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Page B6 •

The Daily Sentinel

Monday, November 26,

www .mydailysentinel.com

2007

Shop loca,uy

Browns continue to win, beat Texans Johnson, Bengals take down Titans
~~w~~

~~~

AP SPORTS WRITER

AP SPORTS WR1TER

CLEVE LAND No
drama. controversy or overtime needed. The Cleveland
Browns fi nally won normally.
Derek Ande rson threw two
touchdown passes, Jamal
Lewis rushed for 134 yards
and a TD and Kellen
Winslow had I 0 catches as
the Browns, whose season
has been fi lied with one
after
another.
thriller
improved their playoff profile with a 27- 17 win over the
Houston Texans on Sunday.
With their fifth straight victory at home and fifth in six
games overall. the Browns
(7-4) stayed within striking
distance of first-pl ace
Pittsburgh in the AFC North
and among the wild-card
contenders.
And for the first time in
t"our weeks, they didn't have
to sweat out _the final seconds.
The Browns' three previous games had all been
decided by three points, two
in OT. Last week, they needed an unforgeuable, 51-yard
field goal at the end of regulation by Phil Dawson to slip
past Baltimore.
But when Lewis barreled
from the 1-yard line with
5:48 left, the Browns led 27I 0 and were far enough
ahead that a late touchdown
by the Texans did nothing
more than make the score
look more respectable.
·The Texans (5-6) weren't
able to do much against
Cleve land's league-worst
defense, which was missing
two injured·starters.
Houston quarterback Matt
Schaub finished 22-of-36 for
256 yards and twa TDs. But
he was picked off twice and
had several other passes batted down by the Browns' suspect secondary, which lost
rookie starting cornerback
Eric Wright to a knee injury
last week.
Dawson, who bounced one
through off the left upright
and crossbar last week
against the Ravens, kicked

CINCINNATI - Chad
Johnson got into the end
zone -at long last, then celebrated his breakthrough by
squatting behind a television
camera, spinning it around
and aiming it at the field.
What he saw: A downcast
Tennessee Titans team playing itself out of contention.
Johnson had a career-high
12 catche s,
set
the
Cincinnati record for career
receptions, scored three
touchdowns and steadied the
Bengals to a 35-6 victory
Sunday over the fast-fading
Titans.
After emerging as one of
the NFL's first-half surpri ses, Tennessee (6-5) has lost
three in a row 10 slip back
into the pack. The offense
has been sloppy and the
defense has suddenly lost its
ability to stop anybody, giving up 28, 34 and 35 points
during the slide.
It was the same story in
Cincinnati.
One week after Carson
Palmer threw a career-high
four interceptions , the
Bengals (4-7) had a breakout game behind Johnson,
who had gone into a shell
and a funk for the past
month.
Stewing over suggestions that his look-at-me
antics were hurting the
team, the chatty receiver
had stopped talking to the
media. Finally, he has
something to crow about,
if he so chooses.
Johnson piled up 103
yards and his first touchdowns since a 51-45 Joss
in Cleveland on Sept. 16.
In that one, he dived into
the Dawg Pound and a got
a sticky, eye-stinging
shower of beer.
Johnson eclipsed Carl
Pickens' club mark with
his 53 1st career reception
in the second quarter
Sunday. His next catch was
a 10-yard touchdown that

.

~-~

Cleveland Browns' Braylon Edwards (17) runs into the
endzone for a touchdown against Houston Texans ' Von
Hutchins (34) in the second quarter in an NFL football
game Sunday In Clevelanp.
The
Browns' muchfield goals of· 25 and 27
yards. With 759 points, he maligned defense finally
moved past Hall of Farner. made some plays, too, blankJim Brown on Cleveland's ing the Texans for the first 27
minutes of the second half
career scoring list.
Not wantirig to get too far before Schaub hit Owen
ahead of themselves, the Daniels for a 6-yard TD with
Browns, who wore throw- 3:12 remaining.
With the Texans' secback uniforms from the
1950s against the Texans, ondary taking away his deep
implemented a no-talkin~­ options, Anderson was conabolit-the-playoffs policy m tent to dink and dunk his way
their locker room last Week. down field in the first half.
threw
underneath
It might be time to lift the He
Houston's coverage on an
ban.
•
Showing nice balance, 11-play, 64-yard scoring
Cleveland 's offense ran drive capped by a 7-yard TO
smoothly behind Anderson, pass to Winslow to give the
who went 24-of-35 for 253 Browns a 14-10 lead with 16
yards. He threw a 19-yard seconds remaining before
TD pass to Braylon Edwards halftime.
and a 7-yarder to Winslow in
The Browns responded in
the first half.
the secane quarter when
And when Anderson Anderson threaded his scorcouldn 't do it in the air, he ing pass through three
handed the ball to Lewis, defenders to Edwards, who
.who had his first 100-yard has II TDs this season game since getting 216 in two shy of the club record set
Week 2 against Baltimore.
by Gary Collins in 1963.

.Eight-point buck, Aa

days til Christmas

issues

SPORTS
• Southern falls to South
Gallia. See Page B1

AP photo · ,
Cincinnati Bengals receiver Chad Johnson operates a
television camera after catching a touchdown pass in the
first half of an NFL football game against the Tennessee
Titans Sunday in Cincinnati. Johnson was given a 15-yard
penalty for his antics.
broke the long drought and confining his celebrations
left the 65,489 fans won- to old-fashioned hugs and
dering how he would cele~ high-fives from teammate s.
brate.
Palmer made up for one
He ran through the end
of
the worst games of his
zone, commandeered a
television camera, peered career with.one of his best,
into the viewfinder and goirig 32·of-3S for 283
swung it toward the field, yard s with those three
·drawing a 15-yard penalty scoring passes to Johnson.
For the Titans, it was
for excessive celebration.
The penalty was assessed another all-Baronas peron the kickoff, helping the formance . Tennessee had
Titans drive to Rob to settle for a pair of field
Bironas' 23-yard field goal s in the first half, when
it reached the I0-yard line
goal.
Johnson al so had a 2- three times . Vince Young
yard touchdown catch in lost a fumble on a blindthe third quarter and a 3- side hit, scuttling one
yard score in the fourth, dri ve.

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Pomeroy
employees
to receive
cash bonuses
OBITUARIES
Page A5
• Betty Curfman
• Gladie M. Anderson
• Kanda Kay Brown

Pomeroy
· Dettwiller Lumber
634 East Main Street
740-992-5500
Open 7 Elays a yveek

•

j

Are you rearJVforaSTIHL~ ?

BY BETH SERGENT .
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY - Both full
and part-time employees
with the Villa~e of Pomeroy
will be receivmg something
extra in their Christmas
stockings this year and
instead of gift certificates, it
will be cash.
At its last meeting, coun- .
cil considered giving fulltime ·employees $100 lJ,n_d
part-time employees SS!J in
Meigs Countr Chamber of
Commerce Gtft Certificates
good at local businesses.
Council hoped by giving the
"Chamber Bucks" it would
be more money · in the
employee's pocket due 10
taxes not being taken out.
However, after discussing it
with Village Solicitor Chris
Tenaglia it was discovered
because it was a bonus taxes
will still have 10 be taken
oul:ast night council voted
10

give the employees cash
bonuses instead. ClerkTreasurer Kathy Hysell said
she had worked out a payroll formula which would
still allow the employees to
take home $100 and $50
bonuses after taxes.
Council held two readings
and votes on the one time
wage increase ordinance,
declaring i1 an emergency
due to time constraints. The,
third reading and vote is to
be held at the next meeting
on Dec. I 0. The bonuses are
to go into effect after Dec.
10.
Councilwoman
Ruth
Spaun asked if the village
WEATHER
could make some repairs to
·Ohio 833 just past the
Pomeroy Mason Bridge
towards the "Middleport
end" of West Main Street.
Mayor John Musser said the
state highway ends at the
bridge and _the section of
road in question is the village's responsibility though
its current condition is not
helped by constant construction near the bridge
site. Musser said he had
Detallo on P..., AI
worked with contractor CJ
Mahan in the past and
would contact them again
about helping with road
repairs . .
2 SI!Cl'IONS- 12 PAGES
Council approved the
transfer of a liquor license
Calendars
A:3 from The Old Liberty Bar to
Pub/ Emmett
Classifieds
B3-4 Emmett's
Windon.
Council commended the
Bs work
Comics
done by Sacred Heart
Catholic
Church, Trinity
Annie's Mailbox - A:3
Congregational Church and
the
Pomeroy
United
Editorials
A4 Methodist
Church on decorating the three gazebos on
' Obituaries
As the
parking lot. The
Merchants
Sports
B Section Pomeroy
Association was also comWeather .
As mended on providing downPlease sH Bonuses, AS ·.
© 2007 Obi~ Valley Publishing Co,

INDEX'

Visit a Servicing Dealer Near You!

BY BRIAN J. REED
BREE!l@MYDAILYSENTINELCOM

MIDDLEPORT
Objections from the Ohio
Historic Preservation Office
will be aired in a public hearing for proposed construction
of a cellular telephone tower
in Middleport.
· New Par, doing business as
Verizo11 Wireless, has proposed construction of a 300foot lattice telecommunications tower on Taylor Drive in
Middleport, near Bone
Hollow. The construction
wo~ld also include an antenna

rebel group each claim
to inflict heavy casua~les
on other side in battle.
See Page A2
• Bush, Mideast leaders
voice measured optimism
about peace prospects.
See Page A2
• Small amounts or
not, he has a problem.
See Page A3
· • Openness subject
of UMW program.
See Page A3
• Friends offer support
to mom whose kids
were killed in fire.
See Page A3
• Competes in pageant.
See Page A3
• Devices for
school buses cut
diesel pollutants.
See Page A5

stihlusa.com

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·
.

• Chadian·army and

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46384 State Route 248
740-985-3301
www.baumlumber.com

()

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992-6687 or 992·2143

INSIDE

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and related equipment.
The Ohio Historical Society
has determined that the construction could have an
adverse effect on historic
properties in the village, and
has filed documents under the
National Historic Preservation
Act and Section I06 rules.
The public hearing on the
Verizon application has been
set for 5-7 p.m. on Dec. II at
the Riverbend Arts Council on
North Second Avenue. It .will
allow the public to submit
comments on any potential
impact the construction would
have on the village.

In a letter to CTL the development of the comEngineering, Inc., the firm that munity."
would install the tower, Mark
Those properties, Epstein
J. Epstein of OHS said two said, include Mt. Moriah
landmark properties, the Baptist Chutch on the corner
William G. Grant House and of South Fourtlj Avenue and
the Middleport Library, which Main Street, the Quality Print
are listed on the National Shop building, the U.S . Post
Register of Historic Places, Office, and the Middleport
"have the potential to be Hi~h School building. Several
affected by the construction, · residences are also included in
which will be visible from the the list.
town."
Epstein suggested the
"Other properties are also Federal
Communications
eligible for listing in the Commission work wi\h the
National Register, including Ohio Historic Preservation
local examples of architectural . Office to "reduce an adverse
styles, and for the history of effect."

BIKERS RAISE OVER $5,000 FOR GOD'S NEf
BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGEI'I)'®MYDAILYSENTtNEL.COM

POMEROY - Though
some bikers may have an
outlaw image, beneath all
that denim and leather rests
th'e spirit of charity which
recently benefited God 's
NET to the tune of $5,096.
The Inaugural All Ohio
Valley Bi)&lt;.ers Benefit Run
raised $10,192 which was
split evenly between God's
NET and Old Man Rivers of
Wood County, W.Va. Old
Man Rivers and God's NET
both help less fortunate chi!,
dren and families by provid,
il}g food, clothing and the
necessities for life; both provide free, hot meals and pass
out school supplies among
other services; both are
501(3) c exempt and tax
deductible.
Three Meigs County biker
organizations participated in
the run and were (in alphab · 1
d ) Ch · ·
ellca or er : . ns!Ian
Motorcycle Association's
Meigs County Chapter
"Delivered,'~ Devils Diciples
Motorcycle Club, Meigs
County Bikers Association.
Members of the three local
clubs as well as several other

Beth SorJenl/pholo

Bikers from across the Ohio Valley join to present God 's NET with a $5 ,096 donation raised
during the Inaugural All Ohio valley Bikers Benefit Run. Meigs County groups represented
are Meigs County Bikers Association, Devils Diciples, Christian Motorcycle Association's
"Delivered" Chapter.
·
clubs· that participated in the
run were recently on hand to
present the Rev. Keith Rader
of God's NET with the

donation. In true biker fashThat money may be used
ion, Rader wasn't presented for a variety of programs at
with a check but with $5,096
Pleue see Bikers. AS
in cash from a leather bag.

joy to the World!
·
The Community Band
recently performed
Christmas favorites
for a crowd on Main
Street in downtown
Pomeroy to usher in
the holiday season.
Only 28 more days
until Christmas .
whether you 're ready
or 'not.
Beth Serpnlfpholo

Stay safe while driving during deer season
STAFF REPORT
NEWS®MYOAILYTRIBUNE.COM

GALLIPOLIS - Ohio's deer population is estimated at approximately
675,000 this fall . Deer movements
increase this time of year when biicks
are chasing does during the breeding
season, which peaks in Novemberright now.
·
While deer are primarily nocturnal
animals and most active in the immediate hours after sunset and again near
sunrise, they can be active and cross
roads anytime of the day or night. In
the event of a probable collision with a
deer, it is safer to hit the deer rather

than · to swerve off the road or into
oncoming traffic.
Most personal injury occurs when
the driver attempts to avoid the deer.
Property damage can be repaired;
death or injury is not worth risking in
order to avoid hitting a deer.
.
Here are some safe driving tips
offered by the Division of Wildlife and
the Ohio Insurance Institute:
• Drive with extreme caution, at or
below the posted speed limit, especially in areas with deer-crossing signs.
• Mo st accidents occur October
through December, and again in May.
High-ri sl! peri'ods are from sunset to
midnight, and in the hours shortly

'\
II

"Have alternative locations
or designs been considered?
Would it be possible to colocate the antenna on an existing tower or structure? Could
the objective be achieved by
locating at this site be reached
with two shortet towers'J Are
there any alternatives that
would minimize, if not avoid,
an adverse effect?"
According· to the engineering firm , the · tower will
include equipment on the
ground level, inside a shelter
on a fenced-in parcel, with
antennae mounted on the top
of the 300-foot tower.

\

before and after sunrise.
• If you see one deer on or near a
roadway, expect that other' may fol low. Slow down and be alert .
• During hours of darkness. use your
'high-beam headlights when no traffic
is approaching. The high beams will
illumin-ate the eyes of deer on or near
a roadway and allow for greater driver
reaction time.
• Always wear safe ty belt s as
requ ired by state law. '
• Do not swerve your vehicle to
avoid striking a deer. If a collision
with a deer ~ee m s probable, it is safer
Please see Drlvlnc. AS

�•

The• Daily Sentinel

NATION • WORLD

Page A2
Tuesday, November 27, 2007

AP DIPLOMATIC WRitER

'·

WASHINGTON
President Bush stepped cautiously into the most direct
Mideast peacemaking of his
admini stration on Monday,
meeting separatel y with the
leaders of Israel and the
Palestinian Authority to
explore whether peace is
possible. "Difficult compromises" will be required but
the Israeli and Palestinian.
leaders are committed to
making them. he said.
A day ahead of a major
Mideast peace conference
in Annapoli s, Md .. Bu sh
said he was optimistic. The
gathering is to launch the
first direct peace talks
between Israel and the
Palestinians of Bush's nearly seven years in office, and
has attracted Arab and other
outside backing.
Israeli and Palestinian
leaders have already said
they want to conclude a bargain within the 14 months
that Bush has left in office.
The two sides were unable
to frame a blueprint for the
talks before they came to
the United States, and negotiations over the text were
expected to continue into
Tuesday.
At an evening dinner at
the State Department for
members of some SO delegations invited to the talks,
Bush toasted the effort and
told the guests: "We've
come together this week
because we share a common
goal : two democratic states,
Israel and. Palestine, living
side-by-side in peace and
security. Achieving this goal
requires difficult compromises, and the Israelis and
Palestinians have elected
leaders committed to mak·
· ing them."
Bush earlier emerged
from an Oval Office meeting with· Israeli Prime
Minister Ehud Olmert and
told him: ''I'm looking forward to continuing our serious dialogue with you · and
the president of the
Palestinian Authority to see
whether or not peace is possibl ~ .l'm optimistic. I know
that you're optimistic."
Next, he met with
Palestinian
President
Mahmoud Abbas, who
stressed _the need to address
issues of Palestinian statehood, sticking points that

spec ific reference to a
Jewish state would prej udice the rig ht of Israe li
Arabs and Palestinians who
claim a right to return to
land they once owned inside
Israel.
• American and Israe li
offi cials are resisting
Palestinian
efforts
to
include language about
"ending the occupation that
started in 1967 ," a reference
to disputed Jewish se ttlements in the West Bank,
The West Bank would form
the bulk . of an eventual
Palestinian state and the two
sides must decide which
settlements would remain a
part 'or Israel.
• The Palestini ans want
the document to set a oneyear tillletable for reac_hing
a resolution. The lsraehs do
not want thi s, 1d the
American s are open the
idea.
Some in Bush's administration doubt that. a settlement is possible in such a
short time frame and have
reservations about whether
AI' photo
the
Palestinians, in particuOn the night before a major Mideast peace conference in Annapolis, Md ., President Ge·orge lar, are ready to 111ake necesW. Bush and Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice, left, host- a gathering for summit diplo- sary concession&lt;,
mats 'at the State Department in Washington , Monday. .
·
Bush's tempered outlook
as he readied the Annapolis
negotiations conference suggested he has
have doomed previous conference ~ could make concluding
this effort succeed where before Bush leaves office in l)is
peace etlorts.
own
misgivings,
January 2009. And it com- although
"We have a great deal of others have failed.
admini stration
"This time, it 's different mits the two sides to resolv- spokesmen said the United
hope that this conference
will produce permanent sta- because we are' going to ing the key issues that States will remain closely
tus negotiations, expanded have a lot of participation in divide them.
involved after Tuesday's
Chief Palestinian negotia- session closes.
negotiations, over all per- what I hope will launch a
manent status issues that serious process negotiation tor Ahmed Qureia said after
The Palestinian question
would lead to a peace agree- between us and the an afternoon meeting with underlies numerous other
ment between Israel and the Palestinians," Olmert said. Rice,
Israeli
Foreign conflicts and grievances in
Palestinian people," he said. He was referring to the talks Minister Tzipi Livni and the Middle· East, and has
''This is a great ·initiative expected to begin in earnest others that detail s of the scattered hundreds of thouand we need his (Bush's) after this week's U.S.-host- document had not been sands of Palestinians across
continuing effort to achieve ed meetings.
finalized. "Our efforts are · several Arab states . The
this objective."
"We and the Palestinians still going on to reach this Palestinians are unlikely to
stt together in document," he said.
At the dinner, with its will
strike any bargain that their
menu of red and yellow beet Jerusalem and work ·..out
A member of · the Arab backers and neighbors
salad and sea bass carefully something that will be very Palestinian
delegation , do not support, so the
selected to meet kosher and good," Olmert said. As to speaking on condition on Annapoli s conference is
Muslim dietary guidelines, timing, he added later: "We anonymity because talks are meant to make Arabs what
host Condoleezza Rice, the definitely will have to sit still going on , said three one administration official
secretary of state, sat down very soon."
main
obstacles
have called
"ground-floor
The agreement that was emerg~d :
between Olmert and Abbas.
investors" in the new round
Bush stopped by briefly to shaping up. as Palestinian
• All sides have agreed of talks .·
share a toast with the partic- official Vasser Abed Rabbo that two states should be · Saudia Arabia, linchpin of
ipants, and clinked glasses described it, is a starting established,
but
the Arab support for the new
with Abbas and Olmert. point for negotiations and ·Palestinians have objected .peace push, said it agreed to
They raised their iced tea; sketches only vague bar- to referring to Israel as a attend after receiving assurfor Bush, it was water. No gaining terms. The big "Jewish
state."
The ances that the Bush adminalcohol was served out of questions that have doomed Palestinians and their Arab istration would remain enerrespect for Muslim tradi- previous peace efforts backers are concerned that a getic after the talks begin,
would come later.
tion.
,
The document was to
Earlier, Olmert said that
international support include a formal announcefrom Bush and also, pre- ment of the renewal of
. sumably, from the Arab peace talks, Abed Rabbo
nations that will attend the said. It will set a target of

and intervene with its own
ideas if necessary.
"When the president says
I am full y backing this
effort, I will use every
resource ... how can you not
be confident ?" asked the
kingdom's foreign minister,
Prince Saud ai-Faisa1.
He also said Saudi Arabia
would not consider establi shing diplomatic relatil)ns
with Israel until · after
Palestinian and other territo.ri al questions are settled.
Criticism directed at the
conference from afar pointed to the enormity of the
challenge. Leaders of the
Islami c militant group
Hamas, for instance, labeled
Abbas a traitor even for
coming to the meeting, and
vowed to reject any decisions to come out of the
conference.
The events were unfolding here as the Israeli military killed four Palestinians
in the Gaza Strip in an
airstrike and a ground clash.
At a briefing . with ·
reporters, Olmert pounded ·
his fist on a desk as he
spoke of the need to · work
toward peace despite diffi.
culties.
"We want to move ·forward," he declared. uwe
don 't want the status quo."
But he als.o said Israel
would insist that lhe
Palestinians fight terror. in
Hamas-ruled Gaza before
any peace deal would be
implemented.

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Public ~eetings

Chri st, for Christmas Party.
Secret sisters revealed. Call
Pat Arnold. 992-5963 for
dinner rese rvations by
Monday morning.

Thesday, Nov. 27
POMEROY
- Meigs
County Emergency Planning
Committee, I I:30 a.m., conWednesday, Nov. 28
ference room of Meigs
POM EROY - OH-Kan
Senior Center. Financial
Coin
Club. 7 p.m.. Pomeroy
repon. minutes, agenda and
Library.
Public welcome .
status of. grants to be present- ·
ed. Ofticer nominations.
Thursdav. Dec. 29
HARRI
SONVILLE
Thursday, Nov. 29
Harrisonville
Senior
ROCKSPRINGS
Salisbury
Town ship Cit izens meet at II a.m..
Trustees meet at 6:30p.m. at Harri sonvi lle Presbyteri an
Chu rc h, for potluck 111eal.
the town hall.

Cheyenne Trussell

Openness subject of
. UMW program

Monday, Dec. 3
SYRACUSE - Syracuse
Board of Public Affairs, regular meeting, 6 p.m., village
hall.
SYRACUSE
Com111unity Development
Block Grant public meeting,
7
p.m.,
Syracuse
Community Center.

•

ALFRED
Thelma 129 friendship call s were
Gary Gibbs (pictured here) ofTornado Road recently shot an Henderson gave the mission reported.
eight-point buck around 7:30 .a .m. on his son Greg's lea~ed report, "Open Heart, Open
Ruth Brooks selected Edgar
property in Mason County, W.Va.
Eyes, Open Spirit." at the Fanner of Frakes, Ky., with
recent meeting of the Alfred Redbird Missions, for the
United Methodist Women.
prayer birthday card, which
The meeting was a was signed by aiL
Thanksgiving potluck dinner,
Thanksgiving readings were
with 10 members, four men' shared by Mary Jo Barringer
and two district officers pre- and Mary Jo Buckley. Virgie
WEST CHESTER (AP) - The mother of three children sent. Henderson gav.e the Buckley, Osie Follrod, and
killed in an apartment fire blamed on a di scarded ci garette prayer before the meal.
Ruth Brooks.
Henderson 's report was The next meeting will be a
shouldn't be judged as a negligent person, her friends and
. Thesday, Nov. 27
from "Response" magazine. potluck dinner on Dec. II,
co-workers said Monday.
·
HARRISONVILLE
Emily Butler had just worked a 12-hour-plus shift as a Practices of openness include with a secret sister gift Harrisonville Chapter #255,
nurse in a nursing home in southwe ~t Ohio before the fire &lt;Ul OJll!n heart, where you turn exchange and drawings for Order of Eastern Stat, Past
broke out Saturday, co--workers said. 'Killed in the fire were. away from an inward focus to new secret , sisters, programs Matrons,
6:30
p.m .. ·
be open to others. With open
· her children: Aubrey, 7; Alexander, 5, and Braden, 3.
Middleport
Church
of
and refreshments for 2008.
eyes,
we
see
others
with
the
. Firefighters said the ~laze came from a ci~arette that
tgmted a hvmg room sofa, and B~ttler was hospttahzed and clear vision of the The Spirit
and an open spirit needs to be
listed in critical condition from burns and injuries.
Co-workers at Franklin Ridge Nursing Ho111e said in a nurtured with prayer, spiritual
·
statement Monday: "She deserves the same kindness and readings and meditation.
Openness of heart, eyes and
compassion she has always given to those for whom she
cares. We love her, support her and hope she can find a way spirit allow one to be fully present to the workings of The
to recover from this terrible loss."
Spirit
in life and the world.
; The state Fire Marshal's office said Monday that an
President Mary Jo Barringer
· investigation was continuing. although initial findings indi;. cate that the fire was accidental. It said a final determina- opened the meeting and mem:: tion wouldn't be made until atier autopsy results were com- bers read The . Purpose. She
introduced UMW District
plete and the mother could be interviewed.
"To say that her burns can heal is one thing, but with President Barbara Proctor and
these three children gone, my daughter is changed forever. Treasurer Sherrill Alltop.
The secretary's and l(easur: She will never be the same," sairt . Susan Richardson of
· Middletown, the children 's maternal grandmother.
er's reports were approved and .
Submitted photo

Friends offer support to mom
whose kids were killed in fire

Clubs and
organizations

Sunday, Dec. 2
RACINE
- Annual
in stallation of officers of
Pomeroy!Racine Masonic
Loge #164. 3 p.m. at the
lodge. Open installation
open to friends, family and
the public. Refreshments follow.

Other events
Friday, Nov. 30
MIDDLEPORT - .. Free
community dinner, with
turkey and dressing, J!lashed
potat_oes and gravy, green
beans, rolls and pumpkin
4:30-6: I 5
pm,
pie,
Middleport Church of Christ
Family Life Center.

ANNIE'S MAILBOX

Small amounts or not, he luis a problem
use. Any other suggestions? questions to anniesmail- In a Quandary
box@comcast.net, or write
Dear Quandary: Trv to: Annie'~ Mailbox, P.O.
113 W.lnd St.
· Dear Annie: I have been coffee or tea samples in a Box JJS/90, Chicago, JL
On Your Side
~ating "Jesse" for six years. mug, a picture frame, candy 60611. To find out more
Pomeroy,
OH
We recently moved in or baked goods, a game, about Annie's Mailbox, and
AutQ Home Life Business
Stop by for a quote
together. Within the last year plant, coffee' table book, read features by other
992-5479
and receive a
he has started playing poker, kitchen gadget or even a jar
free
camouflage hat. •
both online and with his of his favorite pickles. It Creators Syndicate writers
friends. ' Sometimes the doesn't have to be expensive an4 cartoonists, visit the
~ ~~~:::=~
·--. ":·M~~~'"::::W.;::-~=::J,;:ttld~:_..':'"".
~..;;.~=~~":::~~::=r.~
·'•-• .nl~
games at our place last until or elaborate. The idea is to ·Creators Syndicate Web
6 a.m. The online gambling say, ''Thanks for inviting page at www.creators.com.
is the real problem, though. . me."
Every smgle day, as soon
Dear Annie: I read the
as he returns from work, he letter from "Long Road to
goes straight to the comput- Normal," who won't see her
er and starts playing. He father because he' s bipolar
Wall-Away ' Recliners and
won't go anywhere with me. and abusive and won't take
Rocker/Recliners. ,..any Fabrics.
He'll only stop gambling if I his meds . I wish you had
Over 60 Chairs In Stock
get angry. We have had dis- told her about classes avail Reg.
Sale
cussions about it, but he sees able through NAMI (the
$419 ......................... $339
nothing wrong because he is National Alliance on Mental
only playing for "small Illness).
$439 ......................... $349
amounts of money." And, of
NAMI offers Family to
........................ $399
course, he claims his totals Family classes for care........................ $479
are up "overall." .He also givers of those with 111ental
says it's the only recreation- illness. I went through thi s
~I activity he really enjoys. I because of my bipolar son. l
find , it inappropriate and am also bipolar. I learned
unattractive.
inore about my illness than I
I don't want to nag him all knew before. She can find
the time. Am I overreacting? out whether there is a chap·
Should I · step aside? - ter in her area. They teach
• Assorted styles and fabrics. Some styles
Poker Widow In Ontario
what to do in an emergency
that
swivel others with matchifll ottomans.
Dear Poker Widow: situation and how to take
•
100% solid wood- American Made
Jesse has a ~ambling prob- care of yourself
!em, even if 11 is only small
"Long Road" should
amounts of money. If he know that "normal" is just a
doesn't address his addic- setting on the ' dryer.
'
tion, those small amounts Antidepressan!s will not
could turn into major help much if she doesn't
headaches,
particularly educate herself. You can't
when he is playing until the take a pill and.expect life to
early morning hours and be OK. Coming from a faroneglecting other things. This ily where mental illness runs
could affect his job, his bank deep on both sides, it took
account and his future with years of counseling to realNice selection of styles and finishes.
ize I could overcome the
you .
.
Also gathering and pub tables.
· Poker, especially online, obstacles I grew up with. As
Reg. $559 5 pc. set
SALE $449
: is exceptionally popular. the quote says, "Resentment
: Jesse may believe he is is like drinking poison and
Reg. $619 Tablef4 chairs SALE $489
engaging in a harmless waiting for the other person
• ,hobby, and if the novelty to die ." - Not Bitter
Reg. $1249 Table/6 chairs SALE $999
wears off soon and hi s hours Anymore
: :Ceturn to normal , we would
Dear Not Bitter: Thank
' a$ree. But if other parts of you Jor sharing your story
hts life are suffering, or if and giving our readers such
Book Case Bunk Bed.. ..... .. .......... SALE $299
the lost money starts to add excellent infor111ation about
up, it's out of his control. the available programs at
Spin~le Bunk Bed. ... ....... ...... .....SALE $319
OamcAnon (gam-anon.org) NAMI. Readers who are
9ffers ·a list 6f questions to interested can contact the
White Spindle Bunk Bed .... .. .. ..... SALE $339
determine if you are living National Alliance on Mental
· with a compulsive gambler Illness at nami.org or by
,
Black Panel Bu~k Bed..... ............ SAL~$399
OW &lt;&gt;
and bow to deal with it. calling 1-800-950-NAM!
Contact them for sugges- (1-800-950-6264) . (By the
: tions at P.O. ' Box 157, way, that wonderful quote is
· Whitestone, N.Y. 11357.
by actress and author Carrie
• Dear Annie: What is an Fisher. Princes&amp;Leia is one
. appropriate host gift for a smart cookie.)
Annie's Mailbox is writ: . "mal~? I feel funny j:iving a
.. man flowers, &lt;•nd smce my ten by Kathy Mitchell and
friend doesn't drink, I'd pre- · Marcy Sugar, longtime edi106 East Main Street • Pomeroy, OH • 992·3671
. fer not to give him a bottle tors of the Ann Landers col·
• 9:30 to 5:00
. of wine that he will never umn. Please e-mail your
BY KATHY MITCHELL
~NO MARCY SUGAR

Jeff Warner ·

D

Nationwide"

-=

Chadian army and rebetgroup each claim to
inflict heavy casualties on other side in battle

Recliner Sale

DANY PADIRE.

people have been uprooted by conflicts in
the region, including the fighting in Darfur
and the unrelated rebellions in C'- •d and
N'DJAMENA, Chad - Chad's army and Central African Republic.
,
a rebel group both claimed to have killed
Aid workers say recruiters for Chad's
hundreds of fighters on the opposing side in rebel groups and the government have visitfighting Monday in the country's east, an ed refugee camps trying to lu(e children into
area in turmoil from domestic unrest as well their forces. ·
· -• as spillover conflict from the neighboring
The European Union has offered to send a
Darfur region in Sudan.
3,700-soldier force to Chad and Central
The violence at Abougouleigne, about 60 Africa Republic to help protect refugees
miles east of the town of Abeche, left "sev- displaced by the four-year conflict in
eral .hyndred (rebels) dead, several injured Darfur. The force has been held up, howev:
and several prisoners of war" in military er, by a lack of air transportation and medcustody, according to a statement from ical and supply units.
Chad's general staff.
A meeting last week at the EU headquar"The fighting lasted four hours and ended ters in Brussels, Belgium, failed to get more
in the total and definite annihilation of this commitments, raising the possibility that the
column" of rebels, said the statement read EU mission might not be able to deploy in
on state radio and television by an unidenti- December as planned.
.fied officer.
Chad, a largely arid country that is one of
He did not say if any Chadian soldiers · Africa's newest oil producers, has been con- ·
were killed or injured, but said the statement vulsed by civil wars and invasions since
was a preliminary report on the fighting.
independence from France in I 960.
·
A statement from one of Chad's rebel
The most recent conflict is intertwined
movements, the Forces for Development with the one in Darfur. Chad's president is
and Democracy, claimec! its fighters killed from the same ethnic group as some of the
more than 200 government soldiers. ·
African rebels who have rebelled against
"Loss of human life on the enemy side, Sudan's" Arab-dominated government, and·
more than 200 dead, including division each country accuses the other of supportGen. Dirmi Haroun and Col. Guende ing rebel grours on the other' s soil.
Abdramane," said the statement posted a
Hundreds o ar111y officers and members
Chadian opposition Web site.
of Deby's own fa111ily defected in 2005 after
The Chad did not give any figures of its tl\ey accused him of not providing enough
own casualties, but rebels claimed that.only support to the rebels in Darfur.
20 of its fighters were killed.
Once a fight b~tween nomadic Arab tribes
It was not PQssible to independently con- and settled African farmers, both the Darfur
firm either side's claims, but if proved close and Chadian conflicts have grown increw;to accurate, the fighting would be the worst ingly complicated as rebel groups splinsince a separate rebel group tried to take the tered, formed new alliances and received
capital in April 2006. At the time the gov- defectors over the years.
ernment said it killed over 300 rebels.
•
Armed bandits have taken advantage of
Chad has struggled in the face of several the lawlessne ss to attack civilians, and local
rebellions in the east, with some insurgents politicians have used ethnic rivalries to fan
saying President ldriss Deby has not given the violence.
enough support to their kinsmen in Da_rfiJr.
Instability has increased ahead of a
. The fighting came after the rebel group planned U.N.-African Union peacekeeping
last week expressed dissatisfaction with the force for Darfur and the announcement of '
pace of the implementation of a peace the EU mi ssion for Chad and Central
agreement th at it signed with the govern- African Republic.
The EU force is widely seen as strengthment along with three other insurgent
groups. Violence between the Forces for ening Dcby's regime , which has also beneDevelopment and Democracy and govern- tited from hig h oil prices that has allowed it
ment fi ghters was first reported over the to buy more weapons. In 2005. a referenweekend, but there was no word at the time dum lifted con stitutional term li111its and
on casualties.
·
Deby won a third term in election s boyU.N. officials estimate about 3 million cotted by the opposition.
BY

POMEROY - Cheyenne
Trussell will compete for the
title of Miss Oljio Teen USA
Nov. 29- Dec . I at Shaw nee
State
University
in
Portsmouth.
. She is the daughter of
Denise and Mike Bing and
Scott and Teresa Trussell.
She
attends
Hock in g
College.
Ticket information is
available at 35 1-3600.
Bing's Auto Repai r is her
sponsor.

Tuesday, November 2 7 ,2007

Community Calendar

Competes in pageant

Bush, Mideast leaders.voice measured optimism about peace
prospects
.
BY ANNE GEARAN

Page A3

B Y THE BEND

The Daily Sentinel

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

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·Dining Tables &amp; Chairs

Bunk Beds

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fURNITURE • APPLIANCES • CARPET

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�•

The• Daily Sentinel

NATION • WORLD

Page A2
Tuesday, November 27, 2007

AP DIPLOMATIC WRitER

'·

WASHINGTON
President Bush stepped cautiously into the most direct
Mideast peacemaking of his
admini stration on Monday,
meeting separatel y with the
leaders of Israel and the
Palestinian Authority to
explore whether peace is
possible. "Difficult compromises" will be required but
the Israeli and Palestinian.
leaders are committed to
making them. he said.
A day ahead of a major
Mideast peace conference
in Annapoli s, Md .. Bu sh
said he was optimistic. The
gathering is to launch the
first direct peace talks
between Israel and the
Palestinians of Bush's nearly seven years in office, and
has attracted Arab and other
outside backing.
Israeli and Palestinian
leaders have already said
they want to conclude a bargain within the 14 months
that Bush has left in office.
The two sides were unable
to frame a blueprint for the
talks before they came to
the United States, and negotiations over the text were
expected to continue into
Tuesday.
At an evening dinner at
the State Department for
members of some SO delegations invited to the talks,
Bush toasted the effort and
told the guests: "We've
come together this week
because we share a common
goal : two democratic states,
Israel and. Palestine, living
side-by-side in peace and
security. Achieving this goal
requires difficult compromises, and the Israelis and
Palestinians have elected
leaders committed to mak·
· ing them."
Bush earlier emerged
from an Oval Office meeting with· Israeli Prime
Minister Ehud Olmert and
told him: ''I'm looking forward to continuing our serious dialogue with you · and
the president of the
Palestinian Authority to see
whether or not peace is possibl ~ .l'm optimistic. I know
that you're optimistic."
Next, he met with
Palestinian
President
Mahmoud Abbas, who
stressed _the need to address
issues of Palestinian statehood, sticking points that

spec ific reference to a
Jewish state would prej udice the rig ht of Israe li
Arabs and Palestinians who
claim a right to return to
land they once owned inside
Israel.
• American and Israe li
offi cials are resisting
Palestinian
efforts
to
include language about
"ending the occupation that
started in 1967 ," a reference
to disputed Jewish se ttlements in the West Bank,
The West Bank would form
the bulk . of an eventual
Palestinian state and the two
sides must decide which
settlements would remain a
part 'or Israel.
• The Palestini ans want
the document to set a oneyear tillletable for reac_hing
a resolution. The lsraehs do
not want thi s, 1d the
American s are open the
idea.
Some in Bush's administration doubt that. a settlement is possible in such a
short time frame and have
reservations about whether
AI' photo
the
Palestinians, in particuOn the night before a major Mideast peace conference in Annapolis, Md ., President Ge·orge lar, are ready to 111ake necesW. Bush and Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice, left, host- a gathering for summit diplo- sary concession&lt;,
mats 'at the State Department in Washington , Monday. .
·
Bush's tempered outlook
as he readied the Annapolis
negotiations conference suggested he has
have doomed previous conference ~ could make concluding
this effort succeed where before Bush leaves office in l)is
peace etlorts.
own
misgivings,
January 2009. And it com- although
"We have a great deal of others have failed.
admini stration
"This time, it 's different mits the two sides to resolv- spokesmen said the United
hope that this conference
will produce permanent sta- because we are' going to ing the key issues that States will remain closely
tus negotiations, expanded have a lot of participation in divide them.
involved after Tuesday's
Chief Palestinian negotia- session closes.
negotiations, over all per- what I hope will launch a
manent status issues that serious process negotiation tor Ahmed Qureia said after
The Palestinian question
would lead to a peace agree- between us and the an afternoon meeting with underlies numerous other
ment between Israel and the Palestinians," Olmert said. Rice,
Israeli
Foreign conflicts and grievances in
Palestinian people," he said. He was referring to the talks Minister Tzipi Livni and the Middle· East, and has
''This is a great ·initiative expected to begin in earnest others that detail s of the scattered hundreds of thouand we need his (Bush's) after this week's U.S.-host- document had not been sands of Palestinians across
continuing effort to achieve ed meetings.
finalized. "Our efforts are · several Arab states . The
this objective."
"We and the Palestinians still going on to reach this Palestinians are unlikely to
stt together in document," he said.
At the dinner, with its will
strike any bargain that their
menu of red and yellow beet Jerusalem and work ·..out
A member of · the Arab backers and neighbors
salad and sea bass carefully something that will be very Palestinian
delegation , do not support, so the
selected to meet kosher and good," Olmert said. As to speaking on condition on Annapoli s conference is
Muslim dietary guidelines, timing, he added later: "We anonymity because talks are meant to make Arabs what
host Condoleezza Rice, the definitely will have to sit still going on , said three one administration official
secretary of state, sat down very soon."
main
obstacles
have called
"ground-floor
The agreement that was emerg~d :
between Olmert and Abbas.
investors" in the new round
Bush stopped by briefly to shaping up. as Palestinian
• All sides have agreed of talks .·
share a toast with the partic- official Vasser Abed Rabbo that two states should be · Saudia Arabia, linchpin of
ipants, and clinked glasses described it, is a starting established,
but
the Arab support for the new
with Abbas and Olmert. point for negotiations and ·Palestinians have objected .peace push, said it agreed to
They raised their iced tea; sketches only vague bar- to referring to Israel as a attend after receiving assurfor Bush, it was water. No gaining terms. The big "Jewish
state."
The ances that the Bush adminalcohol was served out of questions that have doomed Palestinians and their Arab istration would remain enerrespect for Muslim tradi- previous peace efforts backers are concerned that a getic after the talks begin,
would come later.
tion.
,
The document was to
Earlier, Olmert said that
international support include a formal announcefrom Bush and also, pre- ment of the renewal of
. sumably, from the Arab peace talks, Abed Rabbo
nations that will attend the said. It will set a target of

and intervene with its own
ideas if necessary.
"When the president says
I am full y backing this
effort, I will use every
resource ... how can you not
be confident ?" asked the
kingdom's foreign minister,
Prince Saud ai-Faisa1.
He also said Saudi Arabia
would not consider establi shing diplomatic relatil)ns
with Israel until · after
Palestinian and other territo.ri al questions are settled.
Criticism directed at the
conference from afar pointed to the enormity of the
challenge. Leaders of the
Islami c militant group
Hamas, for instance, labeled
Abbas a traitor even for
coming to the meeting, and
vowed to reject any decisions to come out of the
conference.
The events were unfolding here as the Israeli military killed four Palestinians
in the Gaza Strip in an
airstrike and a ground clash.
At a briefing . with ·
reporters, Olmert pounded ·
his fist on a desk as he
spoke of the need to · work
toward peace despite diffi.
culties.
"We want to move ·forward," he declared. uwe
don 't want the status quo."
But he als.o said Israel
would insist that lhe
Palestinians fight terror. in
Hamas-ruled Gaza before
any peace deal would be
implemented.

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Public ~eetings

Chri st, for Christmas Party.
Secret sisters revealed. Call
Pat Arnold. 992-5963 for
dinner rese rvations by
Monday morning.

Thesday, Nov. 27
POMEROY
- Meigs
County Emergency Planning
Committee, I I:30 a.m., conWednesday, Nov. 28
ference room of Meigs
POM EROY - OH-Kan
Senior Center. Financial
Coin
Club. 7 p.m.. Pomeroy
repon. minutes, agenda and
Library.
Public welcome .
status of. grants to be present- ·
ed. Ofticer nominations.
Thursdav. Dec. 29
HARRI
SONVILLE
Thursday, Nov. 29
Harrisonville
Senior
ROCKSPRINGS
Salisbury
Town ship Cit izens meet at II a.m..
Trustees meet at 6:30p.m. at Harri sonvi lle Presbyteri an
Chu rc h, for potluck 111eal.
the town hall.

Cheyenne Trussell

Openness subject of
. UMW program

Monday, Dec. 3
SYRACUSE - Syracuse
Board of Public Affairs, regular meeting, 6 p.m., village
hall.
SYRACUSE
Com111unity Development
Block Grant public meeting,
7
p.m.,
Syracuse
Community Center.

•

ALFRED
Thelma 129 friendship call s were
Gary Gibbs (pictured here) ofTornado Road recently shot an Henderson gave the mission reported.
eight-point buck around 7:30 .a .m. on his son Greg's lea~ed report, "Open Heart, Open
Ruth Brooks selected Edgar
property in Mason County, W.Va.
Eyes, Open Spirit." at the Fanner of Frakes, Ky., with
recent meeting of the Alfred Redbird Missions, for the
United Methodist Women.
prayer birthday card, which
The meeting was a was signed by aiL
Thanksgiving potluck dinner,
Thanksgiving readings were
with 10 members, four men' shared by Mary Jo Barringer
and two district officers pre- and Mary Jo Buckley. Virgie
WEST CHESTER (AP) - The mother of three children sent. Henderson gav.e the Buckley, Osie Follrod, and
killed in an apartment fire blamed on a di scarded ci garette prayer before the meal.
Ruth Brooks.
Henderson 's report was The next meeting will be a
shouldn't be judged as a negligent person, her friends and
. Thesday, Nov. 27
from "Response" magazine. potluck dinner on Dec. II,
co-workers said Monday.
·
HARRISONVILLE
Emily Butler had just worked a 12-hour-plus shift as a Practices of openness include with a secret sister gift Harrisonville Chapter #255,
nurse in a nursing home in southwe ~t Ohio before the fire &lt;Ul OJll!n heart, where you turn exchange and drawings for Order of Eastern Stat, Past
broke out Saturday, co--workers said. 'Killed in the fire were. away from an inward focus to new secret , sisters, programs Matrons,
6:30
p.m .. ·
be open to others. With open
· her children: Aubrey, 7; Alexander, 5, and Braden, 3.
Middleport
Church
of
and refreshments for 2008.
eyes,
we
see
others
with
the
. Firefighters said the ~laze came from a ci~arette that
tgmted a hvmg room sofa, and B~ttler was hospttahzed and clear vision of the The Spirit
and an open spirit needs to be
listed in critical condition from burns and injuries.
Co-workers at Franklin Ridge Nursing Ho111e said in a nurtured with prayer, spiritual
·
statement Monday: "She deserves the same kindness and readings and meditation.
Openness of heart, eyes and
compassion she has always given to those for whom she
cares. We love her, support her and hope she can find a way spirit allow one to be fully present to the workings of The
to recover from this terrible loss."
Spirit
in life and the world.
; The state Fire Marshal's office said Monday that an
President Mary Jo Barringer
· investigation was continuing. although initial findings indi;. cate that the fire was accidental. It said a final determina- opened the meeting and mem:: tion wouldn't be made until atier autopsy results were com- bers read The . Purpose. She
introduced UMW District
plete and the mother could be interviewed.
"To say that her burns can heal is one thing, but with President Barbara Proctor and
these three children gone, my daughter is changed forever. Treasurer Sherrill Alltop.
The secretary's and l(easur: She will never be the same," sairt . Susan Richardson of
· Middletown, the children 's maternal grandmother.
er's reports were approved and .
Submitted photo

Friends offer support to mom
whose kids were killed in fire

Clubs and
organizations

Sunday, Dec. 2
RACINE
- Annual
in stallation of officers of
Pomeroy!Racine Masonic
Loge #164. 3 p.m. at the
lodge. Open installation
open to friends, family and
the public. Refreshments follow.

Other events
Friday, Nov. 30
MIDDLEPORT - .. Free
community dinner, with
turkey and dressing, J!lashed
potat_oes and gravy, green
beans, rolls and pumpkin
4:30-6: I 5
pm,
pie,
Middleport Church of Christ
Family Life Center.

ANNIE'S MAILBOX

Small amounts or not, he luis a problem
use. Any other suggestions? questions to anniesmail- In a Quandary
box@comcast.net, or write
Dear Quandary: Trv to: Annie'~ Mailbox, P.O.
113 W.lnd St.
· Dear Annie: I have been coffee or tea samples in a Box JJS/90, Chicago, JL
On Your Side
~ating "Jesse" for six years. mug, a picture frame, candy 60611. To find out more
Pomeroy,
OH
We recently moved in or baked goods, a game, about Annie's Mailbox, and
AutQ Home Life Business
Stop by for a quote
together. Within the last year plant, coffee' table book, read features by other
992-5479
and receive a
he has started playing poker, kitchen gadget or even a jar
free
camouflage hat. •
both online and with his of his favorite pickles. It Creators Syndicate writers
friends. ' Sometimes the doesn't have to be expensive an4 cartoonists, visit the
~ ~~~:::=~
·--. ":·M~~~'"::::W.;::-~=::J,;:ttld~:_..':'"".
~..;;.~=~~":::~~::=r.~
·'•-• .nl~
games at our place last until or elaborate. The idea is to ·Creators Syndicate Web
6 a.m. The online gambling say, ''Thanks for inviting page at www.creators.com.
is the real problem, though. . me."
Every smgle day, as soon
Dear Annie: I read the
as he returns from work, he letter from "Long Road to
goes straight to the comput- Normal," who won't see her
er and starts playing. He father because he' s bipolar
Wall-Away ' Recliners and
won't go anywhere with me. and abusive and won't take
Rocker/Recliners. ,..any Fabrics.
He'll only stop gambling if I his meds . I wish you had
Over 60 Chairs In Stock
get angry. We have had dis- told her about classes avail Reg.
Sale
cussions about it, but he sees able through NAMI (the
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NAMI offers Family to
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says it's the only recreation- illness. I went through thi s
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find , it inappropriate and am also bipolar. I learned
unattractive.
inore about my illness than I
I don't want to nag him all knew before. She can find
the time. Am I overreacting? out whether there is a chap·
Should I · step aside? - ter in her area. They teach
• Assorted styles and fabrics. Some styles
Poker Widow In Ontario
what to do in an emergency
that
swivel others with matchifll ottomans.
Dear Poker Widow: situation and how to take
•
100% solid wood- American Made
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!em, even if 11 is only small
"Long Road" should
amounts of money. If he know that "normal" is just a
doesn't address his addic- setting on the ' dryer.
'
tion, those small amounts Antidepressan!s will not
could turn into major help much if she doesn't
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particularly educate herself. You can't
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could affect his job, his bank deep on both sides, it took
account and his future with years of counseling to realNice selection of styles and finishes.
ize I could overcome the
you .
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by actress and author Carrie
• Dear Annie: What is an Fisher. Princes&amp;Leia is one
. appropriate host gift for a smart cookie.)
Annie's Mailbox is writ: . "mal~? I feel funny j:iving a
.. man flowers, &lt;•nd smce my ten by Kathy Mitchell and
friend doesn't drink, I'd pre- · Marcy Sugar, longtime edi106 East Main Street • Pomeroy, OH • 992·3671
. fer not to give him a bottle tors of the Ann Landers col·
• 9:30 to 5:00
. of wine that he will never umn. Please e-mail your
BY KATHY MITCHELL
~NO MARCY SUGAR

Jeff Warner ·

D

Nationwide"

-=

Chadian army and rebetgroup each claim to
inflict heavy casualties on other side in battle

Recliner Sale

DANY PADIRE.

people have been uprooted by conflicts in
the region, including the fighting in Darfur
and the unrelated rebellions in C'- •d and
N'DJAMENA, Chad - Chad's army and Central African Republic.
,
a rebel group both claimed to have killed
Aid workers say recruiters for Chad's
hundreds of fighters on the opposing side in rebel groups and the government have visitfighting Monday in the country's east, an ed refugee camps trying to lu(e children into
area in turmoil from domestic unrest as well their forces. ·
· -• as spillover conflict from the neighboring
The European Union has offered to send a
Darfur region in Sudan.
3,700-soldier force to Chad and Central
The violence at Abougouleigne, about 60 Africa Republic to help protect refugees
miles east of the town of Abeche, left "sev- displaced by the four-year conflict in
eral .hyndred (rebels) dead, several injured Darfur. The force has been held up, howev:
and several prisoners of war" in military er, by a lack of air transportation and medcustody, according to a statement from ical and supply units.
Chad's general staff.
A meeting last week at the EU headquar"The fighting lasted four hours and ended ters in Brussels, Belgium, failed to get more
in the total and definite annihilation of this commitments, raising the possibility that the
column" of rebels, said the statement read EU mission might not be able to deploy in
on state radio and television by an unidenti- December as planned.
.fied officer.
Chad, a largely arid country that is one of
He did not say if any Chadian soldiers · Africa's newest oil producers, has been con- ·
were killed or injured, but said the statement vulsed by civil wars and invasions since
was a preliminary report on the fighting.
independence from France in I 960.
·
A statement from one of Chad's rebel
The most recent conflict is intertwined
movements, the Forces for Development with the one in Darfur. Chad's president is
and Democracy, claimec! its fighters killed from the same ethnic group as some of the
more than 200 government soldiers. ·
African rebels who have rebelled against
"Loss of human life on the enemy side, Sudan's" Arab-dominated government, and·
more than 200 dead, including division each country accuses the other of supportGen. Dirmi Haroun and Col. Guende ing rebel grours on the other' s soil.
Abdramane," said the statement posted a
Hundreds o ar111y officers and members
Chadian opposition Web site.
of Deby's own fa111ily defected in 2005 after
The Chad did not give any figures of its tl\ey accused him of not providing enough
own casualties, but rebels claimed that.only support to the rebels in Darfur.
20 of its fighters were killed.
Once a fight b~tween nomadic Arab tribes
It was not PQssible to independently con- and settled African farmers, both the Darfur
firm either side's claims, but if proved close and Chadian conflicts have grown increw;to accurate, the fighting would be the worst ingly complicated as rebel groups splinsince a separate rebel group tried to take the tered, formed new alliances and received
capital in April 2006. At the time the gov- defectors over the years.
ernment said it killed over 300 rebels.
•
Armed bandits have taken advantage of
Chad has struggled in the face of several the lawlessne ss to attack civilians, and local
rebellions in the east, with some insurgents politicians have used ethnic rivalries to fan
saying President ldriss Deby has not given the violence.
enough support to their kinsmen in Da_rfiJr.
Instability has increased ahead of a
. The fighting came after the rebel group planned U.N.-African Union peacekeeping
last week expressed dissatisfaction with the force for Darfur and the announcement of '
pace of the implementation of a peace the EU mi ssion for Chad and Central
agreement th at it signed with the govern- African Republic.
The EU force is widely seen as strengthment along with three other insurgent
groups. Violence between the Forces for ening Dcby's regime , which has also beneDevelopment and Democracy and govern- tited from hig h oil prices that has allowed it
ment fi ghters was first reported over the to buy more weapons. In 2005. a referenweekend, but there was no word at the time dum lifted con stitutional term li111its and
on casualties.
·
Deby won a third term in election s boyU.N. officials estimate about 3 million cotted by the opposition.
BY

POMEROY - Cheyenne
Trussell will compete for the
title of Miss Oljio Teen USA
Nov. 29- Dec . I at Shaw nee
State
University
in
Portsmouth.
. She is the daughter of
Denise and Mike Bing and
Scott and Teresa Trussell.
She
attends
Hock in g
College.
Ticket information is
available at 35 1-3600.
Bing's Auto Repai r is her
sponsor.

Tuesday, November 2 7 ,2007

Community Calendar

Competes in pageant

Bush, Mideast leaders.voice measured optimism about peace
prospects
.
BY ANNE GEARAN

Page A3

B Y THE BEND

The Daily Sentinel

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

&lt;JJurC!(ow

a;or

(Jwfstmas!

New
shipment!

Glider Rockers

0

Starting at

•ut"

·Dining Tables &amp; Chairs

Bunk Beds

(_But Cf(

anderson s ·
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(flrristmasf

�OPINION

The Daily Sentinel

The Daily Sentinel
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(74·0) 992-2156 • FAX (740) 992·2157
www.mydallysentlnel .com

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Dan Goodrich
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Charlene Hoeflich
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Congress shall make no law respecting an
establishment of religion, or prohibiting the
free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom
of speech, or of the press; or the right of the
people peaceably to assemble, and to petition
the. Government for a redress of grievances.
.. - The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

TODAY IN HISTORY
Today is Tuesday, Nov. 27, the 33 1st day of 2007. There
are 34 days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
On Nov. 27, 1978, San Francis~o Mayor George Moscone
and City Supervisor Harvey Milk, a gay-rights activist, were
shot to death inside City Hall by former supervisor Dan
White.
On this date:
111 1701 , astronomer Anders Celsius, inventor of the
Celsius temperature scale, was born in Uppsala, Sweden.
In 1901 , the U.S. Arniy War College was established in
Washington, D.C.
In 1910, the Pennsylvania Railroad began service at New
York's Pennsylvania Station.
"
ln 1942, during World War II, the French navy at Toulon
scuttled its ships and submarines to keep them mit of the
hands of the Nazis,
In 1945, General George C. Marshali was named spec. ial
s
c
U.. envoy to hina to try to end hostilities between the
Nationalisls and the Communists.
In 1970, Pope Paul VI, visiting the Philippines, was slightly wounded at the Manila airport by a dagger-wielding
Bolivian painter disguised as a priest.
Ten years ago: A day after saying it would open its presidential palaces to international observers, Iraq declared that
U.N. weapons monitors w~re not included in the invitation.
Macy's Thanksgiving Day Parade in New York was.marred
when a gust of wind knocked part of a lamppost onto a 34year-old woman, fracturing her skull and leaving her in a
coma for almost a month.
. Five years a~o: U.N. speCiali sts began a new round of
weapons inspections in Iraq. President Bush appointed for:
mer Secretary of State Henry Kissinger to lead an investigatton mto why the government failed te foil the Sept. .11
attacks. (The following month, Kissinger stepped down, citing controversy over potential conflicts of interest with his
business clients.) Bush gave the go-ahead to open U.S. highways to Mexican trucks.
·
One year ago: Bush , stopping over in Estonia en route to a
NATO summit in Latvia and meetings in Jordan, intensified
diplomatic efforts to quell ri sing violence in Iraq and
Afghanistan. Fire burned down a group home for the elderly
and mentally ill in Anderson, Mo .. killing 10 residents and a
caretaker.
· Today's Birthdays: Actor James Avery is 59. TV host Bill
Nye ("Bill Nye, the Science Guy") is 52. Actor William
Fichtner is 51. Caroline Kennedy Schlossberg is 50. Rock
musician Charlie Burchill (Simple Minds) is 48. R9Ck musictan Charhe Benante (Anthrax) is 45. Rock musician Mike
Bardin (Faith No More) is 45. Actor Fisher Stevens is 44.
Actress Robin Givens is 43. Actor Michael Vartan is 39.
Rapper Skoob (DAS EFX) is 37. RappcrTwista is 35. Actor
;faleel White is 31.
· · Thought for Today: "Man's lot.leliness is but his fear of
. !ife."- Eugene O'Neill, American playwright (1888-1953).

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Page A4
TUesday, November 27,2007

Morton
Kondtacke

to hold · hostage the funds
our men and women in
uniform need to continue
their successful efforts ."
Democrats are following
the same pattern in requiring a court order for electronic intercepts of terrorists overseas because they
might contact someone in
the
United
States.
Democrats act as though
Bush presents a greater
danger to this country than·
Osama bin Laderi.
Meanwhile, Republicans
have driven themselves to
the right edge of the economic and social spectrum, as demonstrated by
Bush 's vetoes of spending
and children's he~lth bills ,
by Republicans' penchant
for borrowing to pay for
their outsized tax cuts, and
by the presidential candidates ' hardlirie position s
on abortion and· immigration.
Republicans in Congress
sustained Bush's vetoes
despite their own record of
piling up $1.9 trillion in
accumulated deficits since
he took office and the fact
Democrats are playing a that Democratic spending
dangerous
game
of proposals represent just a
"chicken" with the coun- $5 billion increase over
try's armed services, curren't levels , designed to
threatening to cut off pay for student aid, medfunding ·for the military tQ ical research and energy
force President Bush to· assistance for the poor.
As demonstrated on the
accept a goal of full withdrawal from Iraq in 2008 House floor recently.
despite the chance Republicans oppose payPetraeus has created for a ing for a needed "fix" in
the alternative minimum
successful outcome.
It 's hard to disagree with tax with higher taxes elsewhat Lieberman has said where, preferring to borm the past two weeks - · row the money from their
that Democrats are "emo- children and grandchiltionally invested in a oar- dren.
rative of defeat and retreat · On the campaign trail ,
tn Iraq" and that ~'it is no candidate dares talk
deeply irresponsible for · about higher taxes to pay
antiwar forces in. Congress America's
bills , · and

there 's nexrto no attention
among GOP candidates to
the fact that America's
middle class feels economically stre ssed .
And the feeling is legitimate, given a new report
showing that upward
mobility in the United
States lags behind that in
other industrialized countries and that only people
in the be st-educated third
of the U.S. population can
. expect to be better off than
their parents.
Except for Sen. John
McCain, Ariz., the leading
Republican candidates are
pandering to a loud antiimmigrant claque in the
party and, except for Rudy
Giuliani. all are vying to
appifal to the right-io-life
movement as ardently as
Democrat s appeal to the
abortion-rights movement.
There's a huge gap in
the middle that could be
filled by a ·candidate who
calls for perseverance in
Iraq and tough diplomacy
toward Iran, . yet also
favors adequate funding
for education and health
care and is moderate on
abortion and immigration .
Candidates pay lip service to the public's evident desire for its politicians to stop partisan
squabbling and start solving their real problems,
but the gap remains wide
in view of anyone offering
nonideological solutions
to those problems.
New
York
Mayor
Michael
Bloomberg
arguably could fit well
into the space, although he
has to begin speaking out
on national and international issues if he hopes to
be successful as an independent candidate.
He is privately telling
visitors that the chances of
his running are 50-50.
Clearly he wants lo keep, a
buzz going about his candidacy, having cooperated
with Newsweek in a cover
profile two weeks ago.
The article exhaustively
covered Bloomberg 's life,
mayoral record and politi-

cal pro spects but was short
of details on hi s view s.
He is clearly pro-choice
on abortion, pro-gun control, pro-gay rights and
favors mer'it pay for teachers and controls on climate
change. His view on lniq,
as
expressed
in
Newsweek, is that "the
current situation is intolerable" bec ause "the public
doesn't understand why .
we are there, and part of
leadership is explaining.
' bringing people along." ·
That
could
mean
explaining why America
has to see the task through
to success, if it can be
attained, but Bloomberg
didn 't say. it is encouraging that in 2006, he campaigned for Lieberman's
re-election .
On the other hand, he
sounds like a Democrat on
Iran, virtually ruling out
military
action
and
promi sing negottatwns.
That doesn ' t necessarily
make him a hopele ss dove,
but he didn't mention the
word "sanctions, " either.
Sen. Hillary Rodham
Clinton, D-N.Y., did .
Bloomberg aides . say he
won 'I run unless he thinks
he can win. A Newsweek
poll indicated that, right
now, he garners only II
·percent of the vote, . ·to
Clinton's 44 percent and
Giuliani's 38 percent, and
pulls more support froin
Giuliani than Clinton.
But that's all theoretical
b'ecause Bloomberg is
hardly known outside of
New. York and its environs. He has to stop teasing and start talking in
order for the public to
determine whether he is
what America desperately
needs - a centrist choice
dedicated to keeping
America safe, solving its
I?roblems and building
consensus.
(Morton Kondrack e is
ext•cutive editor oj' Roll
Ca ll, the 11 ewspap er of
Capitol Ifill.)

Restoring our credibility in the world
The Democratic congressional leadership lamely led by Sen. Harry
Reid and House Speaker
Nancy Pelosi - is squandering its chance to repair .
Nat
what this administration
Hentoff
has continually done to not
only our personal constitutional liberties but also to
our credibility around the
world. We are decreasing- es are strong ...
ly seen as a nation that can
"Today, the clear and
do justice at home and prest:nt danger to conservabroad while fighting the ative philosophy is the
deadly scourge of interna- · White House."
tional terrorism. Instead,
The · proclaimers and
Pelosi and Reid are on a organizers of the American
treadmill of demanding Freedom Agenda include
troop withdrawals ·from former ·
Republican
Iraq while there is evident Congressman Bob Barr, a
progress there against its pillar of privacy rights and
mternal and external ene- other individual guaranunder
the
tees .
mies.
·'
It is too late to follow the Constitution;
Richard
advice of John Adams: Yiguerie, · a resourcef!ll
"Nip the shoots of arbi- spreader of the message of
trary power in the bud, is limited government; .. and
the only maxim which can John Whitehead, founder
ever preserve the liberties of the Rutherford Institute,
of any people." There are whose ceaseless . flow of
now more than shoots. But written and radio commenin a nation that remains tary n\akes it appear that
open to dissent against an he is channeling James
administration that · has Madison.
acquired so much unitary
The admirably deterexecutive power - the mined and energetic initiaantithesis of democracy . tor of the American
that .our Founding Fathers Freedom Agenda is Bruce
tried hard to prevent - it Fein , who served in the
ts not too late to orgamze Reagan
Justice
'lo reclaim our heritage.
Department as assistant
For example. on March director of the Office of
20, in its founding state- Legal Policy and as an
ment,
the
American associate deputy attorney
Freedom Agenda stated: general. He would have
"We are conservative been my choice as successc holars, acltvtsts a·nd sor to the clueless Alberto
writers. We do not favor a Gonzales, but the crucial
crippled executive or priorities of the American
enfeebled government." freedom · Agenda make it
Hnwever, "in a time of clear that George W. Bu sh
danger, checks and bal- would rather have left the
ances make for stronger position open if Bruce
government becau se the 'Fein had been the only
people will more readily possibility.
accept a muscular authoriIn order to reclaim the
ty if barriers against abus- respect of our allies

against our murderous
enemies, the American
Freedom \ ct" nda would
roll be I·
the White
Hw '· ' .. ,uJ J ~&gt; ns around
. du .· 11roce ,s" hy curbing
the president's authority,
on his say-so alone to
"arrest, imprison indefiniiely, torture and transport to foreign dungeons
those he deem's 'ene.my
combatants' outside our
legal system."
And, here are at home, it
would curb the president's
"inherent constitutional
power" (as he misreads
. that founding document)
to: "tap phones, read emails, open mail and even
break and enter without
warrants
or
judicial
review'' as well as:
"improperly lise 'signing
statements' to ignore the
law, employ secret evidence
and
evidence
obtained by torture; and
frustrate proper coQgressional oversight through
excessive ·claims
of
national security."
In that latter pledge,
Fein and his colleagues are
much
too
kind
to
Congress, wltich has continually permitted itself to
be frustrated by, for one
example, not conducting a
·
·
smg1e mvestigation , with
subpoena powers, into the
accountability . _ all the
way. up the chain of commaud - of the CIA' s rampant lawlessness under the
special approval of ·the
president: This has created, among other U.S. and
international war crimes,
the disappearance of an
untold number of "ghost
prisoners'' in tbe Cl A's
secret prisons and who
kiww s where else. (What
say ycu, Attorney General
Michael Mukasey?)
Having brought John

Adams into thi s'1'onversa. lion , I · am glad the
American
Freedom
Agenda r.eminds us of
another acutely contemporary
observation
by
Adams:
"There is danger from
all men. The only maxim
of a free government ought
to be to trust no man living
·
wtth power to endanger
the public liberty."
Also in its- founding
statement, the Agenda
includes my favorite warning from, I believe, the
wisest man to ever sit on
the Supreme Court, Louis
B~andeis : "The greatest
dangers to liberty lurk in
insidi9us encroachment by
. men of zeal, w~ll meaning
but without understanding."
For those wanting 19 join
the American Freedom
Agenda, the add'ress is:
910 17th St, NW Suite
800, Washington, D.C.
20006, or www.american' freedomagenda.org .
Will any of the presidentiar candidates of either
party come on board?
My fellow Boston Latin
School alumnus Samuel
Adams, a fomenter of the
American
Revolution,
insisted: "The ·liberties of
our country, the freedom
of our civil constitution,
are · worth
defending
against all hazards ." That 's
whalthe American Agenda
is about
(Nat Hentoff is a nationally renowned authority on
the First Amendment and
tire ·Bill 'o f Rights an d
1wtlwr of many books ,
including "The War on the
Bill of Rights and the
Gathering
Resistance"
(S even Stories Press,
2004).)

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

www.mydailysentinel.com

'

Obituaries

Can Bloomberg fill JFK-sized hole in American politics?
Michael Bloomberg is
back in the 2008 presiden:
ti al picture, and one thing
is for sure: There is a
statesman-sized hole to
fill in the center of
American politics.
. II would fit a figure who
is strong on national security, unlike all
the
Democratic candidates,
yet fiscally responsible
and socially moderate to
liberal ,
unlike
the
Republicans .
It 's
a
Franklin
Roosevelt-,
Harry
Truman-.
D~ight
Eisenhower-. John F.
Kennedy-sized hole that 's
currently occupied by no
one except perhaps Sen.
Joe Lieberman, ID-Conn.,
a man without a party.
problem
with
The
American politics now is
that Democrats have driven themselves, once
again, to the left end of the
political spectrum on foreign policy - as was
demonstrated once again
recently on the floors of
Congress and in the Las
Vegas presidential debate.
Not one candidate in the
debate,
nor
any
Democratic leader in
Congress, would acknowledge
that
important
progress has been made in
Iraq · since Gen. David
Petraeus launched his
counterinsurgency strategy,
To
the
contrary.

•

Tuesday, November 27, 2007

Local Briefs

Betty Curfman
C09LYILLE - Betty Lee Umensetter Curfman departed thi s hfe tn the arms of her family at Arcadia Rehab
Center November 25, 2007 .
She was born Feb. 24, 1925 in Parkersburg, W.Va., to ·
Dudley and Evelyn Umensetter. She attended local schools
and graduated from Parkersburg High School, Class of
1943. She JOtned the armed services during the second
World War and was stationed in New York City with the
Navy as a' WAVE.
She married John Aldridge in October 1946. They l!ad
Jlnna Lee and Dana John. During her lifetime she wa~
employed at Kai ser Aluminum, Fenton Glass and retired
from Veterans Memorial Hospital in Pomeroy.
After retirement, she devoted her time for five years as a
teacher with the S.T.A.R.S. program. "Miss Betty" helped
many students at Pomeroy Elementary learn to enjoy readmg.
She was preceded in death by her mother and father;
brothers, David and Jack; and her second husband, Charles
Curfman.
She leav~s behind to mourn, her dau~ljt~r. Jinna Arnott
(Randy Smith); a son, Dana (Patty) Aldndge of Reedsville;
stepsons: Norman, Tim, Dwayne (Dink) Curfman; grandchildren: Kevin Clay (Rachel) Arnott, Erica Ryann Leigh
(Mike) Giblin all of Columbus, Rebecca J. Weaver of
Syracuse, and Miss Tara Arnott-Smith of Syracuse and
Erron Aldndge ; step-grandc~ildren, Anita (Tom) Morrissey
of Chesler and Janet Calaway of Lafayette, La.; greatgrandchildren: Dalton J. Jenkins, Iesha Jenna Penick of
Syracuse and Milo, Finley and Georgia Arnott of
Columbus; two special friends, Phil Bearhs and Ginger
Reed.
.
She also leaves behind her 2 "fur children," Teddie and
Scout.
Betty was a charming and energetic person and fought
her battle with Cancer with courage. Her 81 st Birthday was
celebrated on the Island of St. Martin with more than 85
attending the "Queen for a Day." In her purple tiara, after
. losing her hair, she was the inspiration for a series of paintings titled "Angel Of Love" by Marie Therese Ancellin.
They are featured in a gallery in Manhattan.
Services have been entrusted to White-Schwarzel
Funeral Home in Coolville, at I P.M., Wednesday, Nov. .28,
2007 with burial in the Kanawha Baptist Cemetery in
Walker, W.Va.
Visitation will be from 6-8 p.m. on Tuesday. You can sign
the online guest book at www.white-schwarzelfuneralhome.com.
·

Kenda Kay Brown
NEW MATAMORAS - Kenda Kay Brown, 58, of
Archers Fork Road, New Matamoras, and formerly of
Racine, died Sunday, Nov. 25, 2007 at Riverside Methodist
Hospital.
·
,
Vtsitation is from 2-4 p.m. and 6-8 p.m., Wednesday,
Nov. 28, 2007 at Hadley Funeral Home Reno Chapel, 1021
Pike Street, Marietta. Funeral service is at II a.m .,
Thursday, Nov, 29, 2007 at the·Hadley Funeral Home Reno
Chapel. Burial to follow at Newport Cemetery.
Condolences may be sent to hadleyfuneralhmes.com.

Local stocks.
AEP (NYSE) - 48.05
Akzo (NASDAQ)- 75
Aahland Inc. (NYSE) . 47.17
Big Lots (NYSE)- 20.32
Bob Evans (NASDAQ) 30.29
BorgWarner (NYSE)93.43
Century Aluminum I NASDAQ)- 50.88
Champion (NASDAQ) 5.88
Charming Shops ( NA5DAQ)- 5.43
City Holding (NASDAQ)34.43
Collins (NYSE) - 70.54
DuPont (NYSE)- 43.94
US Bank (NYSE) - 30.50
Gannett (NYSE)- 37.31
General Electric ( NY5E)
;_ 38.73
'
Harley-Davidson ( NYSE)
-48.45
.
JP Morgan (NYSE)40.48
Kroger (NY$E)- 28
Limited Branda (NYSE) 17.84
Norfolk Southern ( NYSEI
-48.94
Oak Hill Financial (NAS.

POMEROY- A Lewis Center, Ohio, girl was airlifted to an
POMEROY - Dog and kennel licenses for 2008 will be
area
hospital from the scene of a one-vehicle accident Saturday on
available on Dec. 3.
According to County Auditor Mary Byer-Hill , licenses U.S. 33, the Gallia-Mcigs Post of the State Highway Patrol repon-,
ed.
'
are required by law and must be purchased by Jan. 31.
Kayljn N. Sclmeider, 15, was taken by MedFiight to St. Mary's
The cost of each dog license will be $6 per dog and $25
Medical
Center in Huntington, W.Va., following the 9:39 p.m.
per kennel. If purchased after Jan. 31, the penalty is $6 for
accident in Sutton Township, according to the report.
each dog license and $25 for each kennel license.
Troopers said Schneider was westbound when she was unable
Licenses may be purchased from 8:3.0 a.m. to 4:30 p.m.
to
maintain control of the sports utility vehicle she operated. The
at the auditor's office. Applications will be printed in The
vehicle
fishtailed, overturned and came 10 rest on its top.
Daily Sentinel on Nov. 29, Dec . 16 and Jan. 11 for those
who wish to apply by mail.
The vehicle was severely damaged and Schneider was cited for
Licenses may also· be purchased from Dog Warden failure to control.
Thomas Proffitt.

•

from PageA1
God's NET which is home
to 60-80 kids on a weekend
night, all of whom can have
a free dinner, play pool or
videos games and just hang
out in a safe environment.
God's NET serves free, hot
meals to young people
every day of the week
except Thursday s and
.Sundays.
God's NET also offers
youth programs teaching
)cids everything from how to
learn how to resolv11 conflict, learn musical skills,
learn health, nutrition and
I

.Dissolutions

Local weather

POMEROY - Actions for dissolution of marriage were filed
in Meigs County Common Pleas Court by Jeanette R. Reed,
Coolville and Gregry L. Reed, Reedsville: Jeffrey Smith, racine,
upper 40s.
and Catherine E. Smith, Racine; and Opal . D. Whitlatch . .
Friday
night
and Middleport and Nllal D. Bonecutter. Pomeroy.
·
Saturday ...Mostly cloudy.
A dissolution was granted t61l.onald B. Denny and Bonnie Sue
Lows around 30. Highs m Denny.
the mid 40s.

· 1\Jesday ... Mostly cloudy
in
the
morning...Then
becoming mostly sunny.
Cooler with highs in the
upper 40s. West winds 5 to
10 mph,
Saturday night ... Mostly
Thesday night... Mostly cloudy with a chance of rain
clear. Cooler with lows in the showers. A chance of snow
upper 20s. Southwest winds showers after midnight.
around 5 mph in the Lows in the lower 30s.
evening ... Becoming light Chance of precipitation 50
and variable.
percent.
Wednesday ... Sunny .
Sunday ... Cloudy.
A
Highs . in the mid 50s. chance of rain and snow
Southeast winds 5 to 10 mph. showers in the morning ...
W e d n e s d a y Then rain showers likely in
night..Mostly cloudy with a the afternoon. Highs in the
20 percent chance of rain upper 40s. Chance of precipshowers. Lows in the mid itation 60 percent.
30s. South winds 5 to 10
Sunday night...Cioudy.
mph.
Rain showers like Iy in the
Thursday ... Mostly evening ...Then a chance of
cloudy. A chance of rain . rain showers after midnight.
showers in . the morning. Lows in the mid 30s. Chance
Highs in the upper 40s. of rain 60 'percent.
Monday ... Mostly cloudy
Chance of rain 30 percent.
Thursday night and with a 50 percent chance of
Friday ...Partly cloudy. Lows rain showers. Highs in the
in the mid 20s. Highs in the lower 50s.

Devices for school buses
. cut diesel pollutants ·
CINCINNATI (AP) - Some students across Ohio can
breathe a little easier while sitting in idling school ' buses
because of programs that &lt;lfe retrofitting buses with pollution-eating devices.
.
Harmful pollutants in diesel exhaust have been reduced in
hundreds of Ohio buses through a federal environmental initiative and related state, local and private efforts.
Among the biggest programs has been in the Cincinnati
region, where federal funding channeled through . the
Hamilton County Department of Environmental Services
has helped retrofit 265 of 800 buses in a five-county area.
"The thinll we're trying to do is provide the kids on the bus
a clean envlfonment," said Ken Edgell, who oversees the
department's program. "It provides a healthier ride for the
school kids and, of course, tt is good for the environment."
The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, which began
the· Clean School Bus USA program four years ago, says
diesel emissions can cause health problems including respiratory disease and worsened asthma . in children. The EPA
offers grants to support programs to retrofit bus mufflers
with diesel oxidation catalysts and promotes reducing bus
idling time and replacing old buses with new, less-polluting,
ones.
,The diesel oxidation catalysts ·use a chemical process to
·break down pollutants in the exhaust stream. Edgell said they
reduce pollutants by 40 percent.

DAQ)- ~8.38
Ohio Valley Bane Corp.
(NASDAQ)- 25
BBT (NYSE)- 32.55
Peoples. (NASDAQ)23.54
Pepsico (NYSE) - 74.69
Premier (NASDAQ)from PageA1
13.54
.
Rockwell (NYSE) to hit it while m!Untaining
64.97
full
control of ~our vehicle
Rocky Boots (NASDAQ)
rather
than to nsk swerving
-6.79
·
out of control.
Royal Dutch Shell Report
any
deer-vehicle
•
80.52
collisions to a local law
Sears Holding (NASDAQ)
enforcement
agency or a
-107.77
· state wildlife officer. Under
Wai-Mart (NYSE)Ohio law, the driver of a
45.03
that strikes and kills
Wendy's (NYSE)- 27.08 vehicle
a deer may take possession
Worthington (NYSE)of the deer but must obtain a
20.38
deer possession receipt.
Dally stock reports are
These are available from
the 4 p.m. ET cloalng
law enforcement officers,
quote• or transactions lor state wildlife officers, and
Nov. 28, 2007, provided
Division of Wildlife district
by Edward Jcmaa financial offices.
advlaora laaac Milia In
• Stay alert, awake, and
Gallipolis at (740) 441sober. Deer are often unpre9441 and Lesley Marrero dictable, especially when
In Point Pleaaant ·a t
faced with glaring head(304) 874-0174. Member lights, blowing horns, and
SIPC.

Driving

,

Bikers

Highway Pabol

Licenses due

Gladie M. Anderson
Gladie M. Anderson, 91, of Weston, W.Va., formerly of
Point Pleasant, W.Va., died Monday, Nov. 26, 2007.
· Service will be held at II a.m., Friday, Nov. 30, 2007, at
the Crow-Hussell Funeral Home, Point Pleasant. .Burial
will follow in Pine Grove Cemetery, Leon, West Virginia.
.Visitation will be held al the funeral home from 6 until 8
p.m., Thursday.
Online guest registry can be expressed to the family at
·
·
www.crowhussellfu.com.

For the Record

fitness routines and how to
cook,
Matt Currence, chainnan
of the bike run, said this
year's run far exceeded
expectations and he hopes
the All Ohio Valley Run
become a tradition to benetit local charities.
Other Ohio Valley motor- ·
cycle clubs which participated in the run were (in
alphabetical order);.ABATE
of WV Inc., Mid Ohio .
Valley Chapter; Borderline
Harley Owners Group;
Brothers of the Wheel MCTwin Rivers Chapter;
Justice Motorcycle Club;
Flying Circle Motorcycle
Club;
VFW
5108
Motorcycle Club; Valley
Riders .

Bonuses
from PageA1
town Christmas decorations.
Musser read a letter from
the Ohio Liquor Council
statin.g all liquor permits. in
the v1llage are due to exptre
on Feb. I, 2008. Any obJections to renewals would
have to be made with reasons dictated 'by the Ohio
Revised Code . No objections were raised .
Beech Grove Cemetery
Tru~tee Jim Kitchen said
work was going "beuer than
expected" . at the cemetery
with black top and drainage
jobs getting done .

fast-moving vehicles. They
often dart out into traffic on
busy highways in metropolitan areas.

Divorces
POMEROY -Actions for divorce were filed in Meigs County
Common Pleas Court by Mildred S. Smith, Middleport, against
Richard F. Smith, Reedsville, and by Glen R. Bissell, Racine,
against Melissa K Bissell, Racine.
Divorces were granted to Gloria Diane Rector from Lany
Vmce Rector, Erma McVay from David A McVay, and Merlene
Yates from Eddie D. Yates.

Appointed
. POMEROY- Frederick W. Goebel wa1 appointed to a fouryear term on the Veterans Service Commission by Judge Fred W.
Crqw III.The term expires Dec. 31, 2012.

Sentenced
POMEROY- Kelly Snyder was sentenced in Meigs County
Conunon Pleas Court 10 18 months in prison on a motion to
revoke communi~¥ control. The original charge against Snyder
was failure of a sex offender to provide notice of residence
address.
Aoyd L. Stewart was sentenced to one year in prison on a
charge of possession of cocaine. The sentence was suspended and
he was placed on a five-year period of community controL

Foreclosures
POMEROY -Actions for foreclosure were gnmted in Meigs
COWlty Common Pleas Court to John E. McGee, Albany, arid
others, against H.D. Hively, Ferndale, Calil'., and ohers, and by
WeDs Fargo Bank, Fort Mill, S.Ct, against Andy 0. Doczi,
Middleport, and others. ·
·
A foreclosure wa~ issued to U.S. Bank, N.A., against Tamara
Hubbard, and others.

Dismisssct
POMEROY- A civil action filed in Meigs County Common
Pleas Court by Peggy L Moore and Gary R. Moore against
David W. Hess and State Farm Muwal Insurance Co. was dismissed.

Marriage licenses
POMEROY - Marriage licenses were issued in Meigs •
COWlty Probate Court to: Waller Arthur EUis, Jr., 21, Rutland. and
Brittany Nicole Facemyer, 18, Shade; Shawn Anthony Ogaz, 18,
and Natasha Anjel Wise, Middleport; Dallas Arthur Hill III, 23,
and Brandi Nichole Hicks, 22, Syracuse; Olen R. Goins, Jr., 34,
and KeUy S. Clemons, 39; Pomeroy; Joseph David Ray PhillipS,
21, and Kim Marie Palmer, 21, Syracuse: and Walter J. Haggy,
62, Rutland, and Brenda Joyce Guthrie, 56, Middleport.

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�OPINION

The Daily Sentinel

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

(74·0) 992-2156 • FAX (740) 992·2157
www.mydallysentlnel .com

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

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

TODAY IN HISTORY
Today is Tuesday, Nov. 27, the 33 1st day of 2007. There
are 34 days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
On Nov. 27, 1978, San Francis~o Mayor George Moscone
and City Supervisor Harvey Milk, a gay-rights activist, were
shot to death inside City Hall by former supervisor Dan
White.
On this date:
111 1701 , astronomer Anders Celsius, inventor of the
Celsius temperature scale, was born in Uppsala, Sweden.
In 1901 , the U.S. Arniy War College was established in
Washington, D.C.
In 1910, the Pennsylvania Railroad began service at New
York's Pennsylvania Station.
"
ln 1942, during World War II, the French navy at Toulon
scuttled its ships and submarines to keep them mit of the
hands of the Nazis,
In 1945, General George C. Marshali was named spec. ial
s
c
U.. envoy to hina to try to end hostilities between the
Nationalisls and the Communists.
In 1970, Pope Paul VI, visiting the Philippines, was slightly wounded at the Manila airport by a dagger-wielding
Bolivian painter disguised as a priest.
Ten years ago: A day after saying it would open its presidential palaces to international observers, Iraq declared that
U.N. weapons monitors w~re not included in the invitation.
Macy's Thanksgiving Day Parade in New York was.marred
when a gust of wind knocked part of a lamppost onto a 34year-old woman, fracturing her skull and leaving her in a
coma for almost a month.
. Five years a~o: U.N. speCiali sts began a new round of
weapons inspections in Iraq. President Bush appointed for:
mer Secretary of State Henry Kissinger to lead an investigatton mto why the government failed te foil the Sept. .11
attacks. (The following month, Kissinger stepped down, citing controversy over potential conflicts of interest with his
business clients.) Bush gave the go-ahead to open U.S. highways to Mexican trucks.
·
One year ago: Bush , stopping over in Estonia en route to a
NATO summit in Latvia and meetings in Jordan, intensified
diplomatic efforts to quell ri sing violence in Iraq and
Afghanistan. Fire burned down a group home for the elderly
and mentally ill in Anderson, Mo .. killing 10 residents and a
caretaker.
· Today's Birthdays: Actor James Avery is 59. TV host Bill
Nye ("Bill Nye, the Science Guy") is 52. Actor William
Fichtner is 51. Caroline Kennedy Schlossberg is 50. Rock
musician Charlie Burchill (Simple Minds) is 48. R9Ck musictan Charhe Benante (Anthrax) is 45. Rock musician Mike
Bardin (Faith No More) is 45. Actor Fisher Stevens is 44.
Actress Robin Givens is 43. Actor Michael Vartan is 39.
Rapper Skoob (DAS EFX) is 37. RappcrTwista is 35. Actor
;faleel White is 31.
· · Thought for Today: "Man's lot.leliness is but his fear of
. !ife."- Eugene O'Neill, American playwright (1888-1953).

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR
· Letters to the editor are welcome. They should be less
1han 300 words. All letters are subject to editing, must be
~igned, and include address and telephone number. No
unsigned letters will be published. Letters should be in
good taste, addressing issues, not personalities. Letters of
thanks to organizations and individuals will not be accepted for publication.

The Daily. ~entinel
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Correction P_ollcy

(USPS 213-960)
Ohio Valley Publishing
Co.

Published eve~ afternoon, Monday
t!'lrough Friday: 111 Court Street,
be accurate. If you know of an error
Pomeroy, Ohio.
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able.

•

Ma,ll Subacrlptlon
Inside Meigs County
13 Weeks
. '32.26

· 2e weds

•M2o

S2 Weeks

' 127.11

Outside Meigs County
13 Weeks
26 Weeks
52 Weeks

'53.55

' 107.10
'2 14.21

Page A4
TUesday, November 27,2007

Morton
Kondtacke

to hold · hostage the funds
our men and women in
uniform need to continue
their successful efforts ."
Democrats are following
the same pattern in requiring a court order for electronic intercepts of terrorists overseas because they
might contact someone in
the
United
States.
Democrats act as though
Bush presents a greater
danger to this country than·
Osama bin Laderi.
Meanwhile, Republicans
have driven themselves to
the right edge of the economic and social spectrum, as demonstrated by
Bush 's vetoes of spending
and children's he~lth bills ,
by Republicans' penchant
for borrowing to pay for
their outsized tax cuts, and
by the presidential candidates ' hardlirie position s
on abortion and· immigration.
Republicans in Congress
sustained Bush's vetoes
despite their own record of
piling up $1.9 trillion in
accumulated deficits since
he took office and the fact
Democrats are playing a that Democratic spending
dangerous
game
of proposals represent just a
"chicken" with the coun- $5 billion increase over
try's armed services, curren't levels , designed to
threatening to cut off pay for student aid, medfunding ·for the military tQ ical research and energy
force President Bush to· assistance for the poor.
As demonstrated on the
accept a goal of full withdrawal from Iraq in 2008 House floor recently.
despite the chance Republicans oppose payPetraeus has created for a ing for a needed "fix" in
the alternative minimum
successful outcome.
It 's hard to disagree with tax with higher taxes elsewhat Lieberman has said where, preferring to borm the past two weeks - · row the money from their
that Democrats are "emo- children and grandchiltionally invested in a oar- dren.
rative of defeat and retreat · On the campaign trail ,
tn Iraq" and that ~'it is no candidate dares talk
deeply irresponsible for · about higher taxes to pay
antiwar forces in. Congress America's
bills , · and

there 's nexrto no attention
among GOP candidates to
the fact that America's
middle class feels economically stre ssed .
And the feeling is legitimate, given a new report
showing that upward
mobility in the United
States lags behind that in
other industrialized countries and that only people
in the be st-educated third
of the U.S. population can
. expect to be better off than
their parents.
Except for Sen. John
McCain, Ariz., the leading
Republican candidates are
pandering to a loud antiimmigrant claque in the
party and, except for Rudy
Giuliani. all are vying to
appifal to the right-io-life
movement as ardently as
Democrat s appeal to the
abortion-rights movement.
There's a huge gap in
the middle that could be
filled by a ·candidate who
calls for perseverance in
Iraq and tough diplomacy
toward Iran, . yet also
favors adequate funding
for education and health
care and is moderate on
abortion and immigration .
Candidates pay lip service to the public's evident desire for its politicians to stop partisan
squabbling and start solving their real problems,
but the gap remains wide
in view of anyone offering
nonideological solutions
to those problems.
New
York
Mayor
Michael
Bloomberg
arguably could fit well
into the space, although he
has to begin speaking out
on national and international issues if he hopes to
be successful as an independent candidate.
He is privately telling
visitors that the chances of
his running are 50-50.
Clearly he wants lo keep, a
buzz going about his candidacy, having cooperated
with Newsweek in a cover
profile two weeks ago.
The article exhaustively
covered Bloomberg 's life,
mayoral record and politi-

cal pro spects but was short
of details on hi s view s.
He is clearly pro-choice
on abortion, pro-gun control, pro-gay rights and
favors mer'it pay for teachers and controls on climate
change. His view on lniq,
as
expressed
in
Newsweek, is that "the
current situation is intolerable" bec ause "the public
doesn't understand why .
we are there, and part of
leadership is explaining.
' bringing people along." ·
That
could
mean
explaining why America
has to see the task through
to success, if it can be
attained, but Bloomberg
didn 't say. it is encouraging that in 2006, he campaigned for Lieberman's
re-election .
On the other hand, he
sounds like a Democrat on
Iran, virtually ruling out
military
action
and
promi sing negottatwns.
That doesn ' t necessarily
make him a hopele ss dove,
but he didn't mention the
word "sanctions, " either.
Sen. Hillary Rodham
Clinton, D-N.Y., did .
Bloomberg aides . say he
won 'I run unless he thinks
he can win. A Newsweek
poll indicated that, right
now, he garners only II
·percent of the vote, . ·to
Clinton's 44 percent and
Giuliani's 38 percent, and
pulls more support froin
Giuliani than Clinton.
But that's all theoretical
b'ecause Bloomberg is
hardly known outside of
New. York and its environs. He has to stop teasing and start talking in
order for the public to
determine whether he is
what America desperately
needs - a centrist choice
dedicated to keeping
America safe, solving its
I?roblems and building
consensus.
(Morton Kondrack e is
ext•cutive editor oj' Roll
Ca ll, the 11 ewspap er of
Capitol Ifill.)

Restoring our credibility in the world
The Democratic congressional leadership lamely led by Sen. Harry
Reid and House Speaker
Nancy Pelosi - is squandering its chance to repair .
Nat
what this administration
Hentoff
has continually done to not
only our personal constitutional liberties but also to
our credibility around the
world. We are decreasing- es are strong ...
ly seen as a nation that can
"Today, the clear and
do justice at home and prest:nt danger to conservabroad while fighting the ative philosophy is the
deadly scourge of interna- · White House."
tional terrorism. Instead,
The · proclaimers and
Pelosi and Reid are on a organizers of the American
treadmill of demanding Freedom Agenda include
troop withdrawals ·from former ·
Republican
Iraq while there is evident Congressman Bob Barr, a
progress there against its pillar of privacy rights and
mternal and external ene- other individual guaranunder
the
tees .
mies.
·'
It is too late to follow the Constitution;
Richard
advice of John Adams: Yiguerie, · a resourcef!ll
"Nip the shoots of arbi- spreader of the message of
trary power in the bud, is limited government; .. and
the only maxim which can John Whitehead, founder
ever preserve the liberties of the Rutherford Institute,
of any people." There are whose ceaseless . flow of
now more than shoots. But written and radio commenin a nation that remains tary n\akes it appear that
open to dissent against an he is channeling James
administration that · has Madison.
acquired so much unitary
The admirably deterexecutive power - the mined and energetic initiaantithesis of democracy . tor of the American
that .our Founding Fathers Freedom Agenda is Bruce
tried hard to prevent - it Fein , who served in the
ts not too late to orgamze Reagan
Justice
'lo reclaim our heritage.
Department as assistant
For example. on March director of the Office of
20, in its founding state- Legal Policy and as an
ment,
the
American associate deputy attorney
Freedom Agenda stated: general. He would have
"We are conservative been my choice as successc holars, acltvtsts a·nd sor to the clueless Alberto
writers. We do not favor a Gonzales, but the crucial
crippled executive or priorities of the American
enfeebled government." freedom · Agenda make it
Hnwever, "in a time of clear that George W. Bu sh
danger, checks and bal- would rather have left the
ances make for stronger position open if Bruce
government becau se the 'Fein had been the only
people will more readily possibility.
accept a muscular authoriIn order to reclaim the
ty if barriers against abus- respect of our allies

against our murderous
enemies, the American
Freedom \ ct" nda would
roll be I·
the White
Hw '· ' .. ,uJ J ~&gt; ns around
. du .· 11roce ,s" hy curbing
the president's authority,
on his say-so alone to
"arrest, imprison indefiniiely, torture and transport to foreign dungeons
those he deem's 'ene.my
combatants' outside our
legal system."
And, here are at home, it
would curb the president's
"inherent constitutional
power" (as he misreads
. that founding document)
to: "tap phones, read emails, open mail and even
break and enter without
warrants
or
judicial
review'' as well as:
"improperly lise 'signing
statements' to ignore the
law, employ secret evidence
and
evidence
obtained by torture; and
frustrate proper coQgressional oversight through
excessive ·claims
of
national security."
In that latter pledge,
Fein and his colleagues are
much
too
kind
to
Congress, wltich has continually permitted itself to
be frustrated by, for one
example, not conducting a
·
·
smg1e mvestigation , with
subpoena powers, into the
accountability . _ all the
way. up the chain of commaud - of the CIA' s rampant lawlessness under the
special approval of ·the
president: This has created, among other U.S. and
international war crimes,
the disappearance of an
untold number of "ghost
prisoners'' in tbe Cl A's
secret prisons and who
kiww s where else. (What
say ycu, Attorney General
Michael Mukasey?)
Having brought John

Adams into thi s'1'onversa. lion , I · am glad the
American
Freedom
Agenda r.eminds us of
another acutely contemporary
observation
by
Adams:
"There is danger from
all men. The only maxim
of a free government ought
to be to trust no man living
·
wtth power to endanger
the public liberty."
Also in its- founding
statement, the Agenda
includes my favorite warning from, I believe, the
wisest man to ever sit on
the Supreme Court, Louis
B~andeis : "The greatest
dangers to liberty lurk in
insidi9us encroachment by
. men of zeal, w~ll meaning
but without understanding."
For those wanting 19 join
the American Freedom
Agenda, the add'ress is:
910 17th St, NW Suite
800, Washington, D.C.
20006, or www.american' freedomagenda.org .
Will any of the presidentiar candidates of either
party come on board?
My fellow Boston Latin
School alumnus Samuel
Adams, a fomenter of the
American
Revolution,
insisted: "The ·liberties of
our country, the freedom
of our civil constitution,
are · worth
defending
against all hazards ." That 's
whalthe American Agenda
is about
(Nat Hentoff is a nationally renowned authority on
the First Amendment and
tire ·Bill 'o f Rights an d
1wtlwr of many books ,
including "The War on the
Bill of Rights and the
Gathering
Resistance"
(S even Stories Press,
2004).)

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

www.mydailysentinel.com

'

Obituaries

Can Bloomberg fill JFK-sized hole in American politics?
Michael Bloomberg is
back in the 2008 presiden:
ti al picture, and one thing
is for sure: There is a
statesman-sized hole to
fill in the center of
American politics.
. II would fit a figure who
is strong on national security, unlike all
the
Democratic candidates,
yet fiscally responsible
and socially moderate to
liberal ,
unlike
the
Republicans .
It 's
a
Franklin
Roosevelt-,
Harry
Truman-.
D~ight
Eisenhower-. John F.
Kennedy-sized hole that 's
currently occupied by no
one except perhaps Sen.
Joe Lieberman, ID-Conn.,
a man without a party.
problem
with
The
American politics now is
that Democrats have driven themselves, once
again, to the left end of the
political spectrum on foreign policy - as was
demonstrated once again
recently on the floors of
Congress and in the Las
Vegas presidential debate.
Not one candidate in the
debate,
nor
any
Democratic leader in
Congress, would acknowledge
that
important
progress has been made in
Iraq · since Gen. David
Petraeus launched his
counterinsurgency strategy,
To
the
contrary.

•

Tuesday, November 27, 2007

Local Briefs

Betty Curfman
C09LYILLE - Betty Lee Umensetter Curfman departed thi s hfe tn the arms of her family at Arcadia Rehab
Center November 25, 2007 .
She was born Feb. 24, 1925 in Parkersburg, W.Va., to ·
Dudley and Evelyn Umensetter. She attended local schools
and graduated from Parkersburg High School, Class of
1943. She JOtned the armed services during the second
World War and was stationed in New York City with the
Navy as a' WAVE.
She married John Aldridge in October 1946. They l!ad
Jlnna Lee and Dana John. During her lifetime she wa~
employed at Kai ser Aluminum, Fenton Glass and retired
from Veterans Memorial Hospital in Pomeroy.
After retirement, she devoted her time for five years as a
teacher with the S.T.A.R.S. program. "Miss Betty" helped
many students at Pomeroy Elementary learn to enjoy readmg.
She was preceded in death by her mother and father;
brothers, David and Jack; and her second husband, Charles
Curfman.
She leav~s behind to mourn, her dau~ljt~r. Jinna Arnott
(Randy Smith); a son, Dana (Patty) Aldndge of Reedsville;
stepsons: Norman, Tim, Dwayne (Dink) Curfman; grandchildren: Kevin Clay (Rachel) Arnott, Erica Ryann Leigh
(Mike) Giblin all of Columbus, Rebecca J. Weaver of
Syracuse, and Miss Tara Arnott-Smith of Syracuse and
Erron Aldndge ; step-grandc~ildren, Anita (Tom) Morrissey
of Chesler and Janet Calaway of Lafayette, La.; greatgrandchildren: Dalton J. Jenkins, Iesha Jenna Penick of
Syracuse and Milo, Finley and Georgia Arnott of
Columbus; two special friends, Phil Bearhs and Ginger
Reed.
.
She also leaves behind her 2 "fur children," Teddie and
Scout.
Betty was a charming and energetic person and fought
her battle with Cancer with courage. Her 81 st Birthday was
celebrated on the Island of St. Martin with more than 85
attending the "Queen for a Day." In her purple tiara, after
. losing her hair, she was the inspiration for a series of paintings titled "Angel Of Love" by Marie Therese Ancellin.
They are featured in a gallery in Manhattan.
Services have been entrusted to White-Schwarzel
Funeral Home in Coolville, at I P.M., Wednesday, Nov. .28,
2007 with burial in the Kanawha Baptist Cemetery in
Walker, W.Va.
Visitation will be from 6-8 p.m. on Tuesday. You can sign
the online guest book at www.white-schwarzelfuneralhome.com.
·

Kenda Kay Brown
NEW MATAMORAS - Kenda Kay Brown, 58, of
Archers Fork Road, New Matamoras, and formerly of
Racine, died Sunday, Nov. 25, 2007 at Riverside Methodist
Hospital.
·
,
Vtsitation is from 2-4 p.m. and 6-8 p.m., Wednesday,
Nov. 28, 2007 at Hadley Funeral Home Reno Chapel, 1021
Pike Street, Marietta. Funeral service is at II a.m .,
Thursday, Nov, 29, 2007 at the·Hadley Funeral Home Reno
Chapel. Burial to follow at Newport Cemetery.
Condolences may be sent to hadleyfuneralhmes.com.

Local stocks.
AEP (NYSE) - 48.05
Akzo (NASDAQ)- 75
Aahland Inc. (NYSE) . 47.17
Big Lots (NYSE)- 20.32
Bob Evans (NASDAQ) 30.29
BorgWarner (NYSE)93.43
Century Aluminum I NASDAQ)- 50.88
Champion (NASDAQ) 5.88
Charming Shops ( NA5DAQ)- 5.43
City Holding (NASDAQ)34.43
Collins (NYSE) - 70.54
DuPont (NYSE)- 43.94
US Bank (NYSE) - 30.50
Gannett (NYSE)- 37.31
General Electric ( NY5E)
;_ 38.73
'
Harley-Davidson ( NYSE)
-48.45
.
JP Morgan (NYSE)40.48
Kroger (NY$E)- 28
Limited Branda (NYSE) 17.84
Norfolk Southern ( NYSEI
-48.94
Oak Hill Financial (NAS.

POMEROY- A Lewis Center, Ohio, girl was airlifted to an
POMEROY - Dog and kennel licenses for 2008 will be
area
hospital from the scene of a one-vehicle accident Saturday on
available on Dec. 3.
According to County Auditor Mary Byer-Hill , licenses U.S. 33, the Gallia-Mcigs Post of the State Highway Patrol repon-,
ed.
'
are required by law and must be purchased by Jan. 31.
Kayljn N. Sclmeider, 15, was taken by MedFiight to St. Mary's
The cost of each dog license will be $6 per dog and $25
Medical
Center in Huntington, W.Va., following the 9:39 p.m.
per kennel. If purchased after Jan. 31, the penalty is $6 for
accident in Sutton Township, according to the report.
each dog license and $25 for each kennel license.
Troopers said Schneider was westbound when she was unable
Licenses may be purchased from 8:3.0 a.m. to 4:30 p.m.
to
maintain control of the sports utility vehicle she operated. The
at the auditor's office. Applications will be printed in The
vehicle
fishtailed, overturned and came 10 rest on its top.
Daily Sentinel on Nov. 29, Dec . 16 and Jan. 11 for those
who wish to apply by mail.
The vehicle was severely damaged and Schneider was cited for
Licenses may also· be purchased from Dog Warden failure to control.
Thomas Proffitt.

•

from PageA1
God's NET which is home
to 60-80 kids on a weekend
night, all of whom can have
a free dinner, play pool or
videos games and just hang
out in a safe environment.
God's NET serves free, hot
meals to young people
every day of the week
except Thursday s and
.Sundays.
God's NET also offers
youth programs teaching
)cids everything from how to
learn how to resolv11 conflict, learn musical skills,
learn health, nutrition and
I

.Dissolutions

Local weather

POMEROY - Actions for dissolution of marriage were filed
in Meigs County Common Pleas Court by Jeanette R. Reed,
Coolville and Gregry L. Reed, Reedsville: Jeffrey Smith, racine,
upper 40s.
and Catherine E. Smith, Racine; and Opal . D. Whitlatch . .
Friday
night
and Middleport and Nllal D. Bonecutter. Pomeroy.
·
Saturday ...Mostly cloudy.
A dissolution was granted t61l.onald B. Denny and Bonnie Sue
Lows around 30. Highs m Denny.
the mid 40s.

· 1\Jesday ... Mostly cloudy
in
the
morning...Then
becoming mostly sunny.
Cooler with highs in the
upper 40s. West winds 5 to
10 mph,
Saturday night ... Mostly
Thesday night... Mostly cloudy with a chance of rain
clear. Cooler with lows in the showers. A chance of snow
upper 20s. Southwest winds showers after midnight.
around 5 mph in the Lows in the lower 30s.
evening ... Becoming light Chance of precipitation 50
and variable.
percent.
Wednesday ... Sunny .
Sunday ... Cloudy.
A
Highs . in the mid 50s. chance of rain and snow
Southeast winds 5 to 10 mph. showers in the morning ...
W e d n e s d a y Then rain showers likely in
night..Mostly cloudy with a the afternoon. Highs in the
20 percent chance of rain upper 40s. Chance of precipshowers. Lows in the mid itation 60 percent.
30s. South winds 5 to 10
Sunday night...Cioudy.
mph.
Rain showers like Iy in the
Thursday ... Mostly evening ...Then a chance of
cloudy. A chance of rain . rain showers after midnight.
showers in . the morning. Lows in the mid 30s. Chance
Highs in the upper 40s. of rain 60 'percent.
Monday ... Mostly cloudy
Chance of rain 30 percent.
Thursday night and with a 50 percent chance of
Friday ...Partly cloudy. Lows rain showers. Highs in the
in the mid 20s. Highs in the lower 50s.

Devices for school buses
. cut diesel pollutants ·
CINCINNATI (AP) - Some students across Ohio can
breathe a little easier while sitting in idling school ' buses
because of programs that &lt;lfe retrofitting buses with pollution-eating devices.
.
Harmful pollutants in diesel exhaust have been reduced in
hundreds of Ohio buses through a federal environmental initiative and related state, local and private efforts.
Among the biggest programs has been in the Cincinnati
region, where federal funding channeled through . the
Hamilton County Department of Environmental Services
has helped retrofit 265 of 800 buses in a five-county area.
"The thinll we're trying to do is provide the kids on the bus
a clean envlfonment," said Ken Edgell, who oversees the
department's program. "It provides a healthier ride for the
school kids and, of course, tt is good for the environment."
The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, which began
the· Clean School Bus USA program four years ago, says
diesel emissions can cause health problems including respiratory disease and worsened asthma . in children. The EPA
offers grants to support programs to retrofit bus mufflers
with diesel oxidation catalysts and promotes reducing bus
idling time and replacing old buses with new, less-polluting,
ones.
,The diesel oxidation catalysts ·use a chemical process to
·break down pollutants in the exhaust stream. Edgell said they
reduce pollutants by 40 percent.

DAQ)- ~8.38
Ohio Valley Bane Corp.
(NASDAQ)- 25
BBT (NYSE)- 32.55
Peoples. (NASDAQ)23.54
Pepsico (NYSE) - 74.69
Premier (NASDAQ)from PageA1
13.54
.
Rockwell (NYSE) to hit it while m!Untaining
64.97
full
control of ~our vehicle
Rocky Boots (NASDAQ)
rather
than to nsk swerving
-6.79
·
out of control.
Royal Dutch Shell Report
any
deer-vehicle
•
80.52
collisions to a local law
Sears Holding (NASDAQ)
enforcement
agency or a
-107.77
· state wildlife officer. Under
Wai-Mart (NYSE)Ohio law, the driver of a
45.03
that strikes and kills
Wendy's (NYSE)- 27.08 vehicle
a deer may take possession
Worthington (NYSE)of the deer but must obtain a
20.38
deer possession receipt.
Dally stock reports are
These are available from
the 4 p.m. ET cloalng
law enforcement officers,
quote• or transactions lor state wildlife officers, and
Nov. 28, 2007, provided
Division of Wildlife district
by Edward Jcmaa financial offices.
advlaora laaac Milia In
• Stay alert, awake, and
Gallipolis at (740) 441sober. Deer are often unpre9441 and Lesley Marrero dictable, especially when
In Point Pleaaant ·a t
faced with glaring head(304) 874-0174. Member lights, blowing horns, and
SIPC.

Driving

,

Bikers

Highway Pabol

Licenses due

Gladie M. Anderson
Gladie M. Anderson, 91, of Weston, W.Va., formerly of
Point Pleasant, W.Va., died Monday, Nov. 26, 2007.
· Service will be held at II a.m., Friday, Nov. 30, 2007, at
the Crow-Hussell Funeral Home, Point Pleasant. .Burial
will follow in Pine Grove Cemetery, Leon, West Virginia.
.Visitation will be held al the funeral home from 6 until 8
p.m., Thursday.
Online guest registry can be expressed to the family at
·
·
www.crowhussellfu.com.

For the Record

fitness routines and how to
cook,
Matt Currence, chainnan
of the bike run, said this
year's run far exceeded
expectations and he hopes
the All Ohio Valley Run
become a tradition to benetit local charities.
Other Ohio Valley motor- ·
cycle clubs which participated in the run were (in
alphabetical order);.ABATE
of WV Inc., Mid Ohio .
Valley Chapter; Borderline
Harley Owners Group;
Brothers of the Wheel MCTwin Rivers Chapter;
Justice Motorcycle Club;
Flying Circle Motorcycle
Club;
VFW
5108
Motorcycle Club; Valley
Riders .

Bonuses
from PageA1
town Christmas decorations.
Musser read a letter from
the Ohio Liquor Council
statin.g all liquor permits. in
the v1llage are due to exptre
on Feb. I, 2008. Any obJections to renewals would
have to be made with reasons dictated 'by the Ohio
Revised Code . No objections were raised .
Beech Grove Cemetery
Tru~tee Jim Kitchen said
work was going "beuer than
expected" . at the cemetery
with black top and drainage
jobs getting done .

fast-moving vehicles. They
often dart out into traffic on
busy highways in metropolitan areas.

Divorces
POMEROY -Actions for divorce were filed in Meigs County
Common Pleas Court by Mildred S. Smith, Middleport, against
Richard F. Smith, Reedsville, and by Glen R. Bissell, Racine,
against Melissa K Bissell, Racine.
Divorces were granted to Gloria Diane Rector from Lany
Vmce Rector, Erma McVay from David A McVay, and Merlene
Yates from Eddie D. Yates.

Appointed
. POMEROY- Frederick W. Goebel wa1 appointed to a fouryear term on the Veterans Service Commission by Judge Fred W.
Crqw III.The term expires Dec. 31, 2012.

Sentenced
POMEROY- Kelly Snyder was sentenced in Meigs County
Conunon Pleas Court 10 18 months in prison on a motion to
revoke communi~¥ control. The original charge against Snyder
was failure of a sex offender to provide notice of residence
address.
Aoyd L. Stewart was sentenced to one year in prison on a
charge of possession of cocaine. The sentence was suspended and
he was placed on a five-year period of community controL

Foreclosures
POMEROY -Actions for foreclosure were gnmted in Meigs
COWlty Common Pleas Court to John E. McGee, Albany, arid
others, against H.D. Hively, Ferndale, Calil'., and ohers, and by
WeDs Fargo Bank, Fort Mill, S.Ct, against Andy 0. Doczi,
Middleport, and others. ·
·
A foreclosure wa~ issued to U.S. Bank, N.A., against Tamara
Hubbard, and others.

Dismisssct
POMEROY- A civil action filed in Meigs County Common
Pleas Court by Peggy L Moore and Gary R. Moore against
David W. Hess and State Farm Muwal Insurance Co. was dismissed.

Marriage licenses
POMEROY - Marriage licenses were issued in Meigs •
COWlty Probate Court to: Waller Arthur EUis, Jr., 21, Rutland. and
Brittany Nicole Facemyer, 18, Shade; Shawn Anthony Ogaz, 18,
and Natasha Anjel Wise, Middleport; Dallas Arthur Hill III, 23,
and Brandi Nichole Hicks, 22, Syracuse; Olen R. Goins, Jr., 34,
and KeUy S. Clemons, 39; Pomeroy; Joseph David Ray PhillipS,
21, and Kim Marie Palmer, 21, Syracuse: and Walter J. Haggy,
62, Rutland, and Brenda Joyce Guthrie, 56, Middleport.

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�•

A6 The D"ily Sentinel

www.mydailyrsentinel.com

November 26, 2007

•

Inside

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

Men's coll~e basketball poll, Page B2

414 East C St

Wellston, OH 45692
740-384-3058

OHIO -V ALLEY
BANK.

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

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800-538-7674

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

Browns running toward playoffs, Page B6

•·

Tuesday, November 27, 2007

446-2168
441-3575

LocAL SCHEDULE

992-2357

PO MEROY- A sched ule of upcom in g high
school Vll;rsity sporting ev&amp;nts involvin g
teams from Meig s County.

www.ovbc.com

~ Week 11

Today'• gamOB

X

Winner
Alan
~ Drummond
~ Gallipol

Thundly. Nov. ae
Girls Basketball
Southern at Waterford, 6 p.m.
Eastern at Federal Hocking, 6 p.m.
Meigs at Belpre, 6 p.m.
South Point at River Valley, 6 p.m.

700
main Street
Pomerog,.OH

Fddav Nov. 30

Boya Beaka1ball
Nelsonville~ York at Eastern , 6:30p.m.
Gallla Academy at Meigs, 6:30 p.m.
South Gallia at Cross. Lanes Christian,
7:30p.m.
OVCS Tournament. TBA
Glrla Basktltbell
South Gallla at Cross Lanes Christian, 6
p.m.
Gallia Academy a1 Logan, 6 p.m.
OVCS Tournament, TBA

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

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Boye Baeketball
River Valley at Meigs. 5 p.m.
Eastern at South Oallia, 6:30p.m.
Southern at Grovo City Christian, 11 :30
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The Daily Sentinel
992-2155

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NAME:. _______________
ADDRESS:. _ _ _ _ _ __
PHONE: ______________

lS20 Valley Drive • Poinl Pleasant, WY • 201-hed fat'ility

304-675-4340

The

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Each Tuesday through Dec:. 11, a numbered game will
appear In each participating merchant's ad.
Indicate your pick of winners and write It beside the
corresponding number.
Entries must be dropped off at the:
GaiUpolis l&gt;lllly Tribune !lr maUed to:
Football Smack(lown
c/o Gallipolis Dally Tribune
825 3rd Avenue
Gallipolis, OH 45631
Entries must be postmarked by Thursday to qualify
for that week's contest. The prize will be awarded
weekly on the basis of most winners selected correctly
and In case jjf ties, winner will be determined by blind
draw. You must be 16 years of age or older to enter.
Only one entry per person per w.eek.

'88

Players of
the year in
Division I ·
aren't done
playing yet
COLUMBUS (AP) Three stars who will be on
opposing ·
sides · in
Saturday's big-school state
championship game were
selected · as the players of
the year on the 2007
Associated Press Division I
All-Ohio high school football teams released Monday.
A quarterback with
impressive numbers and
two linebackers from northeastern Ohio headlined the
Division II list.
In Division ·1, the defensive player of the Jear is
Stanforf)-bound Fre Craig
of top-ranked Cil)cinnati St.
Xavier, a do-everything 6foot-2, 210-pound senior.
Sharing the offensive
honors are enemies-for-aday Bart Tanski, Mentor's
efficient and accurate quarterback, and St. Xavier's
the
Danny
Milligan,
Uombers' leading receiver
who alsp returns punts and
kickoffs, handles placements and punting and,
when he has spare time,
plays defensive back.
St. Xavier, No .. I in the
AP's final · regular-season
poll and ranked among the
top teams in the country by
several national publications, takes on No. I0
Mentor for the bi~·school
title Saturday. mght at
Canton's Fawcett Stadium.
The coaches of the year in
Division I are Tim Brown,
who
led
GroveportMadison (7-3) to its first
winning season and ,playoff
appearance .since 1988;
Nick Ciulli, who guided
North Royalton to a 9-1
mark and its first trip to the
playoffs; and Steve Specht
of St. Xavier, who lived
with and succeeded despite
bei.pg under the microscope
since before the season
started.
: In Division II, the offensive player of the year was
Ashland 9uarterback Taylor
Housewrtght, with hnebacJcers Matt Schooley of
Louisville and Josh Lott of
Warren Howland splitting
: ~Ieese see All·Ohlo, 12

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Steelers outlast winless Dolphins, 3-0
BY. AlAN

ROBINSON

AP SPORTS WRITER

Girls Basketball
Jac~son at Gallia Academy: 6 p.m
Boys Basketball
South Gallia at New Boston , 6 p.m.
OVCS at Harvest, 6 p.m.

! .._____________________

'

.

,

PITTSBURGH
Trudging through the quagmire of Heinz Field, the
Dolphins 'and Steelers nearly
went all night without scoring.
. Instead what they ended
up with was the lowest scoring game in 14 years when
Jeff Reed's 24-yard field
goal with 17 seconds left
gave the Steelers a 3-0 victory Monday night over winless Miami (O-Il).
It was the first 3-0 game in
the NFL since the Jets beat
visiting Washington on Dec.
II, 1993.
.
Hanging with the divisionleading Steelers (8-3) for 59
112 minutes in the longest
scoreless tie since the Lions
and Giants on Nov. II,
1943, the Dolphins couldn't
get the game to overtime in
the first 3-0 game since the
Jets beat the Redskins on
Dec. II , 1993.
The only scoring drive
started on the Dolphins' 42
after Miami punted out of its
end
·zone.
Ben

RACINE - Forcing 46
Southern turnovers, the
South Gall ia Lady Rebels
feisty defense led the visitors to a 67-47 non-league
win over the Lady
Tornadoes
Mo!lday
night
in
Southern ' s
Hayman
gymnasium.

s0

ut h

Gallia (2-1)
placed four
girls
in
double figTurley
ures led by
Jennifer
Sheridan
with
15
points ,
Chelsea
Stowers
with
14,
Jasmine
Waugh 13
""""---' and Hailee
Swain II.
Tucker
Niki Fulks
added six, Lindsay Johnson
four, Natasha Adkins two,
and Morgan Gilliland two.
Southern's Kasey Turley
led all scorers with 26
points and eight rebounds.
Turley ·paced the Tornado
storm, but her offense was
limited as Southern lost 46
opportunities
via
the
turnover. Cheyenne Dunn
added 10 joints; Breanna
Taylor ha eight, Lynzee
Tucker ·two and Lindsay
Teaford one.
·South Gallia took an early
6-4 lead on field goals from
Fulks, Stowers, and Waugh.
Great passing in the half
court game, and cool, calm
patience proved to be the
mitial formula for the Lady
Rebels success, The Rebels
surged to a ·10-6 advantage
PIQM ... Southam, 12

Roethlisberger drove the less than 24 hours, and
Steelers into field goal range Heinz Field crews hurriedly
with completions of 21. II put down new lines at half.and 6 yards to Hinc' Ward. time.
Reed, who had missed
At least for the first half,
badly from 45 yards earlier the offenses didn't need to
on a rain-drenched field , be introduced, considering
came · through
after how little yardage was being
Roethlisberger was sacked gained on the slippery, rainon third down .
soaked field. The Steelers
NFL games have been had 112 · yards and the
'played in downpours and Dolphins only 71 by halfblizzards, and the aftermath time, even with Dolphins
the running
back
Ricky
of a hurricane Steelers-Dolphins game in Williams back on the field,
Miami in September 2004 at least for a few minutes.
- but ' this was a first: a The 2002 NFL rushing
lightning and heavy rain champion, reinstated last
delay in a late November week following a drug-relat·
game in Pittsburgh.
ed suspension, carried six
·Lightning chased the play- times for 15 yards in his first
ers off the field during their game since Jan. I, 2006,
pregame warmups, and the before injuring a shoulder. ·
teams were given only nine
The Dolphins, already
hurried-up ntinutes for addi- without injured running
tioqal warmups before the back Ronnie Brown, also
game started at 8:55 p.m., 25 lost · Jesse Chatman (neck)
minutes later than sched- during the game. Chatman,
uled.
. who started the previous
The delayed start meant three games, was questionno national anthem or player able with a sore ankle going
introductions.. The rain into the game.
AP photo
washed away nearly all the
The field conditions creal- Pittsburgh Steelers running back Willie Parker, right, is tack·
yard lines on a new grass
led by Miami Dolphins cornerback Jason Allen after a run in
field that had been in place
Ple..e see Outl1st. 16
the first quarter of the football game in Pittsburgh Monday.

Fairland
STAFF REPORT
SPORT S@MYOAILYSENTINEL.COM

GALLIPOLIS - A 19-0
first quarter run ultimately
proved too much for the Ohio
Valley Christian girls basket. ball team to overcome on
Monday, suffering a 53-25
setback to visitingFairland'fu
a non.-conference matchup.
The Lady Defenders (0-2)
found their offensive touch
after trailing 35-6 at half•
time, outscorinlj the Lady
Dragons 19- 18 111 the third
and fourth quarters. But the
slow stan and · 17 ftrst-half
turnovers were their eventual
undoing.
Junior Andrea VanMeter
led the way for OVCS with
13 points, followed by
seniors Lindsay Carr and
Christy Sanders with six and
four points, respectively. Also
scoring for the home team
was sophomore Lindsey
Miller, who . added two
points.
VanMeter and Sanders
each grabbed five boards,
while
senior
Richelle
Blankenship had four. Junior
Jasmine Owens was next
with two, and sophomores
Hali Burleson and Julie Tillis
each had one.
Blankenship al so contributed four steals. Next
were VanMeter and Sanders
with two apiece, and Carr and ··
Miller with one.
Fairland 's Destinee Spears
was the &amp;arne's leading scorer; finishmg with 20 points.
Closest to Spears was
McKenzie Rucker, who
added eight for the unbeaten
(2-0) Lady Dragons.
Next for the Lady
llryan Walterliphatci Defenders will be their annuSouthern's Breanna Taylor (30) puts up a shot over South Gallla defender Stephanie al tournament, which will be
Sebastian (13) during Monday night's non·conference girls basketball game In Racine .
this Friday and Saturday.

Plenty of motivation fQr No. 2 West Virginia t~is week
Bv JoliN

RABY

AP SPORTS WRITER

CHARLESTON, W.Va.
- A berth in the national
championship game, The
final home game for 20
seniors. There is plenty of
motivation for No. 2 West
Virginia on Saturday night
against Pittsburgh in the
IOOth version of the
Backyard Brawl.
Maybe too much, and
West Virginia coqch Rich
Rodriguez wants to guard
against getting overly psyched up for the Panthers.
Historically there qas
been a lot riding· on this
rivalry between the schools
75 miles apart. For West
Virginia, the stakes have
never been greater - win

and move en
tO
the
national
champ i onship game
in
New
Orleans on Jan . 7.
A loss would relegate the
Mountaineers (11-1, 6-1) to
a Bowl Championship
Series game as the Big East
champion and mark another setback for No . 2-ranked
teams.
"What I don 't want to do
is for our guys to get too
tight and realize there 's so
much on the line. Our guys
know that," Rodriguez said
Monday. "You're better off
· just understanding the
importance of preparation,
and when the game gets
here, have some fun, let it

loose, understanding your
responsibilities and just play
good football."
·
The rivalry is so intense
for the Mountaineers that it' s
common for fans in
Morgantown to wear expletive-laced T-shirts showing
their wrath for the Panthers.
Pitt owns a 59-37-3lead in
the series, while West
Virginia has a 15-10-2 edge
since its stadium opened in
1980.
"The closeness of the two
institutions and the fact that
we know a lot of their players, they know a lot of ours
and we do a lot of recruiting
against each other adds to
it," said· Rodriguez. who
went 2-1 against the
Panthers as a WVU defensive back from 1982-84 and

is 4-2 against them as a
coach.
For the moment, West
Virginia players are keeping
with Rodriguez's orders to
focus on the game rather
than the possible implica·
tions.
It · shouldn't be too difficult. One-fourth of West
Virginia's players are from
Penn sylvania, with many
comihg from the Pittsburgh
area.
Free safety Ryan Mundy, a
Pittsburgh native , lists exPanthers -stars Curtis Martin,
Larry Fitzgerald and Rod
Rutherford as the names he
remembers from the rivalry.
Mundy transferred from
Michigan for this season to
attend graduate school and
has seen his share of hype

for playing Ohio State. His
first Backyard Brawl has a
similar feeling.
"It's right up there, especially with so much at
stake," Mundy said .
Pittsburgh (4-7, 2-4) is
assured of its third losing
season under third-year
coach Dave Wannstedt.
Pride is what's important for
the Panthers on Saturday.
·"The West Virginia game
was alway s the one that you
circled and said it didn't
make any difference what
the records were at that
point." .said Wann stedt, who
went 1-2 against th e
Mountaineers as an offensive tackle at Pitt from 197173 and is 0-2 against them as ·

. Ple11e see WVU, 12

�•

A6 The D"ily Sentinel

www.mydailyrsentinel.com

November 26, 2007

•

Inside

Bl

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Southern at Waterford, 6 p.m.
Eastern at Federal Hocking, 6 p.m.
Meigs at Belpre, 6 p.m.
South Point at River Valley, 6 p.m.

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Gallla Academy at Meigs, 6:30 p.m.
South Gallia at Cross. Lanes Christian,
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Southern at Grovo City Christian, 11 :30
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Only one entry per person per w.eek.

'88

Players of
the year in
Division I ·
aren't done
playing yet
COLUMBUS (AP) Three stars who will be on
opposing ·
sides · in
Saturday's big-school state
championship game were
selected · as the players of
the year on the 2007
Associated Press Division I
All-Ohio high school football teams released Monday.
A quarterback with
impressive numbers and
two linebackers from northeastern Ohio headlined the
Division II list.
In Division ·1, the defensive player of the Jear is
Stanforf)-bound Fre Craig
of top-ranked Cil)cinnati St.
Xavier, a do-everything 6foot-2, 210-pound senior.
Sharing the offensive
honors are enemies-for-aday Bart Tanski, Mentor's
efficient and accurate quarterback, and St. Xavier's
the
Danny
Milligan,
Uombers' leading receiver
who alsp returns punts and
kickoffs, handles placements and punting and,
when he has spare time,
plays defensive back.
St. Xavier, No .. I in the
AP's final · regular-season
poll and ranked among the
top teams in the country by
several national publications, takes on No. I0
Mentor for the bi~·school
title Saturday. mght at
Canton's Fawcett Stadium.
The coaches of the year in
Division I are Tim Brown,
who
led
GroveportMadison (7-3) to its first
winning season and ,playoff
appearance .since 1988;
Nick Ciulli, who guided
North Royalton to a 9-1
mark and its first trip to the
playoffs; and Steve Specht
of St. Xavier, who lived
with and succeeded despite
bei.pg under the microscope
since before the season
started.
: In Division II, the offensive player of the year was
Ashland 9uarterback Taylor
Housewrtght, with hnebacJcers Matt Schooley of
Louisville and Josh Lott of
Warren Howland splitting
: ~Ieese see All·Ohlo, 12

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Ierum 0 mydailyreglster.com

Steelers outlast winless Dolphins, 3-0
BY. AlAN

ROBINSON

AP SPORTS WRITER

Girls Basketball
Jac~son at Gallia Academy: 6 p.m
Boys Basketball
South Gallia at New Boston , 6 p.m.
OVCS at Harvest, 6 p.m.

! .._____________________

'

.

,

PITTSBURGH
Trudging through the quagmire of Heinz Field, the
Dolphins 'and Steelers nearly
went all night without scoring.
. Instead what they ended
up with was the lowest scoring game in 14 years when
Jeff Reed's 24-yard field
goal with 17 seconds left
gave the Steelers a 3-0 victory Monday night over winless Miami (O-Il).
It was the first 3-0 game in
the NFL since the Jets beat
visiting Washington on Dec.
II, 1993.
.
Hanging with the divisionleading Steelers (8-3) for 59
112 minutes in the longest
scoreless tie since the Lions
and Giants on Nov. II,
1943, the Dolphins couldn't
get the game to overtime in
the first 3-0 game since the
Jets beat the Redskins on
Dec. II , 1993.
The only scoring drive
started on the Dolphins' 42
after Miami punted out of its
end
·zone.
Ben

RACINE - Forcing 46
Southern turnovers, the
South Gall ia Lady Rebels
feisty defense led the visitors to a 67-47 non-league
win over the Lady
Tornadoes
Mo!lday
night
in
Southern ' s
Hayman
gymnasium.

s0

ut h

Gallia (2-1)
placed four
girls
in
double figTurley
ures led by
Jennifer
Sheridan
with
15
points ,
Chelsea
Stowers
with
14,
Jasmine
Waugh 13
""""---' and Hailee
Swain II.
Tucker
Niki Fulks
added six, Lindsay Johnson
four, Natasha Adkins two,
and Morgan Gilliland two.
Southern's Kasey Turley
led all scorers with 26
points and eight rebounds.
Turley ·paced the Tornado
storm, but her offense was
limited as Southern lost 46
opportunities
via
the
turnover. Cheyenne Dunn
added 10 joints; Breanna
Taylor ha eight, Lynzee
Tucker ·two and Lindsay
Teaford one.
·South Gallia took an early
6-4 lead on field goals from
Fulks, Stowers, and Waugh.
Great passing in the half
court game, and cool, calm
patience proved to be the
mitial formula for the Lady
Rebels success, The Rebels
surged to a ·10-6 advantage
PIQM ... Southam, 12

Roethlisberger drove the less than 24 hours, and
Steelers into field goal range Heinz Field crews hurriedly
with completions of 21. II put down new lines at half.and 6 yards to Hinc' Ward. time.
Reed, who had missed
At least for the first half,
badly from 45 yards earlier the offenses didn't need to
on a rain-drenched field , be introduced, considering
came · through
after how little yardage was being
Roethlisberger was sacked gained on the slippery, rainon third down .
soaked field. The Steelers
NFL games have been had 112 · yards and the
'played in downpours and Dolphins only 71 by halfblizzards, and the aftermath time, even with Dolphins
the running
back
Ricky
of a hurricane Steelers-Dolphins game in Williams back on the field,
Miami in September 2004 at least for a few minutes.
- but ' this was a first: a The 2002 NFL rushing
lightning and heavy rain champion, reinstated last
delay in a late November week following a drug-relat·
game in Pittsburgh.
ed suspension, carried six
·Lightning chased the play- times for 15 yards in his first
ers off the field during their game since Jan. I, 2006,
pregame warmups, and the before injuring a shoulder. ·
teams were given only nine
The Dolphins, already
hurried-up ntinutes for addi- without injured running
tioqal warmups before the back Ronnie Brown, also
game started at 8:55 p.m., 25 lost · Jesse Chatman (neck)
minutes later than sched- during the game. Chatman,
uled.
. who started the previous
The delayed start meant three games, was questionno national anthem or player able with a sore ankle going
introductions.. The rain into the game.
AP photo
washed away nearly all the
The field conditions creal- Pittsburgh Steelers running back Willie Parker, right, is tack·
yard lines on a new grass
led by Miami Dolphins cornerback Jason Allen after a run in
field that had been in place
Ple..e see Outl1st. 16
the first quarter of the football game in Pittsburgh Monday.

Fairland
STAFF REPORT
SPORT S@MYOAILYSENTINEL.COM

GALLIPOLIS - A 19-0
first quarter run ultimately
proved too much for the Ohio
Valley Christian girls basket. ball team to overcome on
Monday, suffering a 53-25
setback to visitingFairland'fu
a non.-conference matchup.
The Lady Defenders (0-2)
found their offensive touch
after trailing 35-6 at half•
time, outscorinlj the Lady
Dragons 19- 18 111 the third
and fourth quarters. But the
slow stan and · 17 ftrst-half
turnovers were their eventual
undoing.
Junior Andrea VanMeter
led the way for OVCS with
13 points, followed by
seniors Lindsay Carr and
Christy Sanders with six and
four points, respectively. Also
scoring for the home team
was sophomore Lindsey
Miller, who . added two
points.
VanMeter and Sanders
each grabbed five boards,
while
senior
Richelle
Blankenship had four. Junior
Jasmine Owens was next
with two, and sophomores
Hali Burleson and Julie Tillis
each had one.
Blankenship al so contributed four steals. Next
were VanMeter and Sanders
with two apiece, and Carr and ··
Miller with one.
Fairland 's Destinee Spears
was the &amp;arne's leading scorer; finishmg with 20 points.
Closest to Spears was
McKenzie Rucker, who
added eight for the unbeaten
(2-0) Lady Dragons.
Next for the Lady
llryan Walterliphatci Defenders will be their annuSouthern's Breanna Taylor (30) puts up a shot over South Gallla defender Stephanie al tournament, which will be
Sebastian (13) during Monday night's non·conference girls basketball game In Racine .
this Friday and Saturday.

Plenty of motivation fQr No. 2 West Virginia t~is week
Bv JoliN

RABY

AP SPORTS WRITER

CHARLESTON, W.Va.
- A berth in the national
championship game, The
final home game for 20
seniors. There is plenty of
motivation for No. 2 West
Virginia on Saturday night
against Pittsburgh in the
IOOth version of the
Backyard Brawl.
Maybe too much, and
West Virginia coqch Rich
Rodriguez wants to guard
against getting overly psyched up for the Panthers.
Historically there qas
been a lot riding· on this
rivalry between the schools
75 miles apart. For West
Virginia, the stakes have
never been greater - win

and move en
tO
the
national
champ i onship game
in
New
Orleans on Jan . 7.
A loss would relegate the
Mountaineers (11-1, 6-1) to
a Bowl Championship
Series game as the Big East
champion and mark another setback for No . 2-ranked
teams.
"What I don 't want to do
is for our guys to get too
tight and realize there 's so
much on the line. Our guys
know that," Rodriguez said
Monday. "You're better off
· just understanding the
importance of preparation,
and when the game gets
here, have some fun, let it

loose, understanding your
responsibilities and just play
good football."
·
The rivalry is so intense
for the Mountaineers that it' s
common for fans in
Morgantown to wear expletive-laced T-shirts showing
their wrath for the Panthers.
Pitt owns a 59-37-3lead in
the series, while West
Virginia has a 15-10-2 edge
since its stadium opened in
1980.
"The closeness of the two
institutions and the fact that
we know a lot of their players, they know a lot of ours
and we do a lot of recruiting
against each other adds to
it," said· Rodriguez. who
went 2-1 against the
Panthers as a WVU defensive back from 1982-84 and

is 4-2 against them as a
coach.
For the moment, West
Virginia players are keeping
with Rodriguez's orders to
focus on the game rather
than the possible implica·
tions.
It · shouldn't be too difficult. One-fourth of West
Virginia's players are from
Penn sylvania, with many
comihg from the Pittsburgh
area.
Free safety Ryan Mundy, a
Pittsburgh native , lists exPanthers -stars Curtis Martin,
Larry Fitzgerald and Rod
Rutherford as the names he
remembers from the rivalry.
Mundy transferred from
Michigan for this season to
attend graduate school and
has seen his share of hype

for playing Ohio State. His
first Backyard Brawl has a
similar feeling.
"It's right up there, especially with so much at
stake," Mundy said .
Pittsburgh (4-7, 2-4) is
assured of its third losing
season under third-year
coach Dave Wannstedt.
Pride is what's important for
the Panthers on Saturday.
·"The West Virginia game
was alway s the one that you
circled and said it didn't
make any difference what
the records were at that
point." .said Wann stedt, who
went 1-2 against th e
Mountaineers as an offensive tackle at Pitt from 197173 and is 0-2 against them as ·

. Ple11e see WVU, 12

�Page 82 • The Daily Sentinel

www .mydailysentinel.com

Tuesday, November 27.

www.mydailysentinel.com

2007

Cincinnati upends SC-Upstate, 69-57 North Carolina stays No. 1 in a
CINCINNATI &lt;AP) Deonta V&amp;ughn scored 19
pomts Monday mght, takmg
advantage of open shou
from behmd the 3-pomt arc,
and Cmcmnau pulled away
to a 69-57 HCtory over wmless
South
CarolmaUpstate
Cmcmnatt (4-2) broke the
game open m the second
half behind Vaughn , who
went 5-ot-8 from beh1rtd the
arc
overall.
Adam
Hrycaniuk added 13 points
and I 0 rebounds, helpmg
the b1gger Bearcats dominate the boards.
Luke Payne scored 19
pomts for South CarohnaUpstate (0-6), which IS havmg a rough introductton to
Division I. The young
Spartans have played all

the1r games on the ro.1d. losmg live of them by doubledigits
Fellow All,muc Sun member Belmont opened the -season wtth an 86-75 Vll tory ,n
Cmcmnau on Nov. 9. a upoff that the Bearcats were
headed for a rough opemng
stretch of the1r own. Coach
M1ck Cronm, m his second
season d1ggmg out Irum the
aftermath of Bob Hugg1ns '
ouster, has tned JUSt about
everythmg to get a good
combmat1un on the floor
He's got more expenmentmg ahead.
Though bigger and qutcker, the Bearcats agam struggled 111 the first ~all agamst
a team that d1dn 't make a lot
of nustakes At one pomt,
Cromn ~e nt out a hneup of

fo ur
treshmen
and
Hrycanmk, a semor center.
There were four ues and
SIX lead changes 111 the
openmg 16 mmutes. wtth
netthet team up hy more
than three S.C -Up~tate.
which had only two
turnover~ to that pumt , committed th1ee du11ng a late
I 0-point run by Ctncmnau
Vaughn had 3-pomters that
st.Irted and ltmshed the run,
puttmg the Beat cats ahead
to stay 30-22.
Cmcmnatt broke the game
open by pushmg the pace
and htttmg open 3-potnters
Larry Da&gt; ts, Vaughn and
Marvin Gentry made 3s durtng a 13-pomt run that put
Cmcmnatl ahead 58-38
mtdway through the second
half.

I AII~Ohio ~II Ust
Warren Howland

(AP) The 2007
DMSton I AII·Ohto

Coochoa of the year

I team, based on the
~n1o~~lions Of a alate media

Jarvts Gibson Cle S , Tim Flossie,
A,kr Ftreatone

SocanciToam
OFFENSE· Ends- Andy Cruse Cln
Turp1n, 8-4, 210, sr t ]\lrone WHiiams, E
Cle Shaw 6-5. 185, ~ Llhemen-

Matt Gneser, Cole Watterson 6·5, 310

Nordonla,

Frank

sr, Cory Sortce, Day Carroll, 6-4 320,
. Colin E1111rett, Uniontown Lake, '6-3,
, sr., Marc Stevens.
H,
sr : Alex Jones 1
• Cody Connare.
Bill

Carlson,
Wackerly N
Aaron Pankratz,

Canton Hoover.
Macedonia Nordonla,

Er~c

Magnaccfi,

Mass Perry Erick Howard, N Canton

Hoover, John Hamilton. Macedonia
Nordonta, Steve Yoder, Mass
Washtngton, Luke Miller, Wadsworth

WMney

Me&lt;elluo. Akr Garfti\ld, David

Baughman, Mass Perry, Matt Vlck,
Perry,

Mike

Kelker,

~rtbune -

•,

-men's poll with plenty of changes
BY

JIM O'CoNNELL

AP BASKETBALl WRITER

The many hohday tournaments d1dn 't cause any
changes at the top of The
Assoetated Press' men's college basketball poll
The bottom of the Top 25,
however, was another matter
alter 13 ranked teams lost a
game last week
North C.1rohna held tls
shm lead over No 2 UCLA
on Monday as the top f1ve
teams stayed the same from
last week.
F1ve schools fell out of the
Top 25 whtle others made
stgnificant JUmps and falls.
The Tar Heels (5-0), who
beat South Carohna State,
Old Domimon and BYU lust
week, recened 28 ftrst-place
votes - two more than last
week - and 1,725 pomts
from the 72-member national media panel.
UCLA (6-0), desptte losmg one first-place vote from
last week's 26, \\3S agam
mne potnts behind North
Carohna The Brums beat
Maryland, Mtchtgan State
and Yale last week.
Memphts (S-0), whtch
beat Arkansas State 111 tts
only game last week. was
No I on 18 ballots, one less
than last week, and had the
same total of 1,689 points
Kansas (5-0), which beat
A11zona 76-72 m ovenune
on Sund.1y, and Georgetown
(1 -0), whtch won at Ball
State and again received the
only other ftrst-place vote,
held fourth and fifth.
Then came the changes.
Washington State, Duke,
Texas and Texas A&amp;M
jumped to take sixth through
ninth, while Michigan State
stayed No. 10.
Washtngton State (6-0)
beat Montana, Mississippi
Valley State and Air Force to

wvu

fromPageBl
a coach

JUmp from nmth , while
Duke (6-0) rode Its tttle tn
the M,un lnvttat tOnal to
JUmp stx spots to No. 7.
Texas (5-0) and Texas
A&amp;M (6-0) won the
Legends Classtc and NIT
Season T1p-Ofl, respectively, and both moved up seven
places.
The live newcomers mo&gt; e
m as a block from 20th
through 24th: W1scons1n,
BYU , Southern Caltforma,
Xavter and North Carohna
State.
,
Teams that tell out were
Southern lllino1s. Y1llanova,
Syracuse. Vtrgtnta and
Flonda
Tennessee, wh1ch lost to
Texas 97-78 111 the Legends
Classic fmal, dropped four
spots to II th and was followed
by
LouiSVIlle,
Marquette.
Ptttsburgh ,
lndtana, Butler, Oregon ,
Clemson. Gonzaga and
Wisconsm
The last live ranked teams
were
BYU , Southern
Caltfornta, Xavier, North
Carohna State and Kansas
State.
The biggest drops were by
lnd1ana and Kansas State,
whtch both fell seven places
lndtana (4-1) dropped to
15th after an 80-65 loss to
Xav1er, while Kansas State
(5-I) fell to 25th after losing
tis ftrst round game m the
Old Sptce Classic, 87-77, to
George Mason.
Lomsville, wh1ch started
the \\eek wtth the news
semor center Davtd Padgett
would m1ss s1gmficant ttme
with a knee inJury, dropped
to 12th after a 78-76 loss to
BYU.
Southern Illinots and
V11lanova both lost 111 tournament
· champtonshtp
games, the Salukts to
Southern California in the
Anahetm Classic and the
W1ldcats to North Carolma
"You're always looking
for
something
when
you're struggling ltke we
are," he said. "You're
always looking for thtngs
to add to the game. And
playing West Virgtma, the

State at the Old Spice
C!,t"lc
Syt .Icuse lust to Oh1u
State 111 the senufmals of the
NIT
Season
T1p-Off,
V1rginia lost to Seton Hall
and two-time defendmg
national champion Flonda
tell to Flm1da State
Of the live newcomers,
only Wtsconsin d1dn 't beat a
ranked team. The Badgers
(S-Ol had easy wms overColorado and Georg1a last
week
Southern Ca!IIorma and
North Caroltna State both
returned after a week out of
the Top 25 The other three
newcomers were ail ranked
at some pomt last season
There are stx games thts
week between ranked teams
Wtsconsin at Duke, North
Carohn,t State at Michtgan
State: Oregon at Kansas
State, lnd1ana at Southern
Ilhnms, Kans.Is at Southern
Ca!Iforni,t , and Texas at
UCLA.
1 North Carol1na (28) 5-0
6·0
2 UCLA (25)
3 Mecnpn1s 118)
50
5-0
4 Kansas
30
5 Georgetown ( 1)
6-0
6 Wash1ngton St
6-0
7 Du ke

s-o

B TaMas
9 Texas A&amp;M

6.()

, 163

10 MIChigan s,t

4-1

1 015

11 Tenne ssee

51

1 240

11
17
8

22
12
24
14

s-o

19 Gonzaga

s-o

20 W1sconsm
21 BYU
.22 Southern Cal

23 Xav1er
24 N C State
25 Kansas St

Monday thru Friday

8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m
AD

13
15
16 '
10

18

Others rece1v1ng votes Villaoova 162

Vanderbilt 109 Syracuse 00 Arizona 85 S
IllinOIS 80 Miami 68 A~ansas 64 V1rgm.a
62 Seton Hall 54 Ohio St 53 Sa1m Mary's
Cal1 f 50, Connecticut 34 George Mason
34 Stanford 27 Boston College 18
MISSOUn 18 West V1fgln13 17 Florida 12
New Orleans 9 Baylor 5 Illinois 4
Kentucky 4 Mlam1 (Oh1o) 3, Oh10 2 George
Washington 1 New rvJexiCO 1 Texas Tech 1

nvalry 1s one th ing. Now
you're playing a real qualIty team, maybe the best in
the country. It all adds to
the excttement of the
game, there's no question"

*POLICIES*

All-Ohio
from PageBl
the defenstve honors.
Housewnght, a ftrst-team
all-stater a year ago, passed
for 2,568 yards and 31
touchdowns with etght
mtercepllons, and ran for

656 yards and six more
scores
Schooley will lead No 8
Louisville up against 12thranked Cmcmnati Anderson
m the D1vi-ston II playoff
· fmal Fnday mght at
Massillon's Paul Brown
Ttger Stadium.
Jarvis G1bson. who gutded Cleveland South to Its

ftrst playoff appearance and
an 8-2 mark, and Akron
Ftrestone 's venerable Tim
Flossie, who took over a
struggling program two
years ago and turned tt mto
an Akron C1ty Senes champion, were the coaches of
the year F1restone also
made tts f1rst tnp to the
playoffs

then began a charge of
mtense defensive pressure
that forced Southern into
eleven
ftrst-quarter
turnovers, seven of which
resulted in Rebel steals.
Kasey Turley hit 3-4 at
the lme and Breanna Taylor
h1t a three to keep Southern
surprisingly close despite
the miscues. Finally, a quarter ending fast break Swain
·lay-tn gave SG the 18-8
advantage after tound one.
Not only dtd South Galha
pick up the defens1ve pressure in the second period,
but also hit a 4-4 scoring
streak that padded their
already b1g lead. Southern
overcame turnovers and cut
the gap to 26-18 on threepotnt goals from Turley
Taylor, and fteld goals from
Tucker and Cheyenne
Dunn.
South Galha called ttme
out, made adjustments, and
jumped back mto tts full
court pressure where the left
side of the Galha defense
began to devour Southern
pa~ses The Lady Rebels of
Coach Bret Bosttc ran the
floor well m transition The
unselfish play boosted the
Lady Rebel lead to 37-22 at
the half
Southern (0-3 overall)
ended the ftrst half wtth 26
turnovers Turley led SHS
wtth ten at the half and
Taylor had s1x. Shendan
and Stowers each had nme
at the half for South Galha
Southern played a much
better second half, but still
the turnovers mounted.
Behtnd a 10-point Turley
surge Southern played even
wtth the vtsltors. Jasmine
Waugh had a btg sevenpomt tally to lead her club,
with Shendan, Fulks, .
Swain, and Adkins hitchmg
ndes on the scoring
carousel SG led 54-38 after
three, then outscored the
hosts 13-9 gomg down the
stretch to wm 67-47
Southern htt 15-34 overall, hmmg 11-27 two's, 4-7
three's, and 13-18 at the

Box number ads a
!ways confidential.
Currant
ppllos.

rata car

All
Real
Eatat
vertl••m•nta ar
bject to tho Fedora
air Houalng Act o

lsement In vlolatlo
the lllw.

Description • Include A Price • Avoid Abbreviations
• Include Phone Number And Address When Needed
• Ads Should Run 7 Days

r

Found blac~ lab at letart
Locks and Dam, Call 247· An Excellent way to earn
money The New Avon
2147
Call Mar1lyn 304 882 2645

Loat and Found ........................................... OGO

•

13 9 -

87
47

SOUTH GALLI A 12-1) - Nlkl Fulks 3 0·
0 6 Taylor Duncan 0 0·0 0, Chelaea
Stowers 5 4·614, Jennifer Sheridan 7 0·
0 i 5 Stephama Sebastian 0 0 0 0
Hallee Swain 5 1·1 11, Jasmine Waugh
15 3 5 i 3 Lindsay Johnson 2 0 0 4
Nataaha Adkins 1 0·1 2, Morgan
Gilliland 1 0 0 2. Chelsea Johnson 0 0·
0 0 Cryslal Adkins 0 0-Q 0 TOTALS 29
8-16 67 Three-point goals (1)
Sheridan
SOUTHERN (0·3)- Kasey Turley 8 8·
9 26 Breanna Taylor 3 0-0 8, Cheyenne,
Dunn 3 4-o5 10, Lindsay Teaford 0 0·1 1
Lynzee Tucker 1 0-0 2. Chels1 A1fCh18 0
0-0 o Gabby Johnson 0 0-0 0 Jayhn
Sn1der 0 0-0 0 Totals 15 13 ~ 18 47
Three pomt goals (4) Turley~ Taylor 2

1 1!-ltr-11' I'D f~J:L­

MoRt; C0Mf1&gt;R1ABL,;
If YoiJ M£:1?-E!-Y
B~G€'D ATIH&amp;:

I)INNER iABLE,

Lola l Acreage..................................... ...350
Mlscetlaneoua...................................... 170
Miscellaneous Merchandise...... .......
540
Mobile Home Repair.... .. ......... .......
860
Mobile Homes lor Rent .......................... 420
Mobile Homes for Sala................................320
Money to Loan .............................................220
Motorcycles &amp; 4 Wheelers .................. ...740
Musical Instruments.. ..... . . ... . ....... 570
Pereonata ...........,.....
......... .. . .. . . ..005
Pets lor Sale............ . ........
............... 560
Plumbing &amp; Heating. . ....... . ......
...820
Proleaalonal Sarvices ..................... ...230
Radio, TV &amp; CB Repair ............................. t60
Real Eotata Wanted .................................... 360
Schools Instruction....... ......... ......... . t 50
Seed , Plant &amp; Fertilizer........ .......
.... 650
Situations Wonted.... .... .......... . .......
...120
Space for Rent .........................................460
Sporting Gooda ...........................................520
SUV's far Sale..............................................720
Trucks lor Sale ............................................ 715
Upholatery ...................................... . . ...'. 870
Van a For Sale. . ......... . ........ ........ .730
wanted to Buy..........
..090
Wonted ta Buy· Farm Suppllas ................ 620
Wonted To Do .............................................. 180
Wanted Ia Rent .......................................... 470
Yard Sale- Galllpolla....................................072
Yard Sate-Pomeroy/Middle....
....... ... 074
Yard Sate-Pt. PleaHnt.......... ...... . .... 076

..!· ---...-·-

~

- ----

HOMES

AVON! All Areasl To Buy or
Sell
Shirley Spears 304·
675-1429

This newspaper will not
knowingly accept

advertisements for real
estate which Is 1n
violation of the law Our
readers are hereby
Informed that all
dwellings advertised In
lhla newspaper are
ava 1table on an equal
opportunity baaea

II ~1

~~
by NEA, Inc

---- -~-----

www com1cs com

@ 2007

Need someone to take care
of your loved one m the1 r
home m Gall1p011s 1 Pt
Pleasant Call me (740)446·
7165
-:c::----c--~--:-Offenng fu ll t1me care for the
elderly lad 1es 1n my home
20 years exper~ence excel
lent references Call for
more InformatiOn 740 446
4300

Manpower IS now h1nng lor
the
followmg
pos1t10ns
sq ft
Automob1le
Qrodut on
remodeled Ranch on 1 acre
Workers 1n the Butlalo WV
m/1 In Gallipolis New kit w'
Area BenefitS a\lallable Call
pantry &amp; laundry rm Huge
Today 304 757·3338
master su11e w/ FP &amp; pnvate
_
entrance DR lR w/ gas FP/
Metal Fabncator IS acceptAttached carport 2 car
mg resumes for th e 1oII ow1ng
garage &amp; pnvacy fence Nat
'1'l:il""-~~~~-, gas Heat pump &amp; CIA Exc
pos1110ns 30 Dra her (AuIo 6
CAD) Eng1neer. Part room
Cond Ready to move 1n
clerl&lt; and Ouls1de Sales
0PI'OR1l!NITI'
$98,500 neg 740 645 8751
Person
Compensat1on ..__oiiiioiiiiioiiiititlt-"

_c_______

Chnst1an Company seek1ng
Manager to work hom home
$2 000-$6 000 per month
exc Benef1ts FT IPT can
668 434 6256
bised upon expenence
Please submit resume and 3
profeSSIOnal references to
70764 ST At 124 VInton
OH 45686 by Dec 14

riO

BUSINESS

AVON Start your own bus1
Attention!
ness today' earn up to 50% Local company offenng "NO
Call Sharon 1-866-640- DOWN PAYMENT" pro
2866 lnd Rep
grams for you to buy your
home mstead of renting

0hiO Valley Home Health
Inc hmng STNA CNA
Home Health A1des and
Personal Care A1des Full
Part T1me and Per D1em
poSitions available
Apply
at 1480 Jackson P1ke

•NOTICE•
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH
lNG CO recommends
that you do busu1ess w1th
people you know and
NOT to sand money
through the ma1l unlil you

Gallipolis phon e 441 1393

have

IOJ Sk1lleQ Off1ce or apply at
1456 Jackson P1ke phone
441 9263
for
Passpori/Pnvate
Care
• Compet1t1va Wages
Olfice
and
BenefitS 1ncludmg
Insurance
and
health
m1leage

offenng

OTR Drivers needed Must
be at least 24 yrs old and
have 3 yrs expenence Apply
1n person at 2204 Jackson
P1ke
Laborer-Earn
as You - - - - - - - Learn
Start butldmg for
POST OFFICE NOW
your future NOW by )om1ng
HIRING
our ProfessiOnal Team and
Avg Pay $20/hr or
Pressure
Cleamng
$57K annually
Mamtenance Technician All Including Federal Benefits
positions requtre extended
and OT Pcud Tra1mng
TRAVEL outSide the state
Vacat1ons-FT1PT
Company prov1des lodg1ng
1·866·542-1531
transportation
and Per
Delm AVERAGE starting
wage with cost of benefits
mcluded IS $210 00 per field
day waffled With a chance to
advance up to $255 00 per
field day worked We provide

---ccu_sccw::-A---::=::-:-

pa1d tra1nmg ard EXCEl
LENT BENEFITS
Pre
employment DRUG TEST
and a valid Onver s Ln:;ense
are requ1red Class A CCL
IS a plus but not requ1red
WE WILl BE TAKING
APPLICATIONS
AND
INTERVIEWING
FROM
9 00 am unt1l 5 00 PM ON
DECEMBER 4th AT THE
BEST WESTERN INN 701
W MAIN ST RIPLEY WV
ANO ON OECEMBER 51h
AT THE WINGATE INN
1502 GRANO ' CENTRAL
AVENUE VIENNA WV OR
send work h1story and day
11me phone number to
TechniCian Tra1nee PO Box
565 Manana, Oh1o 45750
EOE

Tr.uck Dnvers CDL CICISS A
Reqwred m1mmum ol 5
dnvmg
exp
year s
Expenence
on
Overdelmen:)I Oilal loads
Must have good dr1vmg
record Earn up 'til $2 000
weekly For app l1cat1oo Call
MF
(304)722 2184
8'30am-4pm

Person for l1ve m With elderly
lady Call740 3~7 7129

All real attate adver11aing
in thla newspaper IS
subject to the Federal
Fair Housing Act of 1988
wh1ch m..es II !Hegel to
adVertise 'any
preference, limitation or
dulcrimlnanon basod on
race, color, rel1g10n, sex
farniUal status or national
ongln, or any mt.ntlon to
make any such
preference, tlmltatlon or
discrimination '

Wem to buy Junk Cars call
Male Dalmatian 3 to 4 years
74().388·0864
old outside Dog
Phone
I \11'1 !l\ \11 '\I
304-675-3161 or 304-675Lookmg for a good auto
0542
' ' It\ I&lt; I '
mechamc send resume to
78 Setty Road Albany Oh
45710

Equipment for Rent ..................................... 480

17
18

10

•--•TOilioBIJYiooit--•

Excavatlng ................................................... 830
Farm Equipment.................................. .. .. 610
Farma lor Rent. ........ . . ......... .. ..............430
Farms lor Sale.......... ............................. 330
" For Lease ................................................490
For Sala..... . ................ .. ..... . ................ 585
For Sale or Trada .........................................590
Fruita &amp; Vegetables .................................... 580
Fumlshed Rooma ........................................450
General Hauling....................... ....... .. 850
Giveaway...................... .. ........ . . ....
040
Happy Ada....... • • .......... ........ ... .......
050
Hoy &amp; Grein................. .. ......... .............640
Help wanted .............................................110
Home lmpravements...................................810
Homes lor Sale............................................ 310
Household Goods .................................... 510
Hause a lor Rent..... .. ........ ....... ... ...... 410
In Memoriam.............. . .. ..
............020
Insurance .......................................... 130
Lawn &amp; Garden Equlpment ........................ 660
Llveatock ......................................................630

19
14

POLICIES Ohio Valley Publishing reserves tha nght to ethl reject or cancal any ad at any 11rnt Enora muat be reponed on lhl first day
Tnbun•Sentlnei-Aeg1ster wlll be respon1lble tor no mora than the cott of 1he space occupied by tht arror and only the llratlnstrtton We
any toss or expense that results from the publication or om11~on ol an advertisement Correction will be made In the flrs1 available edition
are always contldentl&amp;l • Current rate card appllee • All real estate ad11ertlsaments are 1ubject to the Federal P:alr Hou1lng Act of 1M8
eccept• only help wanted ads
1 EOE standards W. will not knowingly accept any advenlslng In vtolatlon Of the law

KIT &amp; CARLYLE

out wntten permiSSIOn on
them shall be subJect to
1mmed.ate arrest &amp; prosecu Absolute Top Dollar US
t1on
S1lver and Gold Coins
Proofsets, Gold R1ngs. Pre
Curre ncy
1935
US
GIVEAWAY
Solitaire 0 1amonds· M T S
Com Shop 15 t Second
3 beautiful house broken k1t· Avenue Gallipolis 74()..446
2642
lens 304-895·3013

Apartments lor Rent .................................. 440
AucUon Flea Market ........
.080
Auto Porta &amp; Accessories..
...... 760
Auto Repair............... .... ...... . ........ . . .. 770
Autos lor Sale............... ....... ......... ...710
Boats &amp; Molars for Sale .... . . ..... ... ..... 750
Building Suppllas........................................550
ll!!llntnlnd IIYII!Ilng§ ............................. 340
Business Opportunity .................................21 0
Buslnau Trainlng ....................................... 140
Campara &amp; Motor Homes ........................ 790
Camping Equipment ................................... 780
Carda afThanka ........................................010
Child/Elderly Care ....................................... 190
Elactrtcai/Relrlgeratlon ...............................840

South 011111 87, Southern 47

• All ads must be prepatd'

k1tncarlyle@comcast net

Antiques................................... .................530

S (lalila
18
Southern 8

Thursday for Sundays

Now you can have borders and graphics
~
added to your classified ads
(.~
Jm
Borders $3.00/per ad
l!iit1
Graphics 50¢ for small
$1.00 for large

RJRSALE

4x4's For Sale............. ......... ................. 725
Announcement ............................................ 030

Cross- La~es, WV Fnday

sunday DiSplay: 1:00

• Start Your Ads With A Kevword • Include Complete

\\\(1\ \(I \ II \ I \

CLASSIFIED INDEX

ltne. Southern had 27
rebounds (Turley 8, Dunn
8), six steals, five asststs, 46
turnovers and 17 fouls
South Galha htt '29-68
overall, ~tttmg 29-59 tw?'s,
1-9 threes, and was 8-ot-16
at the lme. South Gallla had
24 rebounds (Waugh 6,
Fulks four, Sheridan five),
24 steals (fulks I 0, Waugh
5, Stowers four), 15 assists
(Stowers 5, Fulks 4), IS
turnovers, and 17 fouls.
Southern
goes
to
Waterford Thursday, while
South Galha entertams

Sunday In-Column: 1:00 p .m.
For Sundi!JYS Paper

Insertion.

We will not tcnowln
accept any lldver

Bryan Waltarllphoto

All Display 12 Noon 2
Business Days Prior To
Publication

r

nowopapa
copta only he!
anted ada meetln
OE llandards.

Southern 's Cheyenne Dunn (20) drtbbles past South Gallia
defender Ltndsay Johnson (25) dunng Monday nigt\t's nonconference g1rls basketball game 111 Racme.

Dally In-Column: 1:00 p.m.
Monday-Friday for Insertion
In Next Day's Paper

y or publlcotlon an
FOUND
In front of PI
he Trlbunt·Santlnel
Pieasanl Ftre Dept a set of
eglater
will
GMC Keys 304 593 0570
aponalble for n.,. 11 . ..,
ore th., the coat
YARDSALE
he space occuple
c:::.:..;:..::;::.::;.;...:.:c.::.:..::..=
the error and onl
Christmas Wreaths &amp; Grave
ha lirot
W
YARD SALE·
Blankets $5-$25 (740)949 ~' 4
all not be liable lo
2115 7409493151 Sues
PoMEROYIMIOOLI:
y toss or expen
Greenhouse
hat result&amp; from t
7 family garage sale Nov
ubllcatton or omit
Publ1c Notice Please be 27th thru 30th ra1n or sh1ne
ton of an advert!
not1f1ed anyone caught tres- 33400 New Lima Rutland
ent. Cortectlons wll
pass1ng
on the property of 740 742·2716
made In the flrt
Alex
McCauseland
m ii;ir'"-.;~~~--,
vallable edition.
Henderson &amp; Pl1ny, wv with\\ANTED

Thio

fromPageBl

Display Ads

OhloValloy
Publishing reserves
lhe right to edit,
reject or cancel any
ad at any time.
Errore
Must
B
aported on the firs

968

Southern

Oearl~ir~

Word Ads

9

6

s-o

17 Oregon
18 Clemson

Webs1tes.
In One Week With Us·
www.mydatlytnbune
com
E-mail www mydatlysentlllel.com
classified@ mydallytnbune.com REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS
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PLUS YOUR AD NOW ONLINE
To Place
~rtbune
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Your Ad, (740) 446-2342 (740) 992-2156 (304) 675-1333
Call Today... or F11x To (740) 44&amp;-3ooa
or Fax To (740) 992-2~57

4

7

973
4-1 964
4-1 950
671
4-1
766
6.()
742
5-1 • 511
495
5-1
454
234
5-1
225
217
5-1
4-1 199
4·1
173
5-1
163

12 LOUISVil le
13 Marquette
14 Pittsbu rgh
15 lnd ana
16 Butler

OH

1 536 5
1 360
, 353

ter

Gallia
County

, 736 1
1 727 2
1 689 3
, 577

Sentinel - l\e
C L-AS S I"F I E D

The Daily Sentinel • Page 83

TRUCK DRIVER NEEDED
Henderson WV Based
COl License &amp; 2yrs
E)(perlence MVR Reqwred
Call (304)675 7434

1150

S&lt;'HOOI.S
h''lllliCfiON

Gallipolis Career Collega
(Careers Close To Home)
Call Today' 740 446-4367
1800 2140452
wwwgalllpohscareer~o llagecom
Accmd1lod Momber Accrod1!1ng
Counc I lor lnd61JOndMI Collngos

i

1nves11gated

!he

MONEY

1'0 LoAN

uNOTICt:**
Borrow Smart Contact
the Oho DIVISIOn ol
Fmanc1al
Instituti on's
OffiCii ol
Consumer
AHa1rs BEFORE you refi
nance your home or
obtam a loan Bt;WARE
of requests tor any large
advance payments o1
fees or msurance Call the
OffiCS
of
Consumar
Atfa1rs toll free at t 866
278 0003 to learn 1f the
broker
or
mortgage
lender
IS
properly
licensed (TI11s 1s a publiC
serv1ce announcement
from the Oho Valley
Pubhshmg Company)

P'

I
• 100C&gt;o financ ng
• less than perfect credit
accepted
• Payment cou ld be th e
same as rent
Mortgage
Locators
(74 0)367 OOOO
By BUilder affordable new
4BR 2 1r2 bath
2 car
garage Green Elem area
Great location 446 9966
House tor sale 1n Rac1ne
area Approx 4 acres all
professionally landscaped
Ranch style house w11tl 4
bedrooms liv1ng room dm
lflQ room kllchen large lam
ty room central a1r gas heat
and 1 fireplace Add 1hon of a
large Flonda room com
pletely cedar opens onto
patiO &amp; pool area Heated 1n
ground pool enclosed by'pfl

111
r~

iO

\Ill'

HouSEl
RENr

FOR

I.

2 &amp; 3 bedroom houses for
rent no pets, (740)992-5858

2br Total Electnc AC $300
a month plus utlilltes
References 304-675-481'4
38R 1n Fa•rland or South
Galila SO 2BA 1n Hannan
Trace • SOuth Gall1a SO
740 256-1686
N1ce 2BA at Johnsons
Mobile Home Park 740 446
2003

~ra,ler lor rent, 3BR, 2 BA

r ~~

can 367-7762 or 446-4060

1 and 2 bedroom apart2 bedroom
house m ments furnished and unlur
Middleport for more 1ntorma- mshed, and houses 1n
tiOn call (740)992 1821
Pomeroy and Middleport,
2BR home m New Haven
R1ver Frontage references
credit check reqwred CElli
304-932 7462 or 304 573
6334

security depOSit requ1red, no
pets, 740·992~2218
1br &amp; 2br atl utllllles patd 1n
Po1nt Pleasant 304 360
0 163

2BR 1n town (GallipOliS) 1br Apartmenl turo1shed
$550/mon No pets Call $475 all utilities paJd qu1et
~::::::::::~~~ 441-0110 Of 992-5174
neighborhood References
For sale by owner 3BR 2BR 1 Bath No pets 1638 Depo~t 304 593 8187'
Ranch
1 bath
Fam1ly Chatham Ave 740·446· IBR Apt, W/D hookup$
Room Stove/Fndge WID 4234 or 208-7861
1nterne-t1satelllte TV 1ncl
Included As~ng $70 000 - - - - - - - - w/rent close to hospital Call
Call 740·709-6339
3 bd house close to
Ordrnance elem $495 plus 740 339-0362
House
for
SALEI
3 depoSit and references 2 Bdrm downtown renovat
Bedroom 5th St , New Available Dec 1 304 755 ed laminate floors $525 mo
Haven WV $35 500 740 8744 or 304 675 6i57
mcludes water &amp; trash No
992 5641
Pels (740)709-1690
3 Bedroom House m
New home m Ga ll1polls Syracuse $500imonth + 2 bedroom Apt Utilll1es pa1d
2BR 2BA 3 acres ~ depoSit No Pets (304}675 $600 a month $400 deposit
REDUCED' $80 000 Call 5332 weekends 740 591 No Rats m Pt Pleasant call
740-446-7029
0265
304 675 8872
_N_IC_e-8-R-ne_w_ly-r-em_od_e_le-d - - - - - - - 3
New WH &amp; Furn CIA 3 BA house 1n Gallipolis Apartment for rent 1 2
Appliance Included Across WID connecbon $450/mo Bdrm remodeled new car
$250/dep You pay all ut1ht1es pet, stove &amp; fng water
rrom Vmton Elem $65 000 404-4 56 3802
sewer trash pd M1ddleport
740 245 5555 or 441 5105
$425 00
No pets
Ret
3BR 1 bath rn B1dwell reqwred 740-843 5264
MOBILE HO~IIS
$575/mo + sec dep 446
RlR SALE
Apt for Rent No Pets 740
3644
38~ 1 5 bath house 1n 992 5856
Warga
2001 Double town $575/rent + sec dep Apts 1n Metgs County In
446 3644
town No Pets Oepos11
w1de on concrete foundation -::-::---,-:------c-:-:
-_ReqUired {740)992·5174 or
1n great cond1t1on with 10 3BR 1BA laundry room 65 (740)441 0110
acres of land 5 m1le s from Mdl Creek No pets 740Poml Pleasant on black top 446 9523
Beautiful Apts at Jackson
road $85 000 304-675 1730 - - - - - - - , - Estates
52 Westwood
or 304-895·3082
3B r 2 car garage C1ty Dnve, from $365 to $560
-------~ School D1stnct Water &amp; 740 446 2568
Equal
New 3 Bedroom homes from appliances
mcluded Housmg Opportunity This
$214 36 per mon,'h Jn cl udes $6001mth A e1 Aeq 740 InStitutiOn IS an Equal
many upgrades delivery &amp; 446 0969
Opportunity Prov1der and
set up (740)385 2434
Employer
3br 2ba 5 m11es out of Pt
Rent to own 2Bed 1 1 '2
Pleasant on AI 2 $450 a CONVENIENTLY LOCATbath MH $2 000 down
month + depos1t 304 675 ED &amp; AFFOROABL~
$432 00 month for 48 1556
Townhouse
apartments
months Includes lot renl
and/or small houses FOR
water trash &amp; sewer 388
Attenllonl
RENf Call (740)441 1111
Local company otfenng NO for applicatiOn &amp; nformallon
0173
l!!l:l:""-~----, DOWN PAYMENT" pro
BUSINESS
grams tor you to buy your
AND BUU.OINGS
home nstead ot rentmg
• 100% financing
Two
story
Appartment • Less than perfect credtt •2&amp;3 bedroom apartments
Bu1ld1ng For Sale m New accepted
•Central heat &amp; AJC
Haven WV $27 000 304 • Payment could be the
•Washer/dryer
hookup
6~~~~!2±~~~ same as re nl
r.
•Tenant
pays
electnc
Mortgage
Locators
1740)367 0000
(304)882-3017

Ellm View
Apartments

L---·

vacy len cmg and land
scaped Fm1shed 2 car
garage attached to house MOBILE HOME LOT FOR
and f1n1shed &amp; heated 3 car RENT 1031 Georges Creek
un anached Rd 441-11 11
garage

~:~~~,~~-~;~~:;;;~ ~~ad~a:~

Wanted • Acreage to lease
for the 2008 Deer Season
Would prefer 200+ acres for
fam1ly &amp; fnends to hunt (no
ou tfitters) please contact
(628)-279-6159 or (826·)
689·8516

ril

Off SA t4t 3BR 2BA
appliances basement 1 car
garage
SSOO 'mo
plub
depos1t 1614)226-0859

.-f,-IN"'"D-:8-A_..RG-:-A-IN""S::-:Ic:-:N=TH""E""C:-:-l-:-A-=:SS:-::If::::IE::D:-=-tS

(740)949 2217

•
.:=Mo=de=rn=1 B:....ed-roo..:::m..:::.ap""lc'-all
446-0390

PHOFF1NC )N II

Sf RVI(

f);

TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY ISS!?
No Fee Unless We W1n 1
1 866 582 3345
IH II I· ' I Ill
10

HOMI;~

1'1lR SAU
m nl 4 bed
Od own paye
rooms large yard Covered
deCk At1ached garage 140
307 7129
2 story home w/ Rver lot
3br 2 ba 2 car garage 304
675 2867

js'fi()'pCLASSIFIEDSI
- - - - - - - - - - - __,..--1--

- ____.. ____ - -

--

�Page 82 • The Daily Sentinel

www .mydailysentinel.com

Tuesday, November 27.

www.mydailysentinel.com

2007

Cincinnati upends SC-Upstate, 69-57 North Carolina stays No. 1 in a
CINCINNATI &lt;AP) Deonta V&amp;ughn scored 19
pomts Monday mght, takmg
advantage of open shou
from behmd the 3-pomt arc,
and Cmcmnau pulled away
to a 69-57 HCtory over wmless
South
CarolmaUpstate
Cmcmnatt (4-2) broke the
game open m the second
half behind Vaughn , who
went 5-ot-8 from beh1rtd the
arc
overall.
Adam
Hrycaniuk added 13 points
and I 0 rebounds, helpmg
the b1gger Bearcats dominate the boards.
Luke Payne scored 19
pomts for South CarohnaUpstate (0-6), which IS havmg a rough introductton to
Division I. The young
Spartans have played all

the1r games on the ro.1d. losmg live of them by doubledigits
Fellow All,muc Sun member Belmont opened the -season wtth an 86-75 Vll tory ,n
Cmcmnau on Nov. 9. a upoff that the Bearcats were
headed for a rough opemng
stretch of the1r own. Coach
M1ck Cronm, m his second
season d1ggmg out Irum the
aftermath of Bob Hugg1ns '
ouster, has tned JUSt about
everythmg to get a good
combmat1un on the floor
He's got more expenmentmg ahead.
Though bigger and qutcker, the Bearcats agam struggled 111 the first ~all agamst
a team that d1dn 't make a lot
of nustakes At one pomt,
Cromn ~e nt out a hneup of

fo ur
treshmen
and
Hrycanmk, a semor center.
There were four ues and
SIX lead changes 111 the
openmg 16 mmutes. wtth
netthet team up hy more
than three S.C -Up~tate.
which had only two
turnover~ to that pumt , committed th1ee du11ng a late
I 0-point run by Ctncmnau
Vaughn had 3-pomters that
st.Irted and ltmshed the run,
puttmg the Beat cats ahead
to stay 30-22.
Cmcmnatt broke the game
open by pushmg the pace
and htttmg open 3-potnters
Larry Da&gt; ts, Vaughn and
Marvin Gentry made 3s durtng a 13-pomt run that put
Cmcmnatl ahead 58-38
mtdway through the second
half.

I AII~Ohio ~II Ust
Warren Howland

(AP) The 2007
DMSton I AII·Ohto

Coochoa of the year

I team, based on the
~n1o~~lions Of a alate media

Jarvts Gibson Cle S , Tim Flossie,
A,kr Ftreatone

SocanciToam
OFFENSE· Ends- Andy Cruse Cln
Turp1n, 8-4, 210, sr t ]\lrone WHiiams, E
Cle Shaw 6-5. 185, ~ Llhemen-

Matt Gneser, Cole Watterson 6·5, 310

Nordonla,

Frank

sr, Cory Sortce, Day Carroll, 6-4 320,
. Colin E1111rett, Uniontown Lake, '6-3,
, sr., Marc Stevens.
H,
sr : Alex Jones 1
• Cody Connare.
Bill

Carlson,
Wackerly N
Aaron Pankratz,

Canton Hoover.
Macedonia Nordonla,

Er~c

Magnaccfi,

Mass Perry Erick Howard, N Canton

Hoover, John Hamilton. Macedonia
Nordonta, Steve Yoder, Mass
Washtngton, Luke Miller, Wadsworth

WMney

Me&lt;elluo. Akr Garfti\ld, David

Baughman, Mass Perry, Matt Vlck,
Perry,

Mike

Kelker,

~rtbune -

•,

-men's poll with plenty of changes
BY

JIM O'CoNNELL

AP BASKETBALl WRITER

The many hohday tournaments d1dn 't cause any
changes at the top of The
Assoetated Press' men's college basketball poll
The bottom of the Top 25,
however, was another matter
alter 13 ranked teams lost a
game last week
North C.1rohna held tls
shm lead over No 2 UCLA
on Monday as the top f1ve
teams stayed the same from
last week.
F1ve schools fell out of the
Top 25 whtle others made
stgnificant JUmps and falls.
The Tar Heels (5-0), who
beat South Carohna State,
Old Domimon and BYU lust
week, recened 28 ftrst-place
votes - two more than last
week - and 1,725 pomts
from the 72-member national media panel.
UCLA (6-0), desptte losmg one first-place vote from
last week's 26, \\3S agam
mne potnts behind North
Carohna The Brums beat
Maryland, Mtchtgan State
and Yale last week.
Memphts (S-0), whtch
beat Arkansas State 111 tts
only game last week. was
No I on 18 ballots, one less
than last week, and had the
same total of 1,689 points
Kansas (5-0), which beat
A11zona 76-72 m ovenune
on Sund.1y, and Georgetown
(1 -0), whtch won at Ball
State and again received the
only other ftrst-place vote,
held fourth and fifth.
Then came the changes.
Washington State, Duke,
Texas and Texas A&amp;M
jumped to take sixth through
ninth, while Michigan State
stayed No. 10.
Washtngton State (6-0)
beat Montana, Mississippi
Valley State and Air Force to

wvu

fromPageBl
a coach

JUmp from nmth , while
Duke (6-0) rode Its tttle tn
the M,un lnvttat tOnal to
JUmp stx spots to No. 7.
Texas (5-0) and Texas
A&amp;M (6-0) won the
Legends Classtc and NIT
Season T1p-Ofl, respectively, and both moved up seven
places.
The live newcomers mo&gt; e
m as a block from 20th
through 24th: W1scons1n,
BYU , Southern Caltforma,
Xavter and North Carohna
State.
,
Teams that tell out were
Southern lllino1s. Y1llanova,
Syracuse. Vtrgtnta and
Flonda
Tennessee, wh1ch lost to
Texas 97-78 111 the Legends
Classic fmal, dropped four
spots to II th and was followed
by
LouiSVIlle,
Marquette.
Ptttsburgh ,
lndtana, Butler, Oregon ,
Clemson. Gonzaga and
Wisconsm
The last live ranked teams
were
BYU , Southern
Caltfornta, Xavier, North
Carohna State and Kansas
State.
The biggest drops were by
lnd1ana and Kansas State,
whtch both fell seven places
lndtana (4-1) dropped to
15th after an 80-65 loss to
Xav1er, while Kansas State
(5-I) fell to 25th after losing
tis ftrst round game m the
Old Sptce Classic, 87-77, to
George Mason.
Lomsville, wh1ch started
the \\eek wtth the news
semor center Davtd Padgett
would m1ss s1gmficant ttme
with a knee inJury, dropped
to 12th after a 78-76 loss to
BYU.
Southern Illinots and
V11lanova both lost 111 tournament
· champtonshtp
games, the Salukts to
Southern California in the
Anahetm Classic and the
W1ldcats to North Carolma
"You're always looking
for
something
when
you're struggling ltke we
are," he said. "You're
always looking for thtngs
to add to the game. And
playing West Virgtma, the

State at the Old Spice
C!,t"lc
Syt .Icuse lust to Oh1u
State 111 the senufmals of the
NIT
Season
T1p-Off,
V1rginia lost to Seton Hall
and two-time defendmg
national champion Flonda
tell to Flm1da State
Of the live newcomers,
only Wtsconsin d1dn 't beat a
ranked team. The Badgers
(S-Ol had easy wms overColorado and Georg1a last
week
Southern Ca!IIorma and
North Caroltna State both
returned after a week out of
the Top 25 The other three
newcomers were ail ranked
at some pomt last season
There are stx games thts
week between ranked teams
Wtsconsin at Duke, North
Carohn,t State at Michtgan
State: Oregon at Kansas
State, lnd1ana at Southern
Ilhnms, Kans.Is at Southern
Ca!Iforni,t , and Texas at
UCLA.
1 North Carol1na (28) 5-0
6·0
2 UCLA (25)
3 Mecnpn1s 118)
50
5-0
4 Kansas
30
5 Georgetown ( 1)
6-0
6 Wash1ngton St
6-0
7 Du ke

s-o

B TaMas
9 Texas A&amp;M

6.()

, 163

10 MIChigan s,t

4-1

1 015

11 Tenne ssee

51

1 240

11
17
8

22
12
24
14

s-o

19 Gonzaga

s-o

20 W1sconsm
21 BYU
.22 Southern Cal

23 Xav1er
24 N C State
25 Kansas St

Monday thru Friday

8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m
AD

13
15
16 '
10

18

Others rece1v1ng votes Villaoova 162

Vanderbilt 109 Syracuse 00 Arizona 85 S
IllinOIS 80 Miami 68 A~ansas 64 V1rgm.a
62 Seton Hall 54 Ohio St 53 Sa1m Mary's
Cal1 f 50, Connecticut 34 George Mason
34 Stanford 27 Boston College 18
MISSOUn 18 West V1fgln13 17 Florida 12
New Orleans 9 Baylor 5 Illinois 4
Kentucky 4 Mlam1 (Oh1o) 3, Oh10 2 George
Washington 1 New rvJexiCO 1 Texas Tech 1

nvalry 1s one th ing. Now
you're playing a real qualIty team, maybe the best in
the country. It all adds to
the excttement of the
game, there's no question"

*POLICIES*

All-Ohio
from PageBl
the defenstve honors.
Housewnght, a ftrst-team
all-stater a year ago, passed
for 2,568 yards and 31
touchdowns with etght
mtercepllons, and ran for

656 yards and six more
scores
Schooley will lead No 8
Louisville up against 12thranked Cmcmnati Anderson
m the D1vi-ston II playoff
· fmal Fnday mght at
Massillon's Paul Brown
Ttger Stadium.
Jarvis G1bson. who gutded Cleveland South to Its

ftrst playoff appearance and
an 8-2 mark, and Akron
Ftrestone 's venerable Tim
Flossie, who took over a
struggling program two
years ago and turned tt mto
an Akron C1ty Senes champion, were the coaches of
the year F1restone also
made tts f1rst tnp to the
playoffs

then began a charge of
mtense defensive pressure
that forced Southern into
eleven
ftrst-quarter
turnovers, seven of which
resulted in Rebel steals.
Kasey Turley hit 3-4 at
the lme and Breanna Taylor
h1t a three to keep Southern
surprisingly close despite
the miscues. Finally, a quarter ending fast break Swain
·lay-tn gave SG the 18-8
advantage after tound one.
Not only dtd South Galha
pick up the defens1ve pressure in the second period,
but also hit a 4-4 scoring
streak that padded their
already b1g lead. Southern
overcame turnovers and cut
the gap to 26-18 on threepotnt goals from Turley
Taylor, and fteld goals from
Tucker and Cheyenne
Dunn.
South Galha called ttme
out, made adjustments, and
jumped back mto tts full
court pressure where the left
side of the Galha defense
began to devour Southern
pa~ses The Lady Rebels of
Coach Bret Bosttc ran the
floor well m transition The
unselfish play boosted the
Lady Rebel lead to 37-22 at
the half
Southern (0-3 overall)
ended the ftrst half wtth 26
turnovers Turley led SHS
wtth ten at the half and
Taylor had s1x. Shendan
and Stowers each had nme
at the half for South Galha
Southern played a much
better second half, but still
the turnovers mounted.
Behtnd a 10-point Turley
surge Southern played even
wtth the vtsltors. Jasmine
Waugh had a btg sevenpomt tally to lead her club,
with Shendan, Fulks, .
Swain, and Adkins hitchmg
ndes on the scoring
carousel SG led 54-38 after
three, then outscored the
hosts 13-9 gomg down the
stretch to wm 67-47
Southern htt 15-34 overall, hmmg 11-27 two's, 4-7
three's, and 13-18 at the

Box number ads a
!ways confidential.
Currant
ppllos.

rata car

All
Real
Eatat
vertl••m•nta ar
bject to tho Fedora
air Houalng Act o

lsement In vlolatlo
the lllw.

Description • Include A Price • Avoid Abbreviations
• Include Phone Number And Address When Needed
• Ads Should Run 7 Days

r

Found blac~ lab at letart
Locks and Dam, Call 247· An Excellent way to earn
money The New Avon
2147
Call Mar1lyn 304 882 2645

Loat and Found ........................................... OGO

•

13 9 -

87
47

SOUTH GALLI A 12-1) - Nlkl Fulks 3 0·
0 6 Taylor Duncan 0 0·0 0, Chelaea
Stowers 5 4·614, Jennifer Sheridan 7 0·
0 i 5 Stephama Sebastian 0 0 0 0
Hallee Swain 5 1·1 11, Jasmine Waugh
15 3 5 i 3 Lindsay Johnson 2 0 0 4
Nataaha Adkins 1 0·1 2, Morgan
Gilliland 1 0 0 2. Chelsea Johnson 0 0·
0 0 Cryslal Adkins 0 0-Q 0 TOTALS 29
8-16 67 Three-point goals (1)
Sheridan
SOUTHERN (0·3)- Kasey Turley 8 8·
9 26 Breanna Taylor 3 0-0 8, Cheyenne,
Dunn 3 4-o5 10, Lindsay Teaford 0 0·1 1
Lynzee Tucker 1 0-0 2. Chels1 A1fCh18 0
0-0 o Gabby Johnson 0 0-0 0 Jayhn
Sn1der 0 0-0 0 Totals 15 13 ~ 18 47
Three pomt goals (4) Turley~ Taylor 2

1 1!-ltr-11' I'D f~J:L­

MoRt; C0Mf1&gt;R1ABL,;
If YoiJ M£:1?-E!-Y
B~G€'D ATIH&amp;:

I)INNER iABLE,

Lola l Acreage..................................... ...350
Mlscetlaneoua...................................... 170
Miscellaneous Merchandise...... .......
540
Mobile Home Repair.... .. ......... .......
860
Mobile Homes lor Rent .......................... 420
Mobile Homes for Sala................................320
Money to Loan .............................................220
Motorcycles &amp; 4 Wheelers .................. ...740
Musical Instruments.. ..... . . ... . ....... 570
Pereonata ...........,.....
......... .. . .. . . ..005
Pets lor Sale............ . ........
............... 560
Plumbing &amp; Heating. . ....... . ......
...820
Proleaalonal Sarvices ..................... ...230
Radio, TV &amp; CB Repair ............................. t60
Real Eotata Wanted .................................... 360
Schools Instruction....... ......... ......... . t 50
Seed , Plant &amp; Fertilizer........ .......
.... 650
Situations Wonted.... .... .......... . .......
...120
Space for Rent .........................................460
Sporting Gooda ...........................................520
SUV's far Sale..............................................720
Trucks lor Sale ............................................ 715
Upholatery ...................................... . . ...'. 870
Van a For Sale. . ......... . ........ ........ .730
wanted to Buy..........
..090
Wonted ta Buy· Farm Suppllas ................ 620
Wonted To Do .............................................. 180
Wanted Ia Rent .......................................... 470
Yard Sale- Galllpolla....................................072
Yard Sate-Pomeroy/Middle....
....... ... 074
Yard Sate-Pt. PleaHnt.......... ...... . .... 076

..!· ---...-·-

~

- ----

HOMES

AVON! All Areasl To Buy or
Sell
Shirley Spears 304·
675-1429

This newspaper will not
knowingly accept

advertisements for real
estate which Is 1n
violation of the law Our
readers are hereby
Informed that all
dwellings advertised In
lhla newspaper are
ava 1table on an equal
opportunity baaea

II ~1

~~
by NEA, Inc

---- -~-----

www com1cs com

@ 2007

Need someone to take care
of your loved one m the1 r
home m Gall1p011s 1 Pt
Pleasant Call me (740)446·
7165
-:c::----c--~--:-Offenng fu ll t1me care for the
elderly lad 1es 1n my home
20 years exper~ence excel
lent references Call for
more InformatiOn 740 446
4300

Manpower IS now h1nng lor
the
followmg
pos1t10ns
sq ft
Automob1le
Qrodut on
remodeled Ranch on 1 acre
Workers 1n the Butlalo WV
m/1 In Gallipolis New kit w'
Area BenefitS a\lallable Call
pantry &amp; laundry rm Huge
Today 304 757·3338
master su11e w/ FP &amp; pnvate
_
entrance DR lR w/ gas FP/
Metal Fabncator IS acceptAttached carport 2 car
mg resumes for th e 1oII ow1ng
garage &amp; pnvacy fence Nat
'1'l:il""-~~~~-, gas Heat pump &amp; CIA Exc
pos1110ns 30 Dra her (AuIo 6
CAD) Eng1neer. Part room
Cond Ready to move 1n
clerl&lt; and Ouls1de Sales
0PI'OR1l!NITI'
$98,500 neg 740 645 8751
Person
Compensat1on ..__oiiiioiiiiioiiiititlt-"

_c_______

Chnst1an Company seek1ng
Manager to work hom home
$2 000-$6 000 per month
exc Benef1ts FT IPT can
668 434 6256
bised upon expenence
Please submit resume and 3
profeSSIOnal references to
70764 ST At 124 VInton
OH 45686 by Dec 14

riO

BUSINESS

AVON Start your own bus1
Attention!
ness today' earn up to 50% Local company offenng "NO
Call Sharon 1-866-640- DOWN PAYMENT" pro
2866 lnd Rep
grams for you to buy your
home mstead of renting

0hiO Valley Home Health
Inc hmng STNA CNA
Home Health A1des and
Personal Care A1des Full
Part T1me and Per D1em
poSitions available
Apply
at 1480 Jackson P1ke

•NOTICE•
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH
lNG CO recommends
that you do busu1ess w1th
people you know and
NOT to sand money
through the ma1l unlil you

Gallipolis phon e 441 1393

have

IOJ Sk1lleQ Off1ce or apply at
1456 Jackson P1ke phone
441 9263
for
Passpori/Pnvate
Care
• Compet1t1va Wages
Olfice
and
BenefitS 1ncludmg
Insurance
and
health
m1leage

offenng

OTR Drivers needed Must
be at least 24 yrs old and
have 3 yrs expenence Apply
1n person at 2204 Jackson
P1ke
Laborer-Earn
as You - - - - - - - Learn
Start butldmg for
POST OFFICE NOW
your future NOW by )om1ng
HIRING
our ProfessiOnal Team and
Avg Pay $20/hr or
Pressure
Cleamng
$57K annually
Mamtenance Technician All Including Federal Benefits
positions requtre extended
and OT Pcud Tra1mng
TRAVEL outSide the state
Vacat1ons-FT1PT
Company prov1des lodg1ng
1·866·542-1531
transportation
and Per
Delm AVERAGE starting
wage with cost of benefits
mcluded IS $210 00 per field
day waffled With a chance to
advance up to $255 00 per
field day worked We provide

---ccu_sccw::-A---::=::-:-

pa1d tra1nmg ard EXCEl
LENT BENEFITS
Pre
employment DRUG TEST
and a valid Onver s Ln:;ense
are requ1red Class A CCL
IS a plus but not requ1red
WE WILl BE TAKING
APPLICATIONS
AND
INTERVIEWING
FROM
9 00 am unt1l 5 00 PM ON
DECEMBER 4th AT THE
BEST WESTERN INN 701
W MAIN ST RIPLEY WV
ANO ON OECEMBER 51h
AT THE WINGATE INN
1502 GRANO ' CENTRAL
AVENUE VIENNA WV OR
send work h1story and day
11me phone number to
TechniCian Tra1nee PO Box
565 Manana, Oh1o 45750
EOE

Tr.uck Dnvers CDL CICISS A
Reqwred m1mmum ol 5
dnvmg
exp
year s
Expenence
on
Overdelmen:)I Oilal loads
Must have good dr1vmg
record Earn up 'til $2 000
weekly For app l1cat1oo Call
MF
(304)722 2184
8'30am-4pm

Person for l1ve m With elderly
lady Call740 3~7 7129

All real attate adver11aing
in thla newspaper IS
subject to the Federal
Fair Housing Act of 1988
wh1ch m..es II !Hegel to
adVertise 'any
preference, limitation or
dulcrimlnanon basod on
race, color, rel1g10n, sex
farniUal status or national
ongln, or any mt.ntlon to
make any such
preference, tlmltatlon or
discrimination '

Wem to buy Junk Cars call
Male Dalmatian 3 to 4 years
74().388·0864
old outside Dog
Phone
I \11'1 !l\ \11 '\I
304-675-3161 or 304-675Lookmg for a good auto
0542
' ' It\ I&lt; I '
mechamc send resume to
78 Setty Road Albany Oh
45710

Equipment for Rent ..................................... 480

17
18

10

•--•TOilioBIJYiooit--•

Excavatlng ................................................... 830
Farm Equipment.................................. .. .. 610
Farma lor Rent. ........ . . ......... .. ..............430
Farms lor Sale.......... ............................. 330
" For Lease ................................................490
For Sala..... . ................ .. ..... . ................ 585
For Sale or Trada .........................................590
Fruita &amp; Vegetables .................................... 580
Fumlshed Rooma ........................................450
General Hauling....................... ....... .. 850
Giveaway...................... .. ........ . . ....
040
Happy Ada....... • • .......... ........ ... .......
050
Hoy &amp; Grein................. .. ......... .............640
Help wanted .............................................110
Home lmpravements...................................810
Homes lor Sale............................................ 310
Household Goods .................................... 510
Hause a lor Rent..... .. ........ ....... ... ...... 410
In Memoriam.............. . .. ..
............020
Insurance .......................................... 130
Lawn &amp; Garden Equlpment ........................ 660
Llveatock ......................................................630

19
14

POLICIES Ohio Valley Publishing reserves tha nght to ethl reject or cancal any ad at any 11rnt Enora muat be reponed on lhl first day
Tnbun•Sentlnei-Aeg1ster wlll be respon1lble tor no mora than the cott of 1he space occupied by tht arror and only the llratlnstrtton We
any toss or expense that results from the publication or om11~on ol an advertisement Correction will be made In the flrs1 available edition
are always contldentl&amp;l • Current rate card appllee • All real estate ad11ertlsaments are 1ubject to the Federal P:alr Hou1lng Act of 1M8
eccept• only help wanted ads
1 EOE standards W. will not knowingly accept any advenlslng In vtolatlon Of the law

KIT &amp; CARLYLE

out wntten permiSSIOn on
them shall be subJect to
1mmed.ate arrest &amp; prosecu Absolute Top Dollar US
t1on
S1lver and Gold Coins
Proofsets, Gold R1ngs. Pre
Curre ncy
1935
US
GIVEAWAY
Solitaire 0 1amonds· M T S
Com Shop 15 t Second
3 beautiful house broken k1t· Avenue Gallipolis 74()..446
2642
lens 304-895·3013

Apartments lor Rent .................................. 440
AucUon Flea Market ........
.080
Auto Porta &amp; Accessories..
...... 760
Auto Repair............... .... ...... . ........ . . .. 770
Autos lor Sale............... ....... ......... ...710
Boats &amp; Molars for Sale .... . . ..... ... ..... 750
Building Suppllas........................................550
ll!!llntnlnd IIYII!Ilng§ ............................. 340
Business Opportunity .................................21 0
Buslnau Trainlng ....................................... 140
Campara &amp; Motor Homes ........................ 790
Camping Equipment ................................... 780
Carda afThanka ........................................010
Child/Elderly Care ....................................... 190
Elactrtcai/Relrlgeratlon ...............................840

South 011111 87, Southern 47

• All ads must be prepatd'

k1tncarlyle@comcast net

Antiques................................... .................530

S (lalila
18
Southern 8

Thursday for Sundays

Now you can have borders and graphics
~
added to your classified ads
(.~
Jm
Borders $3.00/per ad
l!iit1
Graphics 50¢ for small
$1.00 for large

RJRSALE

4x4's For Sale............. ......... ................. 725
Announcement ............................................ 030

Cross- La~es, WV Fnday

sunday DiSplay: 1:00

• Start Your Ads With A Kevword • Include Complete

\\\(1\ \(I \ II \ I \

CLASSIFIED INDEX

ltne. Southern had 27
rebounds (Turley 8, Dunn
8), six steals, five asststs, 46
turnovers and 17 fouls
South Galha htt '29-68
overall, ~tttmg 29-59 tw?'s,
1-9 threes, and was 8-ot-16
at the lme. South Gallla had
24 rebounds (Waugh 6,
Fulks four, Sheridan five),
24 steals (fulks I 0, Waugh
5, Stowers four), 15 assists
(Stowers 5, Fulks 4), IS
turnovers, and 17 fouls.
Southern
goes
to
Waterford Thursday, while
South Galha entertams

Sunday In-Column: 1:00 p .m.
For Sundi!JYS Paper

Insertion.

We will not tcnowln
accept any lldver

Bryan Waltarllphoto

All Display 12 Noon 2
Business Days Prior To
Publication

r

nowopapa
copta only he!
anted ada meetln
OE llandards.

Southern 's Cheyenne Dunn (20) drtbbles past South Gallia
defender Ltndsay Johnson (25) dunng Monday nigt\t's nonconference g1rls basketball game 111 Racme.

Dally In-Column: 1:00 p.m.
Monday-Friday for Insertion
In Next Day's Paper

y or publlcotlon an
FOUND
In front of PI
he Trlbunt·Santlnel
Pieasanl Ftre Dept a set of
eglater
will
GMC Keys 304 593 0570
aponalble for n.,. 11 . ..,
ore th., the coat
YARDSALE
he space occuple
c:::.:..;:..::;::.::;.;...:.:c.::.:..::..=
the error and onl
Christmas Wreaths &amp; Grave
ha lirot
W
YARD SALE·
Blankets $5-$25 (740)949 ~' 4
all not be liable lo
2115 7409493151 Sues
PoMEROYIMIOOLI:
y toss or expen
Greenhouse
hat result&amp; from t
7 family garage sale Nov
ubllcatton or omit
Publ1c Notice Please be 27th thru 30th ra1n or sh1ne
ton of an advert!
not1f1ed anyone caught tres- 33400 New Lima Rutland
ent. Cortectlons wll
pass1ng
on the property of 740 742·2716
made In the flrt
Alex
McCauseland
m ii;ir'"-.;~~~--,
vallable edition.
Henderson &amp; Pl1ny, wv with\\ANTED

Thio

fromPageBl

Display Ads

OhloValloy
Publishing reserves
lhe right to edit,
reject or cancel any
ad at any time.
Errore
Must
B
aported on the firs

968

Southern

Oearl~ir~

Word Ads

9

6

s-o

17 Oregon
18 Clemson

Webs1tes.
In One Week With Us·
www.mydatlytnbune
com
E-mail www mydatlysentlllel.com
classified@ mydallytnbune.com REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS
www.mydatlyregtsler com
PLUS YOUR AD NOW ONLINE
To Place
~rtbune
Sentinel
l\egtster
Your Ad, (740) 446-2342 (740) 992-2156 (304) 675-1333
Call Today... or F11x To (740) 44&amp;-3ooa
or Fax To (740) 992-2~57

4

7

973
4-1 964
4-1 950
671
4-1
766
6.()
742
5-1 • 511
495
5-1
454
234
5-1
225
217
5-1
4-1 199
4·1
173
5-1
163

12 LOUISVil le
13 Marquette
14 Pittsbu rgh
15 lnd ana
16 Butler

OH

1 536 5
1 360
, 353

ter

Gallia
County

, 736 1
1 727 2
1 689 3
, 577

Sentinel - l\e
C L-AS S I"F I E D

The Daily Sentinel • Page 83

TRUCK DRIVER NEEDED
Henderson WV Based
COl License &amp; 2yrs
E)(perlence MVR Reqwred
Call (304)675 7434

1150

S&lt;'HOOI.S
h''lllliCfiON

Gallipolis Career Collega
(Careers Close To Home)
Call Today' 740 446-4367
1800 2140452
wwwgalllpohscareer~o llagecom
Accmd1lod Momber Accrod1!1ng
Counc I lor lnd61JOndMI Collngos

i

1nves11gated

!he

MONEY

1'0 LoAN

uNOTICt:**
Borrow Smart Contact
the Oho DIVISIOn ol
Fmanc1al
Instituti on's
OffiCii ol
Consumer
AHa1rs BEFORE you refi
nance your home or
obtam a loan Bt;WARE
of requests tor any large
advance payments o1
fees or msurance Call the
OffiCS
of
Consumar
Atfa1rs toll free at t 866
278 0003 to learn 1f the
broker
or
mortgage
lender
IS
properly
licensed (TI11s 1s a publiC
serv1ce announcement
from the Oho Valley
Pubhshmg Company)

P'

I
• 100C&gt;o financ ng
• less than perfect credit
accepted
• Payment cou ld be th e
same as rent
Mortgage
Locators
(74 0)367 OOOO
By BUilder affordable new
4BR 2 1r2 bath
2 car
garage Green Elem area
Great location 446 9966
House tor sale 1n Rac1ne
area Approx 4 acres all
professionally landscaped
Ranch style house w11tl 4
bedrooms liv1ng room dm
lflQ room kllchen large lam
ty room central a1r gas heat
and 1 fireplace Add 1hon of a
large Flonda room com
pletely cedar opens onto
patiO &amp; pool area Heated 1n
ground pool enclosed by'pfl

111
r~

iO

\Ill'

HouSEl
RENr

FOR

I.

2 &amp; 3 bedroom houses for
rent no pets, (740)992-5858

2br Total Electnc AC $300
a month plus utlilltes
References 304-675-481'4
38R 1n Fa•rland or South
Galila SO 2BA 1n Hannan
Trace • SOuth Gall1a SO
740 256-1686
N1ce 2BA at Johnsons
Mobile Home Park 740 446
2003

~ra,ler lor rent, 3BR, 2 BA

r ~~

can 367-7762 or 446-4060

1 and 2 bedroom apart2 bedroom
house m ments furnished and unlur
Middleport for more 1ntorma- mshed, and houses 1n
tiOn call (740)992 1821
Pomeroy and Middleport,
2BR home m New Haven
R1ver Frontage references
credit check reqwred CElli
304-932 7462 or 304 573
6334

security depOSit requ1red, no
pets, 740·992~2218
1br &amp; 2br atl utllllles patd 1n
Po1nt Pleasant 304 360
0 163

2BR 1n town (GallipOliS) 1br Apartmenl turo1shed
$550/mon No pets Call $475 all utilities paJd qu1et
~::::::::::~~~ 441-0110 Of 992-5174
neighborhood References
For sale by owner 3BR 2BR 1 Bath No pets 1638 Depo~t 304 593 8187'
Ranch
1 bath
Fam1ly Chatham Ave 740·446· IBR Apt, W/D hookup$
Room Stove/Fndge WID 4234 or 208-7861
1nterne-t1satelllte TV 1ncl
Included As~ng $70 000 - - - - - - - - w/rent close to hospital Call
Call 740·709-6339
3 bd house close to
Ordrnance elem $495 plus 740 339-0362
House
for
SALEI
3 depoSit and references 2 Bdrm downtown renovat
Bedroom 5th St , New Available Dec 1 304 755 ed laminate floors $525 mo
Haven WV $35 500 740 8744 or 304 675 6i57
mcludes water &amp; trash No
992 5641
Pels (740)709-1690
3 Bedroom House m
New home m Ga ll1polls Syracuse $500imonth + 2 bedroom Apt Utilll1es pa1d
2BR 2BA 3 acres ~ depoSit No Pets (304}675 $600 a month $400 deposit
REDUCED' $80 000 Call 5332 weekends 740 591 No Rats m Pt Pleasant call
740-446-7029
0265
304 675 8872
_N_IC_e-8-R-ne_w_ly-r-em_od_e_le-d - - - - - - - 3
New WH &amp; Furn CIA 3 BA house 1n Gallipolis Apartment for rent 1 2
Appliance Included Across WID connecbon $450/mo Bdrm remodeled new car
$250/dep You pay all ut1ht1es pet, stove &amp; fng water
rrom Vmton Elem $65 000 404-4 56 3802
sewer trash pd M1ddleport
740 245 5555 or 441 5105
$425 00
No pets
Ret
3BR 1 bath rn B1dwell reqwred 740-843 5264
MOBILE HO~IIS
$575/mo + sec dep 446
RlR SALE
Apt for Rent No Pets 740
3644
38~ 1 5 bath house 1n 992 5856
Warga
2001 Double town $575/rent + sec dep Apts 1n Metgs County In
446 3644
town No Pets Oepos11
w1de on concrete foundation -::-::---,-:------c-:-:
-_ReqUired {740)992·5174 or
1n great cond1t1on with 10 3BR 1BA laundry room 65 (740)441 0110
acres of land 5 m1le s from Mdl Creek No pets 740Poml Pleasant on black top 446 9523
Beautiful Apts at Jackson
road $85 000 304-675 1730 - - - - - - - , - Estates
52 Westwood
or 304-895·3082
3B r 2 car garage C1ty Dnve, from $365 to $560
-------~ School D1stnct Water &amp; 740 446 2568
Equal
New 3 Bedroom homes from appliances
mcluded Housmg Opportunity This
$214 36 per mon,'h Jn cl udes $6001mth A e1 Aeq 740 InStitutiOn IS an Equal
many upgrades delivery &amp; 446 0969
Opportunity Prov1der and
set up (740)385 2434
Employer
3br 2ba 5 m11es out of Pt
Rent to own 2Bed 1 1 '2
Pleasant on AI 2 $450 a CONVENIENTLY LOCATbath MH $2 000 down
month + depos1t 304 675 ED &amp; AFFOROABL~
$432 00 month for 48 1556
Townhouse
apartments
months Includes lot renl
and/or small houses FOR
water trash &amp; sewer 388
Attenllonl
RENf Call (740)441 1111
Local company otfenng NO for applicatiOn &amp; nformallon
0173
l!!l:l:""-~----, DOWN PAYMENT" pro
BUSINESS
grams tor you to buy your
AND BUU.OINGS
home nstead ot rentmg
• 100% financing
Two
story
Appartment • Less than perfect credtt •2&amp;3 bedroom apartments
Bu1ld1ng For Sale m New accepted
•Central heat &amp; AJC
Haven WV $27 000 304 • Payment could be the
•Washer/dryer
hookup
6~~~~!2±~~~ same as re nl
r.
•Tenant
pays
electnc
Mortgage
Locators
1740)367 0000
(304)882-3017

Ellm View
Apartments

L---·

vacy len cmg and land
scaped Fm1shed 2 car
garage attached to house MOBILE HOME LOT FOR
and f1n1shed &amp; heated 3 car RENT 1031 Georges Creek
un anached Rd 441-11 11
garage

~:~~~,~~-~;~~:;;;~ ~~ad~a:~

Wanted • Acreage to lease
for the 2008 Deer Season
Would prefer 200+ acres for
fam1ly &amp; fnends to hunt (no
ou tfitters) please contact
(628)-279-6159 or (826·)
689·8516

ril

Off SA t4t 3BR 2BA
appliances basement 1 car
garage
SSOO 'mo
plub
depos1t 1614)226-0859

.-f,-IN"'"D-:8-A_..RG-:-A-IN""S::-:Ic:-:N=TH""E""C:-:-l-:-A-=:SS:-::If::::IE::D:-=-tS

(740)949 2217

•
.:=Mo=de=rn=1 B:....ed-roo..:::m..:::.ap""lc'-all
446-0390

PHOFF1NC )N II

Sf RVI(

f);

TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY ISS!?
No Fee Unless We W1n 1
1 866 582 3345
IH II I· ' I Ill
10

HOMI;~

1'1lR SAU
m nl 4 bed
Od own paye
rooms large yard Covered
deCk At1ached garage 140
307 7129
2 story home w/ Rver lot
3br 2 ba 2 car garage 304
675 2867

js'fi()'pCLASSIFIEDSI
- - - - - - - - - - - __,..--1--

- ____.. ____ - -

--

�www. mydailysentlnel.com
AI&gt;AinMErm
FOR RIM

Ellm VIew
Apartments
• 2&amp;3 bedroom apartments
• Central heat &amp; NC
"Washer/Dryer hookup
4All electric- averaging

$50-$60/mooth
• Owner pays water. sewer,
trash

(304)882-3017

~
Furnished Apt , 2nd Ave,
Gallipolis,
Upstairs.
1
Bedroom. No Pets. All utilities paid, (740)446·9523

Furnished ~upstairs 3 rooms
and bath. Clean. no pets,

It

Holiday Special! Save $100 Tara
Townhouse
on 2BR apt. Some utilities Apartments, Very Spacious,
paid. $400+dep. 740-388· 2 Bedrooms, CIA, I t /2
9343 Q( 988-6130
Bath, Aduh POO &amp; Baby
- - - - - - -Pool, Patio, Start $425/Mo.
Immaculate 1 bedroom apt No Pets, Lease Plus

New carpet &amp; cabinets, Security Deposit Required,
freshly painted &amp; decorated, (740)446-3481 ,

WJO hookup. Beautiful countty setting. Only 10 minutes
from to,vn. Must see to
appreciate.
$325/ma.
(614)595 -7773 or 1-800798-4686. 740-645-5953
--------

:__:__ _.:...____
Twin Rivers Tower is accept·
ing applications for waiting
list for Hud-subslzed, I · br,
apar!menl,far
the
elderly/disabled call 6756679
Equal
Housing

112 size BIS &amp; Mat. $150.00.
New sofa &amp; lo"Je seat
$400.00
Recline r sale
$199.95. 202 Clark Chapel
Ad, Bidwell, Oh. 740-388·
0173. M -F 9a • 4p. Sat 9a ·
3p.
...:___ _ _ _ _ __
Carpet
Sale:
Berber.
$6.95/yd; plush, $5.95/yd,
15' wide&amp; 13' 6.widecarpel
in s1odi;. MoUohan Carpet,
2212
Eastern
Ave.,
Gallipolis,
OH. Phone
(740)446-7444

0
lmmaculme 2 bedroom apt ,;;
;;PPD;,;;.;rtun
;,;;;:i1y~---.. Tappan gas range, hot point

New carpet &amp; cabi nets.
freshly painted &amp; decorated.
WID hookup. Beautiful coun·
try setting. Only 10 Minutes
·
from town. Must see to
appreciate.
· $400/mo.
(614)595-7773 or 1-800·
798-4686. 740-645-5953

ttfJO

side by side refridgorator,
browr}, sofa. two chairs. two
1.,~--~---,.J twin size 0011 springs, two
Office/'VVarehOuse/Storage twin size bedspreads with
ma,tching curtains ( green
Great location in Gallipolis!
Space
starting
at color ), T"OUth bed with matsqtt tress. baby gate, girls tod·
700
$ISO.OO/month tor
· dler clothing. c.all 245-5845
- - -- - -- - call «&gt;4-456-3802.
,

deposit req. 740-446-15 19
Q...ciOUI Living 1 and 2
Bedroom Apts. al Village
Manor and Riverside Apts. in
Middleport,· fr om S327 to
$592. 740-992-5064. Equal
Housing Opportunity.

Spacious second-floor apt.
overlooking Gampolis City
Park and river. L.A . den.
large kitchen-dining area
with all new appliances &amp;
cupboards. 3BR, laundry
area, 2 1/2 baths. $900 per
month. can. 446-4425, or
Modern 1 BR Apt Call446· 446-2325
3736

S..ACE
fUR RENr

L

Ir ,. . . .

:-;;;=;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
ll'r10
H ot.b"FJIOI.J)

~

.I

~~CHANDISE.

"---~Gooos~--,.J

3 gas furnaces. Coleman;
15k 1or trailers. $200 each.
Cherry Veneer ca binet. 740-367-7762 0t 367-7272
counter tops, range. dishwasher, excellent cond. 446· Antique AnvH mouse hole
3364 or441 ·7138
forge made 1880. Sheffield

England

Tuesday, November 27, 2007
ALLEY OOP

Good
to the

www.mydallysentlnel.com

The Daily Sentinel • Page BS
NEA Crossword Puzzle

BRIDGE

.-.

ACROSS

Last
Word

Phillip
Alder

•

47 Part ol mph
48 Library
tome
50 New family
member
52 Fragrant

1 Elbows
5 Ad committee
8 Served,

11time
Nortll

ROBERT
BISSELL

CllmUCDDI

That's the word from
subscribers who read
our newspaper daily
for captivating news
stories, dining and
entertainment reviews,
travel deals, local
weather reports and so
much more!

• New Horl'es

11-27-{)7

K Q J 10

•

• J 72

• Garages

• Complete
Remodeling

15 Wheedles
17 Plus
18 High-tech

West

East

•
9
t
•

• 8. 3
. 109852

•••

7 2
AK1095
K Q 3
8 4 3

"" A 7 6

South
•A 9853

• Q.
• J.
4 K J 10 9

741-992-lm
Stop &amp; Compare

Dealer: North
Vulnerable: Both
West

South

•

·2.
Pass

,.

North
2.
Pass

East
Pass
Pass
Pass

Opening lead: • A

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

$175 304-882·

Take your time;
win those tricks

2635

' 60 Monsieur's

servant

• A 7 4
• Q 5 2

MONTY

tree

t 1 Hair cu~er 53 Notion
12 Collected
54 Adores
sayings
59 Seholarohlp
t 3 Horror-film
basis
refusal
61 A Marx
62 Nautilus

scanner

locale

19 Flew alone
21 Foot
warmers
24 Use a
microwave
25 Keats' work
26 Yes,
In Kyoto
27 Moll and
tern
10 Crazed
captain
32 Finish
33 Quick look
37 Je no oals38 Oxygen
source
39 Kind of lock
10 Admonition
13 Outfit
44 Airline to
Stockholm

63 Pull down
64 Like French 16 Hull and
toast
pull
20 Decide
DOWN
21 Hoops
nickname
1 Peanut
22 Island near
butter brand
Kaual
2 Jackie's
23 Hi or bye
second
24 More wacky
3 ' - mat
28 Yeast
4 Dieter's
29 Go
no-no
undercover
5 Arr1!st
31 Pen brand
6 Small bill
34 "Fatha"
7 Trojan seer
Hines
8 Gauge
35 Name
9 Snow hause
in essays
tO Gave
36 Frat-party
medication
orders
14 Went
41 It has long
by bike
arms

42 Follow,
as a
' gumshoe
44 Pelt
·
45 Stan
members
46 Hard
to climb
49 Tot's
vehicle
51 Mock .
fanfare
(hyph.)
52 Typeface
55 Female
deer
56 Sharp tum
57 Joule
traction
58 Furti'l"

Aaron Burr said, •Never do today what

you can put off till tomorrow. Delay may
give dearer light as to what is bes1to be
done."
You will not concur when workers adopt
that policy ,toward necessary repairs to
your house. Sometimes, though, when

are defending at 1ho bridge labia, ~.
a good gui&lt;!eline. II you hava a trick
that cannot run away. do oot thoughtlessly cash it. Perhaps leaving I until
1omorrow - a later trick - would be be\YQU
~

E·mal: ThavHOn&amp;~aol .eom

02007 Thaves I Dist . by ~A , Inc.

ter. Always consider whal else you

BARNEY

might

do.
In this example, how shOUld West defend

MULE

HOW'S TH'

NASCAA
CIRCUIT,
CUZZIN

!

•

HUBCAP?

i
t
••

Hil l's Self
Storage
296.70 Bashan Road
Racine, Ohio
45771
740-949-2217

..

••

••

Feed

•••

•••

••

... THE

•
•••

Public Notice

Pet
This Unique Calendar will be inserted in the Gallipolis Daily Tribune, Point Pleasant
Register and The Daily Sentinel Friday, Dece.m ber 28, 2007 ·

The winning pets will be featured in this
unique calendar.

••••

•
__ _

~.

Name of pet:
• : Your Name:
,! Address: _________ __.:__________
. 1

~

I

I

I

I
~
I

.,::

1:
I
I
I

••
)

Phone:_·------------------------------~-Please send or bring this entry form along with your photo to
ct9alltpoH~

1!Bailp
m:ribune

"Pet Calendar"
.: 825 Third Avenue
.CGallipolis. OH 45631

~oint

i)leasant
3l\.egister

"Pet Calendar"
200 Main St.
Pt Pleasant. wv 25550

I

,...
I

Daily Sentinel

"Pet Calendar"
1 f1•JCmftf '5t.
Pomeroy, OH 45769 ·

-·!·--.. ,. ----r• ----.. ---.----.-.---.-•·; ---•=· •·

1

www.mvdailvtribune.com

www.mvdaiiY.renister.com

·

www.mydailysentinel.com

1

740·367·0536

Public Notice
Notice

of

Drawing

Jurors

Revised Code, Sse .
2313.20
OHice
oi
Camllllssloners
of
Jurors, Meigs County,
Oha
November 2, 2007
To All Whom It May

Concern:
On Wednesday, the 5th
day of December 2007
at 8:30 o'clock, a.m., at
the office at the

"CPTCHR 01

OTRRB. I DTRRB

1hotracl&lt; ·
CAPRICORN (Ooc. 22-Jan. 19) - An
arrangement about which you have .had
some negative thoughts might work out ·

loiE~E 'S T14E WORLD WAR I
F~VIN6 ACE WALKIH6
MCK TO T14E AERODROME ..

VC YOUNG Ill
:JfJt
PC,!W
Y

1~ I

r

Fj,J]'-,
'{

01\ •'

1 SEE Tt-IERE 1S
STI~~ A L16t.lT

ON

IN THE
6ARRACK5 •.

exceedingly well tor you. tt coutd be outside factors that have a hand in bringing
abou11his change.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20·Feb. 19)- If you
are uninvolved romantically at this lime,

I

WONDE~ WHO
THAT 15 STANDIH6
IN TilE DOORWA'I'...

11 f 'i' r r ' {

.'

DEER
PROCESSING
Maplewood Lake ·
SR 124
Between
Syracuse
and Racine
SUMMER
SAUSAGE MADE
740.949-2734

Cow d BOY
.:;..,;..:.:....:;a;.;n.:..,;_;____, ,.---------,
WHA.T 00 YOU THINK
THE WOI!LD WILL BE
LIKE ONCE GLOBAL
"E'LLY
W•nMI"G
1

til-s ~LLWG?

THE RICH WILL MOVE
INLANO WHILE THE RISING
TIDES MAKE 11ERJ6EES
OUT OF MILLI0''5 OF
POORPEOPLE .

r---------, ....---------.
~S. BUT WILL

fiNO BECAUSE 0011
GOVERNME~T HAS

BECOME A COIIPOI!A TIO~ •
. l!l.)j ARISTOOIACY

CATERI~GTOTHESUPER
WEALTHY, THE FUTUIIE
WILL BE LIK£ KATIIINA.

TIMES T_EN~

_ ... ... •

WE BE ABLE TO
WEAR SHORTS ·
YEAR 110!Nl? .c~

"
0

GARFIELD

· nlav"a
a cycling

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

INST'EAP Of ME! .Ji.)Sf
TAKINGt Hl6 91'UFF

WHEN JON 61VE9
ME PRE9EN1'9••• ·

1....2....

""'

~-·

......arrtlllnl:ll•l• ..
. . . . . . . .1111 ..

1

'

PIYIIBTIP PIICES . .

I

~~

t

Commissioners
of
Jurors
of
Meigs
Wise Concrete
County, Ohio, Jurors
will be publicly drawn
All types of concrete
tor the Year 2008 Term
Owner- Rick Wise
ol the Meigs Court of
740-992-5929
said County.
Janice Young
740-416·1698
Chrlatoplillr Wolle
~lllisslaners at
. 'jiifiii;;;;;;;~;;~::::
JG1jijft
t:.O. II
Said Jury Drawing will
be held at the Meigs
County
Board
ol
ElecUons located at
117 E. Memorial Drive,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.
(11)27

JlJ.._,...--~lJo

OYTVOY

.H K TV Y
'PREVIOUS SOLUTION ,-'Many.men go lishing all oltha~r lives wlhoul
knowing that I is nol fish they are after.' - Henry David Thoreau

WOlD
GlMI

0 four
ltorranga lltrors of tho
ocromblad worda be-

'iow to form f011r ~mple words.

0 E NUG

.fhe vatue ot loyally under an conditions .
TAURUS (AprH 20-May 20) - Should
something not be working out tor you as
anticipated. oon' stand there and simply
take it Your 1a1e is always tn your hands.
so make the necessary adJustmems.

I I I I I ~~
"'

KREHl

1--~-,~T--T----l ~
~
1
...

I

S

-

·It is not how much we· give,"
themom lectured the teen,

I

''but how much caru we put

N 0 R GE V ·

I

16

·

I ,. I .

into---."

A

Complete .tn• chuclde quoted

V by f.! lil\g m fh&amp; mi.Uing word s
. you develop from step No. J. below.

.

~ PRINT NUMBHEC lETTERS IN

-.J

THESE SQUARES

~ UNSCRAMBLE ABOVE LETTERS
TO GET ANSWER

SC~ AN~S

11~2s~o1

Octi.w ;__ Rainy - Quell --: Wimple - PENCIL ·

"It's wise to map 0111 yom firture," gramps told me before I
lo1t for colleao. "But," be added, "do it in PENCIL."
•

I

• , •

' •

ARLO &amp;JANIS

better. Move on it while opportunity; is
krl()d(ing loudly,
CANCER (June 21-July 22) - There are
strong chances for personally probfiting
on somethin_g not usually a11aila 1e to
you, but you must do things in ways that
will make it happen. Don'1 leave it ~~~ up
to Lady Luck.
.LEO (July 23·Aug. 22)- In order to be a
good lead8r, you must do a couple ot
things: 1) set a good example, and 2) be
brave enough to take a calculated risk.
VIRGO (Aug. 23·Sepl. 22) - You 're a
good achlevar, and wnat you anempt to
do Is likely to Jurn out qu~e well.
However, w)lat's even more laudable Is
that you'II IIW(Mve others In your success-

8t you do to them .

SCORPIO (Oct. 24·Nov. 22) -Important
thtnga you do are apt to produce a com- .

....-...,___-If ---~~~~~ ....-'r----~

-

don't turn down any soc::lal lrwitations.
There's a strong ctlanc8 that you could
meet someone quite Interesting,
PtSGES (Fob. ' 20-March 20) Someone with whom you have r1cently
established a good relationship 1n your
field of 8ndeavor might be able to help
your career atoOg In ways you never
expected. He or she will be delighted.
ARIES (March 21-April1 9)- You might
be a bit more popular than other members of your peer group. Something you
do or say may transpire that'll show you

lot tO you,

j

L--~~~==~~~~--J!
GRIZZWELLS
l'!A 1\liNKIH6 1\IE:SS:. ~~~
·M~ MU~ t!E 'R\1""'\\~

OTRRB

es and achievemen1s,
LIBRA (Sapt. 23-0ct. 23) - Loyalty is
,the major reaaon·why you have so many
friends, and this anrlbute will be quite
prevalent again. You'll show they mean a

1

IJ

HK LR XKP

can't be accomplished wilhou11he support ot o11)e111 migh11ake a 1Urn tor the

..•

,..

FOBS.

-

~~M~~~M=e~1 ~:'i~:%::~f::~~~~

.

_ • .

.-

JHKKGOBO."

JTVBVNRI . " - URSRTOVK

SAGinARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec: 21) -

PEANUTS

JHYVA

V N T 0 I E K C N. R T I G Y T E " . .. 0

'lllur'llrlhdoll':

Because your cleverness will translate
.your ideas into action quidl:er tha n your
associates, you're apt to be crossing the
finish line while tbey're still trying to find

*Experienced

..--__ !~~-!"!!1~.-:r~ ~i!l_ ~!-~~l;~~i,~!~~- ~!'.!~t; -~C!'!-:!:
I

•

' Insured

PUBLIC SALE
References Available I
Notice Is hereby given
Ca ll Gary Stanley @
that on DeCember 1,
2007 at 10:00 a.m. a
740-742-2293
public sale will be held llP:!!Ic;:!a~se~l;:ea~v:;,e,::~~
lo1 the purpose of sat·
lslylng a landlord'a
lien on the cantenta of '
aelt-aervlce ato1aga
room. The goods to be
sold are described
a-rally aa mlacellaneoua pe11onal · &amp; .
hou1811old. The room
will be opened lor
viewing Immediately
prior to solicitation of
CORNER STONE
bide.
Bayt26
CONSTRUCTION
Name: Bonnie Mllhone
Address:
29395
Roofing, Siding,
Sharon Hollow
Soffit, Decks,
City: Portlllllll, OH
Doors, Windows,
45770
Electric. Plumbing,
Tenna of the sale will
Drywall,
be cash or certHied
Remodeling,
Room
lund ONLY.
Additions
Hill 's SOH Storage
29625 Beahan Rd.
Local Contractor
Racine, OH 45771
740·367·0544
(11) 13, 20,27
Free Estimates

by Luis Campos

stro-

Ylldn..dey,Nov. 2B,2007
Bw Bernie• Bede 0.01
In the year ahead, you might estabDsh a
good relationship with several il'ldividuals
whose philosophy and politics differ aonsklerably from yours. Yet each will learn
from the other, and strong rrlendShips
will develop.

*Rcasol)abk Rates

Deadline for entries is: December 14, 2007

••

BIG NATE

$10.50/100

CELEBRITY CIPHER

Graph

• ?rompt·and Quality
Work

they
might
voted

••••

trick two, declarer's diamond loser disap· ·
pears on dummy's heart jack.

Stanley Tree. Trimming
&amp; Removal

pet and

••

Tor!ay'sciue HrJq&lt;Jaisl

bletoo (he would play high-low] .or the
quaen (unless he has an unlikely doubletoo queen-1hrea). And WSouth star1ed
with queen-doubleton, immediately
cashing the heart ~ng would establish a
discard for declarer.
West should shift to ·the &lt;iamond king.
Note that this establishes four tricks for
the defense: two hearts, on e diamond
and one club. But WWes1 ge1S greedy a1

HAS
SOMETHING
FOR YOU!!

•

••••

onB, he denies having either a low dou-

A.

•••••
••••• Send liS a
•• photo o-f
••···your
-favorite

•

Celebnty CipllerCI)?:ogramS are Cfeated lrom quolations by lamoys~pje. past iYld present
Each Iefier 111 11\e CJptler stands lor another

12% All Stock

' !lA

•••

••••

THE BORN LOSER

WHAT ADEAl!!

.•.

••_

:

to dalasi four spades after leading lhe
heart aca: two, three. lour? What do you
thin~ at t11e auction? ·
Taldng the runner-up question first , lhe
auction is fine. West's two-heart intervemion is n01 without danger - WNorth
has lour or five good hearts. two hearts
doubled would be expensive. But the
overcall might taka """~ valuable b~
ding space from the opponents.- Hefe,
11loultl. Nonh rebids two spades. Then
South. knowing his.g,de has a doubta fi1,
should jump 10 game.
When East plays ·lhe heart threa at Irick

panlon effect. For example, tht harder

l--....!~~:::~~~~--j ·you
work, the mort you could makt
financially and, In turn, provlc:lt 1 rill In
llaiUI With II.

SOUP TO NUTZ

~~"M~~E~

~~ e ~P. ANortw.
Ul ;rusT Ge1Tif'¥0 MY
~M~Sk Ct&lt;ei!M ...

It

l
I!

•!
. .~

....

•

-

-:~ -

--·--- ---------;:-- - -

t - - - - - · - - - -·

-- - - - -

;_

�www. mydailysentlnel.com
AI&gt;AinMErm
FOR RIM

Ellm VIew
Apartments
• 2&amp;3 bedroom apartments
• Central heat &amp; NC
"Washer/Dryer hookup
4All electric- averaging

$50-$60/mooth
• Owner pays water. sewer,
trash

(304)882-3017

~
Furnished Apt , 2nd Ave,
Gallipolis,
Upstairs.
1
Bedroom. No Pets. All utilities paid, (740)446·9523

Furnished ~upstairs 3 rooms
and bath. Clean. no pets,

It

Holiday Special! Save $100 Tara
Townhouse
on 2BR apt. Some utilities Apartments, Very Spacious,
paid. $400+dep. 740-388· 2 Bedrooms, CIA, I t /2
9343 Q( 988-6130
Bath, Aduh POO &amp; Baby
- - - - - - -Pool, Patio, Start $425/Mo.
Immaculate 1 bedroom apt No Pets, Lease Plus

New carpet &amp; cabinets, Security Deposit Required,
freshly painted &amp; decorated, (740)446-3481 ,

WJO hookup. Beautiful countty setting. Only 10 minutes
from to,vn. Must see to
appreciate.
$325/ma.
(614)595 -7773 or 1-800798-4686. 740-645-5953
--------

:__:__ _.:...____
Twin Rivers Tower is accept·
ing applications for waiting
list for Hud-subslzed, I · br,
apar!menl,far
the
elderly/disabled call 6756679
Equal
Housing

112 size BIS &amp; Mat. $150.00.
New sofa &amp; lo"Je seat
$400.00
Recline r sale
$199.95. 202 Clark Chapel
Ad, Bidwell, Oh. 740-388·
0173. M -F 9a • 4p. Sat 9a ·
3p.
...:___ _ _ _ _ __
Carpet
Sale:
Berber.
$6.95/yd; plush, $5.95/yd,
15' wide&amp; 13' 6.widecarpel
in s1odi;. MoUohan Carpet,
2212
Eastern
Ave.,
Gallipolis,
OH. Phone
(740)446-7444

0
lmmaculme 2 bedroom apt ,;;
;;PPD;,;;.;rtun
;,;;;:i1y~---.. Tappan gas range, hot point

New carpet &amp; cabi nets.
freshly painted &amp; decorated.
WID hookup. Beautiful coun·
try setting. Only 10 Minutes
·
from town. Must see to
appreciate.
· $400/mo.
(614)595-7773 or 1-800·
798-4686. 740-645-5953

ttfJO

side by side refridgorator,
browr}, sofa. two chairs. two
1.,~--~---,.J twin size 0011 springs, two
Office/'VVarehOuse/Storage twin size bedspreads with
ma,tching curtains ( green
Great location in Gallipolis!
Space
starting
at color ), T"OUth bed with matsqtt tress. baby gate, girls tod·
700
$ISO.OO/month tor
· dler clothing. c.all 245-5845
- - -- - -- - call «&gt;4-456-3802.
,

deposit req. 740-446-15 19
Q...ciOUI Living 1 and 2
Bedroom Apts. al Village
Manor and Riverside Apts. in
Middleport,· fr om S327 to
$592. 740-992-5064. Equal
Housing Opportunity.

Spacious second-floor apt.
overlooking Gampolis City
Park and river. L.A . den.
large kitchen-dining area
with all new appliances &amp;
cupboards. 3BR, laundry
area, 2 1/2 baths. $900 per
month. can. 446-4425, or
Modern 1 BR Apt Call446· 446-2325
3736

S..ACE
fUR RENr

L

Ir ,. . . .

:-;;;=;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
ll'r10
H ot.b"FJIOI.J)

~

.I

~~CHANDISE.

"---~Gooos~--,.J

3 gas furnaces. Coleman;
15k 1or trailers. $200 each.
Cherry Veneer ca binet. 740-367-7762 0t 367-7272
counter tops, range. dishwasher, excellent cond. 446· Antique AnvH mouse hole
3364 or441 ·7138
forge made 1880. Sheffield

England

Tuesday, November 27, 2007
ALLEY OOP

Good
to the

www.mydallysentlnel.com

The Daily Sentinel • Page BS
NEA Crossword Puzzle

BRIDGE

.-.

ACROSS

Last
Word

Phillip
Alder

•

47 Part ol mph
48 Library
tome
50 New family
member
52 Fragrant

1 Elbows
5 Ad committee
8 Served,

11time
Nortll

ROBERT
BISSELL

CllmUCDDI

That's the word from
subscribers who read
our newspaper daily
for captivating news
stories, dining and
entertainment reviews,
travel deals, local
weather reports and so
much more!

• New Horl'es

11-27-{)7

K Q J 10

•

• J 72

• Garages

• Complete
Remodeling

15 Wheedles
17 Plus
18 High-tech

West

East

•
9
t
•

• 8. 3
. 109852

•••

7 2
AK1095
K Q 3
8 4 3

"" A 7 6

South
•A 9853

• Q.
• J.
4 K J 10 9

741-992-lm
Stop &amp; Compare

Dealer: North
Vulnerable: Both
West

South

•

·2.
Pass

,.

North
2.
Pass

East
Pass
Pass
Pass

Opening lead: • A

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

$175 304-882·

Take your time;
win those tricks

2635

' 60 Monsieur's

servant

• A 7 4
• Q 5 2

MONTY

tree

t 1 Hair cu~er 53 Notion
12 Collected
54 Adores
sayings
59 Seholarohlp
t 3 Horror-film
basis
refusal
61 A Marx
62 Nautilus

scanner

locale

19 Flew alone
21 Foot
warmers
24 Use a
microwave
25 Keats' work
26 Yes,
In Kyoto
27 Moll and
tern
10 Crazed
captain
32 Finish
33 Quick look
37 Je no oals38 Oxygen
source
39 Kind of lock
10 Admonition
13 Outfit
44 Airline to
Stockholm

63 Pull down
64 Like French 16 Hull and
toast
pull
20 Decide
DOWN
21 Hoops
nickname
1 Peanut
22 Island near
butter brand
Kaual
2 Jackie's
23 Hi or bye
second
24 More wacky
3 ' - mat
28 Yeast
4 Dieter's
29 Go
no-no
undercover
5 Arr1!st
31 Pen brand
6 Small bill
34 "Fatha"
7 Trojan seer
Hines
8 Gauge
35 Name
9 Snow hause
in essays
tO Gave
36 Frat-party
medication
orders
14 Went
41 It has long
by bike
arms

42 Follow,
as a
' gumshoe
44 Pelt
·
45 Stan
members
46 Hard
to climb
49 Tot's
vehicle
51 Mock .
fanfare
(hyph.)
52 Typeface
55 Female
deer
56 Sharp tum
57 Joule
traction
58 Furti'l"

Aaron Burr said, •Never do today what

you can put off till tomorrow. Delay may
give dearer light as to what is bes1to be
done."
You will not concur when workers adopt
that policy ,toward necessary repairs to
your house. Sometimes, though, when

are defending at 1ho bridge labia, ~.
a good gui&lt;!eline. II you hava a trick
that cannot run away. do oot thoughtlessly cash it. Perhaps leaving I until
1omorrow - a later trick - would be be\YQU
~

E·mal: ThavHOn&amp;~aol .eom

02007 Thaves I Dist . by ~A , Inc.

ter. Always consider whal else you

BARNEY

might

do.
In this example, how shOUld West defend

MULE

HOW'S TH'

NASCAA
CIRCUIT,
CUZZIN

!

•

HUBCAP?

i
t
••

Hil l's Self
Storage
296.70 Bashan Road
Racine, Ohio
45771
740-949-2217

..

••

••

Feed

•••

•••

••

... THE

•
•••

Public Notice

Pet
This Unique Calendar will be inserted in the Gallipolis Daily Tribune, Point Pleasant
Register and The Daily Sentinel Friday, Dece.m ber 28, 2007 ·

The winning pets will be featured in this
unique calendar.

••••

•
__ _

~.

Name of pet:
• : Your Name:
,! Address: _________ __.:__________
. 1

~

I

I

I

I
~
I

.,::

1:
I
I
I

••
)

Phone:_·------------------------------~-Please send or bring this entry form along with your photo to
ct9alltpoH~

1!Bailp
m:ribune

"Pet Calendar"
.: 825 Third Avenue
.CGallipolis. OH 45631

~oint

i)leasant
3l\.egister

"Pet Calendar"
200 Main St.
Pt Pleasant. wv 25550

I

,...
I

Daily Sentinel

"Pet Calendar"
1 f1•JCmftf '5t.
Pomeroy, OH 45769 ·

-·!·--.. ,. ----r• ----.. ---.----.-.---.-•·; ---•=· •·

1

www.mvdailvtribune.com

www.mvdaiiY.renister.com

·

www.mydailysentinel.com

1

740·367·0536

Public Notice
Notice

of

Drawing

Jurors

Revised Code, Sse .
2313.20
OHice
oi
Camllllssloners
of
Jurors, Meigs County,
Oha
November 2, 2007
To All Whom It May

Concern:
On Wednesday, the 5th
day of December 2007
at 8:30 o'clock, a.m., at
the office at the

"CPTCHR 01

OTRRB. I DTRRB

1hotracl&lt; ·
CAPRICORN (Ooc. 22-Jan. 19) - An
arrangement about which you have .had
some negative thoughts might work out ·

loiE~E 'S T14E WORLD WAR I
F~VIN6 ACE WALKIH6
MCK TO T14E AERODROME ..

VC YOUNG Ill
:JfJt
PC,!W
Y

1~ I

r

Fj,J]'-,
'{

01\ •'

1 SEE Tt-IERE 1S
STI~~ A L16t.lT

ON

IN THE
6ARRACK5 •.

exceedingly well tor you. tt coutd be outside factors that have a hand in bringing
abou11his change.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20·Feb. 19)- If you
are uninvolved romantically at this lime,

I

WONDE~ WHO
THAT 15 STANDIH6
IN TilE DOORWA'I'...

11 f 'i' r r ' {

.'

DEER
PROCESSING
Maplewood Lake ·
SR 124
Between
Syracuse
and Racine
SUMMER
SAUSAGE MADE
740.949-2734

Cow d BOY
.:;..,;..:.:....:;a;.;n.:..,;_;____, ,.---------,
WHA.T 00 YOU THINK
THE WOI!LD WILL BE
LIKE ONCE GLOBAL
"E'LLY
W•nMI"G
1

til-s ~LLWG?

THE RICH WILL MOVE
INLANO WHILE THE RISING
TIDES MAKE 11ERJ6EES
OUT OF MILLI0''5 OF
POORPEOPLE .

r---------, ....---------.
~S. BUT WILL

fiNO BECAUSE 0011
GOVERNME~T HAS

BECOME A COIIPOI!A TIO~ •
. l!l.)j ARISTOOIACY

CATERI~GTOTHESUPER
WEALTHY, THE FUTUIIE
WILL BE LIK£ KATIIINA.

TIMES T_EN~

_ ... ... •

WE BE ABLE TO
WEAR SHORTS ·
YEAR 110!Nl? .c~

"
0

GARFIELD

· nlav"a
a cycling

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

INST'EAP Of ME! .Ji.)Sf
TAKINGt Hl6 91'UFF

WHEN JON 61VE9
ME PRE9EN1'9••• ·

1....2....

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......arrtlllnl:ll•l• ..
. . . . . . . .1111 ..

1

'

PIYIIBTIP PIICES . .

I

~~

t

Commissioners
of
Jurors
of
Meigs
Wise Concrete
County, Ohio, Jurors
will be publicly drawn
All types of concrete
tor the Year 2008 Term
Owner- Rick Wise
ol the Meigs Court of
740-992-5929
said County.
Janice Young
740-416·1698
Chrlatoplillr Wolle
~lllisslaners at
. 'jiifiii;;;;;;;~;;~::::
JG1jijft
t:.O. II
Said Jury Drawing will
be held at the Meigs
County
Board
ol
ElecUons located at
117 E. Memorial Drive,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.
(11)27

JlJ.._,...--~lJo

OYTVOY

.H K TV Y
'PREVIOUS SOLUTION ,-'Many.men go lishing all oltha~r lives wlhoul
knowing that I is nol fish they are after.' - Henry David Thoreau

WOlD
GlMI

0 four
ltorranga lltrors of tho
ocromblad worda be-

'iow to form f011r ~mple words.

0 E NUG

.fhe vatue ot loyally under an conditions .
TAURUS (AprH 20-May 20) - Should
something not be working out tor you as
anticipated. oon' stand there and simply
take it Your 1a1e is always tn your hands.
so make the necessary adJustmems.

I I I I I ~~
"'

KREHl

1--~-,~T--T----l ~
~
1
...

I

S

-

·It is not how much we· give,"
themom lectured the teen,

I

''but how much caru we put

N 0 R GE V ·

I

16

·

I ,. I .

into---."

A

Complete .tn• chuclde quoted

V by f.! lil\g m fh&amp; mi.Uing word s
. you develop from step No. J. below.

.

~ PRINT NUMBHEC lETTERS IN

-.J

THESE SQUARES

~ UNSCRAMBLE ABOVE LETTERS
TO GET ANSWER

SC~ AN~S

11~2s~o1

Octi.w ;__ Rainy - Quell --: Wimple - PENCIL ·

"It's wise to map 0111 yom firture," gramps told me before I
lo1t for colleao. "But," be added, "do it in PENCIL."
•

I

• , •

' •

ARLO &amp;JANIS

better. Move on it while opportunity; is
krl()d(ing loudly,
CANCER (June 21-July 22) - There are
strong chances for personally probfiting
on somethin_g not usually a11aila 1e to
you, but you must do things in ways that
will make it happen. Don'1 leave it ~~~ up
to Lady Luck.
.LEO (July 23·Aug. 22)- In order to be a
good lead8r, you must do a couple ot
things: 1) set a good example, and 2) be
brave enough to take a calculated risk.
VIRGO (Aug. 23·Sepl. 22) - You 're a
good achlevar, and wnat you anempt to
do Is likely to Jurn out qu~e well.
However, w)lat's even more laudable Is
that you'II IIW(Mve others In your success-

8t you do to them .

SCORPIO (Oct. 24·Nov. 22) -Important
thtnga you do are apt to produce a com- .

....-...,___-If ---~~~~~ ....-'r----~

-

don't turn down any soc::lal lrwitations.
There's a strong ctlanc8 that you could
meet someone quite Interesting,
PtSGES (Fob. ' 20-March 20) Someone with whom you have r1cently
established a good relationship 1n your
field of 8ndeavor might be able to help
your career atoOg In ways you never
expected. He or she will be delighted.
ARIES (March 21-April1 9)- You might
be a bit more popular than other members of your peer group. Something you
do or say may transpire that'll show you

lot tO you,

j

L--~~~==~~~~--J!
GRIZZWELLS
l'!A 1\liNKIH6 1\IE:SS:. ~~~
·M~ MU~ t!E 'R\1""'\\~

OTRRB

es and achievemen1s,
LIBRA (Sapt. 23-0ct. 23) - Loyalty is
,the major reaaon·why you have so many
friends, and this anrlbute will be quite
prevalent again. You'll show they mean a

1

IJ

HK LR XKP

can't be accomplished wilhou11he support ot o11)e111 migh11ake a 1Urn tor the

..•

,..

FOBS.

-

~~M~~~M=e~1 ~:'i~:%::~f::~~~~

.

_ • .

.-

JHKKGOBO."

JTVBVNRI . " - URSRTOVK

SAGinARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec: 21) -

PEANUTS

JHYVA

V N T 0 I E K C N. R T I G Y T E " . .. 0

'lllur'llrlhdoll':

Because your cleverness will translate
.your ideas into action quidl:er tha n your
associates, you're apt to be crossing the
finish line while tbey're still trying to find

*Experienced

..--__ !~~-!"!!1~.-:r~ ~i!l_ ~!-~~l;~~i,~!~~- ~!'.!~t; -~C!'!-:!:
I

•

' Insured

PUBLIC SALE
References Available I
Notice Is hereby given
Ca ll Gary Stanley @
that on DeCember 1,
2007 at 10:00 a.m. a
740-742-2293
public sale will be held llP:!!Ic;:!a~se~l;:ea~v:;,e,::~~
lo1 the purpose of sat·
lslylng a landlord'a
lien on the cantenta of '
aelt-aervlce ato1aga
room. The goods to be
sold are described
a-rally aa mlacellaneoua pe11onal · &amp; .
hou1811old. The room
will be opened lor
viewing Immediately
prior to solicitation of
CORNER STONE
bide.
Bayt26
CONSTRUCTION
Name: Bonnie Mllhone
Address:
29395
Roofing, Siding,
Sharon Hollow
Soffit, Decks,
City: Portlllllll, OH
Doors, Windows,
45770
Electric. Plumbing,
Tenna of the sale will
Drywall,
be cash or certHied
Remodeling,
Room
lund ONLY.
Additions
Hill 's SOH Storage
29625 Beahan Rd.
Local Contractor
Racine, OH 45771
740·367·0544
(11) 13, 20,27
Free Estimates

by Luis Campos

stro-

Ylldn..dey,Nov. 2B,2007
Bw Bernie• Bede 0.01
In the year ahead, you might estabDsh a
good relationship with several il'ldividuals
whose philosophy and politics differ aonsklerably from yours. Yet each will learn
from the other, and strong rrlendShips
will develop.

*Rcasol)abk Rates

Deadline for entries is: December 14, 2007

••

BIG NATE

$10.50/100

CELEBRITY CIPHER

Graph

• ?rompt·and Quality
Work

they
might
voted

••••

trick two, declarer's diamond loser disap· ·
pears on dummy's heart jack.

Stanley Tree. Trimming
&amp; Removal

pet and

••

Tor!ay'sciue HrJq&lt;Jaisl

bletoo (he would play high-low] .or the
quaen (unless he has an unlikely doubletoo queen-1hrea). And WSouth star1ed
with queen-doubleton, immediately
cashing the heart ~ng would establish a
discard for declarer.
West should shift to ·the &lt;iamond king.
Note that this establishes four tricks for
the defense: two hearts, on e diamond
and one club. But WWes1 ge1S greedy a1

HAS
SOMETHING
FOR YOU!!

•

••••

onB, he denies having either a low dou-

A.

•••••
••••• Send liS a
•• photo o-f
••···your
-favorite

•

Celebnty CipllerCI)?:ogramS are Cfeated lrom quolations by lamoys~pje. past iYld present
Each Iefier 111 11\e CJptler stands lor another

12% All Stock

' !lA

•••

••••

THE BORN LOSER

WHAT ADEAl!!

.•.

••_

:

to dalasi four spades after leading lhe
heart aca: two, three. lour? What do you
thin~ at t11e auction? ·
Taldng the runner-up question first , lhe
auction is fine. West's two-heart intervemion is n01 without danger - WNorth
has lour or five good hearts. two hearts
doubled would be expensive. But the
overcall might taka """~ valuable b~
ding space from the opponents.- Hefe,
11loultl. Nonh rebids two spades. Then
South. knowing his.g,de has a doubta fi1,
should jump 10 game.
When East plays ·lhe heart threa at Irick

panlon effect. For example, tht harder

l--....!~~:::~~~~--j ·you
work, the mort you could makt
financially and, In turn, provlc:lt 1 rill In
llaiUI With II.

SOUP TO NUTZ

~~"M~~E~

~~ e ~P. ANortw.
Ul ;rusT Ge1Tif'¥0 MY
~M~Sk Ct&lt;ei!M ...

It

l
I!

•!
. .~

....

•

-

-:~ -

--·--- ---------;:-- - -

t - - - - - · - - - -·

-- - - - -

;_

�Page B6 • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

Tuesday, November 2 7.

2007

Nutt resigns at Arkansas, GT fires Gailey, as coaching carousel spins
. Sherman. an assistant head
coach wi th the Houston
Texans for two seasons, will
The same day Texas A&amp;M return to the school where he
entrusted its program to one was the offensive line coach
former NFL head coach, from 1989-93 and in 1995Georgia Tech dec ided to end 96 under R.C. Sl ocum. He
the tenure of another.
replaces Denn is Franchione,
Coaches were coming and who resigned Friday.
going Monday around colSherman signed a sevenlege football as eac h school year contract that will pay
searched for a winning for- him $ 1.8 million a year.
mula.
"I'm not going to delve
Georgia Tech fired Chan into something unless I feel
Gailey.
the
ex-Dallas like we have a legitimate
Cowboys coach, while chance to win champiTexas "A&amp;M hired Mike onships," he said.
Sherman, the ex-Green Bay
The 52-year-old Sherman
Packers coach. Arkansas' hasn't coached in college
Houston
Nutt
and since leaving A&amp;M to
Washin gton State's Bill become an assistant m
Doba also departed days Green Bay in 1996. He 'II
after emotional wins.
coach the remainder of the
Indiana gave interim season for the Texans (5-6).
Sherman became the
coach Bill Lynch a four-year
contract after he led the Packers' head coach in 2000,
Hoosiers to their most sue- and Green Bay went 59-43
cessful season in 14 years. and won three NFC North
Duke fired Ted Ro0of, who · titles in his six seasons. The
went 2-3 as an interim coach Packers also produced two
in 2003 to earn the full-time of the four highest -scoring
job then won just four more seasons in franchise history.
games the next four seasons.
Gailey was 44-32 in six
At Southern Mississippi years at · Georgia Tech . He
and Colorado State, two never lost fewer than five
longtime, successful coach- games in a season and was
es were on their way out 0-6 against rival Georgia,
after disappointing years.
Defensive coordinator Jon
Southern Miss' Jeff Bower Tenuta will take over as
resigned after 14 straight interim coach for the.bowl,
winning · seasons and I0 and he will be a candidate
bowl invitations in II years. for the job permanently.
Colorado State has offered
Georgia Tech (7-5) came
Sonny Lubick a job as an up far short of another run at
· associate athletic director the
Atlantic
Coast
but school officials stopped Conference 'championship
short of saying he has been one year after winning its
fired or has resigned.
division .
BY RACHEL COHEN
AP SPORTS WRITER

"NobodY, likes to get over Washington, which
fi red," Gatley said. "But all gave him a 3-2 record
they can take is your job. against the Cougars' ri val.
They can' t take your faith.
Doba, 67, blamed wideThey can't take your family. spread speculation that he
They can't take your integri- would be fired for damaging
ty."
his ability to recruit, and said
Rumors of Nun's depar- he wanted to take a break
lure surrounded the program after four decades of coachafter the loss last winter of mg.
key recruits and a popular · "I felt with all the negative
assistant coach. Trouble press and Internet, and all
mounted for the coach after the rumors, it was di fficult,
the Razorback s lost their and with my age, to go out
first three Southeastern . .and recruit," Doba said durConference games.
ing an emotional news teleArkansas rebounded to conference from Pullman. "I
finish the regular season 8-4 have no regrets and no aniand knocked LSU out of the mosity."
nation's No. I spot with a
Lynch replaced the· late
50-48, triple-overtime victo- Terry Hoeppner in June and
ry Friday. Defensive coordi- led Indiana to a 7-5 regular
nator Reggie Herring will season. The Hoosiers are in
coach the team in its bowl.
p&lt;lSition to receive their first
Nun,
who
resigned bowl bid since 1993.
Monday, went 75-48 at
The new four-year conArkansas since being hired tract gives Lynch; who was
in December 1997.
the Big Ten's. lowest-paid
"Houston's decision to coach this season, a base
resign was neither forced, or saJary of about $250,000
encouraged, or requested," plus $300,000 for promoChancellor John A. White tiona! activities.
said.
The move provides the
Doba said he will not program with some muchreturn at Washington State needed stability.
Lynch is the fourth coach
after a 5-7 season in which
the team missed going to a at Indiana since 2001, folbowl game for a fourth con- · lowing Cam Cameron,
secutive year.
Gerry
DiNardo
and
In what was called a mutu- Hoeppner, one of Lynch's
al decision, Doba and WSU closest friends.
Roof went 6-45 at Duke.
athletic director Jim Sterk
said Doba decided durinjl a The Blue Devils lost at least
Monday morning meeting 10 games in three straight
he would step down after seasons, including a winless
five seasons. He was 30-29 2006.
at Washington State, includAfter snapping a 22-game
ing Saturday 's 42~35 win losing streak with a victory

at Northwestern, Duke
dropped nine straight to finish this season 1-11. The
Blue Devils have lost 25
consecuti ve Atlantic Coast
Conference games.
'
Bower spent 29 years at
Southern Mi ss as a quarterback, assistant. and head
coach. He was 119-82- 1 in
17 seasons and had been in.
the same job longer than all
. but three coaches in the
Football Bowl Subdivi sion.
Only Penn State's Joe
Paterno (42), Florida State's
Bobby E!owden (32) and
Virginia Tech 's
Frank
Beamer (21 ) have longer
tenures.
The season had been a disappointment for Bower and
Southern Mi ss. Picked to
win Conference USA, the
Golden Eagles stumbled to a
2-3 start and finished 7-5 .
Only Florida State (31),
Michi~an (23), Florida (20)
and Vtrginia Tech ( 15) have
more consecutive winning
seasons. .
·
A terse Bower did not
sound like the resignation
was completely voluntary.
"I want you to know
there 's a lot of fight left in
Jeff Bower, and I am not
done yet," the grim-faced
coach said.
Bower did not take questions after making a short
statement flanked by hi s
wife and daughter. After
meeting with athletic ·director Richard Giannini earlier
Monday, Bower resigned .
Colorado State president
Larry Penley said the :;chool

and Lu bick are in "retirement negotiations." He said
students, boosters and alumni have become fru strated
with the program's performance.
Lubick, who has two years
remaining ori his contract, is
I 08-74 in 15 seasons and led
the Rains to nine bow I
games. But they went 3-9
this season and haven't had a
winning record since 2003.
At Northern Illinois, Joe
Novak, who spent the last 12
seasons building the program, retired Monday. two
days after the Huskies finished 2-10.
Novak, 62, spent 16 years
at NI U, including the past 12
as head coach. He compiled
a 63-75 record while leading
the Huskies to two bowl
games, seven straight winning seasons (2000-06) and
three upset wins over top-25
teams. ht 2003, the Huskies
beat No. 15 Maryland and
No. 21 Alabama and were
ranked as high as No. 12 in
the nation, while setting a
school record with 10 wins.

Holiday songbook
inside today's Sentinel

PLEASANT
VALLEY
HOSPITAL

.

"It hurts know," said Lewis, who has

the opponent both
physically
and ment a IIy,"
C re n ne I
Notebook said. "But
probably
the mental aspect of not
being able to stop the run,
that wears on a defense. As
soon as you start ganging Up
on the run, then you're able
to throw the ball down the
.field if you need ttJ. That
wears on a defense and I can
speak to that because it's
been wearing on us all year."
It was vintage ·Lewis, who
used to relish closing out
wins with the Ravens and
hQpes todd more of the same
with the Browns.
"We .haven't finished a
team off like we should
have," said Lewis, noting
Cleveland's close calls in
recen.t weeks.·"'"
"'. e needed to
show we can finish."
Lewl·s has been a pe. rfect tit
for Cleveland and vice versa.
The Browns were desperate fpr a dependable, proven
back and Lewis more than
matched their profile.
Lewis, who had a falling
out with coach Brian Billick
in Baltimore, was searching
for a team committed to
improving its offensive line
and running the ball.
And with the calendar sQOn
switching to December, the
Browns may be forced to
keep the ball on the ground
more than ever.
Lewis ' production had
dropped off considerably fol·lowing a 216-yard performance against the Cincinnati
Bengals on Sept. 16. He
rushed for just 56 yards
against Oakland and 64
against the Ravens before a
foot injury ·sidelined him for
two games. '
·
.
He went three weeks with·
out getting more .than 61
yards before picking up 92
on 22 carries last week in
Baltimore.
When he got to practice
last week, Lewis was pleased
to hear the Browns would try
to run the ball on Houston.
"But sometimes you never

741 yards and eight touchdowns. "It depends on the
game situation. We just stuck
with it and we carne out with
some 5-yard ·and 6-yard runs
and that just opened things
up."
Lewis' take-on-anyone-inmy-way running style was
expected, but he also shown
good outside quickness,
something he credits to staying light by eating properly.
·Lewis sticks .to a strict diet of
health food durlng the sea'
son. He ingests only vitamins. No pretiels, chips or
any other junk.
· On Thanksgiving, he
ordered his holiday dinner
from a natural food store, and
didn't overindulge.
"Mom didn't come so that
he1ped me out a lot," he .
· d.
JOke
Lewis, though, has experienced
· · some growth sinc(l
amv1ng in Cleveland. In just
ah few months, the Browns
ave gone from a group
given little chance for suecess this season to one of the
league's feel-good stories.
"We're a team," Lewis
said. "If you. look back at all
the championship teams,
they were all teams - one
unit. You didn't have individuals. There
no individuals
on thts team.
.
· A few of them ru;e ~tandmg
out, however. Lewts IS one of
them.
He has given the Browns
both yards and an attitude.
With every cornerback he
crumbles by low~nng hts
shoulder or eyery h~ebacker
he flattens With a shff-a'rms,
he's showing his teammates
the way to win.
"He runs with a sense of
purpose," Crennel said.
"That's what we need from
him every week. They know
he runs hard. It's not like he
tells them he's going to run
hard this play. They know
he's going to run hard on
every play."
·
Lewis has no intention of
letting up either.
"Right now, I'm feeling it,"
he said.',."I'm in a little
groove."

ru;

BY JoE KAY
AP .SPORTS WRITER

CINCINNATI Rudi
Johnson had purpose in his
stride. Carson Palmer was on
target with nearly everything
he threw. Chad Johnson got
in the end zone and somehow avoided getting into the
coach's doghouse.
Now that their playoff
chances have evaporated, the
Cincinnati Bengals have
started putting it all together.
They played by far their
best game of the season on
Sunday, a 35-6 victory over a
Tennessee Titans team that
had a lot at stake. Everything
worked as well as it could in
front of 65,489 fans who
enjoyed the moment but
knew it didn't mean much.
· "We played a complete
game,"
receiver
T.J.
Houshmandzadeh said. "It's
the first time in a long time
that we played a complete
game. This is how we normally play. Too bad for us it
hasn't come enough."
At 4-7, the Bengals have
given up hopes of making
the playoffs. A strong
December run could get the
record back to break-even,
the place they've finished in
three of coach Marvin
Lewis' four se&lt;jsons.
Why play so well now?
Part of it was the opp&lt;lnent. Tennessee (6-5) was
missing . run-stopping defensive
tackle
Albert
Haynesworth, out for lhe
third straight game with a

hamstring injury. The Titans
have lost all three and
allowed opponents to run for
more than 140 yards in all
three.
That was the biggest
change in the Bengals. With
the offensive line in flux
because of injuries and running back Rudi John son
either sidelined or limited by
a
pulled
hamstring,
Cincinnati had topped I00
yards on the ground only
twice all season.
The Bengals had their second-best day on Sunday,
picking up 148 yards on 36
carries for a .pleasing 4.1yard average. Rudi Johnson
ran a season-high 25 times
for 88 yards and his first.
touchdown of the season,
DeDe Dorsey had 42 yards
on five carries, and Kenny
Watson ran four times for 17
yards.
The three-back approach is
a product of Johnson's hamstring injury.
"I'm not all the way back
yet," Johnson said. "We've
got to take my progression
and my comeback with caution."
Lewis could see a difference in Johnson, who rwas
better able to break through
the fust.attempt at tackle.
"You feel good, until you
have a 300-pound guy
strapped to your back,"
Lewis said · Monday. "I
thought this week, his runs
were more Rudi-like, the
way he was fin,ishing runs

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
;,o CF:\1 IS • \'ol. .) ~. !';o. 90

\\ l·.D:'\I .SI&gt;.-\Y, NO\"E~1BFR :!ll , :!oo~

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ne wens Fuel saver Pacuae
S3615ar, le~s
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IIIIJT• 1111- fill Elllcllln.

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Hill.. llllllfiiiiPIH 1111....,
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Outlast
fromPageBl
ed the absence of offense.
After fi ve high school and
college games were played
at Heinz Field last weekend,
crews hurried! y put down a
new layer of sod atop' the
chewed-up turf for Monday
night's game.
The field was covered
during the daylong rain . but
so .much water found its
way under the protective
tarps and there were numer-

ous puddles and mushy
spots once the covering was
removed . Wide receivers
slipped on several pass
plays. and running backs
repeatedly lost their footing
before tacklers arri ved.
Late in the third quarter,
Brandon Fields' punt from
near the Miami goal lin'e
came straight down an'd
'plugged in the drenched
turf like an arrow, burying
itself several inches deep.
A few minutes later,
Pittsburgh kicker Jeff
Reed's 45-yard fi eld goal
attem"pt into a swirling

wind and rain fell far short.
Reed had missed only once
previously in 19 tries this
season , a 60-yarder in
Denver.
Pittsburgh's
opening
drive ended with Ben
Roethlisberger being intercepted by, of all players,
former Steelers -linebacker
Joey Porter in his first
game against the team (hat
cut him in March.
Porter 's pickoff .came
along the Steelers' sideline,
and he yelled at their bench
for several seconds after
making the pl ay.

.......

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.,11

'"!"·"'!" ""'' "''' '' ""

'

SPORTS
• Cavs hand Cellics
second loss. See Page 81

New FQHC medical facility opens Monday
BY BRIAN J. REED
BREEOOMYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY - A new FederallyQualified Health Center will offer
health services to the Meigs County
public, regardless .of income, beginning Dec. 3.
·
Family Health Care, Inc ., based in
Chillicothe, announced it will begin
seeing patients at its new Pomeroy
clinic , located across from the
Veterans Memorial Hospital , on
Dec . 3. The new clinic will share

AP Sports Writers Chris
Duncan in College .. Station,
Texa.s, Mi chael Marot in
Bloomington, Ind. , Joedy
McCreary in Durham, N.C.,
Paul Newberry in Atlanta,
Chris Talbott in Halliesburg,
Miss ., and Noah Trisler in
Fayetteville, Ark.. contributed.to this report.

more than anything else.
That was good to see. It
gives him more confidence
in thing~ . "
The ground game finally
got moving a week after
right tackle Willie Anderson
suggested the Bengals need
to regain their hard edge and
get back to running the ball
with authority. If felt a little
bit like old times.
"This is what we're used
to," Johnson said. "It felt
good, man ."
A week after Palmer threw
a career-high four interceptions in a loss to Arizona, he
had his most accurate game
as a pro. Palmer was 32-of38 for 283 yards with three
touchdowns
to
Chad
Johnson and one deflected
interception.
He played as though he
felt he had something to
prove ..
"Last week was a mirage
of how Carson · plays,"
Houshmandzadeh said.
Even Chad Johnson had
something to celebrate: His
firs~ touchdown since the
second week of the season,
three touchdowns in all : He ·
went behind an on-field television camera to celebrate
the first touchdown. dl"dwing
a 15-yard penalty that Lewis
overlooked for ooce.
"It's important for him to
keep his focus," Lewis said.
"It would be good to see him
tinish the seasop strong and
see how he can outdo what
he did in the first part."

days til Christmas

..

county-owned office space with
phnjcians
from
0 ' Bleness
Memorial Hospital.
ln September, the federal government awarded a $592,500 grant for
the new FQHC in Meigs County,
· after several attempts by Meigs
County Commissioners and a health
care committee to secure funding.
The center will provide · family· practice medical services to· all residents in the county, regardless of
income or insurance . Its goal is to
allow access to health care to the

county 's poorest and uninsured residents, who must now pay at le'ast
$100 cash in order to see a physician.
.
The FQHC designation allows the
facility to bill at a higher reimbursement rate through Medicare.
Patients on Medicaid and private
insurance will also be served. A sliding scale fee schedule will· apply to
patients paying cash .
Family Healthcare, Inc. is a nonprofit organization which now operates FQHC facilities in Chillicothe,

Logan, McArthur, New Lexington
and The Plans.
Beverly Phillips. a certified nurse
practitioner, will see patients. In
addition to providing family practice
mediCal services, the new clinic will
also serve as an access point for
mental health services and dental
care. whi ch Executive Director
Mark Bridenbaugh said will be pro- .
vided through the local health
department's Appalachian Dental
Clinic. Some basic laboratory services will also be pro~ ided .

$14 Million
grant awarded
for health
care network

finally start to put it all together
Lewis runningBrowns·toward playoffs Bengals
'

· BEREA (AP) The
leaves have fallen, the tern. perarure 's plunging and the
daily weather forecast usually includes the. bone-shivering phrase, "lake-effect
snow," a phenomena that can
last six months around here.
Baby, it's cold outside.
Just how Jamal Lewis likes
it.
· "It's my time of year," the
Cleveland Browns' bruising
. ninning back said. "It's time
to run the football."
And · that's just what
Cleveland did Sunday as
Lewis rushed for 134 yards
on a season-hig1129 carries in
a 27-17 win over Houston.
whose players struggled in
the brisk, blustery conditions
at . Cleveland
Browns
Stadium.
Not Lewis. With his legs
churning up the turf and the
Texans, the 245-p&lt;lunder had
his second-best game .since
. · ·
JOining
the Browns, who
signed him to an incentiveI aden one-year f ree agent
contract in March. .
This was exactly why they
got Lewis, who used to overp&lt;lWer (he Browns on a regular basis while with
Baltimore. During
six
healthy seasons as a Raven,
he went over 1,000 yards
four times and ran for 2,066
yards in 2003.
On Sunday, Lewis posted
his most impressive numbers
during the second half, when
he and the Browns offensive
line began to assert their will
on Houston's front seven.
After gaining just 43 yards
on eight carries in ihe first
two quarters, Lewis ran for
91 after halftime, picking up
49 of those in the fourth as
the Browns (7 -4) protected
their lead and ran out the
clock.
Standing on the sideline,
Browns coach Romeo
Crennel watched with satisfaction as the 28-year-old
Lewis put the fini shing
touches. on Cleveland's fifth
straight win at home. The
former defensive coordinator
can appreciate how demoralizing it can be to know what
a team is going to do and still
not be able to stop it.

7
'
.
~

()Jt~

STAFF REPORT
NEWS@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

OBITUARIES
·Page AS
·•Raymond
Arthur Gheen

INSIDE
• Pakistan\~ ·
Musharraf bids farewell
to fellow commanders
before becoming civilian
president. See Page A2
• AEP retiree presents
Southam with grant.
See Page A3
· ~ Norris completes
engineer internships.
See Page A3
• Weeks birth.
See Page A3
• Fisher named to
'Who's Who' registry.
See Page A3
• Mason woman
hospitalized.
See Page A3
• Police crack down on
use of disability parking.
See Page A3 .
• 50-state quarter
program due to wrap up in
2008 as most successful
coin program in history.
See Page AS

...
BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

ATHENS -A $14 million grant
for the building of a fiber optic network to connect healthcare
providers in a 15-county region of
Southern Ohio, which includes both
Meigs and Gallia Countie s, has
been
announced
by
US
Congressman Zack · Space, representing Ohio's 18th District.
.
The Federal Communications
Commission (R:C) has awarded the
funds to Adena Health System and
O' Bleness Health System which
will oversee the project as part. of a
consortium of organizations. . .
"We are really excited that the
· FCC has chosen to fund this important project," said Mark Shuter,
President and CEO of Adena Health
System. "The Southern Ohio Health
Care Network will have a significant
impact on the health and well-being
of everyone in this region."
The project will create a broadband network encompassing a service area of 15 rural counties that
includes nine of the I0 most impoverished counties in· Ohio and will
serve I 9 federally qualified health
clinics, eight critical access hospitals, and II rural health clinics.
The Network will allow area
providers to participate in statewide
unified healthcare information

DARWIN - Back in 1957 the
late Wallace Bradford planted his
first plots of Christmas trees on a
farm off of Cherry Ridge Road and
Ple11e see Grant. A5
now 50 years later, daughter and
son-in-law Caroly·n and John
Keichka, carry on the tradition.
The next two weeks will be the
peak time to buy a Christmas tree
and several people from Meigs and
Athens Counties will once again
make the trek to Bradford Tree
Farm to ride on the wagon, saw in
hand, searching for the perfect tree.
This year John says trees of all
BY CHAJUNE HOEFUCH
HOEFLICH@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM
shapes and sizes are available on
100 acres.
The first trees were sold from the
POMEROY- The ftrst of three holBradford Tree Farm in 1962 at the
WEATHER
iday contests sponsored by the
Bradford's home on Brownell
Pomeroy Merchants AsSociation will
Avenue in Middleport. Though the
be held Saturday, Dec. I, at Peoples
Bradford · trees aren't sold in a
Bank. Pomeroy.
Middleport front yard anymore they
It will be for candies with entries of
are found in Middlep&lt;lrt and other
six pieces on a paper plate to be brought
destinations around the. county in
to the bank by 9 a.m. This year bank
the holiday homes of generations of
customers will be tasting small pieces
Meigs countians.
.
of the candy and then voting for their
These days when families arri;c
favorites in first, second and third
to find and cut the perfect tree it can
places. The judging wiU close at noon
take . as long or as fast as the. cus- John Ketchka helps carry on a tradition of growing and selling Christmas at which time ·me winners wiU be
trees on ·the Bradford Tree Farm founded by his late father-in-law, Wallace . announced.
Piease see Trees, A5
Bradford.
·' ·
Details on Pa&amp;e AI
To be attached to each entry is the
recipe used. The name, address and
telephone number of each participant is
to be written on the back of the paper
plate.
Anyone cal) submit entries in any or
Bv BRIAN J. REED
2 SECilONS- 12 PAGES
all
of three contests.The first place winBREED@MYDAILYS ENTINEL.COM
ners will receive a $50 savings bond,
.
·Calendars
A3
TUPPERS PLAINS -When most working while second and third place winners
will receive cash or merchandise prizes
police dogs retire from active duty, they are honClassifieds
83·4
to
be det~rmined by the host bank.
ored almost a~ if they were ·humans, with plaques
.. Those entering the cookie contest are
Comics
Bs
and awards - honoi·s due for their hard work .
When Thor retired in June, he went heme to a to take their entries of six pieces to the
Annie's Mailbox
A3
quiet retirement with Pam and Mark Boyd. his Ohio Valley Bank anytime froni 9 a.m.
to noon when the judging will begin.
handler for eight years of heavy poli ce work.
Editorials
A4
In the craft conte st~ . entries can be
A 12 year-old Belgian Malinois. Thor has
worked on drug seizures, searches for escaped brought to Fanners Bank any time the
Obituaries
As
week before judging where they will be
prisoners, and missing person cases. ·
displayed
and then judged on Dec. 15
Pam Boyd bought Thor for $1 from the county,
Sports
B Section
saving him from eutlianasia. But Mark Boyd said after the b:lJlk closes at noon.
The winners in all three contests will
Thor has not taken well to retirement.
Weather
A6
be notified by telephone immediately .
Please see Dot- AS
after being selected.
,
Thor
© 2007 Ohio V,Uey· Pubtl.ohlng Co.

First of three
holiday contests
set for Saturday

Working Meigs police dog retires

"

.,

'

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