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Page 88 • The Daily Sentinel
www.mydailysentinel.com .
Monday, October 15. 2007
Putin postpones trip to
Tehran until Tuesday
amid warnings of
assassination plot, A2
Another new No.1 atop the AP poll
AP photo
Kentucky football.players Rafael Little (22) and Johnny Williams Ieiwe the field after upsetting No. 1-ranked LSU, 43-37 , in Lexington, Ky., on Saturday.
Kentucky shocks LSU 43..37 in 30T
LEXINGTON , Kv. (AP) was be<iten during the regu- teams played in Lexington.
- Kentucky topped · them lar season was . Dec. 6, Only that time, it was a
all by toppling No. I LSU. 2003. when Kansas State fa lse alarm because LSU's
Andre Woodson and the beat Oklahoma 35-7 for the Devery Henderson scored
Wildcats became the. latest Bi g 12 title.
on a 75-yard tipped pass as
team to shake up the nationThe last No. I team to time expired in what is still
a[ title race. and the first in lose in . overtime
was known in Iraton Rouge as
nearly four years to take Mia1ni, beaten by Ohio the "Bluegrass Miracle."
dDwn the top-ranked team State in the 2003 Fie sta
Early on Saturday, it didil:l' the regular season, beat- Bowl.
n't seem like this game was
\ng the Tigers 43-37 in
Kentucky took its turn heading to a miracle finish.
~iple overt.inie Saturday.
this time, led by a Heisman It didn't seem like the
• Woodson found Steve Trophy contender at quar- Tigers would need one.
Jilhnson wide open in the terback.
,
But start ing with a minute
end ZOile for a 7-yard score
Woodson wasn't sharp left in the third quarter,
in the third extra period. early but completed 21 of Kentucky scored 13 straight
The 2-point conversion , 38 passes for 250 yards, points to tie it at 27. Both
required after two over- throwi ng for three TDs and teams sc·o red rushing TDs
times. failed but it didn't running for ano ther. He in the first OT and field
.matter.
largely had to carry the load goals in the second.
With a chance to win it, wit h top rusher Rafae l
Woodson, who earlier this
LSU (6- 1, 3- 1 SEC) cou ld- Little sidelined with a season broke Trent Dilfer's
major college record of 271
n't get a first down on four bruised thigh .
straight. runn ing plays.
On the winnin g TO, consecutive passes without
Charles Scott was .stopped a Johnson was wide open an interception, had two
yard short on fourth-and-2 becau;e defender Jonathan picked off Saturday.
11nd No. 17 Kentucky (6-1, Ze non tripped and fe ll.
The Wildcats took an
'2- 1) had it's first victorv Woodson double -pumped early 7-0 lead after
ever a No. I team · s ine~ before firing a strike.
Woodson 's tipped, wobbly
I 964, when it
beat
"Whenever it start s to pass was grabbed in the end
Mississippi.
look dark , that's when they zone by T.C. Drake.
' "It proved we're a team dig down and find someThe Tigers didn't wait
ihat obviously earns " lot thing ex tra," Kentucky long to answer. Two long
illore · respect
now," coach Ri ch Brooks said.
runs - 27 yards from
Woodson said in the middle
LSU became No. I two Trindon Holliday and 55
ol the on-field celebration. weeks ago for the first time yards from Scolt - set up .
"We've come a long way since 1959. In its first game Scott's first TO, a !-yard
. from being a doormat in the as the top team, the Tigers plunge , to tie the game at 7.
SEC to competing with the esca9.ed wi.th a 28-24 win The Tigers tacked on anothbest teams in the SEC aqd over Florida last week when er TO by Scott, from 13
.getting some wins."
· Jacob Hester scored on a 2- yards out, late in the. first
No
highl
y
ranked
team
yard run with less than a half.
•
seems safe in a season of minute left..
Kentucky closed the
surprises. It started with
Thi s week, LSU couldn't deficit to 17- 14 at halftime
Appalachian State knock in g escape and it looks like the when Woodson found Steve
off then-No. 5 Michigan in Tigers ' stay atop the rank- .Johnso n on a SO-yard post,
Week I. In the past two ings wi ll be a short one.
then scrambled 12 yards
weeks, nine teams ranked in
The
first
Bowl untouched into the -end
the top 10 have lost, includ- Championship Series stand- · zone.
ing No. 2 USC falling 24- ings come out Sunday.
Until late in the game,
23 to Stanford last week.
Fans at Commonwealth Kentucky did little against
No. I had been safe Stadium stormed the field, LSU's -top ranked defense,
though, until now.
in a scene reminiscent of which. had allowed fewer
The last time a No. I team .2002, the last time ·these than 200 yards a game. _
NEW YORK (AP) Ohio State has risen - all
the way to No I.
A day after the top two
teams in the AP Top 25 lost,
the Buckeyes jumped two
spots Sunday in the media
poll and became the third
school thi s season to hold
the No. I ranking.
·
The last year three teams
held the No. I spot during
the rcgu·Iar season was
2000, when Nebraska started No. I, Florida State was
top-ranked for a week and
Oklahoma took over late in
the season.
The Buckeyes (7-0) beat
Kent State 48-3 Saturday
and have played only one
team · that s been in the
rankings . at any point this
season . In a season in
which 10 ra nked teams
have been beaten by
unranked teams, just avoiding the upset bug has been
enou~h for Ohio State.
Ohto State was No. l last
season from preseason until
the final poll,· when the
Buckeyes dropped to No. 2
after losing the · BCS
national
championship
game to Florida.
An unpredictable season
took a new twi st Saturday
when LSI:!, in its second
week as No. I, was upset
43-3 7 in triple overtime by
Kentucky. A few hours
later, California, poised to
move up one spot to No. I
with a victory, lost at home
31-28 to Oregon State.
It was the first time in I I
years .the Nos. I and 2
teams m the AP poll lost on
the s~me tlay.
.
The Bucke~es recei.ved
50 of a poss1ble 65 firstplace votes, and were not
the only team to a.dvance.
South Flonda, which had
ne.ver been ranked be.fore
this season, moved up th~ee
spots to No. 2, leapfroggmg
No. 3 Boston College.
Ohio State and South
Florida were also held the
top two spots in the first
BCS standings released
Sunday.
,
The Bulls received 11
first-place votes after a 6412 victory over Central
Florida
BC 's.workmanlike 27-14
victory over Notre Dame
helped get the Eagles one
first-place votes. No. 4
Oklahoma and No. 5 LSU
each received one firstplace vote, as did No. 12
Arizona State.
The last time six teams
received first-place votes
after the first month of the
season was Nov. 25, 1990.
The rest of the top 10 was
No. 6 South Carolina, fol, lowed
by
Oregon ,
Kentucky, West Virginia
and Cal, which slipped
eight spots to No. 10.
Virginia Tech was No . I I ,
followed by Arizona State
and Southern California,
which fell another three
spots to No. 13.
Florida was No. 14, followed tiy Kansas and
Missouri, which were tied
at No. 15. Hawaii, Auburn,
Texas
and Tennessee
20
rounded .out the top ·
Georgia,. T~xa.s Tech,
Cmcmnau, Mtchigan .and
~ansas State were the !mal
ftve.. .
.
Michigan started the sea-.
son at No . 5 and fell all the
way out after a~ opemng
·loss to Appalachian State.
The Wolverines· have won
five straight after starting
the season 0-2.
Texas Tech is making its
first appearance in the . poll
this season. Dropping out
this week were Wtsconsin,
Illinois and Florida State.
................
....,...........
Teacher: Student .
gunman was angty
· about risk of
failing history, A6
Middleport~ Pomeroy, Ohio
:;o ( 'J·, NTS • Vol. 57, No. 5CJ
SPORTS
• Indians take 2-1 series
lead over Red Sox.
See Page 81
TUESDAY, OCTOBER
J(,, 2007
.
'""'·"')tl.,il)"' "';,,..l,,·um
Declaration highlights domestic
violence
problem
•
BY BRIAN J. REED
BREED®MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM
MIDDLEPORT ··- Governor Ted
Strickland has declared October
!Jomestic Violence Awareness Month
in Ohio, in orderto help nlise awareness
. of a problem that is of particular concern to local law enforcement.
. According to the Ohio Department of
Public Safety, domestic violence is on
the rise in Ohio, with 135,645 adults
and children impacted last year. The
Meigs County Sheriff's Department
and Pomeroy Police Department
reported a total of 82 domestic violence
incidents las) year.
Middleport Police Chief Bruce Swift
said domestic violence is a continuing
problem in that COI1ll1lunity, where the
number of domestic violence cases tiled
is typically twice the county average. In
September, Middlc;lport police officers
tiled eight domestic violence complaint~, and two protection order violation ca-;es and two stallcing cases, which
are also considered domestic violence
violations. According to Swift, a large
percentage of domestic violence case~
are alcohol or drug related, but he said
there are other contributing factors.
'There are a lot of factors that contribute to stress in the home, which can
eventually lead to violence," Swift said.
"A lot of the cases we see are the result
of alcohol, but economic factors can
also contribute. When a household
member is out of work, there can be
money issues that also cause stress."
Swift said the process 'iJf convicting
those who become violent in the home
is made more difficult because victims
often ask that the cases be dismissed,
fail to appear at court hearings, or even
refuse to file charges to begin with, In
some cases, police pursue the charges
anyway, Swift said, because they are
bound by law to detemrine if there are
grounds for criminal action when a
domestic violence call is received.
Swift said officers always request a
temporary protection order for tile victim, which result in an automatic arrest
of the alleged offender if he or she has
any contact with the victim in the case.
Swift said the public is often not
aware of another factor in domestic violence cases. Both men and women are
involved, and domestic violence does
not always relate to husbands and
wives, boyfriends and girlfriends. The
law defines domestic violence as any
violence toward a member of a house-
hold, so parents, children and even platonic roorrunates can be charged with
domestic violence if they threaten or
ph)'Sically assault someone in their
home.
First-offense domestic violence cases
are usually fLied as firSt-degree misdemeanors, Swift said, but once convicted
of a domestic violence offeqse, offenders are charged with felonies if charged
again. ,
_
"Domestic violence can happen to
anyone of any race, age, sexual orientation, religion or gender," said Henry
Guzman, director of the Ohio
Department of Public Safety. "It crosses
socio-economic boundaries and can be ·
particularly dangerous because victims
perceive it as being shameful and are
afraid to take steps to protect themselves."
Health
de_partment
schedules flu
shot clinics
OBITUARIES
-~-~----~-~-------
Page A5
• Clarence Bailey
Pie" rrt \!al1' lhlfiUI
..,, I) ................ ..
BY BETH SERGENT ·
BSERGENT41>MVDAILVSENTINEL.COM
INSIDE
• AOL to cut 2,000 jobs,
including 1,200 in U.S.,
as Htransforms into
online ad company.
See ·Page A2
• Holzer names
physician of the month.
See Page A3
• Sonshine Circle
plans gifts for other.
See Page A3
• ·He's showing signs
of being an abuser.
See Page 'A3
• Southern students
leam about Fire and ATV
safety. See Page A3
• Employee of the
month. See Page AS
• Government calls
ex-state investment
adviser lying manipulator.
See Page A5
• Following crackdown,
. lobbyists file disclosure
reports on time. ·
See Page AS
• Group fails to get
enough signatures to
force vote on strip law.
See Page A6
..
WEA1HER '
Detail•
on Pace A6
INDEX .
2 SECTIONS--
Cllallene H-toh/photos
A nev.i swinging bridge has been constructed over the Shade River. The bridge and improvements to the cabin will be ded:
icated in ceremonies by the Tri-State Area Council, Boy Scouts of America, at 2 p.m. Sunday. ·
Ill
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
HOEFUCH®MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM
CHESTER - The new
swinging bridge at the
Camp Kiashuta Scout Camp
along with improvements to
the cabin will be dedicated
in ceremonies to be held
there ill 2 p.m..Sunday.
Members
of
Meigs
County's Troop 235, scouts
and cubs, have been actively inv'olved in updating the
facility in the hope that it
wi ll become a more viable
choice for troops and cub
scout packs in the tri-State
Area Council; Boy Scouts
of America, when considering where to hold troop
campouts or family camping events.
In addition to the construction of a new swingihg
bridge, six new picnic tables
Pleue see C1mp, AS
BY
Comics
Annie's Mailbox
Bs
A3
A4
As
Sports ·
B Section
Weather
A6
© 2007 Olilo Valley Pubtisht"ll Co.
••
~
Several interior improvements including the addition of showers and rest room facilities
have been made to the cabin.
. Emergency heating assistance offered
Classifieds
Obituaries
..
.. ·:...
12 PAGES
Caiendars
Editorials
'
'
BETit
SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM
POMEROY - The Gallia
Meigs Community Action
Agency's Home Energy
Assistance Program will be
taking appointments begit)ning Friday, Oct. 26 for a
season that begin in Nov. I
and runs through March 31,
2008.
HEAP provides financ i ~ l
heating assistance the area's
I
neediest residents who may
be on a fixed income qr
among the working poor.
HEAP helps senior citizens
and familie s with chi ldren
avoid _the choice of "heating
or eating."
The GMCI\A says most of
the HEAP recipients are
"our neighbors" who are living on a fixed income or
working for low wages.
They are the elderly or single parent household and the
disabled . HEAP gives them Regular HEAP can be comthe extra help they need to pleted at the Gallia CAA
make it through ihe cold Heap Office, 859 3rd
Ohio winters.
Avenue, Gallipolis, the
"People who need heir, . Central Office at 8010 N.
should choose HEAP,' Ohio 7, Cheshire or · the
Sandra Edwards, GMCAA Meigs CAA Heap Office at·
emergency services division 1369
Powell
Street,
director said. "Last year Middleport. Applications
over 110,000 Ohio house- will be taken by appointholds received Winter Crisis ment from 8:30 a.m. to
E-HEAP bene tits ."
10:45 a.m. and from I :00
Applications for both
Please see HEAP, AS
Emergency HEAP and
POMEROY -It's that
time of year again, time to
roll up· your . sleeves and
make that funny face that
appears when getting your
flu shot.
Sherry Weese, RN, director of nursing at tlte Meigs
County Health Department
said flu shot climes have
been scheduled for the
elderly and high risk from
9-11 a.m. and 1-3 p.m. on
Nov. 9 and for the general
public from 9-11 a.m. and
1-3 p.m. on Nov. 13-14 for
the general public. Both
clinics take place on a first
come, first served basis at
the health department.
Weese said the health
department has ordered 900
influenza vaccinations for
the elderly and high risk,
200 for the general public
and 60 for children. This is
roughly 100 vaccines less
than what the health department ordered last year.
Last year the healih
department only received
40 percent of their vaccination order from the Ohio
Department of Health but so
far there is no indication
that will happen this year.
This shortage was described
as a miscommunication
between OOH and the manufacturer.
For
those
without
Medicaid or Medicare, the
flu shots will be administered for a fee which has yet ·
to be determined though last
year it was $15. For those
wishing to receive their free
flu shot, they must bring
their Medicaid or Medicare
cards to the clinic.
A flu shot clinic sponsored by Ohio University's
Community
Health
Programs will be held from
9 a.m. - noon, tomorrow at
the
Coolville
United
Methodist
Church
Fellowship Hall. The cost is
$20 cash or check or your
Type B Medicare can be
billed as long as you bring
your card. The chnic is for
adults 50 years and older
and any one over 18 years
with health problems. Call
1-800-844-2654 for more
information. The OU/COM
will also offer the same flu
shot clinic from 9 a.m. - I
p.m., Oct. 29 at the Athens
Recreation Center.
Those at higher. risk of flu
complications, like pneumoma, .are all children aged
six to 59 months; all aduns
aged 65 years or older; all
women who are or wi II be
pregnant during flu season;
residents in nursing homes
Please see Flu shots, AS
\'
�..
The Daily Sentinel
PageA2
NATION .• WORLD
·Community Calendar
UN1ll TuESDAY
AMID WARNINGS OF ASSASSINATION PLOT
leadership.
"If we have a chance to
maintain such direct con- ·
tact, we will do it expecting
a ~ositive and, I will stress,
jomt n;sult," Putin said.
"Because
Russia
ha s
worked and intends to continue to work with partners
in Europe and the United
States to achieve a common
goal."
In Washington, State
Department
spokesman
Tom Casey said the U.S.
government expected Putin
to "convey the concerns ·
shared by all of us about the
failure of Iran to comply
with the international community 's requirements concerning its nuclear pro-
BY VLADIMIR
ISACHENKOV
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER
TEHRAN,
Iran
Russian President Vladimir
Putin pledged Monday 10
negotiate with Iran on
behalf ·of the international
community in their nuclear
standoff, although he didn ' I
come to Tehran as scheduled amid warnings of a
.possible assassination plot.
Putin 's planned trip, the
first here by a Kremlin .
leader since World War II,
raised hopes that personal
diplomacy could find a
solution to the impasse over
the Iranian nuclear program ,
· but he delayed his arrival,
which had bet·n set for
Monday evening.
The Russian leader insist.ed to reporters in Germany
~ that he was going ahead
with the trip, but the
Kremlin declined to di scuss
1\ ( H kl '-.'-d\1 Ill
details. The official Iranian
I \L"'d '\'\l I I \ I I( l'\1 '-.
· .news agency said late
Monday that Putin had only
,
AP photo
·put off his trip by several
· hours and would be in Russian President Vladil)lir Putin addresses the media during the Petersburg Dialogue, a
Tehran early Tuesday in regular Russian-German conference, iA Wiesbaden , Germany, on Monday. Putin and
·time for a Caspian region . German Chancellor Angela Merkel met for a two-day bilateral summit.
summit.
. "Putin will arrive in Hosseini dismissed reports "objective data" to prove sure," said Alexander
Tehran at the head of a del- about the purported assassi- . Western claims that Iran is Pikayev, an expert on Iran
egation tomorrow morn- nation plot as disinforrna- trying to .construct nuclear with Russia's Institute for
World
Economy .and
ing," the Islamic Republic tion spread by adversaries weapons.
Russia, which is building International Relations.
News Agency said, quoting hoping to spoil good relaPutin
emphasized
Iran's presidential press ser- tions between Russia and Iran!s first nucl'ear power
has
resisted
the
push
plant,
Monday
that
he would
Iran.
vtce.
Putin has warned the U.S. by the U.S. and its allies for negotiate in Tehran on
. Iran gave no further
details, and Kremlin offi- and other nations against stronger U.N. sanctions behalf of the five permanent
cials wouldn ' t comment on trying to coerce Iran into against Tehran and strongly U.N . Security Council
reasons for the delay or say reining in its nuclear pro- warned Washington against members - United States,
Russia, China, Britain and
· exactly when Putin would gram and insists peaceful using force .
"Putin 's trip to Tehran is a France - and Germany, a
in dialogue is the only way to
arrive.
Officials
Germany, where Putin deal with Tehran's defiance show of Russia's indepen- group that has led efforts·to
wrapped up a two-day visit, of a U.N. Security Council dence in global affairs. resolve the stalemate with
said they could not say · demand that it suspend ura- · Putin, who approaches the Tehran.
He said the group "can
end of his term, wants to
· where the Russian leader nium enrichment.
and
must be patient" in
"Threatening
someone,
in
demonstrate
that
he
wouldwas.
dealing
with the Iranian
. Putin 's trip was first this case the Iranian leader- n't cave in to the U.S. presthrown into doubt when the ship and Iranian people, will
Kremlin said Sunday that he lead nowhere," Putin said in
had been informed by .Germany. "They are not
Russian special services afraid, believe me."
Iran's rejection of the
that suicide attackers might
try to kill him in Tehran, but council's ·demand and its
he shrugged off the warning previous clandestine atomic
work has fed suspicions in
Monday.
"Of course I am going to the U.S. and other countries
Iran," he said after talks that Tehran . is working to
with German Chancellor enrich uranium to a purity
·Angela Merkel. "If I always usable in nuclear weapons.
-listened to all the var' us Iran insists it is only wants
. threats and the recom. 'n- l~ sser-enriched uranium to
. dations of the special ser- fuel nuclear reactors that
vices I would never leave would, !fen~r~te electricity.
Puun s VISit to Tehran, the
home."
. The remark played into first such trip by a Kremlin
the carefully crafted image leader since Josef Stalin
of a (earless leader that attended a 1943 wartime
Putin has cultivated, and summit with Winston
· also appeared aimed at Churchill and Franklin D.
emphasizing that he is in Roosevelt, is being closely
control - not under undue watched for any possible
influence from security offi- shifts in Russia's carefully
cials - as he. maneuvers to hedged stance in the nuclear
maintain influence after his standoff.
The Russian president
presidential term ends next
underlined his disagreeyear.
Iranian Foreign Ministry ments with Washington last
spokesman Mohammad Ali week, saying he saw no
AOLto cut 2,000 jobs,
induding 1,200 in U.S., as it
transforms into online ad company
Bv ANJCK JESDANUN
AP INfERNEf WRITER
NEW YORK - AOL is
eliminating another 2,000 jobs
, worldwide as it tries to cut
· costs and make room to grow
in online advertising:
The 20 percent slice from
AOL's work force comes after
several rounds of layoffs in
. recent years, including a cut of
5,000 jobs last fall. The latest
cuts would give AOL more
flexibility to expand ad-related businesses through acquisitions and potentially new
hires, company officials said.
"This realignment will
allow us to increaSe investment in high-gfowth areas of
the company - as an example, we added hundreds of
people this year through
acquisitions - while scaling
.back in areas with less growth
potential or those that aren't
. core to our business,"· AOL
: Chief Executive Randy Falco
told employees Monday.
AOL l:x;lieves it is now best
at developing Web sites such
as its Moviefone and
MapQuest properties to attract
: people in some 30 countries,
: Falco said. Its goal, he said, is
· to build ·:the largest and most
,.
sophisticated global advertising network" for marketers to
reach that online audience.
AOL, once the leading seller of Internet access subscriptions, has struggled in recent
years as Internet users have
ditched their AOL accou'nts
for high-speed services
offered by cable and telephone companies.
To make up for declines in
subscription revenues,. the
company has been ttying 10
boost traffic to its ad-supponed Web sites and last year
began giving away A0L.com
e-mail accounts; software and
other features once rese1ved
for paying subscribers.
Last year's job reductions
were mostly in customer-se~:
vicc and marketing personnel
as AOL opted to stop producing and distributing its notorious trial discs aimed at luring
new subscribers.
·• The latest cuts are ex peeled
to affect employees across the
board.
Last · month,
AOL
announced that it was consolidating its advertising operations to ~ hare · innovation s
across the company and help
r.otential advertisers more ea'lly buy ads.
gra·m ."
.
·
Putin 's schedule called
for meetings with hard-line
Iranian President Mahmoud
Ahmadinejad and the country 's supreme leader, Ali
Khamenei. He also was to
participate in a meeting
Tuesday of the leaders of
the
nations bordering
Caspian Sea, which are
arguing over division of its
oil.
While the Kremlin has
shielded Tehran from a U.S.
push for a third round of
U.N. sanctions, Iran has
~oiced annoyance about
Moscow's foot-dragging in
building a nuclear power
plant in the southern port of
Bushehr under a $1 billion
contract.
Russia warned early this
year that the plant wouldn't
be launched · this fall as
planned because Iran was
slow in making payments.
Iranian officials have angrily denied any payment
arrears and accused the
Kremlin of caving · in to
Western pressure.
Moscow also has ignored
Public meetings·
Iranian demands to ship fuel
for the plant, _saying it
would be delivered only six
months before the Bushehr
plant goes on line . The
launch date has been
delayed indefinitely amid
the payment dispute.
Any sign by Putin that
Russia could quickly complete the power plant would
embolden Iran and further
cloud Russia 's relation s
with the West.
But Putin 's trip would be
important for Iran even if it
yielded no agreements. "It's
a break in international isolation, a chance to show·that
Iran is an important country," Pikayev, the analyst,
told the AP.
. Iranian
media
also
emphasized the importance
of Putin's trip. "Iran can use
the visit to lobby for getting
our nuclear dossier out of
the U.N. Security Council
and · Russia can strengthen
its opposition to the U.S.
through boosting ties with
Tehran," the hard-line
newspaper ·Resalat said in
an editorial.
SOUTHERN STUDENTS LFARN
ABOUT
FIRE AND AlV SAFEfY.
the hall. Work will be in the
EA degree.
Concessions available to
benefit God' s NE1'. For
more
information contact .
Tuesday, Oct. 16
'
Thursday,
Oct.
18
Evelyn
Roush, 304-882CHESTER - Chester
RACINE Southern ri sky ATV liSe.
including the 1982 accident
POMEROY Meigs 2949 .
Township Trustees, special
Elementary
students
were
During
19992006,
a
total
where he fr:rctured five verFLATROCK, W.Va. meeting, 7 p.m . Chester County Retired Teachers,
treated
to
a
"Safety
Day'',
a
of
278
ATV
fatalitie
.
,
tebrae
in his hack . He said,
noon luncheon in Bethany The October sing, hosted by
town hall.
· building of .Trinity Church, the Good Shepherd Church class period of training rang- occ urred in West Virginia. it '.'If l wasn ' t wearing my seal
• Pomeroy. Speaker, Tony and sponsored by the Area ing from ATV /Four Wheeler was noted . The greatest hell and shou lder harness,
Wednesday, Oct. 17
Safety, Postal Safety, Fire annual total occurred in and my helmet l would .have
- SYRACUSE- Syracuse Deem. Southern Distri ct Choir, will be held 7 p.m. at Safety,
and general high- 2006. with 60 ATV fatalities. been killed."
· Village Council , 8 p.m. , vii- superintendent. Guests wel- the Good -Shepherd United
road safety sessions. Ohio had 38 fatalities last
He urged kids to wear hel . !age hall , special meeting on come . Reservations, 992- Methodist Church. Featured way/off
The
training
was
sponyear.
when .skateboarding,
n·ets
32 14 by Oct. 16.
will be The Masters Four
salt spreader.
sored
by
school
insurance
It
was
pointed
out
that
sate
bicyding.
skating. riding a
Quartet from the Columbus
provider
Reed
and
Bauer
ATV
ridmg
depends
on
the
motor
cycle
or dirt bike, and
area along with the 'Area
Saturday, Oct. 20
Tuesday, Oct. 23
Insurance.
Larry
Wilcoxen
rider
's
ability
to
recognize
when ridin g ATV's . He also
POMEROY - Breakfast Choir. For more informa· SYRACUSE - Syracuse
and
Mary
Clifford
of
the
ha
zardous
riding
cond
itions.
stressed
1he 1mportance of
contact
Carol
-Board of Publi c Affairs meeting of the Meig s toin
United
States
Postal
It
is
possible
to
determine
getting
a
new
helmet to IT)Cel
· special meeting on wale; County Republican Ladies, Browning at 773-5689 or Department were on hand to how safe a ride will be by current safelv
qandards,
improvement projects, 5 8:30 a.m. at the Hemlock Rev. Dennis Weaver 675: discuss the importance of first evaluating the rider 's no[ing that materials in the
Grove· Grange Hall. RSVP . 5525.
-: p.m., village hall.
·
safety around the mailbox. personal abilities, the ATV helmet become brittle over
I
o
The
sessi_ons were geared capabilities, and then the ter- time.
Sunday, Oct. 21
meigscorepladies@yahoo.c
toward
the K-3 rd grade stu- rain and environmental conWolfe also talked about
POMEROY .
- The
om or phone Karen York,
dents
and
featured
Tigge
r
ditions.
fire safety in 1he stock car
696- 1042 by no later than Dayspring Trio will be in the talking lion, who taught
Casto
reiterated,
"Make
at hom e. He confirmed
and
'concert 10:30 a.m. at the
Oct. 18.
the
children
safety
rules
sure
you
are
familiar
with
the
fire
depar1ment's theme
Laurel Cliff Free Methodist concerning crossing the the area where you are ridTuesday, Oct. 16
of
"Stop.
drop. and roll" if
Church. For more· informa- street to get the mai l, the ing and obey all safety laws
CHESTER
Past
tion ·call 992-2272. Public importance of obeying cau- and speed limits." She also you catch fi re: and he also
Councilors Club, Chester
noted that "i 1 is important to
invited.
Co unci I 323, Daughters of
tion lights on mail -carrier noted to wear proper clolh- always do your best ... that it
Saturday, Oct. 13
RUTLAND Jess ica
· · America, 7 p,m.• at Masonic
CHESHIRE - Walk er Haggy will be speakin g at vehicles, and various laws in g and a! ways "wear a bel- 1s not so much whether you
· Hall. Wear Halloween cos- family reunion, 4 p.m. at the
relating to customer safety mel" even if you are goi ng a win or lose, but the attitude
. tumes, take candy to share . Ky ger Creek Emp lo yees the Rutland Church of God and laws concerning rural short distance.
you have in life , especiall y
morning servi ce, II a.m. mail routes.
POMEROY Ladie s Clubhouse.
A video program and a having a good attitude in
She is currently attending
Auxiliary of Drew Webster
Ambra Casto and Jessica series · of four-wheel riding school."
Lee
University
at Dillon of Reed and Bauer acti viti es were also pl anned:
Post 39, American Legion,
The veteran teacher also
Cleveland. Tenn. and is discussed four-wheel/ ATV however, the curator became stressed the importance of
· 2 p.m. at th ~ Legion hall in
mentorin g under the Judy safety, noting that most acci - ill and could not attend. obeying safety laws and
old Salisbury School (rear
Jacobs Ministries. The pub- dents resulting in loss of life That portion of the safety speed lim it law s. "They (the
Saturday, Oct. 20
·. entrance)
··
POM EROY - Gospel lic is invi ic·d.
or injury of children under- program will be schedu led laws)' not only protect you if
sirig, 6:30 p.m. at the ·
Wednesday, Oct. 17
•
1'8 are associated with · at a later date .
you arc. riding/driving. but
Co mmunity
• POMEROY
The Mulberry
improper use of an ATY.
The Southern Elementary they protect yo u by control; Middleport Literary Club, 2 Center, 260 Mulberry Ave ..
Casto related personal expe- kids also got a treat when li ng the· number of people
..;p.m . at the Pomeroy Pomeroy. Featured singers,
rience s to the cl asses, and Administrative Assistant driving carelessly. You
:-Library. Leah Ord to review Truly Saved, Priscilla
noted that ATV's are not Scott Wolfe brought hi s Dir1 could be hit by " careless
: "Saving
Fish
from Dodrill, Rou sh Family,
Wednesday, Oct. 17 '
toys.
Late Model Stock Car to driver of a car or an ATV.
· Drowning" by Amy Tan : Josie and E~ich Cremeans,
POMEROY
- Free
Casto noted that it only school for the day. Wolfe That's why being aleri and
Phyllis Hackett, hostess.
and the Uplifters. No admis- vision clinic, children birth- · takes one time for an acci- made presentations to all obeying the law is impor.HARRISONVILLE
sion charge. Love offering 21, Meigs County Health dent to be devastatin g, grades K-8 and passed out tallt. One can never be too
· The Harrisonville Masonic to benefit the Bend Area Department, call 992-6626, pointing out that "children souvenir pictures 'to all the careful."
: Lodge will meet at 7 p.m. at Gospel
Jubilee . ext. 32 for appointment.
tend to get braver" as they students in attendance.
Wolfe also bargained with
build confidence on their Wolfe has been a race driver the classes, noting that if
four-wheeler. Ohio ranks for 26 years, winning two they worked hard for good
15th in the nation for ATV Skyline Speedway lat e grades and oqeyed safety
accidents. YearJ.y, an esti- model championship s anJ laws. he would pke them a
mated 40,000 emergency- finishing in the top five in ride next year during "Kids
room cases are reported points for 12 seasons at two Night" m Skyline Speedway
nationwide; one third of all different speedways.
in Stewart, where he races
BY KATHY MITCHELL
the cable repairman made a nev.er went to prom or injuries are to children less
Wolfe spoke o.f the impor- regularly.
service call to my home. homecoming and never had than 16 years of age. The lance of safety on the race
AN'o MARCY SuGAR
Sou thern student s were
., - - - - - - - - - ' - - Directly above the cable a boyfriend. In my early State has developed Strate- track and COmpared that tO also treated to activities preDear Annie: 1 am a box was a handblown glass 20s, I went two years with- gies and programs to reduce safety on the highway and sented by the Racine
:: young married woman·. My horse that I h&d personally out a date. 1 am a 5-foot- ll injuries and deaths related to safety in real life. He shared Volu nteer Fire Depanment
: husband, let's call him carried home from a trip to athletic blonde with a great careless , inappropriate and many real life experiences, a> part of fire safety week.
:·"Pete," ·is very possessive Venice. The horse means a sense of humor and was
. and jealous. He also has an lot to me, since it was orig- often told how pretty 1 was.
-~ anger problem. Anytime I inally a gift for my now- 1 even had a terrifi c job and
~go to t~e store, he wants to deceased father. I was pre- no debt. 1 was told 1 was so
·: know exactly what store I occupied when the cable perfect it was intimidating .
RACINE. Plans for pro- Hewitt, June Kloe s. Ju lia
Refreshments were served
·.am going to, who I'm going guy was making adjust- I assure you, I did -nothing
:: with, when l am going to ments. and he hurriedly left
f viding supplies to the Campbell and Ina Teaford. 10 1he 21 members' attending:
.b h
without stopping to talk to to encourage that type o Alzheimers Partners in Care Sixty-three cards of encour- Edie Hubbard, Blondena
. e orne, etc.
thinking.
project at the Senior Citizens agement were ~igned by the Rainer. Kat luyn H<UT. Evelyn
.. Pete was like this a little me .
" bit before we married, but
Afterward , I noticed the
l;lere l am, at age 42, Center and making a $100 members and sent out.
Foreman.
Mabel Brace,
~ since we said "I do ," it has horse was gone . I don 't very happily married with donation to God's NET were
The patio roof project will Mildred Han. Louise Frank,
' gotten to the poi,nt where want to fal sely accu se any- three sons. I had to ask my made when the Sonshine be set aside for now.
Ruth
·:·he will check my under- one, but very few people husband out on our first Circle met at the Bethany Cookbooks are still for ,ale at Hazel Me Kelvey,
-wear to make sure I have have been in my home date. He never ·would have United Methodi st Church $5 each . It was decided to give Simpson. Lillian Hayman.
Shirley Beegle, Avi s Harrison,
.returned home in the same since I moved here six had the nerve. He says he recently.
a gas card to a local cancer Bell y Pronill , Holly Stump,
·pair. Does he expect me to months ago. I'm pretty sure thought l was "out of his !?resident Kathryn Hart con- . patient. The group planned a
buy · new ones every time 1 the cable guy took it. leagu e. ·• . I wonder how ducted the meeting with dinner at the Kountrv Kitchen Martha Lnu Beegle, Judy
Letha Proffitt.
go out'! Once , he was real- Should I find out hi ' name many peop le out there Mildred Hart r~ading Psalms in Dec. 3 meeting, '6 p.m. A Gilmore.
Wilma
Smith
.
Mmy BalL Ann
ly drunk and got physical. and write an anonymous haven't allempted to ask 100, and officers reports being silent auction was held. memIt took me a while to for- note asking him to return somebody out becau se of given by Ann Zirkle and Julie bers sang Happy Birthday 10 Zirkle and Julie Campbell.
give him for that, but I will the horse, no qu es tions this imaginary league. The next mee1ing will be
Cmnpbell.
Ruth Simpson, and il was
never for get it..
asked '' I j ust want · my Batting a Thousand Now
Nov.
8 al 7 p.m. m the church.·
Edie Hubbard read cards of noted that Louise Frank and
I fight with him constant- horse back . - R.C. in S.D.
Dear Batting: We're sure thanks from the Meigs Co- Phyllis Owens have birthdays Hostesses will be Letha
ly and we argue over · Dear R.C.: It's much there are thousands. OK, operative Parish,
Lena in November.
·
Proffitt and '.lo Lee.
everything. I am question- more likely that the cable maybe dozens, of "perfect"
ing the marriage. I don't guy moved the horse 1n people that others are too
Thursd%i~
want to file for divorce, but order to gel to the cable intimated to approach. It's
that seems like my only box without damaging your a good thing you were will_-choice. Any advice for a fragile souvenir. Have you ing to ask your husband out
• woman in need?
looked behind the TV or on first. We bet he's pretty
. : Frustrated
in
the an adjacent table ? If you 1 d
• Farmland
can't find it, call the cable g ~~:?e~~ Mailbox is ~rit. Dear Frustrated: Pete is company. Explain that you tell by Kathy Mitchell- and
• showing signs of an abuser. think the repairman might
He is controlling, suspi- have moved a glass p1ece Marcy Sugar, longtime
ciou s and angry, and he is when he was in your house editors of the Ann Landers
willing to hurt you. Thi s and as k 1f they would look column. ~lease e-r~ail
type of behavior often . into it for you.
. you!' questro11s to armiesbecomes -worse over time .
Dear Annie : I've read ma.llbox @con!c~st. ne_t, or
Please don't wait until Pete letters in your column from wnte to: A11111e s Ma!lbox,
· Wall-Away Recliners and
.
lands you in the hospital. ~ "great guys" and "wonder- P.O. Box ll8J?O, Clncago,
Call the National Domestic ful women " who say the y IL 60611. To_Jmd out.more
Rocker/Recliners, Many Fabrics, ---- .
Violence
Hotline can't get a date because the about Amue's Ma1lbox,
(ndvh.org) at 1-800-799- opposite sex is looking for and read features by other
SAFE '( 1-800-799-7233 ) outer beauty. Here's a point Creator.~ Syndicate writer.~
(TTY:
1-800-787-3224 ) of view from !he otht<r and cartoonists, visit the
Over 60
.,
and ask for help.
side:
Creator~· Syndicate Web
Dear Annie : Rece ntly.
While in hi gh schop.l,
page at www.creators.com.
Clubs and
·organizations
Reunions
Church events
• FREE Zf/7 Ttchnlcallklpport
• lnstanl Me~MQII'IQ • kep )'OUr blJckly btl
• 10 e-rne~ edclni:6.IM "Nith Wetmi,eill
• • Cu•tom Stwt P""' ·!WM. ~ 611'101l1!
ANNIE'S MAILBOX
( J:,; up': 6X ftlslrll'i'
~
~
Hes showing signs of being an abuser
ftltt 13 mort
Up Online! www.locatNet.eom
Call Todoy UIVOI
•'
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_The Daily Sentinel
Tuesday, October 16, 2007
'.j .
Over 1,000 Visitors
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· Holzer names physician of the month
:. GALLIPOLIS - Mont,rie
• Chaksupa, MD, was select: ed as the October Physician
.-of the Month at Holzer
'Medical
Center
in
_·Gallipolis by the Hospital's
: Customer Service Physician
· Satisfaction-Team . .
Born in Thailand, Dr.
Montrie, as he is known to
his patients and staff, graduated from medical school
at the Chiang Mai Medical
School in Thailand . He
completed his residenc y at
Bronx Lebanon Hospital of
the Albert Einstein College
of Medicine in New York.
Board
Certified
in
Obstetric s and Gynecology,
Monble Chaksupa, MD
Dr. Montrie was a physician
at Pl easant Valley Hospital
from 1974 - 1987 hefore he
joined Holzer Clini c and
Holzer Medical Cemer. In
addition to practicin g medicine, Dr. Montrie has also
served on exec utive and
peer review com mitt ees.
. In his spare time, Dr:
Montrie enjoys playing tennis.
He and his ·wife ,
Panny, have three children.
Phy sician
The
Satisfaction team presented
Dr. Montrie with the
Physician of the Month
award based on commcms
by staff and peers. For his
special honor, Dr. Montrie
received a framed certifi cate and designated parking
spo t for the month of
October.
II
IJ'
$419•00
~:.~·;;:~~~~
Reg. $439.00
Reg. $499.00
Reg. $589.00
. Sale $349.00
Sale $399.00
Sale-$479.00
~
~
lust Jltrlvall! New Shipment Of Bunk Beds
Styles Include Bookcase, Spindle li Panel
.· a . a
.
~
Many New Sets AtS:ale Prices!
Anderson's
URNITURE • APPLIANCES • CARPET
-----------------------
Store Hours: 9:10·5:00 Mon • Sat
Pomeroy, OH • 992-3671
•
�'
OPINION
Th~ Daily Sentinel
Pagei\4
'
Tuesd~y,
October 16, 2007
Tuesday, October 16,2007
Obituaries
-:The Daily Sentinel Clinton, Giuliani behave like its already fall (08_
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio
(740) 992-2156 • FAX (740) 992-2157
www.mydallysentlnel.com
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Dan Goodrich
Publisher
Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager-News Editor
Congress shall make 110 law respecting an·
establishment of religion, or prohibiting the
free exercise ther~of; or abridging the freedom of
speech, or of the press; or the right of the peo'ple peaceably to assemble, and to petition the
Government for a redress of grier•ances,
-The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution
TODAY IN HISTORY
Today is Tuesday, Ocr: 16. the 289th day of 2007. There
art' 76 days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in Hi story:
· On Oct. 16. 1987. a 58 1/2- hou~d amain Midland,
Texas, ended happily as resc uers free essica McClure, an
J·R-month-old gtrl trapped 111 an aban oned well.
·· On this date:
In 1793. during the French Revolution, Marie Antoinette,
the queen of France, was beheaded .
·rn 1859, abolitionist John Brown led a group of about 2(}'
r(len in a fail ed raid on Harper's Ferry. .
·In 1916, Margaret Sanger opened the first birth control
clinic, in Brooklyn, N.Y. (The clinic ended up being raided
by· police and Sanger was arrested.)
In ]·946, 10 Nazi war criminals condemned during the
Nuremberg trials were hanged.
.
In 1957, Britain's Queen Elizabeth II and Prince Philip
b'egan a visit to the United States with a stopover at the site
of the Jamestown settlement in Virginia.
·Jn 1962, the Cuban mi ssile crisis began as President
Kennedy was informed that reconnaissance photographs
IJ:ad revealed the presence of missile bases in Cuba.
··In 1964, China set off its first atomic bomb, codenamed
"596," on the Lop Nur Test Ground.
·
ln 1978, the College of Cardinals of the Roman Catholic
Church chose Cardinal Karol Wojtyla to be the new pope;
he took the name John Paul II.
· In 1991 , a deadly shooting rampage took place in
Kille~n ; Texas, as George Hen nard opened fire at a Luby's
· Cafeteria, killing 23 people before taking his own life.
One year ago: President Bush personally assured Iraqi .
Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki by phone that he had set no
timetable. for pulling troops out of Iraq. Lynne Stewart, a
firebrand civil rights lawyer, was sentenced in New York to
38 months in prison for helping an imprisoned terrorist
sheik communicate with his followers on the outside.
:foday's Birthdays: Actress Angela Lansbury is 82.
Author Gunter Grass is 80. Fonner presidential· adviser
Charles W. Colson is 76. Actor-producer Tony Anthony is
70. Actor Barry Corbin is 67. Rock musician C.F. Turner
(Bachman-Turner Overdrive) is 64. Actress Suzanne
Somers is 61 . Rock singer-musician Bob Weir (The Dead)·
is 60. Producer-director David Zucker is 60. Record company executive Jim Ed Norman is 59: Actor Daniel Gerroll
is · 56. Actor-director Tim Robbins is 49. Actor-musician
Gary Kemp is 48. Singer-musician Bob Mould is 47 . Actor
Randy Vasquez is 46. Rock musician Flea (Red Hot Chili
P.eppe~s) is 45. Jazz musician Roy Hargrove is 38. Actress
Terri J. Vaughn is 38. Singer Wendy Wilson (Wilson
Phillips) is 38. Rapper B-Rock (B-Rock and the Bizz) is 36.
Actress Kellie'Martin is 32. Singer John Mayer is 30. Actor
Jeremy Jackson is 27.
Thought for Today : "We always like those who admire
us; we do not always like those whom we admire." Francoi s, Due de Ia Rochefoucauld , French moralist ( 16131680).
LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR
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Mall Subscription
Inside Meigs County .
13 Weeks
26 Weeks
52
Weeks
' 32.26
'64.20
' 127. 11
Outside Meigs County
13 Weeks
26 Weeks
52 Weeks
' 53. 55
' 107.1 0
'214.21
More than . I0 months
didate, former Sen. John
ahead of the · Democratic
Edwards, to flood to the
and GOP nominating ~on
second-ranki'ng candidate,
ven tions, the two party
Sen.
Barack
Obama
front -runners already are
(Illinois), allowing him to
engaged in general-election
beat Clinton and start an
Morton
politics - though certainly ·
avalanche against her.
Kondracke
not in the same way.
She see ms wnfident
Democratic Sen. Hillary .
- - - - • . enough of her lead that, in a
Rodham Clinton, N.Y., with
WashingtQn Post interview
every reason to be confident
published Wednesday, she
of nomination, is moving to Massachusetts Gov. Mitt began talking about how her
the center to· attract inde- Romney, who criticized experience in past partisan
pendent voters. Meanwhile, Giuliani's legal action.
political wars prepares her
Republican Rudy Giuliani
In one of the more memo- to form a centrist governing
misses no opportunity to rable moments of the coalition.
evening, Giuliani declared.
auack Clinton.
In a Pew Research Center
In Giuliani's case, of "You can't fool all of the poll last month , " tough"
course, . it' s a device to people all of the time . The was the characteristic that
appeal to the GOP voter line-item is unconstitution- Democratic voters most
base, where the NBC/Wall , al. You don' t get to believe associated with Cli nton , and
Street Journal found the about it; the Supreme Court in her Post interv iew she
"comfort level" with a ruled on it. ... And I don't made it clear that her cenpotential Clinton presidency think it's a bad idea to have trism would not be of the
at 14 percent, well behind a Republican pre sidential gentle kind.
other Democratic candi- candidate who actually has
"You can't just wake up
dates.
beat President Clinton at and say, 'Let's all just hold
The former New York something."
hands and be toge ther. '
mayor regularly denounces
Feisty, combative and tak- You' ve got to demonstrate
Clinton's health care pro- ing an orthodox supply-side .that you' fe not going to be
posal as a step toward position on ·economics, cowed or intimidated or
socialized medicine and Giuliani did nothing m deterred by it, and then you
declares her weak in the war Michigan to dimini sh tiis can reach out and bring peoon terrori sm.
front-runner status , espe- ple who are of good faith·
ln Tuesday night 's GOP cially when Romney opined together."
debate in Michigan, the sec- that he ' d have to consult
The chances are, the genond sentence out of lawyers before deciding eral election campaign will
Giuliani 's mouth was "and whether to go to Congress be so tough - especially if
the leading Democratic can- to get approval to make war Giuliani is her opponent didate once said that the on Iran.
as to stir her obvious comunfettered free market is the
Making his debate debut, . bative instincts and chalmost . destructive force in easy-talking . former Sen. lenge her ability to "reach
modern America. " . He Fred Thompson , Tenn., per- out" afterward.
added, "I mean, just get an formed c,redibly, although
But will Giuliani be the.
tdea of where that philoso- he had a deer-in-the-head- nominee? It 's far from cerphy comes from."
lights look when asked tain. Giuliani's national lead
(The Clinton campaign about why America needs a has fallen from 18 points in
declared in response that · strong dollar.
March to 8 at present.
"Rudy got it wrong" and
So far, the presidential according to polling avercited a Clinton appearance race story is that Clinton is ages
assembled
by
on C-SPAN in which she sweeping
on
the Rea IC learPol it ic s .com .
said she believed that unfet- Democratic side - now · Thompson is running sectered capitalism was "the leading ·nationally by 22 ond but has not gained
most radically disruptive points, with all constituency ground since his declaration
force in American life." She groups, in all the polled pri - of candidacy in September.
added, "the market is the mary and caucus states,' now
Romney still leads the
driving force behind our including Iowa, as well as tield by I0 points in Iowa .
prosperity, our freedom ... on most leadership attribut- Giuliani is gaining in New
but it cannot be permitted to es, as the candidate· Hampshire, however, and is
run roughshod over peo- Democrats believe most now just 4 points behind
likely to win, and also in the Romney. Thompson is third
pie's lives as well.")
Later in the GOP debate, latest fund-raising sweep- in. Iowa and fourth in New
Giuliani used his successful stakes.
Hampshire, though he' s
Supreme Court chall6nge of
The only forese~able way running exen with Giuliani
President Bill Clinton's she could be stopped is for in South Carolina.
line-item veto as a stick to the Iowa support of the
What's amazing is that,
beat his rival, ' former third-ranking national can- for all his attractive quali-
ties - brains, good looks,
executive experience Rorimey canno' seem to cut
it in the national polls,
falling to fourth in recent
surveys and barely breaking
single digits.
One Republican consultant I talked to diagnosed
"an authenticity issue with
Romney that you don' t see
with Giuliani · or McCain"
based on hi s changing positions to appeal to soc ial
conservatives.
This consultant quoted an
aerospace. executi ve he
encountered · who said,
"Romney is a businessman
and businessmen are all
about · increasing market
share. If you want to do that.
. you often do it by redesigning the product. That doesn' t always work in politics."
At the same time, Giuliani
has serious problems with
the religious right, whose
leaders have declared they
might bolt from the GOP if
he is nominated because of
hi s
pro-abortion-rights
stance .
The depth of feeling was
illustrated by Richard Land
of the Southern Baptist
Convention, who said,
when I asked about
Giuliani's pledge to appoint
conservative judges, "It
wouldn 't cut it with a neverdivorced man.
"For a man who promised
two wives that he would
love, honor and cherish
them 'til death do us part, it
cuts even less ice," he said,
referring to Giuliani's'
divorces.
On the other hand , as several Republi ca n activists
declared , there is one
cementing force that will
hold the GOP toge ther: the
prospect of Clinton as president. And that prospect is
real. 'At the-. moment , she
leads Giuli.ani by 5.5 points
in
polling
averages,
Thompson by I 0..7 and
Romney by I I. 7.
(Morton Kondra cke is
executive editor of · Roll
Call, the newspaper of
Capiro/ Hill.)
Guantqnamo Bay v.irns
Trying to show that biparProviding · documented no links to terrorism, and
tisanship is a possibility
information on the practices were rounded up by
during the continual civ,il
of some military doctors at Afghanistan warlords and
war in Congress, Sen.
Guantanamo, Dr. Steven H. sold to us for a bounty.
Patrick Leahy, D-Vt., and
Miles - a professor of
I was impressed when,,
Arlen Specter, R-Pa., , last
Nat
medicine at the University after succeeding Donald
month · introduced the
of Minnesota Medical Rumsfeld as secretary of
Hentoff
School and a member of its Defense, Robert Gates said
Habeas Corpus Restoration
Act of 2007. But it fell four
Center fm 'Bioethics - has publicly that he would like
votes short of the supermawritten last year's "Oath Guantanamo Bay to be
JOrity needed (60 votes} so
Betrayed: Torture, Medical
that the debate could c'ontinBut a strong opponent of Complicity, and the War on closed because of the strong
ue. The bill would have habeas rights for the Terror" (Random House, international criticisms of
the so-called trials there that
allowed Guantanamo Bay detainees, Rep. Duncan 2006). ·
detainees to petition our Hunter, R-Calif., a conAmong the authors of the greatly damaged the credifederal courts on the lawful- tender for the presidency, "Lancet" letter is Dr. bility of our government's
ness and conditions of their scorns the notion that those William Hopkins, a psychi- guarantees of their fairness .
confinement. Only · six prisoners are being abused: , atrist with the Medical But there has .been no furRepublicans wanted the "Those guys get taxpayer- Foundation for the Care of ther word from Gates.
In a Sept. 24 lead editorideliberations to continue.
paid-for prayer rugs, have Victim s of Torture in
al
,
the Des Moines Register
Among the opponents of prayer five times a day London . In a letter last year
the bill was The Washington . (and) they've all gained in the "Lancet," he and the emphasized that enactment
Leahy-Specter
Times (a paper in which this weight." .
other authors of this year's of the
column appears). The Oct: I · Hunter, whose forthright- letter characterized the restoration of habeas would
editorial "A terrorist bill of ness I've admired on other aggressive· force-feeding of neither flood the courts nor
rights?" lauded "the cohe- occasions, said nothing of Guantanamo inmates on turn loose terrorists (This is)
sive structure . already . in the repeated hunger strikes, hunger strikes as "degrad- an issue ... of fundamental
place (at Guantanaino between prayers on taxpay- ing ·and unethical ."
human liberty (the cenBay)." The editorial did not er-paid-for
rugs,
and
Congressman Hunter did turies-old core of habeas
mention that those prison- attempted suicides - some not mention these hunger corpus) in a nation supposers, many held for five of them successful. Nor did strikes, still going on -nor edly ·committed to justice
years, are not allowed n<>n- ' he comment on a Sept. 7 let- have I heard anything about for all."
·
military lawyers when they ter in the internationally them from Sen. Lindsey
As our president said on
appear before military com- respected British medical Graham , R-S.C., a chief " Sept. 12, 2001 , "We will not
missions - nor . can they journal, ."The Lancet."
architect and cheerleader of allow this enemy to win the
>ee core evidence against
Tbe 260 signers, nearly congressional legislatio n war by changing our way of
them that can be obtai ned all of them doctors from lfi · (as
in
the
Military
life ." Yet thi s deni al nf
from sources through "coer- countries, charged - as Commissions A~t of 2006)
cive interrogation," verging reported by the Associated denying habeas corpu s habeas, a vital part of our
on torture:
Press - that "The U.S. rights to Guantanamo Bay way of. life, is seldom even
mised by mqst of the crowd
During his Sept. 7 speech medical
establi shment prisoners.
of
presidential candidates
on the Senate floor intra- appears to have turned a
And a leading presidential
ducing his failed habeas blind eye to the abuse of contender, · Republican from both parties - and I
bill, Leahy ineluded previ- military medicine at the Rudolph Giuliaili, utterly hear no national concern for
ous testimony by Rear Guantanamo Bay prison in opposing habeas right s the hunger strikers and suiAdm. Donald Guter, who, Cuba."
there, saia during a presi- cides at Guantan amo, who .
Leahy noted "was working
And the letter compared dential debate that it would aetuall y are hurnan beings
in his office in the Pentagon the ongoing roles of U.S. amount to the "release of awaiting justice.
(Nat Hentoff i.1 a natimlas Judge Advocate General doctors
working
at criminals into the street."
ally
rmmVIIed authority on
of the Navy on Sept. II , Guantanamo, who have He appears una wa re of
2001 , and saw lirst hand the been accused of ignoring studie' 1 and others have the First , Amellllment and
effects of terrorism." Guter torture, to the South Afr ican reported thai are based on the Bill of Rights and auth ~r
later testified that, "As we doctors in the case of (cele- the Defense Department's of' lllllllV hooks, inc/udi~g
anti-apartheid , own records revealing that a "The War 0 11 . the Bill of
limit the right>' of human brated)
beings, even those of the activist Steve Biko - who substantial majority of those Rights and the Gathering
enemy, we become more died while being detained prisorlers had no connection Resistance" (Se ven Stories
like the enemy."
by the securi ty police.
to AI Qaeda . Many also had Press, 2004).)
www.mydailysentinel.com
•
Fallowing crackdown, lobbyists
file disclosure reports on time
"
Clarence Bailey
ASSOCIATED PRESS WR ITER
Local Briefs
Flu shot clinic
Employee of the month
Breast cancer program qffered
RIPLEY -In observance of Breast Cancer Awareness ·
monih, Dr. Mark Younis will be presenting a program ·on
cancer awareness at the Jackson General Hospital sponsored luncheon at noon Friday at the learning Center. There
is no charge but those coming are to pre-register with the
Radiology Depanment at 373-1525. The program is open
to the public .
Watershed tour
taking place Saturday
POMEROY - Tlie 4th Annual Leading Creek
Watershed Tour and Meigs SWCD Pub! ic Officials Tour
will take place on Saturday Oct. 20 beginnin~ a.t 9 a.m.
This tour is free , open to the public and Will end with a
complimentary lunch. Residents are invited to join the tour
to enjoy the splendor of fall in the Leading Creek
Watershed and see where the Meigs Soil & Water
Conservation District has been working this rear. There
will slops on the tour at sites 9f historic sigmficance and
·
environmental restoration.
The touring group will meet at the Meigs Soil and Water
Conservation Ditrict office at 3310 I Hiland Road in
Pomeroy from which they will leave at 9 a.m. Limited
transportation will be available. Carpooling· is suggested.
Residents may call Raina Fulks, coordinator, at 740-9924282 with any questions.
Camp
from PageA1
have been added to campsites, a new roof has been
. put on a shelter across the
Shade River, and there is
progress being mitde on die
mstallation of a shower and
new bathrooms with flush
toilets in the cabin.
As a part of Sunday's program, Alli~ator Jacks Flea
Market Wtll provide hotdolls· chips and soda. All
umts of the Area Council
are invited to attend.
· Next Saturday will be a
HEAP
from PageA1
p.m. to 3:30 p.m., Monday
through Thursday. For those
who are employed evening
appointments are offered
5:30
p.m . on
until
Wednesdays.
As in previous years
GMCA~ are still operating
under the appointment system to apply for Emergency
HEAP. Contact 992-6629
(Meigs County) and 3677341 (Gallia County) beginning at 8 a.m. on Friday,
October 26th to .schedule
your appointment. The tollfree number for Regular
HEAP inquiries is 1-8002!:12-0880. For the hearing
impaired with a .telecommu-
Government calls
ex-state investmentadviser lying manipulator
•'
Bv JOHN McCARTHY
SPRINGFIELD .
Clarence Richard Bailey,
COLUMBUS - The lawyers and others who lobby
92 , of Springfield. passed
Ohio's Legislature got the message.
away on Saturday, Oct.13,
All but 20 to 30 lobbyists filed' disclosure reports that
2007, at Eagle wood Care
detail what they spent on lawmakers from May I through
Center.
Aug . 31, Legislative Inspector General Tony Bledsoe said
He .was born April 29.
Monday. His office oversees lobbyi sts and tracks their con1915 m Pomeroy, Ebenezer
tacts wtth lawmakers.
St. (Lower Monkey Run),
In March, Bledsoe sent a certified letter to 660 lobbyi sts
t~e
son
of · William
and employers who missed a reporting deadline last year.
Raymond and Florence
Most responded, but 41 employers 'and 20 lobbyists did
Hamm Bailey. Mr. · Bailey
not, prompting B1edsoe to assess fines of $100 to $600 each,
was a member of First
depending on the number of tiling deadlines missed and
United Church of Christ,
whether they lobbied both the executive and legislative
Springfield. He graduated
branches.
from Pomeroy High School
Bledsoe blamed the filing shortfall on a sw itch to an elecClarence Bailey
in 1933.
tronic filing system. This year, his office received about
He was the pipe organi st at
3,500 forms for the May-August reporting period.
St. Paul Lutheran Church, Pomeroy, from 1934 until Lobbyists must file a form for each client they serve and
1940. !"'r. Batley was a veteran of the Army Air Force, separate form s for lawmakers, state agencies and retirement
2nd Atr Force, as an mstructor for the B - 25 during systems they try to influence. Bledsoe won' t know the exact
World War II. He later served in the 21st Air Force in number of scofflaws until next month after each audit is
the South Pacific and with the Tenth Air Force for the inspected.
This year, lobbyists were mailed reminder cards near the
B-29. He was ·a member of the American Legion and
Elderly Umted.
He retired from Gilbert Trailer deadline. When the switch to electronic ffiing occurred last
and Tool Rental, a business he owned and operated for year, e-mail reminders were sent, Bledsoe said.
over 40 years .
"We've seen . that the postcards have really helped,"
Mr. Bailey is survived by two sons : Rev. Richard M. Bledsoe said. "E-mail reminders didn't seem as effective."
Lobbyists must report gifts. meals or other spending over
(Sandy) Bailey, Indianapoli s, Ind., and Michael W.
$25
on lawmakers or agency employees. Lobbyists can give
(Carole) Bailey, Springfteld; a sister, Jane Bailey of
lawmakers
up to $75 in gifts each .year. qov. Ted Strickland
Columbu s, and special niece and friend Pat Sprinkle.
He was P.rec.eded in death by his wife Leona Mae has limited .administration employees, including himself, to
accepting no more than $20 in gifts.
(Dolly) Batley and by his parents . . ·
Lobbyists used to 17 years of filing paper reports likely
Visitation will be held from 5-8 p.m. on Tuesday in
just
forgot to file all of their electronic reports last year, said
the Jones- Kenney -Zec hman Funeral Home, where
funeral will be held at I :00 PM Wednesday with Pastor Mike Tobin , president of the Ohio Lobbying Association
Neil Haney, Vineyard Church of Northridge, officiating. and a lobbyist with 33 clients. He said some of the 660 lobbyists who were late last year failed to file multiple forms of
Burial will follow in Rose Hill Burial Park.
.
each client.
"You'd have your legislative and executive version. You
fill out one and you think you're done. I asked him
(Bledsoe) if they'd make it clear to fill out both," Tobin said.
He credited publicity and teamwork for the decline in
tardy filings. Bledsoe's warning of a referral to the attorney
'.
general didn't hurt either, he said.
"It was the combination of working with the. lobbying
the press coverage and the inspector general
association,
COOLVILLE - A flu shot clinic sponsored by Ohio
Uniyersity's Community Health Programs will be held making some accommodation," Tobin said.
from 9 a.m. - noon, tomorrow at the Coolville United
Methodist Church Fellowship Hall. The cost is $20 cash or
check or your Type B Medicare can be billed as long as you
bring your card. The clinic is for adults 50 years and older
and any one over 18 years with health problems. Call . l800-844-2654 for more information.
•
The Daily Sentinel • Page A5
Submitted photo
gef bigger profits and avoid
the need for a pohttcally
unpopular increase in the preAKRON -· A former mi ums paid by Ohio employadviser f()r the Ohio Bureau ers to the fund for tnJured
of Workers' Compensation workers.
Kerger said the defense
!jed to state officials and
manipulated investments that would present testimony that
lost $2 15 million meant for showed the investments were
injured workers, the govem- approptiate and that Lay had
ment said Monday as his trial proper! y reported to the state .
began. The defense said he on investment moves.
Judge David D. Dowd Jr.
followed state guidelines.
Mark D. Lay, head of a . interrupted Kerger's commoney management lirm. ments about an unorthodox
exceeded his investment $50 mill ion investment in rare
authority by using high-risk coins by the workers' cmnhedge investment funds, pensation fund to say "the ·
.o f
Workers'
Assistant U.S. · Attorney Bureau
Compensation
is
not
on trial,
Benita Pearson said in opening statements in U.S. District the defendant is on trial." The
judge repeated the warning
Court. ·
"It was not Mr. Lay's when Kerger mentioned an
money to gamble with," upcoming prosecution witness who has been sentenced
Pearson said.
to
prison in the scandal.
Lay was indicted in June on
The
indictment emerged
charges of investment advisofrom a case that began with
1)' fraud, mail fraud, and conspiracy to commit mail and the 2005 revelation that prowire fraud as part of an inves- lific Republican donor Tom
tigation into a wide-reaching . Noe was investing state
bureau investment scandal money in rare coins. He's
now serving 18 years . in
th~t reachec\ to the lormer
prison
for theft and other
govemor.
.
crimes.
Nineteen
haye
Pearson said violating the been convicted in people
the scandjll,
agreement with the state on which rocked state politics.
how to in vest the money was
More than $300 million :in
the issue, not the losses. "He's
a manipulator, a liar," she told losses were reported at the
bureau. Former Gov. Bob Taft
JUrors.
pleaded no contesno charges
Lay put state money at risk that he failed to report golf.,
by using hedge investments outings and other gifts on (Jis·
with
borrowed
assets, di sclosure forms and wa:;
Pearson said. While such fined $4,000.
investments can mean big
In the wake of the scandal, .
profits, "It also allows your Democrats
made significant
losses to be much bigger," she inroads in the November elecsaid.
tions, gainin" four of five
Lay 's attorney, Richard statewide offices, including
Kerger, said the case was the governor's office, which
about shifting blame for the was wrested from Republican
scandal.
control for the first time in 16
He asked tiJe jury to acquit years.
Lay, founder and chief execuWhile Ohio Inspector
tive of MDL Capital General Tom Charles, who
Investment in Pittsburgh.
leads a task force of investi~a
"You't:e not going to let tors, said the inquiry contyl· .
them pin the blame on Mark ues, few clear targets remain.
Lay," Kerger predicted.
The bureau was the sele.
Kerger said the investments investor in the hedge fund that
were meant ·to respond to . Lay set up in Bermuda,,
Lay's concern expressed to according to the indictment
state officials that interest against Lay. He is accused of
rates could increase, thus repeatedly failing to tell
making fixed-income bond bureau officials when qu<;sinvestments worth less.
tioned beginning in 2~ .
Kerger said the higher-risk about the extent of tile risks
investments were meant to he was taking with the fund.·
BY THOMAS J. SHEERAN
ASSOC IATED PRESS WRITER
Flu shots
Sharon Hanshaw, second from right. nursing assistant,
recently was narned the Pleasant Valley Hospital "Employee
from PageA1
of the Month." This dedicated individual was acknowledged
because "she's a hard worker, is always on time and has a ·
positive and uplifting attitude .that makes everyone around and long-term facilitie s:
her feel betier." Hanshaw has been employed with PVH' for individuals who have long35 years. She resides in Point Pleasant with her husband, term health problems; chilBill. They have one child, Leeann, 24. Also shown with dren aged six month s to 18
years who are on chronic
Hanshaw are, Sandy Wood, left, vice-president of Patient aspirin
therapy; he ath care
Services; AI Lawson, JD, FACHE , chief executive officer of workers who have direct
PVH; and Lisa Merry, RN, unit manager. Hanshaw will contact with patients ;
receive a $50 award, a congratulatory certificate and VIP caregivers and hou se hold
parking. In additiqn, she will be entered in the facility's contacts of children less
Customer Service Employee of the Year recognition.
·than six months of age.
Last year on the first day
of
its flu shot clinic the
.Indian Chief Kiashuta who nied him on a journey to the health department adminmet
with
George French commandant.
422 doses of
Washingt\)n in 1770 as he · Accordin!l to notes taken istered
influenza vaccine.
traveled downriver by boat from Washmgton 's journal,
inspecting · the territory the two had remained
which had been promised to friendly over the years and
veterans of the Virginia were overjoyed at seeing
forces in the French and each other again. Kiashuta
Indian War in payment for and his warriors joined
Washington for the evening
military service.
As they moved down the at the overnight encamp·
Ohio along the Meigs ment site.
A journal note indicated
County shore near what
later became known as the meeting of the two was
Long Bottom, Washington's productive and that before
night
passed.
entourage
encountered the
Chief Kiashuta and his war- Washington and Chief
riors. Washington had met -Kiashuta had smoked a pipe
Kiashuta in 1753 when the of peace beside the campIndian chief had accoml'a- fire:utline for pies.
workday at Camp Kiashuta
with scouts and · leaders
being reminded that hours
invested in working at the
site qualifies scouts to earn
the Council engineering
back patch. For more information about that contact
Don Frymyer at 740-6961285. A lot of proj~cts are
expected to be completed
that day and some work will
also be done on the
Kiashuta Trail.
Camp Kiashuta was
estal)lished many years ago
and has over the years been
used as a site for gatherings
of thousands of scouts. It
was named after the famous
nication device for the deaf more than stx members
(TDD) 1-800-686- 1·557. . should add an additional
"However, an appoint- $6,090 ·to the yea rly
ment may not extend a mcome.
Emergency HEAP proscheduled utility shut-off,"
vides
assi stance to houseEdwards cautilmed .
Eligible households will holds that have had u'tilities
be at or below 175 percent disconnected, face the threat
of the · federal poverty of disconnection or have 10
guidelines this year as ,in days or less supply 'of bulk
2006. The following incpme fuel. The program allows a
levels by . household size one-time payment of up to
should be used to determine $ 175 per heating season to ·
eligibility. These income restore or retain home heatguidelines represent the 175 · ing services. For propane
percent calculation and are and fuel oil clients, the payrevised annually. Allowable ment may be up to $450, if
annual · income · for a one budgetin g allows, because
person
household
ts of the increa·se in fuel
· $17,867,
two persons prices. Clients heating with
' $23,957, three persons wood or coal will be assist$30,047, four persons ed up to $250. Homeowners
$36, 137, five persons or renters may qualify if
total
household
$42,227. and six persons their
$48,317. Households with income is at or below 175
•
percent of federal poverty
guidelines .
The Re gular HEAP program offers he atin~ assistance once per healing season to · low income households while defraying the
high cost of home heating.
Regular HEAP pays a purtion of eligible households'
winter heating bills. The
amount of assistance is
determined by total household income, the number of
people in the household and
the type of heating fuel
used.
The income guidelines for
both 'programs are the same.
However. Regular HEAP
re quire s the previous 12
months income while the
past three months income is
acceptable foro Emergem:y
HEAP. ·
Influen za is defined as a,
viral infection in the nose,
throat and lun gs. About 10
to
20
percent
of
Americans get. the flu each·
year. Eac h year, abgut·
130,000 people go to a
hospital with the tlu. and
20.000 people die because
of the flu and complica" .
lions.
For more information on
the hea lth department's flu
shot clinics call Weese at
992-6626.
'It''
~'
"'
"":
u..:
~
'·.
f
..
0
.'; . \·~ - >_,
•
''
('"!:'f
'-:'" ,·····
~
. .. ............ ·······---·--·III:IUOII\1I',C \H f~ O. \TII E
Auditions
Jingle Bells
Oct. 16-17
6-8 pm
Box Office: 428 2nd Ave.
Gallipolis, OH (740) 446-ARTS
Tuesday, October 23rd @ 7PM
T~ICI) u~ T~un rn~n
Or
Sponsored by Rqcksprings
and Powell's foodfalr.
Trick or Treat Begins @ 7pm
for the Community,
6:30pm for Rocksprings Staff Kids
Games in tb,e dining room for kids
Hot Dog and Bake Sale
Rame Tickets and More!
Hoi Dogs will be provided by
Life Ambulance Company
Come Out amtd Have Fun!
•
�\
P,agt; A6
OHIO
--r:he Daily Sentinel
Tuesday, October 16, 2007
AEP (NYSE)- 47.42
Akzo (NASDAQ)- 85
Ashland IJIC. (NYSE) -
angry about risk of failing history
85.36
BvTHOMASJ.SHEERAN
29.83.
Oak Hill Financial (NAS.
DAQ)- 31.21
Ohio Valley Bane Corp.
(NASDAQ) - 25
BBT (NYSE)- 39.90
Peoples '( NASDAQ)- 28.31
Pepsico ('NYSE) - 71.35
Premier (NASDAQ)-
!llg Lots (NYSE)- 28.17
Bob Evans (NASDAQ) -
93.98
CLEV ELAND
A
teacher wo unded in a shooting rampage at a downtown
high sc hool said Monday
that the student gunman was
disruptive and was failing the
teacher's world history class.
Michael Grassie, 42, spoke
at MetroHealth Medical
Center before his discharge.
He was wounded in the
abdo11.1cn last week by Asa ·
Coon, 14, who killed himself
afle r wounding a second
teacher and two students.
Grassie, sitting in a wheelchair, said Coon was doing
poorly in his class at
SuccessTech Academy and
risked failing .
"I know that made him
re'!lly mad," he said. "He just
seemed really troubled, really troubled.'"
AP photo/The Plain D~ale~ CMI Stephen•
Grassie said he had called ,
Coon's home because Coon Success Tech Academy histo ry teacher Michael Grassie, right, who was wounded In a shootwas disruptive and talking in ing rampage at a downtown high school speaks. Monday, at MetroHealth Medical Center
class, but Grassie was unable in Cleveland before his discharge. At' left is his doctor. MetroHealth Medical Center trauma
to reach the boy's mother. surgeon Jeffrey Claridge. Grassie was wounded in the abdomen last week by Asa Coon,
The father lives out-of-state, 14, who ki lled himself afte r wounding a second teacher and two students.
pplice said.
· Grassie said Coon came "You, you're cool , man." as when Coon entered.
Jeffrey
Claridge,
said
into
his
classroom if to assure him he wasn't at
Grassie also said the Grassie's wound went from
Wednesday holding two risk.
school designed for special- the left abdomen area down
revolvers and said something ·. Grassie said Coon's b~hav ized classes with I 5 or 17 . ' toward the lower back and
Grassie didn 't understand, ior problems, which he said students has some classes hit both the spleen and panaitd then Coon said, "Now . had prompted plans by the with up to 47 students. Any creas. Grassie can expect to
~hat have you got to say to school administration to class of that size "is going to be off work for up to four
. me?"
transfer Coon to another cause problems," he said.
. weeks, Claridge smd.
''He just shot me," Grassie school, should have been a
School otlicials have
The other wounded
said. ·
repeatedly said they were teacher and wouvded stusign of possible trouble.
''I· remember the ex pres·
"All the warning signs trying to determine how dents were released from
sion on Asa's face," he said. were ·there," he said. Coon entered .the building hospitals last week. A third
"Anger, total anger. Real "Nobody picked up on and said tapes from 26 cam- student injured her knee in a
hatred. It's something I them."
eras were checked to deter- fall while fleeing the ramhaven't seen on a 14-yearGrassie criticized security mine what happened. Ames- page.
old's face before."
The district canceled
at the school in a live-story . sage seeking a detailed
· Grassie said Coon had converted office building response to Grassie's criti- classes districtwide after the
tiied a week before the a lone guard and an occa- cisms was left at school shooting and most schools
reopened Monday . with
shooting to pick a tight with sional metal detectaF - and offices Monday afternoon.
hjm. "He tned to goad me," said a permanent metal
Schools CEO Eugene heightened security meaaccording to Grassie, Who detector would have identi- Sanders said last week the sures.
SuccessTech
had no explanation for why fied anyone entering school 50,000-student distril;t, w.ith . r~m!lined closed and was to
Coon might try to pick a with a weapon.
110 buildings, would install · reopen Tuesday following
metal
detectors in each and open house Monday
fight.
Grassie said teachers had
When Coon entered his pressed-·for years to get a school and make ,;syre•+ "·.evening for patents and stuclassroom, Grassie was guard assigned to patrol the guard is on duty in every dents to· discuss safety
working with another student upper floors that house the building. He said it could issues.
ori homework and other school 's classrooms; and he take months to get metal
assignments. Coon looked at questioned what the guard at detectors in all schools.
tfie other student and said, · the main entrance was doing
Grassie's surgeon, Dr.
Century Aluminum ( NAS.
DAQ)- 54.82
Champion (NASDAQ) -
14.35 .
Roekwell ( NYSE) - 70.31
Rocky Boots (NASDAQ)- .
6.12
9.75
Charming Shops (NASDAQ)
Royal Dutch Shall - 84
Sears Holding (NASDAQ).
-7.79
City Holding (NASDAQ) -
38.91
Collins (NYSE) :..... 74.32
DuPont (NYSE) - 49.37
US Bank (NYSE) - 32.51
Gannett (NYSE)- 43.53
General Electric (NYSE) -
138.14
. Wai·.M art (NYSE)- 46.45
Wendy's (NYSE)- 34.18
Worthington (NYSE) - ·
24.12
Kroger (NYSE) - 29.31
Limited Brands ( NYSE) -
Dally stock reports are the
4 p.m. ET closing quotes of
transactions for Oct. 15,
2007, provided by Edward
Jones nnanclal advisors
Isaac Mills In Gallipolis at
(740) 441·9441 and Lesley
Marrero In Point Pleasant
22.24
at (304) 874-0174.
Norfolk Southam (NYSE) -
Member SIPC.
40.82
Harley-Davidson (NYSE) -
49.18
JP Morgan (NYSE) -
48.27
get enough
signatures td force vote on strip law
Tuesday .. .Partly sunny.
A chance of showers with
a slight chance of thunder-.
st?rms in the aflernoon .
H1ghs 111 the mid 70 s.
South winds 5 to 10 mph.
Chance of rai~ 30 percent.
Tues,d ay mght ... Mo stly
cloudy. A chance of showers with a slight chance of
the
thunderstorms in
evening ... Then a slight
chance of showers after
midnight. Lows in the mid
50s. South winds around 5
mph. Chance of rain 40
percent.
Wednesday .. . Mostly
cloudy with a 20 percent
7hance of ~bowers. Highs
tn. the mid 70s. South
wmds around 5 mph.
w e d n e s d a Y
night...Mostly cloudy with
a 20 percent chance of
showers. Low s in the
upper 50s. Southeas t
winds around 5 mph.
Thursday ... Mo-stly
cloudy. A chance of show-
ers in the morning .. .Then a
chance of showers and
thunderstorms in the afternoon . High s jn the upper
70s. Chance of rain 30 percent
Thursday night and
Friday .. .Cloudy with a ·
.
,
chance of showers . and
thunderstorms .
Lows
around 60. Highs in t~e
lower 70s. Chance of ram
50 percent.
.
Friday nlght ... Mostly
cloudy
in
the
evening ... Then becoming
partly cloudy. Lows in the
mid 50s.
.
Saturday
through
Sunday
night.. .Partly
d H' h . h . 'd
c1o_u y. 1g s m t e mt
70s. Lows tn, the lower
50s.
M o 1'1 daY .. . Mo s t I y
cloudy. A chance of sl'lowers in the afternoon. Highs
in the lower 70s. Chance
of rain 30 percent.
1
WOMEN'S
TIE G31 1iro1 is I"i3i
1y TriturE
'
.
Ebint Pleasant REgister
~!!
'
,
f
•
Daily Sentinel
•
lhoto"dn<I,, I ,,.J,,<IH-.., tlll t .I •\'I J
•
( ! 1,,. 1.,1
•
(IRS), a series that proved and had to bring his A-game
itself a top organization in an to the table to claim . the
ever-growing world of dirt · championship.
late model racing. Fifty of
M<)tkham was on, passing
the Midwesf s top late mod- 13 cars along the way, but
els took time• trials, while mechanical woes forced him
four competitive• heat . races out of his heat and to the tail
and two B-mains narrowed of the feature as a provisionthe field to the 24-car start- a! starter.
Meanwhile,
ing grid. Ryan Markham Auk land lived up to his
was down 19 points to
Aukland going into the night
.,ease see Race, 81
Indians
take 2-1
lead over' .
Red Sox·
Belpre at Nelsonville-York
MiUer at Federal Hocking
W8rren vs. Gallia Academy
Oak Hill at South Gallia
Chesapeake at Rive r Valley
Tug Valley (WV) at Hanrran (WV)
Wahama (WV) ·at Matewpn (WV)
' Point Pleasant (WV) at Logan (WV)
Saturday Oetober 20
ASSOC IATED PRESS
CLEVELAND Not
their best. Nat even second _
best. J!lke Westbrook, right ·
at home in the Jake, was
exactly what the Cleveland
Indians needed.
Westbrook, an often overlooked third wheel in the .
kept · Boston
rotation,
~rounded for nearly seven
mnings Monday night, leading the Indians to a 4-2 win
over the Red Sox and a 2-1
lead in the AL championship series.
The laid-back rijlht:hander, who missed a b1g chunk
of the season with an injury,
BY JOE KAY
doesn't possess the overASSOCIATED PRESS
powering stuff of either
C.C. Sabathia or Fausto
CINCINNATI - · Dusty
Carmona - Cleveland's
Baker had a whole new
two aces who flopped badly
look.
in Games I and 2 at Fenway
The 58·year-old manager
Park - or their stellar repuput on a bright red
tations.
Cincinnati cap and a redBu~ Westbrook does have ,
and-white jersey Monday
a devastating sinkerball, and
during his introduction as
oh my, how it sunk the Red
the next Reds manager. The
Sox.
color just didn 't fit.
Backed by an early homer
"This is my first red unifrom old pro Kenny Lofton,
form in , my whole. life,"
Westbrook took a shutout
Baker said.
AP.pholo into the seventh inning.
.. As an outfielder, he won a Cleveland Indians' Kenny Lofton. left, is greeted by Casey Blake after the Indians 4-2 win over the Boston Red Sox in Game
Game 4 on Tuesday night
~orld Series ring while 3 of the American League Championship baseball series Monday in Cleveland. · Lofton's two,run home run started the
Pla~se see Indians, 81
}liearing Dodger blue in Indians on their way to a 2-1 series lead.
W81. As a manager, he has
\vim 1.162 games in San
Fiancisco 's orange and
(!lack and Cubs blue.
·,: He led the Giants td the
Zfl02 World Series and got
the Cubs within l'ive outs of
1iie 2003 Series, two nearmisses that still gnaw at
him . After one year of
BY ARNIE STAPLETON
working in television, he' s
ASSOCIATED PRESS
back in baseball and back
on hi s quest .
DBNVBR - Riding a
"I ' m in spired ," ·said Rocky Mountain High like
Baker, the first black man- none other, Colorado is
ager in the history of base- heading to its first World
ball's first professional Series.
team. "I feel that I was
With their 21 st win in 22
brought here for a number games,
the. relentless season elimination on the
oheasons, not just tb man" Rockies beat the rattled final weekend of the season,
age a baseball team.
Arizona Diamondbacks 6-4 the Rockies have become a ·
"Hopefully we can all in Game 4 Monday night to charmed team that seemingPlealll'Jt Valley HOipital
Tht Office: o( William Clllkl, 00
come together for the same sweep the NL championship ly cannot lose. This marked
2S20 Valley Drive· Suitf Zl4
146 PiMdl SIJM
goal of winning, and we can series at a chilly Coors the sixth straight yeltr that a
have that championship Field.
wild-card club reached the
Ripley. WV 2S271
, Point
WV Z'5~
ticker-tape parade, which is
Series
MVP
Matt World Series.
what I really, really need. I Holliday 's three-run, 45 2- Colorado had never won
need that badly. You just ' foot shot into the pine-filled more than 83 \lames before ·
'• ·,,
don't know how bad l do rock pile in center field going 90-73 thts season and.
need that."
capped a six-run outburst ·in sneaking into the playoffs
A winning ~.-easoo would the fourth inning, and the with a 9-8, 13-inning win
be reason for a parade wild-card Rockies_ a team over San Diego in the wildarnund here.
.
that debuted in 1993 _ card
tiebreaker.
After
: .The Reds haven't won a were on their way.
sweeping Philadelphia· in
World Series since 1990,
a.m:
The Rockies have a record the first round of the playwhen Lou Piniella was eight days' rest to find out offs, the Rockies put .a purhired and led them to their before opening the World pie pummeling on aD-backs
sweep of Oakl and. They've Series at either Cleveland or club that led the league with
Pri(ayf~·:.(ii;
I(UQ
jJeen to the playoffs only Boston ' on Oct. 24. The 90 victories.
8;30
to , .• .at:\~'¥'
ohe time since then. losing Indians lead the ALCS 2- 1.
"Once the sting of this
tQ Atlanta in the 1995 NL
.),_
1/
" It was fun , thi s has been a subsides, we' ll be able to
~ha mpi ou s hip series.
great ride. We're not done reflect that we did have a ·
: The city went zany when yet," Rockies first baseman great year," Ari zona managKen Griffey Jr. returned to Todd Helton said. "We' re er Bob Melvin said.
. , . 5•Lillo.
his hometQwn before the going to keep it going."· .
Ahead 6-1 , the Rockies
With their delirious fans withstood Chris Snyder' s
Please see Baker, Bi
waving'brooms and towels, three, run homer in . the
.............. ......
. . :..
• ...- · di
• ...........
~·'S&J'dfd' ?~....".... ......the Rockies joined the 1976 eighth. Chri s Young_doubled
Big Red Machine as the .with one out in the ninth off
only teams to start a postsea- closer Manny Corpas, bui
ComAcrUs
.
.I
son with seven straight . Stephen Drew popped out
•BJ
iiJI,
•!Olhrlliimr•111tter••••rur.
·
wins. Colorado has won 10 on a 3-0 pitch.
1 ~740-446-2342 ext 33
in row oxerall and lost only Eric Byrnes followed with
Fox - 1-740·446·3006
once .since Sept. 16. .
a checked-swing grounder
· E·mall - sports @mydailysentinel.com
"It's unbelievable-. L never that
shortstop
Troy
dreamed
I'd
have
thi
s
Tulowitzki
charged.
His
S.wr.ta Stoff
opportunity," Holl iday said. throw beat Byrnes ' headfi rst
Bryan Walters, Sports Writer "With this group of guys J' m dive, and Helton threw his
(740) 446·2342, ext 33
so e1lcited to be a part of it. arms- in the air.
bwallers C mydailytribune.com
This MVP award goes 24
" I ·can't believe it, what a
Larry Crum, Sports Writer
other directions."
'
(7401 446·2342. ext 33
Just one strike from post- Please see Rockies, 81
Ierum @mydaily register.com
Baker
thinking
title in
Cincinnati
11/VollfOJr ! TOae~·
Obstetrics & Gynecology ,
304-371-5786 ·
Pleasant.
304 ~67S4839
· w•Ota,&
9
to 6:30p.m.
~ceJ~tiv
f!~td'
a.t bt~ _ llfiee ~t/ol(! ·
r•• r ••u• us
\
~
•
• Point Pleuant Olllee:
~ Ripley Office H~m:
Gallipolis Daily Tribune 446-2342
Point Pleasant Register 675-1333
'
.
The Daily Sentinel 992-2155
'
1 - R00-200 - 400S nr (740) 667- 7388
l l u t u - . ' l •n>ol t \
Football
Vinton Co~unty at Meiigs
Southern at Trimble
Waterford at Eastern
Wellston at Alexande r
claimed the AMRA mai n,
George Klintworth won the
Pure
Slacks,
Tim
Christopher lapped the
Four-cylinders and Randy
Arms claimed the miniwedges.
Au]dand not only put on a
show to win. the race, but he
became the inaugural champion
of
the
infant
lndepe1dent Racing ·Series
• Ripley Offlee:
Contact your
Representative·Today!
•• ·~
Friday October 19
STEWART - Saturday
night featured a lot of first's
as the long list of exciting
racing 'landmark' s trickled
do\\(n into the racing record
books, where Zanesville's
Rick Aukland claimed the
in augural running of the
"Jac k-u-Lantern c· 50" under
the IRS Sanction at Billy
Jarrell' s Skyline Speedway.
After suffering . ignition
problems in warm-ups,
Danville, Indiana's Danny
Smith made a clean sweep in
the 410 Outlaw sprints,
g oin~ 3-for-3 in hi s visits to
Skyln\e this season . Jeremy
Blake trumped Smith with a
4-for -4 streak in the Outlaw
Streets, Jeremy Berwanger
Hedy J. M-Windsor, MD
(Each ad will have the same layout to give everyone equal opportunity to tell their story.)
'
Thursday, October 1B
Volleyball
DiVision IV Sectiona! Tournament .
Wi nner oll ronton St. Joe-Miller match at
Eastern, 6 p.m.
Southam at Symmes Valley, 6 p.m .
Bv Scorr WoLFE
SPORTS CORRESPONDENT'
Series .
This special section, publishing October 31st, is an excellent opportunity
for local businesswomen to tell their story, promote their business and
give their tips for success.
Not just for women who own their own business, but for all the women
who are the back bone of local successful businesses.
•
Wednesday, Octaber 17
Volleyball
·
Division II Sectional Tournament
Jackson at Meigs, 6 p.m.
'Jack-o-Lantem 50' held at Skyline Speedway over weekend
BY TOM WITHERS
THE WOMEN OF
THE TRI- COUNTY
'
P-OMEROY - A sc hedu l.~ of upcoming high
school varsity sporti ng events involving
teams from Meigs County
Local weather ·
presents
Jl ..
LocAL SCHEDULE
to
& The
~
Thesday, October 16, 2007
Cross Country
Divi sion II and Ill d1strict meets at
University ol Ri o Gr'ande, 10 e,.m.
of Women in Business
Gro~p fails .to
'
Bl
The Daily Sentinel
53.15
BorgWarner (NYSE) -
ASSOCIATED PR ESS WRI TER
Citizens for Community
Values. a Cincinnati-based
conservative group that
pushed for the Jaw, argues that
the restrictions will reduce
crimes such as prostitution and
illegal drug use and decrease
blight in neighborhoods where
·strip clubs operate.
The new restrictions on strip
clubs were passed by the
R e p u b I i c a n -c o n t r o II e d
Legislature in May and
allowed to become law by
Democratic
Gov.
Ted
Strickland without his signature. ·
Boston's $103 million man flops again, Page 82
Local stocks
Teacher: Student gunman was
COLUMBUS (AP)
on petitions in at least 44 of
Opponents of a new law that Ohio's 88 counties. They have
bans patrons at strip clubs met the threshold in just 15
from touching dancers failed counties, with 16 counties yet
to tum in enough signatures to · to report, Brunner said.
force a referendum asking vat- Those countjes are e1lpected
ers to overturn it, the stale's to report within a day or two.
e1ectjons,chief said Monday. · Brunner will .:ertify the
The law. which had been remaining repo1ts, m1d the new
held up by a petition drive Jaw will take effect, said Jeff
since Sept. 4, will take effect in Ortega, a spokesman for the
a matter 6f days, Secretary nf secretary of state's.office.
·State Jennifer Brunner said.
The new law prohibits stripThe coalition of strip club pers from touching customers
owners that tried to get the or each other during a pcrforissue on · the Nov. 6 ballot mance and allows no nude
failed to get enough sigmtures dancing atier midnight.
Inside
•
)'
Tuerdays &
a.m.
�Page B2 • The Daily Sentinel
.Boston's $103 million man flops again
CLEV ELAN D (A P) The $103 mtllion man has
been almost ~"<Orthless for
Boston tn the pla)otts
Datsuke Matsuzaka tatled
: tor the second stratght tune
to make tt out of the ftfth
mmng Ill the postseason Hts
bust of a start resulled 111 a 42 loss to Cleveland on
Monday mght that put the
. Red Sox down 2-1 tn the AL
: champtonshtp senes
.
Thts tsn ' t "hat the Red
Sox expected last uflseason
when they patd the Setbu
L10ns $51 , Ill , Ill for DtceK's nghts and agreed to a
$52 mllhon, stx-year contract
Matsuzaka's most tmportant numbers these days are
0 and 6 75 - hts postseason
wms and ERA
He allowed three runs
over 4 2-3 mnmgs m hts
postseason debut agamst the
Los Angeles Angels, but
Boston recovered to wm 6-3
. on tts way to a sweep In thts
one, he gave up four runs,
stx htts and two walks m 4
2-3 mnmgs, stnkmg out SIX
He threw I0 I pitches after
tosstng 96 ,,g,unst the
Angels
"The more pttche s you
thro w. espec1ally to dangerous hmers. the bener c hance
you gtvc them .· Red Sox
manager Terry Francona
satd ' I mean that 's the
same concept tnat we talk
.tbout all lime They kmd ot
reversed 11 on us'
Matsuzaka thnved on the
world stage, but he's !lopped
thts OctobeL
"It's a lot ot pitches. so tt 's
a lot ot deep counts,'
Francona smd
He pitched tor J,tpan 111 the
2000 and ;oo4 Olymptcs
and was the MVP whe n
Japan won the hrst World
Baseball ClasSIC m March
2006 Hts most tmpressJve
pressure pertorm.tnce may
have been the 1998 Japanese
h1gh school title game when
he p1tched a no-httter
He faded w1th the Red Sox
th1s year, hntshmg 15-12
w1th a 4.40 ERA He struggled wtth hts control, espectally from the stretch
Dtce-K started strong
agamst the lndtans, retmng
the count agamst rook1e
Mtcah
Owmgs,
then
blooped a 1-2 pttch dov.n
the left-fteld hne L1ke
from Page 81
everythmg
el se
thts
October for the Rockt es, 11
crazy game," Helton satd le11m the perfect place and
-"Emotionally, you can't ended Owmgs ' streak of 19
say enough about thiS ball- 'scoreless mnmgs
club."
The two-run double put
The Rocktes are the first Colorado ahead 2- 1 and the
team s111ce the 1935
Chtcago Cubs to wm at Rocktes caught another
break when Anzona ftrst
least 21 of 22 after Sept I . baseman Conor Jackson
- accordmg to Ehas Sports couldn't
catch
W1lly
·B ureau
Taveras'
easy
grounder
Before thts season, the
Rocktes had JUst one post- The error set up Kaz
season vtctory, back 111 Matsm's run-sconng smgle
1995, when they were - the e1ghth RBI of the
· ehmtnated by Atlanta 111 the postseason for a pi ayer
once cast off by the New
first round
Now, they're ndmg mto York Mets
Holhday sent the sellout
the World Senes wtth
crowd of 50,213 into a
astomshmg momentum frenzy
when he drove
and to ' thmk, wtth two
Owmgs'
fastball over the
: weeks left m the season,
center-fteld
wall to make 1t
they stood m fourth place
111 the wild-card race and 6-1.
Morales allowed one
knew they had to wm JUSt
earned
run on ftve h1ts m
about all thm games to
: have a shot at elttendmg four innmgs Though he
didn't get the wm, the
. thetr season
Rehever Matt Herges , Rocktes tmproved to 8-2 m
who resurrected ht s career his 10 maJor league starts
Owmgs, the ftrst pttcher
m Colorado thts summer,
smce
Whttey Ford m 1953
pttched two hitless mnmgs
to
collect
two four-hit
, for the wm, and the
: Rocktes' stellar bullpen games 111 the same season,
closed tt out - but not hved up to h1 s 333 battmg
before Bnan Fuentes sur- average by leggmg out a
single in the first and comrendered Snyder's homer
Wtth the Rocktes tratltng mg around to score on
1-0 wtth two outs m the Jackson's two-out smgle m
fourth and runners at sec- the thtrd
Anzona manager Bob
ond and third, manager
Melvm
satd he felt hke an
Clmt Hurdle made a bold
AL
manager
with the DH
move He pulled hts startmg pttcher, rooloe Frankhn whenever he got to fill out
Morales. tor a pmch-hmer a hneup card w1th Owmgs
Hurdle dtdn 't have to tn It
Owmgs had a chance to
worry about burmng hts
bullpen because Game 5 pad the D-backs' lead Ill the
wouldn ' t have been unttl fourth but struck out to
Wednesday mght So he strand a runner at second
sent UJl' rook1e Seth Smtth, In the bottom half, he d1ved
who had only etght career to fteld Yorvn Torrealba's
at-bats 'when he was placed dnbbler and throw htm out
at first Afterward, the
on the playoff roster.
Smtth fell behmd 0-2 m tramer came out to take a
Rockies
Race
from PageBl
smooth, but hard-nosed dnvmg style and was m the top
three the entue mght to
secure the wm and the IRS
champ10nsh1p Markhamis
hard charge fell short, but
Wayne Chmn anchored
'Rook1e of the Year' honors
Hot Rod Conley hit the
fast pedal ftrst m JUmpmg
ahead of outstde pole-sllter
Doug Drown, dnvmg the
Malcu1t #79 machme.
Conley began to pull away
early w1th JUSt the right set: up and
hard-c hargmg
- Conley
dnvmg
style .
Drown also pulled away
from· h1 s nearest pursuer
Aukland, unttl Freddie
• Carpenter brought out the
· f1rst yellow. Three laps
later, Drown overcame
Conley wllh an outstde pass
and appeared to be on hts
way to victory Drown led
the next 35 gO-rounds On
lap 17 Josh McGmre was
mvolved m hts second cautJOn--nelther of hts own
makmg - and went to the
· tat! for the second ume
- It was here that h1s charge
from 24th to stxtb began
McGutre and charges from
the back at Skylme are sy nonymous McGutre passed
18 cars to top Markham 's
13-car crusade Two-time
track champ Racm ' Jason
Montgomery also took
backseat m the lap- 17 sk irmish and charged 1\ack to
II th
Thtrteenth place
starter Steve Shaver was on
a s1mtlar mtsston, vaultmg
mto the top e1ght by lap 25,
then mto the top three and
challengmg tor the wm at
the checkered
On lap 35 Shaver moved
mto th1rd behmd Drown ,
who had closed the gap on
Aukland Aukland seemed
to be on crUise control,
whtle Drown found new ltfe
and closed the gap quickly
w1th Shaver at ht s heels
Mtke Balzano moved mto
the top f1ve , makmg up
some lost ground between
laps 35 through 45 A lap
47 spm by Kenny Christy
Wlth a cltp from another car,
tightened the fteld even further
The stage was set for the
grand finale as Aukland,
Drown, and Shaver saved
Oscar nommaung performances for the final act It
was Shaver low. Drown
htgh, and Aukland low on
the pomt. Drown caught
Aukland on turn entqes, but
Aukland's short mstde route
kept h1m out front Shaver
pulled alongstde, drowmng
Drown amtd a dual edged
sword, sphttmg Drown's
concentration
between
holdmg off Shaver and
Tuesday, October 16, 2007
www .mydailysentinel.com
the stde m orde1 10 the ti rst
on d gro undout ,tn d two
st t tkeout s He e\en got
V1ctor Mdrttnez on a
grounder to st,lft the second
and lanned Jho nny Peralt.t
<tltet Ryan G.trku smgled
Then Kenny Lofton , <1
m<IJOr
le.tgue r
when
Matsuzaka wa s II ye.trs
old, drove Du:e- K 's It rst
pttch mto the n ght-!teld
seats for a two-run homer
Dunng the regular ~easo n
Matsuzaka allowed a teamhtgh 25
He dtd get out ot " tlrst
and-second Jam Ill the thtrd
by stn kll1g out Vt ctor
Martmez . That began a
stretch of five stratght outs,
three on stnkeouts But after
fanmng Trot NIX On. he
wouldn't rettre another batter. allowtng live stratght to
reach
Asdrubal Cabrera and
Travts Hafner htt RBI Stngles, and when Martmez
slapped a smgl e to left
desptte being caught ott balance by a p1tch, Boston
manager Terry Francona
had seen enough .
B~k~~-~~~
from PageiBJ:,
2000 se.tson. but 1t was Itttie more than an overmght
sensati on The Reds are
cotmng o tt thetr seventh
stratght los mg season, the1r
longest ~u c h stretch smce
1945-55
They 'e been through
two ow ners and three general ma11.1gers smce 2003.
Baker ts thetr !t!th manager
over th<tt span, tollowmg
Bob Boone, Dave Mtley,
Jerry Narron and Pete
Mack.tnm , who took over
on an mtenm bas1s last
Jul y
About that time, general
manager Wayne Knvsky
!trs t approached Baker,
who was f1red by the Cubs
after thetr last-place fimsh
111 2006 Baker he spent thts
year away from the game,
usmg the break to work as
an ESPN analyst and spend
time wllh hts family.
" It
was
necessary
because I had to let some
wounds
heal
from
Chtcago," Baker sa1d " h
was beat up pretty good
when I was there "
Baker dtdn't hear from
look at Owmgs ' left shm,
but the nght-hander stayed the Reds agam unttl after
m - only to soon fall the season. By then, they
had dec1ded he was the one
apart
With the Rocktes celebratmg thetr ftrst pennant,
four franchtses remain that
have never reached the
World Senes the Manners,
fromPageBl
Devil
Rays ,
Senators/Rangers
and
Expos/NatiOnals.
w11l fe~ture two soft tossers
The Rock tes went 2-1 Cleveland ' s Paul Byrd,
h1s
old-schbOI
agamst Boston this season, with
outscormg the Red Sox 20- wmdup, and Boston's Tun
5m a June series at Fenway Wakefield, the 41-year-old
Park Colorado last played knuckleballtng master.
Boston grounded mto
Cleveland m 2005 , gettlng
swept 111 a three-game set at three double plays, two of
them by October's scariest
Jacobs Fteld
One night after a cold twosome - David Orttz
ralll forced the grounds and Manny Ram1rez They
crew to dump three tons of combtned for somethmg
dry d1rt on the fte ld, the more unusual - Ramtrez's
grounds crew had a rela- grounder natled Big Pap1
ttvely routme workload m the leg on the basepaths
under clear sktes . It was a for an out that helped
cnsp 55 degrees at game- Westbrook
In all, Westbrook got 14
ume
The D-backs chnched of 19 outs on balls the Red
thetr playoff spot on Sept Sox pounded weakly into
28 at Denver and Melvm the mamcured grass and
put out a d1luted ltneup the mfield dlft at Jacobs Fteld,
next two games wh1le rest- whtch hosted tts flfSt
tng hts regulars for the ALCS game smce 1998
postseason Mel vtn sa1d he Back then, Westbrook was
has no regrets about not m Montreal' s mmor league
trymg to knock out the system perfecting a pnch
Rocktes that weekend that drops, dtps and darts
because hts sole purpose as 11 approaches home
was to get hts team rested plate
The Red Sox couldn't do
and ready for the Cubs,
anythmg w1th 11 until the
whom Anzona swept
when
Jaso n
'Amona ace Brandon seventh ,
Vantek
htt
a
two-run
Webb, whom the Rock1es
beat m -Game I , sa1d he homer
Jensen Lewts reheved
wanted to pttch that final
wtth
a runner on and struck
weekend because he knew
out rookte Dustm Pedro1a
the Rockies were so hot
"I knew that all we had to to end 'the mmng Rafael
do was- w1n one more and Betancourt worked a perthese guys 10ould be out of teet e1~hth and Joe
Borowsk1, the AL saves
1t." Webb satd
Instead, on a cool mght leader, pttched a rare 1-2-3
m October, It was the ram- mnth.
Lofton, wtth a baseball
pagmg
Rocktes
v. ho
knocked out the D-backs passport stamped by II
and gave baseball 1ts f1rst teams over 17 seasons,
handed Westbrook an early
World Sertes at altllude,
Indians
pulhng oft the wtn Drown
rode the thm cushton htgh
on the outer banks, but hts
momentum fell short of the
bewttchmg
"Jack-oLantern" wtn
The top ten fell out hke
thts Rtck Aukland , Doug
Drown, Steve Shaver, M1ke
Balzano , Tun Dohm, Josh
McGUire, Rod Conley, Ben
Adkms, Jeft Burdette and
Ryan Markham.
Ltmlted on budget, but
h1gh on talent and enthUSIasm, K-C Raceway star
Josh Davt s set fast ttme and
gave tt a greaJ run 111 an
effort to wm h1s fmt 410
spnnt wm However, 11 was
outlaw Oanny Smllh thdl
JUmped into the early lead
Although Smtih led flagto-flag he put on qutte a
show w1th htgh-tlymg
passes and dtcey dives on
the low side as Dav1s and
N1ck Naber pursued
Naber bagged Davts, but
Davts fought back The two
battled for several laps
before Naber broke clear to
chase down Smtth alone
Rob Chaney m the Aaron
Htggms #51 mount began a
charge wtth Parkersburg's
Greg Mttchell m tow, and
eventually the duo would
share top pass mg honors
Kellh Baxter battled hard
wllh Caleb Gntftth and
Eddte Slone for the top ftve
as Davt s held oft Chaney
for much of the ra~e
Smllh stmply outran the
held and on to v1ctory but
much
wheel-to-wheel
actiOn back tn the pack
made the spnnt port1on of
the "J,tck-o-Lantern" race,
a r.tce to see Behmd,
Sm1th, Naber anchored
down second ahead of Rob
Chaney, Josh Davis, Keith
Baxter, Caleb Gnffith,
Greg Mttchell, Eddte
Slone, 16-year old John
Memmer,
and
Roger
Mossbarger Mossbarger
won out m a race-long battle wtth Bnan Benson and
Randy Fmk
No matter where he starts
Jeremy Berwan~er has
been a threat to wm m
2007 Berwanger has come
mto hts own thts season
wtth many vtctones at several dtfferent tracks, but
Skylme has been ht s
AMRA modthed stage this
summer. Roy Roush got the
Jump on Berwanger to lead
the ftrst seven ctrcmts m
the
acctdent
ftlledmarathon.
Doug Adk111s was domg
what he does best and that
was " pu~ting on a show".
Adktn s had the hard-charger award m hts pocket as he
bhtzed to fourth m a three
, way dual wtth Roush and
Jerem y Blake.
Blake
streaked !rom IOth to thttd
111 another good nde to fmJSh thtrd behmd Berwanger
.m d Rou sh Adkms was
mvolved 111 a last lap acct-
they wanted
"We wanted to come up
w1th the person we tell was
the best person to take the
Red s fmw ard and bnng
wmnmg back to the Reds,
but also prov1de the stabth ty, contmmty, credtbtlity I
spoke about," general manager Wayne Knv sky satd
Baker was tmpressed by
the way the Reds pursued
htm. offenng a three-year
deal
"Thts " the place where I
was most wanted," Baker
smd. ''That's a great feelmg
when you feel wanted and
needed. You go mto thmgs
w1th an upbeat attitude "
He's the f1rst manager
h1red from outstde the
orgamzatton Since Ptmella,
who mhented a much better s1tuatton Ptmella had a
lmeup bmlt around Barry
Larkm and Enc Davt s a
rotat10n anchored by Jose
RlJO and Tom Brownmg ,
and the Nasty Boy s bullpen
that earned the team to tts
I! tie
Baker gets a team wtth
only
two
dependable
starters (Aaron Harang and
Bronson Arroyo) The only
thmg nasty about thts
bullpen is the earned run
average· 5 13, worst m the
league The everyday hneup also 1s m transttton
One of the b1g offseason
questions ts whether they
p1ck up Adam Dunn's $13
mtllton opuon for next season Dunn became the first
player m Reds htstory to h1t
40 homers tor the fourth
consecuti ve season
"I want hun bac k," owner
Bob
Castelhm
said
Monda) "We'll see what
happens There 's a strong
te e hn~ that we want hun
back '
·
The Reds opened the season with a $69 m!ll10n pa~
roll. whtch ranked 20th 111
the majors They have a lot
of areas to upgrade commg
oft thetr th1rd 90-loss seasOil 111 the last seven years
'Let 's be honest Most of
the ume you don't take
ove1 a wmnmg sJluatton,"
Baker satd "Most of the
ttme, you take over a snuatlon where a team's not
domg very well That's
why they come get you 111
the ltrst pla~e
·'When I took over the
Gtants, we were 111 the bottom I took over the Cubs,
they were m the bottom So
I plan on takmg thts team
to the lop hke I've done
with the other teams- and
beyond That 's my goal
''I've got to take 1t a httle
blt turther and beyond, or
else I won't be sattsfted m
my own ltfe, 111 myself. tf I
don't bnng a champ10nshtp
betore I go home and play
wtth my so n."
lead with a two-run homer
in the second mning off
Daisuke
Matsuzaka.
Cleveland added two more
runs m the fifth agamst the
high-pnced
Japanese
1mport, whom the Red Sox
mvested more than $100
mtlhon m to pttch 111 games
ltke this
By
comparison,
Westbrook was a bargam at
$33 mJ!lton for the lndtans.
who locked htm up in Apnl
for three more years before
he had a chance to test the
free-agent market after thts
season
Westbrook then spent
seven weeks on the disabled hst wtth a s1de lllJUry
and dtdn' t fmd h1s groove
unlll August, when he went
4-1 w1th a 1.90 ERA But
even then, Westbrook, who
lost to the Red Sox on July
23, wasn't expected to shut
down Boston
Westbrook was m complete control until J D.
Drew grounded a one-out
smgle to center m the seventh Vantek followed wtth
a homer to center, bri ngmg
the Red Sox to 4-2
The
homer
ended
Boston's 13-mnmg scoreless streak, a drought that
began m the s1xth mnmg ot
Game 2 on Saturday mght.
Westbrook struck out
Coco Cr1sp but when Juho
Lugo beat out an mf1eld
smgle,
manager
Enc
Wedge pulled hts gutty
starter, who recetved a
thunderous ovatton from
the towel -wavmg crowd ot
44,402 as he Jogged to the
dugout
Lofton, a 40-year-old
who could sttll pass as a
twentysomethmg, gave the
lndmns a 2-0 lead m the
second wtth his seventh
career postseason homer
Ryan Garko smgled wtth
one out, and wllh two
down, Lofton, traded back
for h1s th1rd stint With the
lndmns 111 July, turned on
Matsuzaka's ftrst p1tch and
sent tt on a low traJectory
and barely over the nghtheld wall
Alter h1gh-!tvmg dehnous teammate s, Lofton ,
who se eve ry move has
been cheered smce he
returned to Cleveland,
came out and ttpped hts
helmet to the adonng
crowd
The Red Sox ran themselve s out of a potential
sconng opportumty 111 the
fourth
Orttz ended an 0-for-8
drought vs Westbrook wtth
an oppos1te-fJeld double
off the wallm left, but ~hen
was struck on the leg when
he mexpltcably broke for
thtrd on a hard-htt grounder
to shortstop by Ramtrez
In the second mning ,
Boston loaded them on a
walk. smgle and error by
tirst baseman Garko, a former catcher who botched
an easy grounder But
Westbrook got Vantek to
tly to left and then escaped
trouble by gettmg Cnsp to
h1t mto an mmng-endmg
double play
Westbrook gave up . a
one-out walk to Kev1n
Youktlts m the ftrst , but got
Ortiz to hn a_hard grounder
mto the sh1ft toward second
baseman Asdrubal Cabrera
The converted shortstop
ptcked 11 cleanly and threw
to second, where th;rd
baseman Casey Blake
turned the unconventional
4-5-3 double play
dent t~ end h1s great run,
bumpmg up the hard chargmg Jeff Meadows Ftfth
through tehth were Sam
Lovejoy, Jeff Wood, Rtck
Tracewell , Larry Bond,
Dusty Boley, and Jeremy
Landrum
Jeremy Blake has been
the dommant force tn
Skyhne Outlaw Pure stock
compettllon. Blake char&ed
to hts fourth consecuttve
wtn m a tough battle w1th
Frank Roush Tommy
Mossbarger fought hard
wtth Roush for second, but
Roush clatmed the runnerup
slot
ahead
of
Mossbarger, Rob Casto,
Rob Sm1th, Buddy Brogan,
Brandon ThomP.son, Roger
Shadwtck, Wtll Bro~an ,
and Davtd Dunn . Team
Brogan made a good showtng Ill thetr ftrst Skyhne
a11pearance thts fall. whtle
Brandon Thompson shared
the hard-charger award
wtth Roger Shadwtck, who
went to the tatl to come
back to e1ghth
The versaule George
Klintworth lopked to be the
bndesmatd unlll two laps
to go when cjommant
Danny Talbott suffered a
tlat ttre whtle leading the
ltrst
12
ClrCUllS.
Klmtworth moved mto the
hot seat and took the heat
!rom a htgh-tlymg Shawn
lett to post the wm Behmd
second place Jett was Mtke
Boyer, Duslln Sprou se,
Lucas Jones, Enc Franc1s,
Joe M1sel, Robtn Ours.
Mark Hmton and Jeremy
M1sel Joe M1sel was the
hard charger, commg from
15th to 7th
The Four-Cylmders traded a little pamt throughout
the contest, but the resultmg rambow of color
flashed on vtctor T1m
Ch'nstopher, who edged out
the early leader Tommy
Adkins Adkms was then
left to battle Shawn
McClam
for
second
McClam took seonc don
lap 13, then 11 was Adkms,
unttl fmally McClam took
runner-up Adkms placed
thtrd ahead of Jod1 Leach,
who shared top passing
honors
with
George
Klintworth who started
scratch The fmtsh 4-thru-9
was Leach, Jeff Rankm,
Ryan Adktns, George
Khntworth,
Quina
Wheaton. John Stnnett, and
Steve Brown.
The mim-wedges once
agam put on a show wtth
Randy Arms taktng the wm
ahead of Ron Ptckens, Kyle
Bond, Zach Fox, Sarah
Klintworth, Stone Allman
Ptckens clatmed the heat
W111
Skyhne Speedway wtll
take off Oct 20, but w1ll
race October 27, takmg a
one-week break for the Dtrt
Track World Champtonshlp
at
J1m
N1er's
K-C
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htrtng
lor
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Dulles tnclude a 1swe nng
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ul e
classes
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Volonteers Etc The person
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fUR S•ll
Georges Portable S wwm II
Attention•
don 1 haul your Logo:; to the Local company offer n_g "NO
Mllltust call304 675 1957
DOWN PAYMENT" pro
grams lor you to buy your
P rotess tonally
Clertn home tnstead of ren ting
Of! ce 1Housecle an og
100°/<:> ftnanc ng
Reasonable
Ratu s
Less than perfect credtt
References 740 446 2262
accepted
Payment could be theSMITH Plumbmg repau
ser•ce 24 11rs To lets sa me a~ ent
Locators
stn ks showe rs & tubs 740 Mortg ~ ge
(740}357 0000
517 9 t 32
H\ \M 'I \I.
IO
JltsiNI."
Ot'rnRTL'N I n
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1n this newspaper Ia
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FAir Housing Act ot 1968
whtch makes rl Illegal to
adverttse any
prefere~ lrmilatton or
dtscrlmtnatiOn based on
I" - I(.
race color reltgton se:.
familial status or national
or~gtn or any In tention to
make any such
preference l tm1tallon or
dlsertmmallon
304 773-5683
ppltes
All Real Estat
dv'trlisements ar
ubject lo lhe Federa
air Housing Act o
968.
ThiS newspaper wrll not
knowtngly accept
advertisements for real
estate wh1ch ts '"
Violation of t he law Our
readers are hereby
mfcrml!d that all
dwell tngs advertised 10
thts n~w s paper ar~
available on an equal
opporlumty bases
newspape
ccepts only hel
anted ads meelin
OE sland3rds.
For Sale by owner Nt ce
3BR 2B A Bnck & S dtng
Ranch With unattached
garage on 10 5 acres 24
above ground pool ,../deck
located JUSt m nut es from
GalltpOIIS ctly so uth o~l
Neighborhood
Rd
$12Z 500 Ca ll for Appt
[740}44 1 0448
For sa le by owner 3BR
Ranch
1 bath
Fam ly
Room Stove/Fndge WID
1nctuded Asktng $70 000
Call 740 ..,.09 5339
House lor sale tn Raetne
area Approx 4 acres all
professiona lly landscaped
Ranch style house w1th 4
IU \I I Sl \II
bedrooms ltvtng room dm
tng room ktlcllen large tarn
Hcl'U);
1ly room cen tral atr gas heat
and 1 fireplace Addtllon ol a
IURS.\U
large Flonda room com
0 down payment
4 bed pletely ce dar opens onto
rooms Large yard Coveted patto & pool area Heated tn
deck Anached garage 740 ground pool enc los ed by prt
vacy fenc ng and land
367 7129
- - - - - - - - seeped Ftntshed 2 car
garage attached 10 house
and hntshed & heated 3 car
garage
unatlached
E)(cellent condtl10n ready to
move m $255 000 00 Call
(740)949 2217
Rak{! in th{!
~aving~
Wanted lady to provtde day
care for elderly woman tn
our home Part ltm e to full
t me no I fling Some hght
housekeeprng
cookmg
Must provtde reterences and
agree to background ck Call
446 3067 5 9 only
Race ~"<ay
•
In One Week With Us
REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS
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Page B4 • The Daily Sentinel
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MOOILE ~IF.li
FOR SALE
I '1: I
[
Tuesday, October 16, 2007
'I 1'1'1 II "
,\ I I\ I
" [I
Gallipolis off SA 588. 446- 3BR. 2 story house. good
Oorot~
EllmView
Apartments
location in town . No Pets
• 2&3 bedroom apanments
Call446-1162
2004 16•80 Clayton 3Bed -:-:---,-...:.,-....:..:_-:-::__-::-c • Central heat & AJC
2Bath ,
2002
t6x80 69 Garfield • 2BA. ,1BA • W<isherldryer hookuP
bakwoad 3Bed 2Balh, 3 $460/moi'lth ..- sec. dep
• Tenant pays eleclric
Mpre 16x80 .9 nd
?
More You pay all utilitieS. Call 446-
14x70 to choose from. Days 3644
740-388-0000 Eves 740- - - - - - - - 388-8017 or 740-245-9213
Attention!
Local company offering "NO
95 Oa~wood t4x60. 2br. DOWN PAYMENT" pro1ba, Central Air . $6.000 grams tor you to buy your
304-895-3144 or 304-593· home instead of renting.
4200
• 1ooo ofinancing
• Less than perfect credit
96 16x80 38R. 2BA Must
accepted
b!l moved _ 513,500. 740. • Payment cou ld be the
288"4588 e11enrngs
same as rent
locators.
Great used 2005 3 bedroom Mortgage
16x80 with vinyl/shingle. (7 40)367·0000
Must sell, Only $25 .995 with Pomeroy, 2·3 br. apt. or
delivery. Call (740\385-4367 house. par!lally turn1shed.
Dell Compute r, 1yr old.
Windows XP. Internet ready,
Keyboard aild mouse. Paid
$700.00 Will sacrifice for
$300. Verizon 4 tine phone
system with lnlbrcom. 2
Gracious Living 1 and 2 phones $50. Call 740-949Bedroom Apts. at vmage 1522
Manor and Riverside Apts. in - - - - - - - JET
Middleport, fiom $327 to
$592. 740·992-5064. Equal
AERATION MOTORS
Hous•ng Opportunity.
Repaired. New & Rebui~ In
StOCk. Ca ll Ron Evans. 1·
Middleport, 1 & 2 br. IIJrB00-537-9528.
·
ntshed apartments, no pets,
deposit
&
references, NEW AND USED STEEL
[740)992-()165
Sleel Beams, Pipe Rebar
For
Concrete,
Angle,
Channel, Flat Bar, Steel
Grating
For
Drains,
Driveways & Wat~ways_ l &L
Scrap Metals Open Monctay,
Tuesday. Wednes day &
Friday. Bam-4:30pm. Closed
Thursday, Saturday
&
Sunday. (740 )446-?JOO
Seasoned Firewood Picked
'up or delivered.
HEAP
&LAA, WV LEAP accepted.
Call. Melllin Clagg. 740-4410941 or740-645-5946
oH
XL Ri ver Valley Varsi ty
Jacket. like New. Call 740·
245·5887 or 339·980 4
i
~
304-773·5881
Mobile Home l'ot for rent
$150/mo, plus water. 1.5
miles out Neighborhood Ad.
Green Twp. 740-446·6565
MOBILE HOME LOT FOR
RENT. 103t Georges Cree~
Rd. 441 ·1·111
;;::=;===:,
Ul \ I \I ...,
~
r
1 & 2 Bedroom Apartments
for Rent, Meigs County. 1n
town. No Pets, Deposit
Required, (740)992 -5174 or
{740)441 -0 110-,-.-n-d-2_b_ed_r-oo_m_a_p-ar-tments, furnished and unfurnished. and houses in
Pomeroy and Middleport,
r
Commercial building ~For
Rent" 1800 square feet , off
street parking. Great loca·
lion! 749 Third Avenue in
Gallipolis. Rent $300/mo.
security deposil required, no
pelS, 740-992 -221 B.
10
HousES
1 BR Apt in Spring valley,
mR
RENT
WID
Hookups, [740)339~.__ _ _ _ _ _,..1 0362
- - - ----'---1BA home for rent In down- 2 br. partially furnished apt.
town Gallipolis. $275.00 mo. on 2nd Ave ., Middleport,
Sec Dep req.740-446·3481 $350 a month plus deposit,
must ha11e references. no
2br, in Point Pleasant, nice pets, (7401992 _39871 eave a
'$465, Homestead Realty
304-675-4024 or 304-675· message
0799 as~ for Nancy
2BR renova ted downtown
apt. includes stove, fridge,
3 bedroom house in central H/A water, sewer,
Pomeroy. large & very clean. trash $560/mo +dep. Call
1 112 bath, ale; hardwood 740-709-1690
lloors, lull basement w/2 car ~-----~-
garage, small bac~ "yard, Apartment for rent, .1-2
$585, (740)949·2303
Bdrm., remodeled , new carpet, stove & lrlg.. water,
3 Bedroom House in sewer, trash pd. Middleport.
Syracuse. $500/month + $425 .00 . No pels. Ae.f
deposit No Pets. (304)675· required. 740-843·5264.
5332 wee~ends 740 -59 10265
Beautiful Apts. at Jackson
Estates. 52 Westwood
6 BR house in Gallipolis. DriVe, from $365 to $560.
WID connection. $475/mo, 740-446-2568.
Equal
$250/dep. Also t BA in Housing Opportunity. This
Gallipolis
$275/mo. inslitution is an Equal
·$150/dep Call Wayne 404- Opportunity Provider and
~456-3802 for info.
Employer.
._c_==-----
FOR RENT
HOUSEIIOI.O
..__ _•Gooiiiiiins..,_,..,
i'E
ITS
i
Ir
l'lr~
. - - , 2006 Honda Gold Wing
101"""--A-li'I'OS--
;~:;~,:r:r~o~i~~~~4~~~=~:
4197
Hyun da1
·
Accen t
01
Hatchback. 5 speed trans,
65 .310 miles , good co ndr·
tion. needs catalytic converter. Asking $3200. Call 740·
709 .6339.
-------1954 Chevy 210, 2 door,
350 V-8 Big Cam High Rise
Headers, 350 Automatic,
New Tires, reduced to
511 ,000.00, (740)949-2909
Leave Message if no answer
and will ca ll back.
'
96 Honda CR 250R. $1 ,700;
97HondaCR 125R,$1,700;
or both for $3, 100; bolh 2
cycles.• both ready lo ride ,
(740)992·5658
Amo PARIS &
Ac~RIES
~.o-oiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiio-"
4.0 Engine. automatic transmission & transfer case for a
95 Jeep. $600 Call 740-6454358
'-II
I ~\
I( I ...,
rlO
BASEMENT
1993 Bu ic~ Century. 80K,
WATERPROOFING
good cond ition. $1 ,200 304·
675-8156 after 6pm
Unconditional lifetime guar----~--- antee. Local references fu~2001 Chryslet 300M 3.5, nished. Established 1975.
V-6. 39,000 miles. S5995 .• Call 24 Hrs. (74 0) 446Dogs For Sale
Pappition & POOdle cross . 1998 Dodge Stratus, 2.4 0870, Ro?ers Basement
breed puppy. tst shots & mOtor, 71,000 miles $2395. Waterproofi ng.
wormed $275. Pure breed Call 740·256·1142
Spill puppies, Mala &
Female. 1st shots &
2005 H2 Hummer Lux.Pkg.,
wormed, no papers, $275 FM radio,many EiJC tras,72K
each. Pure bred Chinese ' mUes-$30, K
(boo~)$35K
Pugs, Fawn & Blk, no
740-444-4483-or 331 ·2 142.
papers, male $300. PomaPoos. 2 red, 3 bl ~. $275 ·
Help Wanted
Help Wanted
each.
Call
740-379-2243
- - - - -- - - Heartland Publications · LL(:, a fast growing
Lab. Retriever puppies for
newspaper publishing company, with a regional
sale. 2 yellow,2 choclate. 7
wk.Oi d,vet. ck'd.& have 1st accounting office in Gallipolis, Ohio i$ ~et:king
shor & wormed.3046745070 the positions or Accountant, Collections
CKC Miniature Pinctler
Pups. Tails docked &
wormed. $150.00 each. Call
740·388·8788
·
a
AK~4~f;~~95._4 11bs
0
igr~ol'"wn.;;·...;;~~.;.;;;,o;_ _,
r~,c~~l
.
1 pair Quaker Parrots, $300;
1-44 Magnum SuPer Red
Hawk
pistol,
$600,
(740)742-3706
Alto Saxophone by Selmer
(USA) in excellent cond with
leather case. ~odel AS21 0.
$2100 new, sell ior $500.
BARGAIN 740.339-2237
CORNER STONE
CONSTRIICTIDN
Roofing, Siding,
Soffit, Decks,
Doors, Windows,.
El~tric, Plumbing,
Drywall,
Remodeling, Room
Additions
candidate will have three years of experience
collecting accounts and will be proficien t in
Excel and Word soft war.e. Responsibilities will
include contacting customers directly to resolve
js.~ues cOncerning delinquent accOunts.
Account Specialist: A successful candidate
will haVe three years of accounting e11.perience
and will be proficient in · Excel and Word
software. Responsibilities will include billing.
accounts receivable. cash application, and
accounl .reconciliations.
Successful applicants must be people oriente.d
and have gOO<{ organizational skill s. Positions
qffer all company benefits, i ncluding health
and life insurance, 40 I (k ), and paid vacation.
'
For immed iate consideration. semi yuur resume
and rererences to
dkhill@hcartlandpublications.com, fax l o 740441-0578, or mail to
Diane Hill
Heartland Publications
825 Third Avenue
Gallipolis, OH 4563 1
Public Notice
Tha ,annual election of
the Board of Directors
for the Meigs county
Agricultural Society
will be hold at the ·
Secretary's oftlce at
the fairgrounds, on
Monday, Navember 5,
2007. The polls will be
open from 5 p.m. to g
p .m . on Election Day.
The election shall be
by ballot. Ballots must
be marked whh an "X"
opposite tho name or It
will not be counted.
The caatlng of votea
lor directors by proi·
las are not permitted.
Only Meigs County
residents
holdin g
11lambershlp tickets for
at least15 days before
the date of election
may vote.
Members of the SOCia·
ty must declare their
candidacy
for the
oftlce of Director oflhe
Society by filing w ith
the secretary, Debbie
Watson, 42455 Woods
Road, Coolville , Ohio
45723.
A
petition
slgned by 10 or more
members of the socla·
ty who are residents of
Meigs County, at last7
days before the annual
election of dlrec1ors is
held. Only regularly
nominated candidates
who have met the filing
requirements will ba
eligible for election as
director.
(10) 9, 16
OXYGEN & RESPIRATORY
EQUIPMENT & · SUPPUES ·
Locally Owned and Operated
• 24hr. Emergency Service
7 40-367·0544
Free 367
Estimates
740
0536
•
•
H&H
GuHering
Seamless Gutters
Roofing, Siding, Gutters
Insured& Bonded
740-653-9657
.'
MONTY
•
7 40· 446-0007
~=-
Wise Concrete
South
2•
2•
A ll types of concrete
Owne r- Rick Wise
4•
~~~~~g~~:!_!!~~~~~~~
ADVERTISE IN THIS
SPACE FOR $60
PER MONTH
FRANK & EARNEST
ICLA~ FooiiA~L I
,-....."'
~'M
\)
•
•
BARNEY
W"WW.timberc:reek.cahlnftrJ'.aoJn
B'FORE I PASS TH'
COLLECTION PLATE
LEMME REMIND
Y'ALL. ..
TH' GOOD LORD
FROWNS ON
GAMBLIN'!!
H-Honest
H:t rH~)' RoAd
wv
I I \\ IS
1<1- II·
I "0\S I IH (" 110\
I 11\1
• VInyl Siding
• Replacement
Windows
• Rooting
• Decks
•Garages
• Pole Buildings
• • Room Additions
Hill's Self
Storage
29670 Bashan Road
Racine, Oh io
45771
740-949-2217
THE BORN LOSER
OON'L.
Owner:
James Keesee II
742·2332
~6 Years Experience
David Lewis
740-992-6971
Free
WHAT A DEAL!!
12% All Stock
•
Feed
-------------------------------------;
Homes
• Complete
Remodeling
140-992-1611
Stanley TreeTrimming
&.Removal
Stop & Compare
' Prompt and Quality
Work
Willi
*Insured
*Experienced
References Available!
* Reasonable Rates
CIDCretl Will
Dri¥eway.<,
Sidewalks, Patios,
Concrete Footers
Also
·Block &
Brickwork
Call Gary Stanley
740-742-2293
V.C_YOUNG Ill
@·
992-621
~
P o nli'I OV U~110
.' ' Yr ,11 ~ L c ' 11 '
'!'' 11•'11_,,
Dennis Bryant
740-742-2377
COW and BOY
SO J'MKINDA
PARA~OI D ABOUT THE
WHOLE GOVERNMENT
WIETAPPING THING.
PUBLIC NOTICE
NOTICE: Is hereby
given that on Saturday,
October 20, 2007 ot
10:00 a.m., a public
A · One Auto Repair
sale will be held at 211
99 Beech Street
W
Second
St.,
Middleport, OH
Pomeroy, Ohio. The
740-992-1030
Farmers Bank and
Savings Company Ia
Mon·Fri 9-5
selling for cash In
Oil Changes,
hand or certified check
Brake Svc, Tune
the following collator·
_Up, AIC Svc,
al :
·
Engine Work ,
2004 Arctic Cat ATV
S hocks Struts
The Farmers Bank and
All work
Savings
Company,
guaranteed
Pomeroy,
Ohio ,
Certiiied M echanic
reserves the right to
Bumper To
bid at this sale, and to
Bumper
Service .
withdraw the above
Colla teral prior to sale.
Further, The Farmers
Bank and Savings
Company reserves the
right to reject any or all
bids submltled.
The above described
collateral will be sold
" as Is-where Is", with
no
expressed
or
Implied
warranty .
given .
For further Jnformatlon, or for an appoint·
ment to Inspect colla!·
oral, prior to sale date
contact Cyndle or Ken
at 992-2136.
(10) 16, 17, 18
Advertise
in this
space
Pa ss
2NT/3., Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass
To guarantee one,
don't be tempted
.
I FEEl. l.II<E IF I UTTE~
THE WORD "TEilflORIST"
INTO THE PHON£ L1~E.
THEYRE GOING TO
ME.
CME AFTER
...
GARFIELD
.M anley's
Recycling
5113 1111 Sl•lldiiiiiOit. 1145110
140-992-3194
... . . .dlitfrMIV9:00 IIIHI:IIIM
Sllunllv 1:08 n-12:DD 1111
PlYING TDP PRICES FOil
lllantmCiu•Jitlllntm""*
CabiVIIc Cllverllrs• Cltl1er
11111...... ...,
llllllfwlllrr.. Prlctsl
OK.:YcU''IJE 1\~P E\-\o\16\-1
CA6\.E N~$ ~\ION$. .. LEH
for
S90
6P ~ A 'N~\..¥. 11-1 \'H~
'tJOO~$ ... r--~
per
month
.'
41-
1-
1 Many
millennia
4 l.auper's
42 Crow'a-nest
cry (2 wds.)
45 In neutral
"- Bop"
49 Famous last
7 Bud holder
word
11 Previously 50 Pdnlod arch
12 Tended the 52 Guanobera
garden
Bay port
14 Sooner clly 53 Adulllilly
15 Big parrot 54 Pleasant
16 Part
55 Miscellany
17 Jazzy
56 Nautical
greeting,
- James
18 Frozen
57 Garnet or
dessert
ruby
20 Courtyard '58 Doze
1 0 Gouda
22 Billboards
cousin
23 Ally
DOWN
13 Stuns with
noise
or,poslte
24 Paid
1 Cartoon
19 Forbids
wearers
shrieks
21 Insect eater
27 Like
2 layered
24 - -Magnon
moccasins
cookie
25 Table
30 Umps
3 Just around
extender
31 Manage
the corner
26 Huge ··
hairstyle
for oneself
4 Makes
32 Commit
coleslaw
27 Stooped
perjury
5 Derisive
down
34 Boat
shouts
28 Verve
implement
6 Moray
29 Soap !argot
35 Urges
31 Deck
7 Turned
36 Fix a sock
sharply
the halls
37 Timberland 8 Debate side 33 Naval oH.
39 Undersized 9 In- ·
35 You be1!
pups
(undls·
36 Sword light
40 Cereal grain
turbod)
38 Mr. Danger·
field
39 Cash in
coupons
41 Brother's
daughter
42 Mantra
chanter
43 Delhi
nursemaid ·
44 Mad
, emperor
46 Cyrus'
realm,
today
47 El- (ocNn
current)
48 Incite
51 Temp job
Joey Adams, a comedian . and author,
said, "Do not worry about avoiding temptation . ~s you grow older, it will avoid
you."
At the bridge table, you will occasionally
be lempled by a particular play - perhiiPS a finesse. But always ask yourseU.
what will happen if the tempting Irick
turns out to be ethereal, not solid.
In this deal, you are in four spades. West
leads the hear1 kin~ . When East signals
enthusiastically at trick one, West contin·
ues hearts. After you ruff the third round,
how would you proceed?
Nor1h's second-round rebid of two no·
trump or three d ubs, according to part·
nership agreement, warns of a very bad
hand: 0-3 points with lower !han lour
spades. Than Sooth has th ree choices.
Three spades is sensible, but is.nonforcing in the modern style. Three no-trump
would~ork we ll here. And a jump lo four
spades is logical.
There are four possible losers: two
hearts, one diamond and one dub. But
there are 10 win ners: six spades. two
diamonds' and tw~ clubs.
You must avoid the temptation of the dia·
morid finesse. Suppose you draw trumps
aoolng on the board and play a diamond
to your queen. West will win w~h his ki ng
aoo lead his last heart. You will be
stranded in your hand, unable to r.each
dummy's diamond jack. ·
lnslead, cash your spade ace -king and
diamond ace, then iead with the diamond queen. You ruff West's heart exit,·
play a.spadeto dummy's jack, and dis·
card your club loser on the diamond
CELEBRITY CIPHER .
by Luis Campos
Celebrr!y CiPher Cryp!ogr.:rn sare create<! frOm ouotaroos by ramo us people. pastal'tl present
Each 1ener rM the Cipher srancs 1or oootner
roctay's due: s equals
w
" B N W C VB 0 V R K R X I J K M M K R R V B 0
SKWGCVBD
ONEM
RNIXWCVBD
GNEYPB'W
ONE
JX
JNRR
KRREMXP
PNBX. "
•
I
Wednesday, Oct. 17, 2007
By Bernice Bade Oeot
A more secure person may emerge in
th e year ahead, and you'll begin to do
th ings in patient ways th at'll prove adll8n·
tageous to your co mmerc ial and social
aHairs. It'll prove that, when we walk
slower, we don't miss as much.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) - It's fine to
dig into your wai1Etllo help with the needs
of a family member or loved"one. Just be
smart en ough to draw th e line when it
comes to eJCtending yoursell beyond your
means.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) - 01
course, you are entitled to your views
and opinions regarding a critical matter
that affects others. Bul remember that
your associates have a say, too.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 2 1) sOmeone with Whom you are doing .busin'ess might want everything done under
th e table. ll his or her reasons do not
benefit you, ypu might want to rethink the
transaction.
· CAPA ICOAN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19}- It ttle
te rms of an agreement into which you
are entering cannot be looked down.
don't assume everything will work out
later. A problem will not go away with out
being resolved
AQUAR IUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) - Once
something Is completed and working
properly, leave it alone. If you have an
inclination to continue tin kering on it, you
could mess up everything you've accom·
pUshed in the first pl ace.
PISCES (Fob. 20'March 20) Remember, we are judged by the company We keep. So if you let yourself be
talked into hanging out with an arrogant
group, outsiders will -autQmalically
assume you behave as they do .
ARIES (M arch 21-April1 9)- An ambi·
tiou s goat can be realized if your moti lla·
l ion is powerfu l enough to go after what
you want. However, once it Is achieved.
you might still question whether it was
worth that much eHorl. .
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) - Alt hough
there are obstructions In your path, you
can synchronize your thln~ing by procur·
ing the knowledgeable in formation of
others who have been there before.
GEMINI (Mp.y 21 -June 20)- The finan·
cial and material demands may be rather
high, but you're not without th e wherewithal to meet them. The pressure will
motivate you to work harder and more
effectively.
CANCER (June 21-Ju ly 22)- Amicably
making the necessary adj us try-~ents and
concessions with your colleagues and
co-workers will assure success better
than simply getting your own way.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) - Even If It caus., you aome Inconveniences and/or
delays, It will be best not to tackle an
Important aarslgnment without the help_of
so.meone who hae the experience and
eMpertlee to handle it.
VIRGO (Aug. 23·Sept. 22) - EveQ
though you normally hava a pretty good
handle on the ways and me1ns ol doing
things, th e ma)Orlt)f ot people ln11o1ved 11'1
a project may focus lnw1rdly, not out·
wardly.
SOUP TO NUTZ
.. . AND T111!N I W<*l':
UR.. W Ka Poa~a THINk"
IT MEaNS?
K]l
PN
CVJ
X .KMY
•
SVYRNB
PREVIOUS SOLUTION - "Nobody in loolball should·be called a genius. A .
genius is a guy like Norman Einstein.· · Football commentat or Joe Theismann
.
.
WOlD ,.
Ulll •
W~!!!,
BIG NATE
ROBERT
BISSEll
COISTIUGnON
• Garages
East
Pass
~As.tro-
$10.50/100
• New
North
2t
;ack.
Public Notice
r-======-•
ADVERTISE
IN· THE
,
C.LASSIFIEDS
OPEN!
\
·' .
Hardwood Cabinetry And FurnlCure
West
Pass
Opening lead: • K
& StraUon
10Years
a
Dealer: South
Vulnerable: Both
Craftsman,
MTD,Briggs
. I~~ Road to left MOO\·I!'
Ma:Ktn Golf ('ou~
A 9
t lO 9 6 4
"" Q 10 3
.AKQI0 87
.. 7 4
t A Q
olo A K 6
70 Pine Street• Gallipolis, OH
J&L
Construction
•
South
MASON
MOWER
1-lntegrl~
"' 9 6 5
KQ.flU
.. J 6 52
I
5-Ser\.k.e
East
t K B7 3
~;;;:=;;;;:
J04.773-5861
304-882-3294
Senicing
Lawn Tractors,
Mowers, Tilltrt,
Murray,
8 6 5 :l
.. 9 7 4
• Free Delivery
• Slop By Our Showroom
• Many Mo re Items
':==;;;::=~
r
IIH6-07
• J 52
local Contractor ·
$24.000 new--$19.600. Call
?40-367·7129.
'
1987 Toyota Tercel 4dr, 5sp, ll!li!""-~~---AKC Pektngese Pups., vet manual transmission, cruiSE;!,
HO!\IE
checked.· $300. 740·256· good mileage $800 304·
IMPROVEMENI'S
1664
675-2088
..__itiioiiioiiiioiiioiiiilr
I
SpeciiJifottln:
$4 ,000 in accessories_ Paid
FOR SALE
•
& MEDICAL EQUIPMENT, INC._
_ CWil
4 WMOTOHEF.I.ERSRCl'
740-245-5595
Nort.h
.. J 4 3
'J~r·ii§§O
I
Mollohan Furniture. New
Soi~&Love
Seal $400.
Several to choose from. New
table w/6 chairs $599.95.
202 Clar~ Chapel Ad.
Supervisor. and Account Specialist for
a·ctw 11 Oh 456 14 7'J'388
' eM, F _, t.9- - · Minialure Pincher Pups, 2 immediate employment. .
0173
· - 9'"" 5 a
Black/Tan femal es, $300
each.
wee~s
old. Ac;:countant: A successful Candidate will have
ANTIQIIDii
_17'4-- 0J_38_s_-s_1_24_ _ __
a degree in accounting and will be proficien-t in
--•
Excel and Word software. Responsibilities will
2 RCA . Victrola wind-up Reg. Miniature Au stralian include creating and posting journal entries,
phonographs, 1 tabletop & 1 Shepherd pl4)pies. Solid & calculating inventories. ~nd prep~ring month console, Rhodes electric Tri-colored. $350 each . Call ' end and year-end financial Slillemems. Three
piano, small .child's Rhodes 740-256-6360
years of general ledger and month-end closing
electric grand plano, milita ry - - - - - - - experience
preferred.
battlefield folding pump Yorkie puppies, Champk>n
Bloodline, vet recommendSupervisor:
·A
successful
ed,
when Coltedions
r
1
I
r«l
·1
~--·FOiiiiRiiSiiiAiiLF.iii';,._.,l
VANS
2 Reg. Polled Herelord Bull
· FOR SALE
Calves. 7 months old. 740256-1385
, 1995 Chevy G-20 van lor
Sale. excellent condition
5 Full Blood Angus Heifer $5,000 304-li 75-7217
Cal•es, 6 -7 months old. Call
NEA .Crosswprd Puzzle
ACROSS
Phillip
Alder
Round Bale Feeders
Starting at $125.00, Aoto
TnJers 4', 5' & 6', Bush
Hogs 5' & 6' AU Have Been
Marked Down. End Of The
Season Sale On
Fil'lishing Mowers Starting
At $899.00, Get Your Rear
Blade Now While Prices Are
Low Before The Snow.
Come On In And Get The
Best Deals Now On
Anything In Stock! I!! While For Sale ·(cheap)1998 Ford
The Selection Is SHUGood . Explorer (Sporl) needs
motor. Other-wise in good
~
condition. Phone 992-2272.
__
•
(304)882·3017
•·r
!"""
BRIDGE
740-446-97n
Couch & l.:ove Seat dark
brown , micro suede, 2
months old $650, call · 304675-2247 after 5pm
New 3 Bedroom homes from HUD appro11ed .. near par~.
$214.36 per rilonth, Includes no pets. (740)992-6886
many upgrades. ·delivery &
Modern 1 Bedroom apt. Call
Small 2 br. house on 681W 446 •03g0
set-up. (740)385.,-2434
near Tuppers Plains, no - - , - - - - - - - - New Fleetwood Mobile pets. $350 per mo. -+dep. & Modern 1 BR Apt. Call446. -3736
Home. 40x48. $18.000_ Call utilities, (740)985-3504
:--:-:-----740-4 4&-1 617 after 7pm.
Very nir;;e 3BR, 1 mile from · Second floor apt. overloo~keep trying if no answer
town on 586. No pets. rng Gallipolrs City par~. L.A.,
Nice used 3 bedroom home In etudes stove & fndge. 2 B.A ., 1 1/2 baths. tully
vinyVshingle. Will help with $475/mon. Ref & dep req. equipped kitchen, dining
74 0-446·3292
.delivery. 740,:385·4367
area , , laundry ! hookups.
H
Reierences . and security
JY ~~~·~~U);
deposit reqUired. $600 mo.
;OWNER FINANCING
call446-2325 or 446-4425.
~ Nice 3/2 singlewides
Townhouse
: From $1 .800 down
2BR trailer on farm . 540- Tara
Apartments.
Very
Spacious,
payment
729-1331
•
2 Bedrooms. CIA, 1 1/2
Adam (7 40) 828-2750
2BR trailer, No pets. Bath, Adul1 Pool & Baby
'";;;::=:;:=:::;:=~ . Addison Twp. Call 740-446- Pool, Paho, Start $425/Mo.
0722
No Pets, lease Plus
LOTS &
Security Deposit Required,
At.1lEAGE
2BR. NC . porch. storage · 17401446 _3481 .
bldg. No Pets. Very nice in - - -- - -- APProlC. 3.2 acres. private. Gallipolis. Call 446·2003 or Twin Rivers Tower is accept-&x miles from Hospi tal. _4_46_·_
14_0_9____ _ ing applications for waiti ng
;Elec, septic. wa ter. S30K Trailer tor rent, 3BA, 2 BA. list for Hud-supsized, 1· br,
0 80 . 740 _446 _9478
apartment,for
the
Call 367 ·7762 or 446•406° elderlyfdisabled call 675:0reen Acres ( 10), Farm
AI'ARTM.EI'TS
6679 · Equal
Housin"g
Livin', Fresh Air, 3 miles from
tUR RENT
CO:i!'lpir
po•rl.urn.·;ly~~---,
;.
New Haven, wv $84,500 ..__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
SPACE
The Daily Sentinel • Page B5
r
lO
..4-Sale Commeriesl Tanning
.rARM
97 Neon, auto, air, 40R,
Bed, & Gas remote con- Lw-..iiF..QuiPMENJ'illliiiiiiiiO._.I $1500 OBO. 740-256-1652
trolled Fireplace 304-895 - ..,
or 256·,233
3129
BIG FALL SALE
JIM'S FARM
SUVs
Brunswick regulation pool
EQUIPMENT INC.
FORSAIE
table. slate top, great
2150 Eastern Ave.
Christmas gift, $1500,
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631
(740)949·2803 ask lor
8935
www.mydailysentinel.com
II [,
CONVENIENTLV LOCAT·
ED & AFFORDABLE!
TownhOuse .apartments,
and/or small houses FOR
RENT. Call (740)441-1111
2000 14x70, JBA , 2BA_ Lots deposit Available 10-13-07. for appltcation & information.
oitJp grades . on rentea lot. Call 446-3644 for applica3-4' Kraus-Beck Rd. lion .
2.9 acres, 1989 2BR/2BA 3BR, 1 bath, 2-story older
Mobile Home. $38.000. Near farm house on SA 554 · Rio Grande. Leave mes- BidweiVAV
schoolS
~age . 740-288 -4502
$575/mo plus sec dep. Pets
~----,--------- .under 15 lbs ·w/$575 pet
G"allipolis. 3 miles from - : - -- - - - - -
Tuesday, October 16, 2007
ALLEY OOP
DROILF
· LEPHW
I
I
HNT I N
~~
I j• I .~
REX T E V
I
Overheard at conference:
"The less a man knows·the
-" "
morehewantsto-----."
..,..,...,,--i Q Complete
tho chuckle quoted
l!ll!ng In lhe milling
f--,,,.,5,...,,-,.,""G
_
_ •
. by
wor~
'-...1.-1-..1.-'-..L.....l you d..,.lop from ~ep No. 3 below.
•@ PRINT
.
NUMBERED LETTER S IN
THES E SQUARES
I
·. A UNSCRAMBLE t ETTERS 10
GET ANSWER
•
!'='
I
I' .1' 111
IIII II
SCRAM-LETS ANSWW 1 o- 1 5- o 1
Sinful- Metal ~ Offal - Beaeon - FENCE
"If you think pollticiw have it euy," the rellow ranarbd, "111
lceeping one eat to the ground 1\itlle straddling a FENCE."
ARLO &JANIS
�.,
Page B6 • The Dail y Sentinel
.
.
Rice wms :yport
_www.mydailysent inel.com
·.
'
Ron's Trophies
OHIO VALLEY .
'.
'
HMC'srehab
unit holds
reunion, A:)
~
BANK.
MSl!iam!M·
Galli•iis. O:t &.SII
238SorondAve . -- -
446·2168
21 45 Eastern Ave ---
441-3575
Pomeroy 100 w. Main st. ---------------
992-2357
lnsldeFoodland
~ ····
Inside Walmart
'
"WaC. 111w • liN <It.-, t - w CrfPSIIIIllhrlilll
www..ovbc.com
from skepti Egypt
for Mideast peace
conference, A7
-
,.,
Winner
Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
Billy
Thomas
POUJel.t•s
~ :-:-= e!# e ir,c
700 E. main Street
Pomeroy. OH
Open Sun-Sat 7am-10pm
(740) 992.-5252
1. '
,,
HOLZER CUNIC
.
•
'
'
2. __________________
We,re Everywhere You Are!
Pharmacy
Open m-F 9am-7pm
Sat9am-lpm
· Closed Sunday
(740) 992-15_36
\\'J-:11:'\I ·.Sil \\ , 0("1'01~1 ·. 1{
:;o ( ' I•: N'IS • \ 'ul. :i7. :'\u. ho
SPORTS .
• Indians one win away
from World Series.
See Page 81
www.f'oodf'alrmk.com
3. ________~----~---
"'"'-"tl<l.til"'
1-. :!IHI-
,,, ,.1,.,,,
Moore to replace late husband on council
J.
poned due to Moore's death . continue to base every deci"Ferman cared deeply for sion on what will be good
Middleport . Every decision for Middleport."
MIDDLEPORT - Rae he made was made on the
In other business, council
Moore was appointed to basis it would help the vil- heard the first reading on an
replace her late husband, lage," Moore said. "He was ordinance
amendment,
Ferman, on Middleport worried about the financial which will prohibit parking
Village CounciL
instability of MiddlepQft of semi tractors, with or
Council
President and he made decisions that without trailers, on residenStephen Houchins voted were not always ~opular. "
tial streets. The violation
against Moore's appoint"He had a behef that he will be a minor misdement at council's meeting could be part of bringing meanor.
on Monday evening. The back the village that once
Council planned efforts to
meeting, originally sched- existed. I make the promise promote the village's threeuled for Oct. 8,was post- to this village that I will mill levy proposal in
BY BRIAN
REED
BREED®MVOAILY SENTINEL.COM
November. The village will
purchase yard signs promotmg the levy.
Don Suvers of Fisher
Street met with counci I to
discuss· his objections to
recent council action to
change traffic flow on North
Fourth Avenue to a one-way
street. He said most village
streets are not wide enough
for two-way traffic, and said
no residents on the street
were consulted before the
action was taken .
Stivers said the change
has created an incovenience
to residents who live in the
area, and was made based ·
on· the request of .one person . He said that although
the decision to change the
traffic flow was made based
on claims emergency vehicles could not navigate the
comer, the issue at hand is
not traffic flow, but parking.
Council Member Jean
Please see Council, AS
(
5. ________________~--
BCiagent.
6. __________________
to speak on
local drug
trends
7 . _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
BSERGENT;>MVOAILVSENTINEL.COM
9·----~---------
INSIDE
10 . ______~----------
11 •._________________
12._________________
13 . _________________
14 . _______________~-••
''TIE BREAKER:!r1i
-},
'
.',
·-'·;l_''··
. Total Points in the Moriclay Nite."
· Football Game!
···
Indianapolis @ JackSonviQ~,_-,...;..........
;ci> ·
1
~
_./::;
'
NAME: _ _ _ _ _ __
ADDRESS: ____________
PHONE:. ____________~
PLEASANT
VALLEY
HOSPITAL ~~. ,...~ \~_'t¥\l{.,:;ull >btd i f*'lltlf.
J&amo•
& &rf'i·ft~~
iS .... ~
lllljllnll,.,.
C1 • 4IW!IIpllllt
C..w..JI'I'Irll
lrshiJIAIIIIblylay
Each Thesday through Dec. II, a numbered game will
appear.in each participating merchant's ad.
·
Indicate your pick of winners and write it beside the
conesponding number.
llntries must be dropped off at the:
Gallipolis Daily Trib11ne or mailed to:
Football Smackdown
c/o Gallipolis Daily Tribune
825 3rd Avenue
Gallipolis, OH 45631
Entries must be postmarked by Thursday to qualify
for that week's ~-on test. The prize will be awarded
w~ekly on the basis of most winners_· selected correctly
and in case of ties, winner will be determined by blind
draw. You must be 16 years of age or older to enter.
Only one entry per person per week.
7~
OXYGEN
Be MEDICAL EQUIPMENT, INC.
Specia_lists In:
OXYGEN & RESPIRATORY
EQUIPMENT & SUPPLIES
• Locally Owned and Operated
• 24hr. Emergency Service
• F'ree Delivery
• Stop
Our showroom
; Many More Items
By
.7 0 Pine Street ·Gallipolis, 0~
7 40- 446-0007 '
BY CHARLINE HOIFLICH
HOEFLICHOMVOAILVSENTINEL.COM
BY BETH S!RQINT
8.'-----------------
'
State's new plan
aims toward
transforming
•
•
agmg
serv1ces
AI Regular Cab GMC Slenas
:• Soldier who took
globe from Hitter's
'Eagle's Nesf puts war
trophy up for auction.
See Page A2
• Local Briefs.
See Page AS
• Wilson released
from DC hospital.
See Page AS
• Family Medicine:
Facts can help men
overcome stigma of
having a 'female
disease.' See Page A6
• HMC inpatient
rehab employee of the
year. See Page AS
POMEROY Scott
Fitch, special agent for the
Ohio Bureau of Criminal
Investigation, will be speak·
ing about local drug trends
at this week's meeting of the
Meigs County Community
Coalition meeting.
The meeting takes place
from 7-8 p.m. , tomorrow at
the Mulberry Community
Center. Teens are welcome
as are their parents and anyone in the community/county who is concerned about
dru~ and alcohol abuse.
Fnc~ will be giving a presentauon on current drug
trends in the area as well as
how to identify them and
their affects on users.
Fitch's last visit to the
coalition shed light on a
newer, more potent strand
of marijuana from British
Columbia, Canada called
"BC Bud." Last y~ar this
drug was selling between
$5,000 and $6,000 a pound
compared
to
Meigs
County's, "Gold" going for
between $1,000 and $1 ,200
in larger markets. ·
Please s~ Trends. AS
ODNR sets
meeting on
abandoned
mine projects
Cha~ene
Hoefllch/photo
Members of the RSVP Citizen Corps sort and pack boxes of school supplies to be delivered to elementary schools. Diana Coates is the RSVP coordinator for the Meigs County
Council on Agi'ng,
·
cams
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
· HOEFLICH<D>MYOAILVSENTINELCOM
POMEROY - There will
be no shortage of school
supplies for the hundreds of
children in Meigs County 's
elementary schools after
Oct '26.
·
That's when the senior volunteers of the Citizen Corps
will deliver hundreds of items
ranging from crayons l<_J pen-
school
cil sharpeners to Meigs,
Eastern, Southern and Mid
Valley Christian School.
The collection of ·school
supplies is · a · .Make a
Difference Day project for
the group whose role is one
of volunteers helping others.
· The ~roup collected 310
glue sticks, 2,025 pencils,
57 scissors, 46 bottle of
glue, 384 colored pencils,
24 7 markers, I,088 crayons,
35 rulers, 170 ink pens, 456
erasers, 154 spiral notebooks, 182 loose le.af ruled
packages of paper, 14 boxes
· of Kleenex, 14 rolls of
paper towels, 24 pencil
boxes and pencil bags, 91
folders, .and 8 primary
tablets. Other miscellaneous
items included tape, paint,
stickers, coloring books,
index cards, highlighters
and pencil sharpeners.
GOING PINK
STAFF REPORT
NEWS@ MYDAILVSENTINEL. COM
WEATHER
For Sixty Months
Until October 31, 2007
'S GIIC
ATHENS - The Ohio
Department of Natural
Resources (ODNR) will
hold a ·public meeting in
Athens on Tuesday, Oct. 23
to discuss proposed abandoned mine projects being
considered in six southeastern Ohio counties.
· The meeting is set for 6
p.m. to 9 p.m. in the conference room of the ODNR
Division of Wildlife district
Details on Page AS
office at 360 E. State Street.
Staffers from ODNR' s
Divi sion
of
Mineral
Resources
Management
will be on hand to discuss
environmental and public
2 SECTIONS- 16 PAGES
health and safety issues
Annie's Mailbox
A3 associated with Ohio mines
that were abandol]ed prior
Calendars
A3 to Aug . 3. 1977, when ie,gislation addressing the probClassifieds
B4-6 lem went into effect.
· They will discuss the poliComics
B7 . cies and procedures of
Ohio 's Abandoned Mine
(AML) Progmm and
Editorials
A4 Land
present a list of proposed
Sports
B Section projects for Belmont, Gallia,
L;lwrence, Meigs, Perry and·
Washington
·
Weather
AS Meeting counties.
attendee s are
INDEX
-
\9 aoo7 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
~!
Please see ODNR, AS
Beth Sergent/ photo
. Several downtown Pomeroy businesses recently turned their shop windows pink in honor
of Breast Cancer Awareness month with Hartwell House taKing home the best in show
award . Hartwell House along with other businesses that participated will !llso have their
names announced over the radio during this Saturday's "Every Woman Counts Day" at
Mark Porter GM Supercenter :sponsored by the Meigs County Cancer Initiative . Other
businesses receiving recogni~ion are: Most unique, Smith and Associates; best message, Tea~ord Realty; most original. Pomeroy Library; best family message. Cleland
Realty; most inspiring, American Municipal Power-Ohio: light the night award, Meigs
County Chamber of Commerce. Pictured surveying the Hartwell House window are judges
Tracey O'Dell (left) from the Ohio Tobacco Prevention Foundation and Leigh Anne Hehr
from the American Cancer Society.
·
·
...
POMEROY -The three
year plan of services to
senior citizens being developed by the Meigs County .
Council on Aging follows
closely the recommended
strengths which have been
included in the recently
released 2008-20 II Ohio
State Plan on Aging. ·
Beth Shaver, director of
the local agency, said today
that "the local strategic plan
for the next three years
addresses what the current
(Ohio'
administration
Department of Aging) sees
as issues."
Continuing she said that
the strengths and recommended action . to address
possible weaknesses of
local agencies are already
being taken here and fall
right in line with the pro'posed plan for services by
the state aging · agency.
"What that means," she
said, " is that we can look at
what they are doing, take
what is relevant for us, and
Please see Aging, AS
Horse show ·
•
senes wraps .
·up with 'Gator'
giveaway
BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYOAILYSENTINEL.COM
PORTLAND The
Portland Horse Show S ~ries
will wrap up for the season
on Saturday with a special
Hailowe'en-themed show
and the giveaway of a John
Deere Gator which retails at
around $5.000.
The horse show arena
opens for warm-ups at 10
a.m. and the show begins at
I I a.m. on Saturday at the
show ring behind the
Portland
Community
Center. The Gator giveaway
happens at intermission.
This year the shows were
once again sponsored by the
Ohio River Producers made
up pf Racine-Southern FFA
Alumni. The ORP has also
been sponsoring a fundraising drawing on the Gator, a
compact series utility vehicle, Model CX. Tickets are
still ava ilable by contacting
Bruce McKelvey, 84352 16, 590-9936 or Leanna
Beegle, 949-2008.
'
In addition to the Gator
giveaway, this week's horse
show is a li_ttle different by
adding a special Halloween
costume contest for both
horse and rider. The costume
contest happens at the end of
the show with prizes awarded
to the most original and scariest. Also, a dog and owner
costume contest will be held.
Please 1ee Show, AS
�
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10. October
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Dublin Core
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October 16, 2007
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