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                  <text>Page B6 • The Daily Sentinel
'

)

COlUMBUS (AP) - The 2006 A,;..,.latod Press Division 111
AIHlhlo.high school footbaHteam, based M the l't!OOI11mendati0no of I ltate media panel;

DIVISION II
FINtT-

OFFENSE: Ends-Oaniel ltf1, Dover, 6-foot-3, 175 pounds,
senior; Chal8 Munoz. Fostoria, 5-8, 155, jr. Linemen-Alex
Bu!Welt, Sunbury Big Walnut, 6-Q, 285, sr.; Corey Drake,
l(ettertng Alter, 5-10, 195, sr.; Travis Lester, Circleville, 6-4,
355, sr.; Adam Painter. Sandusky PeOOn&amp;, 6-1 , 260, sr.; Nick
Schepis, Cuy. Falls Walsh Jesuit, 6-4. 285, sr.; Andrew
Robiskie, Chagrin Falls, 6-2, 270, sr. Ouarterbacks-Zach
Coflaros, Steubenville, 6~ 1 . 180, sr.; Jeremy Fudge. Eaton, 6·
o. 180, sr.; Perci Gamer, Dover, 6-2, 215, sr.; Uick Mohner,
Painesville Harvey, 6·3, 178, Jr. Backs-Storm Klein, Newaft
Licking Val., 6-2, 205 soph.; Stephen Ford. cSmllri&lt;lge, 5·9,

Galli"*··

!85, sr.; J1ymo Hoggorty, Go111polll
6-1, 1!10,
ar:; DeVoe Torrence, Canton S., 6·2, 215, jr.; Alan Vanderink1
Mantua Crestwood, 5-10, 180, sr.; Derrick Berbe,., Bellevue,
5-11. 165, sr.; AnthOny Urbanla, 'Cieye. Benedlctlne, 6-Q, 191,
soph.; J.J. MihOci, Jefferson Area, 5-8, 170. sr. Ktcter- Aaron
Bates, New Concord John Glenn, 6·1, 185, sr.
DEFENSE; Llhemen-:-Chase Burge, Lancaster Fairfiek:l
Union, 6~. 235, sr.; Corey Tankstey, Canal Futton NW, 5-8,

210,

sr.; Bred Cash. Kenenng Aner. 5-10. 185. sr.; Nlci&lt; Clpkus.

MentOt" Lake Cath .. 6-2, 210, sr. LinebaCkers-Marc Akam,
MiHersburg W. Holmes •. 6-2, 220, sr.; Mitch -Knapp,
McConnelsville MofQ&amp;n, 6·2, 215, sr.; Ben Maxwell, Kettering
Arter, 6·1, 205, sr.; Cody Hamilton, Franklin, 5·11, 200, sr.;
Derek Lingenfelter. Lima Shawnee. 6--3, 235, sr. Backs-cart
Miller, Oelawl!lre Buckeye Val ., 6-2, 1B5, sr.; Randy
Greenwood, Mentor Lake Cath., 6-Q, 180, soph.; Brian
Hummer, Napoleon , 5·11, 185, sr.; Devon Torrence, CantonS.,
6· 1, 190. sr. Pun1er--8rooks Mohr, Elida. 6-2, 190, sr.

on.nolwl p11yero al 1he yur: Zaoh CoRaros. StetA&gt;enville;
Stephen Ford, Cambridge.
Dolonll,. ployer of I'- v-or: Ben Maxwell, Kettering Alter.
COitChw of the yur: Justin Buttennore, Dre5\1en Tri-Valley ;
Reno Saccocla, Steubenville; Rick Goodrich. Cambridge.
Socor\d Toem:
OFFENSE: Ends-Adem Alderman, Granville, 6-Q, 170,
soph.; Brandon Robinson, Eaton, 5·10, 185, sr.; Connor
MackoVjak. Cuy. Falls Walsh Jasutt. 6-2. 185. sr. Linemenlim German, Newark Licking, Val., 6-7. 275, jr.; Ryan GMtz.
Goehen, 6-3, 275, sr.; Brock C8rter, Napoleon, 6·5, 300, Sr.;
N_, Shorp, Beloit W. Branch, 8-3, 295, sr.; Ted Jones.
Aknln Bucllml. 8-3. 2.0. sr.. Quarterbaoks-Jimmy Vohalik,
Cola. DeSalas, 8-2. tOO, sr.; cameron West. Dresden Tri·
valley, 5·11 , 180. jr.; Trevor Walls, Wavaftt, 6-6, 215, jr.: Jeff
- _ Oolllpollo 011111
e.G, 195, 1r.; Was MiNer,
Aurora. 6-3. 200, sr.; -Marl&lt; Wooldri&lt;lge, Cuy. Falls. Walsh
JaeuR, 5-10, 195. sr. Backs-B.J. Taylor, Shelby, 5·9. 210. sr.;
Nata Ganyard, Niles McKinley, 6-0, 2,0, jr.. Kickers-Mike
Bolinger, Eaton, 5-9, 175, sr.; Jeny PhiiHps. Clyde, 6·1 , 190, jr.
DERNSI: Linemen--Nk;k Anderson, Kettering Alter, 5·10,
185, sr.; Alex Wasy!Jk, Sandusky Perkins , 6-5, 235, sr.; Dan
Havato, Hubblrd, 6-o. 245. sr.; Mli&lt;e Schiavoni, Cleve.
Benedictine, 5-11, 196, sr. Linebackers-Antwan Pran, Cols.
Bextey, 6-3, 213, sr.; Kevin McFarland, Cin. Indian ..,ill, 6.:0,
198, sr.; Tony Scheeler, Cleve. Benedictine, 6·3, 22f. sr.; Joel
Younkins. Hubbard. 6-2. 225. sr. · Becks-A.J. Kaltenbach,
Cols. DeSaleS, 5-11. 180, sr.; Scott Starkey. St. Bemald·Roger
Bacon, 5-10, 190, sr.; Chaz Jordan, Medina Buckeye, 5-10,
170, sr.; Brandon Ph~ps, Minerva, 5--10, 175, sr. PunterDevln Popely. Ashtabula Edgewood, 6-1, 180, sr.

"*·•

.

5~-

Kyte McCalli!!lter, Cols. DeSales; Justin Thomp,son , Cots.
DeSales; Gary Golay, Whitehall- Yearling; Donald Houston,
Newaf1tt Lk:klng Val,; Chris Perez, New Albany; Bylal

Humphrey, Cots. Bexley; Zac Lemmon, Granville; Alex Emrich,
New Albany ; Taylor Jonard, _Sunbury Big Walnut Bryan

McDonald, Canal Winches1er; Cameron McRae. New Albany;

Jake German, Newark Lieking V8L; Justin Herber1, Cots.
OeSales: Jayce Stewart, New Albany: &amp;,ttl Aine , Newark

Licking Val.; Ethan Wetzel, Sunbury Big Walnut; A.J. Principe,
Cols. DeSates;
Daniel Haddix, Urbana: Chris McKee. Eaton ; Andrew
Richards , Cin. McNICttOiaS: Pete Tepe, St. Beman:t-Rooer
Bacon; Tyrone Jones, Day. Chamlnade.Julienne; Sea.n Egter,
Belletontaine; Andrew Ford, Tipp City Tippecanoe; Kyle

Mossbarger, Urbana; Alron Jenkins, Spring. Shawnee; Chase
Oaniets. Cin .. Indian Hill: Nick Marino. Urbana; Jay Julian,
Spring. Shawnee; Kramer Heridricks, Cin. Indian Hill; Cody
Reardon. New Rtchrnond;
Adrian Balser, Thomvile Sheridan; Cody Griffin, Clrdeville;
Adam Turner, Circleville; Evan Brooks, CircteviHe Logan Elm;
Casey Williams. Waverty; Mlkey Caton , Greenfiekt Mcaain;

Kandel Coleman, Hilsboro; Phil Bokovttz, Golllpolll Gollll
AcMI.; Frank Ickes. Lancaster Fairfield Union; Aaron Puckett,
McArthur Vinton County; Aody Trimble, Waverly; Justin Mullins.
Jackson: Matt Graham, McArthur Vinton County; Robbie
Marhoover, JacksOn; Dalton Scott. Waverly; Ramone Conley,

Waverly; - • · 01111po111 Gollll Acid.; Dlvld Rumley,
Oolllpolll Goltle AC..S.; Cody Cordle, Circleville Logan Ekn;
Drew Clanin, Circleville; Silty Stockum, Lancaster Fairfield
Union; Eric Glascock, Lancaster Fairfield Union; Ben Batey,
McArthur Vinton County;
Matt Rinehart . Dover; W~de Warner, DreSden Til-Valley;
Tamawi McGhee, Steubenville; Rocco Auteri . WintersviHef
Indian Creek; Carter Paul, Philo; Sean Campbell, Steubenville;
Zak Stull, Dover: Craig Kampfer. Carrollton; John Nicolozakes,
Cambridge; Michael Evancho, Camblidge; Zach Warehlrne.
New Concord John Glenn: Adam Bfce, Dresden Tri-Valley;

Derek McCiuggage, Milersburg W. Holmes; Kyle Reeder,
Usbon Beaver Local; Nic Aingwalt 1 Warsaw River View ; Brody

w.

Estep. Millersburg
Holmes; Bryce Pons. Zanesville
Maysville: Bear Holdren, Cambridge; Blake Aeneker, Opver;
Joe Pulver, Wintersville Indian Creek; Josh Beadnetl,
Carrollton; Ryan Porter, Dover; Kh1&lt; Wetherell, Cambridge;
Grant Woodard. New Concord John Glenn; Luke Neville,
Lisbon Beaver Local; Steve Davis, Steubenville; Taylor Trout.
Dresden Tri-Valley; Micah Mills, Dover; Ethan- Russell , Lisbon
Beever Local; Michael Smith, Wlntersvill~ Indian Creek; Aai"Ofl
Moon, Warsaw River View;

Patrick Stecker. Beloit West Branch; Marte Bamhart. Poland
Seminary; Josh Neff, canton S.; Mike Maui-er, Youngs. liberty;
Jake Roman , Mantua Crestwood; Marc Kanetsky, Hubbard;
Chase Canis, Akron Coventry: Abrlm Mueller. Cuy. Falls Walsh
Jesuit; Jeremy Musch, Medina Buckeye; Man Betz, Alliance
Marlington; Anthony Chiarappa, Cuy. Falls Walsh Jesul1; Beau
Ca~ . Aurora; Tyler Houska. Medina Highland; Ryan Gillun,
Youngs. Liberty; Ma~ Gauer, Canal Fulton NW: John Adams,
Akron Buchtel; Steve Cinicola, Hubbard;
Michael Swary, Defiance; Nate Caudill, Clyde; Aaron
Contreras, Belleyue: Jake Cooper, lima Shawnee; Aaron
PfeHenberger, ·St. Marys Memorial; Tyler Kubach, Bellevue;
Jermane Kennedy, .Sandusky Peridns; Jordan VenAusdale,
Napoleon; Tyler Rhoades, Uma Shawnee; Jameson CavaliBr,
Kenton; Victor Long , 81. Marys Memorial: John Vajen,
Napoleon; Brett Thompson, Shelby; Josh lowe, Sandusky
Perklns; Derek Patrick. Lima Shawnee; Cameron Stykemaln,
Defiance;
· .
Pauly Ferguson, Rocky River; David Garrett. Painesvme
HEirvey; Mike Roesch , Chardon Notre Dame-Cathedral Latin;
Sam Amidon, Cleve". Benedictine; Andy Daniels. Hunting Val.
Univ. School; Dan Bart}', Mentor Lake Calh.; Kevin White,
Rocky River: Jeff Spik&amp;s, Painesv~le Harvey; Dave Plungas.
Mentor Lake Ca1h.; John Swearman. Cleve. Benedictine; Andy
Breidigam, Rocky River; Zach Toedtman. Chagrin Falls; Bob
LaRosa, Avon; John Schaffer, Mentor Lake Cath.; Chri_s
Aukerman . Rocky River ; Charlie Vasey, Chagrin Falls; Daniel
Terhune, Cleve. Orange; Steve Kiss-Benke. Parma HIS. Holy
Name; Alex Bain, Cleve. Orange; Nate Dent, Painesville
Harvey; Tom Geraghty, Jefferson Area ; Brett Axner, Chagrin
Falls; Corey Kendig, ClelJe. Benedictine; Ed C8tanese, Lorain
Brookside.
·

.DIVISION IV ALL-Omo LIST

Sullivan, Cols. Hartley; lim Beachy, Plain City Jonathan Alder;
Rich Klingel, Caledonia River Valley ; Jacob Zang, Cols.
Hartley; Gar Keen , Sparta Highland; Aaron Mackey, Co(s.

COLUMBU-S (AP) - The ' 2006 Associated Press Division IV
AII..Qhlo high school football team . based on the recommendations of a sta1e media panel;

Eestmoor Acad.; Chris Pollock. Plain City Jonathan Alder;

.

DIVISION IV
Fll'lt Team

OFFENSE: Ends-Trey Masciarelli, Bellaire, 5-foot-9, 170
pounds, senior; Josh Rentz, Garfield Hts. Trinity, 6·3, 185, sr. ;
Brad Thomas, Orrville, 6-3, ~80. sr.; Josh Herron, Lemon-

Monroe, 5-10. 195, sr. Linemen-Michael Law, Perry. 6-4. 255.
sr.; Ad~m Hafer, Zoarvme Tusc. Val. , 6-5, 253, sr.; Austin
Rankin, Blanchester, 5--10. 230, sr.; John Pemberton, Ironton,
6-2, 290, sr.; Jaymie Blair, Oak Halbor, 6-2, 248, sr.; Mike

Madsan. Youngs. Mooney, 6-4, 295. sr. Quartsrbocl&lt;s-Kyle .
Simmons, On'ville, 6-1, 165, sr.; Dan McCarthy. Youngs.
Mooney, 6-t , 195, jr.; Mitchell Evans, Milton-Union, 6-3, 200.
or. Bac:Q-lsolah Peod, Cofs. Eastmoor Aced .. 5-11, 175, jr.;
Travis Cook, New Lexfngton, 5~7, 155, sr.; Kevin Smith,
Wlltiamapon Woodall, 5·11, 175, sr.; Cody Donald, Tontogany
Olaego, 5-10, 180, sr:; Ryan Harvey, Peny. 5·9. 175. sr.; Ryan
Travis, Mass. TusiBw, 6-3, 210, sr. "'icker-Garren Brown.
CVCA, 5·9, 150, Sf.
DEFENSE: Unemen-Taylor Smith, Sparta Highland, 6·3,
225, sr.: Andy COlegrove. lron1on, 6·3, 235. sr.; lshmaai'ly
Kitchen, Youngs. Mooney, 6-3, 320, sr.: Wade Ishmael, Oak
Harbor, 6-1, 255, jr. Unebackers-Jordan Traylinek, Bellaire, 60, 200, If.; Justin Creager, Blanchester, 5-9, 185, sr.; Corey
Hersman, Peny, 6-0 . 205, sr.; Michael Zordich, Youngs.

Mponey, 6-3, 225, jr. Becks-Aaron McCune. Oak Harbor. 511, 180, sr.; Jerry Robinson, New LeKington, 6-1, 1B4, sr.;

Leander Brooks, Cadiz Harrison Central, 5-8, 175. sr.; Noah
Hilt, Mllan Edison, 6~3, 210, jr.; Kelly McDonald, Zanesvi•e W.
Muskingum, 6--1, 165, $f. Punter-ian Kadish, Cln. Wyomi ng,
6-1 , 175, sr.

Offenlive player~ o1 the year: Kyle Simmons, Orrville; Dan
McCarthy, Youngs. Mooney; Isaiah Pead, Cols. Eastmoor
Acad.
Dolonllwl pl1yer o1 1111 year: lshmaai'ly Krtchen. Youngs.

"'Coechel
""""Y· of the year:

Mike Elder; Perry; John Magistro,

Bellaire.

Socondl'Mm:

OFFENSE: Ends- Aaron Aobens. Heath, 6-1. 166, sr.; Zack
Byers, Cols. Hartley, 5-B, 170, sr.; John Porter, Doylestown
Chippewa, 5·9, 140, sr. Linemen-Josh Hall, Milton-Union, 6·
3, 292, sr.; Kyle Borton, Wauseon, 6-1, 280, sr.; Tyler
Muhlenkamp, COldwater. 6-3 . 204, sr.; lim Skalak. Canton
Cent Ce.lh., 6-1, 265, sr. Ouart8rbacks-Nick Rocchio,
BeMaire, 6-2, 180. sr.; Chris Smith, S. Point, 6-3,225, sr.; Sam
Slavik, Coldwater, 6-3, 181 , sr. Backs-Jeremy Murray, Martins
Ferry, 6-9, 165. soph.: Tyter Purcell, Middletown Fenwick, 5-11,
180, sr.; Brian Recker. onawa-Glandorf, 5-10. 110. sr.; Matt
Yarab, Youngs. Ursuline, &amp;1, 188, soph.; John Pettigrew,
CVCA. 5·.9, 175, soph. Kicker--Ben Rascona, Cin. Deer Part&lt;,
5-7, 170, sr.
.
DEFINSE: Linemen-Randy Hogston, Plain City Jonathan

Alder, 6-2.210, sr.; Eddie Vallery. London Madison-Plains. 6-2.
220, sr.; Matt Earley, Blanchester, &amp;2, 225, sr. -linebBck"ersRyan Zann. Martins Ferry, 6-3, 205, sr.;.Rudy Dennler, Milton-

Unk&gt;n, 6-2, 205, sr. ; t.Aatt Bloomar, Oak Harbor, 5·10, 215, sr.;
Josh Bowman, OnviNe, 5·1E), 190, sr.; Cpry Beny, Canton
Cent Cath .. 6-1.200, sr. BackS-Jacob Walburn , Wellston. 611, 170, sr.: Skylar Gibson.. WiHiamsport Westtall , 5·10, 182,
sr.; Vinny Hokavar, Perry, 6·3. 195, soph.; Matt Saros~. Perry,
5·9, 165, sr. Punter-John "Hokavar, Perry, 6-5, 245, sr.

Spocill Mlndon
Jon Meadows. CaiToll Bloom-Carroll: Chris Dunlap, Heath;
Paul KrlpPel, Cola . H8rtley; Travis Londot , Uttca; Ryan Nida,
Carroll Bloom.Carroll; Darryl Wood, Cols. Eastmoor Acad .;
Ryan Hughes, Carroll Bloom-carrot!; Dominic D'Andrea, Cols.
Hartley; Tayklr Harris, Sparta Highland; Tlri'l Williams. Plain
City Jonathan Alder; Marcus Ervin, Cols. Eastmoor Acad.; Paul

..

crum ·
from PageBl

record of 83-58. Comparing the two, OSU
faced seven teams .500 and under with ,the
combined record of teams played coming in
at 73-71 on the year. You be the judge.
Contestant two is Michigan. The Maize
and Blue finished the season Il - l with the
only flaw on its record being bitter rival
Ohto State. But while wins over Notre
Dame·and Wisconsin has lifted the stock of
the Wolverines, the biggest hurdle in the
way of their trip to the title game is - bit.
ter rival Ohio State. ~
Pl)ople outside of this area just dort't want
these two teams to meet up again for the
national championship, arguing they had
their chance and couldn't get the win and
shouldn 't get anot her chance. But for
Michigan's ·sake, they are the only team to
give the Buckeyes a challenge and in the
end could be the only team to give them a
.
.
challenge. We wi II see.
The only way we will see the rematch
of the century 1s if both USC and Florida
falls this week as the voters would not
vote a two loss LSU team or a team from
the big letdown known simply as the Big

James Ward, Pataskala Licking Heights; Gus Casaborro,

Sparta Highland;

.

Jeb Pencil, Spring. NorthweStern; Josh Miller, Cin. Deer Park;
Bren Richter. Lemon-Monroe; Josh Hall, Milton-Union; Bill
Dr~sher,
OakwOod; Davis Conway, Cln. Mariemont; Drew
Frey, Clinton-Massie; Wally Gertus, Hamilton Badil'); Mike
Miller, Lemon-Monroe; Jeff King, Cln . Wyoming ; Darryl carter,
Spring. Greenan; Levi Schwab, Cllnton-Massie; Matt Frankey,
Hamilton Badin; Eric Antonides, Milton-Union; David Bradley,
Finneytown; Josh Ak;:om . Hamilton Badin;
Shane Porter, POf1sroouth; Austin Seevers, Portsmouth W.;
Cornellu1 Engfllh, Pomeroy Melga; Dominic Murphy,
Ironton; Seth Hardin, Williamsport Westfall ; Jack Gose,
Williamsport Westfall; John Walker, Ponsmouth; Ryan
Thomas , Albany Alexander; Austin Sidwell, New Lexington:
Beau Weed, South· Point; Seth Shaw, Washington CH; Cart
Blankenship, Ironton Rock Hill; Cody Rainey, Wellston; Alan
Maynard. Proctorville Falrtand; Josh Conrad, New Lexington;
Branctyn Ward, Piketon; Cody Williams, Chillicothe lane Trace;
Chaz Horsley, POrtsmouth W .; Alex Kay, New LeNington; Zane
Bailey, Williamsport Westfall; Ray Caldwell, Portsmouth; Tyler
Rogers, Williamsport Westfall; Caleb Walls, Chillicothe Unioto;
Tyler Gill, Wellston: Mike Zimmerman. washington CH; Chad
Miller, Ironton; JarrOd Casey. ironton Rock Hill; Ben Haynes,
ChillicOthe Zane Trac'e; Aaron Story, Pomeroy lletp; Dale
Swords, Portsmouth W.;
-·
Elric Neuhart. Byesville Meadowbrook; Ryan Mirich, Martins
Feny; Zach Gust, BelmMt Union Local; Cody Huft. Byesville
Meadowbrook; ·Steven Spillman, Zoarvltle Tuscarawas Val.;
Steffan- Green, St. Clairsville; Dustin Bruce, Bellaire; Jake
Antolak. St. Clairsville; Jaimie ~axwell, Coshocton; luke
Spradling, Bellaire; Nick Perko. · Bellaire; Callb Butter,
Zanesville
Muskingum; Jake Kl~g . Martins Ferry; John
Earliwlne, St Oairsville; Rfcky Craven, Zoarville Tuscarawas
Val.; Carl Perkins, Belmont Union Local; Jayson Keyser,
Bellaire; Dustin Hynes. St. Clairsville; Tyler Hardcastle;
Zanesville W. Muskingum;
Jordan Wrask, Hanoverton United ; Demetrius Fambro, Youngs. Mooney; Nick Hooper, Akron Manchester; Andrew
Loera. Orrville; Zak Kreakbaum, Akron Manchesl8r; K8vin
Mankin. Girard; Kyle Stadetmyer. Girard; John Rhodes.
Garrensville Garfield; Nick Thomas , Akron SVSM; Tyler
Shimanek, Orrville; Sam Benson , Mass . Tuslaw; Randy
Wingerter, Navarre Fairless; Taylor Hill, Youngs. MoQney;
Gabe Clark, Sullivan Black RilJer; Garrett McMullin,
Brookfield; Maurice J~nes . Youngs. Ursuline: Harvey Tuck IV.
Akron SVSM: Kyle Skonieczny, Streetsboro; Dom
Scarnecchia, Youngs. Mooney; RQss Revelle , Youngs .
Ursuline; Joe Cvengros, Warren Ch~mpion ; Phil Garcia,
StreetsbOro;
Jimmy Dunning , Archbold ; David Panott. Bellville Clear Fort&lt;;
Tim DeCant, Millbury Lake ; Tom Laderach, Oak Harbor; Ben
Gerding, Ottawa-Glandorf; Doug SMil, Bellville Clear Fork;
Nate Tackett, Bellville Clear Fork; Jack Schemenauer,
Pembervme Eastwood; Alec Romick, Huron; Tyler Kunk,
ColdWater; Spencer Skinner, Oak Harbor; Adam Homan.
Coldwater; Jeb Miller. BeiMIIe Clear Fork; Jus1in Happeny,
Pemberville Eastwood; Tony Harlemert, Coldwater; Justin
Henck, Tontogany Otsego; Cory Klenke, Coldwater:
Chris Newrpan, Lorain Clearview; Andrew Kirsch, Elyria
Cath.; Jeff Gehring, Gar1ield Hts. Trinity: Adam Relghle~.
Wel~ngton ; Jamie Ball, Lorain C1earview; Tim Rankin, Elyria
Cath,. ; Anthoni Troff, Perry; Cody Schuster, Elyria Cath .; Billy
Svoboda, Gar1ield Hts. Trinity; David Kiinmich, Wellington ; J.T.
Schratz. Peny: Shane Peterson, Wellington: Dave Gamble,
Lagrange Keystone; Dustin Otero, Lorain Clearview; Don
Pfckworth, Wellington; Brian Madzia, Gertield Hts. Trinity ;
Steve Sinkinson, Welling10n ; Nick Suetta, Elyria Cath .; Matt
Guggenbiller, Lorain Clearview; E~ck Saunders, Welling1on;

oay.

-w.

Meigs County
Wmter Sports
edition inside
today's Sentinel

Canucks shut out Blue Jackets

Schaal Faalllall I111-0hla
DIVISION ffi ALL-Omo LIST

Wednesday, November 29. 2oo6

www.mydailysentinel.com

V.j\NCOUVER, British
Columbia (AP) The
Vancouver Canucks are still
struggling to score. At least
they took better care of their
own end Thesday night.
Markus Naslund scored
midway through the second
period and Robeno Luongo
made 24 saves, giving the
Canucks a 1-0 win over the
Columbus Blue Jackets .
It was the II th time in 13
games that the Canucks
failed to score more than two
goals, and the third straight
contest they couldn't net
more than one. But after los-

ing their .last two games by a
! 0-1 combined score, one
was enough for the Canu~ks ·
against Columbus.
"We talked about it before
the game and we said these
are the types of games we
have to win, the 1-0, 2-1
games," Luongo said. "And
when we got the lead we
pla~ed really well defensively.'
.
Naslund provided that lead
8:49 into the second after
Henrik Sedin drew a pair of
players just outside the Blue
Jackets' blue line. He slipJ?ed
the puck to a streakmg

Naslund, who split defensemen Anders Eriksson and
Ole-Kristian Tollefsen and
broke in alone on Pascal
Leclaire.
"Hank seems to have eyes
in the back of his head sometimes," Naslund said. "He
came through the middle and
threw it to me and I was able
to get between the Ds."
Naslund finished the play
with a hard fake to the forehand before pulling the puck
quickly across to his backhand and lifting his 12th goal .
high over a sprawled
Leclaire.

- -

"Shop Locally",..

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
:;o t I:\ I~ • \ ol.

Eagles

,) (l.

'llll ' RSil \' . '\ll\T,IBLR :~o. :!Ooh

·

" ·" """ "·';'"''"'"''·I ,,.,,

Meigs hunte~ rank lOth in state on opening day

SPORTS
• Knicks end CaliS' home
win streak. See Page 81

0)JITUARIES
.

'

'\o . H:.&gt;

Pagjt AS
·~Anderson

BY BRIAN

J.

REED

. BREEO@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY
- Meigs
County ranked I Oth in the
state's opening day deer har. vest on Monday, with 1,054
deer, and the local deer harvest increased' by 24 percent
over the first day of last
year's season.
The deer-gun season
remains
open
through
Sunday, and · then will reopen Dec. 16 and 17.
Tuscarawas .
County
topped the opening day list,
with I ,858 deer. Statewide,
hunters took 39,629 deer on
Monday, · a slight increase
from last year's opening day
total of 38,695.
Other counties 'reporting
the highest numbers of deer
checked on Monday included Guernsey, Coshocton,
Washington,
Holmes ,
Harrison,
Licking,
Muskingum, and Athens.
· Thscarawas County, located in east-central Ohio, has

been the state's top deer
hunting region for many
years. Good lfabitat and a
rich hunting
tradition in the
.. .
area sustam Its reputation as
a deer hunting hot spot,
according to the · Ohio
· Division of Wil\llife.
. Deer hunting in the state
was already «;&gt;ff·. to a good
start with both early archery
aqd youth deer-gun season.
figures up from 2005. When
tombining the results of
Monday's harvest, along
with those from the early
inuzzleloadet &amp;eason, the
first six-weeics' of archery
season and the recent youth
deer-gun season, a total of
94,491 deer have been killed
so far this deer hunting .season, compared to 89,2761list
year at this time.
Approximately 400,000
hunters are expected to participate in the statewide
deer-gun season. Ohio's deer
'· a~.., J. R-/ptioto
population was estimated to Mark Thompson of Dettwiller Lumber in Pomeroy checks in two deer harvested by
be. 600,000 prior to the stan Christopher Davis, Syracuse, and a friend. Dettwiller has been busy this week as one of
of the fall hunting seasons.
the check stations for deer hunters .
~

• Randy Pyles

Eastern School
Board approves
personnel

INsiDE
U.S., North Korea end
talks without agreement
on next round of six-party
negotialklne.
See Page A2
• Meigs FFA members
attend national
convention.
See Page A3
o Sheets honored for
dedicated service.
See Page A3
• Meigs County Court
news. See Page AS
o Taft says he'll veto
reYf~te of conceal carry
bill. See Page A5
. o TOPS honors losers.
SeePageA6
o Patrol names pest
. troopers, dispatchers.
See PageA6
1 Supreme Court takes
up global warming for first
time. See Page A7
o Pope offers message
of strength to Christian
minorities in Turkey.
SeePageA7
o

Henry
fromPageBl
Monday, a day after Henry
caught two touchdown
passes in the Bengals' 30-0
win in Cleveland.
The test had shown Henry
had a blood-alcohol level of
0.092 percent after being
pulled over in June, above
the state's legal limit of
0.08 ,
A jury still will hear testimony .from State Highway
Patrol trooper Michael

Henry and his attorney
declined to comment to
reporters as they left the
counroom.
Six Bengals have been
arrested th.ts year on various charges. Henry, 23, has
been arrested four times
since last December. He
has pleaded guilty to marijuana possession and a gun
charge and has one other
case pending.
He was suspended for
two games and fined
$20,000 earlier this season
for violating NFL poliCies
on conduct and ·substance
abuse.

Nugent

pounds and boyish 'Just hit it like I did during
looks, Nugent can easily be warmups,"'
Nugent
mistaken for a reporter or recalled. "I knew I had to i:lo
equipment manager in the my job."
fromPageBl
Jets' locker room . On the
Besides the 54-yarder,
most y~u need on the field field, he has stood tall for Nugent made kicks of 23,
· b,
years.
34 and 40 yards Sunday. He
to d0 your J0 ·
Nugent set or tied 22 also booted three ·kickoffs
Nugent ued a career high school records at Ohio · into the end zone on a day
with four fie!~ goals in the State, where he established when the wind wasn't much
·
&lt;
h ·
ofa'actor.
Jets' 26-11 · win over
Houston on Sunday and a reputatiOn .or avmg a
•·
powerful and accurate leg.
Nugent also showed some
made a big sta\ement with Those credentials made him toughness, making an open- ·
his 54-yarder th~t was plen- one of the highest-drafted field tackle on Dexter Wynn
ty long and I yard shy of the kickers in the last 23 years during a kickoff return.
te~ record.
~
· , when the Jets took him in
"It wasn't just a tackle, it
[t wa~ a} I th 1 turkey..
the second . round, 47th was a greathit, too," special
Graham JO~ngly shouted 10 - overall, in 2005..
teams ace Brad Smith said.
h1s Australian accent as ~e
Big things were obviously "He did a great job of doing
strolled past Nugent s expected but his NFL his J'ob all day long."
crowded locker Monday.
•
,
.
"Mike really nailed it," career got of\ to a dub1ous
Nugent hasn't· had many
Kory Conley. wemngton.
coach Eric Mangini added. start. Nugent s first field- opponunities to make his
"Mike is the type of guy goal attempt wa~ blocked m mark in games, convening
that everybody cheers for th.e opener agamst Kansas 12 of 15 attempts, tied for
East above Big Blue.
because of the way he City, but he rebounded to the fewest kicks in the NFL.
Finally comes SEC backed Florida. works, the ?.'ay he cares. have a decent rookte sea''I'd say that's probably
While the debate over who owns the best He's easy to root for. son. He made 22 of 28 field the main reason it might be
conference in college football usually fires Obviously,
everybody ~oals, mcludu1. a 49-ya~der kind of a tough thing,
up the pigskin community, I win spare peo- wants three points, but aside .10 the season male agamst because you · can kick one
ple the trouble by saying pound-for-pound · from that, it 's just good to Buffalo. ·
.
field goal and then maybe
the SEC is the toughest schedule in all of see him hit that ty.pe of field . Nugent then had .a homf- · none for the next two
college football.
goal."
tc openmg g~me thts season
h
And coming out of that schedule with an
Questions about Nugent's m a 23-16 wm at Tennessee, games," he said. "But w en
11-1 record, with only a 27-17 lqss to leg strength started to creep missing two of his three you get called upon, that's
Auburn standing in the way, says a lot in after he struggled to field-goal attempts and an the time you have to perabout the Gators and their bid for the cham- reach the end zone on kick- extra point.
.
.
form at your best."
pionship game. While they have hiid some offs. He was also 0-for-3 on
"Even though I had . that
The Jets had two opponuclose calls, so has Michigan and Ohio State. fleld goals of 50 or more Tennessee game,. I'm glad nities to try for 50-yard field
·But hurting Florida 's chance was Arkansas' yards m his young career:
we got the win, and my goals against Chicago two
loss last week, lowering the strength of
. But s.nmlar to a r~hef teammates are so support- weeks ago, · but Mangini
schedule which may be the difference if the p1tcher m baseball, Nugent ive, · it's unbelievable," decided instead to punt.
Gators beat them this week.
has learned to have a shon Nugent said.
New York was shut out 10It would probably take an absolute beat- ' memory, never allowmg . Until Sunday, Nugent had 0, and many wondered if the
down by the Gators and a loss by USC for one bad. kick to lmger: He missed his only try from 50 coach's confidence in
them to be even be considered in a jump also ret uses to . let doubts this season- a 52-yarder at Nugent had been shaken.
over the Wolverines.
~~~ut IJJS abt hties affect windy Cleveland four
"I think once you get one
So in the end, who will get the rose, the
" If you 're doing your job weeks ago. He ~as 0-for-3 on the board, it always helps
final vote or, in this case, the crystal footon the field, then you're m h1 s career from .sO-plus to make the next decision,"
ball when it is all said and done ?
going to get to keep doing yard~ when Mangm1 and Mangini said. "But it will
I say USC.
what you do, do what you spec1al teams coordmator sti II be week to week.... It
Lar,.y Cmm is a spo,.ts writer for the . do best and what you love,'' Mtke Westhoff let Nugent ties into the game day as
try one Sunday.
well as him being able to hit
Ohio Valley Publishing company. He ca11 be he said.
With
his
small
stature
"The
warmups
went
realthat,
which I think helps hi s
reached at..lcrunt@mydailyregistercom or
he's 5-foot-9 and 182 ly .weJI.
at 740-446-2342 ext . .1.1
. so I was thinking, argument ."

-·--·---

•

··--~---

- --··

"""':""",~~

•

give back-side help on by what every means neces.
Vinton County's Megan sary. Vinton County suc.Owens, get a couple of . cessful ran out the clock and
stops on defense, and keep Eastern just mn out of time.
fromPageBl
in their offensive rhythm.
Vinton County was lead
The Lady Eagles, With in scoring by Dixon, who
swered points to gain a 34- successful foul shooting had 21 points, followed by
26 lead with less than four and aggressive defense that senior Owens, who was
minutes left in the third . .
caused Vinton County credited with 18 and freshMost of Vinwn County's turnovers, were able to man Rebecca Puckett consuccess came from the fullbegan to chip away at the tributed II ..
coun pressure it began to Lady Viking lead- cutting
Eastern's Erin Weber led
apply in the third, as well as it to four (48-44) with three all scorers for the night
the 20-point second half 11\inutes to play.
with 25 points.
effort of freshman guard
Eastern caused · seven
"Weber is an unbelievTori Dixon .. .
Lady Viking turnovers on able player," said coach
The Lady Eagles figuted the night, while the Eagles Ward. "We pretty mufh
out and broke the Vinton turned the ball over IS · threw the kitchen sink out
County press with almost times.
trying to double team her
six minutes left in the game
"We had some girls that and she still ·took every
when the Lady Vikings held really stepped up and opportunity to score."
a lead of 45-35.
played hard tonight,' Weber
The Lady Eagles' Katie
"They made a lot of mis- stated. Eastern's sixth man, Hayman put 13 points on
takes tonight," said Eastern sophomore Kaylee Milam, , the scoreboard, Jenna
coach Dave Weber, · "I who according to her coach· Hupp added five, Jillian
attribute · a lot of that to comes in and gives a little Brannon four and Milam
Vinton County, who has a · quick energy, stepped up made the final three points
great club and are very·ath- and sunk a three-pointer of the ~arne.
.
letic."
with nine seconds left in the
Leadmg in rebounds was
Eastern began to get in its game.
. Eastern's Weber with eight
grove and to cut the Vinton
By the one minute mark, and Vinton County's Jessi
County lead, forcing a Lady the Lady ' Vikings had Harkins, who pulled down
Viking time-out with just increased their lead to six nine .
over five minutes left to (52-44). The final minute
"All the kids gave a g(eal
play.
was very aggressive on both effon tonight," praised
Weber reminded his girls sides of the ball, both teams Weber, "I was especiall~
during the time-out that .had to work very .hard at pleased with our defense.'
a
successful
The Lady Eagles return
they were still in the game ~etting
and were now able to beat mbound pass, and no one to action Thursday when
they · play .host to the
the press, they just neede\1 had fouls to give. ·
While Vinton County was Trimble Lady Tomcats in
to finish. All Eastern needed
to do, according to Weber's trying to run the clock, the TVC~Hocking season
time-out huddle talk, was Eastern was trying to stop it opener.
Shimko, who arrested
Henry, during a trial .set for
Feb. 15. Henry has been
charged with operating a
vehicle under the influence
of alcohol and speeding.
Haddad set Henry's bond
at $10,000 on· Monday and
ordered him to repor:t twice
a month to the county's probation department. The
judge ordered him not to
use alcohol or drugs and to
undergo testing as a condition of. his bond. He can
continue driving as long as
he blows into a breath-test
ignition interlock device.

~w

I

STAI'f REPORT

.

INDEX
a SEcnONS- 16 PAGES

.

POMEROY- Up until this week
the condition of the upper parking
lot wall in Pomeroy was in need of
the Little Dutch Boy(s) to plug the
gapping holes but all that is changing.
'
·
After waiting over a year to get
started, this week workers with J.
and P. Caulking of Columbus were
able to get busy cutting sandstone
and filling a portion of the wall with
Portland cement as opposed to grout.
The workers arrived last week to
begin work but the river had risen, ..
delaying the repairs yet again. Work
on the wall had also been delayed

due to funding and bureaucratic
issues.
Sean Hill of J . and P. Caulking
said he and co-worker Joe Sofranko
arrived this week with three tons of
sandstone to repair the wail though
they anticipated needin g two l)lOre
tons for a total of five . Hill said he
searched three places in Columbus
to find a matc hing shade of sandstone for the wall.
"We should have the majority. of
the structural work dorie this week,"
Hill said, explaining this included
th e actual setting of the stone.
Of course this type of work
depends on the \~feather and weather
permitting the job should be done

next week during the "clean up"
phase.
The project is estimated to cost
around $55,000 with the village
receiving 100 percent' of the· fund. ing . Both the Buckeye Hills
Appalachian Regional Commission
· and state of Ohio will each pay 12
1/2 percent of the costs while the
Federal Emergency Management
Agency will pay 75 percent of the
total pfice tag ,
,
It nas been over two years since
the wall s ustained heavy damage in
lhe tloods following Hurricane Ivan
in September 2004 as well as a
major flooding event in January
2005.

'

Calendars
Classifieds

.

MHS juniors utilize musewn for National History Day
BY BETH. SERGENT

Comics
Annie's Mailbox .

BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL .COM

AS

A4
As
B Section
A6

© aoo6 Ohio Volley Publishing Co•
'I

.

.

Bv BETH SERGENT

Detalll on Pace A6

.,

Please see Board, A5

Beth Sercont/pllotO

BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL. CDM

Obituaries
Sports
Weather

Please see Museum. A5

.

Jo Sofranko (left) mixes Portland cement while Sean Hill cuts sandstone to repair holes in the upper parking lot wall. Both
men are from J. arid P. Caulking of Columbus and hope to finish the job next week.

REPAIRS FINAllY BEGIN ON PARKING LOT WAil.

WEATIIER

Places to Go
Editorials

from the collection of Rev.
William Middleswanh that
were' donated to the museum. The collection is housed
on the second noor of the
Geneva and Howard Nolan
Annex Building. .
"Everyone has found
something for their project
today," McCaulla said.
According to its website.

TUPPERS PLAINS
The Eastern Local Board of
Education approved .substitute teachers and supplemental contracts at this week's
regular monthly meeting.
The board approved the
following substitute teachers
for the remainder of the
2006-07
school
year:
Alexandra Brandt, Jan
Aldridge, Cheryl Facemyer,
Marjorie Fetty, Chad R.
G.
Huston,
Edward
Safranek, Jason Wiliams.
Brandon Cottrill, Chad
Hubbard, Kyle Ord, David
Schleter and Ainy Thomas.
The board accepted the
resignation of Victor Wallace
as head football coach, and
approved the following supplemental contracts: Junior
High Cheerleading Ad.visor,
Brittni Hensley; Head Boys
Basketball Coach, Howie
.Caldwell; Assistant Baseball
Coach, Adam Pryor; Weight
Room Coordinator/Winter
Quarter, Brian Bowen .
The board approved the
following stalf for the After
School
Intervention
Program: Mildred Wilson,
Bethen Bowen. Tina KeHey,
Sandy
Needs,
Sharon
Wickersham, Nancy Circle.
Jayne Collins and Krista
Johnson.
The board approved Brittni
Hensley as a substitute secretary for the remainder of the
2006-07 sc hool year, and
Gwen Hall ana Sheila
Connolly as After School
Intervention Aides.
The board also:
• Approved the minutes of
the last meeting and October
financial reports.
• Approved an agreement
with CBIZ in the amount of
$ 1.000 to perform the annual
ac1uanal repon and val uation
of the self-i nsurance fund as
required by ORC Section
9.R33. '
• Approved the transfer of
$279. 11 from Class of 2006
Fund l200.94 l6) to Class of
2007 Fund.
• Approved McGuire &amp;
Associates. · LLC for grant
writing s~rvices for the current sc hool year.
• Approved a contract with
CTL Engineering for services related to Riverview
Elementary property soil
remediation.
• Approved an agreement

POMEROY - With the
instant gratification techno!ogy the intemet brings to
researching school projects,
other information outlets are
being overlooked by students which is why 50
juniors from Meigs Hi gh
School recently utilized the
Meigs County Museum and

information from the Meigs
County Hi storical Society
for National Hi story Day.
Tea McCaulla, Engli sh
teacher at MHS. brought her
. students to the museum to
browse through the various
items to do research on a
National History Day project. The projects could be
anythi'ng from a re,earch
paper to a performance
exhibit or video dncumen -

tary.
McCaulla said everyone
wants to use the interent but,
"I want them to realize there
are ot her th ings they can do
to research projects . like
using bo\)ks and newspapers."
Margaret Parlier of the
Meigs County Museum and
Meig' County Historical
Society said sever;~ I , of the
stLtdents had L"ed honks

�•

The .Daily Sentinel

NATION •

WoRLD

PageA2

•

Thursday, November 30, aoo6

U.S., North Korea end talks
BUSH
FOR THE SUMMIT AFfER witlwut agreement on next
round of six-party negotiations
IRAQI LFADER HAD ALREADY IpT
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

AMMAN, Jordan- By
the time President Busb 's
long mototcade roared up
the private road to King
Abdullah II's hillside
palace, the Iraqi prime
minister's · motorcade had
· already roared down it.
So much for the first of
two
high-expectation
meetings between Bush
and Nouri al-Maliki.
Accounts varied on who
canceled
Wednesday's
thiee-way meeting - and
why.
But it was generally
viewed as a bad omen for
efforts to find a new strategy for controlling spiraling violence in Iraq.
The cancellation came
on the same day as disclosure of a classified White
House document critical of
Malilti and a political boycott in Bagh!fad protesting
his attendance.
Instead .of two days of
talks, Bush and ai-Maliki
:will have breakfast and a
$.Pgle meeting followed
AP ~
by a news ~nference IJD
.
,._.v
Thursday morning, the U.S. President George W. Bush, left, meets with King Abdullah II of Jordan, right, in the
White House sajd.
Throne Room of Radhadan Palace, Wednesday in Amman.

The abrupt change was early to his hotel.
Thursday would have a
an a!most unheard develThe cancellation came "robust" meeting on their
'opment in the high-level after the disclosure of a own.
diplomatic circles of a classified White · House
The
president
was
U.S. president, a king and
w·
N
8 b
d
k h
b
a prime minister. There memo, ntten o~.
y expecte to as t e em at.was confusion _ and con- Hadley. In one _particularly tied Iraqi prime minister
f)' ·
·
. harsh sectiOn, Hadley how best to train Iraqi
Ictmg exp1anattons asserted: "The reality on · forces faster so they can
the streets of Baghdad shoulder more responsibilabout w~at happened.
Bush had been schedM 1-k· · · · h
· f h 1·
h
·
uled · to meet with al- ~uggests
a 1 1 I_s e1t. er 1ty or a ling t e sectamin
Malik'1 and I 0 rd , King tgnorant of what IS gomg violence and, specifically,
·
an s
on, m1srepresentmg h1s mending a gapmg Sunni~bdullah on Wednesday intentions ot that his capa- Shiite divide. There are
night, and .had rearranged bilities are not yet suffi- about 140,000 U.S. troops
hiS schedule to be m cient to turn his 20od in Iraq, and Bush is under
Amma~ for both d~ys for intentions into action.11
unrelenting pressure from
tal.ks atmCC:~ at red"!cmg the
Administration officials Democrats and many
sp1ral of VIOlen~ m Iraq.
did not dispute the leaked Republicans to start brin"'The cancellallon was not
·
h
"'
announced until Bush had account, saymg t at on ing them home.
already come to Raghadan balance. the document wa~
Some analysts suggested
Palace and posed for pho- suppor11 ve of the Jraq1 that the memo miaht actu·
togrtlphs afone with the leader and generally por· ally hell' more than damkin .
trayed him as well-mean· . aBe ai·Mallkl, showina
na
Ina
dtstance between him and
The president "has con· Bush;
White House c!&gt;unselor
Dan Bartlett demed that fldence in Prime Minister
Jon Alterman, former
the ~e)aY. was a snub by al· Malik!,"
said
Bush sJ)ecial assistant secretary
Maltkl directed at Bush or spokesman . Tony Snow, of state for Near Eastern
was relate~ to the leak of a who added that at-Maliki affairs, said the memo's
memo wru.ten by Wh~te "has been very a~gressive doubts about al-Maliki
Hou~e National Secunty in recent weeks m taking "seemed calculated to·steel
Adv1~er. Stephen. Hadl.ey . on some. of the key chal- his spine."
·
9ues!lomng t~e pnme mm·. lenges."
''This memo reads to me
1ster. s c~paclty _for con-. : The memo recommend- more like a memo to
tr~.llmg VIOlence Iraq. , ed steps to strengthen the . Prime Minister ai-Maliki
Absolu~elX
· . not,
Iraqi leader's position, . than to President Bush,".
B_artlett said. ~e sal~ ~e including possibly sending said Alterman, now with .
kmg and the ~me mm•s- more troops to defend the Center for Strategk
ter. had met
fore Bush Baghdad and providing and International Studies.
OU:1 ~ed frof!J a .~ATO sum- monetary suppon for mod- "It has his entire to-do list
mit m Latvia. That negat- erate political candidates as well as a list of what
ed . the purpose. to meet for Iraq's parliament.
he'll get if he agrees;"
tomght toge.~her m a tnlatThe Iraqi prime minister
In Washington , Sen.
era! seth!lg.
. .
.
also faced political pres- Jack Reed, D-R.I., called
A _semor. admm!stratt~n sure at home about the on Bush to appoint a highofficml, who spoke wtth summit. Thirty Iraqi law- ranking special envoy to
U.S. Ambas~ador to Iraq makers and five cabinet work with the Iraqi govZalmay Khahlzad, bas!ca!- ministers loyal to anti- ernment on disbanding
ly
echoed
Bartlett s American cleric Muqtada militias, including all
account.
.
al-Sadr said they were Iraq's factions in the
T~e Jo~damans ~nd th.e boycotting Parliament and nation's political process
Iraqis JOintly dectded tt the government to protest and equitably distributing
~as not the best use of al-Maliki 's presence at the resources such as oil revlime because they bot_h summit.
·
enue. .
,
would be seemg the. prest- - · Bartlett- said
that
"Steps have to be taken
dent . separately, satd the Wednesday night's . three- now.'' he said. .
offictal.
way meeting had always
Bush's meeting with al. Members
of . the been planned as "more of Maliki is part of a new
Jo~aman and Iraq• dele- a social meeting" and that nurry of diplomacy the
gattons
contacted Bush and Maliki on administration has underKhahlzad, who called Alf
Force One and spoke wit~
Bush and Secretary of
State . Condoleezza Rice,
Candy Contest
giving them a heads-up,
Peoples Bank, Pomeroy
the official said.
However, Redha Jawad .
December 2nd, 2006
Taqi, a senior aide of top
Entries before Noon
Shiite politician AbdulJudging after Bank Closes
Aziz ai-Hakim who also
was· in Amman, said the
·Cookie Contest
Iraqis balked at the threeway meeting after learning
Ohio Valley Bank
the king wanted to broadDecember 9, 2006
en the talks .to i'ncl ude the
Israeli -Palestinian conflict.
Entries before Noon
Two senior officials
Judging after closing of bank on Dec. 10
· travelin g with al-Maliki ,
who spoke .on condition of
anonymity because of the
Holiday Craft Contest
sensitivity of the informaFarmers Bank
tion, said the prime mini ster had been reluctant to
16,2006
travel to Jordan in the first
Crafts can be displayed
place and decided, once in
Amman , that he ,did not
as early as Dec. 11th
want "a third party"
Deadline for entries Dec. 16th
in vol ved in talks about
subjects specific to the
at 10:00 AM Judging alter bank closes
U.S.-lraqi relationship.
With al-Maliki alread y
Prizes will be awarded by participating banks
gone from the palace,
Shop local and suppor't the people who suppor't
Bush had an abbrev iated
you, The Meigs Economic Development Office.
meeting aQd dinner with
the king before heading

'?

'

Dec.

taken across the Middle
East. Hadley's memo suggests that Secretary of
State Rice should hold a
meeting for Iraq and its
neighbors in the . region .
early next month and also
that the U.S. could step up
efforts to get Saudi Arabia
to help. It was written just
weeks
before
Vice
President Dick Cheney
was dispatched to Saudi
Arabia.
. ·
Senior administration
officials, speaking on the
condition of anonymity
because the document is
still classified even thouah
published, said that many
of the concerns raised by
Hadley have been or are
being rectified · In the
month that has passed
since his trip to Baahdad.

BYKAliiYMITCIIEU.

because I fear for the safety "Perplexed'' he was not
AND MARCY SuGAR
of those children. What can wrong to assume the host of
I 4&lt;&gt;? - Concerned Aunt . a birthday _party is picking
Dear Annie: I have two in California
up the tab for the entire
Dear Aunt: We don't group. May!Je so, but the
:older brothers. One recently
died and the other is strange bll!me you for worrying, trend these days is the exact
beyond words. "Dennis" has although Dennis does retUrn opposite.
I always assume I'm paybeen married several times the children, albeit later than
and
is
a
father
and
grandfaexpected.
Dennis
has
a
few
ing
my own . tab, or worse,
.
· ther. However, he is · screws loose, but if your paying my own and also
, estranged from all his chi!- nephew has no objection to chip~ing in to pay for the
·dren. Worse, the rest of us Dennis' field _trips, and does- host s dinner as· well. Some
.. are not allowed to have his n't
mind
about ..the folks try to keep the costs
.grandchildren over becauSe "Grandpa" business, there down by ordering a salad,
.their parents fear we would isn't much you can do. Can only to discover they are
. ;allow Dennis to see the kids. you speak to the children's expected to split an equal
. Dennis' children won't tell mother? We hope she will share of the- bill with folks
_- us what happened to cause take this more seriously than who had a three-course meal
.such animosity, but we have · your nephew.
and a couple of drinks.
.our suspicions. Two years ·Dear Annie: I am an
When my husband threw
ago,
Dennis
was
supposed
average
boy
.
in
seventh
a
surprise
birthday for me at
1
to take my children for ice grade. I have several an upscale restaurant, he
cream, and he left town with friends, and one of them is paid tl:te tab for everyone.
,thern and returned six hours my cousin, "Bruce," who is One friend tried to slip him
later. 1 was frantic.
a couple grades younger some cash, but he absolutely
·..- The problem now is that than me. My problem is that refused. Most folks seem
Dennis insists our late he is always laughing at not to understand this conbrother's grandchildren call anything I do wrong.
cept. - Been There in
,
We have been friend s Tallahassee, Fla.
him "Grandpa." He dropped since our youngest days,
Dear · Been There: We
· by with these children, and and I have withstooj his agree. We know asking
· when the ·7-year-old called mocki,ng until now, but mJ! guests to pay is a newer
'him "Uncle," Dennis yelled tolerance has snapped. trend, but. it comes from
at him, saying, "I am your When Bruce laughs, he does ignorance and greed, and we
grandfather!
Remember _it for a reaction. I would have no intention of giving
··that!"
laugh along with him if it it our seal of approval just
Later, I called my nephew were just for fun, but that is ·because it's common. It's
··and asked if he was aware not the case. Please give me still wrong.
of the situation, He was not, your opinion. - Harried in
Annie's Mailbox is writand also did not know his Southern California
ten by Kathy MitcheU and
· kids had left the area with
Dear Harried: We think Marcy Sugar, longtime edi. Dennis. They came home Bruce is jealous of living in tors of the Ann Landers
well after midnight on a your shadow and is assert- column. Please e-mail your
· school night.
mg himself by dragging you questions to annits.mail·
· I told my nephew that down. Ignore him politely. box@comcast.net, or write
Dennis forcing the kids to Bruce is two years younger, to: Annie's Mailbox, P.O.
,call him "Grandpa" is an and he's obviously too Box ll8190, Chicago, IL
:1Jlsult to his father. He says immature to be hanging 60611. To find out more
:"it is not. And he still allows around you. Save your about Annie's Mailbox, and
~ :Dennis to take the kids for friendship for when the fam- read features by other
· ~!rides." We are so afraid ily gets together, and use Creators Syndicate writers
:-Dennis is going to drive off your school time for friends and cartoonists, visit the
I and not come back. I don't your own age.
Creators Syndicate Web
; t.Jiink I can stay out of this· Dear Annie: You told page at www.creators.com.
: ' '

.1

:Community Calendar

c-:,up. ",. ....,:J

Public 1110etings
Mooday, Ike. 4

, SYRACUSE - Sutton
' Town~ip l'rustees, 7 p.m.,
:.syracuse Village Hall. ·
'• LETART
Letart
Townshipl'rustees, 5 p.m. at
; 'lhe offire building.

This is the one gift -

that won't be-· returned.
.

Chapter 134, Order of
Eastern Star, 7:30 p.m. Rob
Monis Night to be observed.
All officers asked to anend.
Potluck dinner.

Thesday, Ike. 5
CHESTER Chester
Council 323, [}Jughters of
America, 7 P·lll· at the
;
Masonic
Hall. Nomination of
.Thesday, Dec. s
will be held, quarter, POMEROY - Meigs Soil officers
ly
birthdays
observed,
t and Water Conservation
Christmas
program
given
; District
Board
of
: Supervisors, special meeting, with a $3 gift . exchange.
: noon, district office, 3310 I Doris Grueser, Marge Fetty
and Charlotte Grant will be
: Hiland Road, Pomeroy.
r ALFRED
Orange hostesses.
MIDDLEPORT
l Township Trustees, regular Middleport
Lodge #353,
! meeting, 7:30 p.m., at the F'&amp;AM, monthly
business
: .home of Oerk Osie Follrod. meeting, 7;30 p.m. All
mem. RACINE American
Power-Ohio, bers urged to attend. All
: Municipal
Masons invited.
l informational meeting, 6-8 Master
Refreshments.
! p.m., Southern Elementary
: School, doors open 5:45
Wednesday, Dec. 6
:I p.m., ('1ght refre s.hme nts.
POMER(!jy
-· The Meigs
I
County Board of Health, regWednesday, Ike. 6
, . PAGEVILLE - Scipio ular meeting, 5 p.m., confer: Township Trustees will meet ence room Meigs County
; at 6:30 p.m. at the Pageville Health Department.
: town hall.
Saturday, Ike. 2
t
SALEM CENTER -· Star
'i
Grange #778 and Star Junior
'
Gmnge #878 potluck supper
at 6:30 p.m. followed by
•
'
meeting at 7:30 p.m. Bring
'
Friday, Ike. I
items for the food bank.
l POMEROY
-PERl Subordinate baking contest.
t Chapter 74 Christmas pro1gram, I p.m., Meigs County
: Senior Center.

I
•

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Saturday, Ike. 2
·, HARRISONVILLE
:· Harrisonville Lodge 411 , reg: ular meeting, 7:30 p.m .
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: nonperishable · food item.
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POMEROY - Six Meigs
FFA members, along with two
Meigs High staff members,
attended the FFA National
Convention in Indianapolis,
Ind. recently.
In the group were Dakota
Arms, president; Sarah Lantz,
vice president; Nicole Hill,
parliamentarian; and members Joe Rosier, Rick Stitt, and
Ashley Life, along with chaperons, ~on Vlasak and Janet
Life. ·
The group was in
Indianapolis for three days
where they watched the
national officers in action,
attended two country music
concerts with perfoimances
by Carrie Underwood, Jason
Aldean, Heartland, Trent
Wilman. Jamie O'Neil, and
Blake · Shelton, visited the
Indiana State Museum where
they saw skeleton mounts of
· animals from the dinosaur era,
full body mounts of lions,
whitetail deer. bears, alligators, and other animals.
Several in the group visited

p.m., Reedsville Church of
Christ. Refreshments.
Sunday, Dec. 3
MIDDLEPORT- David
Stiffler of Wilkesville to
present special music,
II a.m.
service
at
Middlepon
First
Presbyterian Chun;h. Open
communion. Light refreshments following.
Thesday, Dec. 5
POMEROY Team
Jesus Ministries weekly
service, 6:30 ' p.m. at the
Community
Mulberry
Center gymnasium.

Other events
Saturday, Dec. 2
MIDDLEPORT - Straw
giveaway for pet bedding,
10 a.m. to I p.m .; behind
Meigs County Humane
Society Thrift Store,
POMEROY
- Free
Gospel Bluegrass Concert
featuring "Hart Brothers,"
"Little Mill Creek Pickers"
and "E;veryThursday," 6:30
p.m., Mulberry Community
Center. Concessions avail- ·
able. Love offering for children served by God's NET

Birthdays
Saturday, Dec. 2
POMEROY - -Carol
Mclaughlin of Pomeroy
will celebrate her 75th
birthday on Dec. 2. Cards
may b..: sent to P.O. Box
209. Pomeroy.

ND'I'ICK 'I'D DOD OWNERS

Dennis Eichinger, Meigs High School principal. was also presented a gift by the FFA members. Arms and Lantz for his
role in facilitating the .trip.
the Hoosier Horse Park where
they met jockeys and their
horses. and others anended the
Buckeye Bash dance which
was for Ohio FFA members
only, and visited a mall where
everything was FFA.
The Meigs FFA members
came away better educated
and more knowledgeable
because of a career show they
attended with
representatives form schools and businesses in agriculture from all
over the country presenting
infonnatioq. One of the
schools represented was the
Hobart School of Welding
which allowed members to

experiment with welding.
Before returning home, representatives from each state
were photogmphed and several were interviewed for a
RFD-lV show.
For attending the event,
members · were given a $75
credit card to use anyway they
wanted. The Meigs group
bought gifts fOr those here
who had made it possible for
them to attend including
William
Superintendent
Buckley, Meigs principal,
Dennis Eichinger, the agriculture teachers. Vlasak and Ttm
Simpson, and Life, a secretary.

Terry Sheets

.A.I
SWISHER T .LOHSE
PHARW.A.CV

Sheets honored for
dedicated sewice
CHESHIRE, Ohio Terry R. Sheets, a maintenance supervisor at the Ohio
Valley ·
Electric
·Corporation 's.__Kyger Creek
Plant, recently received his
.anniversary award for 30
years of service to the company, as announced by
Ralph E. Amburgey, plant
manager.
Sheets joined the company on Nov. I, 1976, as a
laborer in the labor department. In 1979, he transferred · to the maintenance
department as a maintenance helper and advanced
to a maintenance mechanicS thai same year. In 1995,
he was promoted to a maintenance mechanic-A , and in
1999. to a maintt nance
supervi sor.
Sheets and his wife,
Deni se. reside in Racine.
Ohio.

ND'I'ICE 'I'D DOD OWNERS

U.ry T. By...·HIII, Auditor, 100 E . Second St. R.+ll . 201

~omeroy,

OH. 45769

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D,EADLINE FOR PURCHASE OF 2007 DOG LICENSE IS JANUARY 31. Feea are $6.00 tor each
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Sutl ntlttecl fllll8tDe

Returning Meigs FFA members from a thr~ay FFA national convention in Indiana, Dakota
Arms and Sarah Lantz presented.Superintendent Willlam .Buckley with a gift of appreciation
for making it possible for them to attend.
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High School bell choir presents Christmas concert, 7

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Thursday, November 30, aoo6

When 'grandfather' ge.ts pretty strange

Kyodo said. Similar stances
were taken when the three
met bilaterally and trilateralBEIJING - U.S . 11nd · ly on Thesday, Japanese and
North Korean dielomats South Korean ruedia have
failed to reach an agreement reported.
Wednesday on when to
North Korea agreed in
resume six-nation talks on September 2005 to abandon
Pyongyang's · disputed its nuclear program in
nuclear
program,
but exchange for security guarstressed their corrunitment to antees and aid. But
moving the process forward. Washington imposed the
U.S. Assistant Secretary of financial sanctions against a
State Christopher Hill said
after two days of talks with Macau-based bank on suSpiNorth K~ Vice Foreign cions it was laundering
Minister Kim Kye Gwan counterfeit money for the
that the sides "shared ideas North Koreans. Angered by
that could help ensure the move, Pyongyang withprogress when the ·six-party drew from the talks two
talks resume," according to months later.
The six"party talks iltvo!Ve
a U.S. Embassy statement.
The North ·said in its own the United States, North
statement that it "promise(~ Korea, Japan. Sooth Korea
and Rus8la, which has not
to study these ideas."
No date was set for the sent an envoy to ~ijing.
talks to resume. Hill planned
State
Department
to leave Beijing on Thursday spokesman
Sean
without a follow-up meet- McCorinack
said
in
ing, said Susan Stevenson, Washington that the main
spokeswoman for the u.s. goal of the Beijing meetings
Embassy in Beijing.
was to "make sure that
Hill and Kim also met everybody, at least, has a
with Chinese \lice Foreign good, solid ynderstanding of
Minister Wu Dawei during what might happen" when
the talks Tuesday · and the six-nation talks resume.
Wednesday. The Chinese
Japanese .Prime Minister
Foreign Ministry said in a · Shi112X&gt; Abe said in Tokyo
statement on its Web site that just resuming the talks
late that the parties "frankly
and deeply exchanged views was not the main objective.
on the issue of promoting ''Our efforts are aimed at
the process of the six-party holding six -party talks that
talks and improve mutual produce results," he said.
understanding,"
without
.
elaborating.
"The tltree parties also
agreed to strive for the
progress of the .talks," the
statement said.
Japan's . Kyodo News
agency cited unidentified
officials at the talks as saying Kim had demanded the
• FMI.Mn' 'TictWIII._..
U.S. lift financial sanctions
• l"""rt Moologlng ..... """buddy lilti
• 10t-m~H ICid._YMI Wtbmllll
and freeze U.N. sanctions
•
CUiklm lllltPIQI. ntWI, . . . . . , , men!
that were imposed after the
October nuclear test.
Hill responded by saying
that the possible llftlna of
~·­
"'"Up Ontlntl www.Lt
RiaL.....
financial sanctions can be
discussed durlna the talks
and worklna·level discussions, which aue expected to
be held simultaneously,

..

PageA3

ANNIE'S MAILBOX

BY AI FU 01 ESFN
ASSOCIATtD PRESS WRITER

BY TOM RAUM

BYTHE·· BEND

:The Daily Sentinel

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The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

(740) 992-2156 • FAX (740) 992·2157
www.mydally~entlnel.com

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Jim Freeland
Publisher
Char1ene Hoeflich
· General Manager-News Editor
'

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

TODAY IN HISTORY
Today is Thursday, Nov. 30, the 334th day of 2006. There

are 31 days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
On Nov. 30, 1782, the United States and Britain signed
prelin'liJ:tary peace articles in Paris, ending the
Revolub\)nary War.
·
On this date:
In 1803, Spain completed . the process of ceding
Louisiana to France, which had sold it to the United States.
' ' In 1835, Samuel Langhorne Clemens - better known as
Mark Twain - was born in Florida, Mo.
In 1874, British statesman Sir Winston Churchill was
born at Blenheim Palace.
In 1900, Irish writer Oscar Wilde died in Paris at age 46.
In 1936, London's famed Crystal Palace, constructed for
the International Exhibition of 1851, was destroyed in a
fire.
,
In 1939, the Russo-Finnish War began as Soviet troops
invaded Finland.
In 1962, U Thant of Burma, who had been acting secretary~general of the United Nations following ·the death of
Dag Hammarskjold the year before, was .elected to a fouryear term.
·
·
In 1993, President Clinton si(!ned the Brady bill, which
requires a five-day waiting penod for handgun purchases
and background checks of prospective buyers.
.
Ten years ago: Some 150,000 ~pte filled the streets of
Belgrade to protest Serbian Prestdent Slobodan Milosevic.
1960's novelty singer Tiny Tim, best remembered for his
rendition of "Tiptoe Thru' the Tulips," died in Minneapolis. ·
Five years ago: Roben Tools, the first person in the world
to receive a fully self-contained artificial heart, died in
Louisville, Ky., . of complications after severe abdominal
bleedin~; he had lived with the device for 151 days. Gary
Leon Rtdgway was ·arrested in connection with four of the
Green River serial killings in Washington state. (He later
pleaded guilty to four dozen killings, and is serving life in
prison.) In Georgia, fonner DeKalb County Sheriff Sidney
Dorsey and two other men were arrested and charged with
murder in the slaying of Sheriff-elect Derwin Brown, who
had defeated Dorsey in a bitter runoff election. (Dorsey was
later convicted and sentenced to life in prison; the two other
men were acquitted of murder in a separate state trial, but
were later convicted of conspiracy in a federal trial.)
One year ago: President Bush gave an unflinching
defense of his Iraq war 'strategy in a speech at the U.S.
Naval Academy, refusing to set a timetable for U.S. troop
withdrawals and asserting Lhat once-shaky Iraqi troops
were proving increasingly capable. Shimon Peres quit
Israel's Labor Party, his political home of six decades, to
campaign for Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon's new
organization. Actress Jean Parker died in Woodland Hills,
.Calif., at age 90.
Thought for Today: "The real problem is what to do with
the problem solvers after the problems are solved."- Gay
Talese, American author and JOurnalist.
'

PageA4

OPINION

Thursday, November 30, 2.006

I-Iollywood's (Nativity Story' is a Christmas
gift for audiences desiring reverential films
Hughes ("Whale Rider") in minutes, how~ "Nativity" fully accepcs Mary's vilgi.nithe primary role of her cousin compare with the Bible?
ty.)
Mary.
Rich follows a largely liter·
• This on-screen Joseph is
Was the box office for Mel
(As it happens, Castle- at replication of Matthew and roughly Mary's age. There's a
Gibson's "The Passion of the Hughes, '16, is now pregnant Luke. Unlike some of common Roman Catholic
Christ," that 2004 show-biz out of wedlock.)
· Gibson'S "Passion" embroi- and Eastern Orthodox view
shocker. a fluke? Or did it · · Oddly, Jesus' ministry and .dery, the elaborations emerge that be was much older, to
reveal a massive and neglect- .crucifixion have provided naturally from the biblical undergird belief that Mary
ed audience for reverential ample movie material while and cultural background.
remained perpetually virgin
titre? .
•
his · birth is largely ignored.
. even after Jesus' birth.
We 'II learn more from the · apart from cheapos for the
Spedlks:
box-office receipts for "The church-basement
market.
• Rich emphasizes the charTrivia question: How many
Nativity Story," New Line Pemaps that's because this, acters' Jewishness and, unlike Wise men were there?
Cinema's holiday gift that possibly the most famous with Jesus' passion, the only
Answer: The Bible never
brings elegant Christmas-card story ever told, lacks sus- villains of the Nativity were says, only · noting that the
scenes of Jesus' birth to life pense.
the Romans.
.
group brought three gifts.
on screen.
The movie's historical con• The sho~ bears a PG VI~ Inevitably, though, Rich
Christians will presumably sultan!, the Rev. William len~e wa~nng because t~ shows the traditional trio
!lock t6 "Nativity." even .. Fulco of Loyola Marymount begms wtth the Romans .. crossing ·trackless · desert
though the same Time . University in Los :&lt;\ngeles, slaughter of ~ umocents so while Mary and Joseph strugWamer unit bears responsi- .· endorses mild "higher critiJlllfliiiOtd King Herod ~ gle tOward Bethlehem.
bility for those "Texas cism" of the Bible in a pub- ehnunate YC?Ungsters who d
"Nativity" haS the wise
Chainsaw Ma5sacre" movies. licity handout that will rile threaten .hts retgn \see men following a literal star,
Home video and inevitable fundamentalists,
Matthew 2.\6-_18).
actually a notable conjunction
TV repeats in future . The accounts in the
• Rich s.imilarly Pfe!&gt;C."ts of heavenly bodies such as
Decembers will enhance pro- Gospels of Matthew and Nazareth vtllage~ as h':l"8
urred · 7 B.C. and 5 B.C.
ceeds.
Luke "are not completely on the econonuc margins, occ
m
.
' Director
Catherine . compatible," Fulco says. s11ffering from
ruinous
~e fihn ends wtth a
Hardwicke
("Thirteen," Since "very little was known Roman taxes.
vmceover as refugee Mary
"Lords of Dogtown") says of the events," he explains,
• Mary might have been as defiantly proclauns that God
she sought "epic intimacy" .to · '"the stories were develdped reluctant to wed Joseph, as "has .sea~. the proud ~
evoke "another time and using what is called midrash, Rich supposes, · since it was the unagmatton of thetr
beautiful
landscape." a sometimes creative recon-. · probably an arranged mar- beans; he has put down the
Strikingly austere vistas in suuction of events ~· on riage.
mighty from their thrones."
Morocco and Italy represent what is actually known, elab- · • It's certainly plausible that (Luke 1:46-55).
the lirst-century Holy Land.
orated from clues" jn prior the holy couple, as here, · Omitted for some reason is
·
would have been afraid, con- the baby's presentation in the
The 10-nation ca't boasts writings.
Oscar nominees Shohreh
Screenwriter Mike Rich fused and worried rather than temple and Simeon's propheAghdashloo ("House of Sand ("Finding Forrester," "The serenely accepting the mirac- cy, "Lord, now leaest !hou
and Fog") as Elizabeth, moth- Rookie")
is " devoutly ulous unwed pregnancy that thy servant depart in peace....
er of John the Baptist; and the Christian. Since he turned the would have scandalized for mine eyes have seen thy
magnetic Keisha Castle- minimal scriptures into 94 small-town neighbors. (Rich salvation" (Luke 2:22-39).

BY RICHARD N. OSTUNG
FOR THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

the

. WERENOT ·

· Thursday, November 30, 2006

www.mydailysentinel.com

Obituaries

MEIGS COUNIY COURT NEWS

Helen Anderson
Helen Marie Rings Anderson, 91, of Hartford,· W.Va.,
died Thursday, Nov. 29, 2006.
She was preceded in death by her husband, Raymond
Anderson.
·
Funeral will be held at I p.m. on Saturday, Dec. 2, 2006,
at Anderson Funeral Home in New Haven, W.Va., with
Rev. Sam Anderson and Rev. David Grueser officiating.
Buri~l will be in Graham Cemetery.
Fnends may call from 6 to' 9 p.m. on Friday at the funeral home .. An online registry is available online at
www.andersonfh.com.

Randy Pyles
: Randy ~· Pyles. 51, Racine, died Monday, Nov. 27,
2006, at hts restdence. Arrangements will be announced by
the Cremeens Fqneral Chapel, Racine.

Local Briefs ·
Chicken and noodle dinner
RACINE - The Racine American Legion Post 602 will
be serving a fried chicken and noodle dinner beginning at
11 a.m. on. Sunday, Dec. 3 at the legion hall. The dinner
price is $6 and includes iced tea or coffee and dessert while
available.

Correction
· POMEROY- Meigs County Highway Department will
replace bridges on Sharon Hollow, Portland Road,
Maloon's Run Road, White's Hill Road, Joppa Road and
Hysell Run Road using Issue II funds next year. It was
incorrectly reported that paving projects would be completed on those roads. ·
·

Straw giveaway
MIDDLEPORT -Meigs County Humane Society will
giveaway bags of straw to be used for pet bedding from I 0
a.m . .to I p.m. on Saturday behind the Meigs County
Humane Society Thrift Store.

Road closing

· FI6HTING ...
WE'RE JUsT ·
EXPERIENCING
SOME SPORADIC

CHESTER- County Road 28, Locust Grove Road, one
mile north of Ohio 248, will be closed from 9 a.m. until 2
p.m. on Thursday for a pipe replacement.

CIVIL UNRE$T

Board meeting
ATHENS- Area 14 Workforce Invesllnent Board will
meet at 9:30a.m. on Dec. 8 at the Ohio University Inn.

Special service to include confinnation
POMEROY - The Rt. Rev. Kenneth L. Price. Jr., the.
Bishop for the Southern Diocese of Ohio, will be conducting services Dec. I 0, II a.m. at the Grace Episcopal Church
of Pomeroy, with the Rev. Edward T. Payne, priest in
charge. As part of the service, Bishop Price will confirm 13
persons into the faith by the Rite of Confirmation. The
church is located at 326 East Main St., Pomeroy. The public is invited.
·

Bazaar planned

Rationalizing defeat

ferred? Say it ain't so.
back of Mississippi Sen.
For years. I've had a run'
On cue, many adopted the Trent . Lon, .last seen being
ning debate with .a friend
line taken by talk radio's unceremoniously dumped as
involved in professional
spons. Who gets the worst
Rush Limbaugh. Despite the an unrepentant segregationpress coverage, jocks or
Democrats' takeover of isl
politicians? My argument is
Congress,
the party had a
But was any of it based on
Gene
that fans wouldn't tolerate the
tiger by the tail. CBS's Bob reality? Were incoming
Lyons
nonsense thai pa~scs for jourSchieffer put it succinctly: Democratic congressmen
nalism in Wa\hington, Just
. "The problem that Nancy largely
conservative?
recently. The Washington
Pelosi is going to have is not f\.1ediamatters.org surveyed
Posl ran a front-page story
so much with the .Republican their campaign platforms.
Letters to. the editor are welcome. They should be less mentioning casually that basketball team should ever White House, but with her Guess what? Every single
than 300 words. All letters are subject to editing, must be Social Security will go flat be considered obscure.
'own pany., These Democrats Democrat elected advocates
Even so, to ESPN's basket- that were elected last night chafiging course in Ir.iq. All
sigrti!d, and include address and telephone number. /Yo broke in 2040, which hapunsigned .letters will be published. Letters should be in pens to be completely false. ball gurus, these bizarre are conservative Democrats. support raising the minirimm
good taste, addressing issues, not personalities. Utters of It's pattisan scare-talk.
results
needed
to
be They are not like some of the
All
· ··
oppose pnvauzmg
thanks to organizations and individuals will not be acceptIf they'd reported the explained away. It went liberal ftrebrands that are in wage.
Social Security. All but two
ed for publication.
Rtxlskins score backward, roughly like this: Hey, it's . the House right now."
·favor embryonic stem-cell
somebody would have been only November. UNC Coach
Could Pelosi, a known research.
Exactly
five
ftred . My friend agrees but Roy Williams hasn' t settled woman. pull it off! On the describe themselves as "pro·
objects to the rumor-monger- on his regular lineup yet. same day Democrats unani- lW "
ing, character assassination Problem is, he's got too much mously elected her Speaker · ~&amp;oore the flattops and the
(USPS
213-960)
and moralistic posturing that talent. Ditto for the sainted of the House -· the highest- boots.
Reader Services
Like
Pelosi's
Ohio Valley Publishing
characterize much sports Coach K at' Duke. Fear not, ranking woman in U.S. histo- wardrobe, they're trivialities:
Co.
.
ACC fans. Both teams are the I)' - pundit chatter focused Every Democrat elected ran
punditry.
Correction Polley
Published every .aftemoon, Monday
Lately,. though, I've been "real deal.·· You can count on upon the "stunning" defeat of to the left of the Republicans
Our main concern in all ~ories is to
through Friday, 111 ·court Stre.et,
suuck
by how much the two it.
Rep. John Murtha, her ·prebe accurate. If you know o1 an error Pomeroy, Ohio.
Second-class
realms have come to resemFunny. but I thought it was ferred candidate for majority they defeated. The clear
in a storv. call the newsioom at (7&lt;10) postage paid at Pomeroy.
losers Nov. 7 were moderate
ble each other Consjder .col- November on both ends of leader. .
992·2t56.
Mtmber: The Associated Press and
Was Pelosi's leadership RepUblicans, a vanishing
lege basketball's opening the court. Meanwhile, here's
the Ohio Newspaper A66ociation.
doomed
before it started? breed. Moreover. polls show
Poatml81er: Send address correc- • week. Due to the growth of something else you can count
Our nutln number Ia
tions to The Daily Sentinel. 111 Court
early-season 1ournaments, on: Duke and Carolina games New York Times columnist that most voters- up to two(740) 992·2156.
Street, P~roy, Ohio 4~769 .
highly ranked team&gt; faced on ESPN every time you tum Maureen Dowd accused her thirds in some cases ~agree
Depltrtment extension• ere:
opponents they'd normally on the television . Along with of ''throw(ing) lil~e a girl," by with Democrats on . these
Subecriptlon Rates
have avoided until the NCAA · the SEC. Big 12, Big Ten and "making her ftrst move based issues.
By cerTier or motor route
Anybody who expects
toumamem. The resulls were the other power conferences. on relations~ips and past
News
OM month
'10.27
slights
rather
than
strategy"
Pelosi,
a seasoned, disciIf
you'd
rather
watch
Butler
similar
10
what
happens
durEdRor: Charlene Hoeflich , E&gt;:t. 12 . OM year
•
't23.24
ing "March Madness" each or Oral Robert s. you're out of - a characterization more plined politiCian, to waste this
DallY, .
50'
Roporter: Brian Reed, Ext. t4 ·
Senior
Cttlzen
rates
·
year:
TV schqols from glam- luck. Gonzaga vs. Pepperdine .reflective of her own preoc- historic opportunity on pureReporter: Beth S..rgent .. Ext. t 3
OM month
'9.24
ly symbolic "hot button" .
our conferences lose to hun- may be televised. Alas, by cupations than Pelosi's.
OM year
'103.90
Much coverage focused issues belpful to GOP propagry teatm nolxxly 's heard of. tipoff time in Spokane. much
shoolj remll In advanCe
Advertising
OK, that's an exaggeration.· of the nation 's crucial beer- upon the Speaker's clothing, gandists is apt to be conOutalclt S.leo: Dave Harris, Ext. t 5 direct to the Daly - · No sub·
Serious fan s know that buying demographic will be makeup and hair. Google founded.
scription by mail permifted in areas
Outalde S.leo: Brenda Davis. Extt6 where home carrier service is avail·
Gontaga, which "upset" . sound asleep.
·~ani" and "Pelosi" if you
It's time 5ome ofthesejokClolu./Ctrc.: Judy Clark, E&gt;:t. 1o
able.
So yeah, il\ mainly hype doubt me. Then try to find out ef'S' started reading from a difNorth Carolina. has a terrific
ba,kclball
tradi tion. involving TV contracts and 'what brand of suits Speaker ferent playbook.
Mall Subecriptlon
Marquette. which handled money, thi &gt; Top 25 business. Dennis
Haslert
wears.
(Arkansas
DemocratGeneral Manager
lnalde Meigs County
I
hope
you're
nol
shocked.
Duke
deci,ivcly.
play&gt;
in
the
FoxNews
·
pundit
Mort
Gazette
columnist
Gene
ChMene Hoeflich , E&gt;:t. 12
t3 Weeks
'32.26
What
amused
me
was
how
Big
EN.
El~\\herc
.
though.
'
Kondracke dubbed Pelosi Lyons is a lliltional magazine
26 Weeks
'64.20
much
the
jock
talk
mimicked
52
Weeks
'
t27
It
Oral
Rni'lcrh
defe;Jied
"the
Wicked Witch of the award wi1mer and co-author
E·malt:
the
p&lt;hl-election
rationalizaKat""'·
The
Butler
Bulldogs
West."
' of "The Hunti11g of the
newsOmydailvsentfnel.com
Outalde Meigs Count)'
beat Notre Darnc. Indiana. tioti' of many Washington
In shott, the Democrats lost · President" (St. Martin\
t 3 Weeks
'53.55
Tcnncv. . ~c and Gontthw. pundit&gt;. Whal. Karl Rove not hy winning. GOP, intrapany Press, 2000). You can e-mail
Web:
26 Weeks
' 107.10
GrantcJ.
Butler\
' in a gc niu' ' "Con,er\ati,m" conte&gt;t; were not depicted a5 Lyons at genelyons2@.rbc·
52 Weeks
'2t4.2t
www.mydailysentinei.com
lndi anapolt,. and no Indiana rcjcc·tc•J'! Democrats pre· divisive, despite the come- global.net.)
·~------------------------------~a~

POMEROY- The Enterprise United Methodist Church
will hold its annual Christmas bazaar and bake sale
Saturday at Alligator Jack' s Flea Market beginning at 9
a.m.

Parish shop special
POMEROY - The Parish Shop at the Mulberry
Community Center will .have a special $1 . bag sale beginr.ing today from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m., through 1\tesday, Dec. 12 .

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR

The Daily Sentinel

Betti SOrpntfpllota

Meigs High School juniors (from left) Ben Coppick, Shane
Milhoan and Samantha Dequasie gather research material
for National History Day from books donated by Rev. Wil liam
Middleswarth lor use in the · Meigs . County Museum's
Geneva and Howard Nolan Annex Building.

Museum
from PageA1
National History Day. h"tc .
"ls an education organization that tran~fonm the way
history is taught and
leamed. National History
Day. Inc. helps teachers
meet educational standards:
disseminates high quality
curriculum material s and
. sponsors challenging .contests thai te.ach students ·the
· critical skills they need to

The Daily Sentinel • Page A5

be effective citizens in 1he

21st century.
National
History Day. Inc. improves
education ·every' day.''
MHS students have an
opportunity to take their
class project' to th e regional competition of National
History
Day
at
the
University of Rio Grade.
Next up for lhe Meig s
County Historical Society is
its annual Christmas dinner
at 6:30p.m. tomorrow al the
Geneva and Howard Nolan
Annex Building. Call 9923810 for reservations.

POMEROY Meigs
County Court Judge Steven
L. Story recently processed
the follQwing cases:
Zubairu
Akaaba,
Columbus, $50 and costs,
speeding; Jason K. Altiers,
Ashboro, N.C., $30 and
costs, speeding; Martin D.
Andrew, Rutland, $30 and
costs, speeding; Amanda D.
Ashworth, Racine, $30 and
costs, seat ~It violation;
Melissa R. Barton, Racine,
$30 and costs, speeding;
Constance L. Bensigner,
Lansing, Mich., $30 and
costs, speeding; David G.
Bing, Pomeroy, .$100 and
costs, 90 days in jail, 85
suspended, probation, possession of drugs, $75 and
costs, probation, posses·sion; David 0. Blakenship,
Gallipolis, $30 and costs,
seat belt violtion; Russell E.
Boggs, Oak Hill, $510 and
costs, overload; Tasha R.
Booker, Columbus, $30 and
costs, speeding; Gretchen
D. Bragg, Sandyville,
W.Va., $30 and costs,
speeding;
Brent
H.
Burnette, $310 and costs,
overload;
Wesley
D.
Burrows, Vincent, $20 and
costs, unreasonable speed
for conditions; Jeffrey R.
Campbell, Columbus, $36
and costs, speeqing; Kevin
L. Catr, Charleston, W.Va.,
$50 and costs, speeding;
Tara L. Caudill, Athens, $20
and costs, no child restraint;
Kendra
P.
Cleland,
Pomeroy, $30 and costs,
speeding; Dustin H. Click,
Reynoldsburg, $50 and
costs, speeding.
Zachery E. Connolly,
Racine, $30 and costs,
speeding; Franklin D.
Cook, Charlotte, N.C., $30
and
costs,
speeding;
Virginia C. Cornish, Olive
Branch, Miss.,$50 and
costs, speeding; Roger A.
Davidson, Middleport, $30
and costs, seat belt viola-

tion; Sabra L. Davidson, costs, speeding; Tony A.
Middleport, $30 and costs, Gwrge, Middleport, $200
seatbeltviolation;JamieM. and costs, 10 days in jail,
Davis, Westerville, $30 and suspended, probation, no
costs, speeding; Mary A. operators license; Julie N.
Davis, Syracuse, $30. seat Gillispie, Columbus, $50
.belt violatio.n; Bobby G. and costs, speeding; Sally
Dawkins, Charlotte, N.C., A. Gloeckner, Racine, $30
$SO and costs, speeding; and · costs,· speeding;
John R. Devine, Savannah, Jonathon B. Grimmett,
Ga., $30 and. costs, speed- Ravenswood , W.Va., $50
ing;
Abdullahi
M. and costs, speeding, $30
Dhiblawe, Raleigh, N.C., and costs, seat belt viola$25 and costs, headlights; tion;
Louis A. Guy,
Emily A. Dillard, Galena, Glouster, $30 and costs,
$30 and costs, seat belt vio- seat belt violation; David R.
Iation; Brandie L. Dotson, Halsey, West Chester, $30
Pomeroy, $100 and ·costs, and costs, speeding; Joshua
three days in jail, suspend- A . Harris, Syracuse, $30
ed, probation, no operators and costs. seat belt violalicense; Ashley L. Dunn, lion; Casey I. Hart, Letart,
Racine, $30 and costs, seat W.Va. , $50 and costs,
belt violation; Rebecca J. equipment misuse; Dyana
Eblin, Reedsville, $30 and M.
Hawthorne,
Long
costs, seat belt violation, Bottom, $20 and costs,
$20 and cos.t s, failure to right-of-way I public high. control, $20 and costs. no · way; James A. Hazlett,
child restraint; Steven J. ·Bellecenter, $50 and costs,
Eppel, Quincy, Mich., $30 speeding;
Soriya
N.
and
costs,
speeding; Herbert, Washington, D.C.,
Matthew C. Faulkner, $30 and costs, speeding;
Grover, N.C., $30 and Ryan M. Hill , Racine, $30
costs, seat belt violation; and costs, seat belt violaDonald J. Fife, Middleport, tion; . Christina Holloway,
$200 and costs, 180 days in Pomeroy, $30 and costs,
jail, 170 suspended, proba- seat belt violation; Robert
lion, driving under susp. I Holmes, Albany, $20 and
revoc., $15 and costs, pro- costs, equipment misuse:
bation, no child restraint, Brandy Hosack, Albany,
$25 and costs, probation, $20 and costs, traffic cont.
display plates I valid stick- dev. I signs; Bennie A.
er; Chuck W. Ford, · Hudson, Clarksville, S.C.,
Greenville, S.C., $50 and $30 and costs, speeding;
costs, speeding: Douglas H. Michele
H.
~Hugget,
Foster,
Ravenswood, Earlysville, Va.. $30 and
W.Va., $30, speeding; costs, speeding; Velessa D.
Ricky
W.
Foughty, Hunnell, Rutland, $20 and
Nelsonville, .$30 and costs, costs, failure to control;
seat belt violation; Aaron Jerry Hutomo, Columbus,
M. Frechette, Albany, $1-00 $50 and costs, speeding;
and costs, 90days in jail, 89 · Cynthia
G.
Hutton,
suspended,
probation, Pomeroy, $30 and costs,
resisting arrest; Kevin D. seat belt violation; Charles
Frith, Coolville, $30 and R. James, Lancaster, $50
costs, speeding.
and costs, speeding; Craig
Anthony J. Gallela, . G. Jarvis, Guysville, $30
Columbus, $30 and costs, and costs, seat .belt violaspeeding; Felicia R. Garnes, tion; Vicki L. Johnson, $30
Evans, W.Va., $30 and and costs, speeding.

Sarah N. Lee, Albany,
$30 and costs. seat belt violation;
Kenneth
R.
Leesburg, Bidwell, $30 and
costs, seat belt violation;
Perry E. Livingston, West
Columbia, W.Va., $30 and
costs, seat belt violation;
Kevin
M.
Lundak,
Blacklick, $30 and costs,
speeding; John W. Manary,
Westerville, $30 and costs, ·
probation, speeding, $200
and costs, probation, no
operators license; Atka J.
Marble, Middleport, $20
and costs, assured clear distance;
Winifred
A.
Marcinko. Reedsville, $20
and costs, failure to control;
Jennarx D . Matsh, Grand
Blanc, Mich., $30 and
costs, speeding; Charlotte
McCray, Ashville, $30 and
costs, speeding; David
McDay, Reedsville, $35
and costs, three days in jail,
suspended. probation, passing bad checks; Anthony E.
Moore, $30 and costs,
speeding; Julie J. Morris,
Avondale, Ariz., $30 and
costs, speeding; Brandon E.
Newsome, Worthington,
$30 and costs, speeding;
Justin
R.
Newsome,
Wothington, $31 and costs,
speeding; Quan L. Nguyen,
Cross Lanes, W.Va., $30
and costs. seat belt violation; Jennifer L. Ohm,
Columbus, $30 and costs,
speeding; Scotty L. Oliver,
Pomeroy, $20 and costs,
stop sign; Arlene Parker,
Pomeroy, $100 and costs,
open container in motor
vehicle;
Mikayla
L.
Pasquale, Gallipolis, $50
and costs, speeding; Carly
J. Perry, Letart, W.Va., $30
and costs, seat belt viola· tion; Matthew J. Pettinelli,
Chicago, Ill., $50 and costs,
speeding; Kelly M. Porter, ·
Gallipolis, $30 and costs,
seat belt violation; Angela
M. Price, Racine, $30 and
costs, seat belt violation.

Taft says he'll veto rewrite of conceal carry bill
BY MAn LEINGANG
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

COLUMBUS
Republican Gov. Bob Taft
said Wednesday he will
:veto a rewrite of the state's
concealed weapons law
thai would wipe out local
weapons bans and gun
sales regulations.
Taft's objection to overriding local gun laws has
been clear for months,
spokesman Mark Rickel
said, citin~ as an example
Columbus
assault
weapons ·ban.
If the legislation comes
to the governor, "the 'bill
would be vetoed," Rickel
said.
Taft's
announcement
came as the House passed
the bill 74-14 following an
earlier vote bv the Senate .
House
Speaker
Jon
Husted, R-Kettering, said
he had no comment on
Taft's veto threat.
''I'm sure there will be
more discussion of this
issue," Husted said.
The approval came after
Republican lawmakers said
earlier this week they had
reached a compromise with
the State Highway Patrol.
which had opposed removing a requirement that drivers keep registered handguns in plain view during
traffic stops.
The
highway
patrol
agreed to drop that stance
in · exchange
for
an
increased criminal penalty
for a motorist who fails to
inform a police officer that
a gun is inside the vehicle.
The penalty would increase
from a fourth- 10 a firstdegree · misdemeanor, with
· a two -year gun permit sus-

Board
from Page .A1
with Ohio University effective retro!jctive to Nov. I. to
provide physical therapy to
students with disabilities at a
rale of$65 per hour and travel expenses at the IRS
approved rate. .
• Accepted $3,000 from the
Estate of Eva Robson for a
one time scholarship.
•Set the next regular meeting for 6:30p.m. on Dec. 20
at the elementary libr;uy con·
ference room.

pension.
, The Senate vote of 19-1 Q
was Iar~ely along party
lines, wtth Democrats in
the minority objecting. In
the
House,
several
Democrats
joined
Republicans in approving
the measure.
During
the
Senate
debate, most of the criticism was aimed at the provision that would prohibit
local governments from
passing weapons bans that
are more strict than state
law, and would nullify
municipal bans on · assault
weapons such as ones
adopted by Cleveland,
Cincinnati, Dayton, Toledo
and Columbus.
Sen. Eric Fingerhut, a
Cleveland-area Democrat,
objected to the clause, saying it violates a municipal·
ity's "home rule" authority.
"When we look back on
the
!26th
General
Assembly, high on the epitaph has to be the death of
home rule," said Fingerhut,
who offered an amendment
striking down ·the pre-emption clause, a move that
Republicans squashed.
Columbus
Mayor
Michael
Coleman,
a
Democrat, had written lawmakers this week urging
them to reject the bill.
"It not only violates our
community's home rule on
fireanns, but we believe it
jeopardizes the lives of
police officers. We don 't
know how these two points
·can he made any clearer,"
said Mike Brown. a
spokesman for Coleman.
Sen. Jim Jordan, RUrbana, said the bill is nec essary to clarify the . rights
of law-abiding Ohioans

who are licensed to carry
concealed
weapons.
Removing misdemeanor
local weapons laws will
allow the state to have uniform rules across the state.
"We can't have local
governments apply different standards when dealing
with a constitutional right,"
Jordan said.
Jordan said state and federal gun regulations still
would apply, including
those that prohibit weapons
in schools. But he conceded that the bill would prohibit local governments
from passing future· gun
regulations,
including
those that prohibit people
with licenses from bringing
their weapons to playgrounds and parks.
Three
•· Senate
Republicans
Steve
Stivers
of Columbus,
Robert Spada of North
Royalton
and
David
Goodman of Bexle'y voted against the bill, with
Stivers saying he couldn' t
accept the clause overruling local gun bans. '
About 80 local ordinances are in effect - regulating what guns cari be
carried, sales standards and
child safety - in about 20

communities around the
state, according to the Ohio
Coalition Against Gun
Violence, which opposed
the legislation ..
Jim Irvine, chairman of
the Buckeye Firearms .
Association, said it would
be a mistake for Taft to
veto the bill.
"Think of a driver ' s
license or all of the things
that the state issues a
license for," Irvine said.
"The license has to be valid
wherever you go. Same
thing with a gun permit."

~&amp;·
'fhe Ohio Valley
Symphony
Holiday Pops Concert
"Jingle"

Sat., Dec. 2 at 8 pm
Piano Recital 12/3 at 2 pm
Jingle Bell Follies
1218- 12110
Holiday Classic Movie
Sin~-A-Lon~ 12/11
The Ariel-Dater Hall
428 Sec. Ave. Gollil(:'lio, ~H

740-446-ARTS 2787

Meigs County Health Department

HEALTH FOR ALL!!!
THANKS TO EVERYONE WHO
SUPPORTED THE RENEWAL LEVY

-Announce Your
Holiday Wocship8et'\)tce
Christmas Service ads will
publish Friday, December 15th
and Friday December 22nd
Deadline December 13,2006.
Call Dave or Brenda
at 740-992-2155
For more information

�LoCAL .• STATE

.The Daily Sentinel

PageA6
Thursday, November 30, 2oo6

~~~~~--~--~~~~~~~~~--~~--~~

The Daily Sentinel

NATION •

WoRLD

PageA7
Thursday, November 30, 20o6

:Pope offers message of strength to Christian minorities in Thrkey
CLEVELAND (AP) The commissioners of the
state's most populous
county are considering get. ting rid of touch-screen
,voting
machines and
putting in a new system for
~: the presidential elect1on 111
· 2008.
.
Cuyahoga County spent
. $14 million on the Nov. 7
, election and cannot afford
to sp!!nd that much every
time voters go to the polls,
especially the high volume
that a presidential race
generates. commissioners
Tim Hagan and Jtmm y
Dimora said.
'·Jn 2008. we're going to
be in a predicament."
Dimora said. "Our system
' can't .handle the number of
voters.
Dimora said the elections• board should have
known when they bought
. the touch-screen .machines
. that there weren' t enough
to handle a presidential
·election .
.
' The county. the nation 's
15th largest. election jurisdiction, has more than 1
million v.oters and 1.436
precincts.
"Even though we have a
. substantial amount of
money in it, we' re considering scrapping the whole
system," Hagan said. The
touch-screen
machines.
first used in the May pri . mary. cost $17 million.
The 2004 election in
Ohio - where a narrow
. win gave President Bush
the votes he needed for reelection- was marked by
hours-long lines at some
polls and other problems.

AP photo

.
Michael Vu, director of the Cuyahoga County Board of Elections, works with a voting
machine as votes continue to be counted into the early morning at the Cuyahoga County
Board of Elections in Cleveland, Wednesday, Nov. 8. The commissioners of the state's
most populous county are considering getting rid of its touch-screen voting machines and
putting a new system in place for the presidential election in 2008.
.
· The .county's May pnm~ry ' modale more optical scan indicative of lack of familwas botched when equtp- machines because they iarity than anything else.
ment and other problems take up less space, Dimora The technology performed
well," he said.
·
cause lengthy d~lays.
_ said.
David Bear, a spokesman
Cuyahoga
elections
Hagan and Dtmora said
they want high~speed, OJ?ti- for Diebold Inc. which director Michael Vu said
cal-scan machmes, which makes the touch-screen Wednesday the county
read · paper ballots, to voting system used in might need more touchreplace the county_'s more Cuyahoga County, predict- screen machine~ but prethan 5,000 touch-screen ed voters and poII workers dicted the chance of long
machines. Hagan said the would gain familiarity lines at polls would decline
con:miss!oners need to with the touch-screen sys- as voters become familiar
tem with additional use. with the system and cast
·decide this year.
The county could accom- Any concerns are "more their ballots quicker.
"There are growing
pains," said Vu, who survived an ouster move on a
2-2 vote by the elections

Candy making contest Saturday
POMEROY - A candy
. making contest aimually
sponsored by the Pomeroy
· Merchants Association will
be held Saturday at Peoples
' Bank, Pomeroy.
Entries are to be brought
• to the bank anytime
: Saturday morning. Judging
: will begin at noon after the
. bank closes and winners will
· be advised soon after the
judging is completed.

will

There
be three prizes.
First place will receive a $50
savings bond, and the second and third place winners
will receive gifts.
·
· Those entering the contest
are to submit five pieces of
candy on a paper plate cov-.
ered with plastic wrap. Their
name. address and telephone
number are to be on the bottom of the paper plate, and a
copy of the recipe is to be

attached.
On Dec. 9 the cookie contest will take place at the
Ohio Valley Bank at Save-aLot, and on Dec. 16 the
Christmas craft contest will
be held at Farmers Bank.
Prizes will be awarded in
three places in both of the
contests by the bank host.
Judging of the cookies and
the crafts will also take place
at noon after the banks close.

board last summer.
The· county balked at
buying . more
voting
machines , mostly for
financial reasons, said
Cleveland
Municipal
Judge Ronald Adrine, w~o
led. an election board
review panel and still
serves as a volunteer
adviser to the board.
.
Because of concerns
about a repeat of problems
in the primary, the county
spent millions more than
budgeted in November to
cover poll worker training,
extra machines and mailing absentee voting applications to every voter to
avert polling-place lines
and pr-oblems. About 9.000
poll workers worked on
Election Day in the:; county.
The general election ran ·
more smoothly, although a
judge ordered 16 polling
locations to stay open an
extra 90 minutes because
early voting machine prob:
!ems caw;ed delays.
Traming costs could
decline with succes sive
elections as poll workers
gain experience, Vu said.
"We erred on the side of
caution" in terms of extra
training, Vu said.
Future elections won't
be less expensive, Dimora
said. He said he'd rather
pay a one-time cost to.
switch to optical scan
machine s. The cost of
switching the technology
hasn't been determined, he
said.
Vu doubted a replacement optical-scan system .
would cost as much as the
touch -screen system, but
warned that optical-scan
votin!i has continuing bal lot-pnnting costs that the
county's
touch-screen

machines don't pose.
Switching to opticalscan machines could lead
to other problems including challenged ballots
when a voter's intent isn't
clear, a key issue in ~he
extended Florida recount
in the 2000 presidential
election.
Tom Hayes, a former
Cuyahoga County elections director who was
hired to help the board fix
elections problems, told
the commissioners that
counties with new opticalscan machines can handle
increased demand by simply adding more places
'where voters can fill out
paper ballots, rather than
h.aving to install more
touch-screen machines.
Adrine endorsed the idea
·o r looking at a new, less
complicated system .
"The election system is
built around .trying to
anticipate every possible
thing that can go wrong
and have a contingency for
it," he said. "We need to
explore some alternative to
what we've got. It's j\)st
problematic . There are too
many things that can go
wrong."
Candace Hoke, director
of
Cleveland
State
University's Center ·ror
Election Integrity, which
does consulting for the
election board, applauded
the commissioners for
beginning a voting-e&lt;juipment review early. She
said long l-ines, even with
most machines working,
showed the need for an
alternative system with
lower training costs .

TOPS honors losers

COOLVILLE - Pat Ha-ll was named tips for eating healthy during the holi weekly best ·weight-loss winner at day period. by TOPS SE Ohio
Thesday's meeting of TOPS (Take Off Coordinator Janet Thomas. The chapter
Pounds Sensibly) Chapter #OH 2013, Christmas party is scheduled for Dec.
Coolville. There were 21 members pre- 12. Members are asked to take a $5
sent. Mary Cleland reached her weight- gift and a healthy food to share.
Joss goal and became a KOPS (Keep Leader Snedden presented a program
Off Pounds Sensibly) member. . KOPS regarding getting the proper amount of
members LaChresia Bogardus, · May vitamins and minerals daily.
"-----------,---........,.------:--- Frost and · Patricia Richmond were in The group meets every Tuesday at
leeway. Bogardus and Richmond were Torch Baptist Church. Weigh-in is from
'.
each presented a crystal KOPS pin by 5:15 to 6:15 p.m . with a meeting at
Leader Pat Snedden.
·
6:30. · An exercise period will be held
from 5:30 to 6:00 p.m. for those interRecognized
were
Cleland
and
qeryl
JACKSON - The Ohio
The following troopers Rodney
D. Robinson ; Taylor for their upcoming birthdays. Co- ested. For information, call Snedden at
· State Highway Patrol's ·were· selected for Post Gallipolis Post, Dispatcher Leader Dottie Bond read an article with 662-2633 or attend a free meeting.
, Jackson District recently Trooper of the Year: Athens Bret D. Hutchinson;Jackson
: announced their selections Post, Tpr. Kdth F. Allen; Post, Dispatcher Carolyn L.
. for Post Trooper . and Gallipolis Post, Tpr. Danny McManis; Ironton Post,
: Dispatcher of . the Year. J. Howard; Jackson Post, Dispatcher Drew . E. Fry;
: Each selected personnel .Tpr. Robert L. Haislop Ill; Chillicothe Post, Dispatcher
. will also qualify for Ironton Post, Tpr. Randy S. Nicholas 0. Barrows; and
ACI -36.12
USB - 33.77
Premier - 14.30
District and State Trooper Boggs; Chillicothe Post, Portsmouth
Post AEP- 41.88
Gannett
59.79
Rockwell - 63.90
" and Dispatcher of the YeS~" Tpr. Douglas A. DeBord; Dispatcher, Jason M. Whitt. Akzo - 57.01
.Electric
35.35
General
Rocky
Boots - 14.24
· honors.
and Portsmouth Post, Tpr.
The Patrol's Jackson Aahllllld - 66.78
GKNLY
5.65
Sears - 172.25
District includes Hocking, BIG - 22.42
The State Trooper and Bryan C. Conley.
Harley Davidson - 74.44 Wai-Mart - 46.89 ·
: Dispatcher of the Year will· The following dispatchers Ross, Vinton; Athens, Pike, Bob ev- - 34.26
JPM - 46.67
Wendy's - 32.86
' be selected in February at were seJected · for Pos.t Jackson, Meigs, Scioto, BottWamer - 58.15
Kroger - 21.86
:·an awards ceremony held Dispatcher of the Year: Gallia, and Lawrence coun- CENX- 41.36
Worthington - 18.41
Ltd. - 31.27
· in Columbus. ·
Athens Post, · Dispatcher ties.
Dally stock reports are
Champion - 7. 71
NSC - 48.65
" - - - - - - - - - - - ' - - - - - - - - , - . - - . . . . . . . . , . - - ChanniDC Shops - 13.93 Oak
the 4 p.m. closing
Hill Financial
'
quotes
of tile previous
City Holding - 40.16
27.99
day's transactions, providCol - 60.76
OVB- 25.45
DG -15.70 ed by Smith Financial
BBT- 43.04
0uPont - 48.15
Advisors of Hilliard Lyons
Peoples - 28.92
Saturday
through Federal Mogul - .43
. Thursday ... Mostly
Friday ... Cloudy
with
Pepsico
62.47
.
In Gallipolis.
night ... Partly
·~cloudy with a 50 percent showers and thunderstorms Sunday
: chance of showers. Highs in likely. Some tlmnderstorms cloudy. Highs in the lower
' the lower 70s. South winds may produce gusty winds. 40s. Lows in the upper 20s.
:'. I 0 to 15 mph.
· Windy and much cooler
Monday and Monday
... Partly cloudy. Highs
night
. T h u r s d a y with highs in the mid 50s.
: night. .. Showers
likely. West winds 15 to 25 mph in the mid 30s. Lows in the
, Thunderstorms Jikefy after with gusts up to 40 mph . mid 20.s.
Thesday and Thesday
; midnight. Some thumler- Chance of rain 70 percent.
night...Mostly
Friday
night...Partly
clCar. Highs
storm~ may produce gusty
• winds
after
midnight. cloudy with a 20 percent around 40. Lows in tire mid
.: Breezy with lows in -the chance of rain showers. 20s.
Wednesday ... Partly
. lower 50s. South winds W Much cooler with lows
: to ::!0 mph. Chance of rain around 30. West winds I0 to cloudy. Highs in the lower
40s.
15 mph .
· 70 percent.
·

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8v BRIAN MURPHY
M' RELIGKlN WRITER

ISTANBUL, Thrkey -.
Pope Benedict XVI began
his pilgrimage among
. Turkey's tiny Christian com. munities Wednesday by pay. ing homage to an Itali an
priest slain during Islamic
protests '8nd ewressing sym.padly for &lt;the ~ures fac.mg religious nuoorities in the
,MUslim wadd.
: : The messages - made at
. (lOe (If the 'holiest Olristian
· sites in Turkey - ()()tlJd set
the' tone for the remainder of
·Benedict's first papal trip to a
Muslim nation as he trtes to
streqgtheO bonds with the
~tualleader of the world's •
· Orthodox Christians.
. The pope is e~ to
shatpen his call6 for what the
Vatican calls "reciprocity"
- that Muslim demands for
greater respect in the West
· m~st be . matched
by
. increased tolerance and free- In this picture relea~ by the Ecumenical Orthodox Patriarchate Pope Benedict XVI, right,
dom for Christians in Islamic is· greeted by Ecumenical Orthodox Patriarch Bartholomew I as he arrives at Istanbul's St.
nations.
George's church for a service, Wednesday. At' left in background American OrthoQox
·But too much pressure by Archbi:&gt;hop Oemetrios looks on. The two major branch·e s of Christianity represented by
the Roman Catholic pontiff Bartholomew Md Benedict split in 1054 over differences in opinion on the power of the
, oould risk new friction with papacy, and the two spiritual heads will meet in an attempt to breach the divide.
,. Muslims after broad gestures
of goodwill in tJte opening · took massive security pre- compound in Istanbul, the . here in Turkey. a small
boors of the trip Tuesday that · cautions for the Istanbul pope stood amid black- minority which faces many
sought to ease simmering st&lt;!l', with thousands of robbed Orthodox clerics and . challenges and difficulties
Muslim anger over the polt~ on the street and roads urged both sides "to work tor daily," the pope said.
pope's remarlcs on violence cleared of all traffic for the full unity of Catholics and
At times, he smiled and
· and the Prophet Muhammad. papal motorcade. ·
Orthodox."
showed flashes of the pasA statement claiming to be · the pope's deepening ties
The pope began the day at toral flair of his predecessor,
from al-Qaida in Iraq with Ecumenical Patriarch the ruins of a small stone John Paul II, in one of the
denounced the pope's visit as Bartholomew I -called the home at the end of a din road most intimate papal gatherpart of a ~crusader cam- "first among equals" of the near the Aegean Sea - the ings since John Paul's trip to
paign" against Islam and an Orthodox leaders - also is site where the Virgin Mary is remote Mount Sinai during a
attempt to "extinguish the watched with suspicion in thought to have spent her last trip to Egypt in 2000.
burning ember of Islam" in Turkey as . a possible chat- years.
Benedict went on to honor
TUrkey. Vatican spokesman lenge to state-imposed limits
At an outdoor Mass the memory of a Catholic
the Rev. Federico Lombardi on Christian mioorities and attended by 250 invited priest who was slain in
said the declaration - post- others. Benedict has declared guests, the pope noted the l'urt&lt;:ey amid Ml!slim anger
ed on several Islamic rnili- a "fundamental" commit- challenges facing the "little qver the :publication in
tant Web sites - shows the ment to try to heal rifts flock'' of Christians in European newspapers of carneed for faiths to fight "vio- · between the · two ancient Turkey. ·
' ·
~ of x.lu!Wnmad. ·
Jence in the name of God."
branches of Christianity,
"I have wanted to ,convey
/ 'Let us sing joyfully, even
He said "neither the pope which split nearly 1.000 my personal love and Spiril.U• When we're tested by diffi.
nor his entourage are Wor- vears ago over · disputes al Closeness, tilgetber with culties and dangers IS we
'ed "
fncludintg papal authority.
thlt of the universal ~hurcb, bave teamed frOm ·• 6ne
n Still Turkish authorities
At BBrtholemew's walled to the Christian oommunity witness given by lilt Rev.

......

~~~~~------~------------~~------------ ~SM~WOOmlam

Su:ereme Cf:Jurt takes UJ?
global wan_nzng for first time

1v MARK SHERMAN

reduce those emissions is to
have more fuel-efficient
cars.
WASHINGTON
"We own propeny, 200
Frustrated by Bush adminis- miles ·of coastline. that
tration inaction on global we're
losing,"
wanning, states and envi- Massachusetts
assistant
ronmentalists urged the attorney general James
Supreme Coon Wednesday · Milkey said on behalf of 12
to declare greenhouse gases states and 13 environmental
to be air pollutants that the groups that sued EPA .
government must regulate.
Deputy Solicitor General
The court's first case on Gregory Garre, representing
the politically charged topic the Bush administration,
showed an apparent split cautioned justices that EPA
betWeen its liberal and con- regulation could have a sigservative justices, with nificant economic impact on
Anthony Kennedy pdtential- the United States because 85
ly the decisive vote in deter- percent of the U.S. economy
mining whether the admm- is tied to sources of greenistration must abandon ItS house gas emissions.
refusal to treat carbon dioxGa.rre also argued that the
ide and other greenhouse EPA was right not to act
gases as air pollutants that given " the substantial scientific uncertainty surrounding
imperil public heal~.
Justice Samuel Ahto, who ··global climate change."
Roberts ·pointed out that
with Chief Justice John
regulating
carbon dioxide
Roberts seemed. most skeptical of the states' pdsition, emissions from new veht: said that even in the best of cles addresses just one
: circumsta.nces, the reduction aspect of an issue of global
.: in greenhouse gases would dimensions .
The argument by those
. .
be relatively small.
Justice Davtd Souter md1- pushing for EPA act!on on
. cated that every little bit vehicle emtssmns might or
would help. "They don't might not be valid, but it
have to show that it will "assumes everything else is
stop global warming. Their going to remain constant,''
point is that will reduce the Roberts observed.
Whether Roberts was cordegree of global warmmg
and likely reduce the degree rect, Congress is expected to
become more involved next
of loss," he said.
year.
in the debate on global
The case involves whether
warming
because newly
the
Environmental
Protection Agency must reg- empowered ~mocrats have
ulate emissions of green-' promised to g1ve the tssue a
.
house gases from new vehi- thorough airing.
.
Unions
representmg
cles under a provision of th.e
Clean Air Act. When a deci- 10,000 EPA employees sion comes sometime before more than half the a~ency 's
July, it could have a signifi- work . force - peutioned
cant ripple effect that could Congress on Wednesday
extend to power plants as .seeking immediate actio~ to
well as states' efforts to address global warmmg .
impose more s~n~ent re~­ The employees also sent a
lanons on car tatlp1pe emis- signal to the Supreme Court
that most of the agency 's
sions.
.
.rank-and-file
disagree with
Many scientists. beheve
the
Bush
administration's
that ~nhouse gases, flowing mto the atmosphere at approach on the issue.
The
administration's
an unprecedented rate, are
strongest
argument
at the
leading to a warming of the
court
may
have
been
in
Earth rising sea levels and
other' marked ecological asserting that the states and
environmental g'roups did
changes.
.
Carl&gt;on dioxide,- the pnn- not meet their legal burden
cipal "greenhouse" gas, is to show they will be hanned
produced when fossi I fuels by continued EPA inaction.
such as oil and natural gas Petitioners to courts must
are burned . One way to cross that threshold before
ASsoCIATED PRESS WRITER

'

the merits of a case may be
addressed.
Milkey pointed out that
even small reductions would
be meaningful, pointing out
that very small rises in the
sea level would inundate
significant portions of lowlying coastal land.
On this issue, in particuJar, Kennedy may well hold
the key, lawyers on hoth
sides of the case said,
"Justice Kennedy is the one
everyone is focusing on and
rightly so," said Ann Klee, a
former EPA general counsel
in the Bush administration.
Kennedy himself raised a
I 00-year-old case on this
topic in which the Supreme
Court ruled that Georgia
could sue Tennessee copper
companies .. because their
sulfurous emissions were
destroying Georgia forests.
"That seems to me your best
case," Kennedy told Milkey.
Garre told the court that
the EPA lacks the power to
regulate carbon dioxide as a
pollutant under the Clean
Air Act. Even if it had such
authority, the EP.A still had
the discretion not to regulate·
ihe emissions because of
uncertainty and a preference
for international, rather than
unilateral , action. Garre
said. ·
A federal appeals coun in
Washington, in a fractured
. decision in 2005, upheld the
administration's position.
A separate case involving
the EPA's claim. that the
Clean Air Act ~imilarly does
not give it authority to regulate greenhouse gas emissions from power plants also
is making its way through
the federal couns.
·
California -also has asked
the EPA to approve its program to limit tailpipe emissions of greenhouse gases.
Together, U.S. power
plants and vehicles account
for 15 percent of the world
outpu_t of. greenhouse gases.
said David Doniger, counsel
for the Natural Resources
Defense Council, an environmental group involved in
the Supreme Coun case.
The case is Massachusetts
"'· Environmental Protection
Agency. 05-1120.

pleased to recall in this celebration," said Benedict, who
later wallced amid the crowd
as they reached to touch his
gold-and-white robes and
cried "Viva il Papa" and
"Benedetto," his name in
Italian.
In February, a Turkish
teenager shot the Italian
priest as he knelt in prayer in
his church in the Black Sea
pOrt of Thabzon. The attack
was believed to have been
linked tri outrage over the
~oons. Two other Catholic
priests were attacked this
year in Turkey, where
OlriSiians have often oomplained of disaimination and
pet secution,
on Tuesday, the pope
~ relilrious leaders of all
, failh.s to r'ulterly refuse" to
supp&lt;in any fOI'In of violence
' in the 1111t1e of.failh. He 'll.so
said religious freedom was
:.:ti~.!~!lltllt · of

thou,$h many nations have
clasSified the World War 1era killings as such.
Later, in the 1920s, Turkey
and Greece carried out a
massive
population
exchange under the treaty
that established modem
Turkey, with hundreds of
thousands
of
Greek
Onhodox sent to Greece and ·
smaller numbers of Muslims
going the other way.
Bartholomew heads the
remnants of the GreeiC community in Istanbul thlt now
nwnber no more than 2,000
31li&lt;m.$
about
90,000
Chrisnans in Turlcey.
But they still represent a
powerful symbolic presence
for the world's more than
250 million Orthodox, which
. often denounce Turkey for
placing obstacles in the way
of Banholomew and his clerics.
Turkey
refuses
to
acknowledge the "ecumeniHe sought a careful bal- cal," or universal, title of the
ance as he held out a hand of patriarch and instead considfriendship and brolherbood ers him only the head of the
to Muslims, and expressed local Greek Orthodox comsuppon for measures that munity. The 1\ukish wony is
Thrlcey has taken in its cam- that granting wider status to
pai~ to join the European the J'l3triarch could underUmon.
mine the idea of a single
· But winning over Thrlcish Turkish nationality - a pilsentiments may be easy lar of the nation's secular
and · inspire
com~ with the complex- system ities ahead.
.
demands for s~ial recogniThe legacy of Christianity tion by minonties including
in Turkey is a tangle of his- Kurds and Muslim groups
torical and religious sensitiv- such as Sufis and AleY!s,
ities.
considered a branch of Shiite
Turkish armies captured Islam.
the
Byzantine
capital
Now, Turkish officials are .
Constannnople
now concerned the papal visit and
Istanbul - in 1453 to begin suppon for Christian minoria steady decline for ties
could
embolden
Christians, who had main- · Bartholomew to press
rained communities in Asia Turkey for concessions,
Minor since the ~ of the includmg return of confiscated propeny and the reopenApostles.
. ·· ·
As Ute . Ottoman Empire . ing of a Greek Orthodox
collapsed in the early 20th. seminary that closed more
-century, large numbers of than two decades ago after
Anncniln Christians per- authorities blocked new stu·
isbilcl in mass txp!ilsions and dents. The EU has also
fiabd'll- :tUmY ..-..a,tly pushed Turkey for greater
~~ tbat it commiaed .religious ~nness to belp its
pocide apinst ~. faltering b1d for membership.

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Page AS • The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, November 30,

2006

Thursday, November 30, 2006

-

'Night of Worship' to feature mix of Christian music ·

'

.

Meigs County native Mike Bartrum out for the season

LocAL ScHEDULE

S1»'F REPORT
SPORTMMYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

·Miller at Southern, 6 p.m.

Nelsonville·York at Meigs, 6 p.m.
Trimble at Eastern, 6 p.m.
Chesapeake at OVCS, 6 p.m.

Fddft'tSIMM

lloyolool lb.JII
Me~s at Galli&amp; Academy, 6:30 p.m.
Eastern at Vinton County, 6:30p.m.
Cross LAnes at SOuth Gallla, 6:30p.m.

OVCS Tournament, TBA
Gl~olnkwlbell

POINT
PLEASANT,
W.Va. - Three different
groups, one clear message.
That's what listeners will
hear this weekend during
"Merge, Night of Worship"
at the State Theater in
downtown Point Pleasant.
According to organizers
Brooke Cromley and David
Price, the contemporary
Christian music concert is
one that developed from ihe
idea of the Ohio and
Kanawha rivers merging
just below Point Pleasant.
Cromley said this event is
one that will allow different
generations and different
church groups to gather
together for a great night of
great music.
"We're bringing different
churches, denominations,
races and ages under one
roof to praise one God.

•

BoyoBo

,. ...

GALLIPOLIS - The
French Art Colony is currently hosting "Accessible
Expressions Ohio." · This
touring visual art exhibition
celebrates Ohio's artists
with disabilities by showcasing professional, emerging and 'youth artists.
This show is made possible
by VSA of Ohio, which focuses on promoting the creative
power in people with disabilities. It is on display through
Nov. 30. Admission is free.
The Ohio Arts Council
helped fund this program
with state tax dollars . to
encourage
economic
growth, educational excellence and cultural enrichment for all Ohioans.
Local sponsors for this
show are the Gallipolis
Rotary Club, and Bob's
Market and Greenhouses Inc.
Gallery hours are from
IOa.m . until6 p.m . Tue, day
throu gh Friday, 'and from I
until 5 p.m. 011 Sunday.

'

In his seven years in
·Philadelphia, Bartrum has
helped kicker David Akers
reach the Pro Bowl three
times. Bart111m played in his
I OOth game as an Eagle
against the Packers this season. In his -first 12 seasons,
Bartrum has only missed the
playoffs twice.
(lnfonnarion from philadelphiaeagles.com)

No.3 OSU
beaten by
N. Carolina

-tttng

Crashing Jertcho
That's really the main
goal," Price. added..
·
Doors will open at 6:30
p.m. Saturday, with the
show set to begin at 7. Price
added that · the concert .is
one suitable for all ages and
isn't something geared
specifically toward ·a rea
youth groups.
Among the featured performers is Crashing Jericho,
a band from Ripley, and
Waiting for Iris, a nationally-known
duo
from
Columbus, Ohio. Cromley

said boUt bands are excited
to perform in the area,. and
Crashing Jericho is making
a return to Mason County
after playing at a youth
event here.·a few weeks ago.
. Pulse Worship, an independent worship ministry
of which both Cromley and
Price . are members, is the
host group and also will.
entertain the crowd, and
there will .be• a dramatic
dance performed ·by Jenna
Ondera.
Cromley added that they

Waiting for lrla
are anticipating a large
crowd, and Price said that
people i.n attendance will be
asked for feedback, with
possible
future
events
planned.
They also said door prizes
donated by Willa's Bible
Bookstore
in
Point
Pleasant, W.Va., and Good
News Book Store in
--/photo
Gallipolis, Ohio, will be
The
State
Theater
in
Point
Pleasant
will
be the site for
available.
For more information, "Merge, Night of Worship ' this weekend as three contem·
call Cromley at 304-593- porary Christian bands take the stage for a night of music.
The event will begin at 7 p.m. Saturday.
·
6565.

Pops program kick$
off holiday season
be

SUbnoltled pilot&amp;

Belpre is host to one of the midwest's most impressive Christmas display of lights, including this carousel. which like hundreds of other displays at the Belpre Holiday Light Festival,
is animated.
a culmination of a year's
· work by a volunteer group
that has taken unique ideas
through design, construction and installation.
Another electrical engineer,
Joe Keesey, spending many of
his retirement days at the festival's 3,000 square foot wmtshop, points out that with
about 25 percent of the Belpre

displays being complex ani- display surfaces average
mation makes the festival a 150 square feet and many
displays are made up of a
major Christmas attraction.·
.Moving bells, animals . series of units .
Tbe festival continues
and sea creatures, windmill,
airplane, golfer and other ihrough Jan. I each evening
movement simulated by from dark to 10 p.m.
lights is ~aid to be the rea- Admission" is not charged.
contributions
son that the festival attracts However,
over I00,000 people each toward construction materiyear. According to Kessey, al costs are appreciated.

plays that are written in 24
hours, and then staged in the
next 24 hours.
J .J. Cobb, a Rio Grande
faculty member who leads
the effort for the -theatre
department, will direct the
plays. Cobb explained that
on Thursday, Nov. 30, the

writers will begin crafting
their short plays. Cobb
hopes to have four different
plays produced during
"Frenzy" this year.
· On Friday, Dec. I, students will be given scripts,
and they will have· just 24
hours to learn their lines and

Entertainment Briefs
·FAC exhibit
now open

·o f the premier long snappers
in the NFL and he was awarded for his craft with an invitation It&gt; the Pro Bowl after last
season As a tight end,
Bartrum has II career receptions and ·six of them have
been for touchdowns. On Iy
one other player in NFL history, Patriots linebacker Mike
Vrabel, has as many touchdowns with less than 15
career receptions.

Goowo C!y Chrislian at SOUIIlem, 6:30 t&gt;m.
South Gatlia at Eastern, 6:30p.m.
River VaHey at Beaver ·Eastern, 6 p.m.
OVCS Touonament. TBA
GlltoBMIIelloll
ll&lt;tlpre at River Valley, t p.m.
OVCS Tournament, T8A

'Frenzy' comes to Rio campus
RIO
GRANDE
University
of
Rio
Grande
Grande/Rio ·
Community College will
present its annual theatre
event, ·"Frenzy," on Saturday, .
Dec. 2, beginning at 7 p.m.
This unique event is a
production of .several short

Bartrum

Burkholder said Bartrum will
be evaluated fut1her in
upcoming weeks. Bartrum
played the entire game
Suhday, but reported severe
stiffness in · his neck on
Monday.
"On the MRI this morning,
we found that he had two cervical discs that had some .
pathology
to
them,"
Burkholder said.
Bartrum is regard!ld as one

SltuDIIy'fMNI

Belpre Holiday Light Festival continues until Jan. l
BELPRE - The annual
Belpre Holiday Light Festival, .
anchored by the world's
largeSI ChristmaS carousel (a
diamQter of over 200 feet) is
now in its 17th season.
The festival got underway
on Thanksgiving and will
continue through Jan. LThe
display, adjaoent to the Ohio
River Access Ramp, is reported to be an outstanding example of lighting animation.
Festival volunteer and
retired electrical engineer
Jim Rice is enthused with
the three programmable
logic controllers linked by
modbus to govern 59 different lighting sections. Rice
indicated that a fisherman is
Qatching not only fish, but
lobster and a boot while, on
occasions, a pelican steals a
good catch while an alligator is looking on·.
Festival President Darien
Lorentz · invites area residents to make the short trip
to Belpre's City Parks to
experience the 112 displays,

1- .

Cross Lanes at South Gallla, 5 p.m.
OVCS Tournament, TB"

PHILADELPHIA - Pro
Bowl long soapper and Meigs
County native Mike Baruum
was placed on injured reserve
by the Philadelphia Eagles
Wednesday, ending this 2006
season.
Bartrum sustained a neck
injury during Sunday night's
loss to the Indianapolis Colts.

It's believed
the tnJury
occurred
while
the
13-year veteran · was
making
a
tackle
on
punt coverage.
Eagles
. head athletic
trainer Rick

More information about
the FAC and its upcoming
events can be found by calling 446-3834.

Holiday party
at plantation

Albert Gallatin Jenkins. ·The
1835 house, built in the tradition
of · Tidewater
Virginia, · is noteworthy for
its architecture and was
built by slaves between·
1830 and 1835. It is listed in
the National Register of
Historic Places and on the
Civil War Discovery Trail. ..
l're museum's regular
hours are Tuesdays through
Saturdays from I0 a.m. to 4
p.m.
For more information
about the holiday celebration
at the Jenkins Plantation
Museum, contact Matt
Boggess, site manager for
the museum, at (304) 7621059.

GREEN
BOTTOM,
The i Jenkins
W.Va. Plantation Museum, located
in the Green Bottom
Wildlife Management Area
of Cabell County, will ring
in the holiday season with a
family-oriented party on
Saturday, Dec. 2, from 5
until 8 p.m. The event is
free and open to the public.
The evening's activities
will include a tour of the historic plantation house decked
out in its holiday finery.
Guests also will be treated to
·a traditional holiday dinner.
The Jenkim Plantation
GALLIPOLIS - The
Museum is located on French Art Colony, 530
W.Va.
2
between First Ave ., Gallipolis, is preHuntington
and
Point senting the 12th animal
Pleasant. A facility of the · Holiday Tour on Friday.
West Virginia Division of Dec. 8 from 6 until 10 p.m..
Culture and Hi&gt;tory, the and Saturday. Dec. 9 from I
museum is the former home to 4 p.m. The e\'ent is coof Confederate Brig. t_l~n . sponsored . by Century

Holiday Tour
dates slated

•

pull the plays together.
Some students don't sleep
for the 24 hours ~y are worlcing on "Frenzy," and Cobb
said she will only be able to get
a few hours of sleep.
Tickets are free · for Rio
Grande students, ·and cost
just '$1. for area residents. .

GALLIPOLIS ·· The of "Jingle Bells" will
elves of the Ohio Valley performed. "Jingle" for
Symphony are ready to brass quintet and ''Jingle
deck the hall-. in the his- Fantasia" for orchestra
toric Morris &amp; Dorothy were both composed by
Haskins Theatre of The Scott Michal. "Jingle
4riel Ann Carson Dater Fantasia" will be a world
Performing Arts Centre in premiere. Rou. nding out .
downtown Gallipolis with the sounds of the hoi- the program is the "Jingle
iday season.
· Bell Fantasy" by Carmen
Join the orchestra, under Dragon, ·Jongtime arranger
the direction of · Music for the. Boston Pops.
Director Maestro Ray
The public · is encourFowler,
at
8
p.m. ·aged to attend rehearsals
Saturday, Dec. 2, for a for free on Friday, Dec. 1; ·•
program of traditional and from 7 until 10 p.m. and
familiar Christmas songs.
on Saturday, Dec. 2 from I
The evening starts with to 4 p.m. OVS Saturday
a ·grand flourish as . the dress rehearsals are an
orchestra invites you to excellent way to introduce
"Deck the Halls" in a mer- young children to symrie
fugue.
Seasonal
h ·
·
favorites such as ''0 Little P omc mustc.
Town of Bethlehem," "Joy
The.
Ohio
Valley
to the World," "Good Symphony is sponsored in
King Wenceslas," a med- . part by the Ohio Arts
ley of Christmas carols CounCil, a state agency
and a hauntingly beautiful that supports public proarrangement of Silent grams in the arts. The
Night "Stille Nacht" fill Holiday Pops program is
. funded in part by Holzer
up the first half.
For the child in all of us, Clinic and the Ann C.
no Christmas season is Dater Foundation.
complete without watchTickets for the 8 p.m.
ing some of the 'longtime concert are $22, $20 for
favorites such as "Miracle seniors and $10 for stuon 34th Street" and · dents, and are available at
"Babes in Toyland,"and the Ariel Dater Hall box
the OVS will perform
selections from those office at 428 Second Ave.
movies. "SHyer Bells," Box office hours are
"White Christmas" and Tu!!sday through Friday, 9
Torme's
"The .a.m. until 4 p.m., and 90
Mel
Chri.stmas . Song" are also minutes prior to the show.
For more information,
a must for the holiday season.
call
(740)
446 -2787
Three different versions . (ARTS).

Aluminum.
The FAC will act as the
ticket and refreshment
headquarters.
lickets are available at the
FAC for $10 in advance, or
they can be bought at the
FAC the nighl of the event for
$12. Due to limited tickets,
advance purchase is recommended. For more information about this event, pleao;e
call the FAC at 446;3834.
· This year's tour will feature the Bowers Home,
1210 Ohio 160; the Cowles
Home, 471 Juniper L;!ne;
the Howard Home, 2460
Creek view
Drive;
the ·
Ringhand Home, · 68 State
St.; the Smith Home, 20
Cedar St.; the Ariel-Dater
Theatre, 426 Second Ave.;
tt\e Holzer Senior Care
Center, 380 &lt;:;olonial Drive;
Our House
and the
Museum. 432 First Ave.
A silent tree and wreath
auction . sponsored by the
Junior Women's Club of
Gallipolis. will be on display
•
.
SUbmitted photo
at ihe FAC. The Junior Volunteers are seen preparing the Gallipolis City Park for
Women's Club is also raffling ·upcoming holiday festivities. The annual Gallipolis
off a decorated tree. lickets Christmas paraae is Saturday at 4 p.m. , followed by the
arc $1 each or 6 for $5.
lighting of the Christmas tree in the park.

GalKa Acadmey at Shady Springs tnvne
River Vtltey at Vinton COunty, 6 p.m.
CollegeiMI llblll
Rio Grande at Walsh, 4 p.m.

New York
Knicks'
Stephon
Marbury (3)
drives toward
the basket
against
Cleveland
Cavaliers'
LeBron James
(23) and Eric
Snow (20) in
the fourth
quarter, in an
NBA basketball game,
Wednesday in
Cleveland. The
Knicks won
101-98.

-at-Grande.
Coltego2 lnkwlboll
walsh
Rio
p.m.

At;or VaHey at GaU.oACoden1)'.
Meigs at Trimble, 6 p.m.
Eastern at Wenston, 6 p.m.
loonton St. Joe at South Glllia, 6:30 p.m.
OVCS at Fairland. 6 p.m.

SPORTS BRIEFS

.

'Canes,
Jackets
.
swapmmorleague defensemen
RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) The Carolina Hurricanes
acquired Mark Flood from
the Columbus Blue Jackets
on Wednesday for Derrick
Walser in a swap of minorleague defensemen.
. Flood, 22, has one ~oat
·arid one assist in e1ght
games with the Blue
Jackets' American Hockey
League
affiliate
in
Syracuse. He si~ned a freeagent contract wtth the Blue
Jackets in August 2005.
Walser, 28, made his NHL
debut with the Blue Jackets
five seasons ago. He has
one assist in seven games
with the Hurricanes' AHL
affiliate in Albany.
During three seasons with
the Blue Jackets from 200104, he had. six goals and 21
assists.
·

CoNTACT US
OVP SCorellne (5 p.m.-I

a.m.)

1-740-446-2342 ext. 33

Fox - 1·140·«6-3008
· E...,..t- sportsOmydallysentlnel.com
Soorts Staff

Brlld Sflemllln, Sports Editor
(740) «6·2342, e&gt;ct. 33
bsherman0mydaity1rlbune.com

Larry Crum, Sports Writer
(740) U6-2342, e&gt;ct. 33
lcrumOmydailyreglster.com

Aahley Shaw, SPortS Writer
(740) US-2342, e&gt;ct . 23
sports 11 mydallytribune .com

AP pholo

~

.... .

.. \

-··~·

.,.,

win streak
Bv ToM

WITHERS

ASSOCIATED PRESS

CLEVELAND - Eddy
Curr~ was often New
York s biggest cheerleader
during crunch time last season.
Now, he's the center of
everything for the Knicks.
. "I wouldn't even see the

fourth quarter, let alone the
ball," Curry said. "But that
was last year."
Curry scored 24 points 12 in the final period and Quentin Richardson
had 27 points as the Knicks
continued to play better on
the road with a 101-98 victory over Cleveland on
Wednesday night, snapping

the Cavaliers' six-game
home winning streak.
Curry
and
Jamal
Crawford (11 foints) combined for 23 o New York's
28 pointt~- in the fourth as
the Knicks, playing their
second game m two nights,
improved to 5-5 on the
road. Maybe they should
stay away from Madison

Square Garden, where t,he~
are just 1-6.
·
The 6-foot-11, 285-pound
Curry was an inside ' force
in the fourth quarter, barreling down the lane for easy
baskets on routine pickand-rolls. Once he got the
l;&gt;all close to the rim, there

PINn see Knlcks, 81

Two rising programs will meet in MAC title game
DETROIT (AP) - Brian
Kelly and Frank Solich
canie to the Mid-American
Conference from different
directions, one moving up
the career ladder, the other
coming down.
But they've had the same
results - turning around
programs that had been traditional losers.
Solich and his Ohio
Bobcats face Kelly's Central
Michigan ChiJ?pewas on
Thursday night m the MAC
title game.
While Kelly is considered
an up-and-coming coaching

star, having been in the running for the Iowa State and
Michigan State jobs, Solich
has already been to the highest level 9f college football.
He coached Nebraska from
1998_-2003. including a trip
to the 2001 national championship game.
After being fired by the
Cornhuskers, the Cleveland
.native took the Bobcats job
last season. He went 4-7 in
2005 but led Ohio to a 9-3
· record this year, the
Bobcats' most wins since
they went 10-1 in 1968.
The slow start didn't con-

cern Solich.
"I wasn't interested in a
quick fix," he said. "I wanted to build a team, because
chemistry is just as important as Xs and Os. The players bought into what the
coaching staff was doing."
While the MAC is a long
way from the Big 12, Solich
has enjoyed the chance to
build a team close to home.
"It's been great to come
back and cqntinue my career
in the state of Ohio," he said.
"I was lucky to get involved
in a great situation here."
The Bobcats have already

accepted an invitation to the
GMAC Bowl on·Jan. 7, their
first bow I game since the
1968 Tangerine Bowl. .
"It's' amazing to see the
turnaround in this _program,"
senior linebacker Tyler Russ
said. "We were excited when
Coach Solich · was hired,
because we knew where he
had been and what he had
done."
Ohio is led by tailback
Kalvin McRae, who has
rushed for I, 139 yards and
14 touchdowns.

BY JIM O'CONNELL
ASSOCIATED PRESS

CHAPEL HILL, N.C. Tyler Hansbrough started
· ended
North
and
Carolina's game-breaking
17-2 run in the second half
and the seventh-ranked Tar
Heels went on to a 98-89
victory over No. 3 Ohio
State on Wednesday night
in the ACC-Big Ten
Challenge.
In a game featuring two
of the country's top freshman classes - with Greg
Oden , the best of the
bunch, sitting on the Ohio
State bench in street
clothes. with a towel
around . his neck
Hansbrough, a preseason
All-America as a sophomore took over down low.
The 6-foot-9 forward
was the key insi.de as the
Tar Heels (5-1) were able
to overcome an ·incredible
3-point shooting performance by the Buckeyes (61), who were playing outside the Columbus city
limits for the first time this
season.
· Hansbrough
finished
with 21 points and 14
rebounds, and freshman
Wayne Ellington added I 9
for North Carolina, which
trailed by 10 points in the
first half and was down .
68-63 with I 0:50 to play in
the game.
Ron Lewis had 30 points
for Ohio State, which finished 13-for-26 from 3point range after hitting 12
of its first 19 shots from
beyond the arc.
North Carolina started
three freshmen arid played
· five in the game, while
Ohio State had two on the
floor at the beginning and
had one more among its
eight available players.
Oden, the 7-0 defensive
specialist considered one
of the best high school big ·
men of recent years, was
reduced to a cheerleading
role as he continues ·to .
recover from offseason
surgery on his right wrist.
He is expected back by

Pleen see osu, 81

PINH see MAC. 81

r--~-------------~

PVH H... 4 A-.,., 11.1

Getting ready

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Tbe PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL FOUNDATION is currently a«:ep~ins ordeQ for ·
HIHI' A M•ory Wall tiles as Cbrittma aifts. The uniu have been created in remembrance or as •

lribute 10 family. friends and loved ones. The addition will be cmted in 1 "quilt"
· desip 10 repment the family unil)' and lbt varied pe!looalitics that
CG~mllftity

IDd hospital. Corlu tlla aa 1M ........
ftr $1 •
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compri~e

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Pleae complete the auached form in honor or remembrance of someone who
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made a clift'a aace in yow life. Rft1ra 1ri* pay. .t to: "7ut Vale)' H•,..•l.
A1TN1 c..-., Relad•••· me v.a.y DrM. ..-. Plur

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Cuh. check and ~it cam accepted. PltUe make checb payable to ttlc
"Picouant Valley Hoapi1al Foundation ...

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�'

•

Page B2 • The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, November 30,

www.mydailysentinel.com

Steelers' coach Cowher has no
interest in North Carolina State job

Knicks
fromPageBl

'

BY

AL"N ROBINSON

ASSOCIATED PRESS

PITTSBURGH - Bill
Cowher ts not mterested m
coachmg alma mater North
Carohna
State.
even
though the Super Bowlwmning
Pittsburgh
Steelers coach has only
one season left on h1s contract.
Cowher, a former NC
State linebacker, has seen
hts
name
menuoned
prommently m speculation
smce Wolfpack coach
Chuck Amato was fired
last weekend
Asked if he had any
· mterest m gm ng back to
h1s former school, Cowher
said, "No "
"I've been getting a lot
of contacts about tt; I've
heard about it," Cowher
said Wednesday. "But I've
got a JOb here."
Cowher and hts f~mtly
bought a luxury home in
Raleigh less than a year
ago, adding to the rumors
he might be ready to leave
Pittsburgh. Cowher's wtfe
and youngest daughter are
living in Raleigh thts season, whtle hts other two

daughters are attending
Pnnceton Untversity.
"I'm very flattered to
hear some of the thmg s
that have been coming out,
but I'm not a candtdate,"
Cowher said " I have a JOb
here and my focus really 1s
on th1s JOb nght here, so
you can take me off the
list. "
Cowher dtd not suggest
any posstble replacements
for Amato, who had a 493 7 record while leading
NC State to f1ve bowl
games m seven seasons.
"It's a super program and
I'm sure that they 'II get a
very quahfted coach who' s
gomg to walk mto a good
situation," Cowher said.
While den yin~ interest in
North Carolma State,
Cowher has yet to clarify
his status with the Steelers
beyond
th1s
season.
Prevwusly, he always
signed a contract extension
whenever h1s Steelers contract had two seasons
rema10ing
But he did not do so last
summer, despiie being
offered an extension by the
Steelers , and he apparently
won ' t dectde whether he

w11l return m 2007 until
after thts season ends
Cowher ISm h1s 15th sea·
son, the longest tenure
with the Sall].e club by an
active NFL head coach.
Cowher suggested the
Steelers' struggles haven't
left h1111 lime to worry
about his coaching future
The Steelcrs (4-7), commg
off a 27-0 loss Sunday 111
Baltimore, are m danger of
having the worst record by
a returmng Super Bowl
champiOn smce the Denver
Broncos went &amp;-I 0 in
1999
''I'm the coach here - as
much 'lis that may disappoint some people - but I
am the coach here and I
want to win these last five
games," Cowher said. "I'm
gomg . to do everything in
my power to do that. I've
been here for a while and I
like it. It's a good job. I
don't like the way we are
nght now and I'm gomg to
do everything m our power
to finish this thing up
strong."
Desptte bemg an NFL
assistant or head coach for
21 years, Cowher dtd not
rule out coach10g in col-

lege someday.
"I don't know I don't
look that far down the
road, I really don't," he
said. "I guess those are
times when you get m that
reflecuve mode. The only
thmg I'm reflectmg on
now is that feeling we had
after last Sunday ' s game
and trying to recufy that.
That's where the focus is
at."

Still . even 1f Cowher
decided he wanted to
coach college ball at some
pomt, he almost certainly
couldn't command the
money he makes now.
Cowher is bemg paid
about $4.5 million by the
Steelers, a figure he probably could double by retiring, sitting out a year or
two and then returning to
coach an NFL team willing
to spend big for a proven
w10ner. No college coach
makes close to $8 million
to $9 million per season.
Oklahoma coach Bob
Stoops ($3.45 million) is
believed to be the only current major college coach
who i~ guaranteed more
than $3 million per season.

Redwomen edged at the buzzer by Shawnee
time after building the
advantage to as high as 11
points (31-20).
PORTSMOUTH - The
In a second half full of
University of Rio Grande runs by both te.ams, the
women's basl,&lt;:etball team game went down to the final
was poised for the upset on seconds and turned mto a
Tuesday evening as they thriller.
traveled to NAIA Division II
Rto trailed for the maJority
No. 24 Shawnee State and of the second half, but finalnearly accomplished the ly caught Shawnee State and
feat. The Redwomen were took the lead (68-66) at the
edgedatthebuzzer, 78-77at 4·24 mark on a pmr of free
the James Rhodes Sports throws from JUnior guard
Center m an early Amencan Britney Walker.
The
Mideast Conference South Cleveland native was a
Dtvismn showdown.
major force in the Rto
Rio Grande (7 -4, 1-1 Grande comeback earning
AMCS) started slow out of 26 points on the night to lead
the gate, falling behmd 7-0 all scorers. Walker was the
and went four minutes with· Dick Hyland Player of the
out scClrmg to begin the Game for the Redwomen.
game
The Redwomen
Walker would add a lay-up
weathered the storm and at the 3 23 mark to g1ve RIO
promptly went on a I 0-0 run • a 72-68 advantage and it
to take a 10-7 lead at the looked as tf the upset was
14 19 mark of the first half. on.
Shawnee State (7-2, 3-0
Shawnee wasn't fimshed
AMCS) would then gather and wasn' t about to concede
itself and take control of the defeat as they stormed back
game late m the first half. to tte the game at 74-74 wtth
Mallory Albers , nailed a I :48 showing on the clock.
JUmper to gtve the Lady
Leadmg 77-76 wnh the
Bears the lead at 27-20 with clock windmg down, Rio
5.31 remammg
Albers Grande needed one fmal
scored mne points off the defenstve stop to secure the
pmes
vtctory
The stop never
SSU would carry a nine- came as SSU freshman pomt
pomt lead (42-33) ·to half- guard Jennifer Grandy dehvBY MMK WtWAMS
Sf'£CIAL TO THE SENTINEL

BY MMK WIWAMS
SP£CIAL TO THE SENTINEL

PORTSMOUTH - The
University of Rio Grande
men's basketball team started well and closed well but
h1t some huge rough spots m
the mtddle m falling to
Shawnee State, 83-75, on
Tuesday evemng at James
Rhodes Sports Center in a
cructal
early
season
Amencan
Mideast
Conference South Dtv1s10n
match-up
Rw Grande (4-5, l-1
AMCS ) went on a 6-0 run to
take a 9-6 lead at the 14.56
mark of the first half only to
see Shawnee State (6-1, 2-0
AMCS ) go on a 10-0 run a
few mmutes later to take
control of the game anil lead
20-14 When the streak was
all sa1d and done, the .Bears
out-scored the Redmen 17-3
dunng the s~tch and never
trailed agam.
Shawnee State took the
momentum to halftime as
Ju stm Phillips natled a
JUmper at the buzzer to give
SSU a 36-24 lead. Phtlhps

MAC
from PageBl
" Kal is an outstanding
back," Chippewas hne·
backer Red Kellh satd
" He'' a power runner, and
we're got ng to have to be
phystcal agamst hJm."

hact.(Six pomts and four
asmts on the evemng.
As the second half pushed
on , the Bears slowly built
the lead to as high as 17pomts at 55-38 The game
had reached a point where
Rio could etther fold the tenl
and take a vicious beatmg or
come out of the corner
swmgmg. They chose the
latter.
Thanks to the Iong range
bombmg of freshman guard
Marcus Manns the Redmen
stormed back tnto contention, cuttlng the defic1t to
five points at 69-64 at the
3 IS mark Manns would
pump in 30 pomts on the
strength of 7-of-9 shootmg
from beyond the three-pomt
arc Manns would earn the
Dtck Hyland player of the
game for Rm Grande
Shawnee withstood the
onslaughl and ftve pomts
would be as close as the

ered with 3.9 seconds to give
the Lady Bears a 78-77 lead.
It was the only points
Grandy made on the mght,
droppmg in a floater on the
left base hne.
R10's semor point guard
Carlesha Chambers quickly
raced the baJI up the floor
and missed an off-balance
shot on the final play of the
·
game.
In additiOn to Walker's 26
for Rio, sophomore Sarah
Drabinski added 13 points,
despite bemg saddled with
fouls most of the night .
Sophomore guard Ka'Yanna
Feaster tossed in 12 points
and dtshed out five asststs.
Senior post player Candace
Ferguson, who also battled
foul difficulties, scored nine
pomts and htt some b1g shots
durmg the Rio comeback
,
attempt.
Chambers
led
the
Redwomen m rebounds wtth
SIX

Shawnee State was led by
two players ofiits bench. JIll
Cropper netted 23 pomts and
10 rebounds (eight offensive) and Ahson Meyer
tossed m 14 pomts and
pulled down stx boards.
Those 37 po1nts combmed
off the bench played a huge
factor m the outcome of the

Redmen Would get (73-68
with I :47 on the clock) the
rest of the way
In addttlon to Manns'
Herculean effort, sophomore
forward Brandon Ivery
totaled 19 pomts and seven
rebounds and junior guard
Trav1s Keefer tossed m II
pomts and had four steals
before fouling out
Sophomore
shooting
guard
Brett
Beucler
(Sardtma, OH) was also
beset by foul trouble and
ultimately fouled out as
well Beucler was held to
mne points for the game.
Rio did not have an
answer for Shawnee's Josh
Reed , who matched Manns'
w1th 30 pomts and earmng
the Dick Hyland player of
the game award for the
Bears
Reed was 4-of-8
from three-pomt land.
Aaron Dav1 s was the only
other player to land m dou ble ftgures for Shawnee
State, sconng 16 pomts
Davts hn 9-of-11 from the
free throw hue He also
pulled down, a team-high.
seven rebounds.

Ltke Soltch, Kelly came we haven't."
to the MAC wuh a champlWhile Kelly recetved a lot
onshJp ped1gree, but at a of attention th1s week, he
different level Before com- wanted
to
focus on
mg to Central M1 chtgan m Thursday's matchup
2004, he had won a patr of
"We' re l o~kc d in on
Dtvtsion II titles at Grand Oh1o." he sai d "Th1 s was
Valley State
the desunat1on we wanted
"We knew Coach was a for our football le arn
proven wm ner, so we had to Gettmg to the championsh ip
believe m h1s plan " Keith ga me wa' our only goal "
sa1d "He's been there and
The
Cht(pewas
are

game. Cropper was the Dick
Hyland player of the game
for Shawnee State.
Kelly Wagner also reached
double figures for Shawnee
w1th 12 pomts Becky
Babione added nine points
and pulled down eight
rebounds.
Rio shot 47.5 percent (28of-59) from the field for the
game, including 7-of-12 (58
perceht) from three-point
land. Shawnee shot 40.9 percent (27-of-66) from the
field and only 3-of-17 (17 .6
percent) from three-point
land.
Another key factor in the
final outcome was the free
throw line. Shawnee capitalized on 1ts opportunities
and Rio Grande dtd not.
SSU made 21-of-28 (75 percent) attempts while Rio was
only 14-of-24 (58 percent)
from the charity stn pe.
Rto will travel to Walsh on
Saturday to tangle wtth
Cavaliers. Historically, Rio
has struggled m North
Canton and will make the
trek htlpmg for better fortunes. Tip-off is set for 2

was httle the Cavs could
do but foul him
Curry was 6-of-9 from
the free throw line m the
final auarter.
"He\
the
guy,"
Crawford said. "He's the
guy we go through. It's
great to see him take over
down the stretch."
Richardson, who missed
Tuesday's
game
10
Chicago with a strained
hamstring, was 5-0f-7 on
3-pointers and added nine
rebounds New York made
the
mne 3-pointers btggest by Crawford wtth
1.46 left to put the Knicks
up 97-93
Rtchardson also did a
nice defensive job on
LeBron James, who scored
27 points but on JUSt 10-of·
22 shooting.
Drew Gooden had 16
points
and
Zydrunas
Ilgauskas 12 points and 12
rebounds for the Cavaliers,
who bad no answer for
Curry when it mattered.
"They were playing
pick'-and-roll with Curry,
JUSt rolling him down the
g1,1t," Cavs coach' Mike
Brown said. "Nothing we
did worked. It wasn't him
necessarily catching in· the
· post, posttng up and backmg· in. It was just them
playing ~ick-and-roll."
Cuny s dunk and free
throw for a three-point
play with 46.5 seconds left
put the Knicks ahead by
three, and New York was
able to hang on despite
Steve Francis missing two
free throws and firing up
an airball 10 the final 36
seconds.
Trailing
by
three,
Cleveland had a last possession to tie 11, but
I;lonyell Marshall was
short on a 3-pointer wtth
2,9 seconds remaining.
Crawford grabbed the
rebound, and when the
horn sounded, New York's
j!Uard celebrated by throwmg the ball htgh enough to
htt the arena's g1ant scoreboard.
"We
needed
this,"
Crawford said. "We needed it bad."
James, who scored eight
10 the final period, blew by
Richardson for a layup to
lie 11 at 98 with I :05
remaining But following a
limeout, Crawford drove
the lane and dished under-

osu

from PageBl

p m.

Jan I, but the Buckeyes
could have used him
against North Carolina.
The ACC had already
clinched the 11-game challenge series for the eighth
lime 10 as many meetmgs
earlier Wednesday night,
but the Tar Heels put a
Rto shot 40 percent (26- mce cap on the event for
of-65) from the field and 44 their conference
Ty Lawson had 13 pomts
percent ( 11-of-25) from
beyond the three-pomt ate. for North Carolina, whtle
The Redmen struggled at the fellow freshman Brandan
foul line, hmmg only 12-of- Wnght added II.
I van Harris had 17
22 (54.5 percent) attempts.
Shawnee countered With points for Ohto State and
51 9 percent (27-of-52) freshman Daequan Cook
shootmg from the field and added 14.
North Carolina over42 percent (5-of-12) from
came
a 48-44 halftime
three-point land. The Bears
got the JOb done at the char- deficit by scoring the first
Ity stnpe, hitting 24-of-29 mne po10tS of the second
half in a 12-2 run. The
(82 8 percent) on the night
Shawnee also won the sellout crowd of 21,750 at
rebounding battle 39-33 the Smtth Center sensed
although Rio collected 13 the Tar Heels were in con·
offenstve boards against the trol, but Ohio State had
big post players that other 1deas and they agam
10volved 3-pointers.
Shawnee sported
Hams hit three straight 3s
Rto w1ll travel to North
Canton on Saturday to battle for Ohto State to give the
the preseason p1ck to' wm the Buckeyes a 64-58 lead wtth
AMC South m Walsh 12:43 to" play For a team
University Ttp-off IS set-for that entered the game shootapprox1mately 4 p m. fol- mg 42 percent from behmd
the arc and a\ eragmg 10 3s
lowmg the women's game
Walsh has won the last per game, Ohio State was
four games m the series, on a long-range roll, but it
mcluding an 86-60 thump- was about to end The
mg 10 North Canton last Buckeyes made just one
more 3 the rest of the way.
year.

Rio split the season series
with the Cavaliers last year,
includmg droppmg a 78-69
decision at Walsh.

already guaranteed a second season, but we learned that
v1sit to Ford Field, the s1te phystcally, we can play With
of the last Super Bowl, hav- the best teams in the coun10g accepted a bid to the try. It JUS! comes down to
Dec 26 Motor Ctty Bowl
execution."
''When you've played m
.Whtle Oh10 prefers to
front of I 05,000 people at . attack on the ground,
Michigan. there 's not much Central M1ch1gan likes to
left th at ts goinjl to mumt- throw the ball .
date you," he satd. "Playmg
Dan LeFevour has thrown
M1 ch1 gan and
Boston for 2,555 yards and a conCollege was difficult th1s ference-best 22 TD passes.

'

2006

neath to Curry, who was
fouled by Gooden on a
dunk
Curry mtssed three free
throws earlier in the quarter, but he completed the
three-point play to make 11
101-98.
James forced up a shot
over two defenders on
Cleveland's next trip, but
New York was unable to
take advantage as Francts
m1ssed a pair of free
throws . Damon Jones'
turnover gave it back to the
Knicks, but Francts agam
gave Cleveland hope with
his miss in the lane.
But on their final trip,
the Cavaliers, who settled
for too many jumpers,
couldn't get a 3 from
Marshall.
"We had wtde open
shots," James said. "They
just didn't fall"
Desptte coming in with
the Eastern Conference's
second-worst record (511 ), Knicks coach lstah
Thomas said before the
game that he is convinced
hts team is headed in the
right direction .
"We've just got to stay
sane in mind and get on the
other side of the storm," he
said.
Any threatemng clouds
seem to be clearing.
"Thts is a new team,"
Curry said. "Same guy~.
but we tave a new attitude."
Notes: According to a
story in the current issue of
GQ magazine, James and
New England quarterback
Tom Brady were "fleeced"
dunng a card game at rap
mogul Jay-Z's 40/40 club
10 New York. So who lost
more? "It wasn't me,"
James said. "I ?!): not to
lose." James satd Yankees
third
baseman
Alex
Rodrilluez has also JOined
the htgh-stakes, high-profile table. "We always have
fun," he said. ... G Larry
Hughes mtssed hts seventh
game with a high ankle
spra10.
He
and the
Cavaliers rema10 noncommtttal about his return, but
Hughes still isn't able to
run comfortably. . Kmcks
G Nate Robinson, the
NBA's reigning slam dunk
champion, was called for
traveling in the second
quarter when he tried to
bounce the ball off the
floor and slam it "I won't
be trymg 11 agam unless
we're 11p by 20," he sa1d
"But that's spontaneous
Nate Robinson. I can't
control that."

·· Thursday, November 30,

. ~------~--------------~~--------------~~==~~

SChill flltllall I Ill-Ohio

0

A tlp-m by Cook gave
Ohio State a 68-63 lead
wtth 10·52 left.
That's when Hansbrough
started to dominate down
low.
H1s basket started the
run and then he followed a
reverse layup by Ty
Lawson with a three-pomt
play to give the Tar Heels
the lead for good at 70-68
wtth 8.28 to go. Rayshawn
Terry hit a 3 to end North
Carolina's run of 12
stratght points. After a
jumper
by
Harris,
Elhngton htt a 3 and
Hansbrough followed With
another basket in the pamt
to make 1t 80-70 with 6 33
to play.
Ohio State led 35-25
wtth 7 10 left m the f1rst
half on a dn ve by Lew1s
Sophomore
reserves
Marcus
Gmyard
and
Bobby Frasor led the Tar
Heels on a 12-5 run to get
them within 40-38 with
4:21 left on a dunk by
Hansbrough after Frasor,
who had htt consecutive
3 s, tapped a loose ball
while on the floor to
Danny Green who fed
Hansbrough ahead of the
field for the breakaway
slam.
David Ltghty then h1t
the Buckeyes' seventh 3 m
II attempts - at the time
they were 9-of-18 from
msil;je the arc - to restore
the lead to five.
Ohio State fimshed the
half 8-for- 13 on 3s.
'

Like Solich, Kelly is trying to build a tradition, so
he appreciates what his
opponent has achieved.
"These are two teams that
have unl?roved themselves
on both stdes of the ball," he
satd "Ohio has built a wellrounded defense and an
offense that IS going to run
the ball and control the
clock."

The Daily Sentinel• Page B3

www.mydailysentinel.com

2006

.'

DIVISION VI ALL·Omo LIST

• COLUMBUS (AP ) - The 2006 Asoocoated PreS6 Dovls"n VI
AII·Oh10 high school football team, based on the recommenda
t10ns of a stare media panel
DIVISION VI
FlrotToom
OFFENSE: E~eath Jacl&lt;son, Ada 6-{) 155. freshman.
Enc McCtooi&lt;ey Oregon Stntdl 6-&lt;J. 190 sr Damon Ber11ce
Mana Sletn Marion Local, 6-8 210 sr Zach Stallard lucas 5~
1 9, 140, sr Unemen-Andrew Maynard Lancaster FISher Cath ,
, 6-3 211, sr. Jared Ramage, Caldwell, 6-3 285, sr . John
• Maurer S•dney Lehman, 6·3, 240. Sl , Seth deVIugt Bascom
•• _Hopeweii·Loudon 6·1, 225 sr . Pal Dunn, Sycamore Mohawk.
6-3 240, sr Quarterbacks-Zac Dysert, Ada 6·3 180 jr , Gene
Studebaker, CO\nngton S..2 205, tr , Brandon Moherman,.
'Berlin Ctr Western Reserve, 6-'2. 185 sr Backs-Peter Tobin
Lancaster F1sher Cath 5-10 191 sr, Taylor Jov•clc,
Shadyside 5 11 200, sr, Jason Sampson, Waterford 6-1,
185, sr, Nick Pucl&lt;ett Salineville Southern S-9. 185, sr Sean
Bricknet Bascom Hopewrn-Loudon, 510 170 sr, Nathan
.Same, Dola Hardin Nounern, 5·10 17Q jr Jeremy
t=-larnlshfeger Columbus Grove &amp;-8 170, sr Kicker-Nick
Dom1nlc, M1neral Ridge, 5·9, 143, sr
DEFENSE Lmemen-Man Finnell, Oanvtlie 6-0 180 sr
Andrew Ashland Beallsville 5-11, 150, Jr , Kyl~ W1lhetm:
MechanicSburg 6-2 220 sr , Chns Mcintyre, Columbiana, 510, 225 sr Taylor Smith, Danville 6-2, 215 sr Kyle
Hesterman, L1berty Center 6 2 200 sr Lmebaekers-Babby
Shew, Mogadore 5 8 190 sr , Joe Stoll, Norwalk St Paul 6-1,
215 ~ sr Garrett Brown, Cuyahoga Hts , 5-10, 159, Jf Trav1s
Powers Milford Ctr Fa1rbanks 5-11, 215, sr, Dustin Sadlowski,
Shadyside 5-11. 185 jr Ryan Starks, CIOYO His Lult1 E 511 230 sr Terrance Donald, Cleve Hts luth E , 6-0, 195 sr
Back~rrlck Beaver, Crown City S. GaHia, 54, 145, ar ,
Tim Ryan Antwerp, 5·1 0 1565, jr , Cory Brunow, Dola Hardin
1 Northern, 5-9 160, sr Punter-Matt Miller Cuyahoga Hts &amp;1,170 sr
' " Offensive ployor of the - : Zac Dysert, Ada
; Dofttnol•o ployor of tho yeor: Joe Stoll Norwalk St Paul
Coaches of the year Chsd GrandstaH Danv111e Dave
~" Caldwell BeallsVIlle
'
Second Tum:
OFFENSE: Ends- Taylor M1Her, Cols Crusaders 6-4 190, Jr .
Selh Mohler, Cov1ngton, 6-5 200, sr, Derek Hoge, Waterford,
6-3 191, Jr Evann Farren, Cuyahoga Hts, 5-9, 145, sr
Lmemen-Tyler Smith, Danv111e. 6-3, 270 sr Enc 81bley
Strasburg Franklin 6 5, 280, sr Chad K1nc:ter Old Wash
Buckeye Tra11 6·2, 235 sr Adam Salyers. Mechanicsburg 6, ' 6, 260, sr Quarterback-Josh Smcla1r, Cols Crusaders. 6-3.
175, tr Backs--Cody Destro Mogadore, 6·3, 230. tr. Joe
Winters Columbiana 6-1 190 sr , Andy Humar Thompson
ledgemont 5·10, 185 Jr , Oavtd Alexander, Melvern 6·1 215,
• Jr, Kickers-Bronson Duke Cols Crusaders. 5 10 160 jr Jay
McAllister Bascom Hopeweii·Loudon. 6-&lt;J 175 sr
DEFENSE: linemen-Brandon Watkins, Millersport 6·2 230,
sr Chase Grlnch ShadySide 6-1 265, sr, Kyle Mart1n,
Monroeville, 5·11 204, sr Chris Tofilskl Berlin Ctr Western
,Reserve 6-4 210, sr unebackers---Steve Dav1s, N LE!Wisbu rg
Triad "6- 1, 205 sr Bryant Thomas, lockland 6-1 190, sr
' Vonco Folluno, Crown Clly S Golllil, 5-11, 185, lr Dorin
T1atord, A~~elne Southern, &amp;-2, 260, tr , Chns Motter Doia
Hardin Northern 5-9 170, sr , Marcus Mewhorter, Sycamore
Mohawk 6·3 240, jr John Moore, Lowellville 6-0, 220 sr
Backs-Scot Sentner, McDonald, 6-3, 175, sr, Brantley Akers,
Hamilton New M1aml, 5 9 155 sr Punter--Grant Barbour
Fremont St Joseph 5-8, 215 sr
Spoclol Monllon
Ben Sm1th, Cols Crusaders Kyle Reiff, Manon Cath Justin
Fernow lancaster Fisher Calh , John McGrath, Newark Cath
Bnce Wllhs Morral Ridgedale, Remon Nelson Canal
~ Wn"'Chester Harvest Prep, Mark Ntchols Newark Cath , Gabe
Albanese, Mlltord Ctr Fa11'banks Mike Cox. Sugar Grove Berne

DMSION

V ALL·Omo LIST

COLUMBUS (AP) - The 2006 ASSOCiated Press Dovosoon V
All-OhiO high school football team, based on the recommendations of a state med1a panel

DIVISIONV
Flr111TNm
, OFFENSE: Ends-Ryan Hartke, St Henry 6·1oot-4 195
pounds sentor Ben Wonderly Sherwood Fa1rv1ew, 5-B, 160,
soph Llneme~alhan Cates, F1ndlay liberty-Benton, 6-2,
219, sr Jarod Stolly Uma Cent C&amp;th , 6-1 , 240, sr Lee M11ter
eo.s Acad fK&gt; 205 sr , Matt lschy Woodsfi~d Monroe Cent ,
5-9 205, sr, Cameron Wade Bedford Chane!, 6-3, 275, sr ,
Matt Mihalik Gates Mills Gilmour, 6-7.270 sr OuarterbacksJ J Townsend, warren JAI:. 6·3. 190, sr Ryan Radcliff
Sherwood Fa1rv1ew 6-2 1f2 190, Jr Stephen H1tch
Independence 6-0, 165 sr, Steve Shumaker Barnesville 6-1
170, sr, Jay Edwards, ~sonvolle· York, 6-1, 205, sr Baclo9Marcus Hendren Johnal:own-Monroe 5-11 , 185 sr, Ryan
' Collado, C1n Hills Chrisr1an Acad , 5 11 175, sr Aaron
Roberson, Bedford Chanel 5-11 175 Jr K811m Be1chler
Smithville 5-10 180 sr , Chns Crockett, Cols Acad 5· 10
185 jr. Devin Schie, Sugatoreek Garaway. 5-11, 165 soph
Roger Smith Dayton Christian, 5-9. 190 jr Andy Puthoff St
Henry, 6-3 230, sr Kickers-Jordan Smlth,LouisviHa Aqumas
6-2 185 sr
DEFENSE: Llnemer&gt;-Matt Ferguson Lewisburg Tri Count;
N , 6-2 215 sr Austin FritZ, Deftance Ayersv111e 6 1, 220 sr ,
Matt Thobe, St Henry 6-1 180, sr llnebacke~n Ball
Amanda-Ciearcreek, 6-1 , 210, sr , Holden Border, W Lafayette
_ Ridgewood 6-1 193 sr , Adam Tate, Slewar1 Federal Hocking.
6-1 250, sr Kendall Washington,loui&amp;VIIIe Aqumas 6-4 195
' sr , David Rach, N Lima S Range 6-3 195, sr . Gary
1 Ste1gerwalt Kirtland, 6~, 210, sr, Sam Ostnsky Bedford
Chane! 5-11,200, sr, Spencer Hershey. W Salem NW, 6-&lt;J.
225, sr Sam Kershaw W Jefferson 6-0, 220 sr Adam
Messenger, Barnesv1lle 5-10 170 jr, Joe Gord Day
Chnstian, 6-3, 225, sr, Brandon Craft , Fmdlay L1berty·Benton,
6-1 196 sr Backs-Drew Kirkman Lima Cent Cath 5·10.
155, sr Bemte Agnew Cols Atricentnc 5 1 t 170 sr , Mason
Lowery Kansas lakota 5·9 170 sr Anthony Kokal Warren
JFK 6,.0 t 80 sr Punter-M1tch N~ekamp St Henry, 6-5 245,
sr
ortanaiVI playert. of the year: J J Townsend Warren JFK
' Marcus Hendren Johnstown-Monroe
, ~live pltv-rl of thl ywar; Drew Kirkland, L1ma Cent
Calh Kendall Wash111gton, LouiSVIlle AQuinas David Rach N
' Lima S Range
eo.chll of the yur: Tony Napole1 Warren JFK Dave
Stupka Bedford Chane!

'

.

SecondTeam:

OFFENSE· Ends-Jay Priest Haviland Wayne Trace 6-Q,
f65, sr, Mike Redido. W Salem NW. 6-{) 180. sr . Corey
- Cunningham, New Middletown Spr1ngf1eld, 6·2, 185, sr
Unemen-Andy SpiCZenski BarnesviHe, 6·2. 260 sr, Slpehon
Russo Cln H1lls Chnstian Acad 6.(), 206 sr , Kenny Collmar
f Frankfort Adena , 6-2, 260, sr , Jeremy Oiler Creston
Norwayne, 6-3 230 1r , Justm Ray, LouiSVIlle Aqun"'as, 6-5,
295 Jr Daxid OWen, Burton Berkshire 6-4, 28_., sr
0uarterbacks-8181fl9 Wilson RIChWOod N UniOn 6-3 190
sr Joe lamb, Waynesville 6-3 1QO, sr Kaleb Reed, W Salem
NW, 6-4 195, sr Backs-Joey Inks, W Jefferson 6.0, 190 sr
Josh McCormk:k W Lafayette Rldgawood, 5·9. 160 sr. Beao
~awls, NelsonVIlle-York 5-11 200 sr Hunter Reed, Ashland
' Crestv1ew 5·7, 180 sr, Matt Ma1lbach, Creston Norwayne, 6-4: 215, sr Christian Griffin LouiSvl(le AqUinas, 5·11 185, jr
Cotton Crum Middlefield Cardtnal 6 1 210. sr Josh Brafford ,
Andover Pymatumng Val 5-B 160 sr Kickers-Mike Morgan
Cols Ready 5-1 t 175 soph • Michael Busch Fondlay Liberty·
Benton 6-0 t 85, sr
DEFENSE: Lmemen-Matt Batrd. N Lima S Range 5·11 ,
2..0, sr, Brandon Brodwolf, W Salem NW 6-3 175 sr Cohn
McHugh, Rocky R1ver Luth W, 5-11 230, Jr , Alex Bialosky
Gates Mills Hawken 6-0, 195 s1 Lmebackers-Robb
Hendershot Newcomerstown tKt 200. jr Logan Unk, W
Ltberty-Salem, 6-2,2 15 sr, Mark Chnstman, Gk&gt;usterTnmil'e
• 6 2 200 sr , Jordan Thompson Rockford Parkway 6-4 225
1r Paul Hilton Metamor~ Evergreen, 6·3 205, sr , Coty B1isky
Columbiana Crestvi8W 5-1 t , 207 sr OeAndre Rudolph
Bedford Chanel, 5·10 175 sr. Gerald Dotson, Cleve Cent
1 Cath 5 9 185 sr Backs- Nhchael Welling Aeadmg 5- 11
178 Jr Ty Whittington Lees Creek E Clmton, 5·10, 155 sr

Union Anthony Mercuno Lancaster F1st1er Cath , Clayton
MiiHsor Morral Ridgedale, Andy Paul Newark Calh Nathan
Morton, Danville, Tommy Pellett Newark Cath , Gatlin
A1dgeway, DanVIlle Colton Speelman, Sugar Grove Berne
Unoo, Nathan Brunney, lancaster Fisher Cath ,
Brendlll Suih•an Spnng Galt1 Coni • Jamie WeekS. Spring
Calh Cent Bryant Hale, Covington Rk:k Cotton Hamilton
New M1allll Dan Jacob Sidney Lehman Brian Wagner, Spring
Colt1 Ganl , Davkl Webb Mochanlcsbull! Levi Kenworthy,
Bradford Zack Ziegler Mechanlcsburg Brian Crabtree N
Lewisburg Triad Drew Cran, COVington Jeff Ward. Sklney
Lehman, Jordy Burellson, COVIngton, Logan Beam, Ansonia
Blaine Klaus Mechanicsburg, Charles Norris Lockland
Wesley Funderburgh, N Lewisburg Triad,
Chris Capper Willow Wood Symmes Valley. John Wollo,
Crown City S Gallla, James McGu~re , F1'8nklln Furnace
Green Butch Mamhout, tRactne SOutham, Daniel Sands
Portsmouth Notre Dame 4 Dustm Bradford SclotoVIIIe E
Duolln McCombs, Crown Clly S. Golllo, Alox Da\11~
PQrtsmouth Notre Dame, Gary Truman Sclotov1lle E.. Paul
Burchett SCIOtOV IIIe E, Howte Dempsey WillOW Wood
Symmes Valley lan Kelley, Franklin Furnace Green bron
PhiHipa. Crown City S Gallia, Taylor Sams, Waterford Curtis
Botkins, Franklin Furnace Green Jacob Howard , Sc10tov~le E
Corey Smith, Waterford Cody Bauer, Corning Miller, Andy
Jones. Watertord Dewey Cantrell, Crown Clly S Golllo. Kin
Shipley, Willow Wood Symmes Valley Jon Butler Frankltn
Furnace Green,
J~nlfny Re1sz, Beallsv1lle Zane Carter, Wellsville, Tyler Abbott
Hannibal Rl""r Local Judd Fre~ag Strasbull!-Frenklin, Zak
Kapron, Malvern, Steve Beres Old Wash Buckeye Trail Josh
Baker, Bridgeport Cody Kernen, Beallsville Kevin Stoney
Beallsville Billy Merryman, Shadys1de, Brock Oav!s Q)d Wash
Buckeye Tra1l, Ryan Kuczykowskl, Staub Cath Cent Vmme
Ritchie Shadysode Moke Melntel, Shadysode, Ross Lyon
zanesville Rosecrans DJ Duke, Hann1bal R1ver Local, Josh
Gust Caldwell Corey Keck, Malvern Dan Starr Old Wash '"
Buckeye Tnul, Demck Hesson , Caldwell, Jeff Moz1eko, Steub
Cath Cent , John Krupa, Shadyside Drew Schneiter
Strasburg-Franklm
Eddie Gonda Youngs Chnst1an Matt F1rment McDonald, Will
Voho, Mogadore, Dan Tnner Dalton, Sean Shoaf, Salineville
Southern, Carmen LBmancusa, Vienna Mathews Mark
Greene Mmeral A1dge Zack Qhandler, Ashland Mapleton
Mart Krumpak McDonald Cameron Brant Ashland Mapleton
Cody Fmcham, W1ndham John Yakubov McDonald, Chr1s
Mcintyre, Columb1ana Aaron Valentme, Leetoma, Shane
Smith, Mogadore Kent Cunningham, M1neral Ridge Mackie
McGarry Columbiana Jon Williams Leetonia Enc Keyes
Dalton Brlnt F1ncham, Windham Cory Guy Columbiana Bill
Jawhan Berlin Center Western Reserve,
Kurtis Staup Delphos St John's Jeht Risser, Columbus
Grove lan Oahhnghaus Mana Ste1n Manon Local, Zack
0 Ne1ll, MonroeYIIIe Zach Osborn Greenw1ch S Central
Bryart Sm1th McComb, Josh Rosenbeck Maria Stem Manon
Local J J Hams, Columbus Grove, Ryan Bores, Monroeville
Andrew Iceman Lucas Brock Schafer, Monr08VIIie Enc
Daniel, Sycamore Mohawk
Ryan Walton Ashtabula Sis John &amp; Paul Mark Burchett
Fatrport, Jake Walendz1k Cuyahoga Hts Tom Elkaylany,
Cuyahoga Hts , Andrew Bartko Cuyahoga Hts Darren Boyd
Newbury, Jeremy Schultz Thompson Ledgemont Scott Ruck
ThOmpson Ledgemont Anthony Graham lutheran East
Maunce Sloley lutheran East, Matt Mtller Cuyahoga Hts
Brandon Bowen, Oberlin Kev1n Knmmel Cuyahoga Hts
Ronnie Stover Lutheran East Tim Knotts Fairport Estavan
Hill, Newbury Sal Paratore Cuyahoga Hts
Robert Dav1s l utheran East Dalontae Henderson lutheran
East Ben Dav1dson Ledgemont Ryan Starks Cleve His Luth
E Brett Miller Cuyahoga Hts , Nate Arp Thompson
ledgemont Cyrus Patton CkMI Hts Luth E Mer10 Cannon
Cleve Hts luth E Chas Poteat Cleve Hts Luth E Ntek
Proudfoot, Thompson ledgemont Ryan Prugar Ashtabula Sts
John &amp; Paul, Tony Amelia Cuyahoga Hts Danny Barrett
CUyahoga Hts • Matt Miller Cuyahoga Hts
Denn1s Love Bedford Chanel, 6-t 180 sr Punter-cory
Besancon Sm1thv11ie 6-1 190 sr
Special Menllon
Ryan Hathaway Fredencktown Zach W1ll1ams W Jefferson
Joe Wasserback, Richwood N Umon Guy Cull1son, Cols
Ready Tyler Hams W Jetterson Kyle Wnteset JohnstownMonroe Rob Blanton Baltimore liberty Un1on Chnstlan
Anderson Marion Pleasant Judd Ellinger Amanda
Clearcreek Jason Van Houten FrederiCktown lan Graham
Cols Ready, Cory Whitmer Johnstown Northndge, Jake
Lawrence Manon Pleasant Caleb Layer GaliOn Northmor
Mark Louks, Cols Ready Merntt Zollars Fredenektown
J T Tk:twell Anna Darren Howard lees Creek E Cl1nton,
Ay~n Axe Anna, Brent Poffenberger T1pp City Bethel Adam
D1tmer Arcanum Kevm Bostater Day Chnstian Matt
Zumsteln LGW!sbUrg Trl County North Enc Salley, W LibertySalem, isaiah Cheatham Cm ShrOder Jordan McCollum, Cm
Hills Chnst1an Jordan l~ette Versa11tes Andrew Ummg Lees
Creek E Cl inton Sean Stewart Anna, Mike Powell
Waynesv1He Tony McNellan Versailles C-ory Sn1ffen Anna
D1llon Douglas, Magriolla Sandy Valley, Josh Cowg1ll,
Sarahsville Shenandoah, Blake Allen Barnesville Brandon
Hunter Toronto Matt Moore Magnolia Sandy Valley, Colson
Deetz, Sugarcreek Garaway, Kyle Shurtz W Lafayette
Atdgewood, Aaron Bndgman Sarahsville Shenandoah Justin
Kelly Barnesv1lle Craig Barnett Sugarcreek Garaway, Tom
Knott Magnolia Sandy Valley Enc Pitcher, W Lafayette
RidgeWOOd, Jacob Hupp ~arahsv1 11e Shenandoah M1chaet
Wehr Barnesv1lle Torey Prickett Woodsfield Monroe Central
Dustin Angle W Lafayette Ridgewood.
Chaz Onggs Stewart Federal Hocking Trent Blankenship,
Coal Grove Dawson-Bryant, Trav1s Jones Lucasv1lle Val ,
Dusty Gibson FrankfOrt Adena Blake Fouts Glouster Tnmble.
Drew Spradlin Wheelersburg MIChael Hitchens Frankfort
Adena, Jared Dever Coal Grove Dawson-Bryant Chartes
Fatres Glouster Tnmble Alex Prater, Wheelersburg Aaron
Crabtree Lucesv1lle Val , Max Liles, Mmford, Adam Barber,
Nelsonville York Trevor Polley: Nelsonville York Adam Bare,
Coal Grove Dawson-Bryant J T Conley, Wheelersburg Brant
Day Stewart Federal Hockmg Kers1en HarriS Chesapeake,
Ryan Turner LucasVIlle Val Mark Christman Glouster Tnmble,
Trent Reynolds, M1nford Buddy Barnes, Franldort Adena
Brandon Wtll1ams Crooksville, M1ke Stapleton Chesapeake,
Tyler Chadwell Stewart Federal Hocking, Isaac Standley
Glouster Tnmble Jake Holmes Bambridge Patnt Valley
Keith Kuesel Hamler Patrick Henry, Kent Corthell Delta Kurt
Hanenkrath Della.nce Ayersv1Ue Nate Bowers Sherwood
Fa1rv1ew Derrick V1 cars Delta, Anthony Kmg, Defiance
Ayersvllle Adam M1llar Findlay Liberty-Benton Shane
W1reman Lafayette Allen E Jake Hyland L1ma Cent Cath
Gregg Harter, SherWood Fauv1ew Ethan Smith, Hamler Patrick
Henry Jeremy Ebert Bucyrus Wynford Alek Hughes AttiCS
Seneca E Josh We rl1ng Sl Henry Matt Feathermg1ll, Athca
Seneca E
David Heck N Lima S Range Tim Shahan Newton Falls
Andrew Kestner Columb1ana CrestvieW Bry,an lester, Apple
Creek Waynedale M1ke Ryan, Leavittsburg LaBrae Steve
Bens1nger N L1ma s Range Tom Mariam Warren JFK Jared
Keener, Sm1thv1lle Rob Dray, Warren JFK Jared Prov1nce
Warren JFK Todd Dillon Rootstown Nate Schuler New
Middletown Spnng Shayn Danks Columb1ana CrestvJew
Steve Ts111mos, L1sbon Dav1d Anderson
David Banyasz Columbia Dommie Samf Kirtland Bob Zuber
Independence Rob Armagno Gates Mills Gilmour Joe
Stenger, Andover Pymatunmg Val , Mark Krys1ak Kirtland
Josh McClary Rocky R1ver Luth W Piper Spann
Independence Enc Z1egler, K1rt1and Anthony Pagano Bedford
Chane! Ryan Catanese Gates M1lls G1lmour OeMano Collier
Rocky AIY8r l uth W Greg Koren Gates MillS Hawken Ted ,
Williams Gates Mills Gilmour, Ryan Khnk Columbia Rob
Armagno Gates Mtlls Gilmour Cns Gault And over
Pymatun1ng Val Trav1s Porter Burton Berkshire Kyle Cox
Independence Kory S1verd, independence Chns P1scura
Bedford Chane! Cliff Koc1an Gates Mills Hawken Oar:my
Brown, K1rtland, David Kneger Rocky R1ver luth W Jake
Mullet Burton Berkshire M1chael PICkett, Independence
James Solomon Independence N1ck Henderllght Orwell
Grand Val Ross1 Santo K~rtland Tyler Brodhead Gates M1lls
Gilmour Steve DuPiaga Columbia Adam Montgomery Orwell
Grand Val Ray lw l nd epe nden ~

Memphis mayor dusting off boxing
skills for charity fight agaiMt Joe Frazier
MEMPHIS, Tenn . (AP)It won't be the "Thnlla m
Manila," but Mayor Wtlhe
Herenton promtses a good
show when he steps mto the
nnjl wtth former heavyweight
champiOn
Joe
Fraz1er.
The mayor, a 66-year-old
former amateur box\!r, and
62-year-old "Smokm' Joe"
are fighung a three-round
exhibuion bout Thursday for
charity.
More than 30 yeats
removed from h1s lege ndary
1975
battle
agamst
Muhammad Ah m the
PhtliPpiOes, Frazter said his
once deadly left hook tsn' t
whai 1! once was and he was
unsure tf he would try 1! on
Herenton

Reds ' fan
League Prestdent Branch
Rickey said Lachey 1s
among notable owners,
includmg Warren Buffe l
(Omaha), Nolan Ryan
(Round Rock ) and the
Mandalay Entertamment
Group (Las Vegas)
It's the second lime
Lachey has been mvolvcd
wl!h an ownership gro~p
He was a small player m a
grnup that attempted to buy
his hometown Reds last
year
"It gave me th e tcehng

that hemg mvolved m an
ownership group was 'omethmg I re ally wanted to do "
Lac hcy said ''When th1'
opportumty came about it
felt hke the nght one ..
The p11mary owne1 , Ktrby
Schlegel, hopes the pop
smge r's Involveme nt wtll
booq mterest 1n th e
Ratm ers
"The PR JOlt he can gl\'e
IS huge." Schlegel 'sa1d
·'There's no better adverttsmg than hav1ng a guy hk e
N1ck Lachey mvolved"

an altemauve to Jail
Herenton turned to boxing
whtle growmg up in poverty
m MemphiS and credtts the
sport with building the self·
confidence that helped him
become the city's first black
mayor He 's now in h1s
fourth term
The mayor, who helped
,bnng the Lennox LewiS·
Mike Ty son heavyweight
t1tle hght to Memphts in
2002, has been hav10g fun
promotmg
Thursday 's
match and talkmg about his
accomplishments as an amateur boxing champion .
"If they can see me at thts
age, can they tmagme what I
was hke m my teens'l I was
awesome," he said wtth a
laugh.

Ala. girls' basketball coach who claimed
bias settles case that went to Supreme Court
MONTGOMERY,
Ala.
An Alabama h1gh
school basketball coach who
was fired when he complamed that hts ~1rls' basketball team wasn t treated as
well as the boys' team - and
won a ptvotal Supreme Court
ruhng - has reached a settle·
ment that mcludes a school
board prorruse of equal facth·
ties
"My mm all along was to
ensure fatr treatment for
Birmingham female athletes
and th1s agreement, at long
last, should guatantee that
happens," satd Rodenck
Jackson.
Under the
settlement
reached Tuesday mght wtth
the Btrmmgham B9ard of
Educatwn, Jackson will
recetve $50,000, hts lawyers
will receive $340,000, and
the board w1ll take all necessary steps to prov1de female
athletes wtth factlilles "comparable to those used by male
athletes Jackson had complamed m part that h1s players
had to pract1ce m a gym built
m 1908 rather than a new one
used by boys.
(AP) -

The settlement also assures
that Jackson will remain th&lt;:
girls' basketball coach at
J ackson-Oim Htgh School
He had been rehired as inter1m coach by the Birmingham
system earher.
Jackson sued m 2001 after
he was fired as a teacher and
g1rls' coach at Ensley High,
whtch has smce merged with
Jackson-Olm.
HIS case gmned national
attention last year when the
U S Supreme Court ruled
that the Title IX gender eqmty law protecls whtstleblowers as well as dtrect vtctims of
d1scnmmauon. Lower courts
had found that Title IX dtd
not authonze retahation
clatms
The h1gh court ruling
allowed Jackson to proceed
w1th his Tille IX lawsmt, a
tnal had been scheduled to
begm Dec. II
"Rodenck Jackson stood
up for hts gtrls, and in the
process helped set an important precedent that ensures
that people cannot be punIShed for standing up to fight
d1scriminatton," srud Marcta

D. Greenberger, cu-prestdent
of the Nauonal Women's
Law Center. whtch represented him along With two
Birrrungham lawyers
Jackson said there were
severe meqUIUes between hts
gtrls' team and the boys'
team, coached by the school's
athlettcs dtrector. Unhke the
boys, the gtrls d~n' t have
access to the same ex:pense
account, had to car pool
rather than take a bus to away
games and were forced to
practice m an old unheated
gym rather than the new one
where both teams played
thetr games
The board of education had
argued that Jackson didn't
have a nght to file a Title IX
lawsmt because he personally
suffered no sex discnmmatton, and cla1med he was ftred
for poor performance, not
whistleblowing
Kenneth L Thomas, an
attorney for the boatd, satd 11
mamtams there was no
wrongdomg on !Is part and
"uneqUivocally demes" that
female athletes were treated
unequally.

We remember those who have passed away
and are especially dear to us.
On Fnday, December 22. we Will publish a special page devoted to those who are gone but not
forgotten They will be Similar to the sample below

....

-

Da.VId c. Andrews
July 10,1961·.Ma.J.5,1980

May God's angels
guide you and
protect you
throughout time.
Always in oar hearls,
olohn and Mona. Andrews and
family

you wish, select oae of tht following FREE verses belo11 to
laca1mpany your tribute.
I We hold you mour !houghis and memones fore~ or
2 May God cradle you rn Hts arms now and forever
3 Forever miSsed, never fO~EOilen May God hold you 10 Ihe palm ot
Hts hand
4 Thank you fonhe wonderful days we shared IOgether M) pra) er'
wtll be w1th you unul we mee1 agam
5 The days "' sbared were sweel I long 10 see you agam on God s
heavenly glory
G Your courage and bravery ~ t il IOSJllre us all, and !he memory of vour
srrule fills us wttltJOy and laughter
7 Though out of stght, you'll forever be 10 my hean and mrnd
B The days may come and go, butlhe tomes we shared wtll al•ays rema10
9 May the hghl of peace sh10e on your face for etem1!)
10 May God s angels gu1de you and proteCI you1hroughou1tome
I I You•ere a hght 10 our hfe !hat bums forev~r tn our hearts
12 Ma) Gods graces sh10e over you for all tome
ll You are mour thoughiS and pmyers frommommg 10 mghl and from
year lo vear
14 We send Ihos message wllh a lo&gt;mg kiss for ctemal rest and happmess
I5 Ma) Ihe Lon! bless you w11h Hts graces and wamt l01 mg heart

TO REME&amp;lBEJ(YOUR LOVED O~E IN THIS SPECIAL WAY,
SEND $8.00 PER LISTING • $12 IF PICTURE INCLUDED
Fill out the form below and drop off to: .,.
'

I. • 1 lj•

"

The Daily Sentinel
With Fondest Memories
Ill Court Street, Pomeroy, OH 45 769

Nick Lachey becomes part owner
of the Triple-A baseball team
TACOMA, Wash (AP)
- N tck Lachey is the latest
celebrity to stake ownership
m a team m the Pac1f1c
Coast League.
The Cmcmnau nauve was
mtroduced Wednesday as a
part -owner of the Tacoma
Ramters, the Tnple-A affili ate of the Seattle Manners.
" Sport s for me , other
than what I do for a living,
js truly my passiOn, and
baseball has always been
somethmg that is a part of
my hfe.'' satd Lachey, who
grew up a Cmc1nnat1

That IS, as long as the
mayor doesn't "have the
butterfly 10 mind," Frazter
said, referring to Ali's selfdescnbed style of "float hke
a butterfly and sung like a
bee"
"I mtght get some flashbacks,"
Frazier
sa1d
Wednesday mght at a prefight party.
Frazter, who held the
heavywetght titl~ from 1968
to 1973 and reured from
boxm~ 10 1976, runs a gym
in Philadelphia and stages
occasiOnal exhtbitiOn bouts.
The exhibition at the
Peabody Hotel 10 downtown
Memphis will raise money
for the ctty's drug court,
which offets rehabilitauon
servtces to drug abusers as

DEADLINE: FRIDAY, DECEMBER 15, 1'100~

r-------------------------------------,
I
,
I
Please pubhsh my Irtbute m the spectal Memory Page on Fnday neccrnbcr !2

Name of decea&lt;ed- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 1

I

Relail onshtp 10 me'- - - - - - - - - - - - - - Number ul seleclell verse, _ _ _ _ I
I
Date ol hmh _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __ Dale of peSStnlg.__ _ _ __

•

Prtnl your name h e r c - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 1
Addre"

Phone numherr- - - - - - - 1

Cll)

State- - - - . , . - Ztr&gt;----1

Make Checli'Payable to THE DAIL'r SENTINEL

I

1

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

�'

Page B4 • The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, November 30, 2006

www .my~ailysentinel.com

.
.
'
Randy Lerner on·Browns' latest loss: 'Stckemng
'

.

BY TOM WITHERS
ASSOCIATED PRESS

AMAGANSEIT, N.Y. From hi s owner's suite,
Randy Lerner watched, worried and wondered about his
Cleveland Browns.
On Sunday, Lerner was
repu Ised by the way the
Browns were manhandled at
home by the Cincinnati
Bengals and troubled by
wide (eceiver Brayton
Edwards' sideline · rant
against his teammates.
"I found Sunday to be
sickening," Lerner said.
And what made him tJ1i:
most ill?
"Across the board," he
said. "Everything. I thought
the lack of composure. The
lack of performance. I
thought the wheels came off
on Sunday."
The Browns appear to be a
broken-down mess - again
and Lerner's candid
assessment of their most
recent performance underscores a multitude of issues
confronting the club as it
heads into a final, critical
month of the season.
Coach Romeo Crennel is
fighting for his job. Edwards
is fighting his teammates.
And Browns fans, · at least
the ones who aren 't too
ashamed to acknowledge
their loyalty to the orange
helmet, are fighting mad.
Crennel has come under
scathing public attack for a
perceived hick of discipline
on the club, and particularly
with the motor-mouthed
Edwards, who threw a
tantrum during the third
q~~er of the 30-0 loss to
Cmcmnatl.
Edwards blamed losing
his cool on his "passion for
·the game.". He doesn't fee)
some of h1s teammates are
displaying the same desire to
win as him. And for the second time this season,
Edwards' criticism was

.

AP photo

Cleveland Browns owner Randy Lerner watches the team's foo tball minicamp practice in
Berea in this June 13, 2005 photo.
directed at the club's offensive line, a unit depleted by
injury and now missing right
tackle Ryan Tucker (undisclosed illness) for the rest of
the season.
Following Edwards' latest
rant, the greatest Brown of
them. all weighed in on the
turmoil.
"It's really the leadership

that has to clamp down on
things," Hall of Fame running back Jim Brown said.
''I imagine that would be
Romeo's ·job to make sure
these things aren't happening. That's not a putdown on
Romeo. It 's that it's hi s
arena. He's the boss."
For the moment.
Crennel, who won a hand-

ful of Super Bowl rings as a
defensive coach, is now 9-18
in his first two seasons as a
head coach. Crennel's
biggest fl aw may be his
sense of loyalty. He stood by
embattled offensive coordinator. Maurice Carthon until
it became clear the players
had lost faith in his play call ing.

Thursday, November 30, 2006

ASSOCIATED PRESS

CINCINNATI - Marvin
won 't compare
Lewis
Baltimore's current defense
to the record-setting one that
helped the Ravens win the
Super Bowl six years ago. ·
"That's a long time ago,"
said Lewis, their defensive
coordinator in 2000. "I don't
even remember that. They're
this year's version of the
Baltimore Ravens."
This version is looking
like a champion, too.
With a victory over Lewis'
Cincinnati . Bengals on
Thursday night, the Ravens
(9-2) would become the first
team to clinch a division
championship this season. A
victory in Cmcinnati would
snatch the AFC North title
away from the Bengals (6-5) ·
and put the Ravens on
course for greater things.
"There's something much
more that we're shooting for,
other than just winning the
division," safety Ed Reed
said.
First, they'd like to put the
mouthy Bengals in their
place.
Some Ravens are miffed by
the
way · receiver TJ.
Houshmarmadeh talked down
to 1hem the first time they Im:this
season The RaveJJS won 26-20
on Nov. 5, 1m Housltrnandzaleh
wasn't about to give 1hem any
aedit aftelward.
"Deep down, we know we're
better than Baltimore and they
know it," Houshmandzadeh
said. "We've got better players
than the do."
Hou~dzadeh isn't backinQ down.
"'I think we're better than
them," he said Tuesday. "We'll
find out"
Sure will.
The Ravens know their three-

game lead on the Bengals -

· and the chance to clinch a title

on their field- speak for themselves. Reed chortled when
Houshmandzadeh's comments
were brought up.
"Keep your mouth shut,
man," Reed said. "Play football . I heard it. It is what it
is. The g~me speaks for
itself. If you think you' re a
better team, then come out
and let's play football, man."
The Ravens' are used to hearing good-natured lraSh talk from
Bengals receiver Chud Johnson,
hut HowJunandzadeh's slight
struck a nerve.
"He must nm have played

ALAN RoBINSON
ASSOCIATED PRESS

PITTSBURGH
Nothing in Pittsburgh
Steelers quarterback Ben
Roethlisberger's first ·two
NFL seasons prepared him
for this. ·
Roethlisberger is getting
tossed around like a tackling
dummy nearly every week,
absorbing big hit after big
hit as what traditionally is
one of the NFL' s best offensive lines fails to provide
much protection.
In Atlanta, Roethlisberger
sustained a concussion
. while being steamrollered
by three defenders on a single play. In Oakland, he was
under such constant pressure that he rushed to get
passes off and wound up
throwing four interceptions.
And no Steelers quarterback of recent vintage took
the pummeling he did during a 27-'0' loss Sunday in
Baltimore, when he was
sacked nine times. That tied
a team record for the most
sacks allowed since the NFL
began recognizing the statistic in 1982.
One hit, by the Ravens'
Scott,
caused
•
AP ·photo . Bart
Cincinnati Bengals head coach Marvin Lewis encourages his players during their NFL foot- Roethlisberger's head to
strike the turf with such a
baU game against the .San Diego Chargers in Cincinnati. ·
·
resounding noise that playin the game that we were ing what we did agai nst
"We know what's at .ers 30 yards away turned
playing in." linebacker Terrell them the last time." said stake." Houshmandzadeh immediately to see what had
Suggs said. "Anybody could Palmer. who was only 12-of- said. "We can't ·· afford to happened.
have lined up across from us 26 with two interceptions in stumble and lose another
"That' s probably the hardthat day and we had their the loss . "We didn't play game.··
est I've been hit in my life,"
number. It's evident on the well at all . I feel we ' ve come
The Ravens haven 't lost Roethlisberger said. "I truly
sin&lt;:e
that win over Cincinnati, felt that way. He just
film. If he feels passionate a long way .and made a lot of
;tretchirig
their winning streak knocked the wind out of me
about it, then go out there and progress offensively. They' ll
to
live
game'
while taking and I couldn't really breathe
prove it this time."
be ;eeing a different unit. a
control
of
the
division.
That jarring Joss in unit they've 'een in year'
Baltimore
played
its best very well."
Baltimore became a turning past but not in this past
No doubt Roethlisberger
name of the season last
point for Cincinnati. The game...
.
§unday. a 27-0 victory over considers himself lucky he
offense finall y got on a roll,
There was a confidence in
didn 't experience his third
with Carson Palmer throw- Cincinnati\ locker room the Pittsburgh Stee ler.' .
"Confidence
i;
prooobly
concussion
of the year, to go
ing for nine touchdown; .in thi; week.' a &gt;cnse that all
one
oft
he
biggest
thihgs
that
with
the
one
in Atlanta and
the last three games. Fnr the wa' well again . The Bengals
gm
overlooked
and
biggest
the
one
that
occurred
during
first time in his career, he
knew
that
a
victory
over
rea'on' why a team is suc- his · near-fatal motorcycle
has put up passer ratin.gs
above 120 for three game; m Baltimore "oulu lea' e them ce,sful." tight end Todd crash in Ju ne.
in good 'hare for the piay- Heap ; ai·d~ "You take
a row.
·
A year ago, Roethlisberger
Studying tilm of that game otT; - the\- ' re currenth one Pithhurgh , for example, the was being compared to
in Balt1more made him cringe Qame o ut in the wi ld"caru Super Bowl champion,. I Terry Bradshaw for his lead;tanding... .
...
this week.
th ink they lacked a little bit ership, maturity and perfor"When I ;ay it hurt;, .1 The\ aho kne&gt;A lhere Wth pf conlid enre when we mance under pressure while
mean it literally hun; watchrl.l\ ell I hem the other night. leading the Steelers to a
.
. no ma-rgin for error.
I
. ' '

.

E·mal!
classified@ mydailytribune.com

;.

. ,, "'
Meigs County, OH

In One Week With Us
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l\egtster

Sentinel

ca~f~::;... {7!~~ To44~:~~~2 (7!~~ To99~;!~~6
,fr,ldo'v For Sund•v• P•~Mr

aponalblt for n

ore then the co1t o
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NIU~I

from 1

Christmas Wreaths &amp; Grave Lost·Shettle dog, 16' tall.
Blanlets; $5-$25, (740)949- wlwhite paws. Last seen in
·21 15, Sue's Greenhouse.
Vi nton. OH area. Aeward
Offered. Coll740·388-8514,
740-645·4662.
740-S45· .
GIVFAWAY
• 6510, 740·645·1870
1

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(l40) 5S-6488.

Frigidaire Ref. 3 door sideby-side almond colOr. 740742·2025.

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FOUND

newapape

1

Found -25th· young mate
dog mostly black w!white
and
brown
Pratts
Fork/Burlington area. 740-

Found: Fomale Black lob &amp;
Male Walker Coonhound, on
At 7 in Addison. (740)367·
0938

Wo will not knowing
occopt ony odvtr
tnt In vlolltio

the

~~,.;11. 1'~G f•l?$1' A/116wll•&lt;ol1;

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YARD SALE

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PoMER.oYMIDou:

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financial akj and calling cur·

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Pr~.F.ASANT

good riiiiCIIontcol
and tlectrle~tl •kilts.
Apply In - I I :

Sf'S 'l'nlc1l Solei

Alligator Jack's Flea market
t'loliday hours-Frtday 10·5,
saturday 9-6, Sunday 9-5.
Se\leral new vendors .

CLASSIFIED INDEX
4x4 'o For sale .............................................. 725

Announcement ........................... ................. 030
Antlquea ........................................ ............... 530
A!*1mento lor Rent ................................... 440
Auction ond Fleo Morkot. ............................080
Auto Palllt Acceo-fol .......................... 71!0
Auto Repelr.... ................................. ............. 77o
Autoalor sate ......... ............................... ...... 710 ·,
Motors tor sate ................. ;., .. :::;:;. 750"
Building Supplleo ... ................................, .... 550
lualneoa and Bulldlngo ............................. 340
Bua-• Opponun11y ................................. 2t0
Buetneoa Training ....................................... 140
C.......,. Motor Hom eo ........................... 7i0
Camping Equipment ..............: .................... 71!0
Canlo ol Thonko .......................................... 010

a.

-

a.

a.

ChlkiiEiderly Core ......................... .............. ! iO
EtectrtcaWIIIfrlgeroaon .......................... ..... B40
Equipment lor Rent .....................................480
Excovotlng ............:.~ .................................... 830
Farm Equipment ............................. ............. &amp;tO
Parmolor Aent. .......... ...........................o...... 430
Farmolor sate ............... ....................... ....... 330
For IAIM ................. .................................... 4i0

For ............ ....... ...................... ... ............ 585
For sate or T.-......................................... 5i0
Fruita 1o Vegetableo .".................................... SBO
Fumlehed Aoomo ........................................450

2150EollomAve
Golllpoft.,OH
Absolute Top Dollar: U.S.
Silver and Gold Coins,
Proofsets, Gold Rings, Pre- .
1935
U.S.
Currency,
Solitaire Diamonds· M.T.S.
Coin Shop, 151 Second
Avenue , Gallipolis, 740- 4462842.

MAKE MORE MONEY!
•$8.501hour
•Full and Pan time
schedules
•Medical Benefits
• Ptlld Training
•Ptlld Holidays
•Vacations ·every , 6
months
And Mucll -.1

Buying Junk Cars,Trucks &amp;
Wrec+cs, Pay Cash J D
Solvaga
(304)77H343
(304)674· 1374

Old :WI

Manut.cturer hal 1
pooltlon

Dl81gn

_.

yooro uporlonoe In
monulocturing cleolgn
and knowtedgaabla In
Auto Cod. Apply In

,

SFS 'l'nlc1l SliM
21soe-A..
Clolllpoft., OH

' I 1\\ II I ....

Generel Haullng .......... .............. ...................850

a. Groln .............. ,...................................640

Help Wonted .................................................ItO
Home lmprovemento ...................... : ............ 810
Homeolor sale ............................................ 310
Hou-ld Gooda ..............~ ........................ 51 o
Hou-lor Aent .......................................... ~l10
In Memorlom ............. ............: ........ :....... ...... 020

Insurance ..................................................... 130
.._, &amp; Gerden Equlpment ........................ 680
LI¥1Stock. .....................................................ti30
Loot and Found ............, ...............: .............. 060
Loto &amp; Acreogo ........ : ....................... ............ 350
MI...,.IIOMOU0........................... ................... 170
lllacelloMOuo Merchondloe... ......... ........... 540
Home Repelr ....................................1160
Homee lor Aent ...............................420
- t e Homeotor sale ................................320
MOney to
220
Motorcycleo &amp; 4 Wheelera ................. ,....... .740
Muolcotlnatrumenta ..................... .............. 570
.... .................. ................................... 005
Pell 101 sale .... .............................. .. ............ 560
Plumbing &amp; Heotlng .. .................................. 820
Prolenlonol Servlcoo ........ ...... ................... 230
Radio, TV &amp; CB Repelr ............................... 1tiD
ANI E o - Wonled ..................................... 31!0
Schoololnotructlon ..... ............... .................150
SMd Plont &amp; Fertilizer .............................. 650
•
Situations
Wonted ..................... .................. 120
Space lor Aent ............................................. 460
Sporting Gooda ........................................... 520
SUV'o lor Sole ............................................ .. 720
Tlvckalor sate ....................,....................... 115

-le
-le

Loon .............................................

Uphotllery ................ ................................... 870
v- For S.te ............................................... 730
Wanted to Buy ............................................. 090
Wanted to Buy- Form Supplies .................. 620
To Oo .............................................. 180
Wanted to Aent ............................................ . 70
, Yerd sale- Gotllpollo .................................... 072
Yenl SoiH'ome&lt;oy/Middte ......................... 074
Y•nl Sole-Pt. Plouont ................................ 076

-•led

'.

enjoy phone corwersatlon.
Working houlli are Monday
through Thursday evenings
5
9 00pm HOu""

1DO WORKERS NEEDED
Assemble crafts,
. wood items.
To $480/wk

FEDERAL
POSTAL BS

' Materials prov ided.
t . Pkg. 24H r. ·
.Froe lnformooon
JQ
801 •428 ~
'"49
$15.67-$26.19illr., now hir·
- - - - - - - - ing . For application and tree
An EKcellen1 way to earn
mon""'.
governement
job 1info,
-, The New Avon.
A
·
Assoc
Labo 1
Call Marilyn 304·882-2645
m!3ncan
·0
r •
• 111
"
.
2
8
2
913-599- L&gt;"t . .. rs . emp.
AVON! All Areas ! To Bu y or serv·
Sell. Shirley Spears. 304 - - - - - - - - 675·1429.
Full time position, AsSistant
BENNIGAN'S Now Hiring to Treasurer, Southern Local
Benefits.
Servf!rs App ly at the Point District.
Pleasant Locelion.
. EICpEmence wlpayroll, insurances , accounts payable
necessary. Job description
available at District Otfice.
Send 1esume, letter of Intere.st. and references to
Richard A. Kol&lt;.er, Treasurer,
920 Elm St R••o'ne OH

Monday-Friday. 25-40 hours
.
·
per wee k. Pr1or e~Cp~nence
with retail accounting and
"
' office procedures a dell""'
plus. Supervisory position
w~h hands.. on dutiae.
Please send your letter of
intention and a resume to
O
bookstore rlo.edu or fax

74o-245-l2'5.

••

• NO EkPEfli!IIICE NECESS,lRY
• FULl.·TIME CLASSES
' COl TP.A!NING

• FINAIIICING AVAtLA8LE
• JOti PL.ACEM[Nl
• ENROLLING NOW

ALLIANCE
TRACTOR·TRAilER
TRAINING CENTER S
WYTHE VILLE, VA.

1-800-334-1203

45 77 1 by
2006.

&lt;WOo.&gt;

'

Help wanted at Darst Group
Home , workmg with elderly,
heavy lihlllQ involved 740·
99~·5023.

w

wv

~""''""'"""='7:"'77'"""'11
rr
Ohin V.lky Publilhi•&amp;
1

Col'lpll)' h i P•r1·ti•e
opcni•l ia thtt mail roo•.

'

December 4,

Applkaat ••• hlvt
\'Slid drinrs lk:t•M'·

Elderly. Care. I have r8fer·
ences and experience. Gall
Beve rly at (304)675·1084
•_nyt_lm_•_ _ _ _ _ _

-

New 16x60 .Clayton, ·car
Port Garage, porch, heat
pump, total Electn~ 2 BR, 2
BA utility room &amp; large
fenced lot can (304)7735109
'

---~----

New 2006 Clayton slnglewid86 starting at $199.84
per month. Trade·ins welcomes. Call {740)385-2434.

-oooo

li lO

1

Ph-a• 1pply in penoa
bf-"'etll llm·Jpm at:
llS Tllird Annuc.
Ga!Hpolis. Oticl•S6JI
No Phont Cal .. Pinlr.

fiNO AJOB OR ANEW CAREER
IN THE CLASSIFIEDS

L---------------'

r-IO

-----

~,...,..

Vl"''vtuu11111 •

All 1:'=,:·::::~l~lng

R&amp;J Trucking now'Hinng at
our New Haven, WV
Terminal. For Regional
Hauts·Oump DIY. 1 yair

OTR
verifiable exp.
Call 1-aoo-462·9365 osldor
--:-:-::--:---:-W~NTED : Part-time poshlon
available to assi1t lndMdu-als with mental retardation
at a group -homtrln Bidwel l:
35 hralwk: 3-10p WITh; 3·
11 p F; 10a·9p Sat. Mu11t
have
high
school
dtpbmiiGED. \tal ld drlvef'a
llct~nae and three yeart
good driving e»~:perlenca.
$7.25/tlr.. Pre·emptoyment
Drug Testing . Send resume
to: Buckeye Community
Services, PO Box 604,
Jac~&lt;J?"· OH ~ 5 &amp;4°:
Doodhne for appl icants.
1216106· Equal Opportunity

IOCII
-

11 •.

monulocturer.
....... In -

..,....,

SFSTNok s.•
2150 Eutem Avt
·

~=~Go~ll:lpo~lli~,~OH~~

'lSI

Seasoned tire wood, Oak
and Htd(ory split. You haul
or 1 haul· Take CAA&amp; HEAP
741}949·2036.

'

$176/mo.! Buy 3 bedroom, 2
bath HUD! 4% dn, 30 yrs. @
8%. For listings 800·5594109 eKI. 1709
$1S2/mo! 4 Bedroom, 2.5
bath HUO! 4% down, 30
years @ 8%. For listings
BOQ-559-4! 09 ext F254

1 bedroom $275/mo plus
deposi t &amp; ytilities, 1n
Ranch Gallipolis. Call (740)2566661 .

style Home, setting on 2 112
acres.
Mui;it see to
Appreciate, Reduced Price
lor quick Sale. Moving out of
State .(304)675·4235

1 bedroom in Gallipolis.
$225 month/$100 deposit
No pels. Call Wayne
(404 )456·3802 for informa·
tlon.

2·3 Bedroom Duclex.
$420/mo plus deposit &amp; utili·
ties in Downtown GaH1polis.
No Pots. (740)446·0332 '
8am·Spm Mon-Sat.
---'-----3 Bedroom House at 2004
1/2
Chatham
Avenue.
$525/mo, plus utilities. HUD
approved. Fu n Basem ent.
Carport. (740}446-4543

r

3 Br. house in Pomeroy, 21ull
baths, garage. and basement, very clean, new car·
pet, A/C. hai'ldf cap accessible. $685.00. 740-949·2303
_or_59_1_·3_92_o_
. ---3-&lt;4BA Home in Middleport.
No
pets.
Refer.ences
required. $600.00 month
plus deposft. Available Lola
December. 740-992·5961

I. ~itchen

Ohio.
Asking 5160 ,000.
740·992-4196.
1997 bi 1~-1 house 2 car
• .....
ego 7 acres 3 Br 2
-r
•
·
·
battl, 40X20 pole ba rn,
12)(20 dook, pon heol pump
mergsl Gal11 a 1'one $140000
.
a11740. 1•2
... • 1154

n•
c
3

Pomerrn~,
..,,

3 bedroom. 2 bath, with fire40~0 born
Ro'o
•
~u
· ·
Grande area. On B flat aces.
$120,000. (740)709-116e.

place

Gallipolis. Call
Wayne
_14_04
..:.14
_56_·380
_2_._ __

About $3000 down. 812 S
3rd. Ave., M11XIteport. Totally
remodeled. 3 bedrooms 1
bath
Perfect credit not
Watkons PrOduC1s
vanilla , soup mixes, salves, req uired Payment $525
liniments. des••" m.... Appraised $70 .000. 740.
367-7129.
Call741l-9-49-3027

Sp~es.

new~paper will not
knowtngly accept
advtrtlsemente for ml
• ..tate which Ia In
violetkm ot th1 law. Out

This

~Brick

Accr&amp;dlled Membe r -'&lt;:crediting
C:Oundl tor llldllpendent Colleges 4 rental hOuses "For Sale "
and Schools 1274B
Good income pr~ucing
properties. Great loca.h0n1
M~-- 1. ·· ~tv11Sf}l Ar&lt;~r.uLO
Price(s} are Negotiable.
~------..J Mottvated Sel ler! In

1176

I{ I " I \ I "

'=======~

=I

.oaltipoUscareercohge.com

Late on payments. divorce,
job tra nsfer or a death? I
can OOy your home. All cash
and quick closing. ·740·416·
31 30.

:::-;·"U==P:":'::~I

SALE

WANIID

Need to sell your home1

-

Cot•

-

which rm~k•• It Illegal to
adYertiu "any
prefer•nce, limitation or
dltcrlmlnatlon b..•d on
race, colo~. religion, ux
famltlat•talus or n•tl~l
ortgln, or any Intention to
mo"e ony ....h
"
-preference, llmHation or
dilcrlmlnatlon."

v

HOME~

RFAI..FsrATE

Fair Hou•lng Act of 1968

opportunity baHs.

Bedroom house in
River view. Off
main road. $26,000 Land
COncealedPlstoiCtass "Dec. contract possible wfth down
·
Special · payme n1 • (740)992 •2593
9, 2006 , Ch nstmas
$50. 00.
9 :00 am. VFW
Mason WV. {740)843·5555 , 3 Bedroom,
2 Bath,
740-416·3329
Basement, Large Deck,
- - - . , . . - - - : - - : - - Double Garage. $63,000
Gllllpolla Carwr
Firm. (740}992-2571

1-800·214-Q452

i

mortgage
broker
or • Ranch style home on 2.6
1
Iender
I8
p roper Y acres overlooking the beau·
- · • (T~ ·
bl.
IIceu.-u.
·~SIS a pu IC tiful Ohio River In Long
serv Ice annou ncament Bottom , Oh•o located at
.
1~
I rom th e Oh•o
a n~~5' 61818 SA 124.
This six
Publ'""l Com 0 1
room house includes 2.5
'
bedrooms, one full bath,
l'llofmiloNAL
and a three quarter bath.
~
"1421 square feet of living
space with a full 1mlshed
basement and attached two
TURNED DOWN ON
car garage. Also includes a
SOCIAL SECURITY 18;51? 32• X 40. heated metal out·
No FM Unleas We W•nl
side building with concrete
1..aB8-582·3345
floor. Home Is equipped with
heating, cooling, water and
all electric utilities. Some
oppliances are
FOR
included. For more 1nformalion call 740-985-3315 (day·
1 112 story Cape COd -4 time) or 7-t0-992·2071
years old. 3 l&gt;edrcoms. 2 (evening) .
Pnco
; 12 bathol Iorge front porch ;$,;,;160;::::
,000
:;;:
.00
;::.....,.,...._""1
apprOK. 5 acrao located on
MoBILE HOlliES
Flalwoods Rd., Pomeroy,
FOR SALE -

r'o

ACRFAGE
Lors&amp;

·

.Mobtl1 Home Lot for rent
near Vinton. Call (740)441·
1111 .

lnformad that all
dwellings adVIIrtiMd In

--------

SaiOOlS

:.27!15Fo._~-~-....,

this newapaper are
ewllableon•nequal

R&amp;J TRUCKING
Leading The Way

(740 I828·

r;

readtrl are hereby

Borrow Smart. Contact
the Ohio Division of
Fi nancial
Institution's
Office
of
Consumer
Aftalrs BEFORE you refi·
nance your home or
Obtain a loan. BEWARE
of requests for any large
advance payments of
tees.or insurance. Call the
Office
of Consumer
Affairs toll free at 1-866·
278-Q003 to lea rn if the

s cott

.
- .- - - - - Like new 312. owner
financing. Scotl (740)828·

aubject to the Federal

r

POST OFFICE NOW
HIRING
A"ll. Pay $20/hr or
$571\ annual~
Including Fedefal Benefits
and OT,Paid Training,
Vacations·FTIPT
1-1100.584-1ns USWA
Rei. IP8923

BIIIJ 4 bed. DIWidel

1 •.r r

~"-

l!i;p;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;o

EllrStlpllngiTnllnlngfor
empklyer benefits available. w•tght LDII, Dec. 1 In
Re~umes will _be received GIIUpolll By appointment
unttl the poslt_
o o is filled . CAll {931)72~
Interested gpp1teants shoukl
send an updated resume
•NOTICE•
including the names and OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH·
addresses of three profes·
sional reterences and a let·
lNG CO. recommends
te of int 881 1
that you dO buSiness with
r
er
o:
people you know and
Oh..tiis Mll80n SPHR
•
.....,, .
'
'
NOT to send money
Oirec1or of
through the mall until you
H~man Aesourcee.
have Investigated the
University of Rio Grande,
offering.
PO Box 500,
Aio Grande, OH 45674
e·mail: pmasonOrio.edu,
fax 741}245-4909.

Ohoo
' Val'"' Home He--.·
,.,.,
Cll"'
Inc. hiring AN 's. CNA,
CHH A,
pc•
STNA,
~"~·
ompetitive
ages and
Benefits Including health
Insurance and M ileage.
Apply at1480 JaCkSon Pike,
GallipcHis or 2"15 Jactson
Avenue , Point Pleasan1,
(Careers Close To Home)
or phone to• tree 1-866-441Call T""~! 740-446-4367 .
1393.
..,.....,

..

-.I

oo

call - - - - - - - - L,-..:iiNmtucno-ii;iliiiiltNO..,.J
c

01;,;1,;,
8
....,.(7:;,40,;;:,;)3;;18;.;,

1~ $~0~00 ~r hou~·~t~a~~

Office Coor&lt;lna1or posftlon Employer.~
ava ilable
immediately.
w..dwl needed for

ot...wey ......................................................040

Hippy Ado ....................................................050
Hoy

-~lor
EngiMir.

Mull h i V I I I - 2

I \ ll'l tn \ II ' '
'

"
high 18\181of enthuaiasm
-·
and

Kent ""
CAI.L l'OIIo\YI
t-e77 411111247

YOUNG FARM FAMILY
WITH f4YR S GRAZING
EXPERIENCE wanting to
bu y 150+ acres of open
grourid to continue a grazing
livestocit; operat1on, prefer·
ably In the athens/meigs co.
area. House &amp; buildings not
necessary. E.:cellent 1inancialloperali onal relerences
available. Plea s contact Bill
Krusllng t740)634·2732.

125 ·00 per·diy.

local company offering "NO
DOWN PAYMENT" pro·
grams for you to buy your
home in~tead of r~ntlng.
• 100% financing
* Less than perfect credit
accepted
• Payment could be the
same as rent.
Mortgage
Locators.
(740 }367

L,.______..

ln~de Sale. Dec. 1 and 2. ~~
Guns, tools; Loogababerger,
10,2006 by NEA , Inc.
,l
www.comlcu:om
Fenton, Lionel Train , H-0 "--'-...:..........:.-----"---------1
Trains . large 3 · box high tool
chest filed wit~ craHsman 111
u - "m..~ 1111
u - ~,.,
tools.
34009 Flatwood
n.r.u-nANnD 1
7
4
'
Road Corner of Route ·
miles East of Pomeroy. CASE MANAGER needed In IMAC. Temporary positions.
loads of toys and misc.
Mason COUnty, West Virginia Sensitive
situation
tor
to provide case manage- unarmed security officers.
Multi Family Sale. Hartford
men! services, iniEike and 84 /hour
work-week.
Community
Bu ildin g.
$9S4Jperassessment, develop action Approximately
Saturday, Dec. 2nd, 9:00 · ? plans, classroom Instruction week. Apply with lmac on
and workshops, follow·up Thi.Jr.
y
SALEand data entry. Previous
Nov. 30, from 9-5 at Bossard
case management experlUbrary, Gallipolis, Oti In the
erice and a BA required in Switzer Conferences Room.
Rummage Sale
Human Services or related Must ha·..... 8 va'lld dn've's
•
Southside Comm . Center
It a Hcense' and
fie
ld.
Please
subm
proof of insur·
8·1 , Sat. $5.00 set·up ,
resume with cover letter and ance and pass drug Test
call304·676·6349 or email salary requirements to
bmgnterossg·Crgss!earn- r;;;:=;==:::;:=::;=:;!
~·
Equol l.ocol monulocturlng
Opportunity/Program
compony Ilea • pooiAwciliary Aids and Services
tlon available for
are available upon request.
I n d u 1 t r I 1 I
Voice and T.V:Y. 1-8oo-639·
Ma I nt • n I n c e .
cr~n
Appllcorit mull poo·

0
'"--•nur-•"_,~_,.~_..

Aulattd Living In my
Home owtlng 11

Clnul'Eult1u.v 11 .5Ba , furnished j(itchen,
rentty enrolled students on a •
CARE
OR, LA, De n, FP, out-build·
wnety of topics to encoor·
ing. $118 ,000 (740)446·
age retention. Appl icants
4639.
·
must possess excenant ver· Overnight whh e!derty Lad';.

~o

4"-

Attention!

•

Will take care of the Elderly
in thei r home, have 11 years
contacting applications to experience call t""4)675
\}OJ
•
Beautiful Home on Cedar St. $49,179.
encourage application for 32&amp;4
Wrap-around porch. 3BR. 2750

D

L,~-------'· 1.1f1.i~i-li'~·':;_,',!!lll-~-&lt;-:-~"-~~V]i;~
fi.\'. i II ' I I

cats to good home.

-------Really Cute mixed breed
pups, already wormed, will
hold till Christmas (304)882·
3324

only hot
anted ada meetkl
OEIIIndordo.

r

The University ol Rio
Grande Is taking appllca·
lions for regular part·tlme
Communication Telephone
Associates . The primary
functlon Is to offer ·meritbased
scholarships
to
prospecttve students for the
University of 'Aio Grande
Community College by
worklng 88 a taam of tale·
marketers , making preaward scholarship offers,

1rfo. Er)(El~C!~I..Jl.: My ~~C.~r.

VERY LARG E REWARD.
Lost: Female Aottweller on
giveaway. Call (740}367 .. Johnson Ridge Road, Goes
7291 ·
by the name HBr1ftY. If found
F
ho
P "'A please call (n0)441·9035
ree to good me u~ at or (740)794·0979
Terrier miK, 7 weeks old. Call
· ~
2

6

I~.,•_HEu&gt;-·w·ANIID-•I . ,l==w:T~::no::::lr'~.,.-•ro•"R.~
......It.._M_~.~.s.~•U\•IES•

Of ce..JR!:I6_ 1 tiNJe A
C.ool&gt; ·1'6A&gt; eN ..... WA!&lt;IN4 y..,
t.l "'(~! !11\ljai&gt;I.E -'f "it+E Ni411T,
1

~---2 male half bred Hounds to

11

11 6

KIT &amp; CARLYLE

Outdoor

Eotot

Bu•ln- O.y• Prior To
Publlc:.tlon
Sunday Dl•play: 1:00
Thureday for Sunday•

• All ads muat be prepeld'

*POLICIES*
OhtoV.IIoy
Publlohlng rHI&lt;Vel
tho right to odlt,
rejtct or cancel ony
od otony limo.
Errora Muet 8
oponod on the ltro
of publlclllon on
ho Trlbunt-SOfltlnol
oototor
will

All .DI•plav: 12 Noon 2

Sund•y In-ColUmn : 1:00 p.m .

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

Now you can have borders and graphics
~
addedtoyourclasslfledads
(.~
.m
Borders $3.00/per ad
l!iill
Graphics 50¢ for small
S1.00 for large

Display Ads

Dally til-Column: 1:00 p.m.
Monday-Pr~day for lneertlon
In Next Day•s Paper ·
·

Monday thru Friday

(304) .675-1333

Oead'tir~ ·

Word Ads

copto

I

."··'i

Gallla

696·!182.

Super Bowl victory .in only .
his second NFL season.
This season, he looks ·
more like Bubby Brister
during the•late 1980s, forced
to run for his life on several
plays a. se!jes as his line is
unable to handle the nonstop
blitzing that opponents are
throwing at them.
"He got banged up out
there pretty good," coach
Bill Cowher said after
Sunday's game.
With the Steelers' season
effectively over - they are
4-7 and well out of playoff
contention - they must be
wondering whether they are
taking a few seasons off
their QB's future by letting
him get bounced around
every week.
Still, Cowher saw no reason to pull Roethlisberger in
Baltimore, even though
Ravens QB Steve McN~ir
sat out most of the fourth
·quarter to avoid any unnecessary injury.
"Ben wanted to be out
there," Cowher said. "It's
one of those situations
where you don't want to not ,
be out there with the rest of
your teammates who are out
there fighting and battling.
There's a lot to be·said about
that." .
However, no quarterback
can make plays when he is
being tossed on his backside.
Roethli sberger (36 sacks)
and backup Charlie Batch
(3) have been sacked 39
times, the fourth highest
total in the NFL. By comparison ,
the
Steelers'
defense is tied for sixth with
29 sacks,, or I 0 fewer times
than their own QB s have
been dropped.
Steelers guard Alan
Faneca and . center Jeff
Hartings are Pro Bowl regulars, yet even they are struggling as opponents often
send more blitzers than the
Steelers have blockers to
defend them .
"Teams watch film and
that's the way to get things
done, to bring the house ,"
Roethlisberger ;aid.

~

CLASSIFIED

Crennel believes· he has Thursday night game at
control of the team and is Pittsburgh.
convinced he can keep the
"I don't think these 10
Browns from splintering days will save Romeo's job.
over the next five weeks. · I don't think his job, to be
"You'll see this team stay · honest, is in danger,"
together," Crennel vowed. Edwards said. "There's a lot
"This team will fight, · this of talk right now. There's a
team will compet,;..as we go lot of media hype. But in
forward . Part of my task is to. actuality, I don't think
make sure we do that." ·
Romeo is going anywhere
He also believes he still and I don't think he needs tQ
has the backing of Lerner go anywhere."
and general manager Phil
Maybe Edwards should
Savage.
stay put, too. On Wednesday;
"If I didn't have the sup- Crennel said he was botltP?~· I probably woul~n 't be ered by Edwards' decision to
slltmg up here talkmg to fly by helicopter to th~
you," Crenpel t~l~ repo~~rs recent Michigan-Ohio .State
at the team s trammg facthty game in Columbus Without
Wednesday. '.'I'm assuming permission. The trip made
that I have the s~pport. U~til Edwards, who played for the
I know otherwtse, or I m Wolverines late for a meettold otherwise. I feel like I ing that nigbt.
have support."
.
Lerner hasn't lost hope in .
.If .C~nnel, who srud any the Browns or CrenneL
dtsciphne of Edwards would While his team has again
be handled privately, doesn't · been plagued by costly ·
hold the t~am together, . the injuries and quarterback
Browns wtll be forced tn~o Charlie Frye has been batted
another wmter of dramat~c around like a pinata, the
change. , C~ennel
IS · Browns have shown some
Clevel~nd s. third coach encouraging. signs
of
and third w!lh no NFL head
wth. That is growth for
coachmg expenence - gro
'
since 1999. A fourth coach them.
.
in eight years would not be a
Other tha": '':Yo I&lt;;JPSided
sign of progress.
losses to · Cmcm!l~li, they
Linebacker
Willie hav~ been compellttve every
McGinest led a chorus of Sunday. Just a week earher,
support Wednesday from the the Browns . led the
Browns locker room for Pittsburgh Steelers for.3 1/2
Crennel known by his ini- quarters before collapsmg.
tials, RAC.
However, in the at:termath
"For RAC to be ridiculed of the debacle agrun~t t~e
or prosecuted for what went Bengals, Lerner found il dtfon and what's going on, 1 f!cult to feel much saus;acthink is ridiculous " said · twn from a could ve,
.
McGjnest, who played under sh~uld've loss.
Crennel in New England.
What I saw wtth the
"The man's a decorated gen- Stee.lers game was ~ very
er;li in this game."
motivated,
P!\SStonate
Edwards also backed his Cleveland Browns that
coach, saying the players , wanted to win and played to
should take the blame for the win," he said. "But .I don't
last two weeks. He doesn't know that I would be prebelieve Crennel's future pared to elevate it to a posihangs in the balance as the tive. Winning would have
Browns face Kansas City on been positive, but we're not
Sunday, then play a there yet."

Bv

The Daily Sentinel •·Page 85

·ijf;rtbune - Sentinel - l\e

getting weekly
puml)leling.

JoE KAY

www.mydallysentlnel;com

.

Ravens can be first team into playoffs Steelers' Big Ben
BY

•

'

3BR homo· SR 554, Bidwell·

L,.-----~.,l

$575/mo· sec. dep. referoncos, oil elec. (740)446·

14x70 Clayton. 3 ·bedr m, ~3644.:...._._ _ _ _ __
1 bath, stove. refrigerator.
3BR, 2 bath home- Plants
new carpet, excellent condi·
SubDiv, $850/mo plus tieC.
tion . (740 )446-8955.
deposit.
NO
PETS
-----~-- 17401 • 46 ."""
198,
14x60
Nashua .:..._-'------~"'
Governor
2
bedroom,
Attenton
1 1
Mobile Home S3,800 call L
I
H
"NO
oca company o ermg
(304)882·2319 or (304)593· DOWN PAYMENT" pro2115
grams tor you to buy )'01.11
--~----home instead ot renting .
2003 16.:80. Fleetwood . • 100otoflnancmg
38R, 2BA, VInyl s1d1ng. shm· • Less than perfect credit
nle roof. central BIT lncluoed.
vo
acceptec
ntce Home. Call for pr~c,ng • Payment could be the
Daytime
(740) 388·0000. same as rent
Evening
{740) 388-8017
Locators
Mortgage
Cell (740)645-6150 6, 14 &amp; 1740) 367·0000
16 w1de's to choose tram.
For Re nt· 2 bedroom hou~.
.,&amp; Ooublew1de $400. a month. 17401992$37,790 Mtdwes1 (740)826· :..690:.::..9_ _ _ _ __

~

IIIJ .,.

..

2750.

For Rent· Beaut1lul Dutch
,
Colonial
House.
Pt.
. , . poe-owned
• .,
sl wide Pleasant. 7 rooms 2 full
Owne 1 ftnancmg
Scott baths st ove. retngerator.
(740)829·2750
torced-alf turnace a!T·cond•·
- - - - - - - - 11oned
$650 fmonth cell
Great used 38R nome only
t30 4)675·23t9
$9.995 W1H help w1tl' del1v·
ery. ~a ll {740) 385 -7671
House tor Rent 2br. $275 a
month, Deposit Refe rences
New 14x70, 3 Bedroom 2 No Pets (304 )675·467 4
Bath set up between Athens
and Pomeroy. Readr for Pratty 3BR House fof. Rem
1mmecM.te occupancy Only Cedar Str Central Heat/au,
S199 67 per month Call FR S69S.Ubl ond dep. Call
(7401446·4639.
(7 40)365-4367

'

�Thursday, November 30, 2006

2 bedroom Apt. a\18Uable In
Syracuse. $200.00 deposit
$350.00 per month rent
Rent includes water, sewer,
trash. · No pets. Sufficient
1
; :._(7_40_:1_44_6_·366--7_
. - - - income needed to qualify.
740-378·61
' Small one bedroom house In
: Middleport.
References 2 bedroom apt. Stove,
refrig .,
washer/dryer
required. 304-576·2000.
hookup, water pilid, close to
Holzer on Centenary Road.

3620

1,

(304)773-5218.

.Phillip
Alder

Carmichael

' ' l 'tll, t '1111'\

•RENTALS •SALES
•SERVICE •FREE DELIVERY
•MONTHLY OXYGEN VISITS

No pets. (740)446·9442.

(740)441 ·0 117.

Nonb

MONTY

Eul

: !~ 21o 765 3 , :

Bedroom and

Bedroom

Mobile

' (140)368·9905

Hill's Self
Storage

Mobile Home Lot in Johns()n
Mobile Hom e Park In
• Gal lipolis,
OH . Phone

·29670 Bashan Road

(740)446-2003 or (7401446; .:.'40::.::9·_ _ _ _ __

·

Racine. Ohio
45771
740·949-2217

: Newly remodel ed 1 4:~~70
280, 2 bath mobile home
: $425 monttl + deposit. Also
tor sale a 30rt Nomad
, camper, sleeps 10, great
• conditi 9n. $4.200. Gait

YOUNG'S

CARPENTER
SERVICE
Room Addition• I
Remodeling
NewGaragea
·el~tetrical 6 Plumbing
Rooting 6 Gutters
VInyl Siding &amp; Painting
Patio and Porch Deckl

3 BR. 2 Ba. from $66,000
2 BR. 1 Ba. $59,800
100% Financing W.A.C.
Licensed Home Builder

JRS

/

OUT TO

It A

NOOSE .I
• •.. '
..,,,

••

992-62 , 5

ii .......

Pon1eroy Ul110
?~ Yc,115 LOC.ll [ ~po"'tlf'nr:r

. BARNEY

Hardwood Cablnen And FurnHure

-&gt;UGHAID ·HASTA
STA"V AFTER
SCHOOL AN' DO

www.tlml&gt;&lt;!rcftelwlblnetry.COJII

Pomeroy. $365.00 . per
· month. Call (740)385-9948.

WHEN "VO'RE DONE "YELLIN',
I'LL BE OUTSIDE
PI.AYIN'

HOMEWORK !I

APAKThiENTS

FORRENr

BALL II

Locally
Maid .

~
Affordable

Dependable

West Shade Barber Shop

Fully Insured

Owned &amp; opcrmed ~y

Chris.Parker
17 yrs. experience.
First Barber Shop on

Help Wanted

Help Wanted

Texas Road oiT Route 1
740-985·3lil6

JET

·· II- llonded
Daily, Weekly, or
Monlhly Plans
Available

New Homes· Decks· Roc1fin«ll
Siding - Foundations
Sidewalks
Lowest .Prices
No Job Too Sinal/
1·740-698-0890

:THE BORN LOSER
I'IIE LO~T F\F~ r ~~~ ! t:JOE.:; IAAI ~
POU~t&gt;:&gt;!
AAVE:. TO /1'10\~\lE.
NE.W CI.O\~\NC.

ri.L'

r t-10, &amp;.IT lT DOE:.S t&lt;\E:.AA t'LL _,
N:.TUI&gt;J..L'{ F\1 \~

mt: OLt&gt; ~rzt~
I

51 I£~ F~:{OU~
(,If\:)? r-- ____ ....,

1-740-992-6196

.®

ROBERT .
BISSEll
CIISTBimll

800·537·9526.

UNIT CLERK

&amp;
NURSING ASSISTANTS

NEW AND USED STEEL
Steel Beams. Pipe Rebar
For
Concrete,
Angle,
Channel, Flat Bar, Steel
Grating
For
Drains,
Dnveways &amp; Walkways. L&amp;L
, Scrap Metals Open Monday,
Tuesdav. Wednesday &amp;
Friday, Sam-4:30pm. Closed
Thursday, Saturday
&amp;

Pleasant Valley Hospital is currently
seeking a part -time unit secretary in the
medical/surgical department Applicant
must have excellent customer relations Sunday. (740)446-7300
skills. Medical terminology and computer
Wolfe 24 bulb Tanning Bed
skills are preferred. ·
$900, VInyl Tonneau Cover
Also accepting applications for full time 96-06 short boo Ford. $275,
Nursing Assistants. Previous nursing Chrome Brush Guard 98-03
assistance experience preferred. Primarily ·Ford $125 (740) 256-6244
~enings and midnight shifts.
Announc"ments
Holidays , health
insurance,
single/family plan, dental plari, life
insurance, vacation, long term disability
and retirement.
·
Send resumes to:
Pleasant Valley Hospital
c/o Human Resources
· 2520 Valley Drive
Point Pleasant, WV 25550
Colonial Park
Or fax:
300 Mulberry Ave.
304-675-6975
Or apply online at:
Pomeroy, OH
www.pvalley.org
45769

Applications
for waiting
list being
accepted!

AA/EOE

·

Rr'll\§r-;...~TR:-UCJCS
___....,

New John O.ere Compacts
FOR SAIJ:
and 5000 series Utility trac· '--...illiliiii--,.J
tors 00% Fixed for 36 2000 Dodge Dako1a Club
mon~s through John ~eere Gab Sport, Au1omatic, AC,
Cred1l.
Garm1chael Tilt, Cruise, CD, New Tifes,

Equipment (740)446-2412

r

LMsroa&lt;
·

I

86K, $5200. (7401379·2746
2004 F250 Super Crew
diesel, excellent condition,
11,000
actual
miles,
Warranted . Call (740)446·

1 older Reg. 01r horse stud.
Very calm, good bloodline. 1 4134 or (740)709·1304.
lg gentle male. Both broke to

nde. 17401256·6690.

Horse Boarding, 12x12
740·992·6i831 Stalls. Indoor arana, full
care, $375/mo. (740)645·
~!!...----~~ - 4334.

Ji

0052

r

Fe:~~ .

~~---liililiiiilai_.l
2002 Jeep Liberty 4x4
25.000 miles. CO/cassette
player $8,950 . (740)256·

Advertise
io this-·
space
for

54 per
month

5

94.000 miles. 740·965.361o
$4000 or best offer.
2001 GMC Corwerslon Van,
k&gt;adoo. good oond't $5900
OBO Phona 740-992·0309.

Childbirth Preparation
Classes
Sunday, December 3
· 2:00 pm • 6:00pm .
Holzer Medical Center
Education &amp; Conference
Center

Call 446-5030
to register
. BINGO

Pomeroy,

Amencan Legion Middleport

December 2

PUBLIC NOTICE
NOTICE: Is herebr
given that on Saturday,
December 2, 2006 at
10:00 a.mc, a public
sale will be held 11 21 t
Second
St.,
W
Pomeroy, Ohio. Tho
Farmera Bank and
Savings Company Ia
selling for cosh In
hand or certHied check
the following collateral:
2006
Chevrolet
c · olorado
1GCCS146268t45563
2001 Ford Eacort ZX2
3FAFP11391R107186
The Farmers Bank and
Savings
Company,

6:30 pm

All paper packs you can play for
$25.00
Guara~teed S99.00 a game
Guaranteed $500.00
Coverall cou ld be higher
depending on crowd
Early Bird starts at 5:30 pm
Also playing Bingo
Tuesda N1 hts at 6:30 pm

. Ohio,

reserves the right to
bid at this sale, and to
withdraw the above
collateral prior to ule.
Further, The Farmers
Bank and Savings
Company reserves the
right to reject any or oil
bids submitlad.
The above deacrlbed
collateral will be sold

"as is-Where is", with
no
ea:pressed
or
Implied
worranty
given. For further
information, or for an
appointment
to

JONES'

Tree Service
Top • Removal · Trim
• Stump Grinding
Bucket TnJCk

e4tJ:ws I

lnapect cottaterat, prior
to sale daie conlltct
Cyndle Ken or Randy
at 74()-992·2136. (111 2b01 Yamaha Wolverine
4x4, looks cind runs good.
29, 30, (12) 1.

r

'(OO KNOW, A REGULAR
S'IRAIGIIT AIIEAP, ~ IN TilE
DIRT, IN 'fOUR FACE, ROCK 'EM,
SOCK 'EM, AN'I'Til1116 60£5,6000
~SUIONEO FOOTBALl. 6AME!

J.l~. CJ.IUCK, HOW A80UT

A FOOTBAU. 6AME

70 Pine Street • Gallipolis
446-0007

"KIIIa &amp;

Allie"

Engine verb

Frtnce

34 HoH-sllr

moybe

54 T.,k ·

movie

·

.. 37 P11ture

Undeneadlng along sutt against a Sllllll
slam when ~ding a alde-sull void Is a
well-known ploy. You hope panner con
win the trick and glvo you a ruff. But not
when you have an ecs. How can panno•
aloo havo an aca? Orttman's thought·
lesa lead had 1alographoo that the clUbS
were 5.0. How did East defend 10 per·
suade South to go down?
By playing lte hoan two under dummy's
eight at trick onel
Declarer dlacarded his diamonds on the
hean eight and ace, drew trumps enclng
on the board, and .caned !of the club
jack, bul Chlhonlc cove•ed with the
queen, and South had to lose two club
tricks for doWn·one. ·
If declarer throws a club at trick one,
draws trumps ending in the dummy,_
plays a club to his 10, and continues wilh
the diamond king, he must make the

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Clmpoe
ColoidtyQ(INr-n.-m, _ __,.. .. _

""'lltllrniWo,;._.,....,._
Todly's clus: Eeqvals B

"UIPDT PIIKP VLFGDYC FL FGW
ZWMPLY: DF DP II SD. YR LB. THPWJK
PFZITFIZWR YLYPWYPW."- IIYFGLYK
EtZ_CWPP
PREVIOUS SOLUTION - 'One must laugh belore one is happy, or one may
die without ever laughing al Bll.'- Jaan de La Bruyera
-

':~~~, S@'\\4UM.-~£2fs·

AstroGraph

WOlD
Ullf

~~~~~· .., ClAY I . rOILlN - - - - - ' -

'

lttMnlngo 1ottofl of lilt
lout KIGmbled words bt-

. law 10 form four

"bw•" I c:

s~

words.

HCIJkCN

~3-0ec.

21) -

AQUARIUS (Jon. 20·Fob. 19) -l.ot your
friends see that you know exactly where
you stand on pertinent maners, and your

behallior will eam the reapect of your
peers . Make your words
ity and truth .

9 P«tNI
f.:UMffP.fO Hilt!&gt; 11·1
TH(51

mg with aincer·

$0t:f~!ES

PISCES (Feb. 20-f,1arch 201 - Wyou go
shopping for a specific item and can't

~

Cornerstone
@1 '·;: 6! Construction

can $tford. Keep searching until you can
spot a sate.
·
ARIES (M.sreh 21-April 19) - Should
you get inwtved in some kind of socill
activity, you're likety to setect one that Is
toned down a bit - somewhere away
frtm the madding crowds and only with a
~ pats involved .

ReAidential • Commerdal • General Contracting
Pai nting • Dours • Winduws • Decks
• Sidi ng • Roofing • Room Additions • Remodeling
WV 031H2
• Plumbing • Electrical no-367-GS.U
OH 38244
• Accoustic Ceiling
740-339-3412

SUNSHINE CLUB

always one who Is methodtcal In procedures as well as being conaoientlous
about your responsibilities . Tilere isn't

AIW You RUdy For TP!t Next Power Oullqe?

fuse your priorities

ARLO &amp; JANIS

now.

GEMINI (May 21-June 20) -If you'd like
to accomplish a lot. it'll behoow you to
associate with your more ambitious
friends. Companions you select will h....
a strong inriuence on the out~ of

Free Eetimatea ·

Generac RV Generators
Warran Sales &amp; Service
Generac Guardian
_ J\'IIIilllY_St!Yice Available_·~--''---l
Big Bend Generators
740·416-5494, Pomeroy, OH
1-304-773-5390, Mason, WV
Formerly Terry's Engines

events.

GARFIELD
. !SI6H ... l"f'5 At...MOST
Of YEA~ A6AIN

THAT 'I"IME:

CANCER (June 21-Juty 22) ...J.... You, bet·
tar than most, possess a unique attribute
for making much from meager cin::umstances. You'll find lhat, from the crumbs
others leave behind, you will be able to
bake a tullloat.
l EO (July 23-Aug. 22) - The main reason why you will be able to make som,_

I

I

SOON THE: 6NOW

th ing quite difficult look so eaay is
because you'll have some valuable past
experience upon which to d(aw.

AND THE! CHRI5TMA6

WIU.. BE FALUNG-...

WIU.. 8E RI51Nti&lt;

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) - There is a
strong possibility you will receive some-

•i

thing that has been long overdue you. It'll

i

0

I

•
•

I

.GRIZZWELLS
1\l\S l'!i -nli. ~ C~~y .1-VNit
!'VE~5EEI&lt;

pertairl to a benerit
ever geffing.

you had given up on

LIBRA
(Sept.
23-0ct
23)
Observations you make regarding the
true motives of someone will be remark·
ably astute. But it might be wlae to keep
what yoo surmise to yournlf, eo you can
use it wisely wtlen nteded.
SCORP IO (Oct. 24-NcN. 22 ) Condltiona portolnlng to oomolhlrig vory
imponant to you oontinue to hnd In your
favor. Kiep mov~'ng on the ume path
becaul8 It wMI take you to where you

want to go.

AU. Q\llti oN THt

.·r •

I

SCI!AfMITS ANSWERS
Killen- font1n- Exude -l•alate- OON'l MAKE
I •u dislppoinled dto1 ihuale of our bome.did not go
lhnlup. "Somclimos," my_realtor ~led, '1hc best
dealsi!C lite 011C$ )'1111 DON'T MAKE

much chance you'll be neglectful or con-

Briggs &amp; Striii!On Automatic Standby Generators
10.12 &amp; 15KW
Sales &amp; Warranty Service

t

IIIIII

find what you're looking for at the right
prioe, don't settie and pay mora lhan you

MARY KAY

Say ir
in fr'h.e
C(assi_fieds!

g::,

51
52 Meyers 01

but only it all of 1M family members pul
together in helping to keep "the .house·
hold budget intaCt. Exception&amp; will cause
the cookie ja r to crack.

PEANUTS

Still has original tires on it

L&amp;R
Variety &amp;
Store

In TtJIIIIII
48 TICIIou_e
41 Flauret out
50 Wlildlng

32 Summer" In 53 Little

12 ~.
18 Novtlltt

47

Shouk:l you find yourself In the position of
exercising authority over peopte, be cognizant of the fraHUes of others. It is OK to
·use a firm hand, but don't go so tar as to
use.a ctenched fist.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)- A del·
icate financial condition is manageable,

15 Ye1r1 BfiW• A Str1tton WlrriAtJ S.rvk:e Experience

- - - - - - - '!'lith good tread, Asking
$2900. Phone (7401256·
Public Notice
- - - - - - - 1253
You'll be pleased lo
Request lor bidders:
' ' I&lt;\ It I '
know Mary Kay offers
Sealad bids will be
HoME
products everyone will
recelvad at the office iO
Openlfl{l
of the Mayor ol
IMPRoVEMENTS
love. From the latest
/Mc$mbtlr 1, 200tll
Ruttond, P.O. Box 420,
looks to advanced
Rutland, Ohio 45775
BASEMENT
We buy, tell, &amp;. trade
skin care.
for purchase 01 a 1968
WATERPROOFING
New &amp; Used Items! .
Ask
me
about our
army dump truck wnh Unconditional lifetime guarLots oleverythlngl
wench, offerad as Ia. antee. Local references !urexciting product line
STOP IN AND
And sealed bids will be nished. Established '1975.
today'
recelvad at the ume Call 24 Hrs. (UO) 446·
Juantta Grueser
address tor pun:haie 0870, Rogers Basement
740-949-3027
of a t989 Army cargo Waterproofing
hauler, o - u Ia.
Interested bidders can
Contact the VIllage of ,
Rutland at 740-742·
(jot Sornethln8
2t21 for further lnfor·
malion on the vehicles
to 5a1f t"o that"
to be sold. Bids will be
Syecia[ Someone?
accepted until Friday,
December 15, 2006 at 4
pm. Bids wltl be
openad on Wadnesdor.
December 20 at 5 pm
at the Rutland Civic
Center. The village
reserves the right to
reject anr and all bids.
(I 1) 27, 30, (12) 4, 7

1111n

1t Blurbl

:ttl Hurrlc8ne

TAURUS (April 20-May 20) - You are

1998
Ford
Wlndstar
Nortt,wood. Great condition

30 --Magnan

w-.

45 Nllplckl

be s!eady, i1 doean't nMd to tHt speedy.

1·740-949-2734

1618.

r

uuuge!

--

IIUIIUm

=-ole!

barefoot

exec~

11 Kon-TIId

~

Berety
tcroplng by
Dwelling

own talent.

SAGITIARIUS (Nov.

&amp; MEDICAL EQUIPMENT

w• m.U •utnmlll'

.-

22 Ttrzan't
peJa
23 In 1 hosttle
1111n111t'
24 SUbwly,...
25 1300 hours

entrMce
Plfklng-

stances. Although your progress should

(Jam1ly_ .......)..:"l..·t"ij-3•:....

Skinned • Cut
Wrapped

;:r

8 =~lng
·
lne
10 lllgiZine

35 Fl-oco

Fridly, Dec. 1, 2001
•• lhrnlco Ooot
In the year ahead, you'll have staying
power with endeavora or enterpr-. that
could lead to more abulldanl circum-

• Home Oxygen
• Portable Oxygen
• Ho~Uefill System
• Helios System

MAPLE
WOOD LAI(.E

a

,.~c.,.

In lhs real world, computers excel et
games In which all the Information Is
known , like chess and backgammon. But
1hey are still weak at bndge- except lor
Ch1honlc (pronounced thah-nlk), the fie·
lional brsincMd ol Danny Kleinman and
Nick Straguzzi .
Many of their stories about this supo!til·
ious e&lt;tmputer lhat 1alks and can play
expen·level bndge hava been publlahed
in Tho Bndge Wond magazine. A number ol those and some new onea have
been put Into 'The Principle of
Restncted Talenr (Master Point Presa) .
In this deal, Chthonlc was 81tting East,
partnoring his 'boos." Or. Frederfd&lt; 0 .
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Page B8 • The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, November 30, 200~

www.mydailysentinel.com

The Ravens still flying a little low Rutgers players
Bv DAVE GOLDBERG
ASSOCIATED PRESS

It's not as if the
Baltimore Ravens are
ignored. But they're not
exactly high profile despite
a five-game winning streak
that will allow them to
clinch the AFC South title
if they win in Cincinnati
Thursday night.
That's . another of those
NFL Network games that a
lot of people will miss ·
because the NFL arid some
' major cable systems continue to argue over programming tiers and the arcanities of the TV world.
One thing is certain in
this . season of rampant
mediocrity: The · Ravens
belong in the NFL's top tier.
Nonetheless, the Bengals
are favored by three points
based on the home field and
the fact they seem to have
turned things around after
losing five of six in midseason. Since then, they've
won two road games - in
New Orleans (relatively
impressive) and Cleveland
(ho hum.) Still, they trail
the Ravens by three games
and lost in Baltimore, so a
loss here and that's it four games .out with four
games to go and a tiebreaker against them.
The Bengals looked surprisingly like the Ravens on
Sunday, beating the Browns
30-0 in Cleveland, ·their
first shutout in 17 years.
"We didn't do anything

special," Cincinnati linehacker Landon Johnson
said. "We just played as a
team."
Even with Steve McNair
at quarterback, Baltimore
tends to be cautious on
offense, allowing a defense
that had nine sacks against
the Steelers last week to get
turnovers and field posi-

tion. Led by Bart Scott as
much as Ray Lewis and Ed
Reed, it's beginning to play
as it did in 2000, the season
the Ravens won the Super
Bowl.
The Bengals imploded
during that 26-20 loss in
Baltimore, a game in which
the offense continually
demonstrated its frustra-

tion, notably a helmetthrowing tantrum by T.J.
Houshmandzadeh.
Cincinnati is has more at
stake ~ the BengaJs are
.,d.
d h
h .
c asmg a. wt . car ' .t .e
. ~avens wtll wm the dtVIsto~ regardless. On that
baSIS ...
BENGALS, 17-13

staying low key

The Scarlet Knights will
clinch their first Big East tide
and the league's automatic
PISCATAWAY, N.J .. - BCS bowl bid with a win. A
Judging by many of their loss · combined with a
public statements this week, Louisville
win
against
Rutgers' players mi~ht as
Connecticut
would
send
well be preparing tor an
early season non-conference Louisville to a BCS bowl and
game instead of tbe biggest drop Rutgers io thini in the conference behind West Vuginia.
NFL Weak 13: The Ravens look to lock division title
game of their lives. ·
That would likely send the
Forget luring any of them
The Ravens'can clinch their second AFC North tnle In the lranchiSII's 11·year history,Thursday night K
into · talking about tbe Scarlet Knights to the Texas
they can defeat the Bengals at Paul Brown Stadium.
prospect of ringing out the Bowl and West Virginia to the
WEEK 131i1ATCIIUP8
SIOA'IIJNE
year in Miami or New Sun Bowl. If Rutgers and
Thu-y Balllmore A. . •
Ci~ hes more a1stake- 111e aengats are chUing awild cam. the
Orleans. It's as ·if coach Greg Louisville both lose and create
at C~nnall W
Ra.en&amp; w111 wit\ the division regardtesa .. aeng-. 17-13
_•
Schiano has forbidden even a three-way tie, the higher· Dallas ~ A .GiantS are at alo~ point. Cowboys at a high point. But the NFC Is.too
at N. V. Giants W f/111 bizarre, so ... Glanta, 36-22
.
the words "bowl game" from ranked team in me BCS stand.,
hi111e A •
Jay cUtler Is a raw ioolde, not a guy llf&lt;e 1bny Ramo or Philip. Rivers,
crossing !heir lips .
ings would go the BCS bowl.
at Denver W
lllllo 8at and
,, walehed lor a couple of years. Seehftka, 1&amp;-12 . .
Meanwhile, the stakes
Jackaonvllle &amp;
Lirit. Miami is making its annual ,oo late" charge. The Jagua~ are 1-4 on
couldn't be higher: defeat No. Currently, Louisville (I 0-1) is
at Miami W f/111 the road. Dolphlne, 20.16
.
· 15 West Virginia Saturday and ranked No. 6, Rutgers (I 0-1)
, !ndlanapalle L.Ut .at1 Apolel1tlal diYislon' cllnclter lor the Colts, who beat the ilt&amp;'18 14·13
earn a Bowl Championship is No. 13 and West Vrrginia
arT_,,.._ Wfll1 atllom4o.Colta,14-13
·
I
. .
'
Series bid, most likely to the (9-2) is No. 15.
Mlnnewota ~ .•
Apolen«a.l division clincher for the. Bears, who beat tho Vikings by
The focus on the various
Orange Bowl or Sugar Bowl;
at Chicago W
th""' points on the road. Eas1er lhos time. Beara, 21·2
. :
or lose and probably wind up permutations · doesn'i seem
s./1 Dltgo A. •
Tl18 ~~~~ hll~ some trouble wllh the Raiders. Careful it the
in El Paso for the Sun Bowl or to have made a dent in the
at IIUblo W
weather turns nas1y. CN!rgeq, 2CH7
·
in Houston for the inaugural players' psyches this week. ·
San Franclaco M_ 4'iOii, The 49ers are betler. Not in the Superdome. Saints, 31-16
Texas
Bowl.
"We're just focused on ·
at New OrHno W fll1
The low-key approach has whac's right up ahead, we're not
'IV!plll.y A
•
The Steelers heve SOME pride left. Stiolere, 24-10
trickled down from Schiano looking past anything," defen;t~h'
.
'
through fifth-year seniors
:. Atlanta A
•
Jason Campbell's arrival got a win last weeK because the Redskl.._
like
fullback Brian Leonard sive tackJe Ramel Meekins
at Waolllng!Dn W
finally decided to play defense. Redsklne, 16-13
and then to the rest of !lie said. 'We know what's at stake,
~ CliY A
•
Henn Edwards' lllams usually c~ well. Chlela, 20-10
team. It has been an effective but that's not the driving motiat Clev!etand W
strategy for ~utgers !his 'sea- vation for us. The primary thing
N. V. Jets ~ ~ The Jets Bre a middling team. Like everyone else. Peekers, 23-21
son, notably m the days lead- is doing whatever we can .to
at Green Bay W fll'
. ing up to the Scarlet Knights' prepare to play our best, and
t o.jrolt • . • . The Li011s li.AVE to clean ootthe frtl&lt;lt office. Don't they?
·' .
2S-25 win· over then-No. 3 everything else will fall in line."
at New:Englend
Patrtots,,31·1CI
,.. Louisville
on Nov. 9.
Then there is the money
Houaton A.· .M The Aalders have been competitive since Aaron Brooks relumed.
"I don't think the guys
at'o.tdand W Raldere, 13-12
angle.
The prestige of playbuy
into
this
hype,"
Leonard
· AriltiJna U. Q TheRamscanbeatweakteams.R-.24-13
said this week. "I don't think ing in a BCS bowl notwithat 81. Lqule . . we did for Louisville. It's standing, it will be a big step
Monday
Carolina iiiijl •
Look lor ESPN to use its lengthy booth ~me lor a McNabb·T.O. debate,
financially
for
like when you're watching a do.wn
al Phlladelpllla W
Panthers, 24-20
· .
·
-Oave~•/i.P
big game and you say, 'How Rutgers if it loses Saturday.
All eight Big East schools
are these the best teams in
the country when they're share equally ln total rev~and this and that?' enues from bowl games That's what happens when numbers that reach ·as high
ebration went smoother thaR p r~r.rty damage," Amw.eg city ~ parking, emptied .teams go in with more hype as .$17 million from a BCS
531
trash bms and removed couch- and try to do more than they game like the Orange Bowl
past years.
es
from porches in some neigh- · really have to. That's the - but the conference also
Top-ranked Ohio State
There were about40 arrests
reason we have to stay . rewards its BCS representaadvanced to the Jan. 8 nation- · and dozens of fires set in stu- lx&gt;thoods near camp~.
.
focused
and not think of
a! championship .game with .dent neighborhoods,.but not a · Those meas~s . likely will
tive with an extra $2.4 milits 42-39 victory over then- repeat of the rioting that fol- be repeated leading up to the how big this game is."
While the Louisville game lion for winning the league.
No. 2 Michigan on Nov. 18. lowed Ohto State's 2002 wm national championship game in
That's twice what it gives
was billed as the biggest in
"It's hard to put a price tag on over Michigan en route to the
Glendale,
Ariz.,
aJihough
plans
prevention. You can't do mat. national championship.
.
program history, Saturday's the third-place finisher,
haven't
been
finalized,
univerYou prevented serious injury,
To prepare for the latest
game carries more immedia- while the second-place team
sity
and
police
officials
said.
maybe death, and defirutely matchup of the archrivals, the
gets $1.6 million.
cy for Rutgers.

Bv

DAVID PoRTER
ASSOCIATED PRESS

·Game costs police, fire thousands in OT
COLUMBUS (AP) More than $500,000 was
·spent on police and fire
overtime for the Ohio StateMichigan football game,
according to reports released
this week.
Rick Am\\leg, assistant university police chief, said the
$562,415.65 was well spent
considering the post-game eel-

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