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                  <text>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

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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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'

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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�'

The Daily Sentinel

PageA2

NATION • WORLD

Wednesday, November 28,

'

2007

Community Calendar

Pakistan's.Musharraf bids farewell to fellow
conmtanders ·before becoming civilian president
BY MUNIR AHMAD
ASSOCIATED f'RESS WRITERS

RAWALPINDI, Pakistan
A gri'm-faced Pervez
Musharraf bid farewell to his
fellow generals Tuesday, a
day before quitting as army
chief in a move that could
ease Pakistan's political crisis~

Opponents
welcomed
Musharraf's belated conversion to civilian rule and
appeared to pull back from a
threat to boycott January's
parliamentary elections,
Nawaz Sharif, the pri'me
minister Musharraf ousted in
a
1999
coup,
said
Musharraf's conversion to a
civilian president would
make "a lot of difference,"
and he would only refuse to
participate in the vote if all
opposition parties agreed to
do so as welL
But Sharif also kept up his
rhetoric against the. general,
insisting that Musharraf lift a
state of emergency imposed
toprolong his rule.
Musharraf faces increasingly adamant calls from
critics at home and abroad to
lift the emergency imposed
on Nov. 3 and make good on
a long-standing pledge to
restore civilian rule.
To calm the turmoil, he
has released thousands of
opponents and let all but one
of Pakistan's independent
news channels go back on
the air.
On Tuesday, he took the
first visible steps toward
hanging up the uniform on
which his eight-year domination of this nuclear-armed
country of 160 million people has depended.
A guard of honor of about
150 army, navy and air force
troops stood to attention as
Musharraf arrived at the

AP photo

President Gen. Pervez Musharraf, center, along with Chairman-Joint Chief of Staff Committee Gen. Tariq Majid, right, salute
during an honor guard ceremony at the armed forces headquarters in Rawalpindi, Pakistan on Tuesday. Musharraf visited
troops to bid them farewell, a day before standing down as military chief to become a civilian head of state in a move
aimed at easing the country's political crisis.
·
colonial-style army head- tinued rule as president is
quarters in the garrison city essential for Pakistan, which
faces an increasingly violent
. of Rawalpindi.
· A military band played the onslaught from Islamic
national anthem as an extremists, to remain stable
unsmiling Musharraf, wear- as it reverts to democracy.
ing gold-rimmed spectacles,
To secure his position,
a green-and-white sash over Musharraf has abrogated the
his uniform and more than a constitution and purged . the .
dozen med,als on his chest, Supreme Court, which was
inspected the' troops on a about to rule on the legality
small parade ground.
of his victory in a presidenHe held a brief closed- tial election held in October.
door meeting with other top
Pliant judges . in the
army commanders, then retooled court last week dis·traveled to the headquarters missed opposition comof the navy and air force in plaints that' Musharraf's
the
nearby
capital, retention of his military role
Islamabad, for more farewell disqualified him from · runsalutes and handshakes.
ning for eJected office.
Musharraf made no comThat maneuver and the
ment to reporters, who were crackdown on dissent has
allowed tn watch and film dealt a blow to his relations
some of the events.
with Benazir Bhutto, another
Musharraf insists his con- former prime minister who

has returned from self-exile
and who shares his secularist, pro-Western views.
Bhutto, who has twice
been put under house arrest
to stop her from leading
protests, has joined Sharif in
denouncing
Musharraf' s
backsliding on democracy.
However, she and Sharif are
fierce political rivals, and
there are doubts that they can
forge a united front to force
out Musharraf.
Bhutto says she is reluctant to leave the field open to
pro-government parties and
her spokesman said Tuesday
she would applaud if
Musharraf makes good on an
oft-delayed pledge to leave
the army.
"Let us see what happens
tomorrow because he has
reneged on his promise in

the past," Farhatullah Babar
said.
Musharraf is to appear in.
uniform for the last time
Wednesday as he hands over
his command to Gen. Ashfaq
Kay ani, a former chief of the
intelligence service.
Kayani, a close associate
of Musharraf, is widely
expected to maintain the
army's pro-Western policies
even as he tries to repair the
image of a force damaged by
its direct involvement in politics.
An
official
insisted
Tuesday that Musharraf 's
switch would bring no
change· in resolve against
terrorism.
"Uniform or no uniform, it
would not impact our war on
terror," Interior Ministry
spokesman Javed Iqbal

Cheema said.
Sharif, who returned
Sunday from exile in Saudi
Arabia, went on CNN in
September to calm doubts
about his commftment to
battling the Taliban and a!. Qaida.
"You can't fight terror the
way Mr. Musharraf 'is fighting," Sharif said, adding that
the Pakistani· leader "needs
the threat of terror for his
own survival. We will fight
out of conviction."
But Sharif, a conservative
with good relations with religious parties, is reaching out
to the many Pakistanis who
disagree with sending the
army to fight militants along
the Afghan border and who
deride Musharraf as an
American stooge. Civilians
as well as militant have died
in those operations and occasional U.S. missile strikes on
targets inside Pakistan.
"If the outside world
declares somebody a terrorist, W!l shall not act on it
blindly," he told reporters in
his home city of Lahore .
"We are against extremism
and terrorism. But it doesn't
mean to allow foreign countries· to bomb our people."
That posture could entice
some votes away · from
Bhuttn, who has said she
· might Jet U.S. troops strike
at Osama bin Laden if the alQaida leader is found in
Pakistan.
It remains unclear whether
Sharif can assemble a slate
of candidates strong enough
to challenge the proMusharraf ruling parry or
Bhutto's party in January.
Still, a day after filing his ·
nomination papers, Sharif
gave the strpngest hint yet
that he would actually take
part.

~ay

Merry Christmas
to &amp;meon~ ~pecial with a
&amp;nti~el Christmas An8el

We remember those who have passed away
and are especially dear to us.
On Friday, December 21 , we will publish a special page devoted to those who are gone but not
forgotten. They will be similar to the sample below:

•I
,...~·

.1

David C. Andrtws
luly 10, 1961-May 5, 1980

May God's angels
guide you and
protect you
throughout time.
Always in our hearts,
John and Mona Andrews and
family

wish, select one of the folloWing FREE verses below to
!accompany :your tribuie.
I. We hold you in our thoughls and memories forever.
2. May God cradle you in His arms, now and forever.
l Forever missed, never forgouen. May God hold you in the palm of
His hand.·
4. Thank y~u for the wonderful days we shared together. My prayers
will be with you until we meet again.
S. The days we shared were sweet !long 10 see you again in God's
heavenly gJory.
6. Yoor courage and bravery slill inspire us all, and thememory of your
smile fills us with joy and laugh1er.
7. Though oot of sight, you'll forever be in my heart and mind.
S. The days may come and go, bulthe times we shared wil( always-remhln.
9. May the light of peace shine on yoor face for elemity.
10. May God's angels guide you and protect you throughout time.
II . You were a hghl in 011r life thai bums forever in oor heans.
12. May God's graces shin&lt; over you for all time.
ll You arc in our thooghts and prayers from morning to mght and from
year to year.
·
14. We send this message with a loving kiss for eternal rest and happiness.
IS. May the Lord bless yoo with His graces and warm, loving heart.

TO RDIEMBER YOUR LOVED ONE IN THIS SPECIAL WAY,
SEND $8.00 PER LISTING • $121F PICTJJRE INCLUDED

-

FiJi out the form below and drop oft' to
· The Daily Sentinel
With Fondest Memories
Court St., Pomeroy, OH 45769

~ ~

" :VONLY~

,,p

·:

~ooo

·~rer fictu~e
' J.•

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l'repair-l
f'

v·~ ·1,

Adam Rodgers
"Merry Christmas"
. Mommy &amp;. Daddy

Public meetings

p.m., Pageville TownhalL

Thursday, Dec, 6
Thursday, Nov. 29 .
POMEROY .- Salisbury
ROCKSPRINGS
Townshp Trustees,' 6:30
Salisbury
Town ship_ p.m. adt the town hall.
Trustees meet at 6:30 p.m.
at the town hall .
Monday, Dec.3
SYRACUSE - Sutton
Townshp Trustees, 7 p.m. at
the syracuse Village HalL
.
.

Tuesday, Dec. 4
PAGEVILLE - Scipion
Townshp Trustees, 6:30

·Police crack
down on use
of disability
parking
DAYTON (AP) - ··People
who illegally park in reserved
handicapped spaces to save. a
few steps at the Dayton Mall
are finding out just how
expensive that can be.
Miami Township officers
· ticketed more than 20 cars
this weekend, and each one
of those tickets can cost up to
$500.
The tickets were issued to
drivers accused of using disability placards tl)at were
stolen, fake or belonged tn
relatives.
Police · say one driver
apparently ·photocopied his
mother's placard and another
couple wa~ using a placard
· , originally issued to a parent
who had died.

.:Mason woman
hospitalized
MASON, W. Va. ~ Janice
Reynolds. 68, of Mason, is a
. patient at Dodd tlall,
· . University Hospital, where
she is undergoing therapy
after suffering . a stroke.
. . Cards may be sent to her at
: : DOdd Hall, Fourth. Floor,
· 481 West Medical Center
. Drive, Columbus, Ohio
: 43210.

Page.A:3

BY.THEBEND

·The
Daily Sentinel
.

Clubs and
·organizations

Wednesday, Nov. 28
POMEROY - OH-Kan
Coin Club, 7 p.m., Pomeroy
Lil)rary. Public welcome.
Thursday, Nov. 29

ANNIE'S MAILBOX
POMEROY - Junior
prom parents meeting, 6:30
p.m. at Meigs tfigh School.

Church eventS
Saturday, Dec. 1
CARTHAGE - Carthage
Community Church, old
fashioned hymn fest, starting at 4 p.m. featuring the
!arvis Family, thRousb
lamily other gues singers,
and
church
singers.
Refreshments . For more
information call667-3080.

Weeks birth
SYRACUSE - Joe and
Angie Weeks of Syracuse
announce the birth of their son,
Rylan Chase Weeks. Born on
Thursday, Nov. I, 2007 at4: 15
p.m. at St. Joseph's Hospital in
Parkersburg, W.Va. , Rylan
weighed seven pounds, six
ounces and was 21 inches
long. His maternal grandparents are Mike and Chris
Martin of Chester and John
and Charlotte Johnson of
Waterford. His paternal grandparents are Dave and Jeanie
Weeks of Alfred.

Rylan Chase Weeks

Fisher named to
'Who's Who' registry
RACINE - Andy Fisher,
fifth grader at Southern
Elementary, has been named
to the "Whb 's Who Registry
of Academic Excellence,
Middle School Edition."
Andy is the son of Ralph
and Leslie Fisher of Racine .
He is the grandson of Wes
and Linda Gilkey of
Middleport, and Libby
Fisher of Racine . ·
Andy particifates in
archery, basebal , basketball, fishing, flag football
and hunting. His academic
awards include Southern's
Academic
Achievement
Award as well as math and
reading awards.
Andr is a member of his
church s youth group and
has also been a member of

Wednesday, November 28,2007

Dilemma for a second cousin
BY KATHY MITCHELL

no particular reason. After like she . uses the time to
AND MARCY SUGAR
all the hard _work and prepa- clean or do laundry. She
ration I did, I was not happy. mostly watches TV I wish
Dear Annie: Recently, Wo~se, after dinner, every- we had the money to hire a
while visiting out-of-town . one reloc&lt;tted to the sitting ~ itter or put the children in
relatives, I was reunited with room and never offered to day care, but not everyone is
.a second cousin whom lhad help.
rolling in dough. Day care
When invited 't o a dinner, around here is $26 per child
not seen in 28 years. We are
both in our early 40s and especially one that takes per day.
single. We hit it off instantly, days to prepare, I believe it
My daughter sees nothing
a total personality click, and shows good manners . to wrong with what she's
spent quite a bit of time arrive on time or even a little doing, nor does her husband.
together during my stay.. early. I also think one should Calling Child Protective
Although we didn't act on it, at least offer to do some- Services will probably mean
the chemistry between us is thing, even if it's as simp'e · loss of contact for us. The
very .strong. Since returning as cutting the pie. I don 't average family can't spend
home, we have kept in touch expect my guests to be put to money on expensive seron a daily b¥is and have work, but I believe it's nice vices. When are you going
to tell parents to start being
discussed our feelings for to offer.
one another.
Is there proper etiquette responsible for their own
We don't know what to for this situation? A Jot of children? - Grandma
do. Is it morally or, more people disagree with me. Dear Grandma: We
importantly,
biblically Not Impressed in Ottawa
always tell parents they are
Dear Ottawa: People res£onsible for their own
wrong for us to pursue an
intimate relationship? The should arrive on time for a chi dren, but the parents didanswer is all that's keeping dinner party of any kind, n't write to us. There is. noth·
·
k
ing we can say to grandparus apart. I'm sure we are not gtve or ta e I 0 mmutes ents that will force their
the ftrst people to be faced (unless specifically inv,.ited
with this issue. Your advice to come earlier). Arriving a grown children to listen to
them. In your case, if your
will be ~really appreciated. half-hour late is very incon- . daughter "visually checks"
- ·:Wailing (or the Answer siderate. Although it is kind on her children periodically,
Dear Waiting:. Second to offer, guests are not it may be sufficient supervicousins may legally marry required to help tidy up, sion. If the children are in
in all states, so obviously an since hosts should save .the danger, however, Child
intimate relationship is cleanup for when the guests Protective Services can be
acceptable. (Many states have gone home. Family called anonymously, and
also permit first cousins to members ~ however, are parents are often given a
marry.)
expected to offer to pitch in. warn in~ first.
Dear Annie: "Scared
Anme's Mailbox is writ·
The Bible has no prohibilion against marriages 'Grandmother" said her preg- ten by Kathy Mitchell and
between cousins . In fact, nant daughter,in-Iaw locked Marcy Sugar, longtime edi- .
many biblical married cou- her other children in their · torsoftheAnnLanderscul·
pies were related this way. bedroom all morning watch- umn_ Please e-mail your
Feel free to go for it.
ing cartoons while she slept. questions to anniesmaiiDear Annie: I hosted You suggested baby sitters box@comcast.net, 'or write
Thanksgiving dinner for my or day care.
to: Annie's Mailbox, . P.O.
in-laws . I arranged all the
I, too, am faced with one Box 118190, Chicago, IL
trimmings and even made of my adult children leaving 60611. To find out more
homemade cranberry sauce. toddlers confined to a room about Annie's Mailbox, and
I told them dinner was at 6 for hours with only occa- read features by other
p.m., but they were welcome sional visual checks. I, too, Creators Syndicate writers
19 come any time after 4:30. think it is neglect. My · and cartoonists, visit the
Instead, they decided to daughter is not pregnant, Creators Syndicate Web
show up 30 minutes late, for however. She's lazy. It's not page at www.creators.com.

the Boy Scouts. In his ~pare
time he enjoys astronomy,
computers and spending
time With family and
friends.

RACINE - Kyle Norris
: of Racine has been present: ed with his Engineer fntern
Certificate at a Statehouse
· ceremony hosted by the
· State Board of Registration
for Professional Engineers
&amp; . Surveyors and the Ohio
· Society of Professional
Engineers (OSPE).
Norris earned his bachelors degree in civil engineer. ing from · Ohio University.
, : He is a staff engineer for SEI
Engineers, Inc.
·
Norris is a member of the
Ohio Society of Professional
' Engineers, the state's leading
organiZation advocating for
engineers. OSPE, a state
affiliate of the National
Society of Professional
Engineers, was established
: . in 1878 to promote the ethi, cal conduct of practicing
Kyle ·Norris
• professional engineers, high
standards for engineering OSPE represents all disci- sion: industry, private praceducation, and to advance plines and practice divisions tice, government, construc. public safety and welfare. _of the engineering profes- tion, and _education.

Submitted

AEP retiree presents Southern with grant
RACINE - American Electric Power
retiree Bob Arms recently earned an AllP
Connects program grant donated to the
Southern Local School District
The grant was given in honor of Arms
through the AEP Connects program which
recognizes the comll)itment of AEP employees and retirees to their ·communities and
supports causes that are important to them.
More than 940 grants were made companywide last year representing more than

124,000 volunteer hours donated by AEP
employees and retirees and their families.
• Although no monetary grant can compare to the value of the time our employees
and retirees give to worthwhile causes, the
$150 grants made by this program in the
names of AEP volunteers will help schools
and nonprofit organizations meet the challenges of fulfillinjl imponant human needs,"
Michael G. Moms, chairman, president and
chief executive officer of AEP said .

- Actual Size 1x3

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* Deadline for entfjl December 18th at 5:00
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photo

Southern Local Superintendent Tony Deem (far left) receives an AEP grant check from
Lynne and Bob Arms. Bob, (far right) a retiree of AEP, earned the grant through AEP's ·
Connects program. ~ynne is the president of the Southern Band Boosters.

992·5479

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OPINION

The.Daily Sentinel

The ·Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

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

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

Congress shall make 110 [au, respecting an
establishme11t ofreligion, or prohibiting the
free exercise tl1ereoj; or abridgi11g the freedom
of speech, or of the press; or tile 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 Wednesday.' Nov. 28. the . 332nd day of 2007.
There are 33 days left in the year,
Today's Highlight in History:
·
On Nov. 28, 1942, nearly 500 people died in a fire that
destroyed the Cocoanut Grove nightclub in Boston.
On this date:
In I 520, Portuguese navigator Ferdinand Magellan
reached the Pacific Ocean after Jlassing through the South
American strait that now bears his name.
In 1907, future movie producer Louis B. Mayer opened
his first movie theater. in Haverhill, Mass.
In 1943, President Roosevelt. British Prime Minister
Winston Churchill and Soviet leader JosefStalin began con·
ferring in Tehran during World War II.
' · In 1958, the African nation of Chad became an
autonomous republic within the French community.
In 1964, the United States launched the space probe
Mariner 4 on a course to .Mars.
In 1967, actress-model Anna Nicole Smith was born
Vickie Lynn Hogan in Houston.
In 1990, Margaret Thatcher resigned as British prime
minister d,uring an audience with Queen Elizabeth II, who
conferred the premiership on John Major.
Ten years ago: India's powerful Congress Party withdrew
its support from India's ruling coalition, forcing Prime
Minister lnder Kumar Gujralto resign.
Five years ago: In twin attacks in Kenya, three suicide
bombers killed 14 people at an lsra.eli-owned hotel, while at
least two missiles were fired at - but missed - an Israeli
·
.
jetliner taking off from Mombasa airport.
One year ago: At the opening of a NATO summit in
Latvia, President Bush rejected suggestions Iraq had fallen
into civil war and vowed not to pull U.S. troops ouf"until
the mission is complete.'' The U.N. Security Council voted
unanimously to extend for a year the mandate of the
160,000-strong multinational force in Iraq. Pope Benedict
XVi, in Turkey on his first visit to a Muslim country, llrged
· al) religipus lead,ers to "utterly refuse" to support any vio·
lence in the name of faith.
Today's Birthdays: Recording executive Berry Gordy Jr.
is 78. Former Sen. Gary Hart, D-Colo., is 71. Singer-soJ,lgwriter Bruce Channel is 67 . Singer Randy Newman is ,64.
Movie director Joe Dante .is 61. CBS News correspondent
Susan Spencer is 61. "Late Show" orchestra leader Paul
Shaffer is 58. Actor Ed . Harris is 57. Actress S. Epatha
Merkerson is 55. Homeland Security Secretary Michael
Chertoff is 54. Country singer Kristine Arnold (Sweethearts
of the Rodeo) is 51. Actor Judd Nelson is 48. Movie director Alfonso Cuaron is 46. Rock musician Matt Cameron is
45 . Comedian Jon Stewart is 45. Actress Garcelle Beauvaisc
Nilon is 41. Rhythm-and-blues singer Dawn Robinson is
39. Hip-hop musician apl.de.ap (Black Eyed Peas) is 33.
Actress Aimee Garcia is 29. Rapper Chamillionaire is 28.
Actress Scarlett Pomers ("Reba") is 19.
Thought for Today: "No man can be a patriot on an empty
stomach." - William Cowper, English poet (1731-1800).

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR
Leuers to the editor are welcome. Thev should be less
than 300 words. A/lletrers are su.bject to"editing, must be
signed, and include address and telephone number. No
unsigned letters will be published. Letters should be in
good ta.lte, addressing issues, not personalities. Letters of
thanks to organizatio11s and individuals will not be accepted for publication.

The Daily Sentinel
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Ohio Valley Publishing
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/

PageA4
Weditesday, November 28,

A ·Mormon can be president
Mitt Romney' s religion
keeps coming up on the .
presidential campaign trail.
He seems, at times, a little
annoyed that this is the case.
I am, too. Any American or
admirer of the constitutional
system would also be.
Romney,, the fonner governor of Massachusetts, is a
member of the Church of
Jesus Christ of Latter-day
Saints. That fact alone could
keep commentators in business. "Are they Christians?"
"Was the Garden of Eden
really in Missouri?" "And
about the undergarments ... "
What all these questions
have in commtm is that they
have nothing to do with the
presidency of the United
States.
When a radio talk,show
host pushed the theology
questions a bit too far this
summer, Romney responded: ''I'm not going to have a
conversation about what rriy
church views are because ...
that's not the nature of the
office I'm running for." · ··
Commentators suggest he
give a speech on his religion, comparing it to John
F. Kennedy's 1960 speech
to the Greater Houslon
Ministerial Association.
However, Romney's not
likely to pull a Kennedy by

Wednesday, November 28, 2007

2007

Romney's religion is a topic won Nancy French over.
for religious conferences. Now ·
an
official
not for talk shows. And it " Evangelical . for Mitt,"
certainly should not keep a . French was originally
man from the White House. staunchly
against
a
A.n
early
November
poll
Mormon for president for
Kathryn
from The Wall Street theological
rea so ns .
Lopez
Journal/NBC indicated that
Ultimately, she realized,
only 38 percent of respondents thought Am·erica is "People of faith united are
ready for a Mormon presi- much stronger than we
defensively distancing him- dent But this race has not would be if we splinter and
self from his religion. As gone national yet, and once fight amongst ourselves ."
Romney said to a colleague the American people get the , If you are not going to
of mine in November. "I chance to meet Romney, support Republican Mitt
know there are some people they will see him as . the Romney fur president
hoping that I will simply. qualified candidate with . because you don 't think he
declare in some way that executive experience that he is the guy to win the war
my church is all well and ts .
on terror, that is your call.
goOd, but that I don't really
Not everyone agrees, If you are pro-life and you
believe it and I don't try to thougl\. As one evangelical
do not buy his abortion
follow it. That's not going associated with another
to happen. I'm proud of my campaign tells me, "Sadly, I conversion story, it's a free
faith. I love my faith. It is believe that inany people ... country. But if yol! are nol
the faith of my fathers and will not vote for Romney going to support Mitt
mothers. I do my best to live simply because · of his· reli- Romney for president
because he is Mormori, or
by its te11-chings. And it in gion."
every. way would· teach ,me
While there is a lot to because you think he will
to follow the Constitulion quibble about with John F. not be . elected president
and follow the rule of law Kennedy's speech , he was because he is a member of
and recognize that my duty pre.scient about one thing: the Church of Jesu s Christ
is to my country."
" For while this year it may of Latter-day Saints , say
That is the American . be a Catholic against your prayers for America.
answer to the question whom the finger of suspiI Kathryn Lopez is the
about whether one' s reli- cion is pointed, in other
giqn indicates one's fitness years it has been, and may editor of National Review
to lead this nation. We have someday be again, a Jew Online . (www.nationalre·
no established religion, and · - · or a Quaker - · or a view. com). She can be contacted at klopez@ natioll·
we have no religious tests in ·unitarian- or a Baptist."
our constitutional system.
It is that realization that alreview.com. )

.

. Raymond Arthur Gheen
BEACH ISLAND, S.C. - Raymond Arthur Gheen,
58, Beach Island , S.C.; died Sunday, Nov. 25, 2007 at
his residence.
Born March 29 , 1949 in Bellaine, Ohio, he was the
son of the late Carl 0 . and Lillie E. Gatim Gheen, who
preceeded him in death.
AP photo
Surviving are his brothers Carl Vincent (Pam) Gheen, These handout artist renderings provided by the U.S. Mint show the designs for the ·final five quarters in the Mint's 50Beach Island, S.C .. Sandford Gheen, Belmont, Ohio, state quarter program . The designs, from left are, Oklahoma, New Mexico, Arizona, Alaska and Hawaii.
Frank (Donna) Gheen, MiddleJ&gt;Orl, Floyd (Darlene)
Gheen , Mt;sa, Ariz. and Manuel (Barbara) Gheen, Long
Bottom, and sislers, Caroline (John) Gianangeli,
Belaire, and Delores (Robert) Burton, Pomeroy, and
several nieces, nephews and great nieces and nephews,
and very close friends Rose Fletcher, Brianna &amp; Jenny
Gheen , Bob , Chuck and Gina Johnson, Rachel, Sara, BY MARTIN CRUTSINGI:;R
The states have been honThe final five coins will Alaska and Hawaii were the
Penni, Sherri a'nd Jennifer. He will be sadly missed by
M' ECONOMICS WRITER
ored in the order they were .start with Oklahoma, which last states to join the union in
all.
.
admitted to the union, start- entered the union in 1907. It 1959.
Funeral services will be 3:00 P.M. Friday, November
WASHINGTON-Agriz- ing with Delaware. It was will feature the state bird, the . Through the first eight ,
30, 2007, in the chapel at the Letart Falls Cemetery. zly bear clutching a salmon, honored with a quarter in scissortail flycatcher. and the years of the program, the
Interment will follow. Officiating will be Rev. Don . the Grand Canyon at sunrise 1999. The effort kicked off a state wildflower, the Indian Mint produced 31.2 billion
Walker. Friends may call l hour prior to the service. and a scissortail flycatcher in collecting craze unlike any- blanket.
quarters. Moy said about 20
Arrangements are by Cremeens Funeral Home, Racine. flight. Those striking images thing ever seen before in the
That will be followed by a billion of those quarters were
Expressions of sympathy may be sent to the family by will be on the final batch of coin world.
·
Zia sun symbol for New due to the popularity of the
visiting www.cremeensfuneralhomes.com
state quarters as the most sucBased on a 2005 survey, Mexico, which entered the changing designs which
cessful coin program in histo- Mint officials estimate 147 union on Jan. 6, 1912. attracted collectors in record
ry draws to a close.
million people have ·,gotten Arizona, admitted on Feb. 14, numbers.
The U.S. Mint on Tuesday involved in collecting the 191 2, will be represented by
It costs the government
unveiled the tina! five quarters with their constantly . the Grand Canyon and a · around 9 to I 0 cents to make
designs for the state quarters changing, designs.
saguaro cactus.
a quarter, bot the Mint sells .
with the ftrsl one, honoring
"The American people
. Alaska's coin will feature a the coins at face value. The
Oklahoma, to be pul into cir- have made the 50 state quar- grizzly bear wading in a increased production has
culation in late January with ters the most successful coins stream with a salmon in its amounted to an estimated
POMEROY - Meigs County Cancer lnititative will the other four following at
in United States history," said mouth while the Hawaii coin $3.8 billion in extra profits
observe its Christmas celebration at noon on Dec. 3 in the . I0-week intervals after that.
Mint Director Ed Moy.
depicts King Kamehamcha. for the government.
banquet room of the Wild Horse Cafe. New members are
welcome. Lunch will be on your own.
.
Information is available by calling Courtney Sim at
992-6626.

50-state quarter program due to wrap up in
2008 as most successful co~n program in history

Local ·Briefs

Christmas celebration

Sudanese · offic~l says the te~cher held for

Oh-Kan Coin Club to exhibit

Trees .
from PageA1
tomer wants. Meeting the
wants of those customers is
what has helped the farm
stay in business for 50
years.
"There are three rules in
business: The customer is
always right, the customer
is always right and the
customer is always right,"
John said.
·
Those customers might
spend hours roaming his
farm; some hitching a ride
00 the wagon which runs
on weekends across a halfmile path .
"We give them a bow
saw and turn them loose,''
John said with a smile. "If
we don 't see them for

Grant

The not-so-peifect holiday
Before Christmas rolls
around, you'll probably
read 50 different recipes for
making ihe "perfect turkey"
in newspapers and magazines. You'll see another 50
on the morning TV shows
and on the cooking channels.
Between Thanksgivings and
Christmases, I've eaten well ·
over I00 .turkey dinners in
my life. Not once have I e~r
heard a guest stand up and
say, ''That was horrible. That
wasn't , a perfect turkey.
How dare you cook something like that. I' II never eat
~ere again!" As a matter of
fact, that's probably why
turkey has become so popular for the holidays: It's hard
to mess up. Even imperfect
torkeys taste pretty go\)d.
Besides, when did perfec•
tion become the goal
instead of having a gooq
time, instead of enjoying
your company?
My Dad used to get up on
a rickety ladder and spend a
few hours each year putting
up a simple string of colored lights on our front
porch -every Christmas. The
bulbs were bulky and \igly
compared to the kind you
can buy today, and if one
light on· the string went out,
they all went out. It ·was a
tedious all-day affair to find

ugliest thing I've ever seen.
It looks like you let a bunch
of little kids decorate it!" It
never occurred to us that it
· wasn't perfect.
' "My mother was big on
watering the tree every day:
"That way," .she explained,
"it will live longer." For
years, I thought that adding
water· to things would keep
them alive. Dead dog, add
water. Dead fish, add water.
It was a long time before I
realized that cutting down
the tree was what killed it,
. nOt a ' lack of water. When

fused · together, like molten
glass. To get a piece small
enough to eat, you had to
shatter it with a hammer. It.
never stopped us from eating them. They weren't perJim
fect,
but no one complained.
Mullen
Television at Christmas
was unwatchable. Choir
music instead of cartoons?
What adult thought that was '
out which bulb had burned
a good idea? One channel
out. After my sixth or sevdidn't even want to go to ·
enth sibling showed up, he
the ex pens~ of, a choir. It
even didn't bother with the
trained a camera on a burnoutside of the house. Yet all
ing log in a fireplace all day
those years, no · one ever
long. Riveting stuff comknocked on our front door
and said, "What's with the they found my grandfather, pared to what was on the
'never figured out why only other two channels.
Pathetic light show?: You they
lhe carpet around his body After nine hours of choir
guys aren't even trying. was so wet.
,
"An
Accordion
came
They guy down the street,
his are p~,:rfect." All the perMy grandfather always Christmas'&lt; mid then "How
~
• k"d
gave me a brand new wallet to Knit a Perry Como
ect guys I s were at our each Christmas: I don't Sweater." '
house, makin~ a mess,
h
Today, my basic cable
enjoying -not bemg perfect.
know •what he thoug t I
'Now, when 1 drive past needed one for when l was package has 180 channels.
orte of those overdecorated 6. My driver's license? Not It's not enough, so I pay
houses with computer coor- the perfect gift; but I extra for the movie channels
and . spo\:ts. But there are
dinated light displays that remember it still.
ypu can see from · outer
Mom tried a new recipe only three channels I watch
space, alll can .think is, "If one year for fruitcake. She with any t~gularity. It's not
they have the time and knew no ·one real·ly liked perfect, buH may watch the
money_19 dO'! hat, they tnust . fruitcake, so she found this burning log this ·year. It's on
not have children." Or not · recipe that was all dried channel 589.
(Jim Mullen is the author..
fruit and nuts and no cake. I
enough of them, anyway.
Our tree was the opposite don't remember what held it of "It Takes a Village ldior:
of the perfect tree.s you will all together, ·r think she just Complicating the Simple
Life,, and "Baby's First
s~ in the magazines •. yet I threw candied fruit and nuts
don't remember anyone into a bubbling pot of com Tattoo. " You can reach him
remarking "Why, .that's the syrup and cooked until it a1 jim_mullen@myway.com)
,.

•

The f?aily Sentinel• Page As

Obituaries

POMEROY -· Bob Graham of the Oh-Kan Coin Club
will have a coin exhibition along with a display of old
pictures at Farmers Bank from 8:30a.m. to 3 p.m. Fripay.
On Monday, he will be at Peoples Bank in Middleport
for coin and picture displays. There will be .door prizes,
refreshments, arid a drawing for an old picture reproduc.tion.

DO YOU ·HAVE ·
THE SCORE~?

www.mydailysentinel.com

awhile we go \lack out and
pick them up on the
wagon."
Once the tree is cut, cus"
tomers then return to the
·warmth of the store which
has the stove going and
the hot chocolate hot. In
years past Wally.'s wife,
the late Muriel Bradford,
had homemade ornaments
in the store but times
change even if the trees
don' t.
One thing that doesn't
change are the families
that return for their trees,
and more importantly, the
traditional hunt for those
trees in the middle of the
sprawling farm. ·
"We're on our fourth
generation of families
:coming out here and the
kids are . what makes it
fun," John said about kids
at Christmas, another

naming
a teddy ·bear Muhammad could be freed soon

Bv MOHAMED OSMAN
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

KHARTOUM, Sudan A · British teacher arrested
for allowing her students to
name a
teddy . bear
aspect of the holiday season that never changes. ·
Speaking · of changes,
the farm hasn't planted
any new trees for seven
years. At its peak trees
were planted on 250 acres .
"In a few ~ears we' II
probably give 11 up," John
said though that won't
happen this year: John and
Carolyn took over the
farm in 1992 and though
both are retired from other
jobs, they hope to one day
retire for good.
The Bradford Tree
Farm sells Scotch Pine,
White Pine, Colprado
Blue Spruce, Black Spruce
and Balsam Fir varieties.
They are now open from
10 a.m. until dark up until
Dec. 21. Take US 33 west
to Ohio 681 east to Cherry
Ridge Road . Just follow
the signs or call 992-3505.

develoying application of Southern Consortium for
clinica medicine . where 'Children, and Wright State
medical ·information ·is University
School
of
transferred
via
the
Internet
Medicine
and
College
of
from PageA1
or other networks for the Nursing and Health.
Counties included in the
purpose of consulting and ·
efforts, enhance sustainabil- remote medical· procedures service region of the
Southern Ohio Health Care
ity of rural medicine prac- · or examinations.·
tices, develop deeper collab"This is exactlY. the type of Network include Adams,
oration among healthcare progress that will bring not Athens, Fayette, Gallia,
Hocking,
providers, enhance emer- only better care to rural Highland,
~ertcy communications to Ohio, but will also spur eco- Jackson, Meigs, Morgan,
Improve regional or national nomic development," com- Perry, Pickaway, ·Pike,,Rc;~ss ,
coordination, and support a mented
Representative Scioto,
Vinton
and
progressive
community Space. "Once the network is Washington~
health record project and · up a,nd running, even those
Adena Health System is
efforts for the creation of a in the most remote locations an ·independent, not-forregional health information will have access to the same profit and locally controlled
organization.
care, information, ·and organization servin~ the
"The O'Bleness Health advice afforded to those in needs of JO counties in
System is very pleased to urban areas."
south central Ohio and
In creating the Southern employing more than 2,000
have an opf&gt;?rtunity to collaborate wtth other health Ohio Health Care Network, people. Adena's vision is to
care providers and educa- the partners plan to COil· be the best healthcare systional institutions in this structor purchase fiber optic tern in the nation through
exciting venture," said Rick rings to create a backbone innovation and a customer
Castrc;&gt;p, President and CEO connecting the largest con- centered philosophy. The
of the O'Bieness Health centrations of healthcare system's family of facilities
System. "Creating an inclu- facilities. In addition, the includes Adena Regional
sive and sustainable broad- opportunity to connect with Medical Center, Greenfield.
band healthcare network in facilities outside the reach of Area Medical Center, Adena
squthem Ohio will signifi· the fiber optic rings will also Health
Centers
in
cantly expand and enhance be established, as well as a Chillicothe, Jackson and
capabilities for sharing statewide emergency com- Waverly. Adena's Centers of
information, education and munications network.
, Excellence include the
communication throughout
"At the completion of the Heart Center at Adena; the
the ~egion. "
project, the fiber optic uet- Center for Cancer Care; the
In a letter of support for work will encompass an Center for Women &amp;
the project, Ohio Gov. Ted area larger than the state of Children;
and
Strickland
commented, Rhode Island," said Marcus Ortho!iedics/Neurology and
"The Southern Ohio Health Bost, Chief Information .Pain Management.
Care Network offers a com- Officer at Adena Health
The, O'Bleness Health
pelling model that could System. "This will allow us System is a not-for-profit
help inform policy and strat- to improve technology in regional network of physiegy Thr expandmg broad- our communities that can be cians, healthcare professionals, support staff and· faciliband services in rural areas carried far into the future."
across the country. The
In addition to Adena and ties providing healthcare
· Network fits perfectly with O'Bleness,
consortium services in a nine-county
Ohio members that are participat- area of southeastern Ohio.
The
Broadband
Initiative, an important pri- ing in the project include O'Bieness
Memorial
Children's Hospital and several other
ority for my administratiOn. Columbus
I was pleased to offer my Hospital , Health Policy system affiliates are located
support and endorsement of Institule of Ohio, Ohio State in the O'Bleness Medical
this project."
University College of Park in Athens. ·
The project will be open Medicine ,
Ohio
The O'Bleness Health
to all providers in the ser- S u p e r c o m p u t e r System serves the people of
vice area, and will expand · Center/OSCnet,
Ohio southeastern Ohio at several
telemedicine
capacity. University College of other locations in the region
Medicine, i as well.
Telemedjcine ts a rapidly Osteopathic

Muhammad will probably
be cleared and released
soon, a spokesman for the
· Sudanese embassy
in
London said Tuesday.
Gillian Gibbons was
arrested Sunday and faced
possible charges of insult·
ing religion - · a crime
punishable by up to 40
lashes. She was questioned
by Sudanese authorities on
Tuesday.
"The police is bound to
investigate,"
embassy
spokesman
Khalid
al
Mubarak · told British
Broadcasting Corp. radio.
"I am pretty certain that
this minute incident will be
clarified very quickly and
this teacher who has been
helping us with the teaching of children will be safe
and will be cleared."
Asked abqut the potential punishments six
months imprisonment or
40 lashes - he said: "My
impression is that the ·
whole thing could probably be settled amiCably
long · before we . reach
stages like these. . ... Our ·
relations~ip with Britain is
so good that we wouldn't
like such a minute event to
be overblown."
' Gibbons was arrested
after one of ber pupils' par- ·
ents complained, accusing

her of naming the bear
after Islam's prophet and
founder. Muhammad is a
common name among
Muslim men, but giving
the prophet's name to an
animal would be seen as
by
niany
insulting
Muslims.
Several Sudanese newspapers ran a statement
Tuesday .reportedly from
Unity High School in
Khartoum where Gibbons
taught, saying the adminis·
tration "offers an official
apology to the students and
their families and all
Muslims for what came
from an individual initiative ." It said Gibbons had
been "removed from her
work at the school."
In the first official comment on the case, the
Sudanese Foreign Ministry
on Tuesday played down
the significanc·e of the
case, calling it "isolated
despite our condemnation
and rejection of it."
Ministry spokesman Ali
al-Sadeq said it was an
incidence of a "teacher's
misconduct against the
Islamic faith" but noted the
school's apology.
The statement from the
school in newspapers
called it a "misunderstanding." It underlined the

decorated competition dog
for four years. He was purchased by former Sheriff
Ralph Trussell, at a disfrom PageA1
counted price, and was fed
and cared for using funds
~'Being retired just kills · siezed in cases and from
him. If I get dressed to ~o private donations.
Dog rescue volunteer
out for the day, Thqr sttll
assumes" we're going to Janet Ambrose of Pomeroy
work, because that was even bought Thor a bulletalways the sign the work proof vest. .•
da~ was beginning," Boyd
Boyd never kept track of
satd. "The way working the money Thor helped coldogs like this please lect in drug forfeiture cases,
humans is by doing a good but he has averaged I 00
job and working hard,"
working calls per year, at all
Thor was trained at a hours and for many purpos·
Fremont kennel which spe- es. ·
cializes in training workmg
"He has not only served
p,olice dogs and their human Meigs County for six years,
handlers. He. worked as a but he has served other
"dual purpose canine," counties as well," Boyd
Boyd said, both in patrol said.
work, such as tracking and
Thor
helped
locate
building searches,. and in escaped convt.cts from
narcotics detection.
Hocking County, for exam·
Born in Hollan~. Thor ple, and has assisted the
responds to Dutch com- Adult Parole Authority and
mands. Prior to coming to local police departments on
America, he was a highly- cases -at no cost.

Dog

Announce Your Holiday
Worship Service
Christmas Service ads will. .
publish Friday, December 14~
ana Friday~ December 21.
Deadline December l-2, ·2007
· Call Dave or Brenda
at 992-2155 ·
For more information
,.

school's "deep respect for
the heavenly religions" and
for the "beliefs of Muslims
and their rituals," adding
that "the misunderstanding
that has been raised over
this issue leads to divisions
that are disadvantageous to
the reputation of the tolerant Sudanese people."
The Arabic statement
was · nul officially con·
firmed by the school. But a
person reached by phone at
the school who identified
herself as an administrator
said the statement was correct. She refused to give ·
her name, citing the sensitivity of the situation.
She said the school has
closed for at leasl the next
week until the controversy
eases. The Unity High
School, a private English·
language school with ele·
mentary to high school level s, was founded by
Christian groups, but 90
percent of its students are
Muslim, mostly from
upper-class Sudanese fam·
ilies.
the school' s director,
Robert Boulos, told the
British Broad~asting Corp.
that the incident was "a
completely innocent mistake. Miss Gibbons would
have never wanted to insult
Isl am."
Though clearly not a fam·
ily pet, Thor is a part of the
Boyd household, and at
least has found a refuge
where he will spend his
retirement years in a level
of comfon.
He's sure to appreciate
that more than a gold watch.

Ohio Valley

Symphony
Christmas Show
Sat, Dec. 1, 2007

Jingle Bell Follies
Saturday
December 7, 8, 9
Box Office: 428 2nd Ave.
Gallipolis, OH (740) 446-ARTS

�'

The

D~ily

Sentinel

PageA6.

OHIO

Wednesday, November 28,

2007

Union, state strike deal on preventing c~iser fires Bluftton bus wreck
victims me suit
against insurers

COLUMB US (AP) Equipment . that would
douse tires in the fuel tanks
of State Highway Patrol
crui sers will be installed
sooner ami at a lower cost
under a deal struck between
the troopers' union and the
state.
Arizona-based F.I.R.E.
,Panel LLC has agreed to
wrap the fuel tanks of the
patrol 's Crown Victoria
cruisers in a protective
cocoon that releases fire
&gt;uppressants when ruptured. The Ohio Department
of Public Safety has asked a
. legislative panel for authority to buy I,630 of the sy stems for $395 per car. or
$643,850. less than a fifth
the cost troopers negotiated
in· their contract thi s summer.
, The union pushed for the
protection after two troopers - Trooper Joshua P.
Risner and Patrol Sgt. Dale
R. Holcomb - were killed
m a fiery . crash near
Gallipolis in 2006.
But Ford Motor Co., the
cruisers' manufacturer, does
not endorse the cheaper
technology over the Fordinstalled systems first
demanded in the union contrac t.
"We tested both systems
in equal settings and found
that the F.LR.E. Panel system did not work," said

Bv JOHN SEEWER
ASSOCI ATED PRESS WRITER

TOLEDO - Attorney s want a federal court to determine whether members of Bluffton University' s baseball team involved in a deadly bus cra sh earlier thi s year
are entitl ed to in surance money.
A lawsuit filed on behalf of three players killed in the
crash and two coaches seeks to confirm the bus driver
and the bu sing company were covered during the March
accident.
A charter bu s carrying the team to spring training in
Florida p\unged off an . overpass in At lanta early on
March 2. Five student s from the Mennonite school and
the bu s driver and his wife were ki ll ed . Twenty-eight
other people were injured. ·
'
The Oct. 31 filing in U.S. District Court said the driAP photo
ver and bus company were insured under three policies
In this Sept. 28, 2006 file photo, wrecker crews prepare to haul away wreckage fmm a fier y issued to the university and that the victims are entitled
cras h that claimed the lives of two members of the Ohio State Highway Patrol and a female to coverage for injuries.
motor-ist near Gallipolis .. Equipment that would douse fires in the fuel tanks of State
According to the lawsuit, the insurance companiesHighway Patrol cruisers will be installed sooner and at a lower cost unde r a deal struck Connecticut-based Hartford Fire Insurance Co., New
between the troope rs' union and the state.
Jersey-based American Alternative Insurance Corp. and
'
.
Ford spokesman Dan Jarvis. work fine. He said the sys- the switch from more New Jersey-based Federal Insurance Co. - · have
"There are lots of things in tems use powder. chemicals expensive fire-suppression refused to acknowledge the driver . arid bus company
were covered under the policies, wh ich total $2 1 millife to save money on, but and work automatically.
devices will mean protect- lion.
one of those thin~s is not
"Our system by contrast ing all patrol cars- not just
Representatives of all three insurers said they could
officer safety, in our opin- is a very, very simple sys- new ones - by early 2008 .
not
com ment on the lawsuit.
·
ion."
tem,"
he
said.
"Our
system
'The
other
way,
people
This is the second lawsuit filed since the bu s crash.
Scott Starr, a spokesman
has
no
choice
but
to
activate
might
.
be
driving
a
vehicle
The mother . of one of the players killed, Tyler
for F.I.R.E. Panel, said the
company's syste ms don't in the case of an accident." · two years or 16 months Williams, filed a lawsuit in September against the uni Her~liel M. Sigall, general before they are able to avail ve~sity, the company that made the bus, the city of
include the sensors, electronics and liquid chemicals counsel for the Ohio State themselves of this level of Atlanta and the company that provided the bus and driver for the team. The lawsuit seeks unspecified dam'
that Ford's do - but they Troopers Association, said protection," he said.
ages.
·
Attorneys also have notified-the state of Georgia thin
they may sue the state,on behalf of 16 people injured or
killed .in the crash.
WEST C!-IESTER (AP) weekend.
spokesman for the Lakota different play," Weidlich
Investigators have said the bus driver apparently mis-A high sc hool canceled
Hines said the book 's sc hool district, said stu- said.
took an exi t ramp for a highwa y lane, but the National
its upcoming stage perfor- original title and cover denrs and staff had hoped
Luke Null, a lead actor ln Transportation Safety Board has not made any finding
mance of an Agatha illu stration was a racial to use the play as a way to the play who had rehearsed on the crash' s cause . The board 's final accident report is
Chri stie my stery novel slur toward blacks and create a discussion about since September, said the expected.,next spring , the NTSB has said.
over complaints by an included a cover illustra- diversity.
production had no. racial
The lawsuit is nece ssary so that ihe victims can clariNAACP leader ihat the tion of a black person and
"However students and undertones.
fy the amount of coverage before they file any individoriginal title of the work is a hangman' s noose.
" staff conti~ued to raise
School Board President ual claims, said Steve Collier, an attorney for the famiHines said ,-a lack of issues, and it was quickly Joan Powell said she di s- ly of David Betts, one of the players who died.
racially offensive:
"Ten Little Indian s," raetal , d1vers1ty among obvious that bad feelings agreed with the decision to
John Smalley~ an attorney representing the two coachwhich was originally pub- Lakota s students and al;&gt;out the play were much cancel the play and fears it es, said he has talked with two of the insurance compalished in 1939 in England teachers . allowed the pl!IY more . widespread and could se nd a message to nies and found there WiiS a disagreement abOUt Whether
under the name "Ten Little to be chosen desp1te t~e strong than ori.ginally students in other produc- the policies covered the driver.
Niggers," is inappropriate · h1 ~ t';lfY _surroundmg tts thought. The best ~ction tions that the school pro"Hopefully, this is the best way to get this closed
for a school produ ction, ongmal tttle.
.
motes
censorship.
withow
·delay and litigation," he said.
said Gary Hines, a branch · The book, a story about seemed to be to swnch to a
president of the National ten strangers who are
As sociation
.for
the trapped on an island and
Advancement of Colored are murdered one by one,
People in southwest Ohio. was later published under
Students at Lakota East the name, "And Then
High School had been set There Were None."
to perform the play this
Jon
Weidlich,
a

High school cancels stage play amid complaints over slur

Local stocks
AEP (NYSE) -4\UO
Akzo (NASDAQ)- 74
Ashland Inc. (NYSE)46.91
Big Lots (NYSE)- 19.82
Bob Evans (NASDAQ) 30.45
BorgWarner (NYSE)95.34
,
Century Aluminum (NASDAQ) - 51.20
Champion (NASDAQ) 5,26
Charming Shops '(NASDAQ) - 5.39
City Holding (NASDAQ) 35.76
Collins (NYSE) - 71.66
DuP.ont (NYSE) - 44.59
US Bank (NYSE)- 31.06
Gannett (NYSE) - 36.80
General .Electric (NYSE)
· - 37.45
Harley-Davidson (NYSE)
- 46.48
JP Morgan (NYSE)42,'35
Kroger (NYSE) - 27.84
Limited Brands (NYSE) .17.93
Norfolk Southern ( NYSE)
- 50.10
Oak Hill Financial (NAS1

DAQ)- 29.59
Ohio Valley Bane C.orp.
(NASDAQ)- 25
BBT (NYSE)- 33.58
P1,1oplas (NASDAQ)24.18
Pepsico (NYSE) - 75.92
Premier (NASDAQ)13.18
Rockwall (NYSE) 66.53
Rocky Boots (NASDAQ)
-6.59
Royal Dutch Shall 80.67
Sears Holding (NASDAQ)
--" 1U.56
.
Wai·Mart (NYSE) 45.83
Wendy's (NYSE)- 27.47
. Worthington (NYSE) 20.51
'
·
Dally stock reports are
the 4 p.m. ET closing
quotas of transactions for
Nov. 27, 2007, provided
by Edward Jones financial
· advisors Isaac Mills In
Gallipolis at (740) 441- ·
9441 and Lesley Marrero
In Point Pleasa11t at
(304) 674-0174. Member
SIPC.

Local weather
Wednesday night..Partl y
cloudy
in
the
eve nin g .. .Then
mostly
cloudy with a chance of
·rain showers after midnight. Lows i-n the mid '30s.
Southwest wi nds 5 to 10
mph . Chance of rain 40
percent.
Thur s day ... Mo st ly
sunny. Highs in the upper
40s. West winds 10 to 15
mph.
Thursday
night ... Mostly
clear.
Cooler with lows in the
mid 20s. West ·winds
around 5 mph .
' Friday ... Mostly sunny.
Highs in the upper 40s.
Friday night...M ostly
cloudy. Low s in the upper
20s.
Sat urda ,y . .. Mo s t ly

...

sunny. Highs in the upper
40s. ,
·
Saturday night...Mostly
cloudy. A chance of snow
showers after midnight.
Lows around 30. Chance of
snow 40 percent.
Sunday ...Cioudy. A chance
of rain and snow showers in
the morning... Then rain
showers likely in the afternoon. Highs around 50.
Chance of predpitation 60
percent.
Sunday night...Showers
likely. Lows in the upper 30s.
Chance of rain 60 percent.
Monday ... Cioudy with a
50 percent chance of showers. Highs in the upper 40s.
Monday night and
Tuesday .. . Most ly cloudy.
Lows in the mid 20s. Highs
in the mid 30s.

Tile ... ol tilt Accell a•••c .. to ....... ,.,..... with.,.•••" cue
I*Jilclaa. Mnr padllltl ....,. oa Uqr•t Can A tile Bw csr•cr • - to pi'OYiU
Nate cue aeed1. r. ••BJ, t:llllla aot ftl) COlt effedlte. Tile AA:cr11 CU•tc:
wiD ftllute a padeat A detcadae wJaat pri••!J cue plajaldn weald
NIDOit l'lltaltle for .tllelr aed1. Th padeat doa aot llaft die 11111le of .
1!Jiq toW dlelr owa piiJddn•. Tile
Ct•lc laltafW W., Ida B-..u,
N1lne Pncddoaer ad tlae Medial DlnM:tor Ia Grepi'J vtdna•u, MD.

Acce••

Inside

Wednesday, November 28, 2007

LocAL ScHEDULE
POMEROY - A schedule ot upcoming high
school ~J a roity sport ing event s involving
,t88ms l rom Ueigs County

Ihu!'ldly Npv. 29
Gtrla Basketball

CLINIC

,740.441.3296
'

Redskins safety Sean Taylo~ dies
a day after being shot at his hol;lle
•

Southern at Waterford, 6 p.m.

BY

MAT SEDENSKY
ASSOCIATED PRESS

Eastern at Federal Hocking, 6 p.m.
Meigs at Belpre, 6 p.m.
South Poinl at River Valley, 6 p.m.
Frld!W Nov 30

· Boya Baakatball
Nelsonville-York at Eastern , 6:30p.m.
G8111a Academy at Meigs, 6:30 p.m.
South Gallia at Cross Lanes Christian •

7 30p.m.
OVCS Tournament. TBA
Glr1a Duketball
South GaiUa at Cross Lanes Christian, 6
p.m.
Gatlia Academy at Logan, 6 p.m.
OVCS Tournament, TBA
Saturday P.c 1

Boya Bollkotboll
River Valley at Maigs, 5 p.m.
Eastern at South GaWia, 6:30p.m.
Soutnem at Grov~ City Christian, 11:30

a.m.

·

OVCS Tou rna ment, TBA

Glrla Bllkttball
QVCS Tournament, TBA

MIAMI - Pro Bowl safety Sean Taylor died Tuesday
after he was shot in hi s home
by an apparent intruder,
leaving the Washington
Redskins in mourning for a
teammate · who seemed to
have .reordered his life since
becoming a father.
The 24-year-old player
died at Jackson Memorial
Hospital, where he had been
airlifted after the shooting
early Monday.
"It is with deep regret that
a young man had to come to
his end so -soon,"&gt;father
Pedro Taylor said in a state,
menton behalf of the family.
"Many of hi s fans loved him
because the way he played
football. Many of his opponents feared him the way he
the game.
approached

OSU coach .
finalist
for award
LITTLE ROCK, Ark.
{AP) - Missouri offensive
·coordinator
Dave
Christensen was one of five
finalists announced Tuesday
for the Broyles Award, ~iven
to the nation's top assistant
coach.
. The other finalists are
Auburn defensive coordinator Will Muschamp, Kansas
defensive coordinator Bill
Young, Ohio State defensive
coordiniltor Jim Heacock
and West Virginia offensive
~:oordinator Calvin Magee.
. The Broyles Award is
named for Arkansas athletic
director Frank Broyles. He
was the Razorbacks' football
coach, and more than 25 of
his assistants became head
coaches. They include Joe
Gibbs, Jimmy Johnson,
Johnny Majors and Jackie
Sherrill.
Christensen directs the
nation's No. I offense for the
top-ranked ·Tigers, who will
play Oklahoma in the Big 12
title game on Saturday for a
chance to play in the BCS
national
chamQions~ip
game. Heisman Trophy contender Chase Daniel has
thrown for 3,951 yards and
33
touchdowns
in
Christensen'S'
spread
offt;nse.
.
Magee leads a West
Virginia offense that is No. 2
in the nation in rushing.
Along with Missouri, the
sec ond-r a nked
Mountaioeers control their
own destil)y 'in-the national
title race.
Muschamp's defense is
allowing only 16.7 points
per game and has shut down
some of the Southeastern
Conferenc.e's top rushers.
Auburn ·held Arkansas'
Darren McFadden to 43
yards and Mississippi's
BenJarvus Green-Ellis to 62.
Young has led a Kansas
\lefense that is ranked No. I
in the Big 12 at 318 yards
allowed per game. The
Jayhawks have been one ·of
colle~e foo~ball's biggest.
surpn ses th1s year. They
were undefeated before last
weekend's 36-28. loss to
Missouri.
Ohio State was expected
· io slip some after losing
Heisman Trophy winner
Troy Smith, but Heacock's
defense has allowed under
II points per game, and the
Buckeyes are ranked No. 3
In the nation. Ohio State has
held opponents to three-and·
out on 48.5 percent of their
possessions.
The Broyles Award winner
will be announced Dec: 4 in
little Rack.

CoNTAciUS

HOLZER

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

National scoreboard, Page 82
Jackson edges Gallia Academy, Page.Bl
Steelers co~~Sider optiottS for .field, Page 86

t-740-446-2342 ext 33
Fox - 1-740·446·3008
E-mail- sportSO.mydailysentinel,com

.$J!QrtUiiiiJ!

Bryan Walters, Sports Writer
(740)446·2342, ext. 33
bwallers 0 mydaily1ribune.com

•

Larry Crum, Sports Writer

(740)446·2342. ·~1. 33
,
tcrum@ rnydailyreglster.com
.

'

Others misunderst&lt; •d him,
many appreciated him and
his fami ly lo:,JVed him."
A stri ng of mourners,
including Taylor's father~
visited the player 's home
and. embraced · outside.
Authorities entered the
home, but it was unclear
what they were doing.
NFL commi ssioner Roger
Goodell said the league will
honor Taylor's memory at
all games this weekend.
"This is a terrible tragedy
involving the loss of a young
man who leaves behind
many people struggling ·to
understand it," he said in a
statement.
. Redskins coach Joe Gibbs
said what he would remember most about Taylor was
his excitement about playing
footbalL
"God made him to play
football,"
Gibbs
said

Tuesday during a news conference. "To me, he just
loved and thrived on the
competition part of it. .. .
Sean, he loved footbalL He
loved these guys here."
Gibbs acknowledged it
will be hard to concentrate
on football this week.
"I don't know how we' ll
deal with it, except we'll all
do it together," he said.
Fans already had begun a
makeshift memorial by laying flowers on a field near
the front entrance to the
Redskins' practice facility in
Ashburn, Va.
"This is a terrible, terrible
tragedy," Redskins owner
Daniel Snyder said .
He added the team would
honor Taylor with a patch on
the jersey and the No. 21 on
the helmet.
Please see Taylor. 81

AP photo

Washington Redskins safety Sean Taylor catches a ball during the first day oftralning camp in Ashburn, Va. , in this Aug.
1, 2005 file photo . Taylor died early Tuesday at Jackson
Memorial Hospital in Miami, a day after he was shot at
home in Palmetto Bay, Fla .. by. what police say was an
intruder. He was 24.

James scores 38 as Cavs
hand Celtics second loss
Bv ToM WITHERS

second one."
James came in· averaging
37.5 points, 10.2 rebounds
CLEVELAND- There's and 9.5 assists in his past six
at least one other Big 3 in games,
joining
Wilt
the NBA, and this trio isn't Chamberlain (1964) and
gracing any magazine cov- Oscar Robenson ( 1965) as
ers.
. ' the only players to reach
LeBron James scored 38 those totals in a six-game
points, Drew Gooden added stretch.
"He was fa ntastic,"
a season-high 24 · and
Zydrunas Ilgauskas had 15 Celtics coach Doc Rivers
as Cleveland's threesome said. "That's who he is. He
outplayed Boston's heralded hurt us as much , with hi s
triumvirate during a 109- passing as he did with hi s
104 ·win in overtime on scoring. When he's scoring
Tuesday night.
· and
getting __ e:yeryoQe
James, who has raised his involved, he's a killer.
game to another level , That's what he was tonight."
scored II points in OT as
With his team leading by
the defending Eastern one in overtime, James
Conference
champion~ drained a long 3-pointer to
dropped the Celtics to 11 -2 put Cleveland ahead 99-95,
with one of their best all- and following mi sses by
around performances of the both teams, Cavs forward
early season.
Sasha Pavlovic made a steal ·
James added 13 assists in the lane and fed James
·and finished 14-of-15 from who was fouled.
the line, including 6-of-6 in
He made both free throws
OT. He, Gooden and to make it 10 l-95 .with 54.3
llgauskas
outscored seconds remaining.
Boston's Kevin Garnett,
Allen's 3-pointer brought
. Ray Allen and Paul Pierce the Celtics within 102-98
77-64.
but James went to the line
"We don 't want any tag," and made another pair to
'
said. "We don't want give the Cavs a six-point
any Big 3 or whatever. We lead. Pierce's 3 cut itto 105just go out there and do our 101 but James again made
job . .z is playing career bas- his free'throws.
ketball right now, Drew is
During the closing mingetting better, and I'm going utes, Jame s and Garnett
to do what I have to do for exchanged a few choice
us to win, ·of course."
words and both teams
Allen led the Celtics with play.ed as if it were a playoff
29 points on 10-of-25 shoot- game. After the final horn,
ing, but missed two free there were no friendly hugs
throws with the score tied shared between two of the
92-alllate'in regulation.
East's powers as players on
"I feei ·Iike I let the team both teams headed immedidown ," said Allen, an 89 ately to their locker rooms.
Garnett refused to discuss
AP photo percent career free-throw
Cleveland cavaliers' Drew Gooden (90) drives to the basket against Boston Celtics' Kevin shooter. "I was so surprised whatever problem he had
Garnett (5) during the fourth' quarter of a NBA bi;isketball game, Tuesday in Cleveland. The I missed the first one, I didn' t let it go. I took it into the
Please see Cavs, 81
Caval iers won 109-104 in overtime.
ASSOCIATED PRESS ·

For 1 Saturday, Buckeyes huge
fans of Sooners .and Panthers
.

.BY RUSTY

MILLER
ASSOCIATED PRESS

COLUMBUS - There
will be no bigger Oklahoma
or Pittsburgh fans anywhere
Saturday than the Oh10 State
Buckeyes.
Should the Sooners upend
top-ranked Missouri in the
B1~ 12 championship game,
or 1f the Panthers upset No.
2 West Virginia in their regular-season rivalry, ' he
third-ranked
Buckeyes
would almost certainly find
themselves playing in the
BCS national championship
game for the second year in
a row.
Ohio State defensive lineman Todd Denlinger has
already made plans for
.
Saturday.
"Just watching the games
with
my
somew here
friends ," he' said. " I may
have to go and buy an
Oklahoma shirt . It'll be fun

i

.

.

to watch a ga me, pretty say they backed into the title
much as a fan for a change." game.
The Buckeyes have been
"People have that theory
rooting for other teams all about us backing in, but
we're Il- l and a lot of teams
season, it seems.
They were No. II in the have had chances ·at the first
preseason ~oil but slowly two spots," offensive tackle
moved their way up the Kirk Barton said. "We
chwts while team after team stubbed our toes along the
ahead of them fell. They way and a few teams have
climbed to No. I and stayed · stubbed their toes along the
there for a month before los- way.
·
ing 28·21 at home to Illinois
"N6w if no one else wants
on Nov. 10. That dropped to take it, we'lltake it."
them all the way to No. 7 in
Even if Missouri and West
the Bowl ·Championship . Virginia .both win, the
Series standings.
Buckeyes will have to settle
They came back to beat for the Rqse Bowl - quite a
rival Michigan 14-3 in their consolation prize -· and a
regular-season finale, then likely date with Southern .,
have enjoyed watching California, which would be
Oregon, Okl;~homa, LSU the most glit ~y matchuA of
and Kansas all drop out of the postseason.
the national championship
"It 's tough because a little
hit of you is. like. 'They
picture.
Should either Missouri or have to win so we get to
West Virginia fall, the New Orleans!' But at the
Buckeyrs already have a
ready answer for those who Please,see Buckeyes, 81

AP photo

In this Nov. 17 file photo, Ohio State linebacker James
Laurlnaitis celebrates With fans after beating Michigan, 143, in a college· football game in Ann Arbor, Mich . It's highly
unlikely there will 11e any bigger Oklahoma or Pittsburgh fans
on Saturday than the Ohio State Buckeyes. S,hould the
Sooners upend top-ranked Missouri in the Big 12 championship game, or if the Panthers could somehow upset No .
2 West Virginia , the third-ranked Buckeyes would almost
certainly find themselves playing in the BCS national championship game for the second year in a row.

�Wednesday, November 28, 2007
Page 82 •

NA~ONALSCOREBOARD
Ph1ladelph1a
4 9
308
Soulheast Division

PRo FOOTBALL
National Football L.eagu.
AMERICAN CONFERENCE

v

Orlando
Washmgton
Charlotte
East
WL TPct
PF PA 1 Atlanta
New England 11 0 0 1 000 442 185
M1 am1

Buffalo
NY Jots
M1aml

lnd•anapohs
Jacbonv1He
Tennessee
Houston

5 6 0 455

167 258

2 9 0 182
0 110 000
South
WLTPel
9 2 0 8 18
8 3 0 727

181 278
183 277

PF PA

309 172
243 195

650545 204 22 1
560455 243 263
North
WL TPct

PF PA

830727 272
740636 3 15
470 364 281
470364 182

Pi116burgh

Cleveland
Clndnnatl

BaNimore

145
3 11
292
243

We at
PA
6 5 0 545 261 223
5 6 0 455 221 295
4 7 o 364 162 206
WL TPel

San D1ego
Denver

Kansas C1ty

PF

Oakland
3 8 0 273 200 240
NAnONAL CONFERENCE

I

N Y Giants

PF PA
W L T Pet
1010 909 358 221
7 40636 253 241

Philadelph ia

560 455

Washington

5 60 455 213 240

T~aBay

I
I

I

I

234 21 8
PF
21 4
243
173

PA
164
252
243

New Orleans
Carol1na

7 4 0 636
56 0 455
4 70 364

Atlanta

3 8 0273 155 244
Nortll
WLT Pct

PF

10, 0 909 296
650545 257
560455 236
5 60455 221

Green Bay
DetrOit
M•nnesota
Chicago

I

PA
185
269
22 7
251

West

Seattle
Anzona
San Franc•sco
St LOUIS

WLTPct
74 0 636
560455
380273

2 9 0 182

PF
245
254
150
168

PA
183
259
254
281

y-elinched diVISIOn
Thursday's Games
Green Bay 37 DetrOit 26
Dallas 34 N Y Jets 3
Indianapolis 31 Atlanta 13
Sunday's Games
Seattle 24 St Lou1s 19
Mmnesota 41 N Y G1ants 17
Oakland 20 Kansas City 17
Cleveland 27, Houston 17
Cmc1nnati 35, Tennessee 6
New Orleans 31, Carolina 6
Tampa Bay 19 Washmgton 13
Jacksonville 36, Buffalo 14
San D•ego 32, Balt1more 14
San FranCisco 37, Arizona 31 OT
Ch1cago 37, Denver 34 OT
New England 31 Ph1ladelph1a 28
Monday's Game
Pittsburgh 3 M1am1 0
Thuraday, Nov. 29
Green Bay at Dallas B 15 p m
Sunday, Dee 2
N Y Jets at M1am1 1 p m
Houston at Tennessee 1 p m
Detroit at Mmnesota 1 p m
Buffalo at Wash•ngton 1 p m
Atlanta at St lows 1 p m
Jacksonville at Indianapolis 1 p m
San D1ego at Kansas City, 1 p m
Seattle at Ph•laclelph1a 1 p m
San Franc•sco at Carolina 1 p m
Denver at Oakland 4 05 p m
Cteveland at Anzona 4 05 p m
NY G1ants at Ch1cago 4 15 p m
Tampa Bay at New Orleans 4 15 p m
C•nc•nnat• at Pittsburgh 6 15 p m

Monday, Dec 3
New England at Baltimore 8 30 p m

PRO BASKETBALL
National Bas l&lt;etbell Alloclatlon
EASTERN CONFERENCE
Atlantic Division
WL Pel
GB
Boston
t1 2
846
7 7 500 4 ~
Toronto
New Jersey
7 8
467 5
New Vork
4 9
308 7

GB

813
500
429
385

5
6
6),

7
8
8
4 tO 286
Central Division
WL Pel
8 5
615

8
GB

I

South

W l T Pet

7
6
5

Pet

l

Eal
Dallas

W l
13 3

7

Delr011
Cleveland
9 6 600
Milwaukee
7 5
583
'
lnd•ana
7 6
467 2
Chteago
3 10 231 5
WESTERN CONFERENCE
I
SOuthwest Dlvlelon
I
W L Pel • GB
San Antonto
t2 3
800
9 5
643 2 Y1
1 Dallas
I New Orleans
10 6
625 2'1t
Houston
8 7 533 4
5 9
357 Sir
1 Memphis

1

I

I

I
I

UNC Ashev~lle 64, Tusculum 73
V1rg1n18 94 Northwestern 52
•
MIDWEST
lllmoiS St 61 ChiCago St 49
Indiana 83 GeorgiB Tech 79
N Iowa 61 Iowa St 48
Sam Houston St 81 , W1s Milwaukee
77
'
Wls -Green Say 63 E llhn01s 47
SOUTHWEST
Ark -Uttle Rock 59 R1ce 52
Cent Arkansas 88 Ahema B•ble 47
Oral Roberts 84 Tulsa 70
SMU 81 Paul Outnn 63
UTEP 84, New MexiCo St 76
FAR WEST
Colorado 54 Denver 44
N Colorado 62 Johnson &amp; Wales
1
Colo 51
I Stanford 84, Sacramento St 56
UC Santa Barbara 63, UNlV 60

TRANSACTIONS

Northweet DiYielon
WL
10 5

Pel
Utah
667
Denver
9 6 600
Portland
5 9
357
M1nnesota
2 10 167
Seattle
2 13 133
• Pactf'lc Dlvlalon
W L Pet
11 3
786
Phoen1x
8 6
571
LA Lakers
Gotden State
6 7 462
6 7
462
LA Clippers
5 9
357
Sacrament,o

GB

Tuelday'a Sports Transaction•

1
4'1t
6'1t
8
GB

3
4h
4h
6

Monday's Games
New York 113, Utah 109
M1nnesota 103, New Orlean s 94
Washmgton 110, Dallas 98
Orlando 85 Portland 74
Sacramento 11 2 San Antonio 99
Golden State 129 Phoenix t14
Houston 88 LA Clippers 71
Tuesday 8 Games
Cleveland 109 Boston 104 OT
M1am1 110 Charlotte 90
MemphiS 11 0, New Jersey 103
Ph•ladeJptua 114, M•lwaukee 99
Chicago 90 Atlanta 78
lndiBna 112. Denver 110
LA Lakers 106 Seattle 99
Wednesday's Games
Milwaukee at Atlanta 7 p m
Utah at Philadelphia 7 p m
Memphis at Toronto 7 p m
Cleveland at Detroit 7 30 p m
Washington at San AntoniO 8 30 p m
Minnesota at Dallas 8 30 p m
Houston at Phoemx 9 p m
Orlando at Seattle 10 p m
lnd1ana at Portland 10 p m
Golden State at sacramento 10 p m
Thurtday 1 Games
New York at Boston 6 p m
Denver at l A Lake'rs 10 00 p m
Houston at Golden State 10 30 p m ...

..

1
1

I

I

BASKETBALL
·
COLLEGE
TUesday's College Basketball
Major Scores
EAST
Buffalo 68 Canlslus 59
Cornell 73, Binghamton 68
Dartmouth 76 Vermont 75
Hampton 51 Delaware 50
P•ttsburgh 80 Boston U 53
Provtdence 78 Ma•ne 48
Sam! Joseph's 74 Ball St 63
Towson 74 N C Central 52
West V1rg1n1a 110, Md -Eastern Shore
44
SOUTH
Bowl1ng Green 67 Furman 58
Centenary 105 Northwestern St 90
Clemson 61 Purdue 58
Duke 82 WiSCOnSin 58
Elan 59 W Carolina 49
Flonda 71, Sietson 46
Flonda St 75 M•nnesota 61
Fresno St 74 Wmston·Salem 64
Gardner-Webb 86, High Point 71
Howard 75 Navy 65
Kentucky 62, Stony Brook 52
libertY 91, longwood 67
lows•ana·MQnroe 105, Alcorn St 75
MemphiS 104 Austin Peay 82
MISSISSippt 102 Troy 76
SE loutslana 61 Jackson St 49
Savan11ah St 56 North Flonda 32
Tennessee 93 N Carolina A&amp;T 59
Tennessee Tech 117, Bluef1elcl88
UAB 78 Lou1s18na lafayette 72 OT

I

the drama
"I was at my SISter's
hockey game on Saturday
mght and between penods
fromPageBl
when they were Zambonimg (the tee), I went down
same lime, we at one lime and watched the Kans.ascontrolled our own destmy. Mtssouri game," Launnattts
Now we don't," hnebacker satd w1th a gnn, refernng to
Marcus Freeman sa1d. Kansas' first loss of the sea"We're JUSt anxtous to see son. "It's fun to see how 11
who wms and 1f we happen all plays out"
to go out to Pasadena. that's
So far at least, no offictal
no consolation pnze, that's team v1ewing party has
a great accomphshment for been
orgamzed.
The
any college football team Buckeyes have practtce
We'll be excited to go out Saturday mornmg, then
there too"
they ' ll hkely form in small
Since beatmg Michigan, grour,s all around town But
the Buckeyes have gotten a they II still be hnked by text
ktck out of being fans
messages and cell phones
Just last week, linebacker Laurinattts· and Barton hve
James Launnaitis was back only a few doors away from
home m Mmnesota and was each other, and were
able to catch up on some of already discussmg meeting

Buckeyes

Taylor

Wednesday, November 28, 2007

www.mydailysentinel.com

The Daily Sentinel

an unsolved kilhng.
"Sean has been a close
fnend of m10e s10ce our
da~ s at the Umvers1ty of
from Page Bl
Mtamt," New York Jets
Redskins
teammate hnebacker Jonathan Y1Ima
Chnton Portis also played sa1d m a statement "He was
w1th
Taylor
at
the a great teammate and an
University of Mtami. He even greater person. It ts so
had sensed a new matunty hard for me to fathom that I
am not going to be able to
m his close friend.
"It's hard to expect a man p1ck up the phone to call
to ~row up overmght," htm."
Doctors had been encourPortts sa1d "But ever smce
aged
late Monday when
he had his child, it was like
Taylor
squeezed a nurse 's
a new Sean, and everybody
hand,
according
, to Vmny
around here knew tt He was
always sm1hng, always Cerrato, the Redskins' vice
happy, always talkmg about prestdent of football opera·
lions But family fnend
his child "
Two bouquets were left Richard S,harpstem satd he
by a palm tree outstde a was told Taylor never
consciousness
front gate of Taylor's home regamed
after
being
taken
to the hosBeside the matlbox , an
untouched new spaper lay pttal.
"Maybe he was trying to
with news of his shooting
say
goodbye or something ,"
Taylor's death CODICS
satd.
Sharpstem
nearly a year after Broncos
Taylor, the fifth overall
cornerback
Darrent
in the 2004 NFL draft
pick
Williams was k:tlled m a
an All·American
follow10g
drive· by shooting following
season
at
Miami,
was shot ·
an argument at a Denver
nightclub on Jan.
I. early Monday in the upper
University of M1ami defen· leg, damagmg the key
sive lineman Bryan Pata femoral artery and caus10g
was shot to death m s1gmficant blood loss
Trauma experts satd a
November 2006 several
senous
wound to thts large
miles from Taylor's home m

BASEBALL
MLB-Suspended LHP Dan Serafint 50
games for test1ng positiVe for a parlor
mance-enhanc1ng substance
American League
TAMPA BAY DEVIl R~Y S-Agreed to
terms w1th C Hector Gimenez, tNF-OF
Chn s RIChard and OF Jon Weber on
m1nor league contracts
Nallonfll League
HOUSTON ASTA05-Agreed to terms
With AHP Doug Broca1t on a one-year
contract
lOS ANGELE S DODGERS-Named
Dr Charles Steinberg executive v1ce
president markettng and public rela
lions
PITISBURGH PIRATEs---Named Don
Long I11Hmg coach
WASHINGTON NATIONALS-Agreed
to terms w1th AHP Steven Shell AHP
Denms Tankersley RHP Bobby Brownlie
AHP Tr1stan Crawford , RHP J1m Ed
Warden LHP Mike Bacs1k, lHP Mtke
Hmckley LHP Arn1e Munoz lHP Jason
Stanford C Humberto Cola C Chad
Moeller INF Wllt1am Bergolla INF
Yurendell de Caster INF Antomo Perez,
~NF Luis Jimenez INF Ed Rogers, OF
Jason Oubo1s OF Tommy Murphy, OF
Jorge Pad1lla on m1nor league contracts
FOOTBALL
National Football League
NFL-Suspended Minnesota DT Fred
Evans two games for VIOlating the
league s personal conduct policy dunng
a pa1r of offseason problems
ARIZONA CARDINALS-Placed CB
Enc Green on InJured reserve Released
P Mtke Barr and TE Tim Euhus Resl(rled DE Bo Schobel
CINCINNATI BENGAlS- S1gned lB
J1m Maxwell Placed S Haran a-Daze
Jones on InJUred reserve
CHICAGO BEAR5-P1aced RB cedric
Benson on oniured reserve Sogned OL
Ryan Gibbons to the pract1ce squad
Termlna1ed the practice-squad contract
of S Brandon Sharp
DENVER BRONCOS-Signed G Isaac
Snell Waived FB Kyle Johnson
INDIANAPOLIS COLTs-Released DE
Simeon Alee Ae·s•gnad AB luke
Lawton
JACKSONVILLE JAClUARS-Sogned
LB Marqu1s Cooper Released LB Jorge
Cordova Transferred DE Bnan Smith
from the physiCally-unable·t~rtorm tist
to lllJUred reserve
KANSAS CITY CHIEF5-S&lt;gned PK
John Carney
NEW ENGLAND PATRIOT$-AC1ova1ed
WR Troy Brown from the physiCally
unable-to-perform list
Placed LB
Roseveit Colvin on InJured reserve
Waived DL Kareem Brown
NEW YORK GIANT&amp;-Signed LB
Torrance Daniels lrom the practice
squad Released AB Patrick Pass
SAN FRANCISCO 49ER5-Sogned CB
Markus Curry to the practice BCIUBd
Waived TE Zac Alcorn !rom the practice

GALLIPOLIS Free
throws can make a world of
a difference when it comes
to the game of basketball.
Gallia Academy found out
the hard way Tuesday night
durmg a 37-33 setback to
vtstttng Jackson m the
Southeastern Ohio Athletic
League opener for both
gtrls' programs.
The Blue Angels (1-1, 0-1
SEOAL) made only etght of
23 charily stnpe attempts for
35 percent, including a dismal 3-of-12 performance
durmg a pivotal second half
stretch
that saw the
Iron ladies (2-1, 1-0) battle
back from an early eightpomt defictt
The Blue and White never
trailed in the first half and
dido ' t rehnqutsh the lead
until the 3. 18 mark of the
thtrd quarter at 24-23, then
traded baskets with the
guests to enter the fourth
down 26-25 The hosts
never led agam.
JHS led three times m the
finale by four pomts, the
first of whtch occurred with
2:52 remaimng when Kelsey
Martm converted an oldfashioned three-point play to
give the Red and White a
33·29 edge.
GAHS pulled back to
within a possession just 28
seconds later when semor
Ryann Leslie. converted a
layup to make it a 33-31
contest, but the guests
answered with I :42 left
when Candace Chapman
came up wllh a putback on
an offensive rebound to
make it a 35-31 advantage.
Jumor Rachel Jones again
made 11 a two·pomt contest
after her layup with 24 sec-

also won the battle on the
boards, clatmmg a 3 1-2 5
edge overall and a 15- I 0
advantage on the offensive
glass Gallia Academy also
had three more turnovers
than the lronladtes' e1ght
Alexis Ge1ger Jed the Blue
Angel s w1th 10 points, fol lowed by Leslie with eight
onds remaming pulled the and Jones w1th stx Kan
defictt to within 35-33.
Campbell contnbuted four
Then came the other dtsas- pomts to the losing cause.
terforGalhaAcademy at the wh1le Sam Barnes and Amy
free throw Ime
Noe each added two pomts
The Blue Angels fouled . Allie Troester rounded out
Martm wtth 12.3 seconds the GAHS scormg Wtth one
l~ft on the game clock, set- point.
GAHS established an
tmg up a one-and-bonus
opportumty
for
the early 9-1 advantage in the
Ironladtes. Jackson cleared first quarter after forcmg
the lane wtth a two-pomt Jackson to mtss Its first e1ght
edge, leavmg four GAHS shots from the field The
play~~s around ~h~ foul la_ne Blue Angels .led 11 -4 after
awatttng Martm s cruc1al etght mmutes of play and
attempt
20-18 at mtermiSSion
Mart1n mtssed her bonus
Martin led the Ironladte s
shot, but none of the four and all scorers wtth 15
Blue Angels around the lane
f0 11
d
b
owe
Y
went for the rebound potn 1s,
whtch caromed directly ~h~pman w1t~ et~ht and
back to Martm for an offen- Jann Wasch With s1x markstve board Martm dnbbled ers.
around the penmeter to run
Gallia Academy salvaged
some clock before being a split on the evemng wtth a
fouled agam With JUSt under natl·btttng 37·35 wm m the
seven seconds left m the Jumor varsity contest. The
contest.
Blue Angels ralhed back
'vfartin sank both free from an eight-pmnt fourth
throws the second time quarter defic1t to capture the
around, sealmg the deal on dects1on
the 37-33 triumph.
Morgan Leshe led the JV
The Blue Angels shot 35 Angels wtth 10 pomts, folpercent in the setback, con· lowed closely by Morgan
necting on 12-of-34 field Daniels with eight markers.
Chapman
led
goal attempts - including Nichole
1-of·4 from three-point ter- Jackson and all scorers with
ntory. Jackson, conversely, a dozen pomts.
made just 13-of-43 floor
The Blue Angels return to
attempts for a 30 percent actiOn thts Friday when they
effort. JHS also shot 25 per- travel to Katie Smith
cent from behind the arc, GymnasiUm to take on
making 2-of-8 trifecta tnes. Logan m another SEOAL
Jackson was 9-of·l3 at the contest. The JV lip-off 1s
foul line for 69 percent and scheduled for 6 p m

wtth James.
"I was nilking to a lot of
people," Garnett said m a
sarcasttc tone. "I was talking to Doc Rivers. I was
talking to Drew Gooden. I
had a couple of discusstons
. with a couple of different
people "
And how did he thmk
lDIIes did?
"He played well," he satd
tersely.
Allen's floater in the lane
put the Celtics ahead 92·89
with 2.03 left m regulatton,
but the CavJiliers tied it with
59 seconds to go on
Pavlovic's 3-pointer.
Boston had a chance to
take the lead when Allen
was fouled. but the smooth
guard, who came in shoot10~ 92 percent from the hoe
th1s season, mtssed both
attempts and the Cavs
qutckly called time.
Rtvers was surprised
Allen would misfire
"Yeah," he said. "But I'll
take those all day. We were
69 percent at the line If we

had made our. free throws,
we probably would have
won the game."
James could have won it
in the final second, but was
short on a 17-footer at the
buzzer.
Gooden was 8-for-8 (rom
the field m the third quarter,
sconng 16 to help the Cavs
take a 74-72 lead mto the
fourth. After dropping his
last JUmper, Gooden ran
down the floor and wtggled
his fingers m front of his
face, a gesture he calls
"makmg 11 ram."
Although the Celttcs and
their traveling show of
superstars were m town,
James downplayed the tdea
of it being a statement
game.
"Nab," he said. "They are
one of the best teams in the
Eastern Conference. We are
one of the best teams in the
Eastern Conference. It's
going to be a good showdown."
Rivers also dismtssed th1s
game meaning anythmg
more than the other 81 regular-season matchups
"Game 7s are statement
games," he said
But from the opening up,

tt was clear both teams
wanted this one
The Celttcs bench spent
as much time standmg as
sitting, and Cleveland's
reserves, too, were involved
from the outset. Tempers
flared late m the first half
when Cavs guard Devm
Brown got mto an exchange
wtth three Celttcs, mcludmg
Garnett.
''There was a lot of trash
talkmg out there," Gooden
said. "It was hke an old
streetball game."
Notes The teams w1ll
play agam Sunday m
Boston . Cleveland )ms
won eight of nine meetmgs
wtth the Celttcs .... James
seemed surpnsed by comments made by free agent
forward Anderson VareJaO,
who frustrated by a contract
tmpasse wtlh Cleveland's
front office, has as~ed to be
trdded "Thmgs can some·
limes by twtsted," sa1d
James, who spoke wt th h1 s
teammate a few days ago. "I
don't know tf there ts a lot
of truth to that. When I have
spoken to And~ he wants to
be on this team And whoever ts on my team is gomg
to be successful "

house, but neither she nor
Taylor's girlfriend was
IOJured.
Pohce found stgns of
forced entry, but have not
determmed tf they were
caused Monday or dunng
the previous burglary
The shoot10g happened m
the pale yellow house
Taylor bought two years
ago. In last week's break-to,
pohce said someone pried
open a front wmdow, rifled
through drawers and left a
kttchen kmfe on a bed.
Taylor starred as a runt1me."
mug back and defensive
The attack came e1ght back at Gulhver Prep 10
days after an intruder was Miami His father ts pohce
reported at Taylor's home. chief of Florida City.
A pnvate man with a
Officers were sent to the
home about I :45 a.m. small mner ctrcle, Taylor
Monday after Taylor's gtrl- rarely granted mterviews.
But, beh10d the scenes,
fnend called 911.
Sharpstein satd Taylor 's Taylor was described as
girlfriend told htm the cou- personable and smart.
ple was awakened by loud
After Taylor was drafted,
noises, and Taylor grabbed problems soon began.
a machete he keeps !n the Taylor fired his agent, then
bedroom for protection . &amp;ktpped part of the NFL's
Someone
then
broke mandatory rookie sympo~
through the bedroom door sium, drawmg a $2.5,000
and f1red two shots, one ftne . Driving home late
mtssing and one hitting from a party dunng the seaTaylor, Sharpstein said. son, he was pulled over and
Taylor's 1-year-old daugh- charged with drunken dn·
ter, Jackie, was also m the ymg . The case was dis·

missed in court, but by then
it had become a monthslong distracl!or, tor the
Redskins
Taylor also was fined at
least seven times for late
hits, unifonn v1olations and
other mfractions over hts
first three seasons, mcludin~ a $17,000 penalty for
sp1tt10g in the face of an
opponent dunng a 2006
playoff game.
Taylor endured a yearlong
legal battle after he was
accused 10 2005 of bran·
d1sh10g a gun at a man durmg a fight pver allegedly
stolen all·terram vehicles
near Taylor's home. He
eventually pleaded no contest to two mtsdemeanors
and was sentenced to 18
months' probation.
Taylor said the end of the
assault case was like "a gray
cloud" bemg hfted. It was
also around the time that his
daughter was born, and
teammates
noticed
a
change.
On the field, Taylor's·play
was often errattc. Assistant
coach Gregg Wilhams fre·
quently called Taylor the
l)est athlete he'd ever
coached, but nearly every
big play was mitigated by a

blown asstgnment. Taylor
led the NFL m missed taokles in 2006 yet made the Pro
Bowl because of h1s reputa·
tton as one of the hardest
hitters in the league
Thts year, however,
Taylor was allowed to play
a true free safety postt1on,
using his speed and power
to chase down passes and
crush would-be rece1vers
His five interceptions tte for
the league lead m the NFC,
even though he m1ssed the
last two games because of a
spramed knee.
"I just take this JOb very
senously," Taylor sa1d m a
rare group mterview durmg
traimng camp "It's almost
hke, you play a ktd's game
for a km?'s ransom And tf
you don t take it serious
enough, eventually one day
you' re gmng to say, 'Oh, I
could have done thts, I
could have done that '
"So I )USt say, '1'111
healthy nght now, I'm
gomg mto my fourth year,
and why not do the best that
I ~an?' And that's whatever
it is, whether it's eating
right or training myself
right, whether it's studying
harder, whatever I can do to
better myself."

squad

COLLEGE
COLORADO
STATE-Announced
Sonny Lublck will not return as tootbalt
coech

MISSISSIPPI- Named Houston NuH
football coach
VIAGINIA-Exerctsed a one-year contract ophon on AI Groh football coach

up to watch and talk about
the day's actwn.
The Buckeyes have been
hurting ever since last
year"s embarrassmg 41·14
loss to Florida m the BCS
championship game. They
plan to use that game as
motivation for this year's
bowl game - wherever it
ts, and whomever the opponent is
"Last yeat after the
Flonda game, we had unfinIshed busmess," center J1m
Cordle sa1d. "It's mce to
win the Btg Ten but you've
got to show on the national
scene what you' re made of.
Now it's changed so we' re
rooting teams on, trymg to
get m the best game. We're
gomg to work hard to show
how good we are."
artery, leadmg from the
abdomen through the upper
thtgh, ts among the most
dtfficult to f1x and can
quickly dram the body of
blood. Too long a blood loss
prevents oxy~en from
reaching the bram and vital
organs
"Accordmg to a prehmtnary
investigation,
it
appears that the vtctlm was
shot ins1de the home by an
intruder,"
M1ami -Dade
County pohce said 10 a
statement. "We do not have
a subject description at thts

mrtbune - Sentinel - l\e

Ironladies slip past
Gallia AcademY, 37-33
BY BRYAN WALTERS
BWALTERS@MYDAILYTRIBUNE COM

Cavs
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Departmen
tore w1th good JUnk Art
CJII ectables books toots
otor cycles &amp; parts
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h1ng for everyone Wed ,
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Male Dalmatian 3 to 4 years
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882-2793 or 304-862-2326 $475 all utllrttes paid, qu1et
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FOK RENT
Please Return (Missing ...,,__ _ _ _ __, .... - - - - - - - . .... - - . , . . - - - - . Great
locat•on 446 9966
ubject1o 1111 - .
stnce 11 / 13) Lost male 1110
11116 u ...... nr.lkn'l:'n 111110
WANTF.D
air Housing Act o
2 &amp; 3 bedroom houses for
dachshund black w/very lit
l~WANI'ED
n.r..a...r " ·"·r,.l.u.o
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988.
rent no pets, (740)992·5858
tie brown ar~swers to Dooby, ~.oo-------'
Slight scar on bally 2 or 3
2 bedroom house 1n
Thla
nowapopt
light patches ot ha1r grow•ng
Manpower IS now hiring for Offer1ng full ttme care tor the
cep11 only hoi
Middleport tor more 1nforma
the following positions elderly ladles m my home,
back on h•s nose Kids Pet
m1ss very much 304-675
tion call (7401992 1621
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Automobile
Produt1on 20 years e)(perlence excel
DE atondanto.
Workers 1n the Buffalo WV lent references Call lor
All rHI e•t.te sdverta.lng
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In thll MWSpllpir Is
Area Benefits available Call more informatiOn 740-446·
$550fmon,
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W. will not knowln
Today 304 757·3338
441-0110 or 992 5174
Act
of
1968
F•lr
Hou1lng
occept a n y ~
~ F't.&amp;\ MM!Kt:r
'
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whl&lt;:h m11knlt lllepl to
Metal Fabncator 1s accept Professionally
Clean,
llement In vlolatlo
3 beautiful house broken k1l·
2BA 1 Bath, No pets 1636
HYertle1"1ny
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&amp;
Business
Chatham Ave 740 446
ftholaw.
tens 304-895-3013
A1vers1de Auct1on Barn Sat
preference,
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or
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4234 or 206·7661
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dltcrlmln.~lion baMd on
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Stevens 22 A1fte Modei 15A
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Cert1f1ed Occupational
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Announcement....................... ...........
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Please
submit
resume
ancl3
~
•
Available Dec 1 304·755·
1 yt!ar axper1ence 1n LTC
p1 cl... .. n Qe limitation or
W1nchastor 37A 16 Gauge,
Anttqun........ .. ............. .......
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professtonal references to
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or 304 675 6757
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preferred
Conneet1cut Arms 50 Cal
Apartments lor Rent..... •. ...... ......
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70764 ST R1 124, VInton
"Every
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ThJe newsp~per will not
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5332 weekends 740 591
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Home Heatlh Aides and
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lnformld thlt 111
BuolnOH and Buildings ............................ 340
WID connectiOn $450/mo
Dec &amp; New Sell er 6ocated D1rect resumes/lnqumes to pos1bons available
Apply OHIO VALLEY PUBUSHdwelling• ad"rtlnd In
Buolneaa Opportunity ""W ........ ........ . 210
$2501dep You pay all utdlltes
Amanda Htll,
5 Miles Below the Dam on
thl1 ntWipiPir Ire
at 1480 Jackson P1ke
lNG CO recommends
Bullneaa Trotnlng ...................... , .... , ....... 140
404·456·3802
Aehab Manager
1vall1bl1 on an equal
At 7 South 740 256·6989
Gallipolis plione 441-1393 that you do bus1ness with
Campers llo Motor Homes .......................... 790
311
Bw::krldtf8
Rd
opportunity
b11et
for Skilled OffiCe Of apply at people you know and
Camping Equtpmant ................ ............ ....... 780
3BR 1 bath 1n 61dwell
Bldweh Ohio
1456 Jad&lt;son Pike, phone NOT to send money
Cardo ol Thanks ......................................... 010
$575/mo + sec dep 446
ah•ll@
scenlchlllsnurslng
com
lor
through
the
mad
unttt
you
For sale by owner 3BR 3644
Chltd/Eiderty care .................................... 190
441 9263
Ph 740·446·7150
• Passport!Pnvate
Care have Investigated the Ranch. 1 bath Fam1ly - - - - - - - Electrical/Refrigeration ............................... 840
Absolute Top Dollar U S
Equipmentlor Rent ....... .. •.•.
.... . 480
www vrablehealthcare com Office Competitive Wages lo:11e=rrn=g=====~ Room Stcwe! Fndge W/0 3BFI 1 5 bath house m
S1lver and Gold Coins
•nclucled Askmg $70 000 town $575/rent + sec dep
Excavating ................ ............................... . 830
and Benehts •ncludmg 1!1
Proolsets Gold R1ngs Pre Chnsban Company seeking health
Call740·709 6339
446 3644
Fann Equipment..... .. ....... .... ............... 810
Insurance
and
MONEY
1935
US
Currency Manager to work from home mileage
Fam~s for Rant............................... ..... ... 430
3BR 1BA laundry room 65
Solitaire Diamonds M T S
Fannalor Sale ..•••
• ..... .. .. .............. 330
$2,000·$6,000 per month,
House for sale m Rac1ne MIH Creek No pets 740·
axe
Benehts
FT/PT
call
POST
OFFICE
NOW
area
Approx
4
acres,
all
Co1n
Shop
151
Second
For Leaoe ............................... ........ .... ....... 490
HIRING
profeSSionally landscaped 446·9523
Avenue GallipoliS 740 446 668-434·6 256
For Sale.....
585
Avn Pay $20/hr or
••NO'I'IICE**
Ranch style house w1th 4 .,.-- - - - - - 2842
For Sale or Trade................. ........
590
.,
1Mng room dm· 3Br 2 car garage Ctty
laborer-Earn
as
You
$57K
annually
bedrooms,
Fruita &amp; Vegetables ...... •• .... . .......... .580
School Distri ct Water &amp;
Want to buy Junk Cars, call Learn
Start Outk:lmg for Including Fadet'al Benal1!s
Borrow Smart Contact 1ng room kitchen large tam
Furntohed Rooms........ .
........
..450
-~ ·
he
appliances
Included
740 3BB 0884
your future NOW by JOining
and OT,Pald Tratning
the OhiO Olvls1on Of tly room centra 1Blr, gas at
'
General Hauling..
................................. ...850
Ref
Req
740
$600/mth
Add,
our Praless1onal Team and
VacatiOns FTfPT
Ftnanc1al
Institution's and 1 fl repl ace
I 1o11 oI a
Giveaway................ ..... .. ...... • ........ ..040
446·0969
1
•\
11'1
0\
\II\
I
Pressure
Clean•ng
1·866-542-1531
Office o1 Consumer large Flonda room com·
Happy Ada ........ .. ...... ...............................050
Mamtenanco Techn1c1an All
USWA
Affairs BEFORE you refi
pletely cedar opens onto
Attantton!
..., 1 1H II I "
Hay 11 Groin...... • ....
..840
;;;;;:;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; pos1t10ns requ~re extended ~------- nance your home or pat1o &amp; pool area Heated •n l ocal company offenng "NO
Help Wanted ........................................ ....... 110
I
TRAVEL outstde the state TRUCK DRIVER NEEDED
obtain a loan BEWARE ground pool enclosed by prt DOWN PAYMENr
pro
Home Improvement&amp;..
• •.• . ... 810
HD.l' W ANrEU Company provides lodg1ng, Henderson WV Based
of requests lor any lal'ge vacy lancing and land· grams for you to buy your
Homes lor Sale...... .......... ...... .. . .....
310
transport ation and Per COL L1cense &amp; 2yrs
advance payments of seeped Fm1shed 2 car home Instead of rentmg
Houaahold Gooda . ... .•
. ......... 51()
De1m AVERAGE start1ng Expertence MVR Aequ~red
fees or msurance Gall the 9arage attached to hOuse • t 00% fmanCing •
Houoealor Rent..... ........
410
An Excellent way to earn
wage w1th cost of beneflts C
· .:.
al...:li.:.30...:4.:.16_75:...·_7 4..:34___ Office ol
Consumer and l1nlshecl &amp; heated 3 car • Less than perfect credtt
In Memoriam......
.. .. ............................... 020
money The New Avon
Included •s $2 10 00 per field Affairs toll free at 1·866· garage
unattached ac~epted
tnaurance......................... . .......
.. ....... 130
Call Manlyn 304 882 2645 day worked w1th a chance to Truck Dnvers COL Class A 278 0003 to learn 11 the Excellent conclttlon ready to • Payment could be the
Lawn &amp; Garden Equipment...... ......... .. .680
- - - - - - - advance up to $255 00 per ReqUired minimum of 5 mortgage
broto;er or move •n $255 000 00 Call same as rent
Llveatock. ............ ...... ... ................. ...... 830
years
dnvlng
exp
(740)949 2217
Loot and Found ............... ......... .. .....
.. 060
AVON1 All Areas• To Bu y or f1eld day worked We proVIde
lender
ts
properly :....;.:.:....:._ __ _ _ Mortgage
Locators
EMperlence
on
Lots fo Acreage.. .. ...... .. .....
........ ..... 350
Sell
Sh1rley Spears 304· paid tra1n1ng and EXCEL· Overde•men&amp;IOnat loads
licensed (ThiS IS a public House
for
SALEI
::17'1140;:13~6~7..;·00.;;0
;
.;
0~:---,
3
Mlocelloneouo.... ............. ............... ... •..... 170
675-1 429
LENT BENEFITS
Pre Must have good- dnvmg service announcement Bedroom 51h St , New 12
l\fODlLE HOM~
Miscellaneous Merchandise. .. •..•. .. ....... 540
employment DRUG TE ST record Earn up 10 52 000 from the Oh1o Valley Haven, wv $3S 500 740
1-'0R RENT
Mobile Homo Repair................ ..... .......... 860
and a vahd CV•ver s Licen se week'" For application Call ::Pu;bl:l~sh~on:g:C:om:p:a:"f:l=~ 992 5641
L-------~
Mobile Homotl lor Rent , ,,....................... 420
.
M·F
.are requtred Clas s A COL (
-------304 2 2164
Mobile Homnlor Sale........
•.... 320
Money to Loan ....................................... 220
ant
1815030am 4pSclloomu•
I'RomNoSv•n.
rri'IX."
NAL
! br
Motorcycles fo 4 Wheelero
.•.
..... 740
APPLI CATIONS
A ~o
L&amp;ton'-L::I
REDUCED! $80 000 Call References 304 675·4874
Mualcalln•truments .... ....... . ........ .. 570
INTERVIEWIN G
FROM
740 446-7029
or 304-674 6424
Personals ....... • ...•
.. ...... 005
9 00 am until 5 00 PM ON
TURNED DOWN ON
NICe JBR newly remodeled - B
-R
_o_n_A-da_m
_s-v&lt;
-ile_R_d
3
Pets lor Sale................. .. ........ ........
.. 560
DECEMBER 4th AT THE Gallipolis career College SOCIAL SECURITY ISSI?
Plumbing fo Heating ..
....... ...... • ....... 820
BEST WESTERN INN 701
(G
Cl
t H
)
No Fee Unless We Wlnl
New WH &amp; Furn CIA $375/rent + dap Call after
Proloaalonal Sarvlcea........ ........
...... 230
W MAIN ST RIPLEY WV
areers ose o orne
1-888 582 3345
Applianc e tncluded Across 5pm 44 6-4562
AN D ON DECEMBER 5th Call Today! 740·446·4367,
from Vlnton Elem $65 o0o -'-- - - - - - Radio, TV llo CB Repair ................. .... ........ 160
"' 1-800-214 0452
740 245 5555 or 441 5105 Mobile home for rent w1th
Real Eotate Wanted ... • ..... •. ...... • • ..... 380
AT TH E WINGATE INN,
wwwgaRipol•scareeroOI~ com
electri Cheat (740)949·2237
Sc:hoolalnotructton....................... .......... 150
1502 GRAND CENTRAL !r:c_'~,"
.
~
.~~~
FOR"~.
MOBFORILI:S~·~DS
Seed , Plant &amp; Fertttlzer .••. .. • ..... .. . ..• 850
AVENUE VIENN~ WV OR
"""~""""'
.::MLLo
r......:.
N1ce 2BR at Johnsons
Slluationo Wanted........................
120
Send work hiStory and day and Schoo~ 12746
Mobile Home Park 740-446
Space lor Rent ....... • .......
.. ........ 460
11me phone number to
WANIID
2003
Sporting Goodo................... .......
...... 520
Techmc1an Tramee PO Box
Do
0 clown payment 4 bed- t.t:~.
1
SUV'alor Sale ................, .., .•.•
. ........ 720
565 Manetta Ohio 45750
To
rooms Large yard Covered a:.-arge
200 Double rra•ler for rent' JBR 2 BA
Trucks lor Sale............. ........ ...... . ..... 715
EOE
deck Al1ached garage 74Q- wide on concrete toundat1on Call 367·7762 or 446·4060
Upholottry ............... . ............ ................ 870
Need someone to take care 367· 7129
m great cond1!10n w1th 10
Vono For Sate ....... ...... , .....
.... .. .. 730
Look•ng for a good auto of you r tcw&amp;O-ooe lf1 their
acres ol land 5 ml1es from
APAKThtENTS
Wanted to Buy ....... • .................. .. ..... . 090
mechanic send resume to 11ome 1n Gallipolis f Pt, 2 story Home wiAiver lot Point Pleasant on black top L--oifli;oiiaiiRENrlili;;.,_.J
Wanted to Buy· Farm SIJpplles .
•.
620
78 Setty Road Al t&gt;any Oh Pleasanl Call me (740)446· 3br 2ba, 2 car garage 304· road $85 000 304-675- 1730
Wanted To Do .................... ........ .
..... 180
45710
7165
675·2667
or 304-695-3082
Apt for Rent No Pet s 740
Wontld to Rent ............... ...................... 470
,....,=:o:::--::-====--=-==~..-:;-:;;;:;;.-::m;;;;-=-..:,....-..;;;;;;u;:--, 992· 5658
Yard Sal• Galllpollo................ • ........ .. .. 072

dvertlsements

ar

~f.n__ ~ ~.~y _.ll

r:

Loo-ioiiiliiilliiliiiiiiiiio.,J

CLASSIFIED INDEX

and 2 bedroom apart
ments, furnished and unfur·
mshed and houses m
Pomeroy and Middleport ,
sewnty deposit required, no
pets 740·992·221 8

AND BUUDINGS

MOBILE HOME LOT FOR
AHentlonl
RENT. 1031 Georges Creek
local company offermg YNO Ad 44111t1
DOWN PAYMENr pro - - - - - - - grams for you to buy your Wanted Acreage to lease
tor the 2008 Deer Season
home 1nstead of renting
Would prefer 200+ acres for
• 1000/c hnanc1ng
• L~ than pertect credLt fam1ly &amp; fnends to 11unt (no
outhners) please contact
accepted
' Payment could be the (828)-279·6159 or (628·)
same as rent
689-8516
Mortgage
locators
1(1\l\l'(740)367-0000

0

In front of Pt
FOUND
Pleasant Fire Dept a set of
GMC l&lt;eys 304 593-0570

r

remodeled Ranch on 1 acre
m/'1 In Gallipolis New kit wl
pantry &amp; laundry rm Huge
master stute wl FP &amp; pnvate
entrance DR, LA w/ gas FPI
Attached carport 2 car
garage &amp; pnvacy fence Nat
gas Heal pump &amp; CIA E•c
Cond Ready to move In
$98 500 neg 740 645 8751

Part Basse t Hound Male
whtte and brown 256·1233

211 5, 740·949·3 151 Sue s L---F·Ou-Niiii;.,_.J
Greenhouse
-

Public Not1ce Please be
notified anyone caught Irespassing on the property of
Alex
MCCauseland
10
Henderson &amp; Pliny wv with
out wntten permiSsion on
them shalt be subject to
lmmed1ate arrest &amp; prosecuti

In violation of the law

I

• 8 ... old pups Mother lull

OI'EN HOUSE SCHEDULE
November 30 C 12·2pm
2394
Second
Street
Syracuse December 1 @ 2·
4pm 460 Grant Street
Middleport December 7 @
12 2pm 257 Cole Street
Middleport Contact Agent
Wendl Miller Realtor Agent
Number
740-416·401 5,
Broker G Bruce Teaford
www teafordrealostate net
Teatord Real Estate
Real

POLICIES. Ohio Valley Publlthlng Feut"4H tha rlghtiO ICil. rt)Kt, or Cll'lotllny ad It II'IV tlmt Errors mutt be repol1ed on the flrat
Trlbun.Sentk'IIH'~~ghllllf will bllrnpontlbl•lor no mort thlln Itt• t::u.l of tt. IPIIIa occupt.d by tn. error and onty the flr1t lns.tlon
'"' lo.. or'~"" thlt retullt from tht pubUcllllon or omltalon of 1n adv..t...ment. Corr.ctlon wm bto m1d1 In !he first avall1b.. edition
confld«&lt;tlll • CurNOt ~te Cllrd 'appllee • All reel • • advertl.. rnente •r• subJCtct to the Federal Fair Housing Act or ,968

KIT &amp; CARLYLE

Chnstmas Wreath s &amp; Grave • - - - - - - _ _ ,
Blanke1S $5 $25 (740)949
UJ,; AND

All

All Dlaplay: 12 Noon 2
Bualneaa Daya Prior To

Sunday Jn .. Column: 1:00 p . m.
For Sundays Paper

• Start Your Ads With A Keyword • Include Complete
Description • Include A Prke • Avoid Abbreviations
• Include Phone Number And Addrea When Needed
• Ads Should Run 7 Days

Successful Ads
Should Include These Items
To Help Get Response •••

Now you can have borders and graphics
~
addedtoyourclasslfledads
(.~
.1m
Borders$3.00/perad
~
Graphics SOC for small
S1.00 for large

Display Ads

iir;;;10

r.

1BR Apt WID hookups,
tnternetlsatelllte TV 1ncl
w/rent dose to hospital Call
741)-339·0362
2 bedroom f\pl: Utilities pa1d
$600 a month, $400 deposit
No Pets 1n PI Pleasant call
304-675-887 2
-2-BR
-ap_t _ S-,o-ve
- .-'-,r,d-ge
water,
trash
tncluded
$350/rent $350/dep 44 1
9872 446 7620 709·9519
cell
- ------Apartment for rent 1·2
Bdrm remodeled new car
pet, stove &amp; frlg water
sewer trash pd Mu:ldleport
$425 00
No pets
Ret
reqwred 740 843 5264
Apts 1n Me1gs County, In
town No Pets Depos1t
Aeqwred (740)992·5174 or
(740)441 0110
Beautiful Apts at Jacbon
Eatatas
52 Westwood
Onve, from $365 to $560
740 446 2568
Equal
HoUSing Opportumty ThiS
tnStltUtlon IS an Equal
Opportunity Provider and
Employer

_C_O:...N...:YE:...N_I~EN~T-L-Y-LO_C_A-T·
EO &amp; AFFORDABlE!
Townhousa
apartments
and/or small 11ouses FOR
RENT Call (740)441·1111
lor apphcat•on &amp; mformat1on

Ellm View
Apartments
• 2&amp;3 bedroom apartments
•Central heat &amp; AJC
•Washer/dryer hookup
•Tenanl pays electnc

(304)882·3017

F

===----- ~===m=l.o=AN==~

I

·------,..1
!0

I

~: p~~Ltut

;;2

r~~~~

"'

INsntuCilON

uuu... ...,

IIIJ

Ii

... .....,...._.

I~== ~~~e ~n a~:~~~~;~

Ir

r•o

I

I

----- -- - -

I FIND AJOB OR ANEW CAREER IN THE, CLASSIFIEDS ~ -M446ode0390-rn

Person lor hve on Wl1h elderly
lady Call 740·367 7129
.

-·--

_ ____

.

__:,._

___

EllmView
Apartments
• 2&amp;3 bedroom apart'llents
• Central heat &amp; AJC
•Washerldr" er hookup
,
• All electnc· averag1ng
$50 $60ml0nth
• Owner pays water sewer
trash

(304)882·3017

rlei)
Furnished Apt

2nd Ave

GallipoliS
Upstai rs
1
Bedroom No Pets All ut1b
1as pa1d (74 0) 446-9523
Furmshed upstatrs 3 rooms

:o~~\~le~~~~ ~~~~~~~~ ~~~o~~~~~q c;:~:4~o1~~s

r

Yord Sai•Pomeroy/Middle ..................... 074
Yard Soi•PI. Pteaaant .... . ................. 076

--------

Gracious Living 1 and 2
Bedroom Apts at VIl lage
Mana• a11 d R1Vers1de Apts 1n
Middleport from $327 to
~'592 740 992 5064 Equal
"'
Hou s1ng Opportunity
...:_:.c_.::_:.:.__....:..._ _
Holiday Spec1all Save $100
on 2BR apt Some utlliltes
patd $400+dep 740·368
9343 or 988 6t30
Immaculate 1 bedroom apt
New ca rpet &amp; &amp;btnets
freshly patnted &amp; decorated
WfO hookup Beautiful coon
try settu1g Only 10 m1nutes
from town Must see to
$325/mo
apprectete
(~ 14)595 7773 or 1-800
796·4686 740.645-5953

1 B-e
droomop-1
Call Modern 1 BR Ap1 Call 446
3736

_

•

�'
Wednesday, November 28, 2007

Page 84 • The Daily Sentinel
I

\1~\l

Immaculate 2 bedroom apt.
New carpet &amp; cabinets.
fre&amp;hly painted &amp; decorated,
W/0 hookup. Beautiful coun·

J.Jat In time for Xmea, wikt 9 CKC registered Mini
black cherry dining room Dachshunds, long haired,
table, seats 15, pad lnclud· short haired, red, black &amp;
ed,
perfect
condition. tan, sabl e · Ready to Go·
try setttng. Only 1.0 Minutes $850.00. Call 740-44 1-8299 asking $400 each 304~!593from town. Must see to or 740-441-~72
3820
appreci ate.
$400/mo. ------~(6 14)595·7773 or 1·800· Tappan gas range, hat point Border Coltle and Austr~llan
798·4e86. 740-645-5953
side by side relrldgoralor, Healer mix RUPI S50 each.
- - - - - - - - brown sofa, tvto chairs, two Pekingnese pup~, call lor
-~-~- ap1· twin size bOx aprlnn., two p"··
••1~2
Spacoos
I
_....,...,..
'~· 2 ~
Y&gt;~
.,..
overlooking GallIpoII B Clly twin siZe bedspreads wl1 h CKC Registered-Yorkshire

Saturday, D'ecember 1st
8 am - 1 pm
Acro ss from Post Office for
Meigs Co-op Food Bank

Christmas Comes Early
at

Smith GM
Superstore
1992 Ford Explorer
1991 Pont. Gr AM
1992 Buick Roadmaster
1993 Pont. Sunbird
2000 Pont. Firebird
1995 Jeep·Cherokee
Your Choice

$1995
Smith GM Superstore
191 1 Eastern Ave.
Gallipolis, Ohio

Park and river. L.A. den,
large kitchen-dining area
with atl M'BW appliances &amp;
cupboards. 3BR, laundry
area, 2 112 baths. $900 per
month. Call 446-4425, or.
446-2325

malchirlg curtains ( green
color ), youth bed with mat·
tress, baby gate. girls taddler clolhing. Caii 245-!IM5

r

MtscatANEXXJS

MFROIANDISE

I•

.
·
Antique AnvH mouse hole
forge made 1880, Sheffield
England $1 75 304·882·
_263
_5_ _ __ _ _

j

LMsrocK

•

WBdnesday, November 28, 2007
ALLEYOOP

-..1 1'1'11 1'

,\. I I \ I " I t It h.

www.mydailysentinel.com

·I 1997 Ford Explorer Eddy

Excellent

Breeding,

Phillip
Alder

"41r'i;;j;;ij;ru';j',

I''

"-llilili

IIOBUJ

2006 Honda Gold wtng

$4,000 ln accessories. Pakj
24 ,000 new··$19,600 , Call
740.367.7129 ,

s

(nKJ

L

CAMPERS &amp;
Mqri)K HOM!li

North

c11m1m•
• New
Ho111es
• Garages
• .Complete
Remodeling

-99 Pop-up by Damon, 8ft,
new tires. very good

740-112·1871

F1D

. A8752
I A K Q J 10
.. K J

West

MONTY
TAl Cf.ll fiRST OCV~\l /&gt;/&gt; A
~.~ ~YANG t:NER.€-V.
MARTIAL ARr. ITS PIHLC~Of'I.IY IS
rT 1.'.\jlq ~ ~E~t:&gt;. INf11.' A'rJ.
!'&gt;\SlOt&gt; C1N BAI.ANeiNG T\1£ ~S A~I\JG OR ~1&gt;\~C"'\1\o¥0
&lt;l!' 'liN ANt:&gt; YANG . .

~ . OR Yll;l

South
.K 7532

'b.il' 1\\&gt;AAW.~l'l" .

EI'IER&lt;OY ...

•

UBLIC
NOTICES

•

26 Years Experience

David Lewis
740-992-6971
Free

Guttering

..

AT

J&amp;L
Con$truction

Pass
Pass

1•

3t
Pass

East
Pass

Pass
Pass

• VInyl Siding
• Replacement
Windows
• Rooting
• Decks
• Garages
• Pate Buildings
• Room Additions
Owner:
James Keesee II
742·2332

ONG~!

BARNEY
TSK ... TSK •. .MORE
BA'I) NEWS!!

29670 Bashan Road
Racine, Ohio
45771
740-94&amp;-2217

Hours

7:00.AM • 8:00 PM

GIMME A

AN' TMAT'S WHY THEY DON'T PRINT
NO GOOD NEWS !!

PAPER. !!

THE BORN LOSER
't'OU I;.'~,PE.C1 Mli. TO ""&lt;&lt; P'"WI-\0 WOUCI&gt; W~\TO
\\EM IT t&lt;\011£ 7
OPEN UP ~t&gt; TELL
M't' PRO&amp;.~ TO
~OMEOOE. Wl\0 .
t&gt;OCSI{T
L.ll&lt;£ ME.'"f .t!

P'"WI-\1\1 f.\~ 'IOU
::.0 OOWt-11~ TI-lE
~t".~

DEER

Manley's
Recycling

occieton

i

Tot&gt;,b..'&lt; ?

~Astro-

W~!J?!,

BIG NATE

Thureday, Nov. 29, 2007
By Bernice Bede O•ol
Although your tendency Is to alWays
have a sidekick nearby, you are Mkely
to fare far bener during the year ahead
In ventures or endeavors where partners play an extremely limited role. Qo
it alone as much as possible.
SAGITTARIUS {Nov. 23-0ec. 2 1) - If
you're not careful about how you hBn·
die a discussion with an lndlvli:tual
who feels as strongly about an Issue
es you, thlnga could get nasty and
ugly.
·
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan . 19)- Be
wary or entering Into a joint .endeavor
where the greatest part of the burden
falls on you. Without parity in the
arrangement, your chances of success are slim - or none.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) - Don't
Ignore your Instincts If they persist on
warning you about 8 person, place or
situation. Your mind might perceive
something that your logic couldn't pos-

PEANUTS
r-------------------~
VOV LOOK 1lRED .. WA5 THERE A LOT
OF ACTION 01'1 TilE WESTERN FRONT?

I

MUST SE OUT OF M'&lt;
MIND •. AFTER TilE FIFTH
ROOT SEER, I REENLISTED~

ones

5 ScaHer

frooly
10 Stronger·
testing
12 Kind
of chop
13 Thrall on·
der (2 wds.)
14 Demands
15 Curved
16 A Vanderbilt
18 Early veg~le
19 Nasty sm1lo
21 Sheet
of plywood
25 Ina row
29 Roo1s
31 The jiHors
33 Fairy tale
abode
34 Juno zodiac
sigq
35Adom
37 Does dock

38
40

43

Radio personality AI Boliska said, "Do
you realize if it weren't for Edison we'd
be watching TV by candlelighl?"
At the bridge tabla. the closer you watch
the cards - however they are illuminat·
ed - !he beller.
In this deal , though, South had to watch
his entries. He was in three no-trump,
and Wesf fed !he club two. How should
declarer have planned lhe play?
Som.ewould open one diamOnd with that
North hand. They would argue \hal lhe
suit is stronger than the hearts, and that
when. they bid two hearts on the next
round, they have reversed and so shown
lhe slrenglh ollhair nand. Wrong! Open
in the higher-ranking of two five-card
suits. II you operi one diamond. then
rebid two hearts, you guamntee that
your diamonds are longer than your
hearts. And aNer one heart· one spade,
North's lhree-dlamood rebid Is game·
forcing, not chee98. True, North might
have only lour diamonds. but that cannof
be helped. Then, when Soulh bids fh(~e
no-trump, promising at least one club
stopper but no\ lmpl~ng any more lhan
sf• polniS, North should pass.
South has eight top tricks: one heart, five
diamonds and two clubs. The ninth trick
is available in spades, but only If South
has a ffand entry. He must win the first
lricl&lt; wilh dummy's club ~ng. !hen call lor
the spade queen (perhaps after cashing
1ne diamonds).
If Soulh plays dummy's club jack af lric!&lt;·
one, he can be defeated. East covers
rMih lhe quaen, and llle defenders can
stop South's spade king from winning a
trlc*. They can take one spade, two
hearts and two clubs.

Hill's Self
Storage

12% All Stock
Feed $10.50/100

48

53 Exquisite
54 Kitchen
herb
55 Bring IO bay

DOWN

1 In lhe raw
2 Revival
shout
3 Happy tune

4 Guitarist

- Paul
5 Jazz
Instrument
6 Bushwhack
7 Speedway
compelltfon
8 Blues
singer James
9 Unsefd
of the ·NBA
10 Tar
work
t1 Widen a hole
Wild
12 Pockel item
guesses
(2 wdo.)
Squeal on 17 Wl'1' gauge
Yes,
19 Pizza
to Rob Roy
eighths
Ponytail
20 Pays homage
site
21 Grammy
Dog-team
category
runner
22 Halk wearer

r-------'--'1

COIN and BOY
DIID PUT DOWN

ON£ OF THE PIGS COZ
IT WAS REALLY SICK.

GARFIELD

I

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

GRIZZWELLS
1&lt;1'{

-

~E~. -n.\E~E

PISCES (Feb. 20-MarCh 20) AHempt to be orderly and do things a
step at a time, because failure to be
methodical and system'atic could
deprive you of success, especially
where work is concerned.
ARIES (March 21 -April 19) - It a
squabble deveklps between two pals,
don't say or do anything that will put
you In the middle or make you appear
as If you've taken !!ides. let them
resolve things themselves,
TAURUS (April :20-May 20) - Unless
you have complete confidence In your·
salt, you could either change course
or throw in the towel just when victory
. is In sight. The only way you'll succeed
Is to be resolute.
,GEM INI (May 21-June 20) - You'll
only be asking for rejection If you insist
upon telling others things that they
don't want to hear about themselves,
end it could be downright mean. Don't
try to be a reformer.
.
CANCER (June 21-July 22) - Only
through traditional methods. avenues
and procedures can you derive profits.
Hoping to strike It rich by taking big
risks could leave your bank account
gasping for air.
LEO {July 23·Aug. 22) - If you find it
necessary to strike some kind ot deal
with an Individual you truly dislike, use
an· lnlarmedla!Y to do the selling for
you. A face-to-lace meeting might
MO&amp;T P'~PLE CIRCLE THIN&amp;5 ·upset the applecart at this time
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sapt. 22) - Make
IN CA'T~. GARFIEL" TAB'
sure that you're not dealing with an
1"HING6 IN COOK800K5
Inflated ego, or someone could manipulate you to think you're as great as
you want to believe you are - and
then use this weakness to his or her
advantage.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) - Someone
who is Inclined to gossip about others
Ia not the right type of Individual in
whom you shoukl place your confl·
dance. You may be the next day's topic
of discussion within your circle.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) - If your
goata e~~: ceed your c•pablllllas, your
undertaking&amp; could tum out to be frustrating rather than etlinulatlng. Be realletlc about the objeetlvea you eetabllah
for yoiJraelf.
'

longest rtvgo

By Jove!
Ms.lbubeck 46
Rah-rah
Russo or
47
MagriHe
30 Honay
sources
48
32 Family
nickname 49
36 Ro..nf Table 51

Shakespeare

.

Goose fiver

delicacy
A Ml88
America
host
Pierre's
word
Before

Make lace

knl!1rt

39 Droplet
40 - Bader
Ginsburg
41 Wan
·
42 The other
team

44 RouleHe
color
45 Mrs.

by Luis Campos

Celebn!y CiPher CryptegiWTISate Cleated lrom Q
UOtat:ons by!&lt;Knous people. past and present
Each lit!&amp;! In th&amp;cVrer Slands lor aoolhtl

Today's clue_· X equsJs D

"MN
NY

OG,

MLG

FH-GJMGCII

VHAMARF

JSNWM,
VNHXC

AC

SWII

RNM

MLG

OJEG,"

•

UPGJCWHG

VLJM

OWC ' AK

AM ' C'

MLG

MHWOJR

KJUNMG

PREVIOUS SOLUTION - "Purple is black bloomin~ .'- Chrislopher Smart
"... 1love you 11een. I Green wind. Gillen branches. ·Federico Garcia lorca

'=~:~:~'-S©~&amp;ti~-"r.~S" WOlD

GAM!
- - - - - . . : 1411od by CLAY I. ,0\IAN - - - - - -

.0 fovr
barron;. lt"trs of
Krambltd wcrd~

the
below to form four simple wordJ.

3

HEWL I
I I I~ I
"
0

YI DA0 . .,I
I I I 1• "'I

"Being thrifty is'a good
. thing," gramps said,

~

~

I

· "becawe .we ~ever know the

wealth of water until the--is-·."

G) ·complete

the chuckle quoled
by filling fi1 the missing words
you dtiYelop from step No. 3 below.

@ PRINT NUMBERED \EnERS
IN THESE

@)

SQUAR~S

UN SCRAM8LE LETTERS
F~ ANSWER

2

3

4

•

I .1 I I Iis I I I I

SCRAM-LETS ANSWE~S ' lt · z 1· o 1

Snippy - Nud&amp;e - Hiker ~ Govern,- GIVING
"II is n~ how much we give," lbc mom lectured the teen, "but
how much can: Wll put iuto GIVING."

ARLO&amp;JANIS

SOUP TO NUTZ

ISA lS'I

of' ~~~~Y. .

OUi 1\\f)£
]1~-;E.
D/;,'f~

·- - - - - -- -

23
24
26
27
28

CELEBRITY CIPHER

sible realize .

hlll'lll·--12.···

'·--

1•
3 NT

N011h

Collnt tricks
and watch entries

MY I)OGTO~ p~~SG!tiB~I)
,.,~l&gt;'''"'e· ANI&gt; ~&gt;&lt;e~tGts~ ·"·.
~""\' WITt4 Tt41S Ct41LI&gt;·P~OOF
GAP l. G~T 80Tt4

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

P"'- cell (614) 273- along the North tine ol County · Recorder's ol Section 16 end ·a en examination ol REAL ESTATE.
8123ext. 254.
the 0.18 acre tract Olllce, Melgo County, partol38acreLotNo. Land
and Sltu.ollldlntheStaleof
(11) 28
herein described.
Ohio, alto bolng part 171, Townahiii-2-North, Gr'eenhouHa.
Ohio, County of Malga
·.
· Excepting all the coal of Section 16 and a Ran g e • 1 5 · W a • t, ROBERT E. BEEGLE, and In the Towit~hiJI of
and one-haH of the ott part of 38 acre Lot No. Lebanon Township, MEIGS
COUNTY Orange.
Public Noll.~
and gas In the above- 171, Townshlp-2-North, Meigs County, State of SHERIFF
Being In Section 3,
described preml1ea Range -1 5- We at , Ohio and more partlcu· AnORNEY FOR THE Town 4 North, Range
SHERIFF SALES CASE which have heretofore Leb.anon Township, larfy described as lot· PlAINTIFF
12 West of · the Ohio
NUMBER 04CV120
been reserved.
Meigs County, State of lows:
Bill WALKER
Companys Purchase
BENEFICIAl MORT· CURRENT
OWNER: Ohio and more partlcu- Beginning ata point In 211
COlUMBUS and being described
GAGE CO. OF OHIO
JOHN S. BAXTER JR. l8rly deacrllied as lot· the centerline ol State STREET
aa follows: Beginning
PLAINTIFF
'AND · TAMRA LYONS IOwa:
Route t124 auumed ATHENS, OHIO 45701 at an Iron rod South 12
VS
AKA. BAXTER
Beginning at a 518" Iron to be the Northeast 740.594-8228
deg. 60'14" East 69.37
JOHN S. BAXTER JR. PROPERTY AT: 860 ptn 111 which ts corner ol aald 38 acre (11) 28, (12) 5, 12
feet and South 2 deg.
AND TAMRA lYONS Broadway Street.
aaaumed to bear Welt Lot No.17t;
55'55" East 148.18 feet
Stanley Tree·
AKA, BAXTER ET AL., RACINE, OHIO 45770
a distance ol 416.13 Thence along aeld cenand South 9 deg.
trimming
DEFENDANTS
PPI11Hl0248.000
leellrom the Northeast terltna
South
03"
Public Notice
21'00" Weal 72.03 feet
Public Notice
COURT OF COMMON PRIOR DEED REFER- corner of aald 38 acre 32'02" Welt a diltance
and South 18 deg.
&amp; Removal
PlEAS, MEIGS COUN- ENCES; VOlUME 338, lot No. 171; Township- of 30.061eetto a point; PUBLIC NOTICE
49'17"West129.911eel
*Prompl
and Qualify
PUBUC NOTICE NEW TV OHIO.
PAGE 785
2-Norlh, llange-13:
Thence leaving said NOTfCE:Ia
heraliy from lha Northeast
Work
TELECOMMUNICA- IN PURSUANCE OF An APPRAISED
AT Thence South 32' cenlarltne Wetd a dla- glvenlhllton Saturday, comer of Kennath E.
TIONS TOWER
ORDER OF SALE TO $45,000.00 TERMS OF 08'&amp;0" Welt a distance lance of 433.13 leet to December 1, 2007 at and Judith a Riggs 21 I*Flea.;on••bte Rates
Middleport PCS/Taytor ME DIRECTED FROM SAlE: CANNOT BE ol 5&amp;4.381eet•to a 5/8" a point on the Eaalllne 10:00 a.m., a public ~ acres .aa described
Celt
Site SAID COURT IN .THE SOlD FOR LESS THAN Iron pin HI;
of a 8.266 acre, more or sale witt be held al211 In Meigs County Deed
(CTLf04510256COlc) ABOVE
ENTITlED '213RDS
OF
THE Thence North 79' less tract;
W.
Second
St., Records; Volume 245, .
PlEASE TAKE NOTICE ACTION,
I
WilL APPRAISED VAlUE. 28'31"Waat a distance Thence along said Pomeroy, Ohio. The Page 1029; thence IR•: ferences
V C. YOUNG Ill
that New Per dba EXPOSE TO SAlE AT 10% DOWN ON THE of 735.39 feet to an East line North 32' Farmers Bank and North 50 deg. 20"00"
l'l ' lu1 1 '1
Verlzon Wireless Is PUBLIC AUCTION ON DAY OF SALE, CASH extatlng wooden post 08'50" East a distance Savings Company to Wast 167.13 feet to an
I ''"" "'&gt; ('I •,
proposing to construct THE FRONT STEPS OF OR
CERTIFIED tieing the Southwest of 35.43 feet to a 518' selling lor cash tn Iron . rod on the
•
'
H
• ' ' I" I &lt;I 1 '
a 300' high self-sup- THE MEIGS COUNTY CHECK,
BALANCE corMr of said 15 acre, Iron pin set on the hend or certified check Southeast stde or tha
porting lattice telecom· COURT HOUSE ON DUE ON CON FIRMA· more or tess, tract;
111umed North line of the fottowl~g coltater· road; thence South 26
munlcetlons tower on FRIDAY, JANUARY 4, TION OF SALE.
Thence along the West said 38 acre lot No. al:
deg. 30'00" Weal 9.00
a portion oflhe proper· 2008 AT 10 A.M., OF THE APPRAISAl DID line ol said 15 acre, 171:
1987 Ford Ranger ,.. along aeld road to
ty
located
39441 SAID DAY, THE FOl- NOT INClUDE AN more or less, tract, Thence alo~g tatd 1FTCR15T9HM90151 ·a point; thence South
Taytore Drive, In Meigs lOWING DESCRIBED INTERIOR EXAMINA- North a distance of North line East a dla· 1997 Jaap Gl'llnd 34 dog 00'00" Wast
County, Middleport, REAl ESTATE.
TION OF THE HOUSE. 395.061eet to an eKist· tance of 416.13 leet to C h e. r o k e e 45.00 feet along aald
Ohio
(Site The following Real ROBERT E. BEEGLE, tng wooden poll being the principal point of 1J4GZ58S8VC562218 road to a point; thence
Coordinates: N39·14, Estate .situated In the MEIGS
·COUNTY the Northwest corner beginning.
1990 Chevy pickup South 34 deg. 15'00"
26; W82·5&amp;--17). The County of Meigs, State SHERIFF
of. said 15 acre, more Bearing• are assumed \GCDK14Z2lZ176650 Welt 18.00 feel along
facility wilt constat of of Ohio, and in the AnORNEY FOR THE or lesa, tract;
and are for the ·deter- The Farmers Bank and said road to an Iron
equipment locala(f on Township of SuHon PLAINTIFF
Thence along the mlnettona of · angles Savings
Company, rod; thence South 50
the property at ground and bounded and STEPHEN D. MilES
Northeast nne a dla- only.
Pomeroy,
Ohio, deg. 20'00" eaal 202.53
CORNER STONE
level Inside a shelter described as foltowa: 18
MONUMENT lance of 1018.00 1eet to Tho above description reserves the right to feel to an Iron road
on a lenced·ln parcel, Beginning South 12 AVE..
.
the principal point of was prepared !rom an bid at thla uta, and to along a fence: thence · CONSTRUCTION
PROCESSING
antennas
will
be dag. east 87' from the DAYTON, OHIO 45402 beginning, containing actualsurvay made on withdraw the above north 19 dog. 21'00"
Maplewood
Roofing, Sidirrg,
111ounted on lop of an Northwest comer of a 937·461-1900
a 0.912 acre, more or the 15th day of May, collateral prior to sate. east 132.65 feet along
Lake
Soffit, Decks,
approximately
300' 0.90
acre
tract (11-) 28, (12) 5, 12
leas, lh said SectiOn 16 1995, by C. Thomas Further, The Farmers sald fence to the point
high oalf·supportlng described In deed
and 7.354 acres, more Smith,
Ohio Bank and Savings of beginning, contain·
Doors, Windows,
SR 124
lattice ' lower, with recorded In . Vol. 245,
or leao, In said 38 acre Proleaslonat Surveyor, . Company rasarves the tng 0.53 acres, more or Electric, Plumbing,
Between
wires, cables and other Page
467,
Metg.s
Public Notice
' lot No. 171 for a total 116844.
rtghiiO'r.eject any or all leaa.
Drywall,
appurtenances.
County Deed Record,
of 8.266 acres, more or Also Grantors grant to bids submtHed.
CURRENT
OWNER: Remodeling, Room
Syracuse
The Ohio Historic thence
continuing SHERIFF SAlES CASE fell, subject to all legal the Grantees herein, The above described JASON E. PUTNAM, ET
Addition,s
&amp; Racine
Presarvatlon
Olllce South 12 deg. East82' NUMBER
04Ciit20 easamanta and rlghta- the rtghl to us~ and collateral witt be aotd AL.
Loc:at
Contractor
has determined there ' to the Southwest cor- HOME
NATIONAl of-way.
have access to a 10 "as ts·where Is", wtth PROPERTY AT: 49053
Summer
74Q-367·0544·
wilt be an odvarse nor of the said 0.90 BANK PlAINTIFF VS Bearings are assumed horsepower water watt no
expressed
or RIGGS CREST
Sausage
Made
Free Estlmalea
ellect on historic prop- acre tract 100' to a ALEXANDER J. BUCK· and are for the deter- on the Grantors prop- Implied
warranty REEDSVILLE, OHIO
740,949-2734
74Q-367-D536
ertles. In order to com· point; thence North 12 ALLEW DEFENDANTS mlnatlons of ang les arty,
provided given.
PPt 1Q-00552.000
ply wtth the applicable deg. 'Mist 82' to the COURT OF COMMON only.
Grantaea, their auccea· For further lnforma- PRIOR DEED REFER·
lawa and regulations, Southeest corner of an PLEAS, MEIGS COUN- The above description sora and assigns, pay tfon, or for an appoint· ENCES; VOLUME 236,
. the Applicant Invites 0.11 acre tract; thence TV OHIO.
was prepared frqm an lo! the upkeep of Ilia rflenl to Inspect coital· PAGE 373
any Interested party to South 89 deg. Weal IN PURSUANCE OF An actual survey made on welt.
era!, prior to sale date APPRAISED
AT
auend a public meet· along the South tine of ORDER OF SALE TO the 15th day of May, Reference
Deed: contact Cyndle or Ken $115,000.00 TERMS OF
ing and submit their eaid corner of an 0.11 ME DIRECTED FROM 1995, by C. Thomas Volume 121, Page 191, at 992·2138.
SALE: CANNOT BE
comments on the acre tract tOO' to the SAID COURT IN THE Smith,
Ohio Meigs County Olllclal (11) 28, 29, 30
SOlD FOR lESS THAN
lllllllll•IIM•11.114IJII
potential allect that place of beginning, ABOVE
ENTITLED Professional Surveyor, recorda.
213RDS
OF
THE
J. . .-3114
thla undertaking may containing O.t8 acre, ACTION,
t
W!Ll 16844.
Parcel
Noa.
07·
APPRAISED VALUE ..
have on historic prop· more or teas.
EXPOSE TO SALE AT Together
with
ott 00281.001 and 07·
Public N,ot_ice
10% DOWN ON THE
.......ltfrlll.......... ..
ertles, as redefined' by There Is also conveyed PUBLIC AUCTION ON heredHaments, appur- 00282:001
DAY OF SALE, CASH
the National Histotlc herewith as means In THE FRONT STEPS OF tenancea, rights,' prlvl· CURRENT
OWNER: SHERIFF SALES CASE . OR
CERTIFIED
Preservation Act and Ingress end egress, THE MEIGS COUNTY leges and easements AlEXANDER J. BUCK· NUMBER 07CV051
CHECK,
BAlANCE
PIYIIIC 1.. PIICES Filii '
Section 106 Rules. To the ten foot righl·of- COURT HOUSE ON. thereunto belonging ALlEW
WEllS FARGO BANK DUE ON CON FIRMA·
111111111• CIRI•MI. .IRI . . IIII ·
be considered, the way adjoining the FRIDAY, JANUARY 4, but subject to all legal PROPERTY AT: HAR· PlAINTIFF
TION OF SAlE.
Clltlllllt Ctlullt. . • Ctllllr
comments must sub· entire west tine of the 2008 AT 10 A.M., OF highways, zoning ordl· RIS FARM
VS
Tho appraisal dtd not
stanttatly relate to the 0.90 acre tract as SAID DAY, THE FOl· nances, restrtcttons, PORTlAND,
OHIO JASON E. PUTMAN Include an Interior
ICIIIr.CiiiWI ....I
potential effect, if any, described tn Vol. 245, lOWING DESCRIBED easements and condf· 45770
DEFENDANTS
.
examination of the
10 the historic proper·. Page 467,
Me,tga REAl ESTATE.
lions of record that do PPt 07-00281.001
COURT OF COMMON hOUM.
ties:
County Deed Records, Legal Description
not elfect marketabltt·
07-00282.001
PlEAS, MEIGS COUN- ROBERT E. BEEGLE,
Wise Concrete
The public m&amp;l!ting will to be used In common Home National Bank, ty.
PRIOR DEED REFER· TV OHIO.
MEIQS
COUNTV
All types of con&lt;rele
be held on December with others.
Ptalntlll
In addition, a 30' ease- ENCES; VOLUME 121 , IN PURSUANCE OF An SHERIFF
11th, 2007 from 5:00 The parcel Is subjectto v.
Alexander
J. ment for Ingress and PAGE 191
ORDER OF SALE TO AnORNEY FOR THE · Owner- Rick Wise
pm - 7:00 pm at the the joint right of way Buckallew, at at., egraos, which the cen· APPRAISED
. AT ME DIRECTED FROM PlAINTIFF
740-992-5~29
Freight
Station along the West 10' Defendanta
terllne described 11 $200,000.00TERMS OF SAID COURT IN IHE lE;RNER, SAMPSON &amp;
740-416-1698
Building, located at:
thereof as described In Situated
In .. the follOws:
SALE: CANNOT BE ABOVE
ENTITlED ROlHfi!SS
Race St. In Dave Diles Vot. 245, Page 467, Township of lebanon, Being a part ol a 15 SOLD FOR LESS THAN ACTION,
I
WILl 120
E
FOURTH
Park, Middleport, OH Meigs County Deed County of Meigs, State acre, more or. teaa, 213RDS
OF
THE EXPOSE TO SALE AT STREET, 8TH FLOOR
457&amp;0
Records.
of Ohio, to-wH:
tract of land transfers APPRAISED VAlUE. PUBliC AUCTION ON CINCINNATI,
OHIO
The make-up date In - The parcel Ia also sub- Being a part of a t5 to Charles R. and 10% DOWN ON THE THE FRONT STEPS OF 45202-4007
case of weather wilt be jec:llo a right of way aa acre, more or less, Wayntta C. Harris aa DAY OF SALE,. CASH THE MEIGS COUNTY 5t3·241'31 00
December 13Th, 2007 a means if ingress and tract of land transfers recorded In Daed Book OR
CERTIFIED COURT HOUSE ON (11) 28, (t2) 5,12
from 5:00pm. 7:00pm egress to the balance to Charles R. and 175, at page 297, Matgs CHECK,
BALANCE FRI.DAY, JANUARY 4,
at the Arts Cou•cll. of the 0.090 acre tract WaynHa C. Harris as County
Recorder's DUE ON CONFIRMA· 2008 AT 10 A.M., OF
Building. If you ahou!d described
above, recorded In Deed Book Olllce, Meigs County, TION .OF SALE.
SAID DAY, THE FOl·
have any questions being a 10 loot strip 175, at page 297, Meigs Ohio, also being part The appraisal included lOWING DESCRIBED

w.

West

melody
52 Dlfferenl

1 Gala

44

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

WHAT A DEAl!!

The Syracuse Racine
fleglonal
Sewer
District Is taking blda
on a piece of property
located on Third Street,
Racine, Lot 58 as Is
with no expressed
written warranties. the
District reserves the
rlghllo accept orrejecl
any btdl. Sealed blda
wilt be accepted until
Dec. 18, 2007 at 12:30
p.m.
(H) 28 (12)'5, 12

South

Opening lead: 4 2

Pole Barns 30x50x10
$6,495 Free Delivery .
(937)718·1471

Table &amp; chairs $35, couch &amp;
chair $100. Call446·7620 or
441·9872

A 7 6 4

Dealer: North
Vulnerable: Both

www,flmbo,....eokcablnftt')'.com

WhHe'o Mota! Dollctono ·
Chri1tma1 Special&amp;
Ron Allison
588 Watson Ad
Bidwell, Ohio
740-446-4336

4

• 9 8 6
•

Hardwood hbinetry Alld Furnialre

Cherry Veneer . c~binet ,
counter tops, range, dish·
washer, excellenl Cond. 446·
3364 or 441·7138

• Q J 10 9
• 73 2
.. Q 9 5

• 5 4
• · 10 8 3 2

Iii~ 'IOO'{&gt;~
~i1 1'1G&gt;

Stop &amp; Compare

...--.,

Swim Spes Arrived! Sa\18
$$$Tiki Tubs Hot Tub Outlet ,
Closeouts
available.
Ashland, KY 606-929·5655

East
4 A J 10

• 9 B6 4
¥ K6 3

=======-=

ADVERTISE
YOUR
BUSINESS
IN THE
CLASSIFIEDS

11· 2&amp;-&lt;17

4 Q

BISSEll

I

Tara
Townhouse
to tow. 740·
Apartments, Very Spacious,
2 Bedrooms, CIA, 1 1/2
Batn. Adu~ Pool &amp; Baby
Pool. Patk&gt;, Slart $425/Mo.
No Pets, Lease · Plus
Securrty Deposl1 Required, For ~sale Mink Coat $300, Reg. Chihuahua pups. ,Bia~ 01
Hyundai
Accent
China
set
serve
for
8
$ 100 &amp; white. Have ·shots and Hatchback. 5 speed trans,
(7401446·3481.
c..::::.:.::..:..:.:.::
_ ___ 304 ·773-6038
wormed. $200. Call 304· 65,310 miles, good condi·
BA.SEUENT
Twin Riwrs Tower is accept· - -- - - - - - 674·5857
tiori. needs catalytic con\f8rt·
WATERPROOFING
ing applications for waiting For sale· membership ttt
er. Asking $3200. cau 740. Unconditional lifetime guarlist for Hud-subsized, 1 ~ br. Lazy T Royal Chaparral THE GIFT THAT KEEPS 709·6339.
antee. l ocal references fur-.
apartment,for
the Resort, 4 mites outside GIVING! AKC Registered
nlshed. Established 1975.
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The Daily Sentinel • Page BS

--- - - -- - - - -

�Page B6 • The Daily Sentinel

www .mydailysentinel.com

Wednesday, November 28,

2007

Steeler8 weighing field options
following a Monday night mess
BY

advice given on the Web site
for the company that provided the new sod: ·:During the
PITTSBURGH - The first three weeks , avoid
Dolphins and Steelers rolled heavily or concentrated use
around in the muck and mire of your new yard. This gives
for more than 59 minutes the · roots an opportunity to
without scoring. resembling firmly knit with the soil and
a bunch of school kids play- insures that the turf will
ing a pickup game in a remain smooth."
muddy backyard.
A three-hour pounding by
Running and passing plays 22 athletes, who weigh an
appeared to be going in slow average of 250 pounds or so,
motion. Punting was diffi- likely constitutes heavy
cult, kicking was nearly usage.
The Steelers have had
impossible. Players. sunk
ankle deep at times into the ongoing turf problems since
swamp-like field, and one Heinz Field opened in 200 I,
punt nearly disappeared as it replacing the grass three
struck nose-first into the time~ during the 2002 seabrand new turf, burrowing son. None of those were
itself like a golf ball.
quite this bad.
Welcome lo Muddy Night
Now, the question is
Fc;&gt;otball.·
whether this game - a
"It was horrendous," national embarrassment to
Steelers wide receiver Hines one of the NFL's most sueWard said. "No offense. You · cessful and well-run francould have put (Tom) chises - will push them to
Brady's offense out there install artificial turf.
without anyone scoring."
"We have to look at those
Only this wasn't Lucy options and we will," coach
pullin~ the ball away from a Mike Tomlin said Tuesday.
slip-sliding Charlie Brown "I'm not concerned about it
on Peanuts' imaginary play- · right now. The field we have
ground, but a for-real NFL here is the field we·have."
game with the potential to
With the Steelers (8-3)
affect playoff races and the staying at home Sunday to
winless Dolphins' place in play the Bengals (4-7), an
league history.
NFL official will remain in
For one dreadful night, a Pittsburgh this week to manperfect storm of weather- itor the field.
related events conspired to
On Tuesday afternoon, it
turn the Heinz Field grass was still chewed up, with
into a surface that resembled several long sideline-toa poorly maintained high sideline strips of brown turf
school field. Neither team caused when rain water
scored until Jeff Reed's 24- gushed through the seams of
yard .field goal with 17 sec- the protective tarps laid atop
onds remaining won it for the field.
Pittsburgh 3-0.
However, the Steelers
The sod haq been in place apparently do not plan to
less than a day, put down replace this sod with more
hurriedly after five high new sod.
school and college games
"The field conditions were
last weekend chewed up the less than satisfactory for
old turf. While.the grass was playing the Monday night
new and plush, installing it football game," team presiatop the old field meant it dent Art Rooney II said
didn't drain as well. ·
Tuesday in a statement. "We
Add in a drenching rain- consulted with the NFL
storm. the kind seldom seen prior to laying down new
in Pittsburgh so close to sod and our grounds crew
winter, and lightning, and it did the best it could under
made for one of the weirdest ·the circumstances.
NFL games of recent vin"Unfortunately, we were
tage.
faced with the worst possiDuring breaks, grounds ble weather conditions and
crew members gouged the we acknowledge that it did
new sod with pitchforks to have an impact on the 'playaccelerate the drainage and ing surface. We will continemptied bags and bags of the ue to work with the NFL
water-drying
substance game operations people this
more commonly seen at week as our grounds crew
major league basebal1 works to improve the condigames.
tions of the field in time for
"On TV, maybe it didn't Sunday night's game."
look so bad," Steelers punter
Perhaps the surprise is
Dan Sepulveda said. ''But some Steelers players still
when you're out there, it's do not want artificial turf,
unbelievable."
even though it would allow
No, it looked bad on TV, more events to be staged at
.too.
Heinz Fi'eld.
Steelers coach Mike
"No, you can't simulate
Tomlin often talks about grass," War!f said. "That
splash plays - big plays FieldTurf '(used in the
that make a major difference Steelers' indoor practice
in a game - but every play building) is still turf. Guys
on this rainy night in fall on iC and it can get hard.
Pittsburgh was a splash play. You can still get a concusPerhaps the Steelers sion. Players around here, if
should have followed the you ask them. even if it was
ALAN ROBINSON
ASSOCIATED PRESS

pretty bad (Monday), we
will stick with grass."
Tomlin didn 't think the
bad .field was a big deal,
even though the turf was
clearly the culprit in one of
the lowest-scoring games in
NFL history. It was the first
time since a Lions-Giants
scoreless tie in 1943 that an
NFL game went to the final
minute without any scoring.
"lfs football, man, it's an
outdoor game," Tomlin said.
"It is .played as you move
into December. Everybody
loved to play dirty football
when you were a kid. What
else is new? Guys had a
great time, it created some
adversity and we overcame
it and found a way to win the
game."

AP photo

Pittsburgh Steelers wide receiver Hines Ward (86) hits the soggy turf at Heinz Field after
hauling in a first quarter pass from quarterback Ben Roethlisberger against the Miami
Dolphins in NFL football action at Pittsburgh, Monday. The Steelers won 3-0.

23rd thru
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Cabrera, Laffey
named Indians top ·
players for 2007
CLEVELAND (AP) Infielder Asdrubal Cabrera,
who
took
over
as
Cleveland's starting second
baseman and sparked the
Indians to the AL Central
title, was named the club's
minor league player of the
year on Tuesday.
Aaron Laffey was named
the club's top minor league
pitcher.
.
Laffey went 17-6 with a
Cabrera began the season 3.34 ERA in 31 games ~t
at Double-A Akron and two minor-league levels and
played briefly at Triple-A with the Indians. He was 9Buffalo before his contract 0 in his last 12 starts with
was purchased · by the Buffalo, and led all Indians
Indians on Aug. 7. He soon minor league pitchers with
replaced Josh Barfield at 13 wins.
second and batted .283 in 45
Laffey made his major
games while helping the league debut on Aug. 4
Indians· make the AL play- against Minnesota. He finoffs for the· first time since ished the season as the fifth
200 I.
starter in Cleveland's rotaCleveland went. 28-12 · tion · and went 4-2 with a
when Cabrera, a shortstop 4.56 ERA in nine starts.
in the minors, started at sec- Manager Eric Wedge said
ond.
·
Laffey will compete for one
He batted a combined of Cleveland's starting spots
.303 with 114 runs, 35 dou- during training camp.
bles, five triples, II homers
Th~ lndjans' postseason
and 79 RBls in 150 games awards are named for Hall
with Akron, Buffalo· and of Famers Bob Feller and
Cleveland.
Lou Boudreau.

I

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