cousteau's
31 Egyptian
summer
sun god
4 Hole punch·
32 Dog In
ers
"Beetle
5 Quandary
Bailey"
6 Propane
33 Twilight
holders
36 Her11al
7 Uke some
brews
crowds
37 "Bonlour, - 8 King, In

Author Maya Angelou said in an intBfview, ·1 love to see a young girl go out
and grab the world by the lapels."
AJ. the bridge tab~. most pt the time the
defenders sit back and let declarer do
what he wants, and they hope that he
will mi.sstep or misguess and go down .

tion, is correct to grab no·trump and not
Sh9W his diamond support
Declarer must establish his diamond
suit. And since he w~ l lose the lead
twice, there iS a risk that the defenders
will establish and run lhe heart suit but only if East wins the first diamond
trick . South should Play a spade to
dummy's king and call for a low diamond. If East OOcks, the CQrltract sue·
ceeds. West wins with his diamond ace
but caooot safely lead another heart
East should put up his diamond king, trying to grab the IricK. He gives quiet
thanks when his royal wins. He returns a
heart, and the defenders get three
hearts and two diamonds for down one.

Why drive anywh ere else

Story and Clark Wu rlitzer
Orgal) • Mahogany Finish
around 1954 -needs work to

01
Hyundai
Accent
Hatchback. 5 speed lrans,
65,310 miles, good condi·
tion. needs catalytic co nvert·
er Asking $3200 . Ca ll 740·

If you need it,
try to grab .it

Charlotte 46 Honda rival
49 Imprints
firmly
53 Heed the
alarm .
54 Go off the
track
55 -up
(on edge)
56 Fair

no-trump promises 13 to 15 points.
South, with three soft suits (queens and

12% All Stock
Feed
$10.50/100

AlffO&gt;

This· Unique Cal.endar will be inserte~ in the Gallipolis Daily Tribune, Point Pleasant

!!

WHAT A DEAl!!

rro

245-57 47

INVISIBI.E

TO GROWN-UPS !!

Hill's Self
Storage

J&amp;L
Construction

·
NoncE
OF AVAILFOR PUBLIC I ' P'rompl and Quality
,
INSPECTION
Work
1952 Ferguson TE50 Tractor
Douglas W. Little, I ' R•eaSI&gt;nable Rates
for sale. $2,100. 304-882· Trustee ollhe Ernest &amp;
2819
Maxine
Wingett
Educational Trust, has
Iliad his annual return
of a private foundation, Form 990-PF, with ·
Angus Bu lls, bred heilers.
lhe Internal Revenue
EXcellent ~reeding, Top
Sarvlce for tax year
Performance,
Priced
July 1, 2006
beginning
Reasonably.
and ending June 3D,
www. slateru nangus.com.
2007, In accordance
1740)286-5395
with Internal Revenue
Code Section 6104(b),
this form Ia avallabla
for public Inspection
at the law office of
Douglas W. Llttta,
Trustae, at 2t1-2t3
East Secohd Street,
Pomeroy, Ohio, during
CORNER STONE
lhe 180-day period
beginning November CONSTRUCTION
II&lt; \\"-1'1!I{ I \I l l 1\
15th, 2007.
Roofing, Siding,
(11) 21

Deadline for entries is: December 14, 2007

Pass

engine
Think laster
than
Pool
Not fragrant
Different
Brut .
Where to
spot UFOs
Futon
Candle

game (10-plus 1o 12 poinls) and 1hroe

10
FARM
PuBuc
NOTICE
~--EQIJJPMmriiiiiiiiiiiiiiit_.l . ABILITY

Pet

l}iAT'S EAS'f,
JAME'f !! I'D

www.tbnborereekcabbletq.colll

FORSA.u:

www.mvdailv.renister.com

David Lewis

IAOZA,T'f. ve,Y 6001&gt;, IIJT YOU
(,Afti'T ltAT ~OISINI fOtt
·;.....SANPBOX
ACTIVITifS.

&gt; •

Hardwood Callineil'r And FurnHure

674·5857

r

Pat~s

feature

44 Funny

1rump, whal is lhe bes1 play 'by Soulh

Reg. Chihuahua pups. Black
&amp; white. Have shots and
wormed. $200. Call 304·

I \ 1n 1 "I 1'1'1 I I ",\ I I\ I "I I II I\

East
Pass

t8
2t

lha bank
42 Tote up
43 Bacon

the deal by the lapels and lake a positive
step to defeat the contract .
That applies to this deal. In three na-

740-767-4875

Rem 1100 Lt20ga . slug gun
$500, Bene t1i 12ga pump
with 2 brls $450, Rem 870
Wingmaster 12ga. slug gun
$350, Rem 870 Express
20ga. $225, Mossbe rg 41
pump $220, Ruger Black
Hawk 44mag 9 1/2 brl $350,
Rem 1187 slug brl $125,
Hastings Cantilever rilled

Pass

North
1t

t3
14
15
16
17

CrosJwor~ Puzz;le

Occasionally, !hough, 1hoy have lo grab

ready 1.1 /24 $300/each. Call
740·388-B124.No relay ca lls

••...

www.mtdallytnbune .com

GuHering

Pl:."l'S
I·OR SAU'

30x50x; 0 ' Min Pin pups. 1 blk/tan F 14
Delivery wks.1 blkltan M&amp;F, 1 red F

-Barns

might
voted

1

26 Years Experience

Free

Maytag gas dryer, entertain· have too many dogsl 304·
men t cen ter, livingroom fur· 458·1595.
niture, TV, pink depression·
Beautiful Bichon Frise pupware, 48975 E. Letart 'Rd.,
pies for sa le. Please call
Racine, Oh
740-2 47-4700 evenings.

•••

-~

· -tliii~:Wolt\iil

$250 lo the right home. We

• they
•

r

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

AKC G erman Shepherd
Female. 19 month old black
AERATION MOTORS
Repaired. New &amp; Rebuilt In and red/tan. Friendly and
Stock. Call Ron Evans. 1· playful. Farm raised. Have
$600 invested. Will se ll lor
800·537 ·9528.

i'· Send · us a
photo of
i·· your
. favorite
•••• pet · and

••••

Christmas Specials
Ron Allison
588 Watson Ad
Brdwell, Ohio
740·446·4336

West

Opening lead: • 4

JET

et

•••

Uncondilional lifetime guarantee. Local ..references fur·
riished: Established 19'75 . .
Call 24 Hrs. (740) 4460870, Rogers Baseme nt
Waterproofing

White's Metal Detectors

Su nday. (740)446-7300

Rrplmi K,...."'rry 1&gt;1'"-' IWJ...

for providing the
Thanksgiving Dinner
for the American Cancer
Society's Cancer Support
Group
November meeting.
We Appreciate Your Support!

••
A!

GET A STEAL ON
BUILDINGS!
STEEL
Repos.
Canceled
Orders, No Reasonable
Oiler Refused! 3 Left
25X36, 35x44.
Call
Tod ay'
Save
Thousands ! 866-352·
•
0469

Cha nnel. · Flat Bar. Steel
removed-, Red male $200.00
Grating
For
Drai ns,
Red tamale $225.00 740·
Driveways &amp; Walkways. L&amp;L
388·9824
Scrap Metals Open Monday,
Tuesday. Wednesday &amp; Cocker Spaniels $300. Giant
Friday, Bam-4:30pm. Closed Schnauzers $500, Scottish
Thursday,
Saturday
&amp; Terrier Male $400. All AKC.

SPECIAL THANKS TO
FAMILY OXYGEN &amp;
MEDICAL EQUIPMENT

3 NT

.;i~.ll~ Q(,,,

BASEMENT
WATE~PROOFING

NEW AND USED STEEL CKC reg. Min. Dachsh und
Steel Beams, Pipe Rebar
Puppies , 9 wks old. Wormed .
Fo r
Concrete,
Angle,
&amp; shots. Dew claws

GUARANTEED COVERALL
(NO PROGRESSIVE)
DOORS OPEN AT 4:00

Sou'h

Concrete Removal
and Replacement

Gall 339·3528

Valley llospifnl is c urn· nrl~·
act·t.'pting rt.'S Umt."S for a pnrt-timl'
l•harma cv 'IOC hnidan . Suc&lt;"t'ss fl•l
t·ornph.•tiun
WV Hoard of 11 harm;H'.\'
appron." fllechnidan training prn Ara nl
or l' tJuivalcnt. State-registration HI'
Nationol -ccr tificalion l't.'rtificatc as a
Phunuucy Tt."t:hnidun pn.· r~rrcd.
At 1\'ns t 2080 hours us a J)hurma&lt;.·,y
h .· l·hnician tra inee. Two yeurN phurn,m:y
technician experience prcfcr~d .
Hospital experience prdt.•r•·ed .

$5 PACKS
$1,000

540 ML,CELLANIXJUS
MERUIANDISE

neons &amp; full size a1r hockey.

l~l ~asll nl

THANKSGIVrNG DAY
SPECIAL

I I \II~
( IJ\( Rl II·
10\SII!l! IIIJ\

"-I 1(\ I( Is

Full size pool table, beer

PHARMACY TEC HNICIAN

124 Highland Ave .
Point Pleasant, WV
(304) 675-3877

6 Racecar

lt

2006 Honda Gold Wing
$4,000 in acceSSOfies. Paid
$24 ,000 new··$ t 9,600. Ca ll
740·367·7,29.

BINGO!!!

1 Sandwich
need

1

05 KX 65 Race Ready
Oirtbike. $1500 OBO . Call
740·367·0438

POINT OF HOPE

NEA

BRIDGE

GRIZZWELLS

r '1&amp;\l'I..L E.xtUSE /It~ fo~

nt. &amp;o-ro 1\lt: , __
A Moi.\EI'\'T ! 15t\.IEVE'

Mm~~. '
-rn~\&lt;. YoU .

nooded.

SOUPTONUTZ

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
Celetrtty Cii*l9r CIYJ*lgrams •eaeat!ld lrom q!JOiidrons by fiilmous people past aro prE!Seflt
Eadlletlllf 1111hecrp;llir sl~s loranothe!

Today's clue. Vequals P

"EWKBLJ
B UKNE
ZBPK

GXRR
PXOP

TKM

UKZ

XA

TNM

ZFK

B RNAU

ANGFKWK;

VBAZJ

GXRR

GBT . "

S B.R Z 8 J B W U W 8 0 X B A

-

PREVIOUS SOLUTION- ·wa man d1es and leaves his eslafe in an uncertQin
W_Howe
·

condition , the lawyers become his heirs: - Edgar

r~~:;~' S@\\4\\N\-~t.~ss

WORD

GAMI

14itoi ~y ClAY R. POU.&amp;N --:...
· ---

0 four
loorronge loners of "11tt
ICromblocl word• be-

low to form four simple word1.

jji-1 F_T'l'TIEr-D,v_L,..·-1

I' I I I I

~

I

C0 RUC

I I I' I

I'

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

~
I

4

.__.._I_I~.,_.J-I_.._I_. Z

I

::

E

,

P YR0 T
·I I 15

I. I

One not so sman cutic to

another, "Make lhe most of
yourself for that isall there

Ie is .. ---."

Complete the chuckle qumed
by filling in !he milSing word&gt;

vou develop from S1ep No. 3 below .

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS

1 1 - 2 o-

o1

Nimbus - Motif - Craft - Unstop - FAMOUS

A very well known general once told a group of retired .
soldiers, "It is the orders you disobey that make you

FAMOUS."

ARLO &amp; JANIS

�Page B6 • The Daily Sentinel
Help Wanled

Wednesday, November 21,2007

W'JIW.mydailysentlriel.com
VANS

Help Wanted

Wednesday, November 21, 2007
ALLEY OOP

www.mydailysentinel.com

. The t;&gt;aily Sentinel • Page B7

FoR SALE
01 Dodge Caravan. auto, a1r,
gooel clean van. 64,000
miles. $3000 oeo. 740-256-

WANTED: Part-time position
available to assist an individual
with mental retardation in
Middleport: Sat 3p-Ba Tues;
daytime hours off; sleep-over
required. Must ha~e high school
diploma or GED, valid driver's
license, three years good driving
experience and adequate
automobile insurance. $7.50/hr.
Send resume to:
Buckeye Comm~nity Services
P.O. Box 604, Jackson, OH 45640
Deadline for applicants: 11/23/07
Pre-employment drug testing.
Equal Opportunity Employer.

r

ACROSS

Phillip
Alder

1233 or 256·1652

•

.

MOIURcrrusl

4WHm.ERS

North

RIBERT
CIIISTIICTIII
• New Homes
• Garages
• Complete
Remodeling

lloAl~ &amp; M&lt;JIUKS
FOR SALE

lt -21-07

.AK J
.. 7 5
t 8 75 42
• K J 9
East

BISSEll

98 Polaris Sports"man 500 4
whee ler, warn winch. 803
· miles, $1900. 74()-645-6857
or 379·9515

MONTY

West

•

5 3 2
• Q 9 •• 3
t A 3

•

• 8 6 3

J 8'
t II •
o!o A 54 2

9 7 6 4

•

South

•Q108
. " A K to
• Q J 10 9
"' Q 10 7

140·992-1&amp;n
Stop &amp; Compare

Deale~

North

Vulnerable: Both
Help Wanted

Help Wanled

0

..

;,r

Submil R~.· ~ um c lo:
Pleasant \'alh·:r Hospita l,
c/o Jluman Rcsourc.·cs
2520 Volley Dri ve.
l•oint 1•1e asanl, \'VV. 25550
rax to .104-675-6975:
or apply online at ~· ww . p,· ullc.)'. or~

AA/EOE

Lp1&lt;1&lt;4N,.,..Eonp.ylJ7o- •F.U.""'P.""'I'IId.O.•I&lt;m,•JI

Oerk-f.url1-0tp.rtMJ. hrt-liw.t~i11-. (lncluda lltnditJ.)
QIA· !/JuVS-&amp;"ID'I•""" FJ/-rivfoitio&lt;(l•l•doo Bowf1• )
lilliot !ip&lt;W01· F.JI...,,..IiH. (lollllirs hli•)
5iill Coriutar(IIN)·F.JI....,..,... ~"""" """~• )

-~

l'lu_, TodUiu....,.... ,.... (lodlllirs llcr&lt;!•)

,., -

...••

_

,

•••••
••

•

dttah• ...... )IOIItlonl, pluH

'!.

Pole

$6,495 Free
(937)7 18·1471

o

12ga870 brl $150. 740·446·
2905

••

!A

••

!tA

••

•

••

NOMA

Seamless Gutters
Roofi ng, Siding, Gutters

740-992-6971

Insured &amp; Bonded
740-653-9657

Insured
Estimate s

BARNEY

WHAT
STYLE. ..

8E

VIIIIUI

• VInyl Siding
• Replacement
Windows
• Roofing
• Decks
• Garages
• Pple B~lldlngs
• Room Additions
Owner:
James Keesee II
742-2332

... THE

She is vet checked, 100 %
healthy, AKC reg, all there
shots ere up to date and
dewormed, ready tor there
new home. All there papers
Vtlill accompany them. email
egan yypne@vanoo com
grab them for $400 each

HAS
SOMETHING

FOR YOU!!

Register and The Daily Sentinel Friday, December 28, 2007

•

The winning pets will be featured in this
unique calendar.
The winner will be highlighted on the cover.

play. $100. 304-675·824 I ·
Wurlit2er piano S:JJO. Call

_::=====::::~

740·446-7029

Public Notice

I

i 987 IJidsm obile 98 ldr
more
informati on
ca ll

Name of pet:
: Your Name:

. (74. \16-6967

'•
·'

1

Address: _ _ _ __ _~-----~-

(740)Y92·2335
I

••
: Phone:_·-----------------~ )
I

I

I

Please send or bring this entry form along with your photo to
-.; ~alhpohs ~ailp
~oint ~leasant
:
~rtbune
.Register
Daily Sentinel
: · "Pet Calendar"
"Pet Calendar"·
"Pet Calendar"
,1 825 Third Avenue
200 Main St.
111 Court St.
CGallipolis, OH 45631 Pt Pleasant, WV 25550 , Pomeroy, OH 45769

i 999 Dodge Durango, runs
and looks Gre~t ! 4x4, auto·
mal ic, power seats, power
windows, cruise control , 3rd
row sealing, rear ai r, towing
package
NADA
value
$7025 00 rnake an offer,

I
••
,

I

www.mydailysentinel.com •

-:.-- -l.---- '(i ---- "---·-------- ~--- ··; --- i:- •.

given
that
on
·Saturday, Novembar
24, 2007 at 10:00 a.m.,
li public sale will be
held at 211 W. Second
St., Pomeroy, Ohio.
The Farmers Bank and

Savings Company Is
selling for cash In
hand
or
cartlfled
check the following
collateral:
1982 GMC Pickup
1GTEK14HOCF700933
1997 Ford Explorer
1FMDU34E7VUB24646
The Farmers Bank and

Savings
Pomeroy,

Company,
Ohio,

reserveS the right

to

2000 Che vy Cava lier, 4
Door
Automa hc,
AC,
AMIFM Cassette. New tires,
cleAn,
50k ,
$3950,

bid at this sala, and to
withdraw the above
collateral prlono sale.

(740)379-2748

Bank and Savings
Company reserves the
right to reJect any or
all bids submlnecl.
The above deacrlbed
collateral will be sold

r

SUVs
IUR SALE

1997 Ford Exp lore r. while,
66,000 miles, tinted win·
dows, all power, keyle ss
entry, asking $4,900. 304·

882·2494

4x4
FoR SALE
05 F-150 4x4 STX, white,
41 ,000 miles, 17i n, Am . Rae.
Aims $16.200 304 -5 93·
2805 or 304-593-,034

P"

..

""'

t:t\OW 1\0W TR:-11'\0f'llllt.l ~!&gt;
SLE£1"/

'We.LL.; t JUSHIIOUGI-\T or A.""'
:)OLUTIOM!

A.HE:.IZ

Hours
7:00 AM ·8:00PM

named
39 Promos
40 Money in

50

poles

23 Green film

Pseudo
Pantyhose
color
nbetan ox
Blow awitv
Indy 500
month
Leia's

rescuer

24 Pressed

51 One,

25 Registered
in Bonn
on sonar
52 Cagey
28 Kyo1o hoilorHic
30 -Alamos
34 Swerved
France
35 Probate
9 - choy
concerns
tO Countdown 40 Sighed with
number
delight
12 Magnate
41 Mr. Kenton

,.,Stanley
. . - Tree-

·~~=

BIG NATE

Pomt'Hl), OH

YOUNG 'S

CARPENTER
SERVICE

Soffit, Decks,
Doors, Windows,
Electric, Plumbing,
Drywall,
Remodeling, Room
Additions

Local Contractor

Room Addlt~e &amp;
A...-htll

NewGtriSJtl
Electrtcel &amp; Plumbing

Roofing I Outltl'l

a

Vlnvt Siding Pelntlng
Petlo end Porch Dec:U

wv 038725

V.C YOUNG Ill
Y~l

f'i

•

2°

l

r" 1
•I

'1

Implied
given.

warranty

For further informs·

lion, or for an appolntmentlo inspect collst•

eral, prior to

sate

date

contact Cyndle or Ken
at 992-2t36.
(11) 21 22,23

'(ES, MA'AM ?

'-"''~"'"·~··,., DICKENS~

'(OU KNOW Tlo!AT 7

,I

Wise Concrete
All types of concrete
Owner- Rick Wise

740-992-5929
740-416-1698

Frea Estimates

15

yr~ . E~ p . Frt:~

Estimates

Manlay'a
Rac:yc:llng

GARFIELD
t 1'HINK I'LL ORPI&lt;R A
81,JRG6R.

HOW A800'1' YO-

503 lUI It •1-IIIR.II 45'111 ·
140-992-4

-

Sf R, J.lOW DID

Uh1 t

II f ~f!' II(

PIYIIIG TOP PRICES fOI

•III•••CU•·••-••WIIMII
CIIIIIWIIC t:IIVIrl.. •. . .
1111111.........

(CI)) fir .. I . . Prlcal

ADVERTISE IN THIS
SPACE FOR $60
PER MONTH

,,YOUviNI~'Rf)We5'1'~MING OP 1'HI&lt;
IN ·n.u:: PI!&lt; CAS!&lt; I

t•

Thursd•y, Nov. 22, 2007
By Bernice Bede Osol
Knowledge acquired over time, through
both .experience and schooling, can be
your ticket to success In the year ahead.
Utilize the advantage you've coura·
geous!y and doggedly obtained in order
to reap that which you deserve .
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) - Should
you lind yourself in a partnership situation, don't try to do e\lerything yourself
and don't expect your cohort to carry
most of the load, either.·tf parity preva ils,
the undertaking win be successful
SAG ITIARIUS (NOv. 23-Dec. 21) - It
can be one of those days where many of
your amb itious objecllves can be
achiewd. Organization Is key - so don't
allow yourself to go about things In a helter-skelter manner.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22·Jan. 19) - Don't
hesitate to do a little patchwork it you find
that something you have organlzad cout_d
use a bit of an adjustment Usually most
things can ~and should) ba Improved
upon as time goes by.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) - All it
might take is a bit ol tenacity and
patience to finalize .a situation that has
been causing you both concern , and
aggravation. You have the grit to conceive a new game plan that 'll succeed.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) · I~ you care·
fully evaluate your decisions, you should
be right on target, so avoid acting hastily
or erratically when it !==Omes to objectives
that are important to yOU . Proceed sloWtv and steadily.
· ARIES (March 21 \ pril 19) - Your financial interests Bftl starting to look quite
secure, owing in large part to the solid
base you have establ ish9d through oldfashioned hard work. You'll be reaping
what you sowed.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) - Whether
you like it or not , the responsibility for a
sltuetlon that invoiVBS those you love wi!l
be sitting squarely on your shoulders.
Your dependents will be glad that you're
·running the show.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20)- You 're oM&amp;
sign who can do several tasks at the
same time, but you'd be smart to finish
· what you've already begun before starting somethi ng new: otherwi6e, nothing is
apt to get ~one property.
CANCER (June 21-July 22) - Should
you find yourso ll tnvoiVad with an individual who has a habit of talking about others, eMcuse yourself from this conversation or you could be a'ccused of being an
accessory.
LEO (July 23-Aug . 22) .- A number of
objectives of a material nature can be
gratified, provided you remain focused
on your goals and not spin off on tan·
gents. It'll take steady course to realize
your alms.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)- Strive to be
a listener Instead of merely a talker,
especially It you lind yourse lf In the company of someone whoae Intelligence you
ad mire. You can learn som eth ln~ of
Immense value.
LIBRA (Sept 23·0ct. 23) - There are
be nefits to.be gained In your commercia l
arrangemenhl, provided you r expects·
tlons dO not excud that to which you're
honestly entitled. F\atlltm , not greed, It

a

._.ltfi'..IIII:IO -e:11•11
SIIUniiiii:OO 1111-12:01••

Further, The ·Farmers

" as is-where-le", with
no
eKpressed
or

PEANUTS

COW and BOY

740·367-&lt;1544
740·367 -0536

lllt

Vt ,!1 ~

G21

d~1rl!u­

~Astro-

740-965-3831

Trimming
&amp; Removal

00 Chevy Silverado 4:&lt;4, 01
Harley Fet Boy, 97 Jeep PUBLIC NOTICE
Grand Cherokee ·LTD. 740- NOTICE: Is hereby

'l'.·............. ----.. --.......... -,-.-.. ---------

29670 Bashan Road
Raci ne, Ohio
45771
74D-949·22t7

35537 St. Rt. 7 tlurth

709·6339.

amis"
38 Once

.13 Sumptuous 43
18 Colombie's 45
capital
19 Thrillad
46
20 Silt
47
deposl1s
48
22 Car\'ed

and what is the correcc counter by the
defens~? And what do you think of the
bidding?
The auction has a modern taste . In the
old days, South would ha~e t"esponded
two no-trump. But' that sometimes left
the responde~ awkwardly placed with
game-invitational strength and no fourcard major. Now'.' two no-trump invites

jacks - •quacks') and 4-3-3-3

Shade River Ag. Service

Public Notice

:• ·

lovers

23 Apple seed
DOWN
26 Bullring
1 Derek and
shout
27 Meadow cry
Jackson .
28 Bombay
2 Molassesattire
besed drink
29 Chivalrous 3 Cousteau's
31 Egyptian
summer
sun god
4 Hole punch·
32 Dog In
ers
"Beetle
5 Quandary
Bailey"
6 Propane
33 Twilight
holders
36 Her11al
7 Uke some
brews
crowds
37 "Bonlour, - 8 King, In

Author Maya Angelou said in an intBfview, ·1 love to see a young girl go out
and grab the world by the lapels."
AJ. the bridge tab~. most pt the time the
defenders sit back and let declarer do
what he wants, and they hope that he
will mi.sstep or misguess and go down .

tion, is correct to grab no·trump and not
Sh9W his diamond support
Declarer must establish his diamond
suit. And since he w~ l lose the lead
twice, there iS a risk that the defenders
will establish and run lhe heart suit but only if East wins the first diamond
trick . South should Play a spade to
dummy's king and call for a low diamond. If East OOcks, the CQrltract sue·
ceeds. West wins with his diamond ace
but caooot safely lead another heart
East should put up his diamond king, trying to grab the IricK. He gives quiet
thanks when his royal wins. He returns a
heart, and the defenders get three
hearts and two diamonds for down one.

Why drive anywh ere else

Story and Clark Wu rlitzer
Orgal) • Mahogany Finish
around 1954 -needs work to

01
Hyundai
Accent
Hatchback. 5 speed lrans,
65,310 miles, good condi·
tion. needs catalytic co nvert·
er Asking $3200 . Ca ll 740·

If you need it,
try to grab .it

Charlotte 46 Honda rival
49 Imprints
firmly
53 Heed the
alarm .
54 Go off the
track
55 -up
(on edge)
56 Fair

no-trump promises 13 to 15 points.
South, with three soft suits (queens and

12% All Stock
Feed
$10.50/100

AlffO&gt;

This· Unique Cal.endar will be inserte~ in the Gallipolis Daily Tribune, Point Pleasant

!!

WHAT A DEAl!!

rro

245-57 47

INVISIBI.E

TO GROWN-UPS !!

Hill's Self
Storage

J&amp;L
Construction

·
NoncE
OF AVAILFOR PUBLIC I ' P'rompl and Quality
,
INSPECTION
Work
1952 Ferguson TE50 Tractor
Douglas W. Little, I ' R•eaSI&gt;nable Rates
for sale. $2,100. 304-882· Trustee ollhe Ernest &amp;
2819
Maxine
Wingett
Educational Trust, has
Iliad his annual return
of a private foundation, Form 990-PF, with ·
Angus Bu lls, bred heilers.
lhe Internal Revenue
EXcellent ~reeding, Top
Sarvlce for tax year
Performance,
Priced
July 1, 2006
beginning
Reasonably.
and ending June 3D,
www. slateru nangus.com.
2007, In accordance
1740)286-5395
with Internal Revenue
Code Section 6104(b),
this form Ia avallabla
for public Inspection
at the law office of
Douglas W. Llttta,
Trustae, at 2t1-2t3
East Secohd Street,
Pomeroy, Ohio, during
CORNER STONE
lhe 180-day period
beginning November CONSTRUCTION
II&lt; \\"-1'1!I{ I \I l l 1\
15th, 2007.
Roofing, Siding,
(11) 21

Deadline for entries is: December 14, 2007

Pass

engine
Think laster
than
Pool
Not fragrant
Different
Brut .
Where to
spot UFOs
Futon
Candle

game (10-plus 1o 12 poinls) and 1hroe

10
FARM
PuBuc
NOTICE
~--EQIJJPMmriiiiiiiiiiiiiiit_.l . ABILITY

Pet

l}iAT'S EAS'f,
JAME'f !! I'D

www.tbnborereekcabbletq.colll

FORSA.u:

www.mvdailv.renister.com

David Lewis

IAOZA,T'f. ve,Y 6001&gt;, IIJT YOU
(,Afti'T ltAT ~OISINI fOtt
·;.....SANPBOX
ACTIVITifS.

&gt; •

Hardwood Callineil'r And FurnHure

674·5857

r

Pat~s

feature

44 Funny

1rump, whal is lhe bes1 play 'by Soulh

Reg. Chihuahua pups. Black
&amp; white. Have shots and
wormed. $200. Call 304·

I \ 1n 1 "I 1'1'1 I I ",\ I I\ I "I I II I\

East
Pass

t8
2t

lha bank
42 Tote up
43 Bacon

the deal by the lapels and lake a positive
step to defeat the contract .
That applies to this deal. In three na-

740-767-4875

Rem 1100 Lt20ga . slug gun
$500, Bene t1i 12ga pump
with 2 brls $450, Rem 870
Wingmaster 12ga. slug gun
$350, Rem 870 Express
20ga. $225, Mossbe rg 41
pump $220, Ruger Black
Hawk 44mag 9 1/2 brl $350,
Rem 1187 slug brl $125,
Hastings Cantilever rilled

Pass

North
1t

t3
14
15
16
17

CrosJwor~ Puzz;le

Occasionally, !hough, 1hoy have lo grab

ready 1.1 /24 $300/each. Call
740·388-B124.No relay ca lls

••...

www.mtdallytnbune .com

GuHering

Pl:."l'S
I·OR SAU'

30x50x; 0 ' Min Pin pups. 1 blk/tan F 14
Delivery wks.1 blkltan M&amp;F, 1 red F

-Barns

might
voted

1

26 Years Experience

Free

Maytag gas dryer, entertain· have too many dogsl 304·
men t cen ter, livingroom fur· 458·1595.
niture, TV, pink depression·
Beautiful Bichon Frise pupware, 48975 E. Letart 'Rd.,
pies for sa le. Please call
Racine, Oh
740-2 47-4700 evenings.

•••

-~

· -tliii~:Wolt\iil

$250 lo the right home. We

• they
•

r

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

AKC G erman Shepherd
Female. 19 month old black
AERATION MOTORS
Repaired. New &amp; Rebuilt In and red/tan. Friendly and
Stock. Call Ron Evans. 1· playful. Farm raised. Have
$600 invested. Will se ll lor
800·537 ·9528.

i'· Send · us a
photo of
i·· your
. favorite
•••• pet · and

••••

Christmas Specials
Ron Allison
588 Watson Ad
Brdwell, Ohio
740·446·4336

West

Opening lead: • 4

JET

et

•••

Uncondilional lifetime guarantee. Local ..references fur·
riished: Established 19'75 . .
Call 24 Hrs. (740) 4460870, Rogers Baseme nt
Waterproofing

White's Metal Detectors

Su nday. (740)446-7300

Rrplmi K,...."'rry 1&gt;1'"-' IWJ...

for providing the
Thanksgiving Dinner
for the American Cancer
Society's Cancer Support
Group
November meeting.
We Appreciate Your Support!

••
A!

GET A STEAL ON
BUILDINGS!
STEEL
Repos.
Canceled
Orders, No Reasonable
Oiler Refused! 3 Left
25X36, 35x44.
Call
Tod ay'
Save
Thousands ! 866-352·
•
0469

Cha nnel. · Flat Bar. Steel
removed-, Red male $200.00
Grating
For
Drai ns,
Red tamale $225.00 740·
Driveways &amp; Walkways. L&amp;L
388·9824
Scrap Metals Open Monday,
Tuesday. Wednesday &amp; Cocker Spaniels $300. Giant
Friday, Bam-4:30pm. Closed Schnauzers $500, Scottish
Thursday,
Saturday
&amp; Terrier Male $400. All AKC.

SPECIAL THANKS TO
FAMILY OXYGEN &amp;
MEDICAL EQUIPMENT

3 NT

.;i~.ll~ Q(,,,

BASEMENT
WATE~PROOFING

NEW AND USED STEEL CKC reg. Min. Dachsh und
Steel Beams, Pipe Rebar
Puppies , 9 wks old. Wormed .
Fo r
Concrete,
Angle,
&amp; shots. Dew claws

GUARANTEED COVERALL
(NO PROGRESSIVE)
DOORS OPEN AT 4:00

Sou'h

Concrete Removal
and Replacement

Gall 339·3528

Valley llospifnl is c urn· nrl~·
act·t.'pting rt.'S Umt."S for a pnrt-timl'
l•harma cv 'IOC hnidan . Suc&lt;"t'ss fl•l
t·ornph.•tiun
WV Hoard of 11 harm;H'.\'
appron." fllechnidan training prn Ara nl
or l' tJuivalcnt. State-registration HI'
Nationol -ccr tificalion l't.'rtificatc as a
Phunuucy Tt."t:hnidun pn.· r~rrcd.
At 1\'ns t 2080 hours us a J)hurma&lt;.·,y
h .· l·hnician tra inee. Two yeurN phurn,m:y
technician experience prcfcr~d .
Hospital experience prdt.•r•·ed .

$5 PACKS
$1,000

540 ML,CELLANIXJUS
MERUIANDISE

neons &amp; full size a1r hockey.

l~l ~asll nl

THANKSGIVrNG DAY
SPECIAL

I I \II~
( IJ\( Rl II·
10\SII!l! IIIJ\

"-I 1(\ I( Is

Full size pool table, beer

PHARMACY TEC HNICIAN

124 Highland Ave .
Point Pleasant, WV
(304) 675-3877

6 Racecar

lt

2006 Honda Gold Wing
$4,000 in acceSSOfies. Paid
$24 ,000 new··$ t 9,600. Ca ll
740·367·7,29.

BINGO!!!

1 Sandwich
need

1

05 KX 65 Race Ready
Oirtbike. $1500 OBO . Call
740·367·0438

POINT OF HOPE

NEA

BRIDGE

GRIZZWELLS

r '1&amp;\l'I..L E.xtUSE /It~ fo~

nt. &amp;o-ro 1\lt: , __
A Moi.\EI'\'T ! 15t\.IEVE'

Mm~~. '
-rn~\&lt;. YoU .

nooded.

SOUPTONUTZ

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
Celetrtty Cii*l9r CIYJ*lgrams •eaeat!ld lrom q!JOiidrons by fiilmous people past aro prE!Seflt
Eadlletlllf 1111hecrp;llir sl~s loranothe!

Today's clue. Vequals P

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S B.R Z 8 J B W U W 8 0 X B A

-

PREVIOUS SOLUTION- ·wa man d1es and leaves his eslafe in an uncertQin
W_Howe
·

condition , the lawyers become his heirs: - Edgar

r~~:;~' S@\\4\\N\-~t.~ss

WORD

GAMI

14itoi ~y ClAY R. POU.&amp;N --:...
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loorronge loners of "11tt
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low to form four simple word1.

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another, "Make lhe most of
yourself for that isall there

Ie is .. ---."

Complete the chuckle qumed
by filling in !he milSing word&gt;

vou develop from S1ep No. 3 below .

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS

1 1 - 2 o-

o1

Nimbus - Motif - Craft - Unstop - FAMOUS

A very well known general once told a group of retired .
soldiers, "It is the orders you disobey that make you

FAMOUS."

ARLO &amp; JANIS

�www.mydailysentinel.com

BS The Daily Sentinel ·

November 21 , 2007 .

•

by:

INGELS CARPET
.VIiddlrport, OH

740-992-702X

days til Christmas

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
.)0 ( LN't S • \ ' o i. ·:;~. :'IJo. Xh

•

alln Stock!

$20,995

.

18091

GT Pk~~t

$8,995

Page AS
• Patricia Ann Jamison

INSIDE
Only13,631 Miles

$13,995

For
$17,995

·• Eastem Honor Roll
posted. See Page A3
• Cedar Lakes plans
.Winterfest light display.
See Page A3
• Youth bag deer.
See · Page AS
• Family Medicine:
Chantix - a new stop
.smoking drug - may
:be helpful for reader.
.See Page A7
·• Talent Rev,ue set
. for Friday night.
See Page 88

Diesel, 4x4

$23,995 .

$17,995
.

·using a point system . Projects Water Di strict.
a supplemental appropriation
are mted on a number of cri• A $399,746 paving pro- of $10,000 for contract serteria. including the project's ject, submitted by the coun- vices in their budget.
readiness, the scope of 'the ty engineer, to include
Commissioners
also
project, availabl~ matching County Roads 25, 30, 39, approved the appointment
money and other standards.
55. 75 and 345.
of Joe Bolin, representing .
Meigs
County
• A $147,000 . grant for Soil and Water Conservation
Commissioner Jim Sheets street paving in the Village District, and representatives
reported that the following of Pomeroy, and
of other counties, to the
projects submitted by Meigs
• A $73 ,464 grant for Buckeye Hill RC&amp;D Board.
County were approved for paving in the Village of Commissioner
. Mick
funding:
Racine.
Davenport was approved as
• A $136,500 loan for a
Commissioners met yester- an alternate to the board.
wellhead repair project for day due to the Thanksgiving
Commissioners al so:
the Tuppers Plains-Chester Day holiday. They approved
• Amended the Job and

Family Services ·public
records policy.
• Approved a contract
between JFS, acting as the
agent for the Family and
Children First Council, for
$34,600,
for
the
Partnership for Success
program.
.
• Approved appropriation
. adjustments in the amounts
of $331.21, $735, and $400,
.for the juvenile court.
Also present was Clerk
Gloria Kloes.

WEATIIER

.

INDEX
t6 PAGES

~nie's Mailbox

A3

Calendars

A3

Classifieds

Bs-6

COmics

.•

Editorials
Qbituaries

J\5
J\5

Places to go

B8

~ovies

Sports .
Weather

B Section
A3

@2007 Ohio Valley Publl8hlng Co.

•

Beth llerjent/pllotoe

Pres.clt(lolers give
tm·liey recipes

Meigs Board
•
receives
funding for
new preschool
program '

BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYOAILYSENTINEL.CQM

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
HOEA.ICH@MVDAILVSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY - A funding
gr3J)t Qf $199,480 with which
to operate a preschooVearly
childhood education progmm
for 3 and 4 year olds this current school year has bc:en
· awarded to the Meigs Local
School District. ·
. Announcement of the
grant with acceptance by
the Board of Education
came at a meeting Tuesday
Superint~ndent

Wtlham Buckley sa1d that Alden Coleman takes a bite out of Thanksgiving dinner prearrangements have been pared for students and families at New Horizons Childhood
made to contract with the Enrichment Center.
Athens-Meigs Educational
Service Center (ESC) to
operate the program.
"The ESC will basically
be taking care. of everything," said Buckley, "but it
is our program and everything has to be approved by
us, although it will aciually
be operated by ESC.'~
The program will be conducted in a classroom at the
Bradbury building where
currently ·other school programs, including Head Start,
are in operation. Christy
Lavender has been hired as a
part-time director, and it was
reported by Buckley that the
ESC is i11 the process of hiring a teacher and bus drivers.
. The
superintendent
explained that there will be
both morning and afternoon
classes and there wi II be
about 40 income-eligible
kids involved. He said that
already there is a waiting
·list, that some of the same

POMEROY - Knowing
how to cook a turkey is not
always cut and dry, ju.st ask
preschoolers from New
Horizons
Childhood
Enrichment Center who
have answers, maybe not
the right answers but entertaining ones.
Kylie advises: "Get the
turkey at the zoo. Feed it
and give it a drink of water.
I'm going to eat a cow
instead. Cook it at home for
II minutes at 21 degrees.
Eat il with mashed potatoes
and ice cream."
"Shoot a turkey," Hannah
says. · "Put it in the
microwave for 10 minutes ill
a hot temperature. Have
green beans and nothing else
cause you'll be too full!"
"We have chicken for
Thanksgiving," Isaac says.
"Grammy gets it at the store

Please he Fundlnc. AS
f

and it weighs four pounds .
She cooks it on the ~tove or
in
the
microwave.
Sometimes she puts salt and
pepper on it. She cooks it
for 25,288 hours. It's done
when Pop Pop gets home.
When it's done we put salt
and pepper on it and
ketchup to dip."
"Grandma is going to
walk in the woods with me
and catch the turkey with
her hands when she sees
it," Kaydee says. "She will
put it in a pan and put it on
"the stove. The burner has to
·be very hot. You have to
put a lid on it. it ha&gt; to cook
for a bunch of hours. It's ·
done when the stove beeps.
Then take it off the stove
and eat it."
"Grandpa goes to the
woods and . shoots it,"
Conner says. "Dad puts it in
a pan and puts spray butter
Please see Turkey, AS ·

Thanksgiving
reflections

Free meters

DoUIIa on PICe A3

. 2 SI!CTIONS -

Indians Tyler
Tillis and Kaydee
Hurst of New
Horizons
Childhood
Enrichment
Center get hito
the spirit and
costumes of
Thanksgiving. ·

POMEROY - Yesterday
evening law enforcement
and medical personnel
responded to the scene of a
man who'd been shot near
Bailey Run Road and Ohio
124 in Salisbury Township.
The call came shortl.Y
before 5 p.m. and preliminary reports say the man was
shot at point blank range in
the left shoulder, possibly by
a .22-caliber weapon.
Emergency medical perronnel witlt-·-Meigs-·&lt;BMS
treated the victim and transported him to · Holzer
Medical Center where he
was later transported by helicopter to Cabell. Huntington
Hospital; Huntington, W.Va.
The
Meigs
County
Sheriff's Department is
investigating the incident
and further details were not
available at press time.

ni~h.t

12,515 MUes

REED

BY BETH SERGENT ·

OBITUARIES...

As

J;

B.SERGENT@MYOAILYSENTI ~EL.COM

&amp;OM

·Low

"'"" ·m.Hiaih " ·"tilll'l .&lt;·o•"

Low '
D

Local Owner

:!oo ~

$29,995

•Safett Full' Sin Car In America!

. $4,995

BY BRIAN

BREEOOMYOAILYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY
Four
Meigs County projects are
among those to be funded
through the latest round of
State Capital Improvement
Program (Issue 2) projects.
Projects submitted by
counties in the Buckeye
Valley
Hills/Hocking
Regional
Development
District were rated at the
and district level

$23,995

Now $15,887

1008 Ford taurus

• Ohio State rises above
-Syracuse. See Page 81

Ill Wheel

118,410

:.!:.!,

Commissioners announce·lssue 2 project awards

SPORTS·

r.a..

THURSD.\Y, NOVEl\liiEI{

BY CHARLENE HOEFI:ICH

The Village of
Pomeroy is now
offering free park·
ing at the meters in
the downtown area
until January 2008.
Pictured is Meter
Maid Sandra Thorla
bagging one of the
many meters in the
downtown area.
Charlene

Hoefllch/pho~o

In 1976 long after Nelle
Bing of Pomeroy, had left
here and was · li-ving in
Manch'ester,· . Iowa, she
penned a poem of her recollections
about
Thanksgiving on the farm
in Meigs County. ·
In 1976 ~hen she was 92,
she shared that poem with
Sentinel readers during the
Thanksgiving season.
Mildred Shuler, whose
mother was a close frieQd
of the author, found a-copy
nf it reL,ently while preparing . to move to the
Rockspring s Rehab Center.
She sent to us.
We again choose to share

Please see Reflect. AS
f

•

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